For 13 innings this weekend, the Colorado Rockies looked quite capable of competing with the New York Yankees.

Then, everything unraveled.

The Yankees scored 10 times in the fifth inning Saturday afternoon — a comprehensive collapse for the home side in a 13-1 loss in front of 43,186 at Coors Field.

“We didn’t get the outcome we wanted, but we’ve still got a game tomorrow to win the series,” Rockies first baseman Michael Toglia said. “I think we just flush tonight and get ready for tomorrow. That’s it.”

Fourteen batters came to the plate in the top of the fifth. The Yankees collected seven hits and three walks while dropping Colorado to 9-43.

Rockies starting pitcher Kyle Freeland was officially charged with four unearned runs in the inning, but all seven he allowed were of his making. The key play that broke things open was an error on Freeland after he threw the ball down the right field line trying to get Trent Grisham on a ground ball between him and first base.

“My internal clock wasn’t right on it,” Freeland said. “I thought I didn’t have that much time, when in reality I had a lot of time. … The game sped on me in that situation. It created a pattern for myself and it snowballed on me.”

The Yankees did all of that damage while Aaron Judge was limited to an intentional walk and a strikeout. There was the Freeland error, a wild pitch from reliever Angel Chivilli and second baseman Adael Amador’s glove flying high into Colorado’s thin air after a line drive went over his head into the right-center gap.

Amador had a brief conversation with the second base umpire after the play. Had his glove hit the ball in play, it would have been an automatic three bases. Amador remained in the game.

“I didn’t have the glove tight on my hand,” Amador said via a translator. “The glove kind of keeps falling. It always falls. I didn’t have it tight and I jumped up. When I jumped up, the glove slipped off.”

Amador’s double-play partner, shortstop Ezequiel Tovar, said he spoke to Amador and confirmed it was not intentional.

Freeland’s final line, as he dropped to 0-7 on the season: Eight runs allowed on nine hits and three walks in 4 2/3 innings.

For the second time in this series, Judge sent one into the outfield seats for a solo home run in the top of the first inning. But, as Rockies interim manager Warren Schaeffer noted with his club’s plan when pitching to the reigning AL MVP, having no one on base when he’s up is important.

At the time, that felt important. By the time Judge struck out as the 14th and final batter in the fifth, it had long become a moot point for this day.

Yankees ace Max Fried entered Saturday as the co-leader in the majors with four pick-offs, and he added two more in the first three innings. Jordan Beck and Aaron Schunk both singled off the Cy Young contender, but both were sent back to the dugout after Fried fooled them. Beck took off for second base, while Fried just froze Schunk.

Fried pitched into the eighth, allowing the lone run on six hits and a walk. He improved to 7-0, and his ERA ended the day where it began at 1.29. The second-loudest ovation, behind Judge’s home run, came as Fried walked to the visitors’ dugout at the end of his outing.

The most disappointing moment of the day for another Yankees-heavy crowd came when Judge was replaced in the bottom of the eighth inning, depriving them of another chance to see him bat in the top of the ninth.

Pablo Reyes doubled in Judge’s place, collecting the 20th of the Yankees’ 21 hits.

The strong defense that helped Colorado claim a win Friday night also helped Freeland limit the damage in the early going. Judge’s league-leading 18th home run came after Trent Grisham grounded into a double play. The Rockies starter worked around a single and a walk in the second with the help of another double play.

Then the New York offense erupted, and it was all for naught.

“For me, after we give up that 10-spot, I am thinking, if I remember, I think it was two years ago when the Angels came to town and they beat us by (24) runs one day, but we still won the series,” Schaeffer said. “For me, that’s all that matters. We’re going to look to win a series tomorrow.”