Cody Bellinger’s bat, Will Warren’s sharp start fuel Yankees' 8-4 victory vs. Giants

Cody Bellinger had run into bad luck of late.

The Yankees center fielder missed two games at the beginning of the month when his lower back tightened up — an issue he’s dealt with from time to time.

He sat out again on Tuesday when a batch of room-service chicken wings in Detroit left him with food poisoning.

Bellinger entered Saturday with three hits in his last 31 at-bats, dropping his season average to .189.

“A little bit disjointed here to start, with the back and the food poisoning, [but] Cody’s gonna bang,” manager Aaron Boone said before Saturday’s game against the San Francisco Giants. “He’ll get it rolling.”

That proved to be prophetic.

Bellinger delivered a pair of run-scoring hits in Saturday’s 8-4 victory in the Bronx, helping to back Yankees rookie starter Will Warren as he picked up his first MLB win.

On a chilly, rainy afternoon, Bellinger started the scoring in the first inning when he struck an RBI triple against flame-throwing Giants starter Jordan Hicks. Bellinger then scored on a Paul Goldschmidt sacrifice fly, putting the Yankees up, 2-0.

With the score tied, 2-2, in the bottom of the fifth, Bellinger lined a go-ahead RBI single against Hicks to kick off a five-run inning for the Yankees.

Bellinger finished 2 for 5 with two RBIs and two runs for his second multi-hit and second multi-RBI game with the Yankees (8-6), who acquired him in an offseason trade with the Chicago Cubs. He had three hits and four RBIs on March 29, when he was part of the Yankees’ historic nine-homer barrage against the Milwaukee Brewers.

Bellinger’s bat came in support of Warren, who held the Giants (10-4) to two runs on two hits in five innings.

Behind a crisp, mid-90s fastball and a well-placed sweeper he used to freeze hitters, Warren recorded six strikeouts and elicited 14 swings and misses. His lone blemish came in the second inning, when Wilmer Flores clubbed a two-run home run.

In the top of the fifth, after Warren walked No. 9 hitter Tyler Fitzgerald with two outs, Boone stuck with the rookie right-hander. Warren rewarded his manager’s trust by striking out Mike Yastrzemski for the third time in as many at-bats.

Saturday marked the eighth career start for Warren, the Yankees’ No. 2 pitching prospect, who made the season-opening rotation amid a rash of injuries. Warren, 25, went 0-3 with a 10.32 ERA last season but is now 1-0 with a 5.14 ERA through three starts this year.

He became eligible for Saturday’s win thanks to the Yankees’ fifth-inning rally, which, after Bellinger’s tie-breaking single, also included an RBI double from Goldschmidt; a sacrifice fly by Anthony Volpe; and a two-run single from Jasson Domínguez.

That hit snapped an 0-for-15 slide for Domínguez, who added a seventh-inning infield single and finished 2 for 4.

Ben Rice added a solo home run — his fourth homer of the season — in the bottom of the sixth.

Aaron Judge went 2 for 4 with a walk and two runs. He is 14 for 28 (.500) in eight career games against the Giants, whom he grew up rooting for as a kid in Linden, Calif.

New Yankees closer Devin Williams, who entered Saturday with a 12.00 ERA through four appearances, worked around a leadoff walk and an ensuing double to pitch a scoreless ninth in a non-save situation.

Saturday’s win evened the three-game series for the Yankees, who suffered a rain-shortened 9-1 loss on Friday night. They will go for the series win on Sunday afternoon, when Carlos Rodón (1-2, 5.19 ERA) is set to match up against Giants ace Logan Webb (1-0, 1.89 ERA).

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