New York Yankees starting pitcher CC Sabathia pitches during the second inning of a baseball game against the Detroit Tigers at Yankee Stadium in New York, Sunday, April 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

NEW YORK (AP) Yankees manager Joe Girardi was hoping CC Sabathia would give one of those performances that has made him one of the most dependable pitchers in baseball - his bullpen really needed a break.

The ace obliged.

Sabathia steadied New York's rocky rotation with eight sharp innings, Alex Rodriguez passed Willie Mays for eighth on the career RBIs list and the Yankees beat the Detroit Tigers 6-2 on Sunday despite leaving an astonishing 14 men on base in the first six innings.

''It just feels good to go out there and give those guys a rest,'' Sabathia said of a 'pen that had thrown 73 1-3 innings entering the game, third most in the AL.

A-Rod drove in two runs for 1,904 RBIs without hitting the ball out of the infield. According to information provided by the Yankees from Elias, he is eighth in major league history.

He singled on a dribbler down the third base line with the bases loaded in the second, the Yankees' only hit in six plate appearances with three men on. Chris Stewart slid under catcher Gerald Laird's tag on Rodriguez's grounder to short in the seventh.

Curtis Granderson homered in the fourth inning - barely. He had to stop between second and third to look back after center fielder Austin Jackson nearly made a spectacular catch above the wall in right-center.

Granderson also walked with the bases loaded to force in the game's first run in the second, one of a career-high seven walks by Detroit starter Max Scherzer (1-3).

The Yankees walked nine times and left 15 on base overall, but won the three-game series. Detroit has lost eight of 10.

''We were really fortunate to have a shot in that game the way the game was going,'' Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. ''In this ballpark, with a lineup like that, normally that doesn't happen. And it won't happen.''

Andruw Jones homered in the eighth. He pinch ran for Nick Swisher in the third after the right fielder left with a tight left hamstring following a walk.

Swisher has a low grade strain and will be out several days. Giradi says it's not serious enough for a trip to the disabled list.

With New York's bullpen taxed by Freddy Garcia's horrid 1 2-3 innings start on Saturday, Manager Girardi said before the game, ''I would love to get a good seven or eight strong innings out of CC.''

Sabathia (3-0) came through. He gave up a double in the first then retired 10 in a row before Prince Fielder, his former teammate at Milwaukee, hit his first home run in the Bronx and third this year overall with two outs in the fourth.

The big lefty had little trouble with the Tigers - all except for Fielder and his nemesis Miguel Cabrera, who hit a long RBI double in the sixth inning to close it to 3-2. Cabrera is 10 for 19 against Sabathia.

Sabathia struggled early to a 5.27 ERA on a staff with a 6.37 ERA, 29th in majors, entering Sunday. Garcia was dropped from the rotation before Sunday's game and rookie David Phelps will get a start before the expected return of Andy Pettitte in mid-May.

But Sabathia was sharp this time, yielding four hits and striking out eight. He walked two.

''When you have your ace on the mound and you talk about trying to win all the series and you're tied 1-1 you feel pretty good going into that day,'' Girardi said..

Fielder homered to close the score to 2-1 before Granderson matched him in the bottom of the fourth.

With one out, Granderson connected but Jackson made a long run and leaped where the outfield wall meets a fence that separates fans from the New York bullpen in right-center. The former Yankees minor leaguer who was sent to Detroit in the trade for Granderson had the ball in his glove but momentum carried the glove into that fence, knocking the ball loose for Granderson's eighth homer.

''I didn't see what happened right away,'' Granderson said.

Despite all the walks and seven hits in 4 2-3 innings, Scherzer got away with allowing just three runs.

Luke Putkonen made his major league debut with the bases loaded and two outs in fifth. He got Granderson to ground out to second base then received a bunch of fist bumps when he returned to the dugout.

''To be honest with you, that was the last thing I wanted to do, but sometimes it doesn't want to work out the way you want to,'' Leyland said of bringing in Putkonen. ''I was hoping (Scherzer) could get through the inning and I could start the kid in an inning.''

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