NEW YORK -- By the end of Saturday's massacre at the new Yankee Stadium, it was difficult to tell who was more fatigued: the arms in the Yankees bullpen or the people behind the manual scoreboards in the outfield.

The Indians blasted the Yankees and starting pitcher Chien-Ming Wang in a 22-4 rout that was beamed on national television, and featured the worst inning in Yankees' franchise history. Wang teamed up with reliever Anthony Claggett (making his big league debut) to surrender a franchise record 14 runs on 13 hits in the second inning, which lasted 37 excruciating minutes.The last time the Indians scored that many runs in a frame was in 1950 against the Philadelphia Athletics. The last time a big-league team scored 14 runs in an inning was the Boston Red Sox back in 2003.

Wang's performance -- which resembled batting practice, only the balls were hit harder -- was particularly frightening.

Wang lasted just 1 1/3 innings, allowing eight hits and eight earned runs, a performance that will again trigger questions about his health. He's allowed 23 runs in six innings this season. He is only the second pitcher -- joining Baltimore's Hayden Penn in 2006 -- to allow seven or more runs in three straight starts to begin a season.

In the Yankees' six losses this season, four have come after allowing double-digits runs.