NEW YORK — Yes, it’s only June, but Saturday night at Yankee Stadium, it seemed like so much later in the year than that. There was a palpable buzz, an evident energy and a discernible electricity that made the game between division-leading foes Houston and New York feel as if there was much more on the line than just one regular-season game.
It was precisely the kind of game, midseason or not, the New York Yankees are continually looking to snatch in hopes of expanding their ever-widening lead in the American League East. With a prime-time, two-game set in London against the rival Boston Red Sox and a key road series against the Tampa Bay Rays looming, they will have plenty of other chances to do so.
It would appear so after the way the Bronx Bombers pulled out a 7-5 win Saturday over the visiting Houston Astros in a tense, back-and-forth contest. Eight straight wins — six coming against two teams with a combined .597 winning percentage entering Saturday — is a clear indication of that, too.
“This is a confident group,” first baseman Luke Voit said. “Everybody in this locker room expects the best out of us every night, and it doesn’t matter who does it. Everyone has that next-man-up mentality to get the job done.”
Most of the 46,034 fans Saturday were transfixed by a close game that had everything — four lead changes and a quartet of game-altering home runs, but also some stellar starting pitching, a no-hitter going into the fifth inning and enough web gems to stock SportsCenter between now and the All-Star break. But at least one other creature was, too. A hawk perched early in the game on the left-field foul pole, taking in the action without budging until after fans had cleared out of the stadium. Maybe it was on the hunt, but the bird looked so locked into what was happening on the field that it didn’t want to leave. Given the way this game went, you couldn’t blame it.