The
American
League Championship Series (
ALCS),
the second round of the 2009 American League playoffs, was a
best-of-seven game series matching the two winners of the
2009 American League
Division Series. The AL East Division champions, the
New York Yankees, defeated the
AL West Division champions, the
Los Angeles Angels of
Anaheim, four games to two, to advance to the
2009 World Series, their first since
2003.New York, with a better
regular-season record than Los Angeles, held home-field advantage.
The series, the 39th in league history, began on October 16 and
ended on October 25.
Fox
Sports carried all games with
Joe Buck
and
Tim McCarver in the broadcast
booth. Starting with the 2009 season, weeknight games began 40
minutes earlier as suggested by Commissioner
Bud Selig.
The Yankees won the series 4 games to 2, and went on to defeat the
Philadelphia Phillies 4–2 in
the World Series.
Summary
New York Yankees vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
† Game 6 was originally scheduled to be played on Saturday, October
24, but was postponed because of rain.
Game summaries
Game 1
Friday,
October 16, 2009 — 7:57 PM (ET) at
Yankee
Stadium
in the Bronx, New York
On a blustery night with temperatures hovering in the mid-40s,
starter
CC Sabathia limited the Angels
to one run on four hits and a walk in eight innings, striking out
seven in a 4–1 Yankee win.
The Yankees staked Sabathia to a 2–0 lead in the bottom of the
first on an
Alex Rodriguez sacrifice
fly and an unusual RBI infield single from
Hideki Matsui. Matsui hit a short popup to the
left side of the infield, but there was a miscommunication between
third baseman
Chone Figgins and
shortstop
Erick Aybar and the ball fell
in for a single, enabling
Johnny Damon
to score from second.
Vladimir
Guerrero set up the Angels' only run in the top of the fourth,
hitting a high fly ball to deep left field that looked to be a home
run but bounced in front of the fence for a double instead,
possibly due to the windy conditions. Guerrero scored two batters
later on
Kendry Morales' single. The
Yankees added a run in the fifth on Matsui's second run-scoring
single of the night, and a pair of Angels' errors led to New York's
fourth run in the sixth. After reaching base on a walk,
Melky Cabrera advanced to second on
John Lackey's errant pickoff attempt.
Derek Jeter then singled up the middle, but
Torii Hunter overran the ball, allowing
Cabrera to score without a play at the plate.
Mariano Rivera pitched the ninth,
recording his 36th career postseason save.
Game 2
Saturday,
October 17, 2009 — 7:57 PM (ET) at
Yankee
Stadium
in the Bronx, New York
Once again, the Yankees struck first in the second inning. After
Nick Swisher worked a two-out
walk—his first in this postseason—
Robinson Canó hit his first career
postseason triple to deep right-center field to score Swisher. In
the bottom of third,
Derek Jeter hit a
solo
home run to right field to give the
Yankees a 2–0 advantage.The Angels fought back in the fifth. After
Maicer Izturis hit a leadoff
ground rule double to right field,
Erick Aybar's one-out single brought
Izturis home to cut the lead in half. Later in the inning, New York
starter A.J. Burnett's
bases-loaded wild
pitch caused the game to be tied at two. Both teams threatened
multiple times in the ensuing innings, but neither scored and the
game was sent to
extra innings. In the
top half of the eleventh,
Gary
Matthews, Jr. drew a walk off Yankees reliever
Alfredo Aceves, advanced to second on a
sacrifice bunt by Erick Aybar, and
scored on an
RBI single by
Chone Figgins. However, in the bottom half of
the frame,
Alex Rodriguez tied the
game with a leadoff home run off Angels
closer Brian
Fuentes. Then, in the thirteenth inning,
Melky Cabrera managed to reach on an error
committed by Izturis, consequently driving in the winning run.
Izturis had the option of throwing to first for the second out, but
instead attempted a tough throw to get the force at second for a
potential double play, completely missing shortstop Aybar. Figgins,
who was backing up the play, came up with the ball in an attempt to
get the play at the plate but it slipped out of his hand.
Jerry Hairston, Jr., who had reached on
a single to start the inning, came around to score on that
error.
The game lasted five hours and ten minutes, making it the fifth
longest ALCS game by length of game ever.
Alex Rodriguez's eleventh-inning home run was his second
late-inning game-tying home run in this postseason. Both were off
opposite team's closer (
Minnesota
Twins'
Joe Nathan, in
ALDS Game
2).
Both teams committed errors but the Angels' proved costly.
Game 3
Monday,
October 19, 2009 — 4:13 PM (ET) at
Angel Stadium of
Anaheim
in Anaheim, California
For the third game in a row the Yankees scored first, this time on
Derek Jeter's leadoff
home run off Angels starter
Jered Weaver. They extended their lead on solo
home runs by
Alex Rodriguez in the
fourth inning and
Johnny Damon in the
fifth, both off Weaver. Yankees starter
Andy Pettitte held the Angels scoreless until
the fifth inning, when he yielded a solo home run to
Howie Kendrick in the fifth. The next inning,
Vladimir Guerrero hit a two-run
home run, also off Pettitte, to tie the game. The Angels took the
lead in the seventh, thanks to Kendrick's one-out triple and
Maicer Izturis'
sacrifice fly, both off
Joba Chamberlain. However, a
Jorge Posada solo home run off
Kevin Jepsen—the sixth in the game—tied it
again in the eighth.
Another Angels' gaffe proved costly. In the eighth inning
Abreu led off with a double but attempted to
stretch it into a triple. An alert Jeter called for the ball at
second and tossed to
Mark Texeira who
was covering second, since
Robinson
Canó was in the outfield, to tag Abreu for the out.
For the second consecutive time in the series, the Yankees and
Angels played
extra innings. The
Angels
loaded the bases with one out in
the tenth inning against
Mariano
Rivera, but were unable to score. In the bottom of the eleventh
inning, Yankees pitcher
David
Robertson retired the two Angels batters he faced and was one
out away from forcing a twelfth inning when
manager Joe
Girardi replaced him with
Alfredo
Aceves, a decision that would later be criticized by the New
York media. Aceves, who yielded a go-ahead run to the Angels in the
eleventh inning of Game 2 that was later erased by Rodriguez' home
run, yielded a single to Kendrick on a 3–1
count.
Jeff
Mathis, the Angels' backup
catcher who
was inserted into the game in the eighth inning, followed with a
double to deep left field, scoring
Kendrick from first and winning the game in a walk-off.
Game 4
Tuesday,
October 20, 2009 — 7:57 PM (ET) at
Angel Stadium of
Anaheim
in Anaheim, California
Yankees
ace CC
Sabathia started Game 4 on three days' rest, which proved to be
no problem, as he pitched eight strong innings, allowing only one
earned run, five
hits, and two
walks, while
striking
out five. For the fourth straight game in the series the
Yankees scored first.
Alex Rodriguez
hit a two-run home run, tying a postseason record set by
Lou Gehrig and
Ryan
Howard for recording an
RBI in
eight consecutive games.
Melky Cabrera
added four RBIs. The sole Angels run came on a fifth-inning solo
home run by
Kendry Morales. The game
included three controversial calls by the umpiring crew that third
base umpire and crew chief
Tim
McClelland—who made two of the three calls in question—admitted
were in error, drawing more attention to the argument for instant
replay in baseball.
Game 5
Thursday,
October 22, 2009 — 7:57 PM (ET) at
Angel Stadium of
Anaheim
in Anaheim, California
Unlike the previous four games, this time the Angels scored first.
With
Chone Figgins on third base and
Bobby Abreu on first,
Torii Hunter singled to center field, scoring
both Figgins and Abreu. Hunter then scored on an
RBI double by
Vladimir Guerrero, followed by a
Kendry Morales RBI
single that scored Guerrero from second.
From that point on, neither starter—
John
Lackey for the Angels and
A.J.
Burnett for the Yankees—allowed a
run until the seventh inning. In the
top half of that inning, Lackey worked into a
bases-loaded jam with two
outs when manager
Mike Scioscia replaced him with
Darren Oliver.
Mark
Teixeira connected with Oliver's first pitch for a double that
scored all three
inherited
runners—
Melky Cabrera,
Jorge Posada, and
Derek
Jeter. After an
intentional walk to
Alex Rodriguez,
Hideki Matsui singled, scoring Teixeira and
tying the game. Oliver was replaced with
Kevin Jepsen, who yielded a
triple to
Robinson Canó that scored Rodriguez and
Matsui, giving the Yankees a two-run lead. In the bottom half of
the seventh, Abreu hit an RBI groundout that scored
Jeff Mathis from third. Hunter then drew a
walk, followed by a Guerrero single
that scored
Erick Aybar, and a Morales
single that scored Hunter, giving the Angels a one-run lead. The
Yankees threatened Angels
closer
Brian Fuentes in the ninth inning.
With two outs, Fuentes loaded the bases, but
Nick Swisher popped out to end the game.
Game 6

New York Yankees celebrate after their
5–2 win against the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
Sunday,
October 25, 2009 — 8:20 PM (ET) at
Yankee
Stadium
in Bronx, New York
Game 6 was originally scheduled to be played on Saturday, October
24, but was postponed because of rain. Angels' gaffes once again
proved costly. In the top of the second, baserunner
Vladimir Guerrero ran too far from first
base on a fly ball out and was
doubled
off. The game remained scoreless until the top of the third
inning when
Bobby Abreu singled
Jeff Mathis home to give the Angels the early
lead. The Yankees left six men on base in the first and second
innings before they finally broke through in the bottom of the
fourth after
Johnny Damon lined a
two-run single to give the Yankees the lead for the remainder of
the game.
Alex Rodriguez walked with the
bases
loaded to force in another run. Saunders was then removed in
favor of
Darren Oliver.
Andy Pettitte pitched a strong game,
allowing one run in innings while striking out six.
Mariano Rivera entered the game in the eighth
inning for a six-out save. Guerrero singled in a run with two outs
to close the gap to 3–2. In the bottom of the eighth, the Angels
misfielded two sacrifice bunts by the Yankees, a fielding error by
Howie Kendrick and a throwing error
by pitcher
Scott Kazmir, eventually
leading to two runs. Rivera retired the side in the ninth to record
the Yankees' 40th American League pennant.
Composite box
2009 ALCS
(4–2): New York Yankees over
Los Angeles
Angels of Anaheim
Series quotes
Notes
External links