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Yanks keep faint hope alive with milestone day

Jeter belts 3 hits, A-Rod has slam, Rivera ties for 2nd in all-time saves

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Kathy Willens / AP
Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter watches after hitting a solo home run in the fifth inning to tie Log Gehrig for the most hits at Yankee Stadium. Jeter had three hits as New York beat Tampa 8-4.
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Jim Riggleman was officially introduced as the manager of the Washington Nationals.

updated 6:28 p.m. ET Sept. 14, 2008

NEW YORK - Derek Jeter didn’t waste any time after he homered in the fifth inning Sunday. He quickly traded a bat and a ball for a reminder of the day he tied Lou Gehrig for the most hits at Yankee Stadium.

“It’s definitely special,” he said.

Jeter collected three hits for the third straight game, Alex Rodriguez belted a grand slam and the New York Yankees beat the Tampa Bay Rays 8-4 to win the weekend series against the AL East leaders.

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The Rays went 3-6 on their 10-day trip to Toronto, Boston and New York and will carry a one-game lead into their three-game series against the second-place Red Sox beginning Monday night in Florida.

“It’s never good to lose a series,” manager Joe Maddon said. “It was obviously a tough road trip ... not easy at all. The Yankees are one team that we haven’t played well against this year.”

Jason Giambi hit a two-run homer for New York, still clinging to faint playoff hopes during its final homestand at its longtime ballpark.

Mariano Rivera entered with two on in the ninth and struck out Erick Aybar for his 35th save in 36 opportunities. The All-Star closer also moved into a tie with Lee Smith for second on the career list with 478 saves.

“I’d rather have the team, our team, tied for first place,” Rivera said.

Fernando Perez, who went to nearby Columbia University, hit a three-run drive for Tampa Bay, which started the trip with a 3½-game lead in the East.

Oft-injured Yankees pitcher Carl Pavano (3-1) allowed three earned runs and five hits before he was booed off the mound in the sixth inning following a visit by the trainer and manager Joe Girardi.

Pavano was pitching to Eric Hinske with one out and a runner on first when he got the mound visit. After a short discussion, the right-hander walked off as the sellout crowd, familiar with his injury history, showered him with boos.

“I’m at a spot right now where I’m starting to wake up muscles I haven’t used in a while,” said Pavano, who left with a stiff left hip and expected to be OK for his next start. “Every time I go out there, there’s more innings than the last time and more pitches than the last time so I mean these are things I’m going to have to work through.”

Pavano has started only 24 games for the Yankees since signing a four-year, $39.95 million contract before the 2005 season.

“He did not want to come out,” said Girardi, who opted for the safe route on a muggy day in the Bronx. “He told me he was fine.”

David Price, the top overall pick in the 2007 draft, made his major league debut for Tampa Bay and threw 5 1-3 impressive innings in relief of struggling starter Edwin Jackson. The 6-foot-6 left-hander allowed two runs and three hits, spending much of the outing in the upper 90s.

“It was fun,” he said. “This one here was obviously special. I settled down pretty good, started breathing better. That first inning was pretty rough.”

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Price retired six straight before Jeter led off the fifth with his 11th homer, giving him 1,269 hits at the House that Ruth Built. The sellout crowd of 54,279 roared as the captain rounded the bases after his opposite-field drive to right, and cheered even louder when he came out of the dugout for a curtain call.

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The fans continued to chant the shortstop’s name as Giambi batted against Price, who struck out four and walked none.

Jeter had a chance to break the record in the seventh but grounded into a double play. He’ll likely get another opportunity Monday night when New York opens a four-game series against the Chicago White Sox.


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