NEW YORK (AP) -- As soon as Jorge Posada bumped Toronto reliever Jesse Carlson after crossing home plate, almost everyone at Yankee Stadium knew a fight was coming.Posada and Carlson got into a scrap near the New York dugout, leading to a frenzied, bench-clearing brawl during the Blue Jays' 10-4 victory over the Yankees on Tuesday night.
"It got pretty heavy and pretty thick pretty quickly," New York slugger Alex Rodriguez said. "I think we're all fortunate and glad no one got hurt."
Toronto's Edwin Encarnacion and All-Star second baseman Aaron Hill were hit by pitches before Carlson threw behind Posada in the eighth inning. Posada glared out at the mound and appeared to say, "You don't want to do that."
Carlson motioned toward Posada as the benches and bullpens emptied, though the teams never got close to each other and order was quickly restored. Johnny Damon and manager Joe Girardi aggressively pulled teammates away, aware an injury or suspension could be costly to the Yankees as they close in on a playoff berth. Plate umpire Jim Joyce warned both benches.
But moments later, a nasty rumble broke out.
After scoring on Brett Gardner's double, Posada jostled Carlson, who was on his way to back up the plate. Joyce promptly ejected Posada as Carlson shouted curses at the star catcher.
"As he ran past Carlson, he gave him a little shove with his elbow. It was very unsportsmanlike," Joyce told a pool reporter. "It was a cheap shot."
Posada spun around, sidestepped Joyce and came back at Carlson, who took a high swing with a punch that missed. The two wrestled to the ground as the benches and bullpens emptied and other scuffles broke out near home plate.
"He was just right there on the line to the dugout. We got carried away and hopefully that's the end of it," the 38-year-old Posada said. "I don't want my kids to see that. ... Fight in the middle of the field, benches clearing - that's a bad example."
Brawl in the Bronx
New York Yankees and Toronto Blue Jays brawl on the field during the eighth inning of the Blue Jays' 10-4 victory in a baseball game at Yankee Stadium on Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2009, in New York. Blue Jays catcher Rod Barajas is on the ground at left. Blue Jays third base coach Nick Leyva (16) tries to separate participants. Yankees' Nick Swisher is in the center of the group. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)
AP
New York Yankees reliever Edwar Ramirez, center, restrains Toronto Blue Jays catcher Rod Barajas as home plate umpire Jim Joyce approaches after a brawl broke out in the eighth inning of a baseball game at Yankee Stadium on Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2009, in New York. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)
AP
Toronto Blue Jays infielder John MacDonald, right, reacts as New York Yankees' Eric Hinske (14), CC Sabathia, in dark blue jacket, manager Joe Girardi (27), and Mark Teixeira are seen in a bench-clearing brawl during the eighth inning of the Blue Jays' 10-4 victory over the Yankees in a baseball game at Yankee Stadium on Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2009 in New York. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York Yankees' Derek Jeter, far left, rushes out toward on-deck batter Johnny Damon, second from left, as Yankees' Jorge Posada (20) tries to get around home plate umpire Jim Joyce during an eighth-inning brawl in the Yankees' baseball game against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium on Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2009, in New York. Toronto's Rod Barajas is next to Posada and Joyce. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Toronto Blue Jays catcher Rod Barajas, left, is restrained by an umpire during a brawl in the eighth inning against the New York Yankees, Tuesday, September 15, 2009, at Yankee Stadium in New York. (John Dunn/Newsday/MCT)
MCT
New York Yankees Jorge Posada is restrained by Andy Pettitte and CC Sabathia after a brawl with the Toronto Blue Jays in the eighth inning, Tuesday, September 15, 2009, at Yankee Stadium in New York. (John Dunn/Newsday/MCT)
MCT
New York Yankees' Jorge Posada (20) faced off with Toronto Blue Jays' Jesse Carlson (39) as a brawl breaks out after Posada scored in the eighth inning, Tuesday, September 15, 2009, at Yankee Stadium in New York. (John Dunn/Newsday/MCT)
MCT
A brawl breaks out between the Toronto Blue Jays and New York Yankees in the eighth inning, Tuesday, September 15, 2009, at Yankee Stadium in New York. (John Dunn/Newsday/MCT)
MCT
A brawl breaks out between the Toronto Blue Jays and New York Yankees in the eighth inning, Tuesday, September 15, 2009, at Yankee Stadium in New York. (John Dunn/Newsday/MCT)
MCT
Blue Jays catcher Rod Barajas and Yankees reserve Shelley Duncan got in a particularly rough tussle.
"Once he crossed the plate and threw that elbow at me or whatever, I just said, 'Let's go,"' Carlson said. "I'm probably the smallest guy in MLB and we were right near their dugout, so I was just hoping I got out of there all right."
When things finally settled down, there was catching equipment strewn all over the field behind home plate. New York pitchers CC Sabathia and Andy Pettitte escorted Posada into the dugout.
The 6-foot-1, 160-pound Carlson, also ejected, was left with a large red knot on the left side of his forehead.
"We were wrestling or whatever and we both went down to the ground. We were kind of right near their dugout and kind of got trampled on for a little bit. I was trying to cover up and I'm not sure who it was, but somebody moved my hands out of the way and got in a shot," Carlson said. "I'm fine. It doesn't even hurt."
Carlson declined to apologize and said he didn't throw at Posada intentionally.
"It was a fastball in and I yanked it. Just a bad pitch," he said.
Once umpires review the tape and report to Major League Baseball disciplinarian Bob Watson, Posada and Carlson are likely to be suspended and fined. Perhaps others, too.
"I don't know if that was too smart. They have a lot more to lose than we do," Blue Jays manager Cito Gaston said.
Girardi appeared to get hit in the face with a fist from Toronto infielder John McDonald as he lunged into the scrum. Afterward, the manager had a little scratch on the left side of his face near his eye.
"It's all right. I don't think anyone was trying to hit me," Girardi said, adding that he spoke to his team after the game about focusing on the pennant race. "I thought the umpires did a good job, pulling people off, but it's hard when people have 35-man rosters and they're running in from all directions."
McDonald said he didn't throw a punch at Girardi.
The game was interrupted for about 10 minutes. When play resumed, there were only three umpires on the field. During the fight, third base ump and crew chief Derryl Cousins was hit in the knee by a bottle full of soda that he said was thrown from the stands.
"Doctor checked it out. Nothing is broken. There's going to be a bruise. It's just painful," Cousins said.
Early on, Roy Halladay (15-9) stymied the Yankees and rookie Travis Snider hit two of Toronto's five homers. New York's lead in the AL East was cut to 6 1/2 games over Boston, which beat the Los Angeles Angels.
The Yankees' magic number for clinching a playoff spot is six.
Adam Lind and Encarnacion also connected off Yankees starter Sergio Mitre (3-3).
Notes: Halladay is 18-6 with a 2.84 ERA in his career against the Yankees. ... Lind and Encarnacion also homered Monday in Detroit.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
9-15-2009 @ 11:27PM
steve said...
well torontos gotta do something to get a win,why not distract the yankees so they cant concentrate.blue jays you guys blow.as a baseball team you are very pathetic,im sure theres a baseball camp somewhere that you half-wits can go to after the season is over and im sure the kids there can teach you idiots a few things about gameplay
Reply
9-16-2009 @ 9:37AM
Guyboog said...
Hey, Steve I bet your mom went to college! Duh you idiot! The next time you decide to open your mouth, why don't you NOT!!! And, please, don't cry! Mommy will make it all better!
9-15-2009 @ 11:44PM
Ali said...
Wow, how bad must the Yankees be to let such a 'pathetic' team beat them?????
Reply
9-16-2009 @ 7:15AM
jsyankeesny05 said...
what has that got to do with it. holliday is a damn good pitcher and they must be pretty good to have a 6 game lead.
9-15-2009 @ 11:45PM
rharrigfeld124 said...
Carlson was looking to go a few rounds. I saw the tape on the news and Posada didn't touch him as claimed!!! Even if Posada did, I would go after a pitcher and kick his ass if he threw at me too, regardless of which pitcher took the first shot!!!
Reply
9-16-2009 @ 1:03AM
Bill said...
Posada is a wimp
9-16-2009 @ 4:19AM
James said...
Wrong......Posada clearly threw a cheap elbow. They showed the replay over and over again.
Yankees have no pride.
9-16-2009 @ 9:34AM
Ann said...
i agree carlson had no buisness waiting where he was ! he was looking for trouble! im not saying it was alright for posada to come back to carlson.he should have just left it at the elbow which was just a brush.come on man!!!!
9-16-2009 @ 12:26AM
john said...
posada is done , hes lucky guy thru behind him instead of between the eyes !!!!
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9-16-2009 @ 1:17AM
tonytiger18 said...
It is the Blue Jays that are done!!!
Posada is one tough guy that plays hard and is a good competive teammate. He has been in the league for over fifteen years and has been consistently one of the most productive catchers in the game. He is a border line Hall of Fame candidate. The last thing you can say about him is that he is a wimp--- far from it.
You probably wish that he had played for your team.
9-16-2009 @ 12:31AM
socaldave613 said...
Heres how it is I have a BAT the pitcher has a BALl he hits me with the ball I hit him with the BAT anyone else want a piece of me they get all of me... You only have to do it once and this nonsense stops.
Reply
9-16-2009 @ 12:32AM
d57fan said...
Hey Stevie, moron, first of all, the Jays had a huge lead at the time ...second, Encarnacion, Hill and in the previous game, Ruiz, were all HIT by pitches...Pussada was not hit, not even close, unfortunately...HE was already tossed before the fight even started.
...here's the thing about spoiled arrogant bullies...they don't like it when anyone fights back...
Looking forward to the Yankees choking in the World Series...
Reply
9-16-2009 @ 1:04AM
tonytiger18 said...
D57 fan, you know very little about the game and your comments make no sense.
The Yankees didn't play the Jays the previous day, so if Ruiz did get hit, it was from another team's pitcher.
Mitre was awful and had no command of his pitches.
Encarcion got hit with an 83 MPH slurve that didn't break and there were men on base with no outs.
Melancon is a below average relief pitcher that had mop up duties when he hit Hill with a ball that tailed in on him.
Both Pitchers weren't intentionaly hitting those batters.
The last thing that the Yankees need is to get a guy hurt in a bean ball situation with a team that is playing out the string.
The ESPN commentators stated that Carlson was on the wrong side of home plate instead of backing the catcher for a possible play at the plate.
Carlson wanted a piece of Possada -- bad move on his part. Did you see the bump on his head?
Possada is feisty when he has to be, and in this case with Carlson directly in his path to the Yankee dugout, he had no choice. Carlson definitely stuck his arms out and acted tough with some choice words.
That is why he got his ass kicked.
The ball that he threw at Possada was behind him and just barely missed him, so I don't know what game that you were watching.
Yeah, Possada said something to him after the pitch, but, he didn't charge the mound.
It would have been over if Carlson didn't act like a tough guy by starting the nonsense.
All the Yankees came out for Possada even the manager and Mariano. Carlson was dumb to try something with a guy that is respected by all his teammates.
9-16-2009 @ 3:04AM
cqdeed said...
Typical athletic role models.
Reply
9-16-2009 @ 4:26AM
Lakergregg said...
Wonder where that p u s s y A-Fraud was during all this.
Oh can't wait for someone to call me a name in defense of their favorite metrosexual.
Reply
9-16-2009 @ 11:04AM
tonytiger18 said...
What did you expect Arod to do?
9-16-2009 @ 5:06AM
David S. said...
Gotta love New York....
Reply
9-16-2009 @ 6:34AM
nrfrye72 said...
If you look at all the incidents involving the Yankees and brawls, you'll find that most of those have been caused because a Yankee pitcher hit an opposing player and when the other team retaliated, the big bullies had to react. The Yankees have no class (except for Jeter and Rivera, who deserve all the credit they get and more). These guys are racing for the playoffs, but when they start getting pounded they start the events that lead to the fight and then blame everybody but themselves (maybe they should think about playing hockey in Philadelphia). I'm just surprised it was another pitcher that hit the Jays' batters and not Joba Chamberlain, who seems to think all batters he faces have a bullseye taped to their uniforms and helmets. :-D
Reply
9-16-2009 @ 11:36AM
tonytiger18 said...
And how many brawls have you personaly witnessed involving the Yankees?
For your limited knowledge, this was the only brawl this year and it could have been avoided.
Both Jays hitters were hit by ineffective pichers that were awful --- One on a slow curve that didn't break and the other on a pitch that broke into the batter.
Carlson protected his players by retaliating against Posada.Posada said a few things, but, went directly to first.
End of the nonsense, right?
NO, definitely not the end. Why?
Carlson wanted a piece of Posada.
He was in his direct path to the Yankee dugout instead of backing his catcher up on the throw from the outfield.ESPN commentators asked: what was he doing there on the wrong side of the field?
He mouthed off to Posada as he approached and Posada reacted with emotions to Carlson's baiting.
It was Carlson that put gasoline on the slow fire.
It should have never happened but you can thank Carlson for that.
The Yankees don't need to get into this nonsense with an inferior team that has nothing to lose.
9-16-2009 @ 7:22AM
jmoreno said...
YANKEES SUCK!
Reply