Yankees Fall to Former Pitcher Hughes, Twins in 10-1 Loss

Phil Hughes pitched seven shutout innings against his former team and Miguel Sano hit one of Minnesota's four home runs in the Twins' 10-1 victory over the New York Yankees on Friday night.

Hughes (9-6) gave up seven hits, struck out three and wiggled out of a bases-loaded jam in the seventh. Trevor Plouffe went 3 for 4 with a homer and a double and Torii Hunter and Brian Dozier also went deep for the Twins.

Michael Pineda (9-7) gave up five runs on eight hits in 5 2/3 innings for the Yankees, who had their four-game winning streak snapped. Mark Teixeira had three hits for New York (53-42), which fell to 23-25 on the road.

Kurt Suzuki broke out of a slump with two hits and two RBIs to help Minnesota build a 5-0 cushion in the fourth inning and Eddie Rosario added three doubles.

Hughes spent his first seven seasons in New York, coming in as a highly touted prospect in 2007. He represented the Yankees in the All-Star game in 2010, but never really lived up to the hype that Yankees fans had for him.

Hughes made the move to Minnesota last season and found comfort in the smaller market and bigger ballpark. He went 16-10 with a 3.52 ERA, walked just 16 batters in 209 2/3 innings and signed a five-year, $58 million deal in the offseason.

But this season has been more of a struggle, with a league-leading 23 homers allowed in in his first 19 starts of the season. And he was facing a Yankees offense that scored nine in the finale against Baltimore on Thursday, led the majors in first-inning runs and contributed to a 12-4 start to July.

They nearly pounced in the first inning again thanks to back-to-back singles from Alex Rodriguez and Mark Teixeira, but once Hughes got Brian McCann to pop out to first base, it was smooth sailing.

The big right-hander retired, 15 of the next 17 hitters he faced, then loaded the bases with two outs in the seventh. After a brief conversation, manager Paul Molitor left Hughes in to face Jacboy Ellsbury, and he rewarded the faith by getting Ellsbury to pop out to left field to end the inning.

It was the first time in nine starts — dating back to June 3 — that Hughes has not given up a homer.

Contact Us