MLB

Yankees shut out Angels; A-Rod homers

Alex Rodriguez hit a milestone home run. Hiroki Kuroda was pinstripe sharp in his Yankee Stadium debut. Even recently retired teammate Jorge Posada joined in the festivities.

Ah, there’s no place like home for the Yankees.

BOX SCORE

A-Rod hit his 630th home run and tied Ken Griffey Jr. for fifth place on the career list, Kuroda pitched neatly into the ninth inning and the Yankees beat the Angels 5-0 Friday in their 110th home opener.

Nick Swisher lined a three-run double off Ervin Santana (0-2) in the first inning soon after Posada threw out the ceremonial first pitch and hugged all his old pals.

“I think everybody showed how we feel about Georgie. I think we did feed off that,” Rodriguez said. “We also fed off the fans. Playing here in our stadium we’ve always played very well here.”

Curtis Granderson added a Yankee Stadium-friendly homer to right field. They have won four in a row overall and 14 of itheir past 15 home openers.

“Something kind of clicked when we got on that plane to leave Florida,” Swisher said of the Yankees’ streak after an 0-3 start against Tampa Bay.

Albert Pujols singled in four at-bats. The slumping Angels slugger is 6 for 27 (.222) with no home runs this season. Los Angeles has lost three straight.

“Albert is going to be there, but we have to be more than Albert, and we are,” Angels manager Mike Scioscia said.

Rodriguez came in hitting .174 (4 for 23) without a homer or RBI in the first six games, but got three hits.

Rodriguez singled in the first and lined the first pitch of the third into the netting over monument park in straightaway center field, tying him with Griffey, his former teammate in Seattle. Rodriguez trails Barry Bonds (762), Hank Aaron (755), Babe Ruth (714) and Willie Mays (660) on the career list.

“Griff is special to me because we came up together,” Rodriguez said. “He was a teammate, he was a brother and a mentor all rolled in one. It was a special day for me.”

Kuroda (1-1) gave up five hits and exited after Bobby Abreu’s infield single that led off the ninth. He struck out six and walked two.

In his first start since leaving the Dodgers, Kuroda struggled, allowing six runs at Tampa Bay. Despite saying he would have butterflies in his initial start at home, Kuroda worked through the Angels’ lineup and didn’t allow a runner to reach second until the fifth inning. He twice induced double-play grounders to wipe out singles.

Kuroda received an ovation from the 49,386 fans as he walked off the field. It was the first time he had pitched into the ninth inning in a year.

“I always try to have the same approach no matter where I pitch or when I pitch,” Kuroda said through a translator. “I was able to pitch with confidence.”

Yankees manager Joe Girardi flipped his Nos. 3 and 4 batters in the order to separate Granderson and Robinson Cano, two lefties. Girardi said the Yankees will use this lineup against right-handers, when Granderson bats second instead of switch-hitting Swisher, who drops to sixth.

Swisher was in the right spot Friday, coming to bat with the bases loaded and two outs in the first. Rodriguez singled and stole second, Cano and Mark Teixeira walked and Swisher hit a drive that one-hoped the wall in center field.

Swisher’s previous at-bat was a big one, too. He crushed a two-run homer in the 10th inning Wednesday to help the Yankees win 6-4 in Baltimore.

Santana gave up five earned runs for a second straight start. He walked three and struck out five in six innings.

Pujols grounded into a double play in the ninth against David Robertson, who got the final three outs.

Making his first visit to the new ballpark in the Bronx, the three-time NL MVP said hours before the first pitch: “No disrespecting the history of this organization, the Yankees, but I take it like every other park. … At the end, it’s just a game.”

Unfortunately, this game has been too much like the rest for the Angels early this season. Los Angeles has lost five of six and is 2-5.

Pujols struck out looking at a 77 mph curveball in his third time up against Kuroda, his fellow former National Leaguer. Pujols dropped the bat to his side in frustration and turned to briefly question home plate umpire Mike DiMuro’s call.

“He threw a pretty good game. He kept the ball down and made his pitch when he needs to, when he got in trouble, which wasn’t that many times,” Pujols said of Kuroda. “He was keeping us off balance.”