“He had a couple of really rough outings, one in particular but I think for the most part he was either good (or) really keeping us in the game,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “He flashed that stuff all the time, but was really pitch efficient, too, and I’m really proud of him on that start.”
Brito (4-3) allowed two hits, struck out three, walked one and reached the sixth inning for the first time as a starter. The only time Brito had pitched in the sixth occurred May 15 in Toronto when he was a bulk reliever.
“Going down there, the priority was to be able to command the strike zone with the fastball, use the sinker to both sides of the plate and to keep changeup low in the strike zone,” Brito said. “I’ve been working on a slider that has been giving me really good results and polishing that pitch down and putting a good package of pitches has been the focus.”
The right-hander returned to the Yankees after posting a 7.08 ERA in four Triple-A starts but was selected over Randy Vásquez to make the start for Nestor Cortes, who is recovering from a strained left rotator cuff.
“That was really impressive to see,” McKinney said. “He’s a really good pitcher. He’s got a lot of talent.”
Brito allowed a leadoff single to José Caballero and retired 12 straight before Jarred Kelenic singled to open the fifth. He exited to nice ovation after walking Julio Rodríguez.
Brito was also aided by Bauers’ glove for the final out of the first. Bauers robbed Teoscar Hernández of a potential double by running back and making a leaping catch in front of the right field fence.
After making his defensive play, Bauers hit a fastball into the right-center field seats in the third for his sixth homer since being recalled joining the Yankees. Bauers homered after Volpe nearly missed a homer down the right field line before drawing a walk.
“I swung through two fastballs that at-bat, had a feeling it was going to be that or the changeup,” Bauers said. “I’m guessing he missed his spot there with the fastball.”
McKinney homered for the second straight game and third time since being recalled to replace Judge. The outfielder gave the Yankees a 3-0 lead by blasting a 1-0 fastball about halfway up the second deck in right field for a 414-foot drive.
Castillo allowed three runs and four hits in five innings for his fourth straight loss. He struck out three, walked four and faced the Yankees for the fourth time in less than a year.
“It was good to see us really wear down an elite starter like that and make him work as hard as he did,” Boone said.
Castillo, whom the Yankees tried to the acquire from Cincinnati at last year’s deadline has lost four straight starts for the first time since a seven-game skid April 25 to May 29, 2021. He also has issued 10 walks over his last two starts and allowed multiple homers in two of his last three outings.
“A bad outing for me,” Castillo said through a translator. “I don’t think I had the command of the four pitches where I wanted to place them. I think that’s the main reason why I said it was a bad outing for me.”
Jimmy Cordero followed Brito and got the next four outs, Wandy Peralta allowed Dylan Moore’s pinch hit homer in the eighth and Michael King put two on in the ninth. Tommy Kahnle allowed Kelenic’s sacrifice fly before finishing for his sixth career save.
SERVAIS MUM ON COLE
Seattle manager Scott Servais declined to answer a question about Gerrit Cole wagging his finger 15 times Tuesday night after striking out Caballero to end the seventh inning.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Mariners: SS J.P. Crawford was held out after bruising his right shoulder when Harrison Bader stole second in the second inning Tuesday.
Yankees: LHP Carlos Rodón (strained left forearm, sore back) said he felt fine and his fastball was between 91 and 95 mph after allowing one run over three innings for Double-A Somerset against New Hampshire Tuesday in his first game since two-inning spring training outing against Atlanta on March 5. Rodón is expected to make a second rehab start Sunday. … DH/OF Willie Calhoun exited after his final at-bat with a left quad injury and will have further testing.
UP NEXT
Mariners RHP Bryan Woo (0-1, 7.30 ERA) opposes New York’s Domingo Germán (4-4, 4.30) in Thursday’s series finale.