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September 30, 2011

2011 ALDS: NY Yankees v. Detroit Tigers/Yankee Preview

By Vagabond Guru

2011 American League Division Series - Yankees v. Tigers

Bombers and Bruins revisit their 2006 tilt (Les Tigres won 3-1), sans creepy Kenny Rogers, Mayor Bozo - Sean Casey (Tigers), Torre on fumes in Da Bronx. Granderson is a Yankee, Austin Jackson is in the bigs for the Tigers and talent is all over the field on both sides. The Leyland squad of today is amongst the most respected of Yankee opponents and there is nothing but good competition ON the field in the air between these two. Should be nothing edgy but the tension of win/loss, a beautiful thang, in Guru's estimation. Taking a look at the squads and the flow from The Aerie, reasonably sober (its 2PM).

Pumpage is required.

AL Eastern Division Champion New York Yankees (97-65) Preview


'I'll take Manhattan, The Bronx and Staten Island too...

Yogi Berra, letting his Met heart (Queens) and Dodger (Brooklyn) memories cede 40% of our terrain.


Roster Moves

Yankees left RH Relief Pitcher Hector Noesi off the ALDS Roster, having been thrust into spot starts twice recently and seeing his ERA jump from 3.42 to 4.47 in September, he got the dustoff. Cory Wade and Luis Ayala, who turned in sub 2.00 ERAs right up to their mutual meltdown in Game 162 against the Rays, will occupy the final two spots in the pen. Also left off were Bartolo Colon, whose velocity dropped from 96 to 90 as year progressed and whose short relief possibility is met by Hughes and AJ. Colon is terrific and should be asked back, in a reduced role that saves something of that magic for now, when it would have helped. Austin Romine sits, but has probably moved ahead of Francisco Cervelli (out with concussion) for backup job next year, Montero looks too good to sit and Russell Martin tough to let go, with Gary Sanchez moving up through minors as well, these are chips Yankees must deal in '12 and choose who will go forward as the Catching tandem (likely to be Martin/Montero, at least for next year). Two of Romine/Sanchez/Cervelli must go.


Start spreading the news...

Whitey Ford, talking about the consistent quality of Yankee pitching and Astoria tail.


Starters

CC Sabathia (L) 19-8, 3.00
Ivan Nova (R) 16-4, 3.70
Freddy Garcia (R) 12-8, 3.62

Teeth gnashing about Yankee starters was a given coming into 2011. With Andy Pettitte hitting bible camps, and Manny Banuelos/Dellin Bettances lurking, most looked at retread ancients like Bartolo Colon and Freddy Garcia as half season answers, at best. Colon did diminish with time but provided dominance early and Garcia, helped by some DL downtime, seemed solid later in September in a shutdown start over hungry Tampa Bay earning Game Three shot in this series.

Ideal mix of styles for these three between CC's Lefty Power, Nova's Righty power and Garcia's Righty Junkatron mixamatic, Tigers will need to be in adjustment mode from game to game.

CC has looked bored of late, and has trouble locating when he doesn't bend his back (look at his waist and its easy to understand), if his pitches are darting to the glove - he's near unhittable, if he opens up and leaves a lot of stuff high, he will walk guys early and go on guts. He can beat lots of teams that way, but will need his 'A' stuff for Verlander in Game one.

Nova has not lost since June 3 (12 straight) and can be casually dominant. He struggled last year with surrendering leads and maintaining his stuff through middle innings, this year he was shutdown when given the advantage and his head is as solid as any rookie Pitcher can have. If Yankees get to Fister early, comeback on Nova will be tough in Game two.

Freddy is known to all, will seem to be Moyeresque after two days of 97 mph from either side, and look to keep Yankees in it through six.

CC would go on short rest, famously his forte, if Game 4 and Nova is Game 5 choice.


Exit life, enter night...

Mo, saying the words he's laid down on teams 603 times in the Regs and 42 times in the Playoffs - buh bye.


BullPen

AJ Burnett
Phil Hughes
Cory Wade
Luis Ayala
Boone Logan
Rafael Soriano
David Robertson
Mariano Rivera

Bullpen is the Yankees strength in 2011, something that seemed impossible when Joba Chamberlain blew out his arm, Pedro Feliciano broke down for good and Soriano, Hughes had arm ailments deep into the season. Wade and Ayala gave Yankees terrific middle inning work all season before their spectacular failures against Rays the other night, both should see little or no time against Tigers - if either IS in the game, chances are it's a striped sort of deal for that game.

And not pinstripes.

Hughes is able to dominate for 3-4 inning stretches, just cannot maintain velocity required of a starter, he can be electric in the Pen as evidenced by his '09 Ring. AJ Burnett is similar, though his problem is concentration on the task at hand, he can strike out any hitter with top stuff still and is ideal as a change of pace agent in either CC's or Freddy's starts. Logan is erratic, dominant, then wild, then mediocre, he will be used for 1-2 lefties exclusively. Soriano has pitched better of late, BOMB to Matt Joyce in Game 161 notwithstanding. He has electric stuff, but, like AJ seems to lapse in decision making at key moments - solid 7th inning sort, if needed, but he might defer to Hughes here. Robertson has been best Reliever in MLB this season, with surreal strikeout stuff and low ERA. He has been vulnerable to nerves in the past, and walks too many (35), if you can really bitch about a season with 1.08 ERA, 100 Ks in 66 Innings, 40 hits and .170 batting average against...I won't of course, unless he walks a few and gives up a pop to the pip.

Mo is Mo, his velocity actually is up this year to 93-94 after several seasons 91ish (when announcers refer to his declining velocity, they mean mid '90s and, lets face it, if you throw harder now, you were a hatchling in those days). His stuff and composure are still electric, his great weakness is simply his longevity - veteran Tigers like Cabrera, Peralta and Martinez all know his stuff sooo well and have had some success in past. Still, its Mo and Yankees will take him five times to win three, while expecting him to win 'em all. Mo was sub 2.00 again, with .215 average against and only E-I-G-H-T walks in his 64 games, only six of them unintentional.


I'm catching a greyhound, on that Hudson river line...

Thurman Munson, talking with Heavenly Travel Agent on how he would get to game.


Lineup

Derek Jeter. SS (r)
Curtis Granderson. CF (l)
Robinson Cano. 2B (l)
Alex Rodriguez. 3B (r)
Mark Teixiera. 1B (s)
Nick Swisher. RF (s)
Jorge Posada. DH (s)
Russell Martin. C (r)
Brett Gardner. LF (l)

Jeter hit .327 after his June DL stint, with good power and slugging to all fields. His defense has been strong as well.

Granderson had a terrible September, after being a likely MVP through August, he strikes out too damn much (but will make a better candidate than Jimmy McMillan, Mayoral aspirant on the 'Rent-is-too-damn-high- ticket), when his big brain and solid character hit the political scene. His breakthrough dominant season should insure that will have to wait. He has gigantic power to RF, is a stolen base/extra base threat at all times and runs down everything in CF.

Cano is the best hitter on the Yankees, with line to line thump from the left side. Making his first steps into the #3 hole he should have inherited from Strikeout prone Teixiera in '10, Cano should be avoided and Tigers will let Alex prove he still can be a force with his battered body.

Alex is hurt, his knee, his thumb, his shoulder...he looked incredible in Spring, but that guy has not been able to shine through since all the pain set in. Yankees will have modest expectations, Tigers will go right at him. If Alex is Alex, the Yankees probably cannot be denied. Without him, they may not get full value of Cano thump.

Tex finally broke out with two BOMBS in game 162, after struggling for all of September. He is a shell of the hitter he was in '09, morphing into Jason Giambi style power and popups into the shift interspersed with two K's per game. He has hit .125 in his two Yankee postseasons and does not make enough contact to be dependable when a single is whats needed. Had a swinging chopper to the Shifted 3B at deep SS the other day, which was an easy infield hit and thought, for a brief moment, the ego would come under control ('must hit HR') and the light would come on. Next at-bat, bases loaded, single would break open a win...Tex popped up the first pitch with a Herculean swing. Hit or miss here, much better from #5 than #3 in the Yankee lineup.

Swisher had a nice comeback from abysmal early season struggles Left Handed, he was one of the best hitters in AL through the summer but tweaked his arm late season and has shown less power since. Seems to be making better contact than previous Playoff years, so might be in for an upside surprise if feeling good physically.

Posada is still strong against Righties, which is all they use him for since his RH bat is no longer MLB able. He has shown consistent power, but less contact ability and teams will attack him. Sitting in the Matsui role of '09, knowing his Yankee days are waning, but having a champion's heart and a boppers stick. He will get two starts to show thump, and likely sit for Montero in game three if he struggles.

Russell Martin is another guy (like Swish, Grandy, Alex, Tex) whose health is the key to his offense. He has serious thump from RH side but purely a guess hitter, who will take his shots off Verlander and Fister and hope to get lucky and run into one deep. They will see this bottom third of Yankee order as a place to get quick outs, and Martin must give good at bats to lengthen pitch counts.

Gardner is hitting more of late, after weeks of brutal offense. He is slap hitter with occasional jumpy thump and is speed incarnate on basepaths. If Brett is on base a lot, Yankees will win. If Posada/Martin/Gardner struggle to contribute, Tiger hurlers will go deep into games.


Peanuts Here!

Anonymous


Bench

Eric Chavez 1B/3B (l)
Andruw Jones OF (r)
Chris Dickerson OF (r) - Pinch Runner/Defensive Replacement for Swisher
Jesus Montero C/DH (r)
Eduardo Nunez IF (r)

This is the best group of Yankee bench players in some time. Chavez has been solid all year, Lefty bat is reliable and, if Alex can't go, his 3B glove is still elite. Likely in Lefty PH role for this series. Andruw was on the Lance Berkman (Fat Elvis) plan from 2010, arriving in Da Bronx somewhat lax about approach, but getting into it when he hung around workout fiend Manager Girardi and other detail obsessed pinstripers. His thump has been huge of late and his Defense improved when he shed some of the stove (imagine that?). RH Pinch Hitter duties are his. Nunez is terrific Offensive player with thump, purely insurance this series and glove is too erratic to see playoff action. Dickerson can fly and chuck, won't hold a bat but can make things happen with legs and arm if called upon to run/field.

Jesus Montero is the difference maker in this series. Already he is the second best hitter on the Yankees (Cano). He is a RH with line to line thump and tape measure power, great eye and poise, a decade plus sort of impact player in his first MLB Month. He got knicked on the fingers in 8th Inning of Game 162, so might not have healthy hands, but will likely sit first two games anyway to give Posada a chance to contribute. Girardi and club realize this kid is gifted and will turn to him at some point in this playoff run to put them over the top, will be hitting cleanup opening day 2013,

Tigers match up well with Yankees and this series is a legitimate tossup, it provides Yankees with much better first round test than perennial visit to Twin Cities and a hard won victory over Detroit would be a springboard to dispatching either Rays or Rangers in next round. That is the call here, but purely a homer hitter here, so take it as a tossaroni and see me at its conclusion with kudos/brickbats as appropo.





November 06, 2009

2009 New York Yankees: 'Everyone knows they play to win!'

By Matthew Storey

'Here come the YANKEES
Let's get behind and cheer the YANKEES
They're gonna learn to fear the YANKEES
Everyone knows they play to win, cause...

They're the New York YANKEES'

Yankees theme song, 1966.

When I was a kid, this song used to signal the start of the Yankee games on WPIX, channel 11, and I learned its lyrics and knew them cold by the end of the 1970 season.

But my Yankees, those Yankees, didn't 'play to win' or win much of anything, the New York Mets were the World Champions and the talk of the town. I loved the Yankees though, so I read about Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe D, MIckey and Yogi...and I learned that being a Yankee fan wasn't about this team, this year - it was about the FRANCHISE, about all the Yankee teams over all the years.

They had three glimmers of hope on those teams, a classy Center Fielder named Bobby Murcer and a fiery Ohio kid catcher who was the 1970 Rookie of the Year, Thurman Munson and a left handed Closer with a bushy mustache they got from the Red Sox. Murcer was a connection to Mickey and past glory, Munson and Sparky Lyle, the first cornerstones of future glory.

In 1973, George Steinbrenner bought the team and began to live up to the song. He made it clear, from the start, they're the New York Yankees and they WILL play to win. He tore down the beaten up old ballpark I loved and put in a state of the art version, hired '50s Yankee hero, Billy Martin, to manage, traded for talented young players on the rise (Graig Nettles, Chris Chambliss, Willie Randolph, Mickey Rivers, Lou Piniella, Ed Figueroa, Mike Torrez) and a big Free Agent pitcher, 'Catfish' Hunter, by 1976, their first year in the New Yankee Stadium, they matched the accomplishment of the 1923 Yankees who opened the original, by winning the AL Pennant on a 9th Inning Walk-off HR by Chambliss.

They got swept that year in the World Series, by the incredible Big Red Machine and Yankee fans hardly cared, they were young and exciting. But Steinbrenner cared, the hadn't WON. He went out and signed the best power hitter in Baseball, Reggie Jackson and added ANOTHER closer, Goose Gossage, to their existing Cy Young winner, Sparky. Fans all over baseball cringed - this was overkill.

The Yankees won the next two World Series, Goose and Reggie are in the Hall of Fame. Steinbrenner, who bought the team for 10M in 1973, had a brand new ballpark, a two time champion and the best brand in the game by 1978, a year when the Yankees stormed back from 14 1/2 games behind to catch the Red Sox and defeat them when a guy named Bucky Dent went yard and Yaz popped up into Nettles glove.

Munson died in a plane crash the next year, 1979 and George flew into a rage when his 103 Win 1980 team got beat on a George Brett HR off Goose, and fired Manager Dick Howser. They went to one more series, in 1981, but lost this time to the Dodgers. Winfield was the new Free Agent, Don Mattingly the next homegrown hero, but the team stumbled through a series of missteps in the '80s, Steinbrenner eventually pushing too hard and getting suspended for two years. The break gave him a chance to take a step back and that 1970 Yankee Shortstop, Gene 'Stick' Michael, used the opportunity to stuff the Yankee pipeline with draft picks and young talent. Yankee lifer Buck Showalter was brought in to teach fundamentals and captain Don Mattingly was joined by Paul O'Neill from the Reds, David Cone from the Blue Jays and the Yankees were back in the Playoffs. But, the Boss was back now, and when the Seattle Mariners ousted the Yankees, that was not winning. Close don't count.

Derek Jeter, Andy Pettitte, Bernie Williams, Jorge Posada all came up from the system. Tino Martinez took over for the broken down Mattingly, veteran Catcher Joe Girardi was brought in to handle the pitching staff and a guy who'd never won anything took over for Showalter.

Guy named Joe Torre.

Yankees won it all that year, lost the next, won 3 more, lost one in brutal fashion with a 9th Inning blown save in 2001 and then lost to a young talented Marlins squad in the 2003 World Series. Red Sox came back to beat them in the 2004 ALCS, they won division titles in 2005 and 2006 but lost first round playoff series, then settled for a wildcard in 2007 and saw Torre depart. Former Catcher, Girardi came in to replace him and suffered through a playoff less 89 win season in 2008. The Steinbrenner family looked at the lost season and decided, Girardi, the Yankee core and the Yankee homegrown talent was strong enough to handle the bullpen and the lineup, but they needed more starting pitching and a 1B to replace Jason Giambi. They signed CC and AJ and Tex, got big years from Jeter, Posada, Rivera, Pettitte and newer Yankees, Robinson Cano, Melky Cabrera, Joba Chamberlain, Phil Hughes and aging free agent winners Johnny Damon and a Japanese superstar named Hideki Matsui.

They started cold, got superstar Alex Rodriguez back from injury and went on to win 103 games, sweep the Twins, beat the Angels in six and the Phillies in six more.

World Champions. Number 27 for the franchise, and #7 in the Steinbrenner era.

After all, they're the Yankees.

Everyone knows, they play to win.







October 28, 2009

2009 World Series Preview: NY Yankees vs. Philadelphia Phillies

By Matthew Storey

Finally!

After an interminable five seasons with no World Series for the Yankees, the Bronx Bombers put together a terrific 103-59 regular season, spotting the rival Red Sox and defending AL champion Rays some ground early but blowing by mid-season and finishing with a flourish. They took out the red-hot Twins in 3 well contested ALDS games and overcame some shoddy play to defeat long-time nemesis, the LA Angels, in 6 for the ALCS and the 40th Pennant in 90 Seasons (an ASTOUNDING 44%).

So, with 110-61 in the books, it is time for the new Yankee Stadium to do what the first two did (Stadium opened in 1923, Yankees won World Series, re-opened after 2 season renovation in 1976 and Yankees went to World Series for first time in 12 years, got swept but came back to win the next two) and host a World Series in its first year.

For their part, the defending World Champion Phillies ruined the dream matchup of Yankees/Dodgers, with all the built in magic of Joe Torre, Manny Ramirez and Don Mattingly returning to NYC, but they did so honestly, by thrashing the Dodgers convincingly for the 2nd straight year. LIke the Yankees, there can be no doubt these Phils earned their slot.

Competitively, the Phillies are lacking in NYC story lines (Pedro being the one interesting player from an AL standpoint) and are a genuine NL Power - they play that chippy, competitive style that will remind Yankees of Red Sox - they chatter (already Jimmy Rollins has called for Phils in 5) and all of that hoped for mutual respect we'd have seen from Torre/Girardi is lost. Charley Manuel is a comical figure, a cocky hick who makes for a tough root in these parts, but he's done one hell of a job in a place where men like Terry Francona and local legend Larry Bowa could not break through, Reliever Brett Myers is a redneck jackass who punched his wife on a Boston street but has a big arm when healthy and throttled the Yankees in May, Shane Victorino is like Nick Swisher, an attention seeking showman, but his energetic style makes things happen for the Broad Streeters...and all-time creep, '80 Manager Dallas Green actually was a Yankee manager for a year or so, probably the lowest moment in Franchise history...its a team who aren't much like the Yankees, don't have much history with the Yankees and want to grab the spotlight and the aura of winning from the Yankees. If the Phillies get under Yankee skin and draw them into confrontation, that will be to their advantage. For the Yankees, the key is to treat the Phillies as if they are anonymous, punch the clock, do your thing, ignore the opponent - that's the Yankee way and was instrumental in helping them finally overcome the Angels.

If its a fight, advantage - Phillies. If the games are played low-key, the low-key Yankees will thrive.

And there it is...the best team in the AL and the best team in the NL, what a World Series is supposed to be.

Similar construction, opposite personalities - should make for a classic!

Lets take a look at the individual matchups;

1B

Ryan Howard, Phillies LH
The engaging and majestic presence that is Ryan Howard is heading to First Ballot Hall of Fame status (as is the man who plays next to him and maybe the entire Infield on the other side), his frightening power to all fields and newfound agility on the basepaths and in the field make him a better player than the Howard who already has an MVP and a World Series rings and leads all MLB in HR/RBI since 2005. However, Howard is a dreadful hitter against quality LH pitching (.207 overall) and the Yankees will throw Southpaw starters in 4 or 5 of the potential 7 game series, one of them might be the best LH in MLB and the other one has more Postseason wins than any MLB pitcher in history, LH OR RH. He will have to stay patient and wait for a mistake and hope that the ones he catches up with will find J-Roll, Victorino and Utley on base. For all this thump and expanded fitness, Howard is an all-or-nothing sort who will strike out - look for Yankees to alternate Coke and Marte in late inning situations trying to find an advantage against him as they do with Papi in Boston.

Mark Teixeira, Yankees, SH
Teixeira is a rare commodity, a 1B whose glove is so dynamic it changes game outcomes, he saves errors, throws out runners from anywhere and is always in the right place (witness that Melky to Jeter to Teixeira relay that caught Bobby Abreu off of 2B in the ALCS). That Defensive brilliance has been in full evidence this postseason, but, at least for the first 7 games - his powerful, switch hitting Bat was absolutely NOWHERE to be found, the way it was back in April. He did get a huge 3 Run 2B late in Game Five and then was effective in Game six as well, so may be coming back to form - he needs to if the Yankees have a chance with the Phillies. For Mark, like several Yankees, he can become too HR conscious and too dependent upon catching up to a Fastball. Both the Twins and the Angels feature starters who are not flamethrowers, but who can throw strikes with off-speed and breaking stuff. Teixeira and Swisher both saw an endless series of 70 MPH slow curveballs and 80 MPH change-ups and the Philly staff is built upon similar lines - Mark needs to cut back on the power stroke and give himself a chance to stroke singles off of the junk he will be CERTAIN to see in a heavy dose from Lee, Pedro, Hamels and Blanton.

2B

Robinson Cano, Yankees, LH
Cano is a terrible cold weather player and was shut down effectively for the two freezing ALCS games in The Bronx, making two horrible errors on easy chances, but otherwise played his typically jaw-dropping Defense throughout this postseason. He has incredible range to either side, and a gun for an arm as well as the best damn pivot in MLB on Double Play balls - something that accounts greatly for Andy Pettite's resurgence. Offensively, Cano too was undone by the junk ball and the swinging for the fences mindset early on, but he is a more flexible hitter than either Swisher or Teixeira and was back to spraying effectively all over the field by the tail end of the ALCS. Cano is capable of carrying this Yankee team if he gets hot, and should be effective against all Philly starters since he is equally adept with LH or RH, heat or junk. The key for Robby is to swing at STRIKES, not expand the zone chasing and let them walk him - as they are likely to prefer pitching to Swisher and Melky hitting behind him.

Chase Utley, Phillies, LH
Utley is the only MLB 2B who probably has even more ability than Cano, but the 2009 version of Utley is a great player who is nursing some injury problems. He made two uncharacteristic errors on Double Play attempts that were costly to the Phillies and would have been devastating in a more tightly contested series, the Yankees proved against both Minnesota and the Angels, teams that might be the two best fundamentally in MLB, that if you give them extra outs - they will beat you. Utley is an all-time Great and is capable of dominating, he just doesn't appear to be moving well or driving the ball with as much authority as usual. He is still a .300 hitter with huge thump against either LH or RH pitching and requires rapt focus on every plate appearance by Yankee pitchers.

SS

Jimmy Rollins, Phillies, SH
J-Roll is the Phillies leader, his charisma, all around game, energy and smarts light up the ballpark and his trash-talking Bay Area chatter is never delivered with ugly undertones - he's not a guy to hate, or even to dislike, he wants to beat you, says so and plays hard as nails. Pure respect from the Magic Carpet. But he is not Derek Jeter, who hit a full 85 points higher, stole one fewer base in four fewer attempts and hit 3 fewer HR's, 3 that he's hit so far in the postseason, for all of his switch-hitting, dynamism and presence, Rollins hit .250 with a pathetic .296 ON-Base percentage in 2009 and the Yankees will challenge him to beat them. He can run into a pitch, as he did to open up the interleague series back in May against AJ Burnett and give the Phillies the dramatic extra-base hit as he did to defeat the Dodgers in the NLCS, but at-bat to at-bat, he is not a consistent threat this season.

Derek Jeter, Yankees, RH
Jeter is displaying his all-world ability in this postseason, maybe even more so than in previous years, which is saying a bit for a guy with 4 rings, 3 Gold Gloves, 7 seasons above .320 (11 times .300+), the alltime SS in hits, alltime Yankee in hits, alltime MLB postseason player in hits, 3rd alltime in postseason HR's, 1st in runs...he has made three game altering defensive plays thus far with sheer mental awareness, hits for big power or slap hitting situation with equal dexterity, has the big arm and makes all the plays and stole 30 bases for the 4th time (in 35 attempts) at 35. Jeter has cut back on his strikeouts since moving into the leadoff role and had an on-base percentage over .400 for the 4th time in his career, .112 points better than Rollins, which means something as leadoff men in front of the power. Rollins will engage the fans and the Yankees, psyche himself up. Jeter will remain above the fray, chilly, and waiting for the one thing that can beat the Phillies.

3B

Alex Rodriguez, Yankees, RH
Those of us who watch every inning of every Yankee game, year after year, know that Jeter and Alex carried the Yankees when those around them were being schooled by soft tossing pitching or tightening up in pressure playoff atmosphere. Its rare when two players are so locked in at the plate, on the field, on the bases at the same time and that those two would both be First Ballot Hall of Famers playing side by side only adds to the majesty. Alex was at his very best in the first two rounds and his best is in the short conversation for the best that's been seen on a Baseball field. His bat speed is at the best its been since his freakish MVP year of 2007 and he is running the bases like Alex for the first time all season after the Hip Surgery turned him into more of a stationary type from May through August. Enormous power all over the field, base running, smarts, big glove, bigger arm. The Phillies cannot afford to let Alex beat them and figure to stay away and let him take walks or try and make him chase out of the zone.

Pedro Feliz, Phililes, RH
One of the great fielding 3B in all of Baseball, Felix is the weak link amongst both lineups in terms of Offense, but he still managed to drive in 82 runs and does make contact, which is important on a Philly team that has huge power but several guys who strike out an inordinate amount of the time (Ibanez, Werth, Howard). In a series where both teams are going to live over the wall, it is the team that hits them with men ON BASE that will prevail and the Yankee On-Base percentage dwarfs that of the Phillies and they proved in rounds one and two that they can beat small-ball teams at their small-ball game.

LF

Raul Ibanez, Phillies, LH
Of all the much ballyhooed HR power witnessed in the New Yankee Stadium in its inaugural year, none was more prodigiously struck than the 477 foot BOMB Ibanez hit off a hurt shoulder Chien-Ming Wang in May. Ibanez is one of those MLB players who has gotten better and better as he has gone (Werth is as well) and until being hurt this season, he was right there for NL MVP, but groin and abdominal injuries have greatly reduced his game (.232 with 12 HRs in 2nd Half). Yankees need to right after Rollins, Utley and Ibanez and tread carefully with Howard and Werth, this will result in some long fly HR's from those capable bats, but should keep them off the bases for the most part of the series. Ibanez injuries likely will have him at DH for tonight and tomorrow, with Francisco in LF.

Johnny Damon, Yankees, LH
Like Ibanez, Damon is two different players, when his calves are hurting and his vision is bothering him, he can be easily handled, especially by LH starters, but when his body is cooperating he can devastate teams as he did the Angels in the ALCS with huge HR power and critical RBI hits. He also has played an inspired LF, chasing down balls, diving for critical grabs and making smart throws in the playoffs. He is a marginal fielder overall, but a hustler whose legs are still good enough for 12 of 12 stolen bases in 2009 and is hot right now, if he stays hot, tough to see NY losing this series.

CF

Melky Cabrera, Yankees, SH
Melky looked a little tight in the ALDS, striking out on the same sorts of junkballs that have bedeviled Swisher and Teixeira, but came roaring back with a big ALCS (9 for 23, 4 HUGE RBI). He plays a terrific CF and his big arm catches baserunners, even Bobby Abreu, who played next to him for two years and should have known better. The Phillies will test him and he will throw them out, look for such a play in game one or two and say 'Guru told me so!'. the same Guru who told you this switch-hitting 25 year old would have a big year and was still improving, he is confident now and should have a good series at the back of the Yankee lineup.

Shane Victorino, Phillies, SH
Victorino is as extroverted and self-promoting as Melky is relaxed and team focused, a quirk of personality that leads many to consider him a far better player. The numbers tell a different story, as their power numbers are similar (Melky hit 3 more HR, drove in 6 more runs in 135 fewer at-bats). Both are switch hitters with some thump who can go get it in CF, but Victorino lacks Melky's big arm and Yankees will go 1st to 3rd on him. Victorino is an agile and successful basestealer who will put pressure on Yankee catchers if he is on base. He is also a proven Postseason winner. Still the numbers say he and Melky are similar, Melky hits 9th and Shane 2nd.

RF

Jayson Werth, Phillies, RH
For Guru's money, this is the player the Yankees have to work around to have success in this series. Yankee LH starters will limit some of the damage from Howard and both Utley and Ibanez have physical problems, Rollins will get his if he is feeling it, but Werth is the RH bat with serious thump who could make the Yankees pay for working cautiously to Howard, he singlehandedly destroyed the Dodgers and his game has come so far in such a short time it can be easy to look at him through a previous season's eye - this aint that guy. Werth is a classic mistake hitter with awesome power all over the yard and must be pitched carefully or walked to avoid crooked number-itis. He also showed a big arm in the series back in May. If Werth is in the running for MVP, this is going to be a Philly repeat.

Nick Swisher, Yankees, SH
Nicky, Nicky, Nicky...its a good thing he is such a genuinely nice guy. Like Teixeira, Swish is a power hitter from both sides who works the count and gets on base. Also like Tex, Swisher can be fastball happy and lacks the fluidity in his swing to adapt during at-bats, he takes a stiff arm hack like an axe wielding chopper and if he guesses right on pitch/location, he can send a ball into the stratosphere or tweak it neatly down the opposite line. But he is purely a guess hitter who is likely to be exposed continually by smarties like Lee, Pedro and Hamels. He is an agressive and enthusiastic RF with an average arm.

C
Jorge Posada, Yankees, SH
Jorge was clutch, big power from both sides, great defense in the ALDS and ALCS. He controlled the Angel running game and came through with the bat time and time again. He's caught 23 World Series games, more than 100 postseason games (by FAR, the most in MLB history) and is a sleeper in this series. Amongst veteran Yankees, Jorge is a fighter and an emotional leader on a business like squad, he is most likely to get into with old nemesis Pedro and some of the chattier Phillies.

Carlos Ruiz, Phillies, RH
Many analysts are calling this matchup 'even', I am not sure what they are talking about. Ruiz is a nice player who has made himself a much better hitter, but his career HR total of 22 is one more than Jorge hit in 383 at-bats during 2009. He makes great contact (more walks than strikeouts) and can thump (he hit a huge 3 Run HR to beat Yankees back in May). A nice player matched with a legendary one.

DH

Ben Francisco RH and Matt Stairs LH, Phillies
Francisco is a 5 tool sort with big potential who the generous Indians sent along to the Phillies, believing the gift of a reigning Cy Young winner was not enough! He has limited playing time in his MLB career but has shown flashes of big power and a big arm in the OF (he will play LF for Ibanez in AL park). Yankee pitchers have to avoid relaxing deep in the Philly lineup or they will get lit up by Francisco, Ruiz and Feliz. Stairs is the veteran LH thumper, very similar to Yankee reserve, Eric Hinske, he takes tough at-bats and buries mistakes from RH pitchers in the seats.

Hideki Matsui, Yankees, LH
The great Matsui has surged and been dominant this season when his surgically repaired knees have been drained and feeling strong and the two days off will do him a great deal of good (his best game of both earlier rounds came off a break between them). Yankees will probably benefit from the rest he'll get in Philly without a DH as the Interleague break helped him to a huge year (28HR/90 RBI) in 2009. Unflappable, experienced and huge power, Matsui will lay in the weeds and strike if ignored following Tex and Alex.

Rotation

CC Sabathia LH, AJ Burnett RH, Andy Pettitte LH, Chad Gaudin RH/Yankees
Yankee starters have been dominant thus far. CC has shut down the Twins once and the Angels twice with a minimum of threat and benefits from extra rest and a LH heavy Philly lineup, as well as the desire to make up for a terrible NLDS start in 2008 when he was asked to pitch on 3 day fumes for the umpteenth time in a row, his '09 performance is as good as it gets and shows the difference of not overusing a horse. He has ample rest to pitch three times, but Yankees are likely to throw Gaudin in game 4 unless trailing and desperate. Gaudin is a reliable 4-5 inning type who get strikeouts and need to avoid walks ,but might be a HR magnet against Phillies in their yard for game 4. AJ Burnett is a maddening enigma, who choked horribly in his ALCS start against the Angels, surrendering 4 runs before a single out and then putting two runs on base after his team had stormed back to take a 6-4 lead late. In between however, his dominant fastball and sharp breaking curve shut the Angels down cold - which his ability can do in any start. The season long sample says he will be great once and mediocre once if he gets two starts. Andy Pettitte has been lights-out, winning his all-time record 16th Postseason game, closing out his all-time record 5th series. He has been better than anyone could have imagined and guaranteed himself a job for as long as he wants one in MLB.

Cliff Lee LH, Pedro Martinez RH, Cole Hamels LH, Joe Blanton RH or JA Happ LH/Phillies
In one sense, the Phillie lack of power pitching is a concern - they are not strikeout types and may allow some baserunners here and there, but the Yankees are a fast ball centric sort of Offense who punish the sort of hard throwers who come right after them. Cliff Lee, Pedro and Cole Hamels all have the ability to throw changeups and breaking pitches for strikes in any count and keep Yankee sluggers swinging at air - meaning they WILL be strikeout pitchers! (did you follow all that?). Yankees will pummel Blanton and Phillies will pummel Gaudin, making game 4 the right one to bet the 'Over', Happ is a terrific young LH pitcher, but after Saunders twice with the Angels, Lee and Hamels, he will up against a lineup who has seen every type of LH starter and has 4 everyday switch hitters. Key for Phillies is Yankees being over aggressive, if the Yankees are swinging for fences, the Philly starters will thrive, if they relax and play small-ball, they can break them and feast on fastballs from the pen.

Bullpen

Ryan Madsen RH, Chad Durbin RH, Chan Ho Park RH, Scott Eyre LH

As indicated above, Yankees handle hard throwers better than any team in MLB and Madsen, Durbin and Park figure to get lit up if used for multiple innings. They need 7 innings per start to win.

David Robertson RH, Brian Bruney RH, Damaso Marte LH, Phil Coke LH, Joba Chamberlain RH, Alfredo Aceves RH, Phil Hughes RH

Yankee pen is a power pen, big arms and big velocity, strikeout stuff. Robertson has had some arm issues of late, but was terrific when called upon, Bruney got some needed rest and will be up close to 100MPH, can he throw it over the plate? Marte and Coke give them two different LH looks. Aceves, Hughes and Joba were the keys to the plan and all struggled at times in the playoffs, seemingly more with their nerves than with their stuff. Yankees need regular season like dominance from Aceves (10-1), Hughes (1.44 ERA as reliever, 5-1 K/BB ratio) and Joba (dominant and mediocre in maddening variety).

Closer

Mariano Rivera RH
The best. The numbers are ridiculous, not going to belabor them here for the 1,000th time. If he's in the game and the Yankees have a lead, bet Yankees.

Brad Lidge RH
Exactly the sort of pitcher that Yankee bats thrive against (Joe Nathan), and they beat him at the Stadium in May on an Alex Rodriguez HR and Melky Cabrera line drive. If the Philies have a one run lead, its 50/50.


Yankees are strong where you NEED to be to defeat Phillies with LH pitching and several slumping Offensive players who appeared to be coming out of it late against LA. If Jeter and Alex stay hot and are joined by Cano and Teixeira, there isn't anything the Phillies can do to stop them. Says here we'll be bundled up for a parade before we bundle up for ANOTHER parade in Manhattan this November. hold back those SuperHero floats for Thanksgiving and give us pinstripes in six.








October 16, 2009

2009 ALCS Preview: NY Yankees vs. LA Angels

By Matthew Storey

Five long years for the Yankees. Four for the Angels.

In 2009, both are BACK in the ALCS.

NY returns after choking on the 3-0 ALCS lead, historically, to the Boston Red Sox in '04, winning AL Eastern Division titles the next two years only to be bounced '05, by these Angels and '06, by the Detroit Tigers, than managed to close out the Joe Torre era with an '07 Wildcard and another 1st Round ouster at the hands of the Cleveland Indians and the wings of Lake Erie fauna.

The Joe Girardi era sputtered to an 89 Win opening in '08 when kid Starters Phil Hughes and Ian Kennedy spit the bit and stud rotation stalwarts Chien-MIng Wang and Joba got hurt and joined Jorge Posada on the DL.

In '09, they reworked their bullpen in season and found a deep group of converted starters and homegrown power pitchers, overcame Alex's hip surgery, Chien's failure to recover, Joba's regression and a blown out elbow to Abreu's handpicked successor in RF, Xavier Nady. The Newcomers all contributed, the oldtimers all did as well, homegrown role players and veterans alike played their roles to perfection and it combined for a magical, best in MLB Regular Season of 103-59 and a first round Sweep of the red hot Minnesota Twins.

For their part, the Angels have also dominated their AL Western Division regular season but have failed to advance to the World Series since winning in '02. They lost to Boston in '04, '07 and "08 and to the White Sox in '05, their last shot at the ALCS. This season they weathered the emotional tumult of kid Pitcher Nick Adenhart's death, injuries to Vlad, Lackey and Scott Shields and a season long renaissance from the Texas Rangers to grab the West and sweep away the nemesis Red Sox.

It's time to get it on. Yankees. Angels. Best of Seven. The Bronx.

Tonight. It'll be 40 Degrees, damp, windy, 50,000 screaming neurotic New Yorkers.

Yes!

Lets take a look;

Infield

NYY
1B Mark Teixeira
Tex replaced Giambi ('08/32HR/96RBI) with (39HR/122 RBI) and played sterling 1B, with wild range to either side on grounders and into RF on pop-ups, soft hands on all throws and hit balls, and a QB arm that can throw runners out in any situation, at any base. He combined with Switch-hitters (Posada, Melky, Swisher) to give the Yankees a lineup that is never vulnerable to pitcher shuffling by opponents. He played in LA last season, knows the personnel and the pitchers well, and has enjoyed playing in Anaheim throughout his MLB career.


LAA
1B Kendry Morales
After Angels lost Mark, they promoted Kendry and he made it pay off with a huge 1st season as 1B starter (Yankees have a similar, ready to pop, Cuban defector in 1B Juan Miranda who, like Morales, only needs a chance to play, having dominated AAA and now blocked by Teixeira). Like Teixeira he hits for average and power from both sides of the plate (both have more power from LH side) and joins his OWN group of Angel Switch Hitters (Figgins, Aybar, Izturis with WIllits, Matthews as well) to give the Angels flexibility against any pitching. Defensively, he is less fluid and has a less powerful throwing arm than Teixeira and is a free swinger who will walk less.

LAA
2B Howie Kendrick
2B Maicer Izturis
Kendrick platoons with Izturis, both of them are capable offensively, but Kendrick absolutely KILLS the Yankees (along with Figgins) to the tune of .426 in his career! Both will play in the ALCS and are contact .300 hitters with occasional pop (Kendrick had 10HR, Izturis 8), they will avoid big swings against Yankee strikeout pitching and put the ball in play. Both will run in the Angel scheme. Izturis is the better 2B with a glove.

NYY
2B Robinson Cano
Cano had a huge year (.320/25/85) and is probably the most complete 2B, offensively and defensively in the AL. He has line to line pop, can pull a big HR and makes all the plays with a big arm at 2B. He has struggled, however, in cold weather throughout his career and in the 1st Round was a non-factor.

NYY
SS Derek Jeter
Jeter hit .334, ran well (30 of 35 SB) with pop (18HR) and is amongst all-time Postseason leaders in hits (1st) and HR (t -4th). Made only 8 Errors in 150 Games at SS. Always thinking 2 steps ahead, as he proved again in the Twin series, baiting Nick Punto into trying to score and then relaying to Posada to snuff out their last chance. Jeter likes to make early noise coming into series and will be looking to hit the first pitch from Lackey over the wall tonight.

LAA
SS Erick Aybar
Angels let longtime SS Orlando Cabrera go in the offseason with plenty left (as he proved in Oakland and Minnesota) but promoted dynamic defender Aybar who plays a terrific SS and has proven to be a serious Offensive player (.312/93B) he will run a bit (14 of 21 SB), but does not have HR pop.

LAA
3B Chone Figgins
The Angels tablesetter is a Yankee killer, who does everything on a baseball field well. He was a Gold Glove OF before settling in to play Gold Glove 3B, steals bases (42, but caught 17), hits .298 with a good eye (.395 OBP) but strikes out too often (as does Jeter) with 101 Ks. He has no pop to speak of.

NYY
3B Alex Rodriguez
The hero of the 1st Round, Alex has been positively killing the baseball since mid-August and destroyed the Twins with clutch Power. His big arm and SS range make him a premier defender at 3B, he runs the bases well despite the loss of speed from his hip surgery (14 of 16) and has unmatched thump. Beat him to cash if you're the Angels.

Outfield/DH

NYY
LF Johnny Damon
If this series was played a month ago, Damon would have been considered a Yankee strength, but for the second straight year, struggles down the stretch turned a BIG year into a good one and he was horrible all September before bombing out of the Twin series with 1/12 and 4 K's, looking like a guy battling his vision as he struggled with at times in the regular season. Damon's resume and early season thump provide him with room to get the job done, he has pop (24 HR) and still runs well (12 of 12) in situations. He is an awful LF at this stage with no arm at all and will be replaced by Melky late, who will move from CF with Gardner into CF, OR Guzman in LF with Melky staying put.

LAA
LF Juan Rivera
Former Yankee farmhand, Rivera, has had a nice career in Anaheim, which was cemented when they went out and resigned him this offseason despite an embarrassment of OF riches. He has serious thump on a team that is not really power oriented (25HR/88 RBI) and has a big arm. Doesn't strike out OR walk, puts it in play and doesn't run at all (the only such Angel).

NYY
CF Melky Cabrera
A terrific season for Melky, who plays Gold Glove quality Defense at all three OF slots, has occasional pop (13 HR) and speed (10 of 12). He tends to hit in binges with multi hits and power from both sides and then sliding off for awhile, he looked overmatched at times in the ALDS. He had a huge HR in the '07 ALDS as well as 4 OF assists, the Angels will try and run on him and he will throw them out.

LAA
CF Torii Hunter
The charismatic Hunter is a Gold Glove CF with pop (22HR/90RBI in 119 games), who does everything well on a Baseball field or an interview show and is a leader for the Angels in the clubhouse.

LAA
RF Bobby Abreu
The great Abreu came to the Yankees in mid '07 with whispers about his decline and has proven those to be idiots doing the whispering (Billy Wagner...). He left a productive year and a half in The Bronx for LA and has continued to be the high On-Base, occasional pop (13 HR), RBI guy (103) with speed (30 of 38). He is an indifferent RF with a big arm, who can make a big error or throw out a runner at home.

NYY
RF Nick Swisher
Forced into the starting job when Nady was injured, Swisher carried the Yankees in April, leveled off and surged again late. Hits for power from both sides of the plate (29HR) with no speed, but takes lots of pitches and gets on-base (97 Walks). A big effort, low grace OF who hustles but lacks arm strength.

NYY
DH Hideki Matsui
Big power, Matsui hits bombs against RH or LH pitching, drives in runs in bushels and can hit to all fields. WIll also take a walk in any at-bat.

LAA
DH Vlad Guerrerro
The former superstar is still dangerous (as the Red Sox learned) and can hit any pitch over the wall. He can also be struck out and will not walk, unless the pitcher intends him to be.

Catchers

LAA
C Mike Napoli
C Mike Mathis
C Bobby WIlson

Napoli has serious thump and might be the best power in the LA lineup. Mathis is a Molina like backup, who handles Lackey tonight. Wilson is unknown by Guru, with only 12 at-bats this year. Neither of the two who have played have done a good job with baserunners and Yankees can be expected to run as often as possible.

NYY
C Jorge Posada
C Jose Molina
C Francisco Cervelli

Posada bounced back from '08 shoulder surgery to post a big season of power from both sides, solid throwing out runners and clutch (game winning HR in Game 3 versus Twins). Molina is strictly a defender who will catch AJ Burnett. Cervelli is a great defender who can handle the bat if he plays.

Bench

NYY
OF Brett Gardner
OF Freddy Guzman
UT Jerry Hairston, Jr.

Gardner and Guzman are the fastest men on the field, either can steal a base at any time asked. Hairston in capable at any position on the field if an injury occurs, has some pop (10HR) and deep experience.

LAA
OF Reggie Willits
OF Gary Matthews, Jr.
OF Robb Quinlan

Good defenders WIllits and Matthews, both can run. Quinlan is still waiting to impress.

Rotation

NYY
LH CC Sabathia
RH AJ Burnett
LH Andy Pettitte

Solid all season, dominant in round one. They will strike out more Angels, Burnett will walk a few, hit a couple, throw a wild pitch or two. CC is the only sure thing. AJ has been erratic, but dominates hitters when well. Pettitte has been terrific in 2nd Half and his pickoff move controls running game. Angels will put guys on with contact hitters and look for the big hit and the running game to score.

LAA
RH John Lackey
LH Joe Saunders
RH Jered Weaver
LH Scott Kazmir

Strike throwers here, which negates Yankee patience but may play into Yankee power. All go deep, have postseason success on their resume and can shut down any offense.

Bullpen

LAA
RH Ervin Santana
RH Matt Palmer
LH Darren Oliver
RH Jason Bulger
RH Kevin Jepsen

Santana is the key here, if right, he can dominate Yankees bats and HAS, and if called on for length, his starter's stamina will come into play. Bulger had a big year (6-1) and has power arm (68 K in 65.1 IP), Jepsen surrendered only 2 HR in 54 IP. Oliver is just a guy, and Palmer is a junkballing starter.


NYY
RH Alfredo Alceves
RH Joba Chamberlain
RH Phil Hughes
LH Phil Coke
LH Damaso Marte
RH Chad Gaudin
RH David Robertson

Gaudin did a nice job against the Angels in a September start and will get the Game 4 start if CC can't go on short rest. Aceves is the long guy here, who had a great year (10-1) but got touched by LA a bit - he's a strike thrower which hurts against Angel aggressiveness. Robertson has been a strikeout machine and came up huge against the Twins, Joba and Phil Hughes can dominate in the later innnings with power, breaking stuff and presence. Marte is the last man here, erratic from LH side. Coke is better and will get first southpaw call, but vulnerable to control problems and the longball.

Closer

NYY
RH Mariano Rivera
Angels have serious slap hitters, like the Twins, and they will get some hits. He will limit power, throw strikes and do his job. At his best in postseason. If he comes into the 9th Inning with a 1 run lead, the Angels will threaten, but Mo will close them out.

LAA
LH Brian Fuentes
If Fuentes comes into the 9th with a 1 run lead, the Yankees will beat him. If its 2 runs, they will tie.
Ask Joe Nathan.

Two balanced, terrific teams feeling good about themselves, great managers who have rings as players and hardware as managers. Great, great matchup.

Angels will string hits, steal bases, capitalize on mistakes. Throw strikes and dare Yankee power to beat them.

Yankees are 65-11 when their starters give them a Quality Start (6 Innings/3 Runs or less), against LA, they will need to keep it under 4 and pitch into the 7th where Yankee bullpen is loaded. Yankees are in any game with power and strikeouts, run slightly less but with more precision and are just too good.

Yankees in six games.












October 12, 2009

If you want to go to Heaven, you'll have to Slay some Angels...

By Matthew Storey

The mood this morning, in Manhattan, amongst Yankee fans I have spoken with so far is pleasure.

For sure.

But not ecstasy, somewhere between 'Good Job, Boys' and ''Bout Fuckin' time!' is where I'd peg it.

And, of note to those of you not of this Nation, I have yet to speak with a Yankee fan (not saying they don't exist) who mentioned the Red Sox demise in either a gloating fashion or as a pleasurable on-field result.

The Yankees and fans would have preferred the Red Sox to play, on the East Coast in familiarity with 9 of the last 10 providing confidence. Failing that, it would have been nice to see Boston extend things a couple of games, use up Angel pitching and soften up a touch.

Yankees rooting for Red Sox didn't work out. Unsurprisingly, and, to be genuine, if they want to be World Champions they need to defeat the Angels, who have owned them like no other team. They spotted Boston 8 games and blew past them to win the AL East by 8, they have nothing to prove there.

So, the Yankees play the Angels best of 7, in the American League Championship Series.

Oh, well.

So we aint jumping up and down over here, but we are pleased. Its been five years since they won a Postseason series and the pitching was sensational, as was the power and the clutch. They were at no point playing their best ball and still swept a terrific Twins team who only need a power starter to be right back again.

Still, outside of the rotation, Alex, Derek and Jorge - this team did not play especially well. Those three stalwarts managed a combined 13/32 (.406) with 2 2B, 4 HR, 10 RBI and 9 RUNS. The rest of the lineup was a combined 10/70 (.143) in the three games facing honest, but modest pitching, with the notable asterisk belonging to critical HR hitters Mark Teixeira, Game 2 Walk Offian and Game 1 Godzilla BOMB.

Outside of them, however...

Johnny Damon is clearly struggling with his eyes (check him out when he steps out and blinks), he lost a flyball when his eyes freaked on him earlier in the year and wasn't right for weeks. He was in a career year back in a torrid August, with a career tying 24 HR and 77 RBI. But he closed with no HR and only 5 RBI for the Month of September/October and managed 1 for 12 in the ALDS, with 4 strikeouts. Ouch.

Nick Swisher had a big, game winning 2B in Game 1 only to fade to Damon's level at 1/12, 4 K's. Melky had 5 K's to go with 2/12 and Matsui, Teixeira and Cano were ALSO 2 for 12.

So this Offense was carried by Alex, Derek and Jorge and the pitching was CC, AJ and Andy. Joba was OK, Mariano was just OK and Phil Hughes was his shakiest since joining the Bullpen.

Plenty of room for improvement there, and they will need everybody on board to challenge the Angels who are a similar scrappy, competitive, risk taking sort of team to the Twins but healthier (Morneau is a huge loss for Minnesota, obviously), more experienced and with far superior pitching.

We'll look to the Specifics of Yankees/Angels later in the week, before Game 1 on Friday night in The Bronx.

Until then, we'll savor this one and relax for the first October in longandlong.

It aint yet time to drink. It certainly isn't time to have a Parade, all that is still available however and dreaming is permitted all around. A noble season has certainly been crafted and a deeper pool of playoff teams has never been assembled in my memory, the vanquished Cardinals and Red Sox could easily have been World Champions in another year, the Phillies are deeper on the hill, weaker in the pen, better with Ibanez than Burrell. The Dodgers and Yankees look magical, and the story lines for Manny, Torre and Mattingly are too delicious...you can see how these two teams might reprise '77-'81 and play multiple times for the prize.

Or not.

Because the Angels are formidable and so are the Phillies. Work to be done (heck even the Phillies have not yet cast off the Rockies....), so the work here?

It can wait.














October 07, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/ Season Review/Playoff Preview

By Matthew Storey

Eight months ago, on February 20, Guru published his 2009 Yankee Pre-Season preview, with this;

...'(if) the calamities of early seasons recent don't rear their ugly heads - the Yankees can avoid spotting their rivals the first two months of the season and get off strong early. If they do, and are well positioned on June 1, it should be a magical first season in the new Palace in the Bronx.'

As it turned out, the next few weeks DID produce calamitous events. Alex Rodriguez, fresh from his Steroid funfest had major surgery on his Right Hip and was out for the first six weeks. Mariano Rivera's surgically prepared shoulder did not loosen up right away and he struggled in April until it loosened up. RF Xavier Nady, coming off a huge season and in his contract year, blew out his surgically repaired elbow and was lost for the year. Set-up RH Brian Bruney, coming off a broken foot struggled with his mechanics, hurt his arm and was back and forth all season (he's been left off the ALDS roster, despite his strong September). Worst of all, RH Ace, Chien-Ming Wang, counted on to be part of a dominant Starting Rotation struggled incredibly coming off HIS broken foot, going from 54-20, 3.63 to 1-6, 9.64 and then, just as he was finally looking like the stud of old - blew out his shoulder and may have pitched his last Yankee game.

By May 8, Yankees were at 13-15 and were on their way to being smoked like Sturgeon by the rival Red Sox, who would go on to win the first E-I-G-H-T games in their season series. That 'magical season' already looked iffy...

But Alex came back that day, in Baltimore, and hit the first pitch he saw for a 3 Run HR. New 1B, Mark Teixeira, who had struggled in April, went on a heroic tear and the Yankees had a huge May to make up some of the ground on the Sox. When June 1 did come around, Yankees were actually in 1st Place by 1 game, a lead they'd soon squander as Alex faded from overuse and Wang's struggles continued. They were swept in Boston on June 9-11, and Guru published a column on June 13 'Swept Away! Yankee/Red Sox comparisons' in which, I noted:

'The Red Sox are more competitive than the Yankees will ever be, so are the Angels, the Indians, Twins and Rays. If it was a war, these are the squads like the Confederacy, the Taliban, the Viet Cong, WW II Japanese - dedicated, small fire, innovative, never-say-die...such competitors thrive on close combat, that's why the Mujahadeen are so incensed the Americans don't want a 'fair fight' - they've internalized Western customs that ran from the Crusades to the Victorian Age.

America don't play that.

Neither do the Yankees.

Better resources, better roster, the long slog.

Is there any Red Sox you'd trade for?'

And went on to do a position by position comparison that claimed the 8 times vanquished Yankees actually had more in their dugout and would be likely to reverse the situation against the Red Sox in the coming months, especially since, despite the 8 losses, they trailed by only 2 games in the AL East.

Yankees sputtered for two more weeks, particularly in interleague play, but on June 24, Brian Cashman traveled to Atlanta to see the team and sent a message 'We have all we need in this clubhouse'. Manager Joe Girardi got tossed early, Rookie Catcher Francisco Cervelli slammed his first MLB HR and the Yankees went on a tear.

Coming into the All-Star break, the team sputtered against familiar antagonists, the LA Angels, getting swept in their final first half series to close at 57-41. Yankee hating Universe nodded their heads and said 'solid record, but can't beat Boston OR Los Angeles'. On July 16, Guru published 'Comprehensive 2nd Half Look' in which I noted:

'Yankees have answers at Bat, on the Hill, on the Bases and in the Field and control their own destiny.'

And they did. Beating the Red Sox 9 of 10 second half games to tie the season series at 9-9 after spotting them the first 8, taking 3 of their final 4 from the Angels to tie THAT season series at 5-5 and finishing off a 7-0 season sweep of the other AL Playoff team, AL Central Winner and ALDS opponent, Minnesota Twins. Overall they put up a phenomenal 2nd Half record of 46-18 (.719) to finish as AL East winner and #1 Seed in MLB, 103-59 (.636).

So that was that. Its over.

Onward.

Playoffs beginning as I write, so without predictions about results, I will note my favorites for the various series.

NL

Colorado Rockies vs. Philadelphia Phillies

I despise Dan O'Dowd and the Colorado evangelical emphasis, as regular readers know. I would root for the Iranian team against this bunch. Give me the Phils.

Los Angeles Dodgers vs. St. Louis Cardinals

Manny Ramirez is one of my favorite players of all time, finally free of the 'B' and the creepy supporting cast/fan base - he's easy to root for and Joe Torre is the Godfather of the Yankees, who has removed the LaSorda stench from the Dodger blue and created in its place a dynamic mix of young talent and agreeable veterans.

St. Louis aint my kind of place. Tony LaRussa, brilliant as he is, strikes me as a pompous ass, an 'Anti-Torre' sort (he replaced him in St. Louis), but he has a balanced, brilliant team several notches better than the one he won the World Series with in 2006. Cards can pitch it and hit it and catch it and a case can easily be made for them winning it all.

But not here, I am rooting HARD for the Dodgers/Yankees renewal, a respectful Baseball -only series to echo the Subway series tilts of Torre's youth and bring Brooklyn Joe and Washington Heights Manny back to The Bronx for a love-in/may the best team win sort of affair.

AL

Boston Red Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels

These teams play it differently than Torre/Girardi style. They like to BATTLE (see comments above from earlier in season) and scrap, and tense energy should be in the air. Sox have handled the Angels year after year in Playoffs, so tough to see that changing, but Angels are loaded everywhere and no result would shock. From a Yankee perspective, which Guru, obviously, comes from - give me the Red Sox and let NY avoid the dangerous Angels who've bounced us regularly.

New York Yankees vs. Minnesota Twins

Yankees beat the Cleveland Indians 6 of 6 in 2007 Regular Season and proceeded to get bounced in 4 games. That should take away any complacency against the 0-7 Twins on the Pinstripe part and remove arrogance from even the stupidest Yankee fans (impossible, I know!). Yankees match up well with Minnesota in their lineup, their rotation, their defense and their bullpen. But, as Twins backup Catcher, Mike Redmond noted - they don't play games on Paper (actually, the Twins play on Plastic!). You can break this series down 200 ways, but you won't be able to come up with a statistical basis for a Twin victory. What you CAN note is the Twins have been on a high for the last month of the season, overcoming a seemingly insurmountable 7 game deficit to catch the Tigers on final weekend and then prevailing in last night's thrilling one game, extra-inning playoff. They have momentum and will feed off emotion to balance out disparity in talent.

The Yankees, on the other hand, are a team (as previously noted) built for methodical excellence. They work to channel emotion safely OUT of their play and to focus on taking pitches, grinding through at-bats, making the plays, get 6 solid from starters and shut it down with their bullpen. The challenge from Minnesota will be energetic, they have chippy talkers in Carlos Gomez (who fought twice with Mark Teixeira this season), Alexei Casilla, Denard Span, Delmon Young and Manager Ron Gardenhire...they will take out fielders, strut, chatter, celebrate and try and fluster the Yankees with competitiveness. If they get under Yankee skin and turn it into a fight (the Red Sox, Angel, Ray recipe), they might just have a chance. They have the best player in the AL in C Joe Mauer, a great closer in Joe Nathan, terrific suite of two way players in Span, Cuddyer, Orlando Cabrera (who has beaten the Yankees against big odds as a 2004 Red Sox). Jason Kubel has swung a big bat and the Yankees will avoid Mauer and challenge him to beat them. Twin starters are solid, strike throwers without the dominant Johan Santana and Francisco Liriano of previous Playoff battles.

Yankees can only blame themselves if they lose, as it will come from a loss of composure long before it shows up on the field. Keep their cool, do their thang, ignore Twin chatter and this should be 4 games.

A look at Yankee Players individually:

1. Derek Jeter SS/RH

Derek hit .334 (3rd AL), the 4th best of his illustrious career, made only 8 errors in 150 games (career best) and was the ideal leadoff hitter all season with .406 OBP, 212 hits, 107 runs, 30 stolen bases in 35 attempts and occasional pop (18 HR). Has done it all, seen it all. Nuff said.

2. Johnny Damon LF/LH

Johnny had another big year, but a quiet September. He had a similarly slow July and responded with a huge August, so no reason to doubt his ability if he is feeling well. He's been worried about his future since the 2nd Half started and no doubt the likelihood he is in his last few weeks as a Yankee, where he has expressed a desire to finish his career is/has been weighing on him. But he is well known for being a gamer and a winner, and (if hot) can carry the Yankees. He has power (24 HR) still can run (12 of 12 steals) and will catch it in LF without even a wet noodle for an arm.

3. Mark Teixeira 1B/SH

Best 1B glove I have seen, and Mattingly was incredible. Switch Hitter with huge power. Solid citizen type who loves being a Yankee on the big stage. Tied for AL lead in HR with injured Carlos Pena (39) and led in RBI (122). Tough to really find a weakness in his game and he hit .467 in his only playoff appearance for the Angels last year.

4. Alex Rodriguez 3B/RH

Had the surgery, missed 28 games, sat out for rest another 10 and put up 30 HR/100 RBI while stealing 14 of 16 bases (hello! Hip surgery?) and making only 9 errors all year at 3B. Big arm, huge power, relaxed like never before and hottest Yankee coming into the Playoffs. Unless he chokes on his own expectations, he will dominate modest Twin pitching.

5. Hideki Matsui DH/LH

How great must this guy have been in his prime in Japan? From the moment he got to Yankees, he has done everything right. Now limited to DH by two surgical knees, he gave them 28 HR/90 RBI. Hits RH/LH, Road/Home the same and is a consummate Pro.

6. Jorge Posada C/SH

The feistiest Yankee, whose chippy persona and grumbling about playing time sometimes detract from his incredible production. Came off Major surgery and put up 22 HR/81 RBI in only 383 At-Bats, sluggging .522 at 38 years old. He's as good behind the plate as ever, throwing out 28% of baserunners (twice as good as either Red Sox C, not as good as Mauer). He will bitch about Molina catching Burnett, but will be a vital lineup cog.

7. Robinson Cano 2B/LH

Dustin Pedroia hit .326, slugged .493 and hit 17/83 while playing terrific 2B in '08 and got an MVP, Yankees got more from BOTH middle infielders in '09. Cano hit .320, slugged .520, with 25 HR/85 RBI and a dominant Gold Glove 2B. He is the leading MLB hitter in September/October in the past FIFTY years! (and only 26). He's hot and he's great and he hits 7th in this loaded lineup.

8. Nick Swisher RF/SH

Moved into a starting role when Nady got hurt, Swisher is an average but hard trying RF, but he produces Giambi like Power (29 HR) On-Base (97 Walks) and personality in the clubhouse and with the fans. Like the rest of these guys, he LOVES being a Yankee and it shows.

9. Melky Cabrera CF/SH

The 4th Switch-Hitter in the everyday Yankee lineup, Melky helps make the Yankees invulnerable to pitching matchups. He hit for the cycle in August, hit equally well at home/road, LH/RH and played sterling Defense at all three OF spots. Hits clutch, uses whole field from both sides and can hit LONG HR when overlooked by pitchers seeking a breather from the rest of this gang (had a BLAST in '07 Playoffs off Fausto Carmona). Has GUN in CF to cut down baserunners (through out 4 Indians in 4 ALDS games in '07).


Backups


Jose Molina doesn't hit, handles AJ Burnett extremely well in Game 2.

Brett Gardner hit .270, stole 26 of 31 bases and is a terrific OF.

Jerry Hairston, Jr. plays all positions, knows the game, can run or hit with pop.

Not sure if Eric Hinske (LH power), Ramiro Pena (IF Defense, switch hitter) or Freddy Guzman (pure speed) will be the last guy on the bench.


Pitchers


1. CC Sabathia LH

Ace. Certain. CC pitches deep in almost every start, which becomes a luxury for NY since they feature a deep bullpen. In the playoffs, this should allow them to throw CC for only 6-7 Innings per start, which should free him up for additional starts. When you factor in the extra off-days in playoff series (which is ridiculous since these players are accustomed to playing every day for six months), there is little reason for the Yankees to worry about a 4th Starter even if they make it to the ALCS and the World Series. CC, AJ and Andy are all big, powerful, experienced guys who can go deep and work on short rest. CC has been untouchable in the second half (poor final start against Tampa Bay, however) with a combination of his high '90s heat, wicked slider and terrific change-up. His only vulnerability is a tendency to fly open and leave the fastball high and away to RH hitters (high/inside to LH), when he can't throw the heat for strikes, he has to come in with breaking stuff and change and can give up loud hits. IF the fastball is in the zone, the slider darts out of the zone for swing and miss and the change-up makes 'em shit and go blind.

2. AJ Burnett RH

Ace-like, without the certainty. High '90s fastball? Check. Knee breaking curveball? Check. Stamina, experience, ability to deal with running game (picked off Ichiro twice in one game)? Check. Check. Check. AJ can struggle with his fastball mechanics like CC and when he does, he has a tendency to throw fat, hittable mid-zone strikes that go a L-O-N-G way or walk bushels full of hitters (led AL in Walks). He also gets lazy when he is coasting and can leave pitches in the middle out of nowhere (Porcello did this last night and gave up a HR to Kubel). He also has so much movement on his fastball to LH hitters that it can flow back over the plate for damage. The biggest issue, however, is his composure. Where CC is unflappable in every situation and can control a game with nothing stuff just on his mental command, AJ pouts and turns mild rallies into blowouts at times. Girardi needs to be quick with a chat or even a hook in this circumstance.

3. Andy Pettitte LH

Andy threw the ball better in the 2nd Half then I think anyone in MLB believed he still could. He likes to remind folks that he is 'only' 37, and his 78 K's in 97 2nd Half innings speak to that truth. His cutter has been darting in on RH hitters, his curve has been painting the outside of the plate and he can throw a 4-seamer at times as well. He has unmatched Playoff experience and moxie (trails John Smoltz by 1 win for All-Time record 15-14). He can pitch all day, has the best pickoff move in MLB and is a worthy #3 in a playoff rotation.


Long Men


Alfredo Alceves RH

'Ace' led all MLB relievers with 10-1 record, throwing long, short, spot start (1). He has modest stuff but an endless variety of pitches, all of which he can throw for strikes (16 walks in 84 innings!). He is the ideal picture of composure in all situations on a mound (something young Yankees like Joba and veterans like AJ can learn from, IF they can learn!). Girardi knows Ace will not let things blow up on him, will control damage, will throw strikes, will give him length...not much more you can ask for from a middle guy. A great find by Cashman in the Mexican league, Ace is only 26 and can pitch in MLB as long as he can lift his arm, and probably will be in pinstripes as long as Girardi is.

Chad Gaudin RH

A nice pickup off the scrap heap by Cashman, Gaudin has been a terrific performer for NY since coming over. He has strikeout stuff and limits damage (3.43, 41 hits in 42 Yankee innings). Like AJ, his problem can be control (20 Walks) and he too can then leave fatties in the middle (7 HR). He is deep in the back of pen in a short series, but capable if called upon and earned the spot over longer term Yankees like Brian Bruney.


Middle Men


Phil Coke LH

Coke shuts down hitters (44 hits in 60 Innings) but, stop me if you've heard this...walks too many guys (20) and then gets burned with long balls trying to throw fat strikes (10 HR). He is capable of dominating LH hitters in situational use, but erratic control makes Yankees queasy. 27 and homegrown with a chance to be a Yankee for a long time.

David Robertson RH

Robertson is a strikeout machine, leading ALL AL Pitchers with 13 K's per 9 Innings (63 in 43.2 IP), like Coke he walks too many (23) but does not surrender the long ball (4). He had some arm fatigue late in September, which would be the only worry about this terrific young pitcher. Another homegrown mid '20s guy who, like Coke, was a minor league starter with several pitches and can give length if called upon.


Late Innings


Joba Chamberlain RH

Joba was erratic in the last two months after being dominant first three starts of the second half. He struggled with his fastball command, his control and his concentration at times as he moved in and out of various schemes the Yankees devised to limit his innings. His velocity, 101 MPH two years ago, was at 91-94 for most of his late year starts, which probably indicates a bit of fatigue in his first full year as a starter. But he dominated Boston in several starts (including next to last of the year) and will be asked only to air it out as a reliever in the playoffs, which he did in blowing away Tampa this weekend with a 7 pitch inning at 97 MPH. He gives the Yankees an incredible 7th Inning asset, especially with the depth of this pen. Can obviously give multi innings, but unlikely to be asked to do that with all the other options for length. Joba is homegrown and just turned 24.

Phil Hughes RH

Phil had finally found himself as a Yankee starter this June, when Chien-Ming Wang came back from rehab stint and reclaimed his spot in rotation. Yankees put Hughes in the Bullpen and no single move had more to do with the 103 win season. Hughes was Mariano-like in the 8th Inning, striking out 65 to 13 walks and a 1.24 ERA in relief. Another homegrown power pitcher, Phil is 23.

Mariano Rivera RH

Talking about Mo's surgery in the February preview, I noted that even if he fell off 'by 20%, his ERA would only be 1.68'. Mo fell off by less than 20%, saved 44 of 46 chances, struck out 72 to 12 walks and his ERA did 'soar' all the way to 1.76! The only knock on his season was an uncharacteristic spate of HR's (7 in 66.1 IP, the worst of his career). Mo is the all-time Postseason closer with an absurd 0.77 era and 34 saves, but he has also been the victim of some memorable Postseason comebacks (Cleveland '97, Arizona '01, Boston '04).

Guessing the Yankees will take their chances on him, however.

And that's that. 35 minutes to first pitch, enjoy the Yankees in ALDS, we'll update after its over.








September 08, 2009

2009 New York Yankees: How the AL East was Won

By Matthew Storey

Yesterday, the Yankees swept the Rays in The Bronx in a Labor Day Doubleheader. In so doing, they took a Nine Game Lead over the Boston Red Sox for the AL Eastern Division and a Six and a half game lead over the Los Angeles Angels for best record in the American League.

With an 89-50 record, and 23 games to play, it is time to declare victory in both races.

Congratulations to the 2009 New York Yankees, American League Eastern Division Champions for the 8th time in the Decade and first time since 2006.

Congratulation to the 2009 New York Yankees for the best record and #1 Seed in the American League, which, with the American League victory in the All-Star Game insures that every series they make will begin at Yankee Stadium and, if needed, play a deciding game there as well.

Those are the only things that can be accomplished in the Regular Season and they took care of their business.

On to the next challenges. Everything is relative. Yankees won 87 games in 2000 and notched their 3rd Straight World Series, they won 103 in 2002 and were ousted by the eventual champion Angels in the first round. Although they have lapped the rest of MLB in the regular season, Manager Joe Girardi, closer Mariano Rivera, starter Andy Pettitte, Shortstop Derek Jeter and Catcher Jorge Posada all played on the 1998 Yankees and the 2009 version would have to win out its last 23 and sweep 11 playoff games to match that team's 125-50 season.

Before we look ahead, lets look at what has transpired since our last update;

Yankees through 116 Games were 73-43 (.629) in 1st Place by 6.5 over Red Sox

Since then, in Games 117-139, they have played 16-7 (.696) and lead by 9 games with an overall record of 89-50.

As we are focusing on the future and a SUMMARY of the past, I'll abandon my usual game by game summary, which can easily and more completely be found on Yankees.com (remember, you should all be spending at LEAST an hour a day there anyway! With NFL starting, MLB playoffs, Breeders Cup, NHL and NBA on the way (and some of you College Football, which Guru doesn't follow) NOW is the time to assess your friends, family and acquaintances for those relationships that can be abandoned or sent over the edge, which will free up the time you need for sports.

Accordingly, here is a player by player look at the Season that has been and a projection forward.


Manager Joe Girardi

Joe put Derek Jeter, the definitive #2 hitter of the previous decade into the leadoff spot and Johnny Damon, on the short list of best leadoff hitters in that decade in the two hole. Both guys have turned in superior seasons and have complimented the change in roles perfectly. Joe put the CF position into the hands of Melky Cabrera, coming off the worst season of his career and Brett Gardner, an unproven pinch-runner who struggled with MLB pitching in 2008, both have played Gold Glove defense, have stolen bases, shown complementary offensive talents (Melky switch hits with some power, Gardner's speed unravels defenders). Joe had to juggle personnel to make sure Hideki Matsui's knees, Alex Rodriguez's hip, Jorge Posada's shoulder, Mariano Rivera's shoulder, Johnny Damon's wheels all held up and their numbers and vigor speak to how effectively he has done that. Joe had to adjust on the fly when Wang, Bruney, Veras, Marte, Ramirez, Melancon and now, perhaps, Joba ALL blew out body parts or performed beneath expectations and he inserted former starters into the pen, and has watched Phil Hughes (1.08 ERA as reliever), Alfredo Alceves (10-1 in relief), Phil Coke, David Robertson all strike people out, work multiple innings and keep the Yankees in ballgames. Now, with Marte, Albaladejo and Melancon up and getting a chance to show what they can do, Joe has an ideal preview for Playoff Bullpen considerations. Joe has balanced out the loss of Wang, and struggles of Joba by spotting Sergio Mitre and Chad Gaudin in places where they can win and do no harm to Yankee plans. Joe has found time for Eric Hinske, Jerry Hairston, Jr, Ramiro Pena, Francisco Cervelli all to play and gotten terrific play from all of them. After a tough first year with NY media, Joe has been a straight shooter and established where he will and will not go with player discussions, and peace has reigned throughout the Yankee kingdom. Alex has Kate Hudson, but no drama. Alex, Derek and Mariano periodically take over the spotlight because of some silly Hall of Famer they need to pass statistically, they do so in style, everyone claps and smiles ear to ear and they all move on. The are workmanlike, which defines Girardi, their stars, their role players and their new arrivals and that has always been a winning approach in Pinstripes.


Starting Pitchers


LF CC Sabathia

CC has been the Ace he has always been. He is always calm, always around on the bench in games he isn't pitching and you can see how effortlessly he leads and sets a tone. He is pure professional on a hill, in front of a microphone, in the community. He dominates about half the time, and finds a way to stay close the other half, he seems to have 4-5 tough starts early each year but Yankees haven't seen that in months.


RH AJ Burnett

AJ has been a great TEAMMATE, the aloof, sniping AJ has not been seen much in NYC. He is emotional and will continue to benefit from the company he is keeping by controlling the swings better. On the hill, he also dominates about half his outings, but has a difficult time controlling damage and remaining focused on EVERY pitch when he is not on top of his game, and that has led to some bad losses. He needs to do better and be more consistent and needs to cut the Walks WAY down. But his big arm and obvious joy at being in Pinstripes make him an easy guy to root for. He was terrific last night in 11-1 victory over Tampa Bay.


LH Andy Pettitte

Andy was pretty good for the 1st Half last season and sitting at 12-7, before things fell apart in the latter months. It took months for the team to bring him back, but he has made that decision pay off big time, with a 13-6 season and a sub 3 ERA in the 2nd Half, Andy is firmly in the Playoff rotation and has put himself in position to get a 2 year extension in the offseason if he pitches well in October. He is a Yankee, who loves being a Yankee and takes an active role with all his teammates, he can be seen with other starters, with old friends, with new arrivals, always friendly, always open, never a jerk towards opponents or teammates. Andy is a Texas Evangelical who has nothing but positive vibes for The Bronx and The Bronx for him, and that is saying a lot.


RH Joba Chamberlain

Next to the devastating loss of Chien-Ming Wang, Joba has been the Yankees biggest disappointment and a genuine concern has to exist within the organization as to whether or not he is ever going to be the sort of pitcher, physically and mentally, that he was prior to straining his shoulder August 4, 2008 against Texas. His fastball is anywhere from 5-8 MPH slower, his slider has fallen off, his control has been terrible, his ability to pitch out of jams or put hitters away goes missing for several starts. He gets chance after chance to right himself and take advantage of the flexibility the Yankees situation affords to either sit out and pull together or step up and perform, and for the last six weeks, he simply has not been able to do so. He may be tired, he might be hurt or may be dealing with things in his personal life. At only 23, it would not be surprising if all three are going on, but for the Yankees to WIN, he has to be better than he is right now.


RH Sergio Mitre

Tough call. Sergio has stuff that is similar to Chien-Ming Wang's 'B' arsenal, not the crackling mid '90s sinker but a low '90s dropper with decent control and other pitches. He is no front of the rotation type, but he has shown flashes of being a dependable #5. He is still in his first year after Tommy John surgery, so he will be better in the next couple of years and has shown enough to keep the Yankees interested. With just a few more starts this year, he needs only to show health and improvement to be a Bullpen piece in playoffs.


RH Chad Gaudin

Chad is a perfect example of a guy who is not going to be a Yankee for long. He has been on multiple teams with little success in his brief MLB career, got dumped on the Yankees from the lowly Padres and has chafed at being used in a spot starters role since arriving. He is decent in relief or starting, but is being counted on to play a supporting role and seems not to be able to play that way. He wants to be a starter somewhere and will need to go elsewhere for that chance. In the meantime, he is filler for the next 23 games.


Bullpen


LH Damaso Marte

Marte came up lame after the World Baseball Classic, took months to heal, struggled in the minors and managed to lower expectations into the underworld before being called up in late August. And then, he has pitched terrific baseball since arriving. He is throwing in mid '90s, slider is nasty, control is there. He is perfect used as a LH specialist and never in the role they put him in last year of set-up for both RH and LH and multi-inning.


RH Jonathan Albaladejo

A role player in the Bullpen, Jonathan is not a flame thrower but he throws strikes, gets ground balls and chews innings and has avoided being fuel for big innings since his return from minor leagues.


RH David Robertson

A strikeout artist, Robertson has an impressive 61 K's in his 41 Innings (13.4 per 9 innings!) and is an ideal bridge to the set-up guys.


RH Brian Bruney

A tough two seasons for the Yankees set-up man, who has battled injury and rehab, but has pitched better of late. Brian still has stuff that take a backseat to nobody, with 97 mph heat, wicked breaking stuff and guts. He just needs to pitch more than the Yankees can give him now, and that effects his control and his mood in negative ways. With Hughes going back to the rotation in 2010, Bruney will still have his chance to be the full time set-up guy next year if he manages to keep it together through the rest of this frustrating year and contribute in the playoffs.


LH Phil Coke

Coke can pitch a ton of innings and games and be effective. He strikes people out, dominates LH hitting, throws hard, throws sliders...his hits per inning is low and his spirit is positive. But...he gives up a LOT of HR's and that is not a good long term strategy for a Yankee reliever (see Farnsworth, Kyle, Proctor, Scott). He has to get a handle on that serious flaw and will then be a long time Yankee asset.


RH Mariano Rivera

39 of 40 saves, 35 in a row, the year after 39 of 40. 63 K's and only 51 Baserunners in his 56 innings. Had a mild groin strain that cost him a few days, but was his normal self yesterday picking up the save. As long as he can strike out six times as many people as he walks, give up less than a runner per inning and save almost every game, you are covered. All of the sudden, he is going to be looking at ANOTHER contract. Amazing. Maybe the most amazing of all team sports athletes.


Infield


1B Mark Teixeira

Gold Glove Defense, all-world hustle, big power and clutch from both sides of the plate, a passion for being a Yankee and embracing his team, manager, tradition, fans and goals. A perfect signing.


2B Robinson Cano

Cano played Gold Glove defense for the first four months of the season, combining his unmatched range and cannon arm with the sure hands and concentration he sometimes lacks, but has fallen back of late as Yankees have begun to coast a bit. That said, he is still a great, great Defensive 2B who will blow an easy ball periodically (10 errors). Offensively, he is back to the player he was in '06 and '07, with 23 HR/76 RBI/.316 AVG/ .516 SLG and is second in MLB in total bases to Pujols, all at only 90%.

He is the most gifted combination of defensive and offensive skills of any 2B and has numbers, but STILL lacks the whole maturity that could make him a HOF type. He will surely be given a decade or so to find that next gear by the Yankees.


SS Derek Jeter

The great Jeter, who has merely spent his summer becoming the ALL-TIME hits leader for Shortstops and now is on the brink of becoming the ALL-TIME hits leader for the Yankees. He is Derek, at bat and in the field, on fire for two months, leading the team, making the right play, getting the big hit, saying the right thing. What he has avoided this season that has cost him in recent years is that twisted leg, pulled muscled, smashed hand that keeps his production merely mortal. Hitting .330, will have 20 HR to match is 20+ steals, outstanding defense, unmatched presence. ZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.


3B Alex Rodriguez

Alex has had to fight his surgical hip all season, and their were times in the Summer when he looked like it was really slowing him down, sapping his power, reducing his speed. But he is feeling great of late, has managed to steal 10 of 12 bases anyway, play strong 3B and moved his average above .280. He can reach 30 HR/100 RBI if he stays hot, despite the missed time and the reduced flexibility. He seems relaxed and happy and, on this years team, he is just a guy not a savior, which he has proven is too large a role for him. Idea situation for both parties.


UT Jerry Hairston, Jr.

Jerry doesn't really do anything better than the man he replaced, Cody Ransom, but he is a 3rd Generation MLB player whose brother is also in MLB and he is comfortable in his role and confident in his ability. Both men can run, play infield or outfield with skill, pop an occasional HR or drop a bunt, but Jerry believes in Jerry and its his job now.


UT Ramiro Pena

Some guys come up to the Yankees and play tense, overwhelmed by internal expectations and the setting. They usually need to go elsewhere to be the best they can be. Ramiro came up from Double A, played tremendous SS, hit the ball effectively from both sides of the plate, doesn't ever get rattled, runs the bases well. Ideal utility player.


Outfield


RF Nick Swisher

Really Nick has had two seasons. At home, for whatever reason, he has struggled (.206 AVG/ .311 SLG, 3HR/20 RBI) and on the road, he is an MVP candidate (21 HR/55 RBI/ .614 SLG). He plays an enthusiastic RF, with glimpsed of both excellent and porous play, but is a consistent Giambi style On-Base machine and a well liked teammate who would be even more valuable if he could match up his road work with home cooking and move himself into the star orbit of his teammates.


CF Melky Cabrera

At 25, Melky has had the bounce-back year only Guru expected him to have (bow here, done). He's hitting above his career high of .280, has already surpassed his career best in HR with 12, slugging .430 and playing that tremendous Defense in CF, LF or RF with the rifle arm. He's stolen 10 of 12 bases and won a bushel full of games on walkoff hits. A fixture in The Bronx now.


LF Johnny Damon

Johnny has battles with his calves and his eyes at times, his shoulder is shot and he still plays like a LB (colliding with Melky yesterday and giving Hershey squirts to Yankee fans) but he catches the ball wherever its hit and has given the Yankees .288 AVG/ .510 SLG/ 24HR/76 RBI/ 10 of 10 stolen bases, clutch, loves being a Yankee, knows how to win...


RF Eric Hinske

Hinske showed up in The Bronx with a smile on his face, has been the epitome of a class act and good teammate and smashed 7HR in only 69 at-bats for a cool .580 SLG. An ideal LH power bat on the bench.


DH Hideki Matsui

Knees killed his glove. Full time DH has eerily similar stats to about 6 teammates with 23 HR/76 RBI/ .505 SLG. He carried the Offense in August and has cooled off some since, but always an asset in the lineup.


C Jorge Posada

Broken record numbers....20HR/ 72 RBI/ .533 SLG, Jorge has come back from surgery to lead the staff from behind the plate, throw out runners, hit for power and average and clutch from both sides of the plate on a team and lineup with few weaknesses, he is yet another strength.


C Jose Molina

Great defender, great with pitchers, great arm, great guy, poor offensive player (best game ever with 3 hits ,2 walks yesterday). Does his job.


C Francisco Cervelli

The youngest and best defensive catcher on the Yankees, pitchers love him, runners fear him and he handles himself well at the plate. His HR against Atlanta in mid-June was the catalyst to a Yankee season to remember and a long career in pinstripes.

And that is enough of that! We'll recap the season and preview the playoffs in about four weeks.









August 15, 2009

2009 New York Yankees: Dominant, Again.

By Matthew Storey

When last we spoke, we'd looked at 2009 New York Yankee games through Game #98.

At that point, the Yankees were 60-38, a record they've added to by going 13-5 in Games 99-116, which break down as follows:

Game 99 - @ Tampa Bay Rays W 11-4
Game 100 - @ Tampa Bay Rays L 6-2
Game 101 - @ Tampa Bay Rays W 6-2 (New York leads Season Series 6-5)
Game 102 - @ Chicago White Sox L 3-2
Game 103 - @ Chicago White Sox L 10-5
Game 104 - @ Chicago White Sox L 14-4
Game 105 - @ Chicago White Sox W 8-5 (Chicago leads Season Series 3-1)
Game 106 - @ Toronto Blue Jays W 5-3
Game 107 - @ Toronto Blue Jays W 8-4 (New York leads Season Series 7-2
Game 108 - Boston Red Sox W 13-6
Game 109 - Boston Red Sox W 2-0
Game 110 - Boston Red Sox W 5-0
Game 111 - Boston Red Sox W 5-2 (Boston leads Season Series 4-8)
Game 112 - Toronto Blue Jays L 5-4
Game 113 - Toronto Blue Jays W 7-5
Game 114 - Toronto Blue Jays 4-3 (New York leads Season Series 9-3)
Game 115 - @ Seattle Mariners W 11-1
Game 116 - @ Seattle Mariners W 4-2

Through 98 Games - Yankees 60-38 (.612)
Games 99-116 Yankees 13-5 (.722)

Leaving them at 73-43 (.629/1st Place/AL East 6.5 Games over Boston Red Sox)

They are on a pace to finish at 102-60. They have gone 22-6 (.786) in the Second Half and 35-11 (.761) since losing the 1st of 3 against the Atlanta Braves on June 23. They've won 38 come-from-behind games, lost only one game they were leading after the 7th Inning. They lead MLB in Runs, HR, RBI, Slugging Percentage, On-Base Percentage and are 2nd in Batting Average. Since Phil Hughes went into the Bullpen, the Pen has an ERA of 2.06.

What Has NOT Gone Well...

Chien-Ming Wang is done for this year and next and may never again be in Pinstripes, a sickening blow to lose a Pitcher in his prime who came into this year 54-20.

Mike Mussina, retired, after rejuvenating his career with a 20-9 2008 Season and discovering a way to dominate with control and change of speed.

Jason Giambi and Bobby Abreu, who combined for 52 HR and 196 RBI were let go.
Xavier Nady blew out his elbow in week one, ending his Yankee career.

Damaso Marte, who came with Nady in a 2008, trading deadline deal with Pittsburgh which cost the Yankees prime OF prospect, Jose Tabata, signed a 3 year offseason deal with the Yankees, then blew out his arm in the World Baseball Classic and looks like he may be done.

Brian Bruney, who suffered the same 2008 broken Lisfranc injury to his foot that ruined Wang, has also gone through dramatic reduction in effectiveness and two protracted stints on the Disabled List, forcing the Yankees to move Phil Hughes and Alfredo Aceves to the Bullpen, and thus leaving the Yankees with retread arms, Sergio Mitre and Chad Gaudin in the 5th slot in the rotation and as spot-starters for use when Joba Chamberlain is skipped a turn to keep him under a pre-established Innings Limit. Aceves and Hughes have been dominant in the Bullpen, Mitre and Gaudin represent the Yankees Achilles Heel in the Rotation.

Alex Rodriguez had Hip Surgery and has been playing at 2/3 of function all season and has only two HR (albeit critical game-winning types in the recent Red Sox series) in the last month.

What HAS Gone Well...


The Glory of the Middle Infield

In 2006, Derek Jeter hit .343 and Robinson Cano hit .342 and the Yankees used an August sweep to blow past the Red Sox on their way to a runaway in the AL East. In 2009, both are hitting .318, and have combined for 32 HR and 110 RBI with Derek Hitting leadoff. Defensively, Jeter has 6 Errors and Cano 4, playing middle infield every day with six weeks left in the Season. Jeter also has 20 Stolen Bases.

Beaten Up Outfielders on the Final Year of Big Deals...

4 years ago, the Yankees signed 30 year old Johnny Damon to be their CF and resigned 29 year old LF Hideki Matsui to identical 4 year/52M contracts. Both have hit consistently well throughout the ensuing years, but Matsui has been injured in every season and required knee surgery after both 2007 and 2008, which reduces him to a full-time DH Role. For his part, Damon lost the starting CF job to Melky Cabrera in 2006 and has played LF/DH since, and has seen both his Stolen Base and Defensive Ball Tracking skills go from elite to mediocre in 2009.

So, there was little reason to believe these two players would produce much Offensively in the final year of contracts, with beaten-up bodies. Damon, with the weak arm and reduced ball tracking ability is a part-time OF at best and a full-time DH in waiting. Matsui is one knee from Retirement.

Here is what they have done Offensively:

Damon .286 Average/ .367 On-Base/ .526 Slugging 22 HR/67 RBI/ 8-8 Stolen Bases

Matsui .266 / .361/ .509/ 19 HR/58 RBI

These old men can flat out RAKE!

At 35, Damon is on a path to 3,000 hits once someone signs him to another long term deal as DH/Parttime OF/Fultime WINNER. You can never say enough about this guy and, while it still seems unlikely the Yankees would keep him, given Melky/Gardner/Jackson and Damon's Defensive liabilities, what he brings Offensively and in the clubhouse is going to be extremely hard to replace.

Also 35, Matsui's Physical limitations make his retirement seem a certainty.

But, even with TWO bad knees, his Power, Plate Discipline, Baseball IQ and ability to perform in the Clutch are all still at Elite levels. If there is ANY player I wish I could have seen in his prime, it is Matsui, whose ability at this stage and career in Japan make is clear he would have been a Hall of Famer if he had played his whole career in MLB. A great, great player and a sayonara reminiscent of Mussina's glorious goodbye in 2008.

The New-Style Yankee Kids...

For decades, the Yankee system has consistently produced one-dimensional Power Hitters, who played OF/1B/DH and whose Defense and Base Running was secondary and below-par. Players like Steve 'Bye-Bye' Balboni, Hensley Dan Pasqua, 'Bam-Bam' Meulens, Kevin 'No' Maas, Shane Spencer, Shelley Duncan come immediately to mind, as does that big Power Hitting they traded to the Reds, who was traded to the Red Sox who was traded to the Nationals, who had as much Power as ANYONE ever has and had so little else to offer, I can't remember his name!!!! (Wily Mo Pena!).

This is NOT to dismiss the top level talents they have produced, Don Mattingly, Derek Jeter, Jorge Posada, Bernie Williams, Alfonso Soriano, Robinson Cano...only to note, that when they swung big, they overemphasized raw power. Jeter was can't-miss, Posada is driven, Soriano and Cano are freaks overlooked by scouts who are seduced by false hustle and showy athletes and miss the natural flow of perfect motion. The same scouts, in another era, missed on a player named Joe DiMaggio.

Watch BJ Upton move after a fly ball and you don't need to look at his statistics. - you know what he can do to you. And yet scouts and many media and fans have been doubting these players half decades into their careers, while celebrating lesser lights with grunting styles. What we New Yorkers saw in the Mid '80s when the absurd debate about who was superior between FBHOF Rickey Henderson and wall-charging, chaw dipping, roid raging good ole boy, Lenny Dykstra, like Dustin, the plucky lil' fella got himself an MVP and a WS run. Rickey was MVP back in Oakland, and won a WS there, then went to Toronto and did it there, then played another decade ending it first ALL-TIME in Walks, first ALL-TIME in RUNS SCORED and first ALL-TIME in Stolen Bases, by 500 or so.

The Yankees, in the days they were developing the Bashers who moved like Glaciers of the World, sent Rickey away in his prime to get those HR, SB, RUNS, WALKS elsewhere and win World Series elsewhere.

And Yankee fans, like Guru, said...what if we KEPT THE TRANSCENDENT TALENTS, kept the instinctual types who excel on Defense and situational baseball and signed players in their prime who had the ability, work ethic and desire for NYC that would not be denied.

2009 is that year.

Melky Cabrera, 25, is a switch-hitter with a huge arm who plays Gold Glove caliber Defense at all three OF positions, has hit for the Cycle, and .350 after the 7th Inning. Ramiro Pena, 23, is a switch-hitter who plays Gold Glove caliber Defense at SS and solid at 3B and 2B, Francisco Cervelli, 23, is a Catcher, who plays Gold Glove caliber Defense and handles the bat like a veteran (think Kurt Suzuki, Jason Kendall). Injured 25 year old OF, Brett Gardner, has Carl Crawford speed, hits .280 and catches everything hit.

These are not transformational players, the Yankees have those all over the field. But they are young, agile, smart, fundamentally sound on both sides of the ball and do the things that teams need to win.

Run. Throw. Catch. Think. Compete. Speedster, Gunslinger, Utility Infielder/Switch-hitter, Utility Outfielder/Switch-hitter. Backup Catcher with complete Defensive game.

Unlike the machismo and random efforts of the past, these are precise, surgical moves to fill holes and complete a diverse roster that can win. Cano is a star, Melky is a role player, but their contributions are equal on this team. That is scouting, that is development, that is planning.

The Newbies

Mark Teixeira has been Alex Rodriguez in a year that Alex is hurt and cannot carry the Yankees. He is a switch-hitting, Gold Glove, HR hitting, clutch machine who plays like a man on fire and dreams in Pinstripes.

CC Sabathia has been a Horse, a LH power pitching, 98 MPH, devastating slider, a knee-breaking change-up, deep in games, low-hit, dominant-in-big-games, instant charisma, zero drama, team leader.

AJ Burnett has been a dominating, intimidating, strikeout inducing, deep game pitching, Yankee loving, Pie in the face breath of fresh air in the rotation and clubhouse.

Nick Swisher has been a switch-hiting, power hitting, league leading walk getting, charismatic, Yankee loving, clubhouse transforming, good guy goofball just happy to be a Yankee.

Jerry Hairston, Jr. came over at the 2009 Trading Deadline, he plays 3B and LF, runs well, hits well, knows the game. An ideal Utility veteran.

Jose Molina and power hitter, Eric Hinske are both honorable Veterans with good, solid games (Molina is a Defensive catcher with a gun for an arm, Hinske hit 5 HR in his 1st 20 at-bats. But Pena/Hairston/Cervelli/Gardner is an ideal, versatile, athletic bench and inter-changeable, versatile pieces like Melky Cabrera and Nick Swisher back up both OF slots and 1B. That should be your playoff bench.

Oh, by the way, the Yankees Pitching Staff, has more strikeouts than any other and, since 6/1 the best Batting Average against, most saves, lowest ERA of any Bullpen.

A team managed by and led by players with multiple rings who were on a 113 win team in 1998.

A team that is on its way to a strong postseason.

Take a bow, Brian.

Wow!

Wang, a healthy Alex, Nady, Marte, Bruney...would have made this one of the greatest teams in Baseball history.

Without that, they are on their way to a Division title, with the best record in Baseball.

Quite a season, thus far.

The Arms from the Farm...

Joba Chamberlain is 23, he gets a lot of press because of the variety of rules associated with his development. The Joba Rules are always fodder for debate. Joba dominated in the Bullpen, he has been the Yankees best Starter in his first two years in the rotation. But he hurt his arm last August and seemed to sag in June. Verlander was 101 and dominant in his 2nd year, 2007, and was 91-92 in 2008 before bouncing back to his previous form this season. The Yankees have good reason and the effect is he will miss 3 of his last 9 starts on a team in comfortable position. Non-story. Like the one that USED to follow Joba, something about the Bullpen? (97 MPH)

Phil Hughes turned 23 in June, in the Pen through no fault of his own as Chien-Ming Wang moved his .700 ass back in. Phil had put 8 innings and zero runs on the Twins just ten days earlier. He went into the pen, has thrown (97 MPH) and has a 1.35 ERA two months later. Rotation in 2010 for the as long as his arm is healthy.

Phil Coke is a bit of kid, he gets too pumped up, follows up strings of strikeouts with fat strikes that get smacked.
But...he is a power LH (95 MPH), strikeout machine, low batting average against, strike thrower who can go multiple innings or be a LH specialist, and is 26.

David Robertson is 24, he has the best Strikeouts Per 9 Innings of ANY MLB PITCHER in 2009. He is inexperienced, walks too many and is a work in progress, but his ERA is 3.24 and those 47 K's in 33 Innings are a nice way to start a career in Pinstripes (95 MPH).

Alfredo Alceves, 25, the one Bullpen stalwart who does NOT possess a big arm. All Aceves can do is start, long relieve, short relieve, close, strike people out, get double plays, pop people up, throw strike in every situation, keep hitters off balance. A gem, a find, a long term solution.

Then, there are the FREAKS!

Jorge Posada is 38 on Monday, has been a regular catcher since 1997, playoffs every year from 1996-2007. He was lost early in 2008 to Shoulder Surgery (the same Surgery that Chien-Ming Wang has just had, one year after having the same surgery as Brian Bruney). He has 15 HR/50 RBI, hits .285, slugs .500, throws runners out. Leads.

Andy Pettitte, 37, was the kid LH star of the '96 World Series, yesterday he struck out 10 Mariners and has a 2.04 ERA in the Second Half. He just became the all-time MLB pickoff leader. He will be a rotation regular somewhere as long as he wishes, possibly back in The Bronx.

Mariano Rivera will turn 40 during Thanksgiving football. He has saved 73 of 75 opportunities the past two seasons, has a CAREER WHIP of 1.02, has 132 Strikeouts and 13 Walks (10/1) last two years, over 120.1 Innings.





July 20, 2009

2009 NY Yankees: Detroit Tigers/Games 89-91

By Matthew Storey

Yankees opened the 2nd Half of the 2009 Season at home against the AL Central Division Leading Detroit Tigers at the new Yankee Stadium, and the two teams put on a clinic with three well-pitched, nail-biting ballgames. Coming into the break, the Yankees had squandered some of the momentum of a 13-2 stretch that brought them into a first place tie with a sweep at the hands of the LA Angels in Anaheim and renewed questions about the back end of their rotation, which lost Chien-MIng Wang just as he found himself again and has seen an ineffective Andy Pettitte struggle with good lineups. With the rest of four full days off for the bulk of the squad (SS Derek Jeter, 1B Mark Teixeira and Closer Mariano Rivera were All-Stars), New York was hoping to get off to a strong 2nd Half start.

Game 89

NY Yankees 5
Detroit Tigers 3

Winning Pitcher: Phil Hughes (4-2)
Losing Pitcher: Joel Zumaya (3-3)

HR: Granderson (19)
Teixeira (22)

AJ Burnett was the Yankees most reliable starter in the six weeks leading up to the All-Star break, with a 5-1 record and 1.74 ERA, but he struggled mightily with his control in his start against the Tigers, walking 5 against only 1 Strikeout. Still he managed to limit the damage to 3 runs over 6 innings, getting critical help from Melky Cabrera in CF who threw out Miguel Cabrera from the RF wall trying for a 2B and completing a DP on a sinking liner to RCF that looked like the start of a rally, only to end a threat. Burnett, for all his travails, did what Starters need to do to give the Yankees a chance to win. Trailing 3-2 after 6, Yankees brought in Phil Hughes, who closed the 1st half on a roll, with 16 scoreless innings, and he kept that up with a dominating two innings of 97 MPH gasoline, surrendering three hits on curveballs but retiring six of six outs on Strikeouts.

For Detroit, Rookie LH starter, Lucas French, befuddled the Yankee bats with an assortment of 88 MPH 'fast'balls, curves, changeups and stayed in the strike zone to give the Tigers a major boost and hand over a 3-2 lead to his bullpen in the 6th Inning, which Reliever Fu-Te Ni of Taiwan held through an adventurous 2 hit 6th Inning. The Tiger bullpen unravelled in the 7th, however, when fireballing Joel Zumaya came in and the Yankee bats, who'd been chasing the junk of French and Ni all evening, got a chance to see some heat and took advantage with a Derek Jeter single, a Johnny Damon double and a Monstrous 3-Run BOMB into the 2nd Deck in RF from Mark Teixeira to move a 3-2 deficit into a 5-3 lead, a lead that held up when Hughes finished off the 8th and All-Star closer, Mariano came in and closed it out for his 24th Save. 5-3 Yankees win.



Game 90

NY Yankees 2
Detroit Tigers 1

Winning Pitcher: CC Sabathia (9-6)
Losing Pitcher: Justin Verlander (10-5)

HR: Rodriguez (18)
Thames (10)

This was a gem of a Baseball Game. The sort of pitcher's duel that lives up to the billing and makes for a thrilling watch. Yankee Starter CC Sabathia faced off against All-Star Jason Verlander and fought through his own early wildness to give the Yankees 7 shutout innings. For his part, Verlander worked through his own 6 shutout innings, before leaving a fastball over the middle of the plate to leadoff hitter, Alex Rodriguez, which he deposited into the first row of seats behind the RF Wall for a 1-0 Yankee lead. Verlander, who came into the game stating that he was unconcerned about the short RF porch in the new stadium, flashed a broad grin when the ball went out and proceeded to get a bit rattled as he allowed a couple of baserunners and a Nifty deke by Nick Swisher on a soft ground ball to SS Adam Everett allowed Melky Cabrera to reach 1B with the insurance RBI as Robinson Cano came home for a 2-0 lead. Alfredo Aceves came in for the 8th Inning and sandwiched Strikeouts of Miguel Cabrera and Magglio Ordonez around a HR to DH (and former Yankee) Marcus Thames, which also landed in the 1st row of seats, this time in LF for a 2-1 game. Mariano Rivera came on for his second consecutive save (25).

Game 91

New York Yankees 2
Detroit Tigers 1

Winning Pitcher: Joba Chamberlain (5-2)
Losing Pitcher: Edwin Jackson (7-5)

HR: Rodriguez (19)
Teixeira (23)

Another gem. All-Star Detroit starter Edwin Jackson, stolen from the Tampa Bay Rays in the head-scratching offseason trade, continued to throw peas at AL hitters and completely shut down the Yankees, except for a low inside pitch that Alex Rodriguez golfed about 440 feet into the Tigers bullpen in CF in the 4th Inning and a 3-1 pitch to Mark Teixeira, that followed a questionable strike on 3-0, that Teixeira sent screeching into the 2nd Deck in RF for the 2-1 lead.

For his part, Yankee starter, Joba Chamberlain had seemed fatigued in his recent outings, his energetic demeanor and upper '90s fastball seemingly gone prematurely in only his 3rd MLB season (he's 23). But he opened up his 2nd half stomping around the hill and dominating Tiger hitters, getting stronger throughout the game. He made one mistake, a hanging 4th Inning curve to Detroit Rookie Clete Thomas (a nice looking LH power hitter with a big RF arm) that he hit in the seats and overcoming a soft line drive single in the 5th that Nick Swisher butchered into a leadoff 3B by Curtis Granderson. Joba got out of the jam, ending it with a 95 mph fastball to Marcus Thames and a patented fist pump and primal scream, as previously parodied by Oriole Aubrey Huff. Apparently, Joba is learning the most important lesson ANY of us can ever learn - if you let the opinions of idiots like Huff stop you from expressing yourself - you are destined for nothing.

Phil Coke relieved Joba after 6 2/3 and got a 1 pitch out, and Phil Hughes was back for the 8th Inning, extending his scoreless innings streak to 19 with 2 more strikeouts, giving him 8 K's in the 9 outs he got from Detroit this weekend. Mariano provided the replay with his 3rd successive Close (26) on OldTimers Day in The Bronx to send the generations of Yankee legends, 50,000 fans in the yard and Millions at home into Sunday night feeling mighty fine about the 2nd Half that begins with a sweep of the Tigers and a pair of BlueJay wins over the Boston Red Sox, moving the Yankees within 1 game of the lead. The only downer being the collapse of the Kansas City Royals bullpen to blow three successive leads against wildcard pursuer, Tampa Bay, meaning the Yankee sweep did not result in a single game of gain over the Rays.


Next Up:

Yankees host the Baltimore Orioles for three game set in The Bronx and then the Oakland A's come in for 3 on the weekend.





July 16, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Comprehensive 2nd Half Look

By Matthew Storey


When last we spoke, the Yankees were through 57 games, sitting at 34-23. Since then:

Game 58 Loss at Boston Red Sox 7-0
Game 59 Loss at Boston Red Sox 6-5
Game 60 Loss at Boston Red Sox 4-3 (Lose series 3-0, Trail season series 8-0)
Game 61 Win vs. New York Mets 9-8
Game 62 Lose vs. New York Mets 6-2
Game 63 Win vs. New York Mets 15-0 (Win series 2-1. Lead season series 2-1)
Game 64 Win vs. Washington Nationals 5-3
Game 65 Lose vs. Washington Nationals 3-2
Game 66 Lose vs. Washington Nationals 3-0 (Lose series, season series, 1-2)
Game 67 Win at Florida Marlins 5-1
Game 68 Lose at Florida Marlins 2-1
Game 69 Lose at Florida Marlins 6-5 (Lose series, season series, 1-2)
Game 70 Lose at Atlanta Braves 4-0
Game 71 Win at Atlanta Braves 8-4
Game 72 Win at Atlanta Braves 11-7 (Win series, season series, 2-1)
Game 73 Win at New York Mets 9-1
Game 74 Win at New York Mets 5-0
Game 75 Win at New York Mets 4-2 (Win series 3-0, Win season series, 5-1)
Game 76 Win vs. Seattle Mariners 8-5
Game 77 Win vs. Seattle Mariners 8-4
Game 78 Lose vs. Seattle Mariners 8-4 (win series 2-1, lead season series 2-1)
Game 79 Win vs. Toronto Blue Jays 4-2
Game 80 Win vs. Toronto Blue Jays 6-5
Game 81 Win vs. Toronto Blue Jays 10-8 (Finish 1st 81 Games, 50% of Season at 48-33, 96 win pace)
Game 82 Lose Toronto Blue Jays 7-6 (Win series 3-1, lead season series 5-2)
Game 83 Win at Minnesota Twins 10-2
Game 84 Win at Minnesota Twins 4-3
Game 85 Win at Minnesota Twins 6-4 (Win season series 3-0, season series 7-0)
Game 86 Lose at Los Angeles Angels 10-6
Game 87 Lose at Los Angeles Angels 14-8
Game 88 Lose at Los Angeles Angels 5-4 (Lose series 0-3, trail season series 2-4)

Yankees were 34-23 (after 57 Games)

Games 58-88 17-13

Current Record 51-37 (.580/94 Win Pace) 2nd Place (3 Games Boston), 1st Place WildCard (2 Games Texas)

Recap

Yankees went through their worst stretch of the season, followed by another surge and capped it all of with their typical drubbing at the hands of the Los Angeles Angels, the only team to hold a winning record against the Yankees in the decade and who have now beaten them to the tune of 17-5 in Anaheim last Five seasons!

Individual Player Updates, First Half Grades and Second Half Projections

Note: Grade is based upon Players OWN potential. How much of what he CAN do has he done.

Outfielders/Designated Hitters

LF Johnny Damon (B)
.276 Avg/.362 On-Base/.510 Slugging/16 HR/50 RBI/8-8 Stolen Bases

Johnny is a horrible Defensive player at this point, his bad arm now matched by vision issues that have made his vaunted Ball-Catching skill more of a hit-or-miss thing. But boy can he RAKE. He has slumped badly in July, but even so, his numbers speak for themselves. He has hit for power, hit in the clutch, hit in situations and taken advantage of being moved out of the leadoff slot to put up 50 RBI's in little more than a half-season while continuing to be a source of excellent baserunning (5th in AL Runs, 8-8 in Stolen Bases). Johnny needs to be a full-time DH at this stage, but a team that gives him that chance can expect Edgar Martinez sort of DH performance. No reason to project any change for Johnny in the 2nd Half.

RF Nick Swisher (B)
.237/.360/.434/14/47

Nick has been an upgrade Defensively from Bobby Abreu, but the loss of Xavier Nady has made him the fulltime RF and his Offensive output is a steep downgrade from Abreu. In the midst of an awful July, Swisher is an On-base machine (5th in AL, just ahead of Abreu, who outhits him by 80 points) and his spirited, knucklehead presence has gone over well with his buttoned-down teammates, making him a positive intangible in a way the low-key Bobby was not, since he just added to the sleepy atmosphere. Not a knock on Bobby (there really aren't any, except his ball tracking in the OF), just a roster composition issue for the Yankee clubhouse.

Nick is a hit-and-miss, streak hitter and can't really be relied on day-in, day-out to contribute. Of course, the 70 Strikeouts that provoke that dire review of his contributions would only make him 4th Worst on the Rays (Pena 111, Upton 99, Longoria 77) or 3rd Worst on the Red Sox (Papi 78, JD Drew 74), so maybe I should be gentler?

CF Melky Cabrera (B)
.285/.347/.439/8/34/5-7 SB

Melky has been the Starting CF, but his versatility move him to RF or LF when Girardi sits Damon or Swisher. At any of the three OF slots, Melky is a Defensive Star, providing Gold Glove heroics in all three slots with a big arm that has so thoroughly proven his point - nobody runs on him anymore. Offensively, he is much improved from last season's fiasco and is back at the proven performance level of 2006 and 2007. He hits equally well from either side of the plate for Power and Average, plays the game with intelligence and has proven to be a terrific situational/clutch hitter throughout the first half. He rarely strikes out and runs occasionally (5 of 7 SB) and has been one of the Yankees best performers. With his glove, arm and smarts, if he can slug .439 - they should keep him his whole career, the versatility of playing all three OF slots with that skill, the big arm and the switch-hitting
make him the sort of asset the Yankee system never used to develop and now seems to do so from every corner.

Melky's next HR will be a new Career high and he will only turn 25 on August 11 so no reason not to expect continued improvement.

CF Brett Gardner (B)
.282/.352/.404/3/19/18-22 SB

Originally the starter in CF, Gardner lost his job to a hot Melky early on and skeptics (like Guru) clamored to forget him and ship him to the NL destination his Speed/Slap hitting seem to be destined for. But, like Melky himself, Brett didn't use the demotion to sulk, but rather has contributed every time he has been in the lineup. His blinding speed is on the short list of the AL's fastest (Crawford, Span, Gomez) and his ball-tracking skill and base-stealing are as good as it gets. His arm is weak, however, and were he a more experienced MLB player - LF would be the ideal spot for him (he replaces Johnny Damon's old role as a Basestealer/Table Setter/Ball Tracker). Offensively, he has gone out and PROVEN that he belongs in MLB. With his legs and glove, if he can post .280 with .400 slugging, he will always have an MLB role.

Brett is 25 and in his first full MLB season, so he should only improve.

RF Eric Hinske (Inc)

This recent pickup was a bit of a head-scratcher, Yankees have Swisher who is a similar OF/IB/DH type with thump and have better options to back up Alex Rodriguez when he rests his Hip at 3B (Ramiro Pena, sent to minors and Cody Ransom). But Hinske cost nothing (Pirates just dumping him) and is a professional power hitter (3 quick pops already) who has played in the AL East his whole career and been in last two World Series, like all Yankees, he is thrilled to be given the shot at wins and riches and will benefit from the RF porch. But his Defense already cost them the final game in Anaheim, which was ironic since it looked like an Abreu moment while Abreu was watching from the LA Bench. His presence makes one wonder if there may be another move before the trade deadline with one of the other marketable OF types listed above.

No clue what to expect from Hinske, his role or his potential tenure.

DH Hideki Matsui (B)
.265/.367/.517/14/40

At every one of these updates, I've pointed out how fragile Hideki's two surgically repaired Knees looks and how likely it is that the magnificent warrior is one slip away from retirement. But the NL Games provided and unwanted but, as it turned out, wonderful chance for Hideki to get a mid-season respite (he pinch-hit in each game) and he has been frisky since returning to daily DH. Despite his leg woes, that keep him from playing OF anymore, his production is comparable with other AL DH's and he hits in situations, hits in the clutch and walks as much as he strikes out (36/40).

Matsui will rake as long as he can stand, how long that will be is impossible to say, but Damon/Swisher/Hinske are similarly productive DH options and would allow the full-time presence of Melky/Gardner on Defense and the bases, so Yankees are not vulnerable in the OF.


Infielders/Catchers

1B Mark Teixeira (B)
.275/.378/.535/21/63

Mark has had an uneven beginning to his Yankee tenure as the latest in a string of great Yankee 1B from Chris Chambliss to Don Mattingly to Tino Martinez to Jason Giambi....While Teixeira's switch-hitting power and spectacular glove make him a worthy heir to the line, all players go through an adjustment to playing in The Bronx and all families/individuals go through an adjustment period as well. Roger Clemens took two years to fit in, Randy Johnson knew after two years, he never would. Teixeira is not only gifted, he is INTO IT...he wants it so bad and is so pumped over the moon about being in Pinstripes, he forgets to breathe...he struggled in April, flourished in May, playing like an MVP, then sagged a bit in June. His numbers are huge even though and his Defense, coupled with the two youngsters in the OF and suite of young, slick-fielding back-ups, gives the Yankees impact Defensively at every spot on the field. Mark has been outspoken about the lethargic approach the Yankees bring to the field, what he calls 'thinking we can just throw our gloves on the field', but he doesn't yet understand the Yankees play it that way because their season is designed to go long into October every year and the hype around the team makes every....single....day....high drama if you let yourself get caught up in the flow. They will always run into more energetic, competitive squads, particularly early in the year...but the Yankee way is just to show up, punch the clock and put the better players on the field, counting on talent, not desire, to win the day.

When Mark stops trying to 'make' things happen (like Alex does) and just LETS it do so, like Derek and Damon. The Yankees will hoist flags in The Bronx.

2B Robinson Cano (A)
.308/.341/.490/13/46

Cano has had a dominant year Defensively, with 3 errors in 87 games, while being 3rd in Total Chances for a commanding lead in fielding Percentage (.993) over his closest rivals in balls reached (Hill, Kinsler) both of whom have twice as many errors. His arm, range and double play prowess are unmatched in the game by any 2B. Then, there is the bat! Cano has ridden torrid 2nd Half Streaks to lift up sub-par first-half numbers in each of his previous 4 seasons, with his .300 plus 2008 2nd half salvaging a brutal early season slump. In 2009, the slow-start was avoided, putting down a solid foundation for his second half heroics. If Cano has his typical 2nd Half, the Yankees are looking at .320/30/100 and a Gold Glove from their 26 year old Second Baseman.

Cano, as noted, has been a 2nd Half/hot-weather player all his career, no reason to expect that to change. He will likely settle in with his infield mates in 2010 for an all Infield top-of-the-lineup of Jeter-Cano-Texeira-Alex that could be in those slots for 5 years, or until Derek breaks Rose's record.

SS Derek Jeter (A)
.321/.396/.461/10/37/17-20 Stolen Bases

Wherever Derek goes, he is the man. In every marriage, there is, since 1996 a contractual agreement that if Derek shows up at the door, the man will provide his wife and prepare food and drink for afterwards, and an understanding that to do anything less would be to deprive a woman and her daughters of a world where there ARE good men. Derek goes to the WBC and is the man, comes back to The Bronx and is told he will hit leadoff, so he goes back to stealing bases and hitting for average, clubs HR's when needed, responds to the lesser men who criticize his Defense with a 4 error (2nd) first half, while being 5th in Total Chances and 2nd in Fielding Percentage to a guy who plays indoors (Scutaro).

Likely to finish with an average close to his career number (.316), 20 HR, 30 SB and fewer than 10 Errors.

3B Alex Rodriguez (B)
.256/.411/.548/17/50

Alex should have listened to his body and had the hip surgery in the offseason, and should have had help with those decisions from a Yankee front office which mishandled every injured Yankee on its roster this winter. That said, his incredible healing powers and ability to maintain a pharmacological edge on MLB's testing regimen (for you Paranoids out there!), led to his surreal return in Early May and a 1st Half with numbers that any OTHER 3B would feel pleased with. He slumped badly as he was overplayed in his first 35 games back, but once rested adequately, he went on a typical Alex tear and blasted by MLB's greatest all-time sluggers on the all-time list, which will have him sometime in the next few days nestle into 9th place ahead of Harmon Killebrew, before his 34th Birthday on July 27. His hip has sapped his speed and burst on the bases, but he has been spectacular at 3B (5 errors) and the booming power is all the way back.

Will likely feel more comfortable with greater rest and the All-Star downtime for the first time in his career, he remains the indispensable Yankee. Call it .290/40/125.

UT Cody Ransom (D)

Cody was awful at the plate and in the field when filling in for Alex early in the year, then blew out his quad for two months, which revealed Ramiro Pena as a switch-hitting contributor with Gold Glove prowess in the IF. When Ransom returned, the Yankees sent Pena down and gave Cody back his job and he has thus far continued to show rust, but DOES have skills with both the bat and glove and is likely to reward the faith with steady 2nd Half contributions, OR be demoted and allow Pena to be that guy. Either way, Yankees are well covered around the entire Infield.

C Jorge Posada (B)
.285/.369/.508/11/40

Jorge has been the lone Yankee to return from 2008 Surgery with his game intact, as Joba, Wang, Bruney, Alex and Mariano all went through varying stages of after-effects in 2009. Jorge missed a few weeks with a hamstring pull, but the time off did his shoulder well and allowed the Yankees to discover the Defense excellence and Offensive pluck they have in Rookie Francisco Cervelli (threw out 10 of 21 SB attempts) and Jorge never missed a beat from either side of the plate or behind it either before or after the pulled hammy. He is one of four regular switch-hitters with power in the everyday lineup (Teixeira, Swisher, Cabrera), has been effective as a pinch-hitter or DH when called upon and been the leader they missed without him in 2008. Defensively, he has worked through shoulder surgery to throw out 30% of runners, many of them running to test his arm and succeeding early in the year. If the Yankees have a healthy Jorge and Hideki throughout this season, they may come to point to their unexpected time off as a key to their fortunes.

If Jorge is healthy, he rakes, defends and leads. He is healthy.

C Jose Molina (Inc.)

Molina blew out his leg right after Jorge and Cody did, Cervelli is the future backup and, perhaps, Jesus Montero, is the heir to Jorge, but Jose provides the veteran glove, smarts and top-gun wing to contribute the rest of 2009.


Starting Pitchers

LH CC Sabathia (B)

See Mark Texeira's summary for the reality of adjusting to life as a Yankee/New Yorker, its a big deal and a big change and takes awhile. CC is a horse, throws 98 mph heaters at the knees, sliders, curves, change-ups...he pitches deep in games, leads in the clubhouse, shows up, stands up, speaks calm. He can dominate with stuff or moxy, pitch a complete game with 10 K's or 2. Everything you could ask for.

CC will be his typical self in the 2nd Half.

RH AJ Burnett (B)

AJ pitched in some poor luck at times in the first half, as the Yankees went through some valleys with injuries and production that often found him being victimized by poor run support. Lately, however, he has been cruising and winning, striking people out and pitching deep into every start. Has embraced being a Yankee and being in New York more than anyone could have imagined, the Blue Jay players said they were amazed at the AJ they see in Pinstripes - a talented young person who has come into his own skin.

AJ looks good from here.

RH Chien-Ming Wang (D)

Poor Chien. Dominant throughout his Yankee career, he broke his damn foot in a freakish accident last June, sat out extra months to insure its healing and managed to rust from inactivity, then have to try and recapture his stuff on a big -league hill (Catastrophe), in the minors (worked), the bullpen (worked well) and finally, back into the rotation where, in his last start, he FINALLY looked like the Chien-Ming Wang who piled up the 54-20 record as Yankee ace from 2005-08. Then, he injured his arm. He's only 29, so even a lost year is no biggie, the important thing is to get him HEALTHY and bring him back to the guy he still can be, too young, too strong, too good to lose.

No idea what to expect, Yankees have lost Chien and Mussina, their best two starters from '08, defeating the purpose of the new 'depth' - with Wang, Joba and Bruney at a fraction of their previous ability, the entire staff has been shifted to plug Hughes into the spot Bruney occupied and the back end of the rotation has gone from the anticipated strength to the glaring weakness of this Yankee team.

RH Joba Chamberlain (C)

So much nonsense is written about this kid 'needing to learn how to pitch'. That is bullshit. He is smart on a hill and knows what to do, but his stuff is simply not the same since he walked off the mound with a sore shoulder last August 4 in Texas. As a starter in 2008, he threw 34% of his pitches at 95MPH or better, and with the other 2/3 of his pitches being the biting slider and change-up, that led to low BAA, low pitch counts and the ability to work in the strike-zone. In 2009, the loss of velocity has turned Joba into a nibbler, trying to work off-speed on the corners, getting into bad counts and managing walks and thumped baseballs from middling fastballs left over the plate. The Yankees and Joba insist his stuff is fine, but that is childish. The naked eye and the radar gun do not lie and, while an Andy Pettitte or Mike Mussina can be expected to adjust to becoming a finesse pitcher in their mid '30s, to watch the Yankees most exciting homegrown starters in decades BOTH (Wang, Joba) lose their arm-strength in the same season and battle to overcome injury has been the scariest thing about the season. Power pitchers go through this. Justin Verlander went from 102 to 92 last year and is back to his dominant stuff this season, so it CAN be done and Yankees have to hope it will be by Joba, because if he is bringing the stuff he has now to the mound, he aint Joba and they might as well call him 'Jason' and ship him to Kansas City.

The key not only to the Yankees season, but to many Yankee seasons. A dominant homegrown power pitcher with a brilliant future or an early-career blown arm?

We'll see.

LH Andy Pettitte (C)

This grade may be a bit harsh. Andy has been what he was in 2008, a guy who can win and cruise when he is feeling great and playing a team with young hitters he can fool or who lack lineup depth, but lacks the stuff to get outs against elite teams and hitters who are familiar with his arsenal. A decent back of the rotation starter, but of no value in a playoff setting, which points out the critical importance of getting Wang or Joba right during the 2nd half. He needs to make the adjustment that Cone, Mussina and other power arms made late career to throw more soft stuff and more variety to allow his bread and butter cutter to be more effective. If they keep trying to throw a ball by hitters who know their movement well, they get THUMPED (check out Schilling's 2006 HR numbers trying to throw his old heater by hitters, then his 2007 numbers when he figured it out).

Andy is strong, healthy and a winner. He'll win more than he loses, but struggle with the best teams.


Bullpen

RH David Robertson (C)

Called up to replace the previously brilliant but hopelessly lost Jose Veras (Cleveland Indians on waivers) and Edwar Ramirez (11 k's per 9 innings in his Yankee career, but walks by the bushel in '09). 24 year old Robertson has actually begun to pitch just like Edwar. He gets lots of Strikeouts with his biting curve and sneaky 93MPH (34 K's in 22.2 Innings), he can strike out any hitter...WHEN he throws strikes! (16 walks). He is young enough, talented enough and deep enough in the bullpen mix to be given the rest of the Summer to figure it out, but come September, he needs to be throwing strikes or be back in MiLB.

Up to him.

RH Alfredo Alceves (A)

Was great as a September starter for the Yankees in 2008, was great in the Rotation in Spring Training, was great back in the minors, was great as a long-man in the Yankee bullpen, was great a a short-man in the Yankee bullpen, was great throwing long relief (4 innings) and spot-start (3 2/3) in back-to-back emergency duty when Wang shifted from pen to rotation, Hughes went from reliable starter to short inning relief and then Wang hurt his wing after Hughes had been reconditioned as a short-guy. Aceves isn't the guy they plan around, he is simply part of the solution whatever the plan requires. The sort of guy they have suddenly come up with in abundance in this year when the bigger name, bigger gift guys are fighting their bodies. Aceves has the experience of pitching in regular rotation for YEARS in the Mexican leagues and is like El Duque working over hitter after hitter. Implacable and professional, just the way Yankees should be.

A gift. Will he keep on giving? He is only 26 and has a 2.45 ERA in 73 Yankee innings, as well as a ratio of 36 K's to only EIGHT walks in his 43.1 Innings this year. A strike throwing machine.

LH Phil Coke (B)

Yet another mid '20s Yankee arm with a terrific arm. Coke controls hitters (26 hits in 38.1 Innings), but can begin to cruise and leave pitches up in the zone. He has been victimized by control issues, resulting in walks (14, to 31 K's) and HR balls (6). Needs more experience and command to be a dominant force in the Bullpen for a long time.

Already solid, could be great or go backwards.

RH Brian Bruney (D)

Like Wang and Joba, Brian got hurt in 2008 and has struggled with his health and unable to return to previous arm strength in 2009. When right, Bruney is 98 mph heat and biting sliders on the black. Unhittable stuff and precision command. But he is clearly not there in his second return from the DL this season. Instead of 98 on the black, its been 94 in the middle, with predictable results. His issues have forced Yankees to move starter Hughes into Bruney's role, thus depriving themselves of a stud young starter just as Wang, Joba and Pettitte are wavering.

Not good.

Difficult to feel confident about Bruney, since his broken foot and strained elbow are fresh in all our minds. That said, he's another power arm who is only 27 and has proven stuff (200 K's in 199 MLB innings) and has worked to return from injury and remake his once portly body. He may not contribute in 2009, but should be kept healthy and given the chance to return to the dominant arm he was so recently.

RH Phil Hughes (A)

Phil had the same basic route as Aceves. His arm is a given and the wait with him has been about his experience and health. He did a serviceable job in the Yankee rotation early with 5 good starts and only one bad (a 5/9 Debacle against the Orioles at the Stadium) that is almost all of his 2009 ERA (8 ER in 1.2 IP). Once Wang reclaimed his Rotation slot, Hughes was moved into a short, late-inning role and has thrived. He surrendered a 2-Run pop to Kevin Youkilis in the first inning of his second relief stint against the Red Sox at Fenway and those have been the only runs he has surrendered in 13 relief appearances over 18.1 Innings, he has struck out 19 and walked only 5 and 5 hits in the 15 innings since Youk went yard. He is three weeks into his 23rd year, throwing 96 mph gas at the knees with what might be the best curve ball South of Halladay. A dynamic talent, who is HEALTHY, which is critical with Wang and Bruney down and Joba on the ropes.

Phil will be in the pen for now, perhaps all of 2009 and will move into a long-term starters job in 2010. Brian Cashman had the only word that makes ANY sense on the whole debate between the relative merits of staff members stating 'any decent starting pitcher is going to be effective in a set-up role, but only a few set-up guys can be effective front-end starters. Nobody in Baseball doubts that is what Phil Hughes will be for long and long.

RH Brett Tomko (C)

Veteran filler has adequate stuff (96 mph) but has never performed to it in 15 big league seasons or as a Yankee, purely a mop-up the slop guy who will be displaced by Labor Day from within by a returner (Damaso Marte) or a call-up (Mark Melancon).

RH Jonathan Albaladejo (B)

Big Jon is an effective middle guy who gets ground balls, throws strikes and can provide multiple innings in situations when the starter has left early or game is in need of a hold while the bats make hay. Another young (27) arm with moxy, who can help the Yankees now and in the future. He slipped early in the year, but made the most of his send-down and has been terrific since returning and could be here to stay.

Look for Jon to solidify a secondary role in the Bullpen in the 2nd half and continue packing donuts by the box full!

RH Mariano Rivera (A)

Mo had some hiccups after his typical brilliant Spring, with poor outings in 3 of his 36 appearances (4/24 in Boston, 5/7 and 6/6 against Tampa Bay), but has been casually brilliant for the rest of the time. He adds 43 K's and 3 Walks in his 37 2009 Innings to his 2008 totals, giving him a ratio of 120 K's to 9 BB's in his last two seasons, over 107.2 Innings, a period in which he has saved 62 of 64 chances. MOney in the bank and showing no signs that he won't be signing yet ANOTHER contract as Yankee closer come the end of 2010.

MOre Mo. The greatest of the great in all of sports, Derek may have privileges with your wives and daughters, but Mo has full access to your home, car, possessions and slave labor upon request. He owns you as he has owned the American League and makes the histrionics of men like K-Rod and Pap-B seem almost as dated as those of Al Hrabowsky, despite being a dozen years older than either man. Will remain long enough to outlast Trevor Hoffman and become the first man to save 750 games and to be a closer past his 50th Birthday. Will retire in October 2020 after his 26th Year.


Manager, General Manager and Coaches

Joe Girardi (A) is the ideal guy for this team. He leads by example, being the fittest Yankee with pipes, abs and ridiculous body fat. He has been masterful with the bench and the platoon of young CF'ers Melky and Gardner, and adjusted on the fly when the bullpen standouts of 2008 and arms they counted on for 2009 (Bruney, Marte, Veras and Ramirez) ALL failed to reasons of health and ineffectiveness and rebuilt things by switching from short-guys to recast starters (Hughes, Coke, Robertson, Aceves) who could pitch multiple innings and throw strikes. Juggling the health of veteran position guys nursing injuries and getting production from minor league call-ups. Has Yankees running the bases (5th in Stolen Bases, succesful 80% of the time) and been an arbiter of relaxation in the sometimes tense world of NY clubhouses where the hostile media (National and Local included) cover the team like the Nixon White House, thinking about making careers with nonsense and gossip. The new chemistry, that has been an adjustment for Yankee veterans AND Yankee fans has been an unqualified success. They have more fire but still have professionalism, are loaded with guys who LOVE being Yankees, play through pain and put their teammates first. The kind of team Joe Girardi PLAYED on. This is the best Defensive and Situational Yankee team since 1999, and, if healthy - the best lineup in MLB. The rotation problems with Wang and Joba are the only issues which can derail Joe from his first of many, many Championships. If Derek has dibs on your wife, and Mo on your assets and activity, think of Joe Girardi as the person who can come into your community and provide you and your neighbors with plans for the coming decades, all in about an hour.

He has seen all, done all, won all in the Uniform, but also been on terrible teams, on NL squads, managed a young, small market outfit as well as the Yankees. Knows everyone, knows everything about the situation he is in, remains in control of himself in all situations. Has less interest in the spotlight and is less fascinated by the media than Torre was, so silly little dramas don't pop up and appears genuinely in sync with his contemporaries Cashman and Yankee principal owner, Hal Steinbrenner. Yankee-haters speculate Joe might be on the hot seat if 2009 does not put the world of Baseball back on the footing it lost in the awful last half-decade, but the locker the team built for Joe's son in the clubhouse should signal everyone that Joe is here for a decade or more and will retire in the company of Stengel, McCarthy, Huggins and Torre for Yankee longevity and success. There is no greater bet in Professional Sports than betting on Girardi, and the Yankees know what they have.

Hitting coach, Kevin Long (B) has dealt with a lot of injuries and nonsense in the typical early season Yankee adjustments, but the team leads MLB in runs, homers, slugging, on-base percentage, OPS....they walk almost as much as they strike out and have yet to really see anyone perform at a higher level than previously established form.

Pitching coach, Dave Eiland (C), has managed to oversee devastating injuries to critical performers and varying degrees of unreliable performance from previously reliable arms. That said, the 3.82 staff ERA after the 15-17 early season struggles makes it clear the team has a comfortable position in all facets of the game.

GM Brian Cashman (B)

A nice job for a guy who will spend the next two decades with Manager Girardi and Owner Hal Steinbrenner counting championships, producing Yankeeographies and adding to the miseries of New England men and women who have suffered for eons from the deficiency of their menfolk between the temples and the hip flexors. Unable to achieve satisfying sexual interaction and limited to choices of programs about Dancers, programs about Fat people and programs about Fat people who dance - the 'Nation' will begin the post-Manny decades without continued on-field success, but at least they have clams AND cranberries!


In Conclusion

Yankees have answers at Bat, on the Hill, on the Bases and in the Field and control their own destiny. If Wang and Joba are healthy and contribute, the World Series is a formality. If not, they will scratch and claw and be in the mix. Either way, the future is bright and the present fruitful and the Yankees appear poised to lift the Black Cloud that has covered the game since 2001 the same way Obama has removed the stain of the Bush years. When America looks back on the these past years, in both Sports and Life - this time will be known as 'The Worst Time Ever', but the time since November 2008 will soon make it as forgettable as the years between 1981-1992 (previous worst time ever).

Luckily, the Yankees are here to insure all will be well in the future!







June 13, 2009

Swept Away! Yankee/Red Sox Comparisons...

By Matthew Story
First it was an early April series at Fenway, Yankees blew a two run lead in the 9th with Mariano and a 6-0 lead behind AJ Burnett, who had an 0.40 ERA in Boston before surrendering 8 runs that game and 7 more on Tuesday!

Then it was a two game sweep in The Bronx, as Joba battled 1st Inning woes before trotting out his all-world arsenal to strike out 12 Red Sox in 5 2/3, only to be undone by the 4 First Inning runs in the end.

Now its a 3 Game Sweep at Fenway, Beckett at his best on Tuesday, but some tough, gritty play by the Red Sox and some tight, pathetic performances by veteran Yankees like Chien-Ming Wang and Nick Swisher, seemed to doom the Yankees on the 2nd and 3rd nights.

E-I-G-H-T losses in 8 games.

But only 2 out of First Place, while distancing the other AL wild cards.

Interesting.


The Red Sox are more competitive than the Yankees will ever be, so are the Angels, the Indians, Twins and Rays. If it was a war, these are the squads like the Confederacy, the Taliban, the Viet Cong, WW II Japanese - dedicated, small fire, innovative, never-say-die...such competitors thrive on close combat, that's why the Mujahadeen are so incensed the Americans don't want a 'fair fight' - they've internalized Western customs that ran from the Crusades to the Victorian Age.

America don't play that.

Neither do the Yankees.

Better resources, better roster, the long slog.

Is there any Red Sox you'd trade for?

The Players

1B Teixeira or Youkilis?

No knock on Kevin, who has made himself into a premier MLB Player. But when he hit .312/29/115, it was his first trip above each plateau in his career. He's 30. Teixeira is a switch hitter on another level entirely. The difference between an All-Star and a Hall of Famer.

Teixeira .289/.391/.628/19/52
Youkilis .350/.472/.631/10/37

2B Cano or Pedroia?

Despite the absurd MVP award for a guy with 17/83 in power numbers who lost the batting title to a Gold Glove CATCHER and still prevailed in the 'Manny Ramirez Protest Vote' by the idiots in the BBWAA (Moron's Association), just look at the data. Cano is a better player across the board. Pedroia is a hard worker with heart. Heart don't matter in The Bronx, or on The Magic Carpet.

Cano .293/.327/.463/9/35 - 2 Errors in 269 Chances
Pedroia .306/401/.406/2/24 - 4 Errors in 254 Chances

SS Jeter or Green? !

3B Alex or Lowell? !

C Posada or Varitek? !

LF Damon or Bay?

Well here is the best case for a current Red Sox over a previous one, but the disparity is slight...Bay is the guy who will kill a mistake and have big RBI games when the arms are mediocre, but Damon can hit anyone, at anytime and go deep in the deepest of doo-doo.

Damon .286/.361/.537 with 13 HR/35 RBI/5 for 5 SB
Bay .277/.399/.592 with 16 HR/57 RBI/5 for 6 SB

CF Ellsbury or Melky?

Ellsbury for all his Base Stealing heroics remains a guy with one weapon - his legs making a comparison to Brett Gardner more appropriate than one to Switch-Hitting/Rocket Armed Melky, with thump from both sides. Ellsbury is a .370 Slugger, with ONE HR.

RF Swisher or Drew?

Can you choose 'Neither'? Swisher and Drew are both mistake hitters. Swisher a great guy, Drew a creep, Swish hits both ways, Drew a LH hitter. No opinion from the Magic Carpet here...

Drew - .267/.391/.500/8/30
Swisher - .255/.394/.538/12/35

DH Matsui or Ortiz?

Ditto! Hideki and Papi are noble warriors whose bodies have betrayed them. Matsui runs on knees that barely stand, his Hall of Fame skill set just a memory, running into a few fastballs over the wall and few hooks into LF. Papi is stripped of Manny in the lineup AND the clubhouse, his knee and wrist hurt...

Matsui - .260/.350/.475/8/23
Papi - .203/.299/.338/4/25

The Starters

Josh Beckett or CC Sabathia?

There are maybe ten guys in the top rank of Starters and both these guys are on it (Johan, Halladay, Lincecum, Zambrano, Verlander, Greinke, Peavy, Volquez). Beckett is RH and has an indomitable persona and breathtaking stuff, a proven Champion. Sabathia is an Offensive Linemen playing with Cornerbacks, a bruiser LH who mixes, mesmerizes and goes all day long.

AJ Burnett or Jon Lester?

Burnett has stuff that is the equal of any MLB RH pitcher, but that is all he has. He lacks the mental preparedness of an Ace and his ball moves so much it often leads to walks or out pitches that suddenly lurch over the plate. Lester is an assassin, a great LH arm, control, composure. A MUCH better pitcher than AJ.

Chien-Ming Wang or Daisuke Matsusaka?

Wang's struggles have been well documented. But let's take a deeper look, this is a guy who broke his foot last June 18 and only Weds did he return to the 95-96 mph that made him 54-20 in his first four MLB seasons. He is big, strong, healing and will dominate as he always has once he gets innings under his belt and gets a feel for the Strike Zone. Dice-K is hard used, in part because of his style of throwing TONS of pitches (unlike Wang who cruises late on low pitches) and reminds me of Hideki Matsui, who is HOF all the way, but left too much back in Japan to last at this level once his body started claiming him.

Andy Pettitte or Tim Wakefield?

Andy is a borderline Hall of Famer (check the incredible numbers) and one of MLB's all-time winners, who is also LH. Wakefield is a Knuckleballer, who reliably takes the ball every five days, dominates when it dances and struggles when it doesn't.

Joba Chamberlain or Brad Penny/John Smoltz?

Joba is Smoltz twenty years ago. No comparison in 2009. Penny, despite his heroics tonight, is just a guy today.

Phil Hughes/Alfredo Aceves vs. Justin Masterson/Daniel Bard?

Four good young arms, with different strengths.

Jose Veras vs. Manny Del Carmen?

Equal on arm, Del Carmen has been far better on a hill. Veras needs to be able to throw strikes or the oohs and ahhs his stuff provides are useless.

Phil Coke vs. Hidkei Okajima?

A flamethrowing (96 mph) LH with 4 pitches who was a starter vs. a crafty veteran with a freaky motion and a sterling MLB record.

Mariano Rivera vs. Jonathan Papelbon?

Jon is ten years younger, and throws 4-5 MPH harder. Mo has far better control (30K, 2 BB (1 intentional) in 25 IP), Papelbon (29K, 13 BB in 27 IP). Mo is cool, PapB is hot. Either way, you are probably toast.

The Rest

Joe Girardi vs. Terry Francona?

The brilliant engineer Girardi, who is fitter than 75% of MLB players and has both a Manager of the Year trophy and 3 World Series Rings versus the classy survivor Francona, who has brought Boston two rings in five seasons.

Brian Cashman vs. Theo Epstein?

Brian heads for the shadows, the ultimate organization man in the ultimate organization, Theo is his own man in a loose group of executives. The two cultures are as opposite as the fan bases, ballpark and rosters and really cannot be compared, neither guy could do the other ones job. Brian 'swings for the fences' envisioning Rings and Yankeeographies and Theo craftily prefers guys who suit the Nation and will drive through glass of the B crew.

Hal Steinbrenner vs. John Henry?

Again, the culture clash is severe. The Steinbrenner belief (like Jerry Jones in NFL) is create top shelf conditions, ultimate amenities for fan and player and demand accountability for top dollar, John Henry openly campaign for a salary cap that will reign in the need to expand his payroll, tries to chisel dollars from HOF free agents in his grasp (Alex, Tex) while signaling his closer he'd prefer to pay a reduced salary for his continuing services. As different as any two management philosophies could be.

Empire vs. Nation?

I don't really know any Yankee fans, I am a loner, most of my close friends are actually Red Sox fans! I think the biggest difference is the sense of companionship Nation fans have for one ANOTHER. To be 'Red Sox Nation' is to be bonded to something larger than the Red Sox results, to be a Yankee fan is only about Wins and Losses. And Championships.




June 09, 2009

2009 NY Yankees:Rolling Right Along/Games 48-57

By Matthew Storey

Recap

Game 48 - Win 5-3 @ Cleveland Indians
Game 49 - Win 10-5 @ Cleveland
Game 50 - Lose 5-4 @ Cleveland
Game 51 - Win 5-2 @ Cleveland (Win Series 3-1, Win Season Series 5-3)
Game 52 - Win 12-3 over Texas Rangers
Game 53 - Lose 4-2 to Texas
Game 54 - Win 8-6 over Texas (Win Series 2-1, Win Season Series 4-2)
Game 55 - Lose 9-7 to Tampa Bay Rays
Game 56 - Win 4-3 over Tampa Bay
Game 57 - Win 5-3 over Tampa Bay (Win Series 2-1, Season Series tied 4-4)

Record through game 47 - 27-20
Games 48-57 - 7-3

Current Record 34-23 (.597/97 Win Pace)

Injury Report

Alex Rodriguez - Continues to play 3B 5x per week, DH 1X per week. Stole first base since return from Surgery, feels OK and is probably at 80%.

Jorge Posada - Returned from pulled Hamstring and is hitting with usual stroke, he appears to be struggling with his throws more than he was before hamstring injury, which is a concern. Girardi will continue to catch him 2 games, DH 1, catch 2, sit 1.

Hideki Matsui - Caught a couple of fat pitches in Texas, but has been struggling mightily since. Managed to leg out potential Double Play ball to win a game against Tampa Bay, but still seems to be moments away from career-ending problem with knees.

Xavier Nady - Hitting regularly in extended Spring Training games, but has not thrown the ball with intent, seems weeks away.

Jose Molina - Badly damaged Quad is likely to drag out past All-Star break.

Brian Bruney - Impossible to assess after aborted first comeback, has an elbow issue that cannot be treated and has to be discounted from plans, if they get something from him - it's gravy.

Damaso Marte - Who the fuck knows?

Cody Ransom - Who the fuck cares?

Looking Ahead

Yankees are in Boston for three games (T-W-TH) and will throw (AJ Burnett, Chien-Ming Wang, CC Sabathia) against (Josh Beckett, Tim Wakefield, Brad Penny), then Yanks are back home for the NY Mets over the weekend (F-S-S) with (Joba Chamberlain, Andy Pettitte, AJ Burnett) against (John Maine, Livan Hernandez, Johan Santana). Then the Washington Nationals come in for three (T-W-TH) to close out the Homestand before Yankees hit the road for the Inter-League tour with three in Florida, three in Atlanta and the final set with the Mets at the new Citifield.


Player Capsules

Pitchers

CC Sabathia (3.56) - CC was rolling along in dominant fashion but hit a speed bump in his last start against Tampa Bay, getting beaten for a 3 Run HR by backup Willie Aybar and a solo shot from Backup Ben Zobrist as well as 2 of a 3 hit day from 34 year old, Career Minor Leaguer, Joe Dillon. Ouch! Still, despite giving up the HR to Aybar, CC settled down and allowed only the 5 runs in 8 Innings.

AJ Burnett (4.69) - AJ has been tighter his last few turns, throwing more strikes and staying out of the middle of the plate where his ball tends to drift and create LONG HR chances. His stuff has so much movement, he is almost at its mercy when it moves into the middle. He got a suspension for throwing behind the monster talent, Nelson Cruz, when the idiot Padilla was plunking Teixeira. Currently on appeal, seems he will miss the start against the Mets.

Chien-Ming Wang (14.46) - The electric stuff returned for Chien while working out of the bullpen for three appearances. He surrendered a long HR in his first inning against Raul Ibanez, but really settled in after that and was dominant against Cleveland to earn a return to the starting rotation. His first start, he was dominant for the first two innings, got nickle and dimed in the 3rd for 2, then settled down and shut the door, gave up 2 more in 4th, then shut them down, then gave up a HR to Cruz in 5th as he tired. His sinker, slider and change are all working, only needs to rebuild stamina at this point. Appears to be more Strikeout capable since the time in the pen, may turn out to be a blessing. Not likely to be at full speed Wang until late June.

Andy Pettitte (4.22) - Andy walks the tightrope in his starts, but continues to do so effectively and go deep into games. Had a scare with his back, three starts back, but was whistling the ball last night against Tampa Bay (7 K) before leaving a lazy pitch over the middle to Gabe Kapler (barely hanging on to MLB slot). Reliable in the back of rotation, but suspect against better lineups/hitters.

Joba Chamberlain (3.79) - Alternates between dominant (8 innings, 2 runs against Cleveland) and competent (6 innings, 3 runs against Rays), but never surrenders a lot of runs even when he is 'off'. Velocity is solid (up to 98 against Cleveland) but control has not been what we've seen previously.

Phil Hughes (5.30) - Phil finally got a regular turn in the rotation and was looking terrific, also alternating between dominance and competence, but Wang needs to be in rotation and Andy has not done anything to warrant demotion, so Phil goes to the bullpen. Last night he made his inaugural pen appearance and dominated the Rays 1-2-3 with 95 MPH heat and wicked curves, has the perfect arsenal for one time through any lineup and makes the Yankee pen MUCH stronger with his ability to throw strikes, go several innings and get K's.

Alfredo Aceves (2.70) - Another starter out of the Pen, and he has brought stability and multi-inning appearances every time called upon. An indispensable member of the staff.

Phil Coke (4.24) - Emotional pitcher, Phil needs to do a better job of controlling his adrenaline and the strike zone. That said, he has a BIG LH arm and, when right, casually dominates LH hitting. Needs to work on keeping calm, throwing strikes and avoiding fat strikes. A project, but a promising one.

Jose Veras (6.65) - Veras has become the forgotten man in the Yankee bullpen, his 98 MPH notwithstanding, like demoted Edwar Ramirez, Jonathan Albaladejo and Mark Melancon, he just has not demonstrated enough strike throwing ability. Can strike out the side or walk the bases loaded, which is too much uncertainty for a team who want to win.

Brett Tomko (2.16) - Yet another starter in the pen, Tomko has the live arm (mid '90s) and vast MLB experience. He is able to go multiple innings and get a lineup for one time through.

David Robertson (2.08) - The most consistent strike thrower of the pen callups, Robertson can strike out any hitter from either side and avoids cripping walks that have derailed other bullpen arms. Likely to see innings that used to go to Veras.

Mariano Rivera (3.20) - Had a few horrific outings, but continues to roll for the most part, with 30 K's to only 2 walks, and a perfect 6-6 in closing out Yankee victories both Sunday and Monday after Saturday's blowup. Ball is 93 and moving two feet at the last moment, can't complain.

Players

1B Mark Teixeira (.286/18/51)

A beast. A brilliant glove, great arm, great instincts, huge power from both sides, clutch, loves being in NYC, loves being a Yankee. Stop me, I'm drooling.

2B Robinson Cano (.300/9/34)

Robby has been a Superstar on the road, where he has twice led the AL in Hitting, but continues to be mediocre at Yankee Stadium as he was in the old building. No idea what the difference is for him at Home, but glad Yankees are going on the road - they need Robby hitting. His Defense (2 Errors in 57 games) continues to be incredible, great range, great hands, great arm, great turn on DP.

SS Derek Jeter (.306/8/26)

The Captain was on a tear for awhile (16 game hitting streak, 7 multi-hit game streak) and has cooled off a bit, likes to swing for power when not hitting for average and hit long HR last night. His Defense has been nothing short of OUTSTANDING with terrific plays one after another (highlight play on slow roller last night to save Pettitte with bases loaded) - just 2 errors in 53 games at SS.

3B Alex Rodriguez (.248/8/23)

Still only 80%, Alex does a lot of guessing at the plate, when he gets it right - he crushes the long ball, otherwise he sort of dips and darts, takes his walks, tries to work counts. He has such a good sense of his body and of the situation, is sort of 'faking it till he makes it' - nobody should pitch to Teixeira until Alex proves he is back healthy, but they continue to avoid him and that helps the Yankees. Solid on Defense, has to be careful to avoid re-injuring the hip.

C Jorge Posada (.297/8/27)

A HR/BB guy from the LH Side, and an high-average type from the RH side, Jorge is valuable in every at-bat. He continues to rake, hit in the clutch and play through damage to his shoulder, hamstring. Defense has been off a bit of late, throws sailed on him during the last two series, but threw better last night.

LF Johnny Damon (.299/12/34)

Tough to complain about a guy who is this good Offensively, hits for average, hits for power, runs deep counts whether he is hitting or not, hits in the clutch, steals bases, scores runs...he is consistent as a ball catcher in LF but his atrocious right arm continues to be a run scoring opportunity for opponents.

CF Melky Cabrera (.297/6/23)

Melky smashed his Right Shoulder into the CF wall in Texas and has gone into his first slump of the season since the bump. His Defense and clutch hitting have continued to be terrific, but he needs to bring that average back up above .300 and thump. Hits equally well from both sides of the plate, but has been much better at Home than on the Road thus far.

RF Nick Swisher (.257/12/35)

Nick was an April hero and a May zero, and has gotten hot again in June (.500). He provides consistent On-Base and spurts of BIG Power, then goes through two weeks of strikeouts. Happily for Yankees, he is in a 'good' phase now. His Defense has been consistent and an upgrade from Abreu.

DH Hideki Matsui (.246/8/23)

The noble warrior, fighting his body, fighting to contribute and be part of the Yankees winning...his legs are just hanging on and every time I write one of his ten game summaries, I feel like its the final one. How long he lasts is anyone's guess, Guru's guesses he won't make it to September.

OF Brett Gardner (.265/2/9)

Gardner has improved greatly as a hitter and is no longer an automatic out. His speed is a given and his Defense is a plus, an ideal 4th OF type.

IF Ramiro Pena (.243/0/4)

Pena has played much less now that Alex, Derek and Cano are there on a nightly basis, but his glove is a given when someone needs rest. His Switch-hitting bat has struggled with sporadic time, but he doesn't cost the team when he is in there and is likely to hold off Cody Ransom when he returns early July.

C Francisco Cervelli (.271/0/4)

A premier defender/thrower who covers for Posada when he needs downtime for the Shoulder, Cervelli is similar to Pena in being a situational Offensive player who lacks thump but not savvy, ideal backup.

IF Angel Berroa (.150/0/0)

Hasn't done a damn thing, should be released to allow an OF for the National League swing.

That's it for now, Yankees pull into Boston tonight and we'll have those game summaries for each of the three contests.












May 28, 2009

Surging and Healing - '09 NY Yankees - Games 38-47

By Matthew Storey

The last time we checked in on the Yankees, they had won the first three games of a 4-Game set against the Minnesota Twins and were at 20-17. They went on to sweep Minnesota, then sweep Baltimore in 3, then they lose 2 of 3 to the World Champion Philadelphia Phillies in a THRILLING early season contest between two teams playing at a very high level. That closed the Homestand out at 8-2.

Then they travelled to Texas to face the AL West leading Rangers, who had not lost a Home series since April 14 (KC Royals) and won 2 of 3 to win their 4th successive road series. After losing their Season Opening road series to the Baltimore Orioles, 1-2, behind dreadful starts from CC Sabathia and Chien-MIng Wang, the Yankees have now won 6 of 7 road series (Kansas City, Tampa Bay, Detroit, Baltimore, Toronto, Texas) with the one series loss coming to the Boston Red Sox, a series in which they held a 2 run lead with Mariano Rivera and a 6 run lead with AJ Burnett, and managed to lose both games.

Not likely to recur.

So the Yankees are playing good baseball now, that is clear. Let's look in-depth and take their temperature;

1.) Injury Report

Alex Rodriguez - Appears to be healthy.
Derek Jeter - Appears to be healthy.
Johnny Damon - Slammed his battered shoulder into a wall in the Twin series and his hot streak died immediately, ran into wall in Texas last night and is playing through, but obviously hampered (3 K's last night, just waving at balls he was driving all over the field before jamming shoulder).
Melky Cabrera - Another OF who slammed his shoulder into a Texas wall, MRI showed no structural damage but he is too sore to play, calling for 3-6 games at this point.
Jorge Posada - Caught 5 Innings in simulated game, pronounced Hamstring 100% and shoulder strength closer to 100% than it was before DL.
Xavier Nady - Playing simulated games, difficult to project how the elbow will respond. 2nd Half at BEST. Yankees desperately need OF help, but Nady is facing surgery and unlikely to play field.
Jose Molina - Not ready to play, another month? May have lost job to Cervelli.
Cody Ransom - Not ready, at least a month and no spot when he's healthy.
Hideki Matsui - Looks like he is about to collapse from the two bad knees, than, when you are resigned to losing him - hits two long HR's in Texas. May be bionic.
Damaso Marte - The new Brown, Igawa, Pavano - exists to provide meaningless health updates for the length of his 3 year deal, calls Brian Cashman at 3AM every night and says 'Sucka!'.

2.) Individual Capsules - Player by Player Updates

Players

Yankees finally have their entire Infield playing together, all healthy, and the results have been impressive. In the Outfield, injuries of varying severity to Nady, Damon and Cabrera have forced a lot off shifting and decreased productivity. Catcher Cervelli, filled in admirably for Posada and kept the line moving all through the recent hot streak. Defensively, Cervelli has been terrific, as is Melky Cabrera in CF, and Yankees have gone a franchise record 14 games without an error (MLB record is 17, by the Red Sox).

1B/Mark Teixeira - A BEAST. He was hitting .191 on May 12 in Toronto. Since then he has gone 26/61 for a cool .426, raising his anemic average all the way to .275 in an EYEBLINK, while bouncing 8 HR off every wall from both sides and driving in 22 runs. Since Alex returns, teams pitch to Mark, he's only had 6 walks in this stretch, or one less than he had in one GAME against the Red Sox (5) on 4/25, when Alex wasn't around. His Defense is extraordinary, everything he was advertised to be. .275/.382/.596

2B/Robinson Cano - Cano's curse is to be so talented that no progress feels like ENOUGH to accommodate that talent. However, even as he continues to waste periodic at-bats by determining to swing at the first pitch and grounding harmlessly to 2B (trying to pull instead of taking his natural stroke to LF), he is hitting .320/.351/.536, with 9 HR/28 RBI and has made only 2 errors at 2B in 47 Games while being 3rd in Total Chances at 231 (Aaron Hill, Ian Kinsler tied with 236).

SS/Derek Jeter - Derek bottomed out at .264 in Baltimore on May 8, since then he's gone 24/67 (.358) with 3 HR/9 RBI. He's stolen 10 of 11 bases, and is now at .297/.372/.464 for the season. Like Cano, he has committed only 2 Errors in 44 games at SS, making the absurd claims about his Defense go
P-O-O-F!

3B/Alex Rodriguez - Completing an Infield without peer, Alex has stormed back from Surgery with THUMP, smacking 7 HR/17 RBI in his 66 At-Bats, while compiling an overall of .258/.410/.636 and playing his typical sterling Defense. Yankee infield has combined for 40 HR and only F-I-V-E Errors.

CF/RF Melky Cabrera - He has been a revelation, coming into his own in his 4th MLB season with a
.323 AVG/.368 OBP.481 SLG, hitting over .300 in April and May. He has won three games with walkoff hits and tied the Extra Inning loss to the Phillies in the 9th the day after one walkoff, but hurt his shoulder in the first inning at Texas. Yankees need his Defense, his switch-hitting, reliable bat and his young legs.

CF/Brett Gardner - Seeming overmatched at the plate in April, after winning the CF job in Spring Training, Gardner took a cue from Melky and stayed focused, worked hard and took advantage of his playing opportunities to post an unlikely .357/.449/.619 over his last 30 days (22 games). He has twice come in to replace an injured OF and, in each case, had 3 hit games. His legs have never been the question, as his blistering speed leads to errors, forced decisions and 9 of 11 Stolen Bases. His Defense is consistently terrific, and he compensates for poor arm strength with a tremendous jump and fundamentally solidly positioning. He will be an essential contributor as the Yankees move through 2009, as Damon and Matsui both will require extensive downtime, and Nick Swisher's struggles are likely to force the Yankees to make a move, either through a trade or a callup of one of their Minor League OF Options. If Brett can continue at .277/.339/.416 and contribute 40 Stolen Bases, he will be an asset.

LF/Johnny Damon - Damon carried the Yankees through the worst stretch of their young season, when Teixeira and Cano were not hitting, and Rodriguez and Posada were both out of the lineup, winning AL Player of the Week in the process. But, as has happened seemingly every year of his MLB career, he sent his fragile shoulder into a wall and came out a reduced Offensive player. Johnny is such a terrific hitter, baserunner and leader, and his place on the team is secure, but he clearly needs to play LESS in order to be at top strength in August/September, his body is battered and too much could leave the Yankees without legitimate production from LF.

RF/Nick Swisher - Swisher is the weakest link in the Yankee lineup. A mistake hitter who is incapable of handling top pitching, Nick strikes out 40% of the time. He ran into some hangers and straight fastballs earlier this year, while he carried NY before Damon took over the role. But that is six weeks past and Nick has hit just .173/.343/.370 since assuming the everyday RF role in the wake of Xavier Nady's injury. No MLB team with championship aspirations can afford that sort of production from a corner OF slot, even the Yankees, who get production from their Infield and Catcher other teams cannot match, need more than that. If Melky is healthy and Brett continues to contribute, Yankees need to cut Swisher back to a part-time OF with occasional DH duties when Damon and/or Matsui need a blow.

UT/ Ramiro Pena - Pena proved his value with sterling Defense at 3B, SS and 2B and has cemented a hold on the Utility Infield position. His Switch-hitting, glove and fresh legs insure Girardi will be confident if any of his regulars need time off, Alex will need time off for his Hip, Cano for his wandering focus and Derek from the assortment of plunks, dinks and collisions he endures annually. Pena is ideal for his role.

UT/ Angel Berroa - With Alex back playing every day and Pena firm in the utility slot, Berroa might want to go week-to-week with his rent payments - his time is almost up - Yankees are likely to call up an OF and designate Angel any day now.

C/Francisco Cervelli - Cervelli is no Jorge Posada, he lacks thump and is a RH hitter. BUT, he also has provided the Yankees with a complete backup, who calls a great game, throws darts to all bases and avoids striking out while hitting .300. Yankees got almost NOTHING from Catcher in 2008, as Jorge was injured and backups Jose Molina, Ivan Rodriguez and Chad Moeller all failed to do ANYTHING.

C/Kevin Cash - Awful early, Cash is coming off a productive couple of games in Texas, but his situation mirrors that of Angel Berroa, Posada is on the way back and Cash will no longer be King, or a Catcher for the New York Yankees.

DH/Hideki Matsui - Hideki has his surgically repaired left knee drained earlier in the season, and immediately went on a serious roll...but then the leg stiffened back up and he went into a tailspin. His bat is incredible, but his health is day-to-day, even at the best of times. He hit 2 HR last night in Texas, and may be about to go off on one of his notorious hot streaks (hit 14 HR in July 2007 to be Player of the Month), or, he could take a bad step and retire. That is his reality in 2009.


Pitchers

CC, AJ and Andy are providing veteran outings every start, going deep into games and keeping them close enough for the Yankees to win every time they are on the hill. Joba, 23 and Hughes. 22 have been electric at times, with low-hit/big K games, and also been ineffective or wild at others. Both are waiting for their experience levels to catch up with big arms and composed demeanors, they are already effective MLB starters, sometimes dominant, as they learn. Chien-Ming Wang and Alfredo Alceves are starting insurance while providing reliable innings in the Pen. Mariano has been Mo. Coke, Albaladejo, Ramirez, Tomko and Veras have been erratic and unreliable, and Girardi has been shuffling them with David Robertson, Mark Melancon and Anthony Claggett in search of a better group performance.

LH/CC Sabathia - He has been dominant.

RH/AJ Burnett - He has struggled with control, either with walks or bad location, that has led to erratic performances, but he goes long in games and strikes out a ton of hitters, and when he gets the ball over the plate, casually dominates. Gives them a chance every outing.

LH/Andy Pettitte - Just battles, has average stuff, deep experience and incredible competitiveness. Seems to have critical mid-game lapses in each start, sometimes he overcomes them, other times he struggles through, but always provides length.

RH/Joba Chamberlain - Was rolling along, a la Melky, when BOOM, he took a wicked liner off his shin in the 1st inning of a start against the Orioles. He looked flustered and uncomfortable in his one start since being hit with that ball, going only 4 innings against the Rangers, but surrendering only 3 runs despite the struggle. He never gets beat up, but hasn't been consistently reliable with his control or his fastball, which can hit 97 at times, or languish at 91-92, seems to need a little time in starts to warm up his arm, which is odd since he was so effective in the Pen. Also has a lot on his mind, with his sick Dad and imprisoned Mom, and there really isn't any way to measure that sort of stress. Still, despite the questions, like Cano, his talent is vast and his ERA of 3.97 and 46 K's in 45.1 Innings are certainly more than acceptable.

RH/Phil Hughes - 22 year old Phil seems to have made his breakthrough to permanent MLB duty. He followed up a 5 Inning/9 K effort against Baltimore with 8 Shutout innings in Texas (3 Hits), and has now given up more than 3 runs in only one of 6 MLB starts in '09. His Fastball has been consistently at 94 and his curveball is the best on a staff that has wicked CB's from Joba, AJ, CC and Andy. Has only to do a better job with adversity to become a star. May still be moved to the Bullpen in '09, but there is little doubt he can dominate in either role and that he will be permanent rotation fixture from '10 forward.

RH/Alfredo Aceves - 26 year old Ace has been overused by Girardi, due to his excellence and the unreliable '09 contributions from Veras, Ramirez, Coke and Albaladejo. He managed to win 2 games in short relief, handles middle relief and filled in for Joba with 3.1 after throwing 2 the night before, all scoreless. Girardi finally went to the well one too many times in the second game at Texas and they got to him as he began his 3rd inning, a day after 2 innings. If the rest of the pen stabilizes, he can be a great asset all season - if not, he will blow out his arm and become too familiar to opponents.

LH/Phil Coke - 26 year old Phil is better than he realizes. He doesn't trust his 94 MPH fastball enough and constantly gets beaten by throwing multiple offspeed pitches in at-bats. He has great potential but the performance on the mound has been less than the sum of his ability, it remains to be seen how big a role he will play the rest of the year - he needs more consistency, better control and less big bombs.

RH/Jose Veras - Veras came into an 8-0 game last night, gave up a 2B, a 2 Run HR and a walk and was dismissed by Girardi. He is in need of a role with a team who have more time for him to find his control. Likely to be gone by the All-Star break.

RH/Chien-Ming Wang - I was deeply skeptical about Joe Girardi's approach to his young CF tandem, and watched in amazement as BOTH players got stronger from competition and seemed to grow up in Girardi's system that rewards good play with playing time and poor play with a reduction in role (D'uh!). I was originally skeptical, as well, about the plan to place Chien-Ming Wang in the bullpen, Wang, who has always been a starter since he was a teenage phenom leading the Taiwanese international team and was the Yankee 'Ace' the last four years, is seemingly the LAST guy who should/could/would go to the bullpen. But then, I thought about Girardi, and his approach, and realized that Wang hasn't EARNED his job back and his major problem has nothing to do with his arm, it has to do with his being tough enough to overcome some reduced capacity after the injury that can ONLY be repaired with consistent innings that can ONLY be provided if he proves he knows how to get hitters out, regardless of his 'comfort level'. Joe didn't insult him or coddle him, he is inviting him to take his place through his play. Last night, Wang came into a blowout and blew through the final six hitters. Maybe this will work?

RH/Mariano Rivera - Mo is dominant.

3.) Looking Forward

After an off-day on Thursday, Yankees begin a 4 Game Wraparound series in Cleveland (F-S-S-M) and will throw (Pettitte-CC-Phil-Joba), then come home for a 3 game set with Texas (T-W-TH) behind (AJ-Pettitte-CC) and then they begin a Gauntlet that will tell them exactly where they stand in the AL East race, with 4 at Home against the Tampa Bay Rays (F-S-S-M) and then a quickie trip to Boston for 3 games with the Red Sox (T-W-TH).


We'll check in with features as they go through this stretch and be back to recap in about ten days.





May 22, 2009

The Curious Case of Melky Cabrera...

By Matthew Storey

In the Summer of 2005, a Yankee team reeling from major injuries to two starting Outfielders, brought up a 20 year old, emergency Minor League replacement named Melky Cabrera...

He proceeded to overrun a fly ball and look like a Deer caught in Fenway's headlights, on his way to a forgettable MLB debut (6 games, .211).

The next season, given an invitation to Spring Training at 21, his smiling, energetic personality, switch-hitters bat and booming left arm put him on Joe Torre's radar, and he found himself back in The Bronx by Spring and playing important innings, at first as a late-inning Defender, then as the everyday LF and, eventually, supplanting Johnny Damon in CF, a move Damon himself approved since the dramatic difference in their respective arms made it a 'no-brainer'.

That 2006 season, at 21, Melky led AL OF in Assists with twelve (12) despite playing only 127 Games at 3 OF positions. He made one of the All-Time Highlight reel plays to rob Manny Ramirez of a LCF HR, which led noted Yankee-hater, Curt Schilling, to note 'You have to hand it to them, they bring up winners like Cano and Cabrera'.

He hit .280, with 8 HR and 50 RBI (460 At-Bats) (compare with Jacoby Ellsbury, last season at 24, who hit .280 with 9HR and 47 RBI in NINETY FOUR more at-bats (554). It's true that Ellsbury, stole 50 bases from 61 tries that season - Ellsbury has Gardner speed, Melky is 37 of 50 tries in his career...but it is ALSO true that Melky's 12 assists as a Rookie compare to 5 for Ellsbury in 212 games played and that Melky had 4 assist in one 4 game playoff series against Cleveland in 2007.

Melky came back in 2007, at 22, and put up .273, with 8 HR and 73 RBI, while placing 3rd in AL OF Assists with SIXTEEN, then followed up with the 4 assist playoff and what appeared to be a game winning Playoff HR before the swarm ate Joba and the Yankee victory.

Melky began the 2008 season, at 23, with an impressive .299/6 Start and then...fell apart, slumping all the way to .249 with only 8HR and 37RBI. Even ending up in the Minor Leagues late in August...

At that point, he'd played MLB OF for 2 full seasons plus 4 months and proven to be an effective player for all but the final three of those months (he still had 7 Assists from CF, which, while a STEEP drop for Melky, was still one more than Torii Hunter (4) and Grady Sizemore (2) had COMBINED in 2008, while battling for the 'Gold Glove', a total of 288 games).

Over the Winter, the speculation was that NY would trade Melky to Milwaukee for Mike Cameron, a player TWELVE years older than Melky, who had never managed to top Melky's .273 from his 22 year old season or reach his .280 from his 21 year old season, despite playing 14 years of MLB baseball. Cameron, hitting solely from the RH side, DOES have 20 HR power, but that power comes at the cost of an average of 135 K's per each of his 12 FULL MLB Seasons (Melky's career high in K is 68).

If Melky's .249 in '08 was a slump, Cameron's LIFETIME Avg. of .251 was hardly the antidote, and Melky's 'worst of three seasons' Assist total (7) was one less than Cameron's career BEST (8). His lifetime Ratio of Assists/Errors is 68/64 (Melky's? 35/10). As for RBI, Cameron topped Melky's 73 only 3 times in his 15 seasons, and only broke 100 once (2001).

Guru spent most of the Winter writing about the above numbers and the ABSURDITY of trading away a young player with that combination of skills, who was an INSTANT fan favorite in NYC and is beloved by his teammates, amongst whom are his Idol, Alex Rodriguez and his best friend, Robinson Cano.

What I found interesting about those columns was the RESPONSE. People wrote in to say what a 'terrible player' Melky is and screeched when confronted with the statistical rebuttal...'everyone KNOWS he sucks'! Which struck me as odd. Here is this kid, with a million watt smile, a HERO to his Dominican fan base in Washington Heights and throughout NYC. His T-Shirts adorn the backs of thousands of New Yorkers ('Got Melky?') T-Shirts are amongst the best-selling items for the Yankees, who sell 25% of ALL MLB merchandise.

Still, people outside of NYC and in the local media seem to truly DISLIKE the guy, despite the evidence.

My preview magazine, written by a guy named Scott Gramling, who is an Oriole fan and lists his writing staff as 'six world-class writers' (although three of the six are from the Gramling FAMILY!). His review of Melky Cabrera, had this to say 'The offseason acquisition of Nick Swisher likely pushes Johnny Damon to CF and Cabrera to the bench, where he belongs. He's atrocious Offensively and good Defensively, only in comparison to Damon and Bernie Williams'. Now, overlooking the fact that Bernie Williams won FOUR Gold Gloves as a Yankee CF, given the statistical and anecdotal evidence, its safe to say that Melky is indisputable as a Defender. And, given the numbers Offensively, it is hard to understand the intensity of criticism, given his age and established ability as a productive MLB hitter.

Of course, the same group of Oriole fans said of Jeter 'his Defensive deficiencies won't kill your fantasy team the way they do the Yankees' (UPDATE: Jeter is 2nd in AL Fielding Percentage with 2 errors in 37 games, while being 5th in Total Chances and trailing a guy who plays fulltime on the rug...). That would be fewer errors than Julio Lugo, made in a single inning for Boston or Oriole kid, Robert Andino, made at SS during the just-completed SWEEP at Yankee Stadium). Interesting to note this is another 'fact' that 'everyone' knows, but is an absolute JOKE to those of us who have seen every inning, every game and understand that, in New York, NOBODY lasts if they aren't doing the job - not even Derek could survive if his Defense was porous, which it isn't - it happens to be terrific.

Happily, the Yankees avoided trading away the Switch-Hitting 24 year old Melky for the 36 year old Cameron, throwing open the Spring competition and awarding the starting spot to speedster Brett Gardner, who promptly lost the job to Melky when it became apparent he lacked a serious CF arm and was not an everyday Offensive threat, while Melky was streaking to a season, in which he's hit successfully in 25 of his 28 starts, hitting .319/.370 On-Base/.500 Slugging, with 5HR/19RBI.

But, just today, a friend on Facebook, called Melky 'one of those guys who is a dime a dozen', and I wondered - where are there are other switch-hitters with that sort of an arm, who don't strike out, can hit .280, drive in 73 RBI and slug .500, before they turn 25?

On MLB, recently retired, Sean Casey, a favorite of the White-Boy Press (Joe Buck, Peter Gammons) opined that he saw Gardner last year and thought he brought more 'energy' than Melky, which is interesting phrasing since Melky is, perhaps, the most demonstrative of Yankees, while Gardner is a stoic, crew-cut sort...

Is it all possible that the critics, like Casey, are really talking about the TYPE of energy?

Melky speaks no English, and the NYC media have proven time and time again that this makes them FURIOUS (they despised El Duque Hernandez). In Casey's world (and in Boston) the bouncing, laughing, stylin' Dominican approach has not exactly been the local favorite! When Melky mugs for his buddy, Cano, hops into his big brother, Alex's arms or leaps skyward after the final out for a butt bump with Robby...lots of us see 'Energy' (Joe Torre said 'I love the energy and charisma this kid brings to the team'), but apparently, lots of folks see something else...something they do NOT like, something lots of them also saw in class-act Bernie Williams, whose gentle, Guitar Playing self did not keep him from being a hated Yankee for a decade and a half.

It was nothing short of bizarre to watch the disconnect between the urban Yankee fans (who adore Melky, as we do Manny, Cano, Alfonso Soriano...) and the conservative, anglo press (NY Daily News staff, Yankee Announcer Michael Kay, MLB Network Casey and fellow Right Winger, Al Leiter) when it came to the Gardner/Melky contest - the latter were rooting HARD to see the South Carolina kid to win the job and only grudgingly have admitted how superior Melky's play has been, while Melky's teammates insisted all along that the reports of Melky's demise was WAYYYYY overdone (Damon said, in Spring 'Melky is going to be here a long, long time').

Which is NOT to say that Melky is in the same class Offensively OR Defensively with the Tampa Bay Rays phenom, BJ Upton OR the Orioles duo of CF Adam Jones and RF Nick Markakis...those are all Superstar type players with power that dwarfs Melky's.

Melky will remain a solid everyday player, but never be a superstar. He can hit .300, hit 20 HR, drive in 100 runs, steal 15-20 bases and throw out a bushel full of Baserunners, however, and that is MORE than enough to insure he remains a Yankee for longandlong. Happily, he and Gardner get along beautifully and his teammates adore him, as do Yankee fans who live IN the City. CF is likely to be patrolled by 5 tool Minor League Phenom, Austin Jackson (hitting .341 at AAA) who Reggie Jackson compared to Devon White, Defensively, in the coming years, but Melky's big arm and defense figure to make him a RF fixture as Damon and Matsui move on, and Swisher/Gardner shift over to LF.

As for his Manager? Joe Girardi said 'Melky is a different player than he was last year, he's patient at the plate, driving the ball with authority from both sides and his Defense has always been there. He's so young, and it is not unusual to see struggles from a 23 year old, regardless of how many seasons he has under his belt. We challenged him to compete and do better, and now he is playing everyday and winning games for us. We like everything we've seen.'

As for Guru, I love Melky, always have and believe that The Magic Carpet was the ONLY voice sticking with him when the critics were circling.

I have no problem saying 'I told you so..'.









May 19, 2009

Catching up/Looking Forward - 2009 NY Yankees

By Matthew Storey

Hey kids!

For a writer who has become accustomed to writing about Baseball nearly daily, my recent sabbatical has been a strange break from routine...I filed Game reports through the first game of the last Red Sox series (Game 25) and then...

Nothing.

Or, to be more precise, Manny Ramirez, was suspended (my last column deals with this) and my fury at MLB just took the F-U-N away. I always chat up the Doormen on my Dog Walk routes and several are Dodger fans (old time NL fans in NYC, whose dads were either Dodger or Giant fans back in the day, are still loyal to Dem Bums), they share my revulsion at the moralizing tone this sets and the incredible damage it does to the PRODUCT - obviously, nobody wants to watch Juan Pierre play, but urbanites aren't the only ones in the mix and its clear there are passionate voices on the other side of the argument. As New Yorkers, we are not accustomed to having accommodate such voices - we've got them right here in our Right Wing tabloids (New York Daily News and New York Post) and are used to ignoring their racist, culture war way of covering the sports scene. Nonetheless, Manny is on the sidelines and the NL season has become a non-event as a consequence, but LA is certainly the class of the West in any case, so the ultimate cost may not be so prohibitive.

I've got two tickets for the LA Dodgers against the NY Mets (my first game at Citi Field) on July 9, and his suspension is scheduled to end a week before that date - so HOPEFULLY, the New Yorkers who love the guy and could not let him know when he was wearing that ugly hat with the 'B', will have a chance to see him and Joe Torre, back where they belong. Otherwise the tickets are give-aways...

I've said all that needs to be about the reasons it made me mad, no reason to rehash here. What I DO want to do is catch up with the Yankees and touch on what we've learned in Games 26-37 and go through the roster to talk about who IS getting the job done and who is NOT.

Schedule Recap

Yankees were 13-12 through 25 games, since then;

Game 26 - Loss to Red Sox @ Yankee Stadium (Yanks lose series 0-2, trail Red Sox 0-5 on season)
Game 27 - Loss to Rays
Game 28 - Loss to Rays (Yanks lose series 0-2, trail Rays 2-3 on season)
Game 29 - Win against Orioles in Baltimore
Game 30 - Lose to Orioles
Game 31 - Win against Orioles (Yankees win series 2-1, tied on season 3-3)
Game 32 - Lose to Blue Jays in Toronto
Game 33 - Win against Blue Jays
Game 34 - Win against Blue Jays (Yankees win series, lead season 2-1)
Game 35 - Win against Twins @ Yankee Stadium
Game 36 - Win against Twins
Game 37 - Win against Twins

Yankees 7-4 in this period, overall 20-17, 3rd Place in the AL East, trailing Toronto by 3 games in Loss Column and Red Sox by 1.

Injury Update

RH Ian Kennedy, had Aneurysm surgery and is lost for the season.
RF Xavier Nady, is just beginning to work on Baseball drills and his return is currently unknowable.
C Jose Molina, has a deep thigh issue and is probably a month away from return.
UT Cody Ransom, has a blown out thigh and is six weeks away.
P Damaso Marte, has shoulder problems and return is indefinite.
C Jorge Posada, is close to returning from a simple Hamstring pull, probably this weekend.
P Brian Bruney, is close to returning from a sore elbow, any day.
P Chien-Ming Wang, is ready to return from complications to his hip allignment, following foot surgery. Will be slotted into rotation.
3B Alex Rodriguez, returned in Game 29.
SS Derek Jeter, pulled oblique, missed two games, returned.
1B Mark Teixeira, aggravated his Left Wrist injury in collision at 1B, played one game at DH and played 1B yesterday, sore.

This Week

Yankees close out 4 game set with Minnesota tonight (M) at the Stadium (Andy Pettitte, pitches), then welcome the Orioles for a three game set on (T-W-TH) (CC Sabathia, Phil Hughes, Joba Chamberlain) and then the World Champion Philadelphia Phillies are in for 3 game set (F-S-S) to usher in the Interleague schedule and close out the 10 game homestand. (Wang would be scheduled to throw on F, but so is AJ Burnett, Yankees will replace Hughes and insert Wang in the rotation slot that makes sense).

Roster Review

Pitching

CC Sabathia - (3.70) Has settled down into his new routine and is providing the Yankees with low ERA while going deep into games. His early season control problems have disappeared. Ideal 'Ace'. Consistently at 97-98 mph and extremely effective with offspeed and breaking stuff. Given Yankees a chance in 6 of 8 Starts thus far.

AJ Burnett - (5.02) Has been pitching effectively, but not getting any run support. Gives Yankees a chance to win and goes deep.
High ERA mostly attributable to meltdown against Boston, where he blew 6-0 lead and surrendered 8 earned runs. Stuff is always there and his focus and obvious excitement to be a Yankee has made his transition a dream. Needs to walk fewer hitters. He's given Yankees a chance in 6 of 8 Starts thus far.

Joba Chamberlain - (3.76) He's had to overcome 1st Inning jitters and some wildness, but provides low ERA. Needs to be more economical with pitch count to get deeper into games. Has given Yankees a chance to win in 6 of 7 starts.

Andy Pettitte - (4.00) Old reliable, Andy shows up every five days, takes ball and competes. Also given Yankees 6 good starts from his 7 tries.

Phil Hughes - (7.56) Phil is still struggling with the mental toughness required of a MLB Starter, his big arm allows him to dominate for stretches and, when things go his way - he's capable of going deep into games with low hit/run counts. BUT...when hitters get on through walks, bloops or Defensive mistakes - he tends to unravel and lose the Strike Zone. Needs to B-R-E-A-T-H-E on the mound but has not yet mastered the skill of relaxation under pressure. Likely headed to the Bullpen, where his big arm will be an upgrade and the shorter stint will make him more effective - has nothing left to learn/prove in the Minors and can serve his apprenticeship out of the pen. When he gets it (and at 22, he will), Yankees will likely allow Andy to retire/leave, the question will be up to Phil - who could move into a permanent rotation slot as soon as '10 and remains a solid #6 option if anyone goes down. Phil has given the Yankees a chance to win in 2 of 4 starts and is likely making his final one for the foreseeable future this week.

Chien-Ming Wang - (34.50) Chien was simply mishandled by the Yankee staff. Coming into the season, his health status was as important an issue for the training/pitching staffs and his abysmal and atypical performances made it clear that he was NOT ready and NOT feeling 100% and, given his value and the damage those three starts did to the team/bullpen - someone screwed up. Happily, he is coming off a typically dominant effort against an AAA team stacked with MLB hitters (Hafner, Marte, Graffanino) and seems to be in a better place physically and mentally. He is not ALL the way back (only at 92 mph, he usually operates at 95), but he can be effective at this point. Chien has been blown out early in 3 of his 3 starts, failing to give the Yankees ANY chance in all.

Jose Veras - (6.75) Veras has a dominant arm, but like former Yankee relievers with such 'stuff' (Scott Proctor, Kyle Farnsworth) he is simply too erratic with his control to be dependable. Does not get hit hard (Slugging against .390), but walks SO many guys, that even singles lead to runs against. He'd be the first to be demoted/moved if Yankees move Hughes to the pen. It seems like it is time for that to occur.

Edwar Ramirez - (4.86) Edwar has also struggled with his control, but his power changeup/fastball array is more reliable than Veras more dynamic power and his incredible production (110 K's in 93 Innings as a Yankee) and previous success make him worthy of retention. He HAS to throw more strikes however, as he is getting pounded when forced to throw 'get over' strikes. In his defense, he has been forced to absorb long stints in blowout losses that have derailed his numbers. Still an important answer in Pen.

Jonathan Albaladejo - (4.82) Alba is a ground ball/control specialist who ALSO has simply walked too many guys. His sinker is reliably effective, but those singles he surrenders are deadly with walked runners on base. Not a focal point in the pen, might be vulnerable if some of the more dynamic arms who've yet to hit their MLB stride do so (David Robertson, Mark Melancon).

Phil Coke - (4.60) Coke is in the same situation as Phil Hughes (a 'Phil' thang?), he's dominant at AAA and occasionally so in MLB, he simply needs more seasoning and to avoid the middle of the plate. He has good control and throws strikes, but he needs to work on the command of those strikes, he can shut lineups down for awhile and then will leave 0-2, 1-2 pitches in the Zone and get
POPPED. Experience is the cure and his power LH arm will allow him enough wiggle room to get that experience in Pinstripes.

Alfredo Aceves - (2.16) 'Ace' has the least impressive 'stuff' on the staff, but is a polished product on the mound. Exactly the opposite of the rest of these great throwers who need more seasoning and EXACTLY what the Yankees need right now.Throws strikes, goes after hitters and stays away from the middle of the plate. Can start, provide long or middle relief and is coming off back to back Late inning wins out of the pen. A terrific job thus far in his Yankee career.

Brian Bruney - (3.38Brian is dominant, strikes out tons of hitters, doesn't walk guys...but he's just gotten HURT in each of the past two seasons. If he is healthy, the Yankees are set in the 8th and 9th inning.

Mariano Rivera - (2.76) Mo is still Mo (22 K's/1 walk in 16.1 Innings), surrendered 4 April HR's, but those hitters (Jason Bay, Curtis Granderson, Carl Crawford, Evan Longoria) are all capable of doing that against anyone and lack of consistent early season due to Yankee struggles and rounding back to best shape after surgery are all understandable excuses for slight drop-off. Been dominant of late, as per usual.

Infielders

1B Mark Teixeira (S) - Mark struggled mightily after hurting his Left wrist in opening series and was below .200 earlier this week, although his power, on-base percentage and Defense have all been there. However, since Alex Rodriguez, is back in the lineup, he has burst out and his average looks ready to climb towards more typical levels. Provides Gold Glove Defense Yankees haven't had since Tino, switch-hitter with Power and enthusiastic Yankee, he benefits more personally from Alex's return than any other Yankee. The two are close friends, familiar with one another and forces pitchers to 'pick their poison', Yankees have been 2nd in Slugging and HR's with limited production from Teixeira and Alex, and injuries to Posada and Nady. An extremely good sign.

2B Robinson Cano (L) - Cano has been the same guy we've become accustomed to seeing. His Defense is unmatched at 2B, he simply covers an incredible amount of ground (overwhelming lead in total chances for AL 2B last two seasons), has a rocket arm and turns a smooth Double Play and has avoided the 'brain cramp' mistakes on easy chances thus far. Offensively, he can look like the best hitter in the game for long stretches, as he did for much of April...but he can also fall into lazy habits and give away bushels of at-bats when he is a little off, as he has in May. Girardi gave him the day off yesterday and the emergence of Pena allows for Cano to get more pine time and refresh his approach periodically. He is HR threat and covers the field from foul line to foul line with line drives, has taken more pitches, only needs to have a better situational approach and focus to be a perennial Batting Champ threat.

SS Derek Jeter (R) - Derek has been terrific at SS, with only two errors in his 35 games, his arm has looked fully healed after issues in each of the past two seasons and his much maligned range is actually terrific. Offensively, he was hot early, has cooled off considerably (like Cano, Swisher) but is still a great situational hitter who moves runners, uses the whole field, can go deep when needed (5 HR) and doesn't panic in clutch. He's stolen 8 of 9 bases.

3B Alex Rodriguez (R) - Alex is still in Spring Training mode after a week of baseball, returning from his surgery. His Defense has been solid and he's caught three mistakes with that power of his, but he is not the force we all expect in the batter's box just yet. He will continue to get his HR as Damon and Teixeira put stress on pitchers and his walks as they opt for Matsui and slumping Swisher instead. When he gets his stroke back, he will HR/walk MORE. Yankees will be happy to see Cano start hitting, Posada return and Swisher do SOMETHING, so Alex can have what he provides for Mark - protection.

UT Ramiro Pena (S) - 23 year old Pena has been the surprise of the young season. He's an effective LH hitter, who hits from both sides of the plate and plays slick Defense at SS, 3B and 2B. With Alex recovering, Derek needing periodic days off to recover from his linebacker approach to the game and Cano needing mental health days - Pena is the IDEAL utility man. A great job by the minor league system getting this AA kid MLB ready. Injury to Cody Ransom, who blew his chance with terrible Offense, turned into a blessing when it got Pena a look. He'll be here for a long time.

Outfielders

LF Johnny Damon (L) - Damon has been the Yankees MVP, incredibly clutch and productive (.627 slugging). He is made for Yankee Stadium the way Mike Lowell, Jason Bay and Dustin Pedroia are made for Fenway and he KNOWS it, will do anything humanly possible to force Yankees to keep him in NY (final year of his contract) and keep Michelle happy. Leaving NYC is obviously not what he or they want, and his play has at least made it less of a longshot.., but realistically, with Austin Jackson looming for CF and excellent two-way play from Melky, it is going to come down to a choice between keeping Johnny or Brett Gardner and Damon's Defensive shortcomings are likely to push that choice to the younger player, with the speed and defense. Yankees will benefit from Damon's contract year throughout the season however, and someone will sign him for as long as he wants - a 3,000 hit player if he can find a DH gig for a few seasons.

CF Melky Cabrera (S) - Melky has been terrific since Spring Training. He came in knowing his job was on the line, and early Spring success by Gardner pushed him to the bench, but he hit-hit-hit and EARNED his way back to the everyday job. Moves his Gold Glove level Defense and big arm easily to LF or RF when Girardi gets Gardner in the game and they blanket the OF. He has shown consistent Avg/On-Base/Slugging all season and would be Yankee MVP if not for Damon's recent explosion. Only flaw has been his and Cano's production in games after they've had Walk-Off winners and headed up to Washington Heights for coronations from beautiful Dominican women! Take away those 0 for occasions, Melky would be hitting .340!

RF Nick Swisher (S) - Nick is a breath of fresh air, happy to be a Yankee, relaxed and versatile (1B, OF), he even gets down effective Sac Bunts when called upon. For the first two weeks of the season, he put on a tear that was almost surreal, from both sides of the plate. BUT...for the past month, he has done Z-E-R-O, striking out every other at-bat and looking completely lost at the plate. All of his damage has come on the road and his inconsistency has illustrated how much the Nady injury hurt the middle of the lineup. Swisher is not a threat at the plate right now, and Girardi would be well served to go with Melky/Gardner for a few days in a row and allow Swisher to clear his mind.

CF Brett Gardner (L) - Brett was overmatched in the every day lineup, but handled the move to the bench well and has become a decent contributor with his speed and defense. He has game changing legs and is a weapon off the bench or with a glove, he will play as much as his bat allows. Likely to be the 4th OF or starting LF once Austin Jackson joins the team, either later this season or next.

DH Hideki Matsui (L) - Likely in his final season, Matsui has continued to be effective at the plate, shown power, been clutch. He will always be able to hit, his knees are on their final strides however and a career ending recurrence could happen at any moment. He is certainly done as a defender. Difficult to see how he can hold up for the duration, but will be productive as long as he does. Nady may inherit some time if he heals up or Jackson could be the one to replace him, freeing up DH time for Damon/Posada/Jeter.

Catchers

C Jorge Posada (S) - One of the Yankees amazing F-I-V-E switchhitters (Pena, Melky, Teixeira, Swisher), Posada came off the injury without missing a beat. He threw the ball effectively, caught his regular innings load and provided more thump and offense in five weeks than they got from Catcher all last year (5 HR/20 RBI/.582 SLG/.312 AVG). Then he pulled his hamstring! But, alas, the Yankees actually benefited when Francisco Cervelli (like Ramiro Pena) got MLB playing time and proved to be a dynamic Defensive catcher with a power arm and a productive bat. Posada will also likely benefit from the break and appears ready to return.

C Jose Molina (R) - Jose has been a much better hitter this season than last, he does well in a backup role and continues to be one of the best Defensive catchers in the game. His injury is not close to healing, however, and Cervelli has probably pushed himself into the eventual backup job, although that will wait one more season due to Molina's contract.

Manager/Coaches

Manager Joe Girardi is SMART. A graduate engineer from Northwestern, he can be deceptively 'aw shucks' with media, but his players realize how intelligent and accessible he is and they adore him for that balance. Has instilled a '90s like focus on team production and gotten impressive results from benched starters and young position players and blended a group of new parts into the larger Yankee whole with little drama or difficulty. This is HIS team in a way that last year's group was not and with veterans moving on through injury or contract (Matsui, Damon, Nady, Molina all likely in final Yankee year) that will only continue.

Pitching Coach Dave Eiland has to GO. He has gotten less out of more than any pitching coach in Baseball. Proven performers were either not ready for the season start, unable to throw strikes or injured on his watch. Yankees have depth and quality across their staff and in their system, but Eiland is not the guy. Guru would love to see Girardi's old batterymate, David Cone, bring his FIVE rings and depth of knowledge from the broadcast booth into the Pitching Coach job.

Hitting Coach Kevin Long has to GO. Guys go into twilight zone periods (Cano, Swisher) that linger without correction and seem to be coaching themselves. As with Cone, Guru would love to see Tino Martinez in the permanent chair, bringing HIS four rings, bilingual ability and universally respected approach to hitting. So would all the Yankee hitters, as Teixeira credited work with Tino for breaking his slump before Alex's return made it moot.

Bench Coach Tony Pena and 3B coach, Rob Thomson, are respected and in the right roles for this team.

And that's where they stand, as we near the 1/4 pole of the 2009 season.



May 05, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 25/Red Sox

By Matthew Storey

Boston Red Sox - 6 (16-10)
New York Yankees - 4 (13-12)

Winning Pitcher: Lester (2-2)
Losing Pitcher: Hughes (1-1)

HR: Lowell (6)
Bay (6)
Damon (5)
Teixeira 2 (5)

Another dreary, rainy night in NYC, the 5th straight day of grey skies and soggy Yankees.

The rain drowned the Kentucky Derby, with the high-priced, pedigree types balking at the grinding, dirty effort required in such conditions, allowing the garland of Roses to go to an overlooked grinder ridden by an overlooked jockey, trained by an overlooked trainer...instead of a glamorous and glorious stallion, with a Hall of Fame Jockey/Trainer combo...we got an out-of-nowhere Gelding with a cadre of inarticulate slobs whooping it up.

The rain is drowning the Yankee homestand, with the high-priced, pedigree types balking at the grinding, dirty effort required in such conditions, once again watching the early season games go to a roster of overlooked grinders who've overcome much and relish the effort.

Instead of the sleek, pretty-boys in Pinstripes, each of whom has known all his life he would someday make serious coin and play serious ball, each of whom inspires waves of high-maintenance tail and ushers directly from The Bronx to the arms of a spectacular woman who would never DREAM of a misplaced pound, or an unplucked hair (horrors!), sliding into the premium booth at some magnificent restaurant, or nightclub...

...the sparkling Yankees are again undone by the overlooked ones, who've had to grind it out through long careers in the minors (Youkilis), overcome doubts about size and athletic ability (Pedroia), beaten Cancer (Lowell, Lester), found their game mid-career (Papi), toiled in MLB obscurity (Bay) or who harbor deep-seated resentments towards their wealthier, prettier rivals (Varitek)...managed by an afterthought retread who has turned his career around in Boston (Francona) and is a rare class act in the tired Beantown script.

These are the guys who have never 'gotten the girl', who struggle to compose sentences, whose demeanor, absurd facial hair and troll-like visages will never and have never been mistaken for the glamour side of the game. But they are winners - ugly ones, but the 'W' counts just the same, and the bottom rung women they escort don't demand attractiveness and style, they LIKE their men grungy (ewww...).

They've had to FIGHT just to have MLB careers and they resent those who coast and preen, and treat them like they are less than - even when THEY are the one's winning. You can just picture the hideous Red Sox, with their porcine women, stuffing gruel into their unwashed faces, wiping filthy hands on their shirts, belching and babbling on in some semi-coherent garble. This is Sarah Palin's America!

Yankees versus Red Sox is more than just Baseball, it is two completely contradictory approaches to life and work, more so now that the last of the HOF Superstars who DID walk in the same places as the Yankees has shipped off to L.A. (Manny Ramirez) and has joined up with former Yankee Manager, Joe Torre to have the dream season in the sun the Yankees believe is their birthright.

Once again, the Yankee season has begun with a nightmare of twists and unforseen turns, injuries to their power hitters, injuries to critical pitchers, rainouts, a sparkling new stadium left half-empty by the devastated wallets of Wall Streeters...the best laid plans, undone. Asking the expensive colt with the royal pedigree, who likes to be unencumbered in his races and to be allowed to run off alone, unchallenged...to grind it out in the mud with the claiming horses?

Not going to happen.

That isn't Yankee baseball. These guys are never going to be able to out-compete, and I suppose that makes on wonder if maybe Joe Girardi, isn't the right guy for them after all. Girardi is a plugger, a hard worker who had to fight for everything HE got in the game, too small, too this and too that...he used his intellect to understand the game better than his opponent and molded his body with harder work in the gym. He was part of a Yankee team that featured grinders and pluggers, but lacked in the Glamour the city demands of its champions. These Boston Red Sox have more in common with workmanlike Girardi and those old Yankee teams...and they inspire the sort of fan interest those teams did, but neither has the feel of a real YANKEE team. They are the champions of people like them, the sorts of folks that guys like Guru and Alex wipe from their shoes contemptuously, regardless of result.

This game was like a lot of games lately - a lot of unexpected barriers. Home Plate umpire was calling a tight zone and Phil Hughes, who had electric stuff - 95 MPH darts and bending curves, simply could not solve the zone...forced to come in, he gave up single runs in each of the first four innings and was unable to get quick innings, running his pitch count way up. For the Red Sox, Jon Lester was brilliant, an older version of Hughes, in his 66th MLB start (to Phil's 23rd), he's solved the zone and locked in his position in the rotation. He was dominant for awhile, until a pair of terrible calls led to a Jeter strikeout and a flustered Girardi, with his left-side infielders all sitting on the disabled list, had to run out to protect Jeter from getting run...

The obligatory shouting match ensued, the strain of having to struggle etched on the face of Joe, who'd imagined that year two could not POSSIBLY contain the challenges of year one (Surprise!)...when Joe was given the thumb, Lester relaxed for a moment and Damon and Teixeira took advantage with back to back bombs to bring it to 4-3, Sox.

Alfredo Alceves, who pitched so well for the Yankees last year in his MLB debut, came on and pitched well for several innings, only surrendering a 2 run HR off the Foul Pole to Jason Bay, who always gave the Yankees a hard time in Pittsburgh and has continued to be a hot hitter in Boston, 6-3, Sox.

Yankees added another on Teixeira's 2nd HR, as his wrist is apparently feeling better after costing him most of the first five weeks. 6-4, and despite a Yankee 9th Inning threat, Papelbon struck out Cano with bases loaded with Yankees to move the Bombers two back in the 'L' column and make 4 straight losses to the Sox on the young season.

Par for the course, really. The Yankees have started this way just about every season since '05 (had a decent start in '06) and Boston has OWNED them in April/May baseball, although they haven't been able to sustain it or win the season series. The problem, as it was in those other years, is that, even if they once again manage to right their ship, get healthy and get on a roll - these early season struggles take away from the season they were BUILT to have - the season the Dodgers ARE having. Yankees and Yankee fans alike, are not interested in a long, competitive slog - like those high-ticket Colts, they want to run free and alone on the lead.

Having to work hard sullies things.

But work hard they must, if they want to make anything of their year. As difficult as it to even LOOK at the likes of Pedroia and Youkilis, they are going to have to make the best of it and try to fight back (keep LOTS of 'Purell' around, Guys!).






2009 New York Yankees/Game 24/Angels

By Matthew Storey

Los Angeles Angels - 8 (10-13)
New York Yankees - 4 (13-11)

Winning Pitcher: Palmer (2-0)
Losing Pitcher: Sabathia (1-3)

HR: Morales (4 )
Posada (5)

An inexcusable Yankee loss, as CC Sabathia, throwing 98 MPH was unable to defeat career Journeyman, Matt Palmer, a 30 year old rookie reminiscent of Aaron Small (2005), shut the Yankees down throwing 88 MPH and reminding everyone that this is a team likely to spent the hours after a wee-hours victory celebrating, NOT getting ready to win the next day.

An absolutely awful performance by the whole team.




2009 New York Yankees/Game 23/Angels

By Matthew Storey

New York Yankees - 10 (13-10)
Los Angeles Angels - 9 (9-13)

Winning Pitcher: Albaladejo (2-1)
Losing Pitcher: Fuentes (0-2)

HR: Posada (4)

This one was really three games.

Yankees took a 4-0 lead in the 1st against Jered Weaver, who then settled into a dominant groove and shut them down.

Meanwhile, Andy Pettitte cruised for 5.2 Innings before the Rain got hard and the Yankees started to look around towards the umps looking to be let off the field...

The Umps decided to 'play on' and the Yankees went into sleep-mode, just as the Angels surged and took the lead over two innings all the way up to 9-4.

Then the Yankees, inexplicably, rallied and won the game.

Woo-Hoo!





May 01, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 22/Los Angeles Angels

By Matthew Storey

New York Yankees - 7 (12-10)
Los Angeles Angels - 4 (9-12)

Winning Pitcher: Coke (1-1)
Losing Pitcher: Speier (0-1)

HR: Napoli (4)
Damon (4)

VagabondGuru.com is an effort that includes many, many contributors, but the site itself came about through a 3 person effort between Guru, Red Sox Steve and Mary Hannington - known by many as Mal Volio. Guru and Mal have been famous friends for longandlong and Mal is the one who took the world that Guru carries in his oversize head (see logo!) and made it the place we know and love.

Mal, who lives in Detroit, and Guru, here in Manhattan, had collaborated entirely online and by phone.

Until yesterday.

Mal arrived early in the day, we did some work, did some visiting with my brood and Red Sox Steve and then we headed up The Bronx for our first look at the New Yankee Stadium.

I was with one of my favorite people, who I never met before, going to one of my favorite places...

Where I'd never BEEN before.

It was thrilling. It was amazing. It was disorienting. It was wonderful.

And, they played Baseball. Which, of course, is the point of the exercise.

AJ Burnett was on the hill for the Yankees, who'd overcome the short starts that plagued them with Wang, earlier in the season and seen Andy Pettitte, CC Sabathia, Phil Hughes and Joba Chamberlain provide consecutive solid starts, going deep into the games and giving the Yankee bats a chance to win.

Burnett, never really in that dominant mode he can feature, nonetheless provided grit and balance and fought himself and the Angels well enough to keep the game at 4-4 through his 7 innings.

In the Bottom of the 8th, Robinson Cano hit a single, extending his hitting streak to SEVENTEEN games, he has still had only ONE hitless game this season (21/22) and ONE hitless game last season (14/15) after his benching by Girardi. Guess the right button was pushed, the kid looks like an MVP right now and the Defense is sterling. Jorge Posada then blasted a drive to the wall in CF that bounced over the wall for a ground rule double. 2nd and 3rd. Swisher was walked intentionally to load the bases.

Melky Cabrera, who has emhatically wrested back the starting CF job (gee, who was his lone Champion during the long winter of Mike Cameron rumors and Brett Gardner insurgencies?)...

Where was I?

Oh yeah, Melky stepped up and laced an RBI 1B to drive in the go-ahead run. 5-4. Yankees.

Next up was 23 year old Ramiro Pena, a revelation who came into Spring Training with a reputation as a defensive wizard at Shortstop but only AA experience (with two time Minor League Organization of the Year, Trenton Thunder) and was not expected to compete for a job. After seeing his slick glove and switch-hitting bat, however, Joe Girardi and staff knew they could not leave such a talent in the Minors and brought him North to fill the Utility Infield slot that belonged to Cody Ransom, who was thrust into the starting lineup by Alex Rodriguez's injury. Pena, like Melky, sat on the bench, saw the guy in front of him struggle and waited his chance. When he played, his glove sparkled and after a slow start, the quick bat and situational awareness has been evident. After three weeks of Ransom and Gardner being automatic outs in their lineup, Melky and Pena have solidified the back of the lineup and joined Mark Teixeira, Jorge Posada and Nick Swisher to give the Yankees F-I-V-E switch-hitters in the everyday lineup, which effectively renders the opposing managerial options nill in terms of same side matchups.

Pena stood in and pulled a laser into the RF corner to plate 2 and seal this deal.

Mo cleaned up.


On a special night, in a special place, with a special friend.













April 30, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 21/@ Detroit

By Matthew Storey

New York Yankees - 8 (11-10)
Detroit Tigers - 6 (10-11)

Winning Pitcher: Chamberlain (1-0)
Losing Pitcher: Porcello (1-3)

HR: Swisher 2(6,7)
Granderson (7)

In the aftermath of Phil Hughes sterling effort as a starter the night before, the bizarre life of Joba Chamberlain - in which every person in the World has an opinion about his job that conflicts with the one that he AND his employer have - blew up once again. Manager Joe Girardi was, once again, forced to deal with questions about moving Joba back into the bullpen.

Blah...Blah...Blah...

Never mind the roster of terrific young arms who HAVE those jobs in the Yankee bullpen, recent damage, circumstantial rather than serious, notwithstanding...

Joba has been training to be a STARTER since the Winter, was an effective starter last season and would have to go through a transition to accommodate the return to the pen.

But, more importantly...in now SIXTEEN MLB Starts, the guy has surrendered more than 3 Earned Runs...

T-W-I-C-E.

23 year old Starters who can turn into quality starts 88% if the time, and pitch deep into games on low pitch counts (88) with only one run surrendered, as he did last night - are FAR more valuable than any set-up man in the HISTORY of Baseball.

Let's let that one drop, OK? It may be sexier to see Joba throwing 101 mph and pumping his fist on a 15 second ESPN highlight, but having him for 7-8 innings per start is infinitely more valuable. Throw in the fact he is homegrown and under team determination for years, balancing out the high-ticket Free Agents at the top of the rotation...his ability as a starter, one who is nearly unbeatable when 'on' and who is able, even when he has little (as he did in Boston last start) to manage the Game and limit damage. Try and learn to enjoy the idea of the Yankees with four homegrown starters of different ages, all capable and effective (Pettitte, Joba, Hughes, Wang) to mix and match with the brilliant acquisitions (CC, AJ).

Joba nibbled early and got himself into some trouble in the Bottom of the 3rd, walking the bases full by being too shy about the plate and getting into a pissing contest with Ed Runge, the 187 year old Umpire who seemed to delight in tweaking the kid. Joba fought back and struck out the dangerous Miguel Cabrera on a BEAUTIFUL slow curve to end the threat and then sat through a 7 Run outburst from his Offense in the Top of the 4th. Thus freed from restraint by the rare (for him) run support, he abandoned the nibbling and went into the strike-throwing, attack-mode Yankee fans have been waiting to see all season and dominated casually from that point forward.

Final tally, 7 IP, 3H, 1R, the 3 BB and 6 K's.

Phil Coke threw an effortless 8th, but Jonathan Albaladejo, ran into trouble in the 9th Inning of an 8-1 game, and was unable to right himself - forcing an unprepared Mariano Rivera to unpack his overnight bag, minutes from a plane ride and walk in to face the dangerous Curtis Granderson, cold.

That had predictable results in the form of a 3 run bomb, pissing off Mo, but only putting 1 run on his ERA and, shortly thereafter, the team was able to pack for the return to the East Coast with a series win in Motown.

Offensively, the Yankees took one turn through the lineup to see the stuff of impressive 20 year old Detroit Starter, Rick Porcello, and then took him to task in the 4th, with the decisive blow being the first of Nick Swisher's two HR's (this one, a 3 run shot RH, later a solo shot LH). Swisher, for his part, has now come close in 75 April at-bats to matching the production of the guy who was traded for him (Wilson Betemit) who produced 10 HR in TWO HUNDRED NINETY Yankee at-bats. Nice job, Brian.

Hideki Matsui, extended his hitting streak to 9 games with a 3 run 2B, Derek Jeter's 8 game streak went by the board with an 0-5 and Robinson Cano, extended his streak to 16 games and has now gone hitless in a total of TWO games since his benching last September and made several sterling plays at 2B.

Yankees come home today and Guru and Mal Volio will be there TOGETHER! Can't wait to share our impressions of the new Palace and the ballgame tomorrow.













April 29, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 20/@ Detroit

By Matthew Storey

New York Yankees - 11 (10-10)
Detroit Tigers - 0 (11 - 9)

Winning Pitcher: Hughes (1-0)
Losing Pitcher: Perry (0-1)

HR: Molina (1)
Swisher (5)

On May 1, 2007, 20 Year Old Yankee prospect, Phil Hughes had his 2nd MLB start and promptly threw into the 7th Inning with a dominating No-Hitter in the launching pad that is The Ballpark at Arlington, facing the Rangers bomb squad, featuring a power hitting Switch-Hitter named Mark Teixeira.

With Teixeira in a hole at 0-2, Hughes snapped his Hamstring and lost three months.

He came back in September, pitched well and won a Playoff Game against the Cleveland Indians, the only game the Yankees won in that series. The last Playoff game they've won.

Off that performance, the Yankees placed the strapping, professional Hughes into their Starting Rotation for 2008 and resolved to baby-sit him through any bumps.

From the outset of the 2008 season, however, the cool, effective Hughes was never in evidence. He lost serious velocity, struggled with the strike zone and was every bit the positive for the rotation that Chien-Ming Wang has been in 2009. In his final start, he was walking half way towards the plate on every pitch and, mercifully was pulled from yet another blowout.

What the Fuck?

Turned out, Phil had a broken rib AND was desperately in need of glasses. D'uh! How is it that a prized thoroughbred could be walking around, unable to see and in agony and not think to tell someone is a question that will remain in the pantheon of such inquiries, unanswered for all eternity...

He was gone for another three months, returned in September, pitched effectively, went to Arizona Fall League, pitched effectively, came to Spring Training, pitched effectively, went to AAA Scranton/Wilkes Barre, dominated and waited his turn. Which arrived when the injured Wang aped Hughes, HURT/STUPID act, harming the team and himself in the process.

Last night, the 20 year old Kid who showed so much promise showed up in Detroit and something was different.

He was a man.

You forget how young some of these kids are. Hughes was 20 and those 2 years of adversity have left their mark. He was in complete command from the start last night, throwing 6 innings of 2 H, 2 BB shutout and would certainly have pitched in the the 7th if it wasn't for the inconvenient 35 Inning the Yankees put up in the Top of the 7th to turn the game from a tense pitchers duel (Edwin Jackson was equally impressive for the Tigers, shutting the Yankees out for HIS 6 innings) into a laugher.

After the barrage (10 runs), Hughes fellow strong armed AAA phenom, reliever Mark Melancon, added to his dominant 2 inning stint in his Boston debut with an easy 7th, Edwar Ramirez and Jose Veras, now well rested after three solid starts, each pitched a scoreless frame to close it out.

Offensively, Yankees got another multi-hit game from Robinson Cano (4 in a row), 2 hits and an unlikely 3B! from Hideki Matsui, whose knees are obviously feeling better and is positively raking, 2 hits and his 5th HR from Nick Swisher and 2 hits, 2 walks, 2 runs and an RBI from Melky Cabrera, who has responded to losing his starting job in CF with .325 AVG/.413 OBP/.625 SLG.

Melky is another one who began his Yankee career at 20, and looked like a boy amongst men. His dominant Defensive ability and big arm kept him in the lineup through his first two seasons and he took Fausto Carmona deep to seemingly win a Playoff Game in that same Cleveland series, before a magical Yankee pitcher of 21, named Joba, was swarmed by a scene from a Horror movie. P-O-O-F!

Melky showed up in '08, ready to build on his .280/.273 Averages and to move beyond his 8 HR/73 RBI totals, while still patrolling the Yankee stadium CF and cutting off runs with his arm.

He opened April/May with 5 quick HR, was hitting near .300 and Yankees were set for a decade.

Then, he collapsed, his numbers fell off a cliff and he found himself in the minors in Late August watching Brett Gardner, playing CF for the Yankees.

He had a nice Spring, but Gardner beat him out and he didn't sulk, he mashed, he played all three OF slots and mashed from both sides of the plate. When Gardner's slap-happy NL style didn't result in any thump. Melky was back in CF and, like Hughes, the time for childish things has passed. He's had a near-death experience (almost ended up in Milwaukee! Guessing those hottie Dominican mamas that drape themselves over Melky and Cano up in Washington Heights don't DO Wisconsin...) and come back stronger and more mature.

There's more, there's always more...but for now, that'll do.












He's all grown up now

April 28, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 19/@ Detroit

By Matthew Storey

Detroit Tigers - 4 (11-8)
New York Yankees - 2 (9-10)

Winning Pitcher: Verlander (1-2)
Losing Pitcher: Sabathia (1-2)

HR: Ordonez (2)

Yankees may have set a MLB record in their Monday night game in Detroit, although we have no way to check on it, by losing their 2nd successive game to a starting pitcher named 'Justin' (which was always sort of a weenie name for mouseketeers, until one of them grew up to be 'America's sexiest' and date a succession of hottie starlets, now Justin's are ruling the Earth!).

Ahem...sorry, the BASEBALL game was a real treat for MLB fans, after the ugliness of Saturday in Fenway Park when the delicious pitchers duel between Josh Beckett and AJ Burnett degenerated into one of the ugliest, slo-pitch Softball sorts of games you'll ever suffer through (16-11). This time, the marquee matchup lived up to its billing as CC Sabathia, gave the Yankees all they need with 8 innings of complete game to give the Bullpen it's 2nd night off, striking out 7 and walking Z-E-R-O (the big number), CC was throwing darts all night and closed out the the heaving 96mph - so there is no worry there.

Unfortunately for CC, the struggling Verlander, who came into the game with a surrealistic 9.00 ERA (what is the deal with the former studs of the AL Pitching corps so far this season? Wang, Beckett, CC, Verlander...taking time to get things going). From the first moment, this was the Verlander of two season ago, throwing strike after strike, focused, working quickly and featuring that ridiculous stuff that only Joba can match. Like Joba now, Verlander mysteriously dipped down last year from near 100 MPH to a pedestrian 92-93 and got smacked, on Monday night, the gas was at 99 and the curve was criminal, the hot Yankee bats managed to hang in an get a decent number of Hits, but they were purely of the 1B variety and there never was a real threat of scoring until they got into the bullpen late and put on a mild comeback in the 9th, which died when Jorge Posada, hit into a Double Play with 2-on and none out. If Verlander is back to this form, he goes right back to his accustomed spot as Cy Young capable and the Tigers may be ready to have the season they planned on having LAST year.

Robinson Cano continued his sick hitting with another 2 hits, and Melky got another start and hit (the final one off Verlander) to continue strengthening his hold on the CF job he lost in Spring to Brett Gardner. Gardner has a role to play, with his solid Defense and breathtaking speed, but he simply cannot supply ANY thump in the batter's box (2 of his 3 extra base hits, in EIGHTEEN games, came in successive at-bats against Tampa Bay when Crawford and Upton dared him to hit it over their heads and he hit modest fly-balls that would have been easy outs with normal positioning).

Damon hurt his chronic left shoulder, foolishly running into the Green Monster chasing Papi's game-turning 2B on Sunday night. He is moments away from the DL or the bench, and Gardner is likely to play in his place (unless they call up Austin Jackson!), so both Yankee kids will continue to get chances, but this is the Melky we saw LAST April, playing shutdown CF, making laser throws and stroking it, with power from both sides of the plate. With Melky in the lineup, Yankees have a fantastic F-O-U-R Switch-Hitters in the everyday lineup, all of whom have power from both sides of the dish.

Kudos are due to Jose Molina, who struggled mightily at Bat, when asked to be the regular catcher last year upon Posada's injury. While he led MLB in runners thrown-out with a sick 50%, he just didn't give them ANYTHING offensively. This year, returned to a backup role, he has been getting his hits and holding up the bottom of the order better (.280), if he can continue that, Yankees will have best Catching duo in AL, outside of Cleveland (Victor Martinez and Kelly Shoppach both RAKE).

Tough Edwin Jackson (easily the worst trade of the offseason by Tampa Bay) goes for Les Tigres tonight and will face 22 year old, Phil Hughes, returning to the Yankees to cover Wang's spot while he heals. Hughes looked strong last September in his return to MLB, pitched well in Arizona fall league, well in Spring Training and dominated in AAA. He belongs, needs to stay calm, and deliver a 6 inning outing to give the bullpen more rest. Anything outside of that is gravy, Jackson can, and has, shut down the Yankees before, making his ouster from the Rays all the curiouser.

Perhaps, after the bitter disappointment of '08, the Tigers were simply due for something to go their way.






April 25, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 16/@ Boston

By Matthew Storey


Boston Red Sox - 5 (10-6)
New York Yankees - 4 (9-7)

Winning Pitcher: Ramirez (2-0)
Losing Pitcher: Marte (0-1)

HR: Bay (4)
Youkilis (5)

It was an odd night at Fenway. The Yankees and Red Sox were playing their first game of the 2009 season, amidst the usual hoopla and adrenaline the rivalry provides, and the game was a close, back and forth affair that the Red Sox salvaged with a 2 Run HR by Jason Bay in the 9th to tie (Mariano Rivera's 2nd blown save since 2007!) and a GW HR by Kevin Youkilis in the 11th to seal the comeback triumph for the Red Sox. But from the beginning, you could sense the Yankees issues really have little to do with the game tonight, they are starting to feel like they've already lost before they even GET to the field.

Tonight's starter, 23 Year Old, Joba Chamberlain, pitched as a Starter last July 25 at Fenway and was absolutely BRILLIANT, mixing his 4 pitches with pinpoint control and easily bringing 98-99 mph heat to set up his 90 mph slider. That guy was nowhere to be seen on this night. Joba had no ability to throw the fastball on the corner or to throw the ball past anyone, and survived on guile and fortuitous Double Play balls. For whatever reason, his dynamic stuff, the stuff that had blown away the American League in his first two seasons, has not been seen since August 4, when his arm gave out against Texas.

Tonight, he was gritty and managed to be effective, besides the lack of stuff...he's smart and knows how to pitch and he is still getting the respect his arm earned him from hitters. But that won't last, with the stuff he is throwing now - he's just a 'guy', not the Joba the Yankees expected to lead their rotation for a generation. Something is wrong there, and this is a guy, like Chien-Ming Wang, that cannot be replaced. Home grown Starters with dominant arms and makeups, in their TWENTIES, and they are hurt, or damaged...

It cast a pall over the game ON the field from the beginning and made it hard to get too interested in the proceedings. There was no excitement when the game appeared to be won, and no despair when it was lost. With Alex Rodriguez having surgery, Xavier Nady blowing out his elbow, Chien-Ming Wang not recovered from last year's injury, Mark Teixeira nursing a poor wrist and now Brian Bruney, who has been the brilliant 98 mph guy in the bullpen HURT and heading to NYC for an elbow scan AND Cody Ransom, Alex's understudy blowing his Quad and heading to the DL...

The Yankees advantage has unraveled, after 16 games. They are now forced into the SAME position they've experienced in each of the past 5 years - having to patch it together on the fly, compete with what they have and grind it out.

That can't work.

These Yankees are not the '90s Yankees, they are not a close-knit group of grinders, they are Thoroughbreds built to dominate and there is not going to be any way they can do that with what they've already lost. As in this game, the season has already changed its complexion and the Yankees know they are in for a grind, depleted, and will have to rely on competitiveness.

Yankee players are never going to 'outcompete' the Pedroias and Youkilis' of the world, these are guys who have had to fight, scratch and claw just to HAVE MLB careers -grinding and competing is the Red Sox game, and you'll never succeed playing another man's game. Guys like Cano and Swisher are the polar opposites of their Red Sox counterparts, smooth, natural talents who've known they'd be pro-stars since 10th Grade and grew up with MLB Dads (Jose Cano, Steve Swisher). In a grinding game, as we saw tonight, always bet on Boston and if this season comes down to grinding and dealing with adversity, that is simply not going to be something the Yankees are going to be able to do.

As for this game...Joba had nothing, worked in and out of trouble for 5.1 IP and got some good Defensive help from Jeter and Cano, who repeatedly bailed him out of jams with sleek DP work. His natural ability to throw the ball by hitters was nowhere in evidence, however and he looked like a 45 year old Roger Clemens, trying to get by on smarts and presence, not a 23 year old who looked unbeatable seemingly, moments ago...

Yankees clawed out a pair of runs, and were stymied themselves by three diving Red Sox plays that saved runs, Mike Lowell, diving to snare a sharp line drive ticketed for the LF corner and two runs, Jason Bay, diving and saving two runs on a Cano SF and Dustin Pedroia, diving to snare a go-ahead 1B by Derek Jeter up the middle that would have scored a run. Then, leading 4-2 in the top of the 9th, the Yankees loaded the bases, only to see Cano and Melky fail to bring in any of the runs, which would seal their fate.

Yankee bullpen was fine, Coke saved Joba's mess, Albaladejo was terrific and Mo was mowing them down in typical fashion before he left a lazy one to Bay that stung, Damaso Marte was his most effective since coming to the Yankees, but Girardi was forced to ask him to do things that are not his job in the 11th, with Brian Bruney and his RH stuff on a plane to NYC, Marte was asked to get the white-hot Youkilis out in his 2nd inning of work, and you knew that wasn't going to go well for Marte who is strictly a LH guy when the pen is healthy.

For the Sox, Jon Lester WAS throwing hard and had his good stuff, but not his command and the Yankees worked his pitch count way up and got him out early. They handled all of the Boston pitchers on this night, but the depleted lineup was 4-19 with Runners in Scoring Position and that always leaves a team feeling like it is 'waiting to lose', in this case, that is exactly how it turned out.

As always, the game and the series mean a lot more on the Boston side of the rivalry...the Yankees are probably lost for a couple of weeks after today's events and the season is already looking like a grind, rather than the one the Yankees worked so hard to make happen. For whatever reason, thoughts of a special year probably died tonight in Boston and the long slog is going to be their reality.

How you feel about that probably depends upon the type of fan you are. Some players go the race track to see the Stakes horses run, they are of noble-breeding, come from the preeminent breeders, have the best trainers and elite jockeys...and they often blow the doors off inferior competition to win at low odds, establishing their greatness and mark on history, but not providing much of a competitive spectacle. Other players are not interested in the mismatches at the top tier, but prefer the competitive and evenly matched races amongst claiming horses and lesser breeding stock. No big money purses, No fancy talent, but plenty of hard fought competitive betting races.

Its the difference between Pre-Salary Cap NFL teams laden with superstars at every position (SF 49ers, Dallas Cowboys) and Cap Era teams who play a 'system' and outcompete similarly talented squads with smarts and grit (New England Patriots),

When a brilliantly talented Stakes horse gets injured, its best to retire him, because he isn't accustomed to grinding it out with the more common animals on the track and won't compete to the wire if his typical burst of speed is no longer available.

Incredibly, after 16 games, it now appears that the 'Stakes Horse' that was supposed to be the 2009 Yankees is not going to be at full speed, and, for Yankee fans, that probably signals a year that will be yet another disappointment.

With Wang gone, the team will bring up effective RH reliever David Robertson to cover for Bruney and then bring up Phil Hughes to cover for Wang on Tuesday and then take his turn every five days. Hughes is dominating again at AAA and has nothing left to prove there, but, even at his best - he's no Wang or Joba, at THEIR best and there really is no way to know if we will SEE them throwing that way again. With Ransom now hurt, they'll have to bring up Angel Berroa, who has a better MLB bat but no longer can play MLB level Defense and they will have to live with that gaping hole, as they have been thus far, until Alex can make it back.

Sadly, it looks like his return will not be enough to help this team, whose season has probably died before it begins.









April 23, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 15/A's

By Matthew Storey

New York Yankees - 9 (9-6)
Oakland A's - 7 (5-9)

Winning Pitcher: Jose Veras (1-1)
Losing Pitcher: Dan Giese (0-2)

HR: Suzuki (1)
Matsui (2)
Jeter (4)
M. Cabrera (3,4)

This was ugly.

Another brutal start from CC Sabathia, whose ball is humming with it's normal velocity and bending with it's normal torque, but not yet being placed for strikes...he's a B-I-G man and grinding his way through the first week of his Bronx life. You can see how the smaller confines/stage of Spring Training was an easier fit for him, the circus aspects and the lifestyle adjustments are simply going to take time - the STUFF (unlike Wang) is there, but, right now - the results are not, he is walking everyone in sight, and given his career as one of the most accurate power pitchers the game has seen - it's ugly.

CC managed 6.2 innings, and gave up only 6 hits, one of them a pop-fly HR to white-hot Kurt Suzuki, (his first HR since last August!) that gave the A's half of their 6 ER against him. He got some shoddy Defense from Johnny Damon (who was one of several players to struggle with pop-ups in the driving rain this game was played in - for five hours!) and Jorge Posada, who had a brain-cramp on a potential play at the plate - vacating his position to back up 1st base as slow-footed Jason Giambi waltzed home with a gift run and Derek Jeter's relay home beat him easily, but found no Catcher!

Yankee Offense was solid early, with HR power continuing to be a positive and covering for the Black-Hole in their lineup that has been Cody Ransom/Brett Gardner thus far.

Hideki Matsui had a long HR and has been his accustomed hitting machine since having his Knee drained last week...his skills are truly superior. It has been a pleasure watching him perform in his Yankee career and seeing his easy power, fundamental soundness, baseball instincts and sheer toughness as his body has broken down in front of us and he STILL contributes - it's inspirational, he reminds me of Andre Dawson. It's easy to see why he is Japan's biggest Baseball hero - as good as he is, here at the end, he must have been incredible when his legs were young - if he's spent those years in the Bronx, he'd have Hall of Fame written all over him. In his current condition, with both knees shot - every game could potentially be his last and while we all hope he can make it through, we have to enjoy him while he is around.

A Pro.

Jeter, another pro, but one whose legs are feeling frisky, made some terrific plays at SS and hit a long HR to CF and Melky Cabrera, a baby whose game is still developing, followed up his huge April from 2008 (5 HR) with an even better April 2009, by clubbing a 420 foot HR to Left Center field in the 2nd inning hitting RH (back end of back-to-back with Matsui) and later smacked the Game Winner in the 14th, a 2 Run HR, from the LH side. This gives him 4 HR in 23 At-Bats and an unlikely place in 2nd place amongst AL Sluggers at .826 (although his limited at-bats disqualify him). What matters, from a Yankee perspective is he is providing the bottom of the order with some desperately needed THUMP to cover for Ransom/Gardner/Pena/Molina, who have all been ANEMIC offensively.

Still, for all their power and Offensive success in this game (Yankees had 15 hits through 7 innings), the bats went into a deep chill from there and managed only two hits the rest of the way, with Melky's close-out the 17th and exclamation point.

For their part, the Oakland team has a nice blend of elements that are just not working NOW, but certainly figure to improve as the season moves forward. Orlando Cabrera, Jason Giambi and Matt Holliday are not yet hitting, but they are all proven producers and they have enough role players, young guys and rehabbers to suggest they'll be competitive with more time. They also have their typical array of young hurlers with big arms, none bigger than Reliever Andrew Bailey and Starter/Lefty Specialist, Josh Outman. The starter in this game, Brett Anderson, is their #1 prospect and you can certainly see why, he has a terrific arm and presence and only requires time to get his feet under him in MLB (he reminds me of Phil Hughes, not an 'if', but a 'when', at 21 - that is a guess?).

Yankee relievers picked up CC and the slumbering bats through the late and extra sessions and benefited from the slumping A's hitters and the damp, wet conditions to post 7.1 innings of shutout ball. Phil Coke picked up CC to close out 7th, then Jonathan Albaladejo and Mariano Rivera each had a shutout inning. Damaso Marte did what he does, by walking one and striking one out, before giving way to Edwar Ramirez, who gave them 1.1 IP and then Jose Veras came in, promptly walked the first batter and went 2-0 on the next one and Yankee fans groaned....

But Posada came to the mound for an animated discussion and Pitching Coach, Dave Eiland (who must be feeling pretty tense these days...with a guy named David Cone sitting in the booth and a perennial Cy Young contender having fallen apart on his watch...) joined them and, lo and behold! Veras pitched the way a guy with 98 MPH heat, 75 MPH change-ups and darting curves SHOULD pitch and gave the Yankees ten straight outs in his longest MLB stint to seal the win.

So, for a Yankee team that has seen just about EVERYTHING go wrong, from Alex Rodriguez's injury to Chien-Ming Wang's disintegration, while being blamed for the recession, the corruption of American youth, both World Wars and the plight of the American family...the record is actually decent. This is a team that is neither playing well nor at anything close to full strength and has fundamental problems in figuring out Wang and surviving the injuries to Nady and Matsui. But it has done some winning, despite these problems and shown some grit, early, that was missing last season.

On to Boston, for the typically Hot-Early Red Sox, we'll see what they get from Joba tomorrow, but the rotation shuffling has left Joba and AJ back-to-back, which is a problem, there are very few pitchers in baseball with the stuff to prepare a lineup to face AJ - but if you wanted to draw up the perfect guy to face before him - it'd be Joba. They are going to have to separate those two, as designed, with Andy Pettitte at the first opportunity to do so.






April 22, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 14/A's

By Matthew Storey

New York Yankees - 5 (8-6)
Oakland A's - 3 (5-8)

Winning Pitcher: Andy Pettitte (2-0)
Losing Pitcher: Dana Eveland (0-1)

HR: Damon (2)

Coming into the season, the Yankee rotation featured four guys who there really weren't any questions about, and one guy who they figured would be 'good enough'. After fourteen games, AJ Burnett has been as advertised, CC Sabathia has been erratic, but showed brilliance in one of three starts, Joba Chamberlain has not settled into a regular turn or regular feel, but his velocity does not appear to be at mid-season levels and his control is not his accustomed level either. Chien-Ming Wang, erstwhile Ace, is lost somewhere in a fog - not prepared for the season and searching for answers, with half the Yankee losses attributable to him.

Andy Pettitte, meanwhile, has been much more than 'good enough'.

Last night, in his first start in the New Yankee Stadium, that was the biggest reason for his return, Andy shut down meaningless chatter about 'wind tunnels' that has arisen from a SINGLE FOUR GAME SERIES! with a crisp, unchallenged 7 Innings - no K's, no BB's, 2 Runs. He got beautiful Defensive plays from Brett Gardner, Derek Jeter, Cody Ransom and Mark Teixeira and looked effortless and in sync for the third successive, impressive start to his 2009 season, the sort of antidote a rotation NEEDS when one of its spokes goes off form.

Yankees opened things Offensively, with a 4-spot in the 2nd Inning, highlighted by slap-hitter, Brett Gardner, happily encountering a drawn-in infield with men on 2B and 3B. In this formation, a slap is just what you need and his 1B resulted in 2 RBI.

Andy cruised from there until the A's plated 2, utilizing one of Kurt Suzuki's 4 hits for the first run and then being thwarted by some terrific defense and a call that wiped out a chance for a run on an comeback squibber to Pettitte on which Chavez ventured inside the baseline and was plunked by the throw for an automatic out.

The replay made it obvious that Chavez's foot was completely on the infield grass, later on, ESPN's Baseball Tonight - center of the Yankee-Hating Universe, reported that although the replay they SHOWED made it look like Chavez was on the grass, they had heard reliably that ANOTHER replay (from the A's?) showed he was 'clearly inside the line, they blew the call!', to which, John Kruk, hero to all slobs with lazy minds chimed in 'that's huge there, they're ready to change that game!'. No evidence, no interest in what happened, no research to back up claims - they just RUN WITH IT if it has a slant that will please a large segment of the audience. Like FOX covering the Clintons.

That's journalism in America, 2009.

After that inning, Johnny Damon took Andrew Bailey off the facing in RF for a 5-2 lead. Bailey has a Joba-like arm, scintillating 98 mph Heat and table-splashing curveballs, he has a big future. The Damon run was his first surrendered in 10.1 Innings, and only his 2nd HIT to go against 13 K's. Don't be surprised to see Mr. Bailey making his way towards the 9th Inning soon, be aware those Fantasy GM's needing save options. Mr. Bailey is legit, and no Mariano blocks him by the Bay.

Brian Bruney, came on for the 8th, the Yankee RH has been lights out of late, and he extended his consecutive outs streak to 23 by getting two quick outs, before surrendering a run on two consecutive A's 2B's to close the scoring at 5-3.

Mariano came in. Light's out. 4th Save.






April 20, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 13/Indians

By Matthew

New York Yankees - 7 (7-6)
Cleveland Indians - 3 (4-9)

Winning Pitcher: Jonathan Albaladejo (1-0)
Losing Pitcher: Jensen Lewis (1-2)

HR: Choo (3)
Garko (1)
Posada (3)

Yesterday we got a fascinating and surprising answer to the age old marketing querie;

'How do you spell Relief?'

A-L-B-A-L-A-D-E-J-O, it seems, is the answer.

As the Yankees sought to cobble together 9 innings from a staff that has been battered by the sudden collapse of its most consistent performer (Chien-Ming Wang), the onus has fallen on Starter AJ Burnett to follow him by going deep into games and saving the overworked bullpen.

Mission accomplished.

Burnett was even WILDER than CC (5 Walks) and Joba (5 Walks), and with Wang's fiasco, its safe to say this is about as poor a beginning this highly valued staff could have imagined for their first four in the New building. AJ gave up an unseemly SEVEN Walks, but only three hits - including two HR, to Sin-Shoo Choo and Ryan Garko. Both Choo and Garko did what you have to do against guys like Burnett, guess fastball, zone an area and swing all out if you get it there - what players call 'running into one' since your bat is already headed to the spot the ball arrives in. Sweet swings for both, and no knock on AJ who was otherwise unhittable (the third hit, by Hafner was a bloop).

AJ gave the Yankees 6.1, but when he finally lost the strike-zone completely (a la the 'bad' AJ of Marlin days), he walked the bases loaded in the 7th with only the one out and Albaladejo came on, with the Yankees trailing 3-1 and the possibility of losing 3 of 4 staring them in the face.

He got two weak ground balls to end the threat and risk injury from a pumped up High-5 from the hulking AJ on the top step of the dugout. This game was salvaged right there.

For their part, the Indians had received a strong start from Yankee pariah, Carl Pavano, who effectively shut them down on a harmless 4 hits, 1 run over his 6 innings.

After Albaladejo did his Houdini act, Yankees welcomed stud reliever, Rafael Perez, rudely, with a 2B from Robinson Cano and an RBI 1B for Hideki Matsui to make it 3-2. Indians then went to Jensen Lewis, Friday's tough-luck loser and Joe Girardi decided to pinch-hit for Catcher Jose Molina with Jorge Posada.

Posada launched a high-arcing fly ball to the RF wall and Indian RF Crowe leaped...

Two fans were reaching for the ball and they and Crowe all whiffed on the catch, but the ball caromed off one fan and into the seats for a 2 Run, go-ahead, pinch-hit, HR.

'Hip, Hip, JOR-GE!'

The play was impossible to diagnose, even with replay (if the fan had interfered, it would be ground-rule 2B), but the Umpires did the right thing and called for Replay review, and 8 1/2 minutes later...

It stood. 4-3 Yankees.

Brian Bruney was perfect, again, in the 8th and the Yankees tacked on 3 runs when poor Cody Ransom matched Hafner's early bloop into sun-drenched LF for a bases clearing 3 RBI, 2B. 7-3.

Mo came in to get the work, in a non-save situation and that was that.


Yankees survive the series, 2-2, and the week, 4-3, despite being BLOWN out three times.













April 19, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 12/Indians

By Matthew

Cleveland Indians - 22
New York Yankees - 4

Winning Pitcher: Fausto Carmona (1-2)
Losing Pitcher: Chien-Ming Wang (0-3)

HR: Teixeira (3)
Choo (2)
A. Cabrera (1)
Sizemore (4)
DeRosa (3)
Martinez (4)
Hafner (4)


The 1960 World Series featured a Yankee team, laden with Hall of Famers, who blew out the Pittsburgh Pirates three times in the series. The beatings were so complete, no observer could imagine the Pirates surviving the onslaught.

The Pirates won the Series, in Game 7 on a walk-off HR by 2B Bill Mazerowski. A shot that put him in the HOF, the way Manny's departure put Dustin Pedroia in the MVP chair. People like a little guy who achieves more than most thought possible...

The 2004 American League Championship Series, saw the Yankees blow the Red Sox off the field in Game 3 at Fenway Park, 19-8, observers commented upon how utterly dominant the addition of Alex Rodriguez and Hideki Matsui made the Yankees...

The Sox, of course, won the next 4 games and the Yankees have never won another Playoff series, Alex Rodriguez, has won 3 AL MVP awards but never won a Championship and Hideki Matsui's knees are close to sending him into an honorable retirement.

Baseball is a game of endurance, of adversity, of adjustment. Six months long with endless ups and downs. So far this WEEK, the Yankees have been blown off the field by the Rays on Monday, 15-5, then won crisp back to back games to take that series, then been blow out 10-2 by the Indians on Thursday, only to bounce back and win a tight one, 6-5 yesterday.

Then yesterday, for the 3rd consecutive time, Chien-Ming Wang failed to do anything of consequence and was blown off the field in the 2nd Inning in the midst of a 14 run inning!

Chien, who came into the season with a 54-20 MLB record and spent last April throwing a 2-hit shutout at Fenway Park and a 1-0 victory over these Cleveland Indians and their ace, a guy named CC, has now lost 3 games in a row for the first time in his MLB career (99 Starts) and sent millions of New Yorkers onto Suicide watch. Truly, for us, if you cannot trust Chien-Ming Wang, there is nobody left...

The game itself is irrelevant. Chien had nothing, his replacement, a short-timer from AAA was treated rudely and a succession of overworked relievers got tatooed similarly.

As Johnny Damon put it '"He's making it real tough on our bullpen right now, we have to count on guys in our 'pen to go seven or eight innings. We have six losses on the year right now, and he's got three of them. In all three of those games, we've been blown out and we've had to go to our bullpen, so maybe our bullpen's not sharp the following days. I don't know what more to say, but hopefully he can figure it out, because it'd be tough to keep on going like this."

The only positive news from a Yankee perspective is the return of a productive Mark Teixeira, who hit a monstrous 2 Run HR in the 1st Inning that had Yankee fans imagining good things before the deluge...

Cleveland is an honest team and a good barometer...they play hard, have two brilliant hitters (Sizemore, Martinez) and a bevy of big swinging thumpers who KILL mediocre pitching. You have to chuck it to beat 'em, and if you don't - they'll hand you yours. That is what they've done in two of the first three games of the series, the matchup tomorrow seems like you could play it 50 times without the Yankees losing, but watching Wang, suddenly go from dominant to incompetent after never struggling in his career has proven that, truly, anything can, and WILL happen.


Six games this week. 3-3. Twelve games this season. 6-6.

Tomorrow is the rubber game, AJ Burnett against the despised one, his former teammate, Carl Pavano.





April 18, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 11/Indians

By Matthew

New York Yankees - 6 (6-5)
Cleveland Indians - 5 (3-8)

WInning Pitcher: Brian Bruney (2-0)
Losing Pitcher: Jensen Lewis (1-1)

HR: Mark DeRosa (2)
Johnny Damon (1)
Mark Teixeira (2)
Melky Cabrera (1)
Robinson Cano (3)
Derek Jeter (3)

A Strange Game.

Yankees had Joba Chamberlain on the hill, facing journeyman, Anthony Reyes, and got FIVE HR's from the Offense, but had to scrape from behind to eek out a 1-run victory. The result, while indicative of a certain grittiness on their part, is a cause for some slight concern, as Joba (like CC the game before) was really not sharp and was without excuse, facing a team of big swingers who should be tailor made for his arsenal. The issue, as it was with CC - is strikes, or rather, their inability to THROW them...Joba had five walks to match CC's output and that allowed the few hits he gives up to be of the RBI variety.

The Yankees expect FAR better from their young power pitcher and, this outing, certainly makes one wonder if his shoulder may have some residual issues that he isn't admitting to. HIs velocity, which reached 95 at times, was 91-92 for most of the game and that just will not do. Until we see more of what we saw last season in his 12 starts, there are going to be concerns about his arm health - 23 year olds who lose 6-7 MPH after an injury shutdown cause Guru to lose sleep!

Joba battled through it, as best he could, but really could not muster the sort of stuff he is accustomed to and the Indians, a fastball hitting group not asked to cope with the better heat, took advantage and a 5-3 lead by the time of Joba's exit, after 4.2 innings.

Unlike the previous game, when two Yankee relievers (Marte, Veras) poured accelerant on the fire...this time the Yankee relief was exceptional, providing the final 4.1 innings of scorelessness that was needed to allow the Yankee Offense to come all the way back and win. Phil Coke, Jonathan Albaladejo and Brian Bruney all were in complete control and Mariano Rivera, entering to his signature 'Enter Sandman' for the first time, across the street from his old office, got touched (the nerve!) for two hits by the Indians #8 and #9 batters (81 year old Tony Graffanino, Asdrubal Cabrera) and had to clamp down to strike out Grady Sizemore and Mark DeRosa (twice due to a missed call) and secure the win.

Offensively, the Yankees reached the seats those five times, but each was a SOLO affair, causing the closeness of the contest. Damon and Teixeira went back-to-back early, Melky got his first of the year on a no-doubter, Robinson Cano sent one to the 2nd deck for his 3rd and the Captain, Derek Jeter, who is hitting .600 this season in the 8th and 9th inning, took Lewis out to RF for his 3rd and the game, his third 'decider' in 4 games this week.

Today it's Chien-Ming Wang trying to rediscover the magic against the team that first revealed he was not superhuman in the 2007 playoffs - the Indians will not help him, he'll have to be on his game to handle a strong offensive team that knows him well.





April 17, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 10/Indians

By Matthew

Cleveland Indians 10 (3-7)
New York Yankees 2 (5-5)

Winning Pitcher: Cliff Lee (1-2)
Losing Pitcher: Jose Vera (0-1)

HR: Posada (2)
Sizemore (3)
Martinez (3)

The day finally arrived.

For months, Guru's daily trip to Yankees.com has been greeted by the countdown to Opening Day at the New Yankee Stadium and the Date 'April 16, 2009' has been emblazoned on my noggin. The sun was glorious in a cloudless sky and the anticipation was high, the ceremonies grand (Bernie WIlliams standing alone in Center Field, how else? - playing a self-composed Jazz Guitar version of 'Take me out to the Ballgame' had me crying real live Pinstriped Tears...Bernie was hurt being cut and chafed at missing this as a player, most organizations would have made him persona non grata, the Yankee way was on display.)

Ultimately, the setup was better than the follow-through, as the Yankees looked a little tight all afternoon, hung on by their fingernails through a gritty but uneven (5 Walks) by LH/CC Sabathia (the 2007 AL Cy Young Award Winner for the Cleveland Indians) and took their at-bats, typically long, drawn-out affairs as if they had someplace better to be - as if that was even possible, on April 16, 2009.

Facing CC, was LH/Cliff Lee (the 2008 AL Cy Young Award Winner for the Cleveland Indians), coming off two horrendous losses and Lee was in control from the beginning, taking advantage of Yankee impatience to send them chasing and surrendered only a long BOMB HR to dead CF by Jorge Posada, who continues to R-A-K-E with thump. Lee pitched 6 Innings, 7H, 1R, 3BB, 4K and got the decision.

For his part, CC pitched 5.2 Innings, 5H, 1R, 5BB, 4K, but his 122 pitches forced him from the game in the 6th inning, which would play a huge role in deciding this one.

With a 1-1 game on the line, Edwar Ramirez relieved and gave up a 1B, loading the bases, he, in turn, was relieved by Phil Coke who got the 3rd out, after the Yankees went out in the Top of the 7th...

The game blew wide open.

Jose Veras, who has brilliant stuff but seriously erratic results, walked 1 and gave up 2 hits, without retiring a batter and only avoids being the subject of Preschool Death Squads (Steinbrenner device for dealing with wayward relievers) due to the HORRENDOUS performance of the next pitcher, Damaso Marte, who was misused and ineffective in 2008 after coming over in the Nady trade with Pittsburgh, was resigned (mystifying Yankee fans) for big dollars in '09 and has been awful, dreadful and looking every bit of the Red Sox version of Eric Gagne...On this day, he 'held' the Indians to SIX runs, on 3 H, 1 BB and 2HR (one of them a Grand Slam by Grady Sizemore on a frisbee slider...).

In an instant, an interesting 1-1 game between the two Cleveland Cy Young LH turned into a joke, pretty tough to survive NINE run innings!

And that, in terms of the game itself, was that.

For the Yankees, roster moves await, Xavier Nady is done, David Robertson, who pitched very well last year is back up from AAA to take his slot and pitched the 8th and 9th scoreless yesterday, certainly Veras is a candidate to go down for a stint, Marte is a serious veteran and poses more problems, he may chafe at Minors, has no trade value and looks, more and more, like this year's version of Latroy Hawkins, who was a Yankee catastrophe but landed in Houston and dominated after being cut by Yankees. As someone who has seen them come and go for decades, the reality is some guys just don't like it here and don't perform well in this environment...going from Pittsburgh to this day in the Bronx is about as big a contrast as the results for Marte - better to take the hit and send him away too soon, then wait...wait...wait and watch these scenes unfold. If they are committed to him, Girardi needs to use him as INTENDED - as a LH specialist, not a set-up man - Phil Coke, who was a dominant starter in Minors, has the arm and the repertoire to be stretched out, he should be the set-up LH and Marte can come in an do his thing (K or BB to LH hitter). Minors offer help with Melancon and Hughes dominant arms to bring up.

Yankee numbers point to the illusion of small-sample statistics. The OVERALL show a team that has been hitting (5.4 runs per game) and not pitching (5.4 ERA), but the reality is the Offense is ailing with all the power hitters hurt (Alex, Tex, Nady) and only 4 batters contributing (Swisher, Jeter, Posada, Cano), the lineup is filled with holes right now, particularly with all the RH thump gone - its no accident their two worst games came against LH studs (Kazmir, Lee), they don't have the horses there.

As for the pitching, its a reverse situation, with all BUT 4 pitchers throwing well, only (Marte, Veras, Wang and Coke) have struggled. Wang, Coke are not concerns and Veras, Marte offer options.

10 game diagnosis?

Pitching looks great. Offense needs Alex and a healthy Tex. Until then, Pitching will have to carry things.

More day baseball in the beautiful new palace today, we'll be here afterwards.





April 16, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 9/@ Tampa Bay

By Matthew

New York Yankees - 4 (5-4)
Tampa Bay Rays - 3 (4-5)

Winning Pitcher: Brian Bruney (1-0)
Losing Pitcher: Troy Percival (0-1)

'The Battle of the Andy's' took place at The Trop on Wednesday afternoon, as longtime Yankee stalwart, Andy Pettitte, faced off against Tampa Bay's surprising rotation survivor, Andy Sonnanstine.

Both pitched well.

Sonnanstine, who is one of those guys who lights up opposition eyes with is seemingly mundane arsenal and then shuts them down with pinpoint control and change of speeds, did just that, surrendering only a monster BOMB HR to white-hot Robinson Cano, wearing #42 (they all were) in honor of the man he was named for - Jackie Robinson. Cano's 2 run blast tied the game in the Top of the 3rd after the Rays had scratched out a couple of their own, and the Rays took the lead in the Bottom of the 4th on a HR by Carlos Pena - who looks locked in on the field and in the batter's box - a terrific player, who, for whatever reason, took years to develop it at the MLB level - he spent time with Oakland, Detroit, Boston and the Yankees and the opportunity and success never came together, but he has been a FORCE since arriving in Tampa Bay and provides and anchor for years to come.

For his part, Andy Pettitte, kept the game close, pitching 7.1 Innings of 3 run baseball for his second consecutive strong start, although he did not factor in the decision. Brian Bruney, came in and struck out Pat Burrell and Carlos Pena on 8 pitches, giving him 5 strikeouts from 5 batters faced in this series, having struck out Upton, Crawford and Pena in the 9th Inning on Tuesday. He threw just 18 pitches to get the 15 strikes and only 1 ball.

No need to belly-ache about the 8th Inning Guy - its clearly Bruney and you have to wonder why Girardi used him in the 7th in the KC game the pen blew, his perfect innings, control and 97 MPH look good to Guru!

Yankees tied the game in the top of the 8th on back-to-back 2B's by Derek Jeter and Johnny Damon.

Cody Ransom, benched for the past two over his weak start, got a chance at redemption, pinch-hitting in the 9th and responded with a ringing 2B to CF and then, the Captain, who had made a circus play earlier (Cano also made a highlight play) and put the Rays away the day before with a 3 Run BOMB, finished them off again with an RBI 1B that drove in Ransom with the winning tally.

Then it was time for the only MLB Player who still wears #42 EVERY day, Mariano Rivera, who was his customary self for an effortless close-out to a successful road trip.

Yanks won 5 of final 7, survived 3 Home Openers for opponents, took 2 of 3 from the Rays in Tampa Bay and have gotten consistent Offensive production even while carrying some struggling sticks and missing their #3 (Teixeira is playing and playing good defense, but his wrist is clearly hurting and he is a shell at the plate) and #4 (Alex) hitters. They blew one late to KC, had no chance on the two bad Wang starts and the opening day CC fiasco, but they seem to be responding to Girardi and the new elements seem to have created a NEW team, rather than the situation last season where veterans were trying to deal with the change from Joe Torre.

It's Joe Girardi these days.

There was some bad news, however, as Yankee RF joined the near surreal list of injuries this team has suffered in recent years, blowing out his surgically repaired elbow on a seemingly harmless toss to 2B in KC - the Yankees have the depth to survive, but its a player coming off .297/25/97 and in his final year before Free Agency, and that certainly makes it tough to replace the production. Bad news for X.

Yankees will probably bring up AAA player of the week, 1B Juan Miranda, who is just one of the rampaging Scranton Wilkes/Barre club that has opened their defense of their back to back International League titles with a crisp 7-0, led by CF Austin Jackson and Miranda. Yanks don't need another OF, but with Swisher playing every day in RF and Tex hurting, they will need Miranda to back-up 1B. They are going to need Alex healthy when he returns, losing Nady makes them a bit LH biased, but with

F-O-U-R Switchhitters (Melky, Tex, Posada, Swisher) they should have enough RH thump.














April 15, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 8/@ Tampa Bay

By Matthew

New York Yankees - 7 (4-4)
Tampa Bay Rays - 2 (4-4)

Winning Pitcher: AJ Burnett (2-0)
Losing Pitcher: JP Howell (0-1)

A night after a blowout, filled with sloppy defense and still-in-Spring-Training Pitching, the Yankees and the Rays played an instant classic at the Trop last night - a scintillating pitcher's duel between two hard throwing RH studs (AJ Burnett, Matt Garza).

And, on this night, although Garza had the advantage of a terrific first name - AJ got the cake.

Yankees loaded the bases right away in the Top of the 1st inning on back-to-back singles from Brett Gardner/Derek Jeter and a walk to Mark Teixeira (nursing a sore wrist). Garza then got tough and struck out the sizzling hot bat of Nick Swisher before Jorge Posada fought off an outside pitch and drove it to deep left to score Gardner with the critical first run in a game that was clearly not going to see many.

From there, Garza settled in and began mowing down Yankees and strutting around the mound, going so far as to buzz Swisher under the chin when he arrived at the plate during the 4th Inning. Refreshingly, Swisher, one of three Yankees who are 2nd Generation MLB (Shelly Duncan, Robinson Cano) did NOT stare at the mound, grab his crotch, charge the hill...he just stepped back, got his bearings, stepped back into the box...

And hit the next pitch 400 Feet over the Right Centerfield wall, his 4th HR in his 6th Yankee start, replacing a guy who had 4 HR in 189 at-bats in 2008.

2-0 Yankees.

Meanwhile, AJ Burnett was CRUISIN'...with only a harmless walk to Pat Burrell marring perfection over the first 6 innings. Burnett just looks like a different guy than the rattled, wild-eyed, emotional power pitcher whose body seemed as out-of-control as his temper for all those years of underperformance and injury. Now, with his Roy Halladay-inspired calm, he looks like a Zen master..quietly rocking his body back and firing those cannon shots with an easy toss. He mixes in two speeds of curve-balls, an occasional change-up and can dart the heat up or down. The contrast between the low '70's curve, the mid '80s slider and the high '90s gas makes it tough on the hitter and the calm motion and self-control keep him in the strike zone.

He held the no-hitter until the bottom of the 7th, when Carl Crawford put a BEAUTIFUL at-bat on him and laced a clean 1B to LF, then, momentarily...the old 'Bad' AJ surfaced, as a clearly shaken Burnett lost his focus and left two successive pitches out over the plate against two terrific hitters (Evan Longoria, Carlos Pena) and they each smacked singles...when Pat Burrell flied-out, it was a 2-2 game. The No-Hitter, Shutout and Lead all lost...

In the top of the 8th, the Rays brought in last year's stud set-up man, JP Howell (who looks 12 years old), and Brett Gardner burned Crawford in LF by smashing a 2B over his head - there is NOTHING that a hitter likes better than getting to see the OF's Number, when he has tried to play you short and you've forced him to retreat with his back to the plate...on Monday, the Rays did so twice and came up with circus catches - on this night, the balls kept flying. With another hit from Jeter and the Yankees sitting with 1st and 3rd, Teixeira came up, hitting RH for the first time since the wrist injury, it was obvious that he was feeling uncomfortable and JUST as obvious what a critical situation this was. Teixeira did the best he could with a long, lazy fly ball to break the tie. 3-2 Yankees.

Burnett came out for the bottom of the 8th and dominated, finishing his night with 8IP/9K/1BB/3H/2R, the kind of performance the Yankees needed with a tired bullpen coming off innings of Monday relief.

In the 9th, facing Dan Wheeler, Cano and Melky Cabrera (hitting for Nady, who he'd replaced in RF during the 8th) had a 1B and Brett Gardner smashed a 2B to dead CF, this time burning BJ Upton who turned to chase as Crawford had the inning before. This was Gardner's best game as a Yankee and, if he can swing with authority - he is a keeper, his legs are a given. 4-2 Yankees.

Derek Jeter stepped in, with 2 soft 1B's already in the game and blasted a 3 Run HR into the RF seats that the OF never moved on, the 'no-doubter' that gave Gardner and Jeter 6 hits combined on the night and put the game out of reach.

Brian Bruney, who pitched a dominant 7th Inning on Sunday, before the 8th inning meltdown by Phil Coke, came in to face the formidable top of the Rays order and mowed down Upton/Crawford/Longoria on just 10 pitches, striking out the side and sealing the Yankees best win of the first week of 2009.

Today its afternoon baseball at the Trop, the battle of the Andy's - Pettitte and Sonnanstine, should be one to be decided by the offenses...





April 14, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 7/@ Tampa Bay

By Matthew

Tampa Bay Rays - 15 (4-3)
New York Yankees - 5 (3-4)

Winning Pitcher: Scott Kazmir (2-0)
Losing Pitcher: Chien-Ming Wang (0-2)

This one looked like a blowout before it began, and lived up to its billing once the teams hit the field.

For the Rays, one of the few things that did NOT go right in 2008 was their play against the Yankees, who handled them 11 of 18 times and did better as the season went on.

On a night when they hoisted their AL Pennant and AL Eastern Division Crown in their mausoleum of a Concrete Box - 'The Trop' (like a wedding in a Mall)...

...and sent out their fire-balling LH Ace, Scott Kazmir, against a Yankee lineup missing its #3 and #4 hitters (Rodriguez and Teixeira) from the Right Side and carrying a left side of the infield (Cody Ransom and Derek Jeter) both from the Right Side, who had combined to go a combined 2 for their last 37 against far more modest arms.

For the Yankees, coming off a brutal loss the day before on an 8th Inning meltdown by reliever Phil Coke (who was horrible again and is, as mentioned yesterday, in need of some AAA time to sort out his delivery from the stretch...) and relying on Chien-Ming Wang to be back in form in his 2nd MLB start since his June 15 broken foot, the chances seemed iffy from the outset.

Ten minutes into the game, those chances had all but evaporated.

Chien-Ming Wang was making his 97th MLB Start and had only lost two in a row ONE time before last night (although he lost 2 straight to Cleveland in the '07 ALDS), but has yet to look comfortable or throw at his accustomed velocity (94-96) or location (D-O-W-N, down, down...) and he had that lost deer look he gets when his stuff isn't there...if you watch as much Yankee baseball as Guru does, and have seen every inning Wang has ever thrown...you knew, and you also knew something ELSE that was important...

'Chuck' was on at 8PM, so there was an alternative...

Wang is proven, so there is time to get him right and, the Yankee minds/hearts were almost certainly not in Tampa Bay but on their historic Thursday date...one of the biggest moments in the history of sports greatest franchise - the opening of the New Yankee Stadium in The Bronx.

On the field, the carnage was mainly inflicted by Carlos Pena (Guru cannot tell a lie, Pena, Upton and Longoria are fantasy stalwarts for his teams...and with the outcome never in doubt, it wasn't such a bad night for some stat-padding at my Yankees expense!). Pena had a Grand Slam off Wang's 'relief' that brought in the final of his 8 runs surrendered in 1 Inning plus, giving him 6 RBI in the first two innings!

BJ Upton is 100% healthy, hit the ball, stole bases and simply made one of the greatest catches you will EVER see in a baseball game running, Willie Mays-like directly into the dead CF wall with his back completely turned to the plate and snatching a monstrous blast off the fence at the last possible second off the bat of Xavier Nady one of the only three Yankees with thump from the RH side in this configuration. Carl Crawford, hit the ball, stole bases and made his OWN masterful play to steal a 2B from Nick Swisher, who continued his torrid hitting with his 3rd HR (10th RBI) and the blast Crawford caught to go with another Walk - he even pitched a scoreless inning in Gar-BAGE time and recorded his first MLB Strikeout off bodybuilding immortal, Gabe Kapler.

Swisher, in 7 games and 20 at-bats, has SEVEN Extra Base hits, replacing a guy, Wilson Betemit, who had 4 HR and 24 RBI in 189 at-bats in 2008. Given the unexpected losses of Alex and Tex, he is an irreplaceable part for a lineup that is designed around those two in the middle. The Yankees are going to have to pitch and catch during the injury period, while those two heal, Matsui and Wang re-acclimate and Jeter finds his stroke.

One player who apparently does not need more time is Jorge Posada, who drove in multiple runs for the 3rd consecutive game, with yet another monster 2B in the gap. Posada, a freak who caught deep into the playoffs every year for a decade without ONCE going on the DL, has now come back from tricky Shoulder surgery looking like his All-Star ass never left. He's got 5 Extra Base hits in his first 20 at-bats, to go with 8 RBI's returning to his spot in place of Jose Molina who managed only 18 RBI in 286 at-bats in 2008 and 20 extra base hits - meaning that Posada, like Swisher, will provide more production by mid-May than his predecessor did all year long.

Yankees have AJ Burnett on the hill next up, facing Matt Garza, which should give the LH-heavy lineup a better opportunity to score some early runs and close the preview series and the road trip with a battle of Andy's, sending Pettitte to face Sonnanstine - who, inexplicably, was retained over Edwin Jackson (shipped to Detroit for a bucket of warm spit named Matt Joyce).

Two more before the big game...we'll be here to chronicle all of them.






April 13, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 6/@ Kansas City

By Matthew

Kansas City Royals 6 (3-3)
New York Yankees 4 (3-3)

Winning Pitcher: Cruz (1-0)
Losing Pitcher: Coke (0-1)

On a day when Joba Chamberlain made his 2009 Debut against Royal Ace, Gil Meche, there were a couple of Yankee concerns;

1.) With Alex Rodriguez rehabbing his surgically repaired hip, new slugger Mark Teixeira has now missed successive games with a bum wrist.

2.) With Derek Jeter and Hideki Matsui off to slow starts, Jorge Posada and Johnny Damon resting, the Yankee lineup was dangerously thin against the solid Meche, with Cody Ransom, Brett Gardner, Jose Molina and Melky Cabrera all swinging light wood - this was not a day for letting cheap runs score.

3.) With Meche on the hill and Joakim Soria as their closer, the time for a thin lineup to break through was going to have to come towards the end of Meche's start in the 6-7-8 innings.

For the most part, Joba set the Yankee up for success with 6 effective innings, 5 K's and only 1 Walk, being touched only for a solo HR by John Buck on an ill-advised (Buck can't catch up to the fastball) Slider that hung in the zone like a pumpkin.

Things looked good for Joba, but a bizarre ground ball that scooted off the wet ground, under BOTH 1B Nick Swisher and 2B Robinson Cano, allowed two unearned runs to be plated by the Royals.

Still the Yankees will take this sort of outing, every time. He threw all his pitches, threw first pitch strikes, was able to ramp up his velocity to high '90s on demand and seemed relaxed and fluid throughout, probably having his best inning in the final frame (6th).

As expected, the Yankee lineup looked anemic against an effective Meche, but DID find a way to break through in the top of the 7th on a clutch RBI 2B by Xavier Nady, an RBI single from Cano to tie and a modest DP ball from Melky that nonetheless plated the go-ahead run.

When Brian Bruney dominated the Royals in the Bottom of the 7th, the Sweep was in the air...

Girardi brought Damaso Marte in for the Bottom of the 8th and he did his job, getting two quick outs, but Joe brought in Jose Veras to face Billy Butler, and Veras - who has electric stuff, but struggled in '08 with back-to-back outings (he pitched yesterday) committed the sin of walking Butler with two outs and Girardi went to Phil Coke to get the last out of the 8th, which, with Mariano lurking could be seen as the Royals last shot.

Coke, who dominated in 12 September innings last year (1 run surrendered) and has casual LH heat in the mid '90s, is a strikeout pitcher who makes hitters miss (19 k's in 17 Yankee innings, 5 in 2.2 IP this season). But he was touched up by the two weakest hitters in the Oriole lineup earlier in the week (Cesar Izturis, Greg Zaun) and against Kansas City, who'd managed only 3 Earned Runs in 25 2/3 Innings against Yankee pitching, Coke managed to surrender 3 Earned Runs to the next three hitters -
Brayan Pena (as 3rd String Catcher, holding his MLB job by a thread and career sub .400 Slugger) hit a 2B to tie the game and score Butler, then Alberto Callaspo (another sub .400 Slugger) followed with a bloop that Gardner broke poorly on to take the lead and John Buck (the 5th of 5 '09 hitters, with sub .400 Career Slugging that hit Phil Coke to drive in runs) adding insurance with another 2B.

Ouch.

Coke's arm is live, no question, and he is not one to give up on after a poor first week, but Pitchers know there is something wrong when the sort of stuff he brings is being handled by a series of hitters who have proven to be weak. Usually, it comes down to location - leaving the ball too far over the plate, but it can also signal that he is tipping his pitches (something Girardi will be expert in recognizing). Yankees have serious depth at AAA and should not hesitate to give Coke a tune-up stretch at Scranton Wilkes/Barre is things don't quickly reverse themselves...this was a 'Win' that turned to a 'Loss' due to Coke's issues and, with 3 coming up in Tampa with the Rays - a win they needed to book. The schedule makers were exceedingly kind to the Yankees, sending them to play two last place clubs in Baltimore and Kansas City and they can't be happy with .500 Baseball against them.

So...it's on to Tampa Bay. 4 Good Starts from the rotation in a row and solid work from the rest of the bullpen, but the lineup is a concern with all that thump on the sidelines healing and the predictable failures of Ransom and Gardner. Melky, like Wilson Betemit, is simply not a player with the sort of makeup or skill set to play off the bench - they are asking him to do something, at 24, that is not going to work out. If they remain committed to Gardner, they need to ship Melky for a lower upside OF who CAN play once a week effectively.

See you tomorrow!





April 11, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 4/@ Kansas City

By Mattew

New York Yankees 4 (2-2)
Kansas City Royals 1 (2-2)

Winning Pitcher: Andy Pettitte (1-0)
Losing Pitcher: Sidney Ponson (0-1)

Everything.

Up to date.

At the newly renovated Kaufman Stadium.

It was always gorgeous and now looks even better, a sparkling palace on the plains.

For New York, this was the sort of crisp, well-pitched victory that put smiles on the faces of all who dream in Pinstripes, as LH Andy Pettitte was in fine form and controlled play from the start - hurling 7 innings of 3 hit ball, 6 K's and only 1 BB. He was charged for the cheapest of runs when the wind took a pop-up out of the reach of a diving Nick Swisher, making his 2nd straight start in RF. Swisher later ripped an RBI 2B to atone, in part, for a transgression that mattered not at all...

At least on this day.

Robinson Cano, continued his torrid hitting, with another two hits, one to LF and one to RF, AND another W-A-L-K, which is only news if you've been following the career of the free-swinging Cano, who took about a month to walk the same 4 times he has in his first 4 games this year. Since being given a wake-up benching for two games last September, Cano is a sizzling 28-56 (.500) and, when he is on a tear like this (as he was during the Yankees 8-0 run after the '08 All-Star game), he's as good a hitter as there is in the game. He also put on another clinic at 2B with a circus grab on a high line drive and several far ranging nabs to his left.

Nice start for him, keep it up, Robby.

Despite getting into a quick hole on Jorge Posada's 2 run 1st inning single, Royal starter (and '08 Yankee) Sir Sidney Ponson, followed up his WBC heroics with a decent start and largely kept his team in the game, striking out the side to keep the score at 4 after a lead-off 2B by Teixeira had Yankee announcer (Met, Blue Jay, Yankee AND Royal legend) David Cone noting he was 'probably' on his last hitter.

Ponson has the stuff to be an effective back-end rotation guy, he needs to throw strikes and avoid the constant tight-rope act, but made a good start on his 2009 endeavors with this respectable effort.

And that's about all I got.

A good game for the Bombers, we'll take about 98 more just like it and then get ready for October!





April 10, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 3/@ Baltimore

By Matthew

New York Yankees 11 (1-2)
Baltimore Orioles 2 (2-1)

Winning Pitcher: AJ Burnett (1-0)
Losing Pitcher: Alfredo Simon (0-1)

HR: Scott (1)
Teixeira (1)
Swisher (1)
Cano (1)

All that Florida baseball, mostly in the sunlight, was kind to the Yankees.

Baltimore had been relatively kind to the sticks, but stalwarts CC Sabathia and Chien-Ming Wang failed to menace and left the Bombers ohfer Niner.

That silliness is finished.

Behind textbook power baseball, the Yankees rode AJ Burnett's overwhelming arsenal, 3.1 more innings (8.0 straight) of hitless relief pitching from Monday's disappointers (Phil Coke, Brian Bruney) and homeboy studs, Jose Veras and some guy named Mo to a redemptive 11-2 score.

It's pretty wild to see Burnett in the Bronx.

I remember back in 2003, when the Yankees survived 7 games and extra innings against Boston, in the first of their back to back ALCS drama and rolled into a World Series against the Florida Marlins nobody imagined they could lose. Things went well for awhile, and late in Game 4, the Yankees looked like a 3-1 leader on their way to a title. Then the karma that gaveth with Aaron Boone, lefteth with Alex Gonzalez, who took Jeff Weaver over the wall, as Yankee fans threw up their hands about Weaver being left in a second inning, having worked his ass off to prove to Joe Torre how utterly worthless he was (think MLB version of Trent Dilfer, sure he won a title later, but neither guy was around the next season). At 2-2, the Marlin pitching simply took OVER and shut the Yankees down - cold.

A young staff that featured phenom Dontrelle Willis (anxiety ridden in Detroit), stud Brad Penny (rehabbing with Red Sox), precise Carl Pavano (tatooed in his Tribe debut today after 4 lost years with the Yankees) and an instant Superstar named Josh Beckett (Red Sox Ace).

Guru sat in the Aerie, shaking my head at their pitching depth and variety, and the thing I remember the MOST is the way all the announcers and Marlins themselves kept talking about the guy who was NOT there. Somehow, someway, they insisted this missing guy had an arm that outshone the others, even though the others were shining brilliantly on the biggest stage of all.

That kid ended up getting big dollars to come to the AL East, but still, it seemed like he was always hurt (and it's interesting to note that ALL of those guys have suffered injury after injury and missed critical amounts of time) and I never took him that seriously. Then, last year, all the sudden, it seemed, he shows up looking like the guy they were talking about back in '03 - blowing 98 MPH pellets on the knees and in the eyes, and a darting curve that can't be overstated. The guy's stuff is FILTHY.

Still...despite the way he dominated, he never had the mind of a Beckett or the grit of Penny.

But, apparently, he went to school with Roy Halladay, got a clue about pacing himself instead of forcing it (the difference between Beckett in '06 and '07) and - here he is.

He was terrific today, clutch when he needed it, and he picked up his rotation and his club.

Nice job.

Speaking of which...take a bow, Joe Girardi. He talked of the 'value of competition' all Winter long and openly pushed the on-field position battles in Center and Right Field.

Guru was skeptical.

Then I watched Brett Gardner come into camp a greatly improved Offensive player, and, out of nowhere, won the job with a brilliant .446 On-Base .621 Slugging .379 Average. Gardner's speed is a given that makes him a game changer, if he hits at ALL - he's valuable, hitting like that, when pressed to perform, was impressive. And it wasn't just him, Melky Cabrera, asked to compete for what had been HIS for three seasons, responded with his OWN brilliant Spring .408/.508/.349 and 13 RBI, a third of what he managed in 400+ at-bats last season. In seven weeks, two question marks with one outstanding characteristic (Melky's arm - how good? Nick Markakis has 38 OF assists in the past three years over 463 Games, Melky has 35 in just 408!) became players the team feels great about, Gardner is 25, Melky is 24 - Joe pushed the right buttons and it shows.

Gardner had 2 hits today, and stole a base.

Over in RF, Nick Swisher, displaced by the Mark Teixeira at 1B, and blocked by Johnny Damon in LF and Hideki Matsui at DH, was asked to compete with Xavier Nady for the RF job. Instead of pitching a fit and pointing out that, 'Hello! I was a STAR just two years ago, and I'm a 28 year old Power Hitting, Switch Hitter who can play 3 positions well and one adequately...', he complimented his teammates, loved on the whole Yankee vibe and kept the energy level up. Joe sat Matsui today, moved Nady to DH (he had a ringing 2B) and gave Nick the start in RF.

Swisher responded to the challenge to prove himself with a 2-Run Bomb into the RF seats, an RBI single down the LF line and an RBI 2B down the RF line. 3-5, 5 RBI's, every inch of field, plus over the wall.

That's how you insure more playing time.

Turn it up Nick.

The team has interesting problems with its OF. They have six names - two kids, two vets in their final contract years who are consistent and productive (Damon, Matsui), and two guys in their prime with thump and leather. The veterans make serious coin and aren't going anywhere, the kids have too much upside and are too affordable to ship, but the prime guys are a duplication, and Austin Jackson looms for '2010 as Damon/Matsui leave. Swisher would make a HUGE impact in San Francisco, Nady, who has a .300/30/100 bat works anywhere, and that's why he's moved around so much.

Tough not to be seduced by Swisher's skills...we'll see how they play it. Guru sees both Gardner AND Swisher as NL style players with tremendous upside for the right situation, but 'against type' in the Bronx. That can be a good thing...

Yankees hit the ball all three games, with HR's from Posada, Matsui, Jeter, Teixeira, Swisher and Robinson Cano, who came into camp looking like a lion, came back from the WBC focused and smoking the ball and has opened up the '09 season with 6 hits, 3 WALKS and Softball numbers all around, not to mention the typically and casually brilliant range/arm combination at 2B. Like Burnett, Cano is never going to be mentally aware like a Jeter, Alex or Teixeira, but, also like AJ, his physical gifts are ridiculous, he was 3-4, with a HR, 2 RBI and 4 Runs this afternoon.

As for the Orioles, a successful series, and the satisfaction of seeing their plans start to take shape. Adam Jones looks like a blossoming star, Markakis and Roberts already are, Huff and Mora are reliable veteran contributors, Izturis gives them reliable glove work and smarts at SS, Luke Scott is Nick Swisher by the Bay (but not Swisher's bay, where he belongs...). Matt Weiters is on the way to solidify the Catching for long and long...they have two genuine MLB arms up top with Guthrie and Uehara, and now they wait on their farm system to churn the young, high-draft-pick arms into those top slots and fill up the Pen.

They are closer than they've been for a decade.

And Guru? Done. See you after Game 4.





April 09, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 2/@ Baltimore

By Matthew

Baltimore Orioles 7 (2-0)
New York Yankees 5 (0-2)

Winning Pitcher: Koji Uehara (1-0)
Losing Pitcher: Chien-MIng Wang (0-1)

HR: Nick Markakis (1)
Derek Jeter (1)

Guru wrote a column over the Winter, 'The Changing Face of Baseball'.

You see it everywhere you look, on this 35th Anniversary of one of the greatest moments in Baseball History, when Hank Aaron went over the wall for #715 - sending a 10 year old Guru into leaping ecstasy and bringing the racial integration of Baseball full circle.

Tonight at Camden Yards, the Yankees and the Orioles, naturally, had a combined fifty players...

...from N-I-N-E countries (USA, Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Japan, Venezuela, Panama, Cuba, Taiwan and Mexico).

20 Million Japanese watched this game at 8AM, watching their biggest Star, Hideki Matsui, from their biggest franchise, the Yomiuri Giants face off against his former teammate, 34 year old, Koji Uehara, making HIS MLB debut (Uehara was the winning pitcher, Matsui was 0-5).

8 Million Taiwanese watched this game at 8AM as well, watching THEIR biggest Star, Chien-Ming Wang, make his comeback from surgery that broke millions of hearts in Taiwan AND The Bronx (Wang was rusty and took the loss).

Globalization works.

On the field, the Yankees were thrilled to see their erstwhile Ace on the Hill, despite the dreadful results (3.2 IP, 9 H, 7 ER, 3 BB, 1 HR). Wang came into the game with a career mark of 54-20, 25-9 on the road and the Yankees had won 30 of his last 38 starts - they'll live with an occasional clunker, just as long as he takes the ball every five days. If he loses his next start, he 'drops' to .750 for his last 40 - guessing they'll let him take the hill for #41.

For the Orioles, Adam Jones continued his torrid start, showcasing the sorts of skills that may make him a perennial 40/40/Gold Glove threat and Nick Markakis became the 3rd of the top 3 Oriole hitters in the lineup to have a 3-3 start, highlighted by a HR to finish off an empty Wang.

On the Hill, Koji Uehara, a two-time Japanese Pitcher of the Year, whose skills have eroded from those accomplishments, but who hasn't FORGOTTEN a thing about how to get hitters out - especially those who've never seen you before (think 'El Duque' Hernandez). Uehara was efficient and once the lead got huge, was able to relax and reel it in, like the veteran stud he is. The reality of the Orioles is they have MORE than enough lineup, any time a pitcher gets them into the 6th inning, they have a chance.

For the Yankees, Derek Jeter hit a long HR in the 9th, and has taken to the leadoff role with a .600 On-Base pctg and 5 hits in his first two games. Posada looks strong and is throwing the ball with authority. Robinson Cano looks locked in at bat and made several sparkling plays at 2B, but he also failed to run hard on a ground ball to Melvin Mora at 3B that he anticipated would be the third out, only to have Mora overthrow it and Cano not score.

In a blowout, those things get lost - unless you pay attention, Guru does - so does Joe Girardi.

Not running out an automatic ground-ball out is no great sin, but running when you have a chance to SCORE is something that needs to be ingrained and, if it isn't, needs to be coached. In a game that ended with Mark Teixeira on 2nd and Hideki Matsui at-bat, that run would have changed the at-bat for Matsui - when a single would have tied it, instead of him needing a HR.


Game 2, for sure, but a lesson that Joe will surely communicate.

Yankee bullpen was terrific, with Jonathan Albaledejo, Edwar Ramirez and Jose Veras combined for 4.1 IP scoreless, a silver lining on a tough night for the pinstripes.

Tomorrow, Yankees send AJ Burnett to the hill, looking to avoid the O-Sweep, game starts at 1:05PM and we'll see you back here afterwards, with the recap.





April 07, 2009

2009 New York Yankees/Game 1/@ Baltimore

By Matthew

Baltimore Orioles 10 (1-0)
New York Yankees 5 (0-1)

WP: Jeremy Guthrie (1-0)
LP: CC Sabathia (0-1)

HR: Posada (1)
Matsui (1)
Izturis (1)

Thud!

That's the sound of a team that swaggered into Baltimore's Camden Yards, off a 24-10-1 Spring Training, having won the final 10 games, enjoyed a two-game power display in a preview for their 1.5B new Palace, hit .295 in Spring, with a 3.35 ERA...

Thud!

That's the sound of 6'7", 310lb, Lefty, newly signed to lead the rotation of the New York Yankees in a rich, long-term contract, casually dominant just five days ago, 5-0, sub 3.00 era lifetime against the Orioles...

Thud!

That's the sound of a 33 year old, career minor-leaguer, a terrific athlete, defender and seemingly unflappable type asked only to replace the Sports Biggest Star on the Sports Biggest Franchise...

Thud!

That's the sound of Switch-Hitting Superstar, born and raised in Maryland and lustily booed by the local crowd...

That was the sound emanating from Camden Yards, where the feisty locals, seemingly relegated to the role of Washington Generals, took advantage of some 'Welcome-to-the-Yankees' jitters from the above referenced players and stormed to a big lead, endured a Yankee comeback and then, improbably...got the big outs with tying run on 3rd Base and only 1 out, then pushed across a clinching 4-spot with the unlikeliest of candidates playing a leading role.

It was that kind of day.

Bummer.

CC Sabathia was flat-out TERRIBLE, worse really than you might imagine he COULD be. He was in trouble from the start, gave up 6 hits in 6 at-bats to Oriole leadoff man, Brian Roberts and his talented follow-up, Adam Jones...walked FIVE and struck out ZERO, with two first inning wild pitches to boot.

His ball had nothing on it and he couldn't throw a strike.

He held a heating pad against his stomach/chest from the 3rd Inning on and Joe Girardi needlessly stayed with him despite the evidence that he had nothing and might be hurting...

It was that kind of day.

A reminder about what one can find on Paper and its value when they hit the field.

Nada! At least on this day.

Cody Ransom misplayed one ground ball from an out into a deflection that scored a run, then muffed a double-play grounder when CC was on the ropes, leading to two more runs. He managed to avoid being charged for any 'errors' (hometown scoring providing O-RBI). He was lost at the plate as well, with an 0-3 against the modest Oriole staff.

Mark Teixiera was worse, booed at every turn by the oddly partisan Oriole crowd (Yankee fans usually make up at least 1/3 of Baltimore crowds, but the O's bundled the opening day tickets with other, non-Yankee games, insuring they'd be purchased by the hardest core Oriole fans and block out those annoying, condescending Yankee fans).

People like Guru.

Even with CC's non-performance and all the disappointment provided by Ransom and Tex in their debuts in Pinstripes, the Yankees came back from 6-1, with a 420 foot BOMB by Jorge Posada (who threw the ball well and looked remarkably like the All-Star stud who used to be Jorge Posada), a nice way to come back from surgery and another one, a 2 run shot from fellow surgical recovery patient, Hideki Matsui, who, ALSO, looks like...himself. Those reassurances from the old guard would have to be the solace for the flopping newbies.

At 6-5, the numbers were all in the Yankees favor once again as Pinch Hitter Nick Swisher smashed a pinch-hit 2B to LF (hitting LH) and was sacrificed over by Brett Gardner (a nice debut, with a line drive single, two good bunts and an accurate throw to double off Melvin Mora at home). Pinch Runner (and MLB debuting new kid in town), Ramiro Pena. 1 out, tying run on 3rd, due up...Jeter...Damon...Teixeira.

To face - Jim Johnson, seemingly the ideal patsy to allow the appropriate script to play out.

But Johnson induced Jeter (who had 3 hits) to ground into a drawn-in SS for out #2, then walked Damon after a tough at-bat, bringing Teixeira in, 1st and 3rd, 2 out...

Tex weakly ground to 2nd, score remained 6-5, Orioles.

A closer look at Johnson shows a reliever who pitched to a 2.23 ERA in 2008, surrendering only 54 hits in 68.2 Innings - who knew the Orioles were actually attempting to W-I-N?

Didn't we have issues with this LAST year? And what gives with the crowd getting on Teixiera, when they've heard he grew up a Don Mattingly fan - why would someone think THEIR dreams would be HIS?

Small-town stuff, for sure, but Baltimore is certainly no small-town.

The bottom of the inning saw another surprise, LH Phil Coke, who was cruising along, began the bottom of the 8th with a wicked K of Luke Scott and got set to face possibly the two weakest-hitting regulars in the AL East - Geoff Zaun, entering his 16th MLB season with a .386 slugging percentage and facing a 95 MPH LH reliever who'd surrendered ONE run in MLB SMOKED a massive 2B to CF and Guru thought...

Huh?

Then, Cesar Izturis, entering HIS 10th MLB season with an even more pathetic .332 slugging percentage and coming off a 414 at-bat season with O-N-E HR and facing Coke, who had never surrendered a MLB HR...hit a long arching fly-ball that Johnny Damon tracked to the wall and LEAPED...

And then, from the dreary confines of Camden Yards, the Orioles, perhaps the least 'sexy' franchise in the American League...a team of plodders and grinders and kids whose gifts will be wasted, a team that has been on an endless downward spiral since Game 1 of their 1996 Playoff series against the unheralded Yankees and their rookie SS, who hit an arching fly ball that wasn't QUITE going to make it over the wall that would be helped by the Sainted Jeffrey Maier, providing the little push that led to Derek Jeter, folk hero with 4 rings...got a little revenge!

As Damon leaped...his glove tracked true and it looked like a catch, but NO!!! A woman in the stands grabbed for the ball, moving his glove aside and then other hands pushed the ball itself those final 10 or so inches it needed to make it into the stands.

Izturis had his '09 HR already! Coke had doubled his runs against from '08 in an instant and surrendered his 1st HR (as long as that's the ONLY one you ever surrender, kid!) and the Yankees were effectively DONE.

Set-up man, Brian Bruney, came in and pitched like a high school kid all hopped up on nerves, throwing pitches to the backstop and walking 2 of the 3 hitters he faced before a disgusted Girardi came out and, mercifully took him out.

And that's that, Yankees smoked on opening day, script rewritten by the angry locals, who've apparently grown tired of losing (11 straight years) tired of the Yankee fans overrunning their park, tired of being considered after-thoughts in the division, tired of Millions of New Yorkers assuming they would happily consent to being stooges for our glory.

Why any of that would tire someone out is something a New Yorker like Guru could never understand, but on this opening day, that's the way it played out...the Mouse jumped up and bit the Elephant and the Orioles are now undefeated!





March 07, 2009

Surveying the Damage to the Yankee Season...

We've already discussed the injury...Alex is hurt and he MUST have the surgery, he is the Franchise player and has eight more years after 2009 - that Hip won't heal itself, there is nothing to discuss.

Go have the operation. Rehab. Rest. Get ready. Return, but only when READY to be Alex.

(he has announced a modified procedure that is slated to have him on the field around Memorial Day and will involve a follow-up surgery in the off-season.)

The Yankees will survive.

But how?

Cody Ransom is a solid player, he will make all the plays and contribute. He is a lot like Brandon Inge of the Detroit Tigers, a superior athlete who pays rigorous attention to his craft. He will hold the place at 3B and hit 9th. It seems that Alex will likely miss Four Months - April, May, June, July - 100-110 Games worth, which means there will be 400 or so At-Bats for Ransom and any others covering for Alex.

A BEST-case scenario for Ransom would be something on the order of .275/10/50, which puts the Yankees, even in the rosiest view, in the position of replacing 50 runs, or a half-a-run per game.

That is tough, as they learned when Jorge Posada was, essentially, lost in the opening week last season. Jose Molina led MLB in throwing out runners trying to steal and is a beloved figure to the Pitching staff for his Defensive wizardry, but his anemic production created a vacuum in the bottom third of the order, where Melky was in a season-long slump and Robinson was lost for the first-half, when the Yankees lost the essential ground they could not recover.

Ransom will hit more than Molina, but not enough to make up for Alex. Nobody can do that.

The lineup that makes the most sense is this one:

DH Johnny Damon LH
SS Derek Jeter RH
2B Robinson Cano LH
1B Mark Teixeira SH
C Jorge Posada SH
LF Nick Swisher SH
RF Xavier Nady RH
CF Melky Cabrera SH
3B Cody Ransom RH

Cano is, despite last season's first-half struggles, the Yankees best 'pure' hitter. He has terrific power and line to line plate coverage, Damon and Jeter live on-base and Cano will see good pitches in front of Tex. It will be asking him to take responsibility for his vast talent, but this is his 5th year and his ability dictates such a step. I saw one analysis that dismissed him with 'coming off a bad season, he is unlikely to recover' - huh? T-A-L-E-N-T doesn't disappear, Cano is the only one who has the all-around Offensive game to step into the #3 hole and Tex is the only logical #4.

With Alex out, the RH power is reduced, but with F-O-U-R Switch-Hitters in the lineup mix, the Yankees will still see RH production from Tex, Swisher and Posada. Both Melky and Brett Gardner have tools that help the team and, had Alex been healthy, there might have been opportunities to play both of them and create opportunities Defensively and on the base-paths. Without Alex, it is likely that the Yankees need Swisher in the lineup for his Power and the kids will have to platoon.

Matsui and Damon are both LH hitters, Damon should sit when Gardner plays, since Brett is an ideal leadoff type with that speed. They can almost pair off Damon/Melky/Swisher and then shift to Swisher/Gardner/Matsui, and Posada will need lots of rest time from Catching, so he will get DH At-Bats also.

The real problem is that bottom 3rd of the order. If Posada is sitting and Molina is playing, and Melky struggles, they are right back to last season's struggles with Melky/Molina/Ransom scaring NOBODY in that 7-8-9 zone.

The antidote, however, is good pitching and the Yankees are LOADED, not only with the marquee Free Agent signings (CC Sabathia and AJ Burnett) but with a healthy Chien-MIng Wang and Joba Chamberlain and the sterling work of Hughes, Alceves, Coke behind Andy Pettitte if anyone is injured, they've gone from being three starters DOWN to being three starters backing up. The Bullpen is loaded to the gills from both sides and the MInor League System that had the best overall record of any MLB team, won Championships at AAA and AA and saw AA Trenton Thunder win their second successive MiLB Franchise of the year is bursting with Pitchers and Catchers.

Ironically, the one place they are NOT deep (due to the nature of the big-league team with a quartet of long-term fixtures in the Infield) is where Alex plays - on the Left Side. That is why Ransom, like Molina - an great type to have as a backup, is forced into full-time play that will expose his limitations as a hitter. As long as he plays the sort of Defense we have seen from him, the overall Defense should be strong, with Nady replacing Abreu and Swisher in LF, Teixeira at 1B and the two wizards in CF. Jeter is healthy and feeling good and Cano has led the AL in chances by a WIDE margin in each of the past two seasons at 2B.

They will pitch it and they will catch it.

They will need to make sure they score enough runs to make it matter.

We shall see.














February 20, 2009

The 2009 New York Yankees - Preseason Preview

...sigh...

The endless peace and quiet of another Manhattan Winter begins to fade...

The subtle inaction of another Yankee offseason is all but lost...

The limitless calm of Big City life and Yankee fandom are about to be swallowed up by the clamor and tumult of endless Florida sunshine, Tampa Bay Golf Courses and Stripper Bars, fresh cut grass, 20,000 adoring Yankee fans, the feel of tapered wood, of stitched hide...

Or something like that!

Of course, the City NEVER sleeps and neither do the Yankees. They've retained Damaso Marte and Andy Pettitte, signed Free Agent Pitchers, CC Sabathia and AJ Burnett and 1B Mark Teixeira, traded Utility Infielder Wilson Betemit for 1B/OF Nick Swisher and taken a flyer on 2003 Rookie of the Year, Angel Berroa, to compete with incumbent Cody Ransom for the Utility IF job that belonged to Betemit.

They also bring back a bevy of critical performers in varying states of rehab, after 2008 injuries or maintenance procedures during the offseason. Of those, #3 starter, Chien-MIng Wang, has been handled with suitably delicate care and given an entire Winter to rest an injury that Brian Bruney returned from in three months - he will be ready. Similarly, Closer - Mariano Rivera, who had an effortlessly dominant 2008, had a straightforward procedure on calcified bone in his shoulder, not impacting on structure - he should be ready to go.

Not as assured, but with a strong track record for healing, being honest with everyone about his health and finding a way to contribute is DH Hideki Matsui, who carried the moribund Yankee offense until injuring his knee in June, while leading the AL in hitting at .323. Matsui will be what he says he can be and the depth at corner OF makes it of little concern, if he can go - he will, if not Damon slides to DH and Swisher is in LF.

But the one critical and irreplaceable Yankee part is the injury that causes the most uncertainty. Unlike Mariano, C, Jorge Posada's shoulder injury was serious and his surgery a major procedure. Despite optimism around his devotion and diligence, the Yankees will not know about Posada for two months and cannot realistically replace what he brings Offensively if he cannot go. In no other area do the Yankees hold as large an edge over their AL rivals as they do with a healthy Posada, anything less than a legitimate Posada year cannot be accounted for and will narrow whatever Yankee advantages exist.

Oh, and this year?

The big, bad press corps is reallyreallyREALLY going to make those Yankees sweat over 'this year's steroid drama' (stop me if you've heard this one before!)...

Those mean, tough vocal fans in opponent ballparks are reallyreallyREALLY going to rattle the Yankees...

Those crafty, worldly, economic geniuses who own and run other MLB clubs are reallyreallyREALLY going to get serious about a Salary Cap that will reallyreallyREALLY help the game...

blah...blah...blah

In other words, or better still, let's use Jason Giambi's words, the former Yankee and former Steroid accusee/center of the circus/source of predicted fan/media ire had this to say about all the 'difficulties' of being a Yankee;

"All 25 guys got along in New York, that was what we had to do. I had a great time and a lot of fun there. In New York, there was always something going on. There were 55,000 fans in the stands every night and it was fun to be a rock star. That's what it felt like."

Like Manny's glowing reviews in LA or Damon's unabashed love for all things 'Yankee', positive reviews from former Yankees are about as welcome in the Yankee-hating Universe as naked photos of Barney Frank (and escort)! So lets not expect these remarks to penetrate what 'everybody knows'. I loves me some Jason, always did, still do. Wish you well Big G!

So much for excitement from THAT angle, lets stick to what we know...the GAME!

Catcher

Jorge Posada
Jose Molina
Francisco Cervelli

We discussed Posada. He is the critical Yankee, and shall remain an unknown hanging over this team. Molina is a brilliant Defender with a rocket arm, but an anemic Offensive player who killed the back end of the lineup in '08. Cervelli will get some exposure as one of the few MLB level players on the Italian World Baseball Classic team. He is one year removed from the horrific, and wholly unnecessary Broken Wrist he suffered in Spring '08 against the Tampa Bay Rays. He played in September and in Winter and he is ready, if Posada cannot go - Cervelli will play a lot.

First Base

Mark Teixeira
Nick Swisher

Both guys are under 30, have big power from both sides of the plate and can handle the leather.

Enough said.

Teixeira, will play 150 games and Swisher will spell him, while getting serious AB's in LF, RF and DH.

Giambi gave the Yankee serious thump and OBP, but Tex is younger and infinitely more agile with the glove and arm. Swisher is three seasons removed from 35 HR and stardom. As solid as any position on any team in MLB.

Second Base

Robinson Cano

Cano had a down year in '08, but its been overblown. He still hit .307 in the second half and finished with .271/14/72, while handling SIXTY ONE more chances at 2B than his nearest AL competitor. He has the sweet swing, the power, the rocket arm and endless range you dream about at 2B and is only 25.

Short Stop

Derek Jeter suffered two nasty beanings on his left hand on 95 MPH darts from former Oriole starter, Daniel Cabrera that interrupted and then finished his season. Outside of those periods, he was his typical .317 self, spraying the ball, avoiding rally-killing, reliable Defense (I know, I know...one of these years, the Bill James smears are reallyreallyREALLY going to stick!). Just not this year, even with the hand, Derek hit .300 and was an AL Silver Slugger, he turns 35 in June and looks the same as ever.

A rock.

Third Base

The Anti-Christ, Destroyer of Worlds, Devourer of Virgins, Rationalizing, Needy, Awkward...he may be all those things (hey, it worked for Bill Clinton!), but Alex Rodriguez is also a 3B with unrivaled SS range, with a rocket arm, who made only T-E-N errors all season, led the AL in Slugging % (.573), hit .302/35/103 while undergoing constant scrutiny (even I am yawning...).

Like him. DON'T like him. But you cannot get away from his game, which is H-U-G-E.

Left Field

Johnny Damon had a big-time year for the Yankees last year, he was dynamic at Leadoff, hit for power (.461 slugging) and speed (29 SB's), was typical clutch (6-6 game with a walkoff hit!) and did a decent job tracking balls and scaling walls in LF. What he didn't do, what he CANNOT do is throw, and that makes him a liability anytime he has to play the field. Swisher is a solid OF with a decent arm who would be an upgrade Defensively and offer OBP and power from a Switch Hitter. Anytime the Yankees can keep Damon and Matsui OFF the field, it is a plus for the team and with Hideki's knee, it is likely Damon will get lots of DH AB's and allow Swisher to play in LF.

The loser of the CF battle will get innings as a Defensive stopper here at times.

Center Field

The battle is ON!

Speedster Brett Gardner (think Juan Pierre, Joey Gathright....) can run like the wind and steal bases at will...but his bat has little thump. He's an excellent ball tracker with those legs, showed the ability to climb walls and has a solid arm. If he can hit .270, his legs make him an asset, but his Offensive limitations make him a part-time player.

Gardner will compete with deposed incumbent/fan favorite, Melky Cabrera, a wall scaling Defender with a rocket arm who switch hits and has shown promise Offensively, but who bottomed out in the latter months of '08 with terrible mechanics and slothful habits. Like Cano, he had the fear of Yankee banishment put into him and has worked feverishly to retain his job, declining to be the starting CF for the loaded Dominican WBC team in order to compete for CF. If Guru gets a vote, he starts, on a short leash and looks to reproduce his hot April of '08 when he slugged 5 HR and hit .299. With the Yankee offense as strong as it appears on paper, no reason not to carry Melky's arm AND Brett's legs - both are weapons that winning teams need.

Swisher and Damon have both played CF in MLB, if needed.

Right Field

Xavier Nady is simply a solid MLB player. He hits for serious power, 2B's from line to line and HR thump. He plays a better OF than deposed RF Bobby Abreu, but will not hit for as high an average. He should be good to replicate his '08 numbers and the Yankees will sign on for them (25/97).

Swisher and Melky may see time in RF as well.

Designated Hitter

Hideki Matsui, Nick Swisher, Johnny Damon and Jorge Posada all figure to get plenty of AB's in this catch-all slot for the Yankees. Each is capable Offensively, for reasons we've already discussed.

Utility Infielder

Cody Ransom has good thump and plays reliable Defense anywhere in the IF, but is weakest at SS.

Angel Berroa was once a promising SS but has lost the ability to hit in recent years. Ransom is the sort of reliable reserve Girardi likes and relies upon, seemingly his job to lose.


Starting Pitching

CC Sabathia
AJ Burnett
Chien-Ming Wang
Andy Pettitte
Joba Chamberlain

The #1 is an Ace who is used to carrying his team on his prodigious back and throwing an obscene number of innings in so doing. The Yankees will not push him that way, they have plenty of pitching depth and an ample bullpen, they will seek to limit him to 7 innings per start and hope to have a fresher, more representative CC in the playoffs then he was able to be after brutal workloads in '07 (Cleveland) and '08 (Milwaukee). His larger than life persona was MADE for the big stage and it is tough to imagine him NOT thriving. He will bring 98 MPH from the LH side every five days.

The #2 is a dominant thrower, he has the 98 MPH heat from the RH side and the backbreaking curveball and can make lineups fold up. He is also not a strong instinctive thinker on the mound and can overthrow or encounter stretches of wildness at times. Like CC, he will not be asked to work any miracles or carry the club, just to show up every five days, take the ball, take care of his health and give the team a chance to win. If he does that, with his stuff, they will win more than lose.

The #3 is an Ace who has been pitching his whole career against opponent #1's and has gone 54-20 in that slot. Presumably, facing #3's, he should be similarly effective. He brings 96 MPH sinkers from the RH side, has extensive Yankee experience and has thrown shutout 2-hitters at Fenway and outdueled new teammates CC and AJ on numerous occasions.

The #4 is a veteran LH winner, whose cutter/slider/sinker mix contrasts beautifully with the power arms around him in the rotation. He gives the Yankees veteran poise, presence, 200 Inning consistency and, like Wang, will be pitching against the weakest opposing starters of his career in the #4 slot. He's proven and a beloved team leader for his former catcher/Manager Joe Girardi, his teammates and the fans and can counsel the big baby at 3B on the 'horrors' of the Scarlet 'S'!

The #5 has the best stuff of them all. Throws 101 RH heat with 4 plus pitches to accompany that, command of the strike zone, poise...the whole package. Joba Chamberlain against #5 starters is practically unfair.

Phil Hughes, 22 and Alfredo Alceves, 26, are both capable MLB ready RH starters who will absorb the bulk of spot starts and injury starts as well as play a role in long-relief.

Relief Pitching

LH specialist, Damaso Marte is dominant when left in that role and struggled when the Yankees tried to expand it last season after joining New York.

Lesson learned. Girardi spoke honestly about the misuse and the Yankees went out and retained him. meaning they intend to use him in an optimum, specialist role.

LH, Phil Coke, was originally part of the Marte deal but instead came up to the Yankees in late Summer and was Mike Stanton reborn, whistling 96 MPH past AL hitters like they were tied-up. If he can be ANYTHING like that guy, he will be the LH answer at set-up.

RH David Robertson, Jonathan Albaledejo, Edwar Ramirez and Jose Veras all have strikeout stuff and complimentary styles, expect each to get serious innings in the Yankee pen. Robertson is a 4 pitch artist, Albaladejo a grinding strike thrower, Ramirez a power-changeup strikeout machine (better K's per 9 innings than Joba) and Vera brings 98 MPH low heat with a wild windup that unsettles hitters.

RH set-up man, Brian Bruney, showed up from Arizona three years ago with a 98 MPH heater, a chip on his shoulder and fat belly. He followed up a sizzling 0.87 ERA debut in late '06 with a mediocre, overweight '07 and you wondered if that was why an arm like his was available in the first place.

Then he showed up last spring, 25 pounds lighter, focused like a laser beam and dominating to the tune of 1.59 ERA in the early going, before suffering the freakish injury to his Lisfranc that Wang suffered a month later. The old Bruney would have been surly and gotten fat while rehabbing, the new Bruney worked his ASS off, showed up late season and dominated again (1.96) while clearly establishing himself as the primary setup guy. In 2009, he claims that he is even fitter and more focused, a new dad who 'gets it' and is fully healthy. His stuff is as good as any closer and if his head is where it appears to be, the Yankees are set in the bullpen.

Mariano Rivera, can be 20% less effective than he was in '08 and still be a huge plus at Closer. No human being should be able to Strike out 77 to 6 walks and surrender only 47 total base runners in 70+ innings, blowing only ONE save along the way... Mo does it so casually and with such quiet grace...it's hard to overstate. The best player, at his role, I've ever seen in Baseball. If his performance DOES decrease by 20%, his ERA would 'balloon' to 1.68!

Coaches

Former Manager of the Year and Yankee World Series hero, Joe Girardi is back for his second go-around. Last Spring, the Yankees left camp loaded for bear, only to spend a month in the rain, watch the never-before-hurt Posada blow out his shoulder in Game 2 and miss the first couple of games in his office under quarantine with the flu! He's been a Yankee, so the circus is as second-nature to him as it is to the rest of us and the experiences of '08 and seeing Sydney Ponson and Darell Rasner trot out for 25% of his team's starts HAVE to make any 'problems' he is facing now seem miniscule. He knows what he has and knows, if he keeps them healthy and avoids fueling the distraction machine - his team will win 100 games and return to the postseason.

Former Manager of the Year, Tony Pena slides over to bench coach, providing the team with more of a players perspective and a second Spanish speaker (Girardi) as well. Rob Thomson moves from the bench, where he was miscast, to 3B. Newcomer Mick Kelleher, takes over for Pena at 1B and Kevin Long (hitting), Dave Eiland (Pitching) and Mike Harkey (Bullpen) return to their roles.

Ownership

GM Brian Cashman has done everything humanly possible to stock this team and its farm system (AAA Scranton-Wilkes/Barre won its league and finished Second overall for the level, AA Trenton repeated as league Champion, AA Champion and MiLB Organization of the Year) and should be able to concentrate on the draft and international signings, that is IF nobody makes a pitch for one of the Yankee corner OF's and brings the specter of Manny back into his ear!

Hal Steinbrenner seems to have taken the reins as the public voice of the Steinbrenner family, after Hank's boozy bluster. Hank's outbursts were often distractions, but he was right about Moose and right about Joba, if he has something else to say - let him say it and lets see if he's right again.

The Yard

We'll find out on April 16...the moment it opens its gates, the clamor, the nonsense, the haters will...poof...disappear and perhaps, if the WBC doesn't get anyone hurt and the calamities of early seasons recent don't rear their ugly heads - the Yankees can avoid spotting their rivals the first two months of the season and get off strong early. If they do, and are well positioned on June 1, it should be a magical first season in the new Palace in the Bronx.

Guru will be there for every one of the 162 games with Game reports that go in-depth, pitch by pitch, to bring you the best Yankee coverage possible...with NO Gossip, NO Payroll and NO Drug Tests.







If you like the G-A-M-E, and only the game - I'll catch you here on The Magic Carpet!

February 09, 2009

Herbie the Bookbinder Chimes in on Steroids...

Ahhhh....Spring is here and that means the Sports media bring us talk of...

Steroids!

The now annual rite of 'Blockbuster' revelations (that are years old!) and the ensuing witch-hunt...

A cynic might say, it almost seems like a ploy to sell media products!

Still, this is The Magic Carpet, where we observe our promise to you..

'5. NO Gossip

6. NO Payroll

7. NO Urine Tests, NO Blood Tests'

Guru doesn't care about what is in ANYONE's bloodstream and doesn't find 'evidence' in the form of a computer file of names relevant (as I suspect any Judge would agree).

In fact, I've developed a theory over the years listening to more and more of the talk time that used to go towards things like Pitching, Hitting and Fielding wasted on Gossip, Salaries and Drug Tests...the Theory is that ANYONE who is;

a.) Male

b.) Heated up about these topics

Clearly has one (or more) of the following deficiencies;

a.) Insufficiently sized apparatus between the Ears.

b.) Insufficiently sized apparatus between the Legs.

This is easy to test for, IF you are one of the aforementioned types who get exercised about such things, pull down your pants...IF the object you find there is of sufficient length and girth...

THEN you know you are a Moron!

If, however it is extremely small, you might STILL be a moron.

Going through life with a small brain AND a small cock must be trying. I suppose your tired act is somewhat understandable!

Now, while Guru cannot and WILL NOT speak on this topic yet AGAIN, he has invited the 'Great Weitz', Herbie the Bookbinder, who will begin a regular column on The Ice Flow called 'From the Right...' on next Mondays pages, has written a brief missive relating to these allegations. The sentiments, as will soon be clear, are HIS and HIS alone.

Enjoy!

So A Rod tested positive in 03 ..Whatever he took at whatever risk to himself he did it to provide a better show for the fans.

Why do we all act as if we expect him to be the Virgin Mary

Let him drink jet fuel and hit a ball 900 feet.

One has to take some risks to earn $ 27,000,000

I go to watch the game

Everybody remembers Alzado.

Everybody knows what can happen with steroids.

I sort of admire a guy who risks death for my entertainment

Wouldn't it be great if amphetamines were MANDATORY before a game

Players might not last as long ..but that should be their own choice.

Performance enhancing drugs are here to stay

Let the fans benefit by great performances

Ballet dancers now jump lots higher , trapese artists accomplish feats

Why the puritanical crap from the lushed up pot heads who write our sports columns

And let the crooked scum in Congress have hearings about economy, foreign policy, public health, etc

750 people (25 players on 30 teams) don't need government oversight









July 13, 2008

2008 New York Yankees/Game 95/@ Toronto

At Rogers Center in Toronto on Sunday, the Yankees finished off its poorest effort in fifteen seasons to go into the All-Star break under a dark cloud and now prepare for the inevitable house-cleaning upon their return on Friday.

Given their 4 game winning streak in the Bronx to close out the split with Boston and the mini-sweep over Tampa Bay, Yankee fans dared to hope that the season-long slumber was at an end and could only drool in anticipation of an easy road trip against the Pirates and Blue Jays.

Then, given the benefit of a Cleveland Indians sweep over the Rays, the Yankees were in excellent position to go into the break RIGHT THERE for 1st Place in the AL East.

Instead, the Yankees mustered THREE runs in their three losses for the trip, posting an unforgivable 1-3 record at the most critical of times.

What's worse, the Yankee captain - long known as a 'stand-up' guy who doesn't sugar coat poor performances, responded to understandable criticism of the team's NON-EXISTENT offense by saying 'the offense isn't struggling, we've been facing some good pitching'.

Shut the fuck up, Derek.

Here are the F-A-C-T-S, the best Offense in the game - ON PAPER, the identical one that scored more runs than any team in Baseball in 2007 and has received better seasons from 3 of its cogs (Giambi, Matsui, Damon) has been regularly shut down whenever facing good pitching, scoring its runs in bunches when up against weaker arms to partially mask its ineptitude.

What's more, even given the devastating injuries to their pitching staff, with Ace Chien-Ming Wang and #4 Phil Hughes lost and top set-up men Brian Bruney and Jonathan Albaladejo injured as well, the pitching has actually been terrific. The bullpen has pitched beyond expectations and has established a solid 4 man bridge to Mariano Rivera, who not only put together a great first half, but the best of his illustrious career and one of the best EVER. Mike Mussina was reborn, easily pitching well enough to be a 14 game winner with even MODEST run support, sabotaged to 11 wins. Andy Pettitte has been GIANT and he too, on this day giving up 4 early runs and then shutting it down from there never has been given a SNIFF of Offensive support.

Melky Cabrera, who looked like the Yankee CF for the next 15 years at 22 and opened up in April with .300 hitting and .500 slugging, to go with 6 early HR's has COMPLETELY disappeared (although his Defense is Gold Glove quality) as a hitter and has become an automatic out against good pitching, posting a pathetic .234 in May and .206 in June and actually looks to be getting even WORSE in July! Worse than his disgraceful failure has been the unconscionable no-show from his best buddy, Robinson Cano (another whose defense has been oustanding) who - two years after posting .342 Batting Average and one year from 97 RBI's has posted Offensive numbers similar to Blue Jay Sunday hitting hero, the nobody of all nobodies - Marco Scutaro! Guessing the Yankees thought they had a perennial all-star, batting champion contender and power threat in the 25 year old Cano when they signed him to the 4 year contract before the season...instead they got a worthless pile of garbage who has failed the team and the city in every conceivable manner.

Bobby Abreu has been so-so, although HIS Defense is atrocious (except for his arm, which is still excellent as displayed on a huge throw to nail Scott Rolen at home on Sunday). Jeter is fine as well, but lost a month of production when his hand was bashed by Oriole Daniel Cabrera...Posada lost six weeks to a bad shoulder and has seemed to sulk about not catching enough, even though his bad shoulder FORCED the Yankees to protect their four year investment in him and the LAST thing he should be thinking about is his individual status...Rodriguez is the player we saw in his non-MVP years of 2004 and 2006, still top-tier but not enough to carry the team as he did in '05 and '07 (he too has been Gold Glove quality at 3B). Giambi has been terrific, closing out his solid 1st half with a 9th inning HR on Sunday to keep the Yankees from their latest shutout/humiliation. Matsui and Damon both played all-star caliber baseball all through the first half and their injuries have pointed out how weak the rest of the Offense truly has been as the COMPLETE offensive collapse followed their injuries over the past two weeks.

Even worse than the unreliable performance by the starters has been the complete and total failure by the bench. Shelley Duncan, relied upon the supply RH power - managed exactly O-N-E HR before being sent to the minors and promptly blowing up his shoulder (although he TOO looked good with the glove at both 1B and RF), Alberto Gonzalez, Justin Christian and Brett Gardner are all Defensive wizards and speed demons on the bases, but they are too raw to help the offense and require the type of opportunity that simply cannot be provided to them (see Melky and Cano). Young players cannot 'learn on the job' in the Bronx, they have to be the finished product (old version of Cano, Wang, Joba...) or they have to be shipped out to get their seasoning elsewhere and then, perhaps be considered as free-agents. The last thing a Yankee fan wants is to watch some kid's growing pains with hopes for the 'future'...WIN, or get the (expletive) out of New York.

Guru is sending out waves of murderous rage that had a passer-by recoiling in horror, so FURIOUS is he with the 1-3 trip...it will be three nights of no-sleep, while I replay every wasted at-bat and cultivate the garden of gastro-intestinal timebombs in my innards.

Watching the Yankees, the day after Bobby Murcer's death - with EVERYTHING on the line, against a pitcher whose ONLY weakness is his high pitch counts on day when he has only three days rest - swing at the first pitch and generally conduc themselves like 25 guys in search of an airplane ride home to their families for some time off was the ultimate (expletive) YOU to the fans, who, like Guru will now gnash their teeth in agony while the players relax.

I am SO (expletive) tired of hearing about the 'weather', the 'travel', the 'injuries' and seeing the team continue to support those who have failed us - Cashman and hitting coach, Kevin Long should have their heads lopped off in the most humiliating fashion possible - hey, it seemed to work for the Mets!

So that's it, a miserable 50-45, an all-world Offense that is practically invisible and impossible to replicate performances from their pitching and defense all portend a complete disintegration in the second half. The only solace that can be had is if the bloodletting and organizational clampdown is severe enough to create the same sort of misery for the clubhouse and the player's families that Guru will be going through these next 96 hours.

A TSN type once commented that Guru needed 'anger-management, IMMEDIATELY'...

Brother, you don't know the HALF of it - I could take out a small village right now - I am shaking with rage!

But I gotta walk Scout before I begin the killing spree.

If I manage to control the anger (50/50 proposition), then I'll return with more charming displays of an unhealthy psyche when the Yankees return on Friday.

Until then, fuming...





July 12, 2008

2008 NY Yankees/Game 91/Rays,92/@ Pitt, 93/94/@Tor

Bobby Ray Murcer (May 20, 1946 – July 12, 2008





There isn't a dry eye anywhere that a Yankee fan is found, Bobby Murcer died today...succumbing to the Brain Cancer that he has been fighting since Christmas Eve, 2006. I wrote about Bobby when he came back to the YES Broadcast Booth for the first time last season, but couldn't locate the entry today. Suffice it to say that he was my FIRST Hero, the best Yankee in the years when I became a fan, an Oklahoman who was more like 'us' to Mom and I as we adjusted to the move back to NYC from Texas. I met him in the Yankee clubhouse as a 7 year old in 1971 and worshipped him - he told me to be good to my mom (still am, Bobby). When the Yankees closed down the original stadium for renovations (the stadium that is in its final season in 2008, the Yankees moved to Queens for two years and Bobby struggled to hit those Yankee stadium HR's he had patented in the Bronx - his 10 HR season that year was the first time in seven seasons he fell below 22-33 and Yankees traded him that winter for Barry Bonds Dad - Bobby Bonds. Although Bobby came BACK to the Yankees in 1979, he missed the 3 world series and 2 World Championships his beloved Yankees went to during his 5 years away.

That year, 1979, Yankee Captain and close friend to Bobby, Thurman Munson crashed his plane flying home to Canton, Ohio and Bobby gave the eulogy at his service. The first game back, Bobby hit a 3 run HR and then had a game-winning 2 run 1B in the Bottom of the 9th, playing the Orioles and his longtime friend, New Yorker and fellow announcer, Ken Singleton. In 1983, when I was 20, Bobby retired and went directly to the Booth, making way for Don Mattingly, who succeeded him as 'Most Popular Yankee'. Bobby was the only Yankee to play with Mickey and Donnie Baseball, the bridge between generations of Yankees. Bobby lost two of his prime years in the late '60s to Military Service during the Vietnam War and never spoke of it as anything but an inspiration and a tool that made him stronger. He was 'old school' in the BEST sense of that term.

In the booth, he was a fixture with Phil Rizzuto (who we lost last year) and into the YES years, covering all of the Championships and becoming a fixture to NEW Generations of Yankees and Yankee fans.

He came from the places Guru comes from and lived his life in the place that Guru lives his. He was the finest public person that has ever been associated with the Yankees since my first season (1970), a deeply religious man, who, like Andy Pettitte, never pushed any agenda or pointed the finger at other lifestyles, but rather, who GLOWED with decency, good humor, love for the Yankees and most of all, devotion to his wife, Kay, whose name I have known since I was 7 and who my heart breaks for today.

We loved you, Bobby. We'll never forget you.

Game 91/ Rays

Guru was in the bleachers for this one, a blistering hot day in the Bronx that failed to heat up slumbering Yankee bats. With 20,000 Yankee fans sporting their Giambi Mustaches, Sidney Ponson danced on the edge for six innings of one run baseball before handing it over to the bullpen who supplied 4 shutout innings of relief. A 1-1 game became a 2-1 victory when Bobby Abreu doubled Derek Jeter in from 1B on a gap 2B for the walkoff, a sweep of the 2 game Rays series and a 4-2 homestand against the teams the Yankees trail in the AL East.

Game 92/@ Pittsburgh

Three weeks ago, Yankees had a 3 run lead with Mike Mussina on the hill, only to have the rains flood the game away. In the Makeup game, the Yankees once again received a terrific start from the suddenly dominant Moose, but came away with a tough 4-2 loss when Jose Veras was tagged for a clutch 2 run HR by terrific young Pirate CF (All-Star!) Nate McClouth. Veras, who had not been scored upon in 17 1/3 innings previously, can hardly be blamed for the rare mistake nor can Yankee hitters, who ran into a brilliant performance from Pirate starter, LH, Paul Maholm, who threw 8 innings of 2 run ball and Pirate Closer, LH, Domaso Marte, who shut them down in the 9th. A tough loss for New York, coming off the 4 game winning streak against their rivals, but no fluke - this Pirate team has some players and some pitchers and played inspired baseball on this night.

Game 93/@ Toronto

Once again, Yankees got a brilliant pitching performance from their starter only to lose to an even BETTER one from the opposing starter. Blue Jay Ace, RH, Roy Halladay toyed with the Yankees in a complete game 2-hit shutout, offsetting 7 strong innings of 10 K work from Joba Chamberlain. Alex Rodriguez and Derek Jeter had the only Yankee hits and Yankee LH callup, Billy Traber, surrendered a 2 run shot in relief to provide the final 5-0 margin.


Game 94/ @ Toronto

Derek Jeter led off the game with his 200th MLB HR, only to see it squandered by a 4 run Toronto outburst in the bottom of the 1st against hard-trying, good-guy, not-good-enough Darell Rasner, and given the Yankee Offensive struggles since Matsui's injury (less than 3 runs in 8 of 12 games, worst since 1991) it was an open question if they'd be able to overcome the deficit. But Blue Jay starter, Jesse Litsch, is no Halladay and Yankee bats came alive with 8 more runs on their way to the 9-4 victory, one of which came on Alex Rodriguez's 537th HR - passing Mickey on the all-time list to move into the #13 slot, eleven behind #12 - Mike Schmidt, still two weeks before his 33rd Birthday.

For his part, Rasner had some poor luck in the 1st Inning debacle, with some bad Defense and just ONE bad pitch that Adam Lind hit for a 3 run 3B. He struck out 6 in five innings and combined with four Yankee relievers (Edwar Ramirez, Jose Veras, Kyle Farnsworth and Latroy Hawkins) to record 8 shutout innings to close out the win.

Yankees try for the series win to close out the first half tomorrow with Andy Pettitte going up against terrific AJ Burnett (owns the Yankees) in Rogers Center, a game that is sure to be an emotional one for the Yankees and close Murcer friend, Joe Girardi (crying profusely and beautifully in the postgame, making me prouder of him that I already was). For a team that has been inconsistent with its approach and its professionalism, perhaps the example of their class act Manager and the great Bobby Murcer can be used to lift them up from their recent malaise. Facing Burnett, they'll HAVE to if they want to go into the All-Star break with a good taste in their mouths and keep the Rays and Sox right where they are.