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Ace Lee vs. Pro Pettitte In Game 3 Of ALCS

NEW YORK (AP / WCBS 880) - Cliff Lee's left arm has been the most dominant force in baseball during the past two postseasons.

Now, all that October success has earned him another matchup with the New York Yankees.

"They're basically an All-Star team. From top to bottom, they have threats everywhere," Lee said. "I'm not going to get intimidated."

LISTEN: Previews from WCBS 880 Sports Director Jared Max

With the best-of-seven AL championship series tied at one apiece, the scene shifts to Yankee Stadium for Game 3 on Monday night, when a pair of pressure-proven pitchers will be back in the spotlight.

Lee is a spectacular 6-0 with a 1.44 ERA and three complete games in seven postseason starts the last two years. He gets the ball for the Texas Rangers against Andy Pettitte, who has an outstanding October resume of his own. The longtime Yankees lefty is going for his 20th postseason win.

"Obviously, it's a great matchup," New York manager Joe Girardi said Sunday, when the Yankees and Rangers worked out under blue skies in the Bronx. "Before we played Game 1, all the talk was about Game 3."

Coming off the first home playoff win in the franchise's 50-season history, the Rangers are back on the road — where they're unbeaten in these playoffs. Texas won all three first-round games at AL East champion Tampa Bay, including a pair of masterpieces by Lee.

Next, he'll try to join Orlando Hernandez and Orel Hershiser as the only pitchers to win their first seven postseason decisions. Hernandez opened 8-0 for the Yankees from 1998-2000, while Hershiser went 7-0 with the Los Angeles Dodgers and Cleveland Indians from 1985-95.

"Regardless of what's happened in the past or what other people expect of me, I expect as much out of myself or more," Lee said. "So I don't look at it any different than I would any other game. I expect to be successful."

Because of his overwhelming brilliance, most of the buzz leading up to this matchup has revolved around Lee, nearly acquired by the Yankees before Seattle traded him to Texas on July 9.

That's just fine with the 38-year-old Pettitte, who is 5-0 with a 2.88 ERA in his last nine postseason starts and always seems to come through when New York needs him most.

After missing two months with a groin injury and making only three starts in September, he pitched seven solid innings to beat Minnesota in Game 2 of the division series.

"I feel like there's not a whole lot of attention that I get anyways. It's been like that kind of my whole career," Pettitte said. "I'm kind of uncomfortable with a whole lot of attention. I want to go out and do my job, give us a chance to win that ballgame."

The high-scoring Yankees, with baseball's top offense this season, have been as overmatched by Lee as everyone else lately. They like to work pitchers and grind out at-bats, but their patient approach can be neutralized by Lee because he keeps everything on the plate.

"If he's coming out and throwing a lot of strikes, we can't be taking," Mark Teixeira said.

In his last five starts in the Bronx, Lee is 5-0 with a 1.67 ERA and two complete games, including a six-hitter in the World Series opener for the Phillies last year when he struck out 10 and gave up only an unearned run.

In fact, he won both his World Series starts for Philadelphia. New York took the other four games.

"Cliff can't do it by himself," Rangers manager Ron Washington said. "He's only human. If anything goes wrong, he's going against a ballclub that can make you pay."

Lee struggled in August, then had an injection in his aching back and took almost two weeks off before returning to face the Yankees at home on Sept. 12. He allowed two hits in eight-plus innings of a 4-1 win.

In the postseason, he's been nearly perfect, compiling 54 strikeouts while walking only six in 56 1-3 innings. He struck out 21 and did not walk a batter in two starts spanning 16 innings against the Rays.

"I would like to throw a full season without walking anyone. I know that's probably unrealistic, but if you make every single team you face swing their way around the bases, it's going to pay off in the end," said Lee, who also won the regular-season opener at new Yankee Stadium for Cleveland in April 2009.

If the wild-card Yankees have their way, this will be the last time they see the 32-year-old Lee until they start throwing money at him this offseason, when he can become a free agent.

But if the Rangers win Monday night, New York would need to take the next three in a row to advance without facing him in a decisive Game 7 at Texas.

"We've faced a lot of pitchers throughout the years that have had great reputations. Reputation doesn't win games," Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter said. "You still have to go out there and pitch."

Nobody knows that better than Pettitte. At 19-9 with a 3.87 ERA, he holds major league records for wins, starts (41) and innings (256) in the postseason.

"He's been through it so many times, does not become rattled, knows how to prepare for this type of game," Girardi said. "Experience is an important thing when it comes to this time of year, because you don't expect Andy to get too hyped up. He'll be the same guy that he is during the regular season."

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press.

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