Masahiro Tanaka gives up home run

ByANDREW MARCHAND
March 6, 2014, 4:05 PM

— -- CLEARWATER, Fla. -- In his first exhibition start for the New York Yankees, Masahiro Tanaka allowed his first home run of the spring and finished a three-inning stint against the Philadelphia Phillies on Thursday with two hits and one run allowed.

After a delay of more than 90 minutes because of downpours and a tornado warning, the 25-year-old Tanaka nearly finished his day unscathed. However, with two outs in the third, Tanaka surrendered a home run to Phillies leadoff man Freddy Galvis on a 3-1 pitch.

Thus far in the spring, Tanaka has pitched five innings, giving up one run and four hits. The Phillies were the opponent in both of his appearances.

Tanaka took care of the Phillies in order in the first inning, working ahead by establishing a 90-plus mph fastball. Of his 11 pitches, eight were strikes. He ended the inning by striking out Chase Utley with his signature cutter in the dirt that the five-time All-Star swung over.

In the second, Tanaka showed the ability to escape trouble. Following a one-out double by Marlon Byrd, he got Domonic Brown to ground out to first and Carlos Ruiz to fly out to right.

Tanaka threw 41 pitches, 25 for strikes. Known for his preciseness with seven pitches, he has yet to walk a batter in Florida.

He made his debut Saturday against the Phillies in Tampa, Fla., entering in the fifth inning and facing mostly backups. He threw two scoreless innings, allowing two hits and striking out three.

Prior to Thursday's game, Tanaka looked forward to starting so he could face more major leaguers.

"I'll be able to face some of the better, or some of the first-string batters," Tanaka said through an interpreter. "I'd like to go up there and see how I can pitch against those batters."

Preceding the first pitch Thursday, there was a tornado warning and a downpour that washed out most of the other exhibition games in Florida. The Yankees and Phillies waited out the storm.

The Yankees signed Tanaka in January for seven years and $155 million. They also paid a $20 million posting fee to Tanaka's Japanese club, the Rakuten Golden Eagles.