White Sox Break Losing Streak as A-Rod Returns

Chicago 8, New York 1

Alex Rodriguez blooped a single into left field in his first at-bat of the season, hours after being hit with a long suspension.

It was a nice start for the embattled slugger, but that was it. The finish belonged to the Chicago White Sox.

Rodriguez went 1 for 4 in his first game for New York, but the White Sox beat the struggling Yankees 8-1 on Monday night to snap a 10-game losing streak.

Rodriguez was suspended through 2014 by Major League Baseball in the Biogenesis case, a punishment he is appealing.

That clearly was the biggest story on a day when New York's Derek Jeter went back on the disabled list because of a strained right calf and Andy Pettitte (7-9) got knocked out early. Alex Rios drove in four runs, Alexei Ramirez added four hits and Jose Quintana (6-3) pitched into the seventh for the White Sox.

Rodriguez, meanwhile, is digging in, ready to go toe to toe with MLB.

At 38 and coming back from hip surgery, he said he's fighting for his life. He was welcomed back with the same sort of greeting he got on the road in the past, a series of boos and jeers amplified by the penalty announced earlier in the day.

The crowd at U.S. Cellular Field booed the three-time MVP during pregame warmups and introductions. When he stepped to the plate in the second inning for his first at-bat of the season, they could have drowned out a jet.

They weren't feeling any better after Rodriguez dropped a leadoff single into shallow left on the third pitch. He moved to third with no outs on Vernon Wells' double but was stranded.

Rodriguez flied out in his second and third at-bats and handled a few grounders at third, getting booed every time he stepped to the plate or touched the ball.

He also struck out in the eighth as fans chanted "Steroids! Steroids!"

Rodriguez did not deny using performance-enhancing drugs in a news conference after the punishment came down. Instead he said he will talk about whether he used PEDs at another time when he is more free to speak.

He did say he has to defend himself because no one else will.

The Yankees are hoping Rodriguez can provide some sort of spark even though they're fading from the playoff picture and inject some power into the lineup. That's something they haven't gotten, particularly from their third basemen.

Pettitte, however, did them no favors. He lasted 2 2-3 innings in his shortest outing of the season while matching season highs for runs (seven) and hits (11). He fell to 0-3 in his last four starts.

Rios delivered an RBI single and scored during a three-run first. He added a two-run double in the second that made it 5-0.

Rios then capped a two-run third with a bases-loaded walk after Preston Claiborne replaced Pettitte, making it 7-0.

That was more than enough for Quintana, who gave up one run and eight hits in 6 2-3 innings.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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