Burnett a hit (twice) at practice
A.J. Burnett got on the mound and plunked Greg Golson on the arm. Then he whacked Austin Kearns.
Burnett's simulated game was a hit - twice - on Wednesday as he prepared for his start against Texas in the AL Championship Series.
''It's different when they're our guys. They know I didn't mean to do it, but it's still not a good feeling,'' the struggling starting pitcher said.
Burnett was dropped from the Yankees' rotation for the AL Division Series against Minnesota, but manager Joe Girardi doesn't want to bring back CC Sabathia, Andy Pettitte and Phil Hughes on short rest for the latter part of the best-of-seven series against the Rangers, which starts Friday in Texas.
So, Burnett will start Game 4, his first game action since Oct. 2. He threw 80 pitches in the simulated game, with Girardi and pitching coach Dave Eiland watching part of it from behind the mound.
Thwack!
Not exactly how Burnett wanted to start.
''At the same time, you see how it works even for our guys. From them on out, nobody wanted to stand up there,'' Burnett said. ''I can use that for my advantage.''
Both hit batters came on sliders away, a pitch Burnett said he doesn't use very often during games.
''It kind of grazed,'' Kearns said. ''It wasn't anything.''
Burnett was 10-15 with a 5.26 ERA during the regular season, but just 4-13 with a 6.48 ERA over the final four months and 1-7 since Aug. 1.
He threw his simulated game to Francisco Cervelli. Last year, Jose Molina caught Burnett's five postseason starts instead of Jorge Posada, and Cervelli could wind up behind the plate for Burnett's start against the Rangers. Burnett had a 4.66 ERA in the 129 1/3 innings Cervelli caught during the 2010 season, down from a 7.28 ERA in the 38 1/3 innings he threw to Posada, according to STATS LLC.
Given his season, Burnett will be fortunate to pitch to anyone at this time of year.
''My past couple of bullpens have been 20 pitches at the max. So, it was good to be out there and get fatigued toward the end and work through it,'' he said. ''The curveball was great, I thought, today. And I threw some great changeups, too. I felt a little off on the stretch in the beginning, but a couple innings later I threw a whole inning ouf of the stretch, so it caught up with me.''
NOTES: Girardi wouldn't say whether he'll stick with the first-round order, when Pettitte pitched Game 2, followed by Hughes. Speaking before Wednesday's workout, Girardi said he wanted to talk with his scouts late in the day before making a decision. One factor was whether to pitch his two left-handed starters, Sabathia and Pettitte, in consecutive games. ''We'll look at numbers. We'll look at a lot of different things,'' Girardi said.