MLB

A-Rod back in Yankees' starting lineup for Game 1 of ALCS

Alex Rodriguez has returned to the Yankees' starting lineup for their AL championship series opener against Detroit on Saturday night but has been dropped to sixth in the batting order.

Slugger dropped to 6th in New York's batting order

Alex Rodriguez of the New York Yankees was 2 for 16 with no RBIs in the division series against Baltimore. (Alex Trautwig/Getty Images)

Alex Rodriguez returned to the Yankees' starting lineup for their AL championship series opener against Detroit on Saturday night, dropped to sixth in the batting order.

Rodriguez was 2-for-16 with no RBIs in the division series against Baltimore, going hitless in 12 at-bats against right-handed pitchers with nine strikeouts. Manager Joe Girardi pinch hit for him in Game 3 and 4.

"This is a guy we know can do a lot of damage," Girardi said. "I talk about sometimes going with my gut and evaluating what I see and different things you take into account when you made the lineup up, talk to people, and I think he's raring to go."

The 37-year-old third baseman had not hit as low as sixth since Joe Torre batted him eighth in the fourth and final game of the 2006 AL division series against the Tigers, according to STATS LLC. He went 0-for-3. A-Rod last hit sixth in Game 2 that year against Detroit, going 0-for-4 with three strikeouts.

Detroit has four right-handers in its rotation. Rodriguez entered the series 1-for-9 in his regular and post-season career against Game 1 starter Doug Fister, 0-for-3 against Anibal Sanchez, 8-for-30 with three homers against Justin Verlander and 1-for-12 against Max Scherzer.

Rodriguez is 10-for-66 (.152) with no homers and six RBIs in post-season play over the last three years. He hasn't homered in 84 at-bats since Sept. 14.

"We need this guy to be Alex," Girardi said. "That's the bottom line. If we want to make some noise, we need this guy to be Alex."

Girardi picked Hiroki Kuroda to start Game 2 on Sunday, when Detroit goes with Anibal Sanchez. The 37-year-old Kuroda has never started on short rest in his big league career, STATS said.

"I'm not too concerned. I prepare myself as the next game that I'm going to pitch is my last," he said through a translator. "I have always taken that approach, so I am just going to do the same for tomorrow."

Phil Hughes is slated to start against AL Cy Young Award and MVP winner Justin Verlander in Game 3 on Tuesday in Detroit, with CC Sabathia down for Game 4 the following night against Max Scherzer. Kuroda could pitch on short rest again if there is sixth game.

Girardi decided not to pitch Sabathia on short rest in Game 3, but might bring him back on three days' rest for a seventh game on Oct. 21, which Verlander likely would start for Detroit.

"You want to bring him on short rest now? Or if you need to do it later, do you want to do it later?" Girardi said.