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Gerrit Cole roughed up in worst start of season during Yankees’ loss to Tigers as skid hits three

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DETROIT — Whether he was most frustrated by a few pitches left over the heart of the plate, the inability to retire leadoff hitters, the Tigers finding some holes on him, or a pair of in-game delays, the problem was that Gerrit Cole had options.

The Yankees did, too.

On a third straight day when their offense was held in check, Cole got hit around more than he had all season as the Yankees dropped their third straight in a rough 5-3 loss to the Tigers on Monday night at Comerica Park.

Cole, who came into the night holding opposing hitters to a .196 batting average in his first five starts back from Tommy John surgery, got tagged for nine hits and five runs across 4 ¹/₃ innings.

He allowed the leadoff batter to reach in all five innings, including a home run in the fifth, as the Tigers (34-44) raced out to a 5-1 lead.

“I certainly made some mistakes, but the opposition is going to put pressure on you sometimes,” said Cole, who struck out five and walked one across 89 pitches. “The reality is it’s not the try-hard league, it’s the get-it-done league, and we just didn’t get it done tonight.”

Gerrit Cole walks off the mound during the Yankees’ June 22 loss. AP Photo

Tigers lefty Framber Valdez, meanwhile, suffocated the Yankees (46-31) after they squandered some early chances, retiring the final 10 batters he faced across six innings. Amed Rosario belted a two-run shot in the seventh inning to pull the Yankees within 5-3, but that was as close as they would get.

The Yankees threatened by putting a pair of runners on base with two outs in the eighth inning, but the Tigers brought in Will Vest — a possible trade deadline candidate for the Yankees — who struck out Jasson Domínguez and then retired the side in the ninth.

After a strong stretch, the Yankees have now scored just six runs over their past three games and three or fewer runs in four of their past five games.

“I just think it’s part of the season,” Rosario said through an interpreter. “We’ve been there before. [Tuesday], we have a really good opportunity to tie the series and hopefully win this series. You can’t really panic. You understand you go through some stretches like that, but looking forward to [Tuesday].”

Gerrit Cole throws a pitch during the Yankees’ June 22 loss. Imagn Images

Since he returned from the injured list in late May, Cole has looked like his vintage self at times and more human at others, like Monday. There was an understanding all along that there would be some ups and downs as he settled back into pitching regularly for the first time since 2024, and that the Yankees would handle him with the long run in mind — as they did this turn by inserting Elmer Rodríguez as a spot starter Sunday, giving Cole (and the rest of the rotation) an extra day’s rest during a stretch of 16 games in 16 days.

But after Rodríguez gave up three runs in four innings Sunday, Cole wasn’t much sharper Monday.

Riley Greene rounds the bases after hitting a home run during the Tigers’ June 22 win. AP Photo/Paul Sancya

Ali Sánchez — who left the game in the seventh inning after getting drilled on the right wrist by a 98 mph fastball that required tests — roped an RBI double that put the Yankees up 1-0 in the second before the Tigers took the lead for good in the third.

Zach McKinstry led off with a triple to the gap that left fielder José Caballero was unable to cut off before it bounced all the way to the wall.



McKinstry came in to score on a groundout that tied the game before the Tigers restarted a rally with two outs on a single and a walk.

Spencer Torkelson then blooped a single to center that made it a 2-1 game before Cole left an 0-2 fastball down the middle to Colt Keith, who lined it for a single and the 3-1 lead.

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After a leadoff single in the bottom of the fourth, a six-minute delay ensued as an infield dirt camera in front of second base became exposed.

Jazz Chisholm Jr. tried to cover it up with dirt, but the grounds crew eventually came out to handle matters as Cole threw warmup pitches.

Cole retired the next batter before stud rookie shortstop Kevin McGonigle — on another 0-2 count — slapped a double to left field.

Caballero fielded it off the short wall but then hesitated on the throw and misfired home, his throw tipping off Rosario’s glove and bouncing to the backstop as the Tigers went up 4-1.

“They got nine hits and they just put a ton of pressure on us and played overall slightly better baseball,” Cole said. “That’s just the way it broke tonight.”

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