Yesterday, Yankees manager Joe Girardi was asked by reporters if Mariano Rivera could cap off his Hall-of-Fame career by being granted one final wish-- to play centerfield. Girardi sounded like, under the right conditions, he would consider it.
Today, on the Mike Francesa Show, Rivera was asked if he wanted to play one game, one inning or one out at the No. 8 position.
"Just one inning," the unassuming Rivera replied. "If I caught one ball in centerfield, that would be it."
It sounds like it's more than a flight of fancy for Mo.
"I have one more year left," said the 41 year-old Rivera, "So I will be pursuing that position."
When pigs fly or when Jorge Posada plays second base. Oh wait, the 38 year-old catcher did, so now it's might be hard for Girardi to deny Rivera one of his final wishes on his major league bucket list.
Rivera checked off another to-do item when he had his one-and-only at-bat in the July of 2009-- a ninth-inning, bases-loaded pop-up-- which had the Yankees dugout rolling with laughter.
Now, it's time to bring John Fogarty's immortal song to life.
"Put me in, coach-- I'm ready to play today, Look at me, I can be Centerfield."
In a week when Rivera reached the 600-save milestone, is poised to pass Trevor Hoffman on the all-time list and being lauded as one of the greatest Yankees of all time, it seems like a given that before the season's end we will see Rivera penciled in at centerfield-- under the right circumstances.
Or won't we?
Rivera is a gifted athlete and shags flies in centerfield all the time during batting practice. It seems unlikely he would embarrass himself or make a silly error. I mean look at the pressure-filled position he already excels at.
"He's incredible," said Girardi.
If there's a meaningless blowout before the end of the season, could we honestly not think of that scenario happening at this point of Rivera's career?
"I'll think about that when he tells me he's near the end," said Girardi. "It's something I would definitely think about. That'll get me in trouble, won't it?"
Sounds like he is already given the idea some thought.
"Maybe I'd try it for one hitter," said the manager. "A guy who hits a lot of ground balls, strikes out a lot... and there would be nobody on base where he'd have to make a throw."
Gloomy Gusses are already pointing out the dangers and hurdles. Besides blowing the play-- unlikely-- or twisting an ankle chasing down a fly ball (devastating); meaningless games come around about as often as an A.J. Burnett August win during a September playoff race, and the Yankees can't afford for any of those negatives from occurring.
So, when would the best time for Girardi to play fairy godfather and grant Rivera his final wish?
Rivera has one more year left on his contract but next season could be too late. There's always the possibility of injury or a tighter playoff race to curtail his longing.
I say, this year, first blow-out at Yankee Stadium, put him in. It's the least the Yankees could do for Mariano Rivera Appreciation Week.
It's the least they could do for the Sandman.
|
|
Showing posts with label Joe Girardi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Girardi. Show all posts
Friday, September 16, 2011
Thursday, September 15, 2011
A-Rod's Return to Yankees' Lineup on Friday Still Looks Uncertain
New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez had another day to rest his sprained thumb in Toronto, but said he wasn't sure he would be playing against the Blue Jays. Goodbye Cameron. Helloooo Nunez.
While the rest of the Yankees spend their last off-day of the regular season prepping for the stretch run, A-Rod said he will will test his swing on Friday and make a decision after that.
Asked by reporters if that means he won't play against the Blue Jays, Rodriguez said, "That depends on how the session goes."
Only yesterday, Joe Girardi was optimistic about A-Rod's Friday night encore.
"We decided for him to not hit [Wed.]," said the manager. "We said, you know what, if we can give him two more days before he actually swings on it, it's probably better off for our plans just to put him there Friday."
Contrary to what Girardi said about A-Rod's Friday night return to the lineup yesterday, he has now backed off by saying his slugger is more day-to-day.
"I haven't touched a bat in five days," said Rodriguez. "Maybe Girardi has more confidence than me."
The third baseman injured his left thumb Aug. 21 against the Minnesota Twins. He played in nine games since then and is hitting .258 (8-for-31) with two home runs and 4 RBI's over that span.
Rodriguez was expected to miss only three or four games since the digit acted up again Sept. 9. That is, until it was slow to heal this week.
Girardi planned on using A-Rod if the slugger could swing a bat on Thursday. He didn't, so it doesn't look good.
A-Rod took ground balls and threw long-toss before Wednesday's game against the Seattle Mariners.
"I was at the point I had to stop because I was unable to do my job," said Rodriguez. "It's not going to feel 100%, but you have to play through it."
The Yankees play 14 games in 13 days before closing out the regular season-- all against AL East rivals.
For A-Rod, this has been a tough week. Besides breaking up with his long-time actress girlfriend, Cameron Diaz, the put-offish player was named the sixth "Meanest Major League Baseball Player" in a Sports Illustrated player's poll.
While the rest of the Yankees spend their last off-day of the regular season prepping for the stretch run, A-Rod said he will will test his swing on Friday and make a decision after that.
Asked by reporters if that means he won't play against the Blue Jays, Rodriguez said, "That depends on how the session goes."
Only yesterday, Joe Girardi was optimistic about A-Rod's Friday night encore.
"We decided for him to not hit [Wed.]," said the manager. "We said, you know what, if we can give him two more days before he actually swings on it, it's probably better off for our plans just to put him there Friday."
Contrary to what Girardi said about A-Rod's Friday night return to the lineup yesterday, he has now backed off by saying his slugger is more day-to-day.
"I haven't touched a bat in five days," said Rodriguez. "Maybe Girardi has more confidence than me."
The third baseman injured his left thumb Aug. 21 against the Minnesota Twins. He played in nine games since then and is hitting .258 (8-for-31) with two home runs and 4 RBI's over that span.
Rodriguez was expected to miss only three or four games since the digit acted up again Sept. 9. That is, until it was slow to heal this week.
Girardi planned on using A-Rod if the slugger could swing a bat on Thursday. He didn't, so it doesn't look good.
A-Rod took ground balls and threw long-toss before Wednesday's game against the Seattle Mariners.
"I was at the point I had to stop because I was unable to do my job," said Rodriguez. "It's not going to feel 100%, but you have to play through it."
The Yankees play 14 games in 13 days before closing out the regular season-- all against AL East rivals.
For A-Rod, this has been a tough week. Besides breaking up with his long-time actress girlfriend, Cameron Diaz, the put-offish player was named the sixth "Meanest Major League Baseball Player" in a Sports Illustrated player's poll.
Sunday, September 4, 2011
Girardi Sticking With Yankees' Six-Man Rotation
It looks like the New York Yankees have finally made a decision on who will be left off the five-man starting rotation and it is...wait for it...no one. That's right, chopping a pitcher from the overcrowded rotation-- which seemed so important just last week-- is now a non-issue as far as manager Joe Girardi is concerned.
On Sunday, after the Yankees defeated the Toronto Blue Jays 9-3, Girardi said he'll stick with six starters at least for another week and maybe longer at his post-game interview.
Girardi said he spoke with all parties involved before Sunday's game and claims he is in "no rush to make the decision."
"I let them know who was pitching and when. People like to know where they're going to be every five days, six days,' Girardi said. "Life's not always like that. The good thing is they're getting another chance."
For A.J. Burnett and Phil Hughes, who've had more chances than Lindsay Lohan in court, D-day could come by next weekend.
Girardi denied any of his starters are on the bubble, but referred to those two pitchers' last outings at his press conference.
"We want to see it again," he said. "We liked what we saw in Boston. I know Hughes gave up some runs but threw better than he did. We liked what A.J. did and want to build on that."
Girardi commented on Burnett's new mechanics and thinks the erratic pitcher is on to something.
"I love what I saw in Boston," he said. "He had a tough August. It took guts, but he went out and did it."
The manager addressed his concern about keeping CC Sabathia (19-7) on his regular five-man turn. The Yankees ace, who won today's game, is pretty adamant about keeping his routine, so Girardi may adjust the six-man rotation accordingly.
"It's designed so if we want to give CC an extra day, we can do it, said Girardi.
What CC wants, the big guy gets.
"It's possible I might keep him [Sabathia] on his normal turn," said Girardi. "Or move him back to Saturday. I'll see how he feels."
Girardi announced his starters for the upcoming home series against the Baltimore Orioles and Burnett (9-11, 5.25) and Hughes (4-5, 6.75) will give it another shot.
Freddy Garcia (11-7, 3.09) will start on Monday followed by Hughes on Tuesday and Burnett on Wednesday.
There has been speculation about Bartolo Colon (8-9, 3.72) being sent to the bullpen. Questions about the 38 year-old running out of gas have been swirling about during his past four starts. The rotund righty is 0-3 in those last four outings after getting a no-decision yesterday, but it looks like Burnett and Hughes are the ones on the hot seat.
Whatever Girardi decides to do, it looks like the six-man scheme has been working. The Yankees have won seven of their last eight and are tied for first place in the AL East. The manager said nothing is set in stone...for now.
"I am allowed to change my mind," he explained. "I may want to go to a five-man, but we'll see."
Here we go again.
On Sunday, after the Yankees defeated the Toronto Blue Jays 9-3, Girardi said he'll stick with six starters at least for another week and maybe longer at his post-game interview.
Girardi said he spoke with all parties involved before Sunday's game and claims he is in "no rush to make the decision."
"I let them know who was pitching and when. People like to know where they're going to be every five days, six days,' Girardi said. "Life's not always like that. The good thing is they're getting another chance."
For A.J. Burnett and Phil Hughes, who've had more chances than Lindsay Lohan in court, D-day could come by next weekend.
Girardi denied any of his starters are on the bubble, but referred to those two pitchers' last outings at his press conference.
"We want to see it again," he said. "We liked what we saw in Boston. I know Hughes gave up some runs but threw better than he did. We liked what A.J. did and want to build on that."
Girardi commented on Burnett's new mechanics and thinks the erratic pitcher is on to something.
"I love what I saw in Boston," he said. "He had a tough August. It took guts, but he went out and did it."
The manager addressed his concern about keeping CC Sabathia (19-7) on his regular five-man turn. The Yankees ace, who won today's game, is pretty adamant about keeping his routine, so Girardi may adjust the six-man rotation accordingly.
"It's designed so if we want to give CC an extra day, we can do it, said Girardi.
What CC wants, the big guy gets.
"It's possible I might keep him [Sabathia] on his normal turn," said Girardi. "Or move him back to Saturday. I'll see how he feels."
Girardi announced his starters for the upcoming home series against the Baltimore Orioles and Burnett (9-11, 5.25) and Hughes (4-5, 6.75) will give it another shot.
Freddy Garcia (11-7, 3.09) will start on Monday followed by Hughes on Tuesday and Burnett on Wednesday.
There has been speculation about Bartolo Colon (8-9, 3.72) being sent to the bullpen. Questions about the 38 year-old running out of gas have been swirling about during his past four starts. The rotund righty is 0-3 in those last four outings after getting a no-decision yesterday, but it looks like Burnett and Hughes are the ones on the hot seat.
Whatever Girardi decides to do, it looks like the six-man scheme has been working. The Yankees have won seven of their last eight and are tied for first place in the AL East. The manager said nothing is set in stone...for now.
"I am allowed to change my mind," he explained. "I may want to go to a five-man, but we'll see."
Here we go again.
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Moth Blamed For Phil Hughes' Walk To Red Sox Batter
Joe Girardi must be buggin' out when it comes to figuring out his starting rotation. After last night's 9-5 loss to the Boston Red Sox, the Yankees manager blamed the game's turning point on a moth which flew into starting pitcher Phil Hughes' eye.
Hughes (4-5) delivered a 3-2 pitch to Josh Reddick-- a ball-- setting up Jason Varitek's double where Reddick scored the tying run.
The Yankees had finally showed some measure of success against Red Sox starter Josh Beckett and were leading 5-4 when the moth ball incident occurred. Hughes was even up 0-2 against Reddick before walking him.
If you look closely at the video, you can see a lone moth buzzing around Hughes' head before the fatal toss and the pitcher wiping something from his eye as Reddick jogs towards first base.
Yankees fans might recall Joba Chamberlain and the "midge" attack in Cleveland in 2007. Those little buggers swarmed the sweaty pitcher and were blamed for the Yankees loss to the Indians and early playoff exit. At least you could see the bugs covering Chamberlain that night.
"From what I heard a moth flew into his [Hughes] eye when he made the 3-2 pitch," said Girardi. "You can't stop it and can't get a redo."
Call it The Mothman Prophecies because it may be a prediction of things to come.
Hughes showed signs of improvement last night but his fastball, which started out at a crisp 95 mph, wilted to 91 mph before he was pulled in the sixth. It still looks like he runs out of steam.
The struggling Hughes may have just pitched his way out of the starting rotation-- and not because of the moth.
"I really didn't want to tell you guys that, but, yeah, a moth flew in," said Hughes. "That's when I yanked it."
The Yankees might want to invest in some bug spray tonight when A.J. Burnett pitches because there's sure to be a lot of flies-- some of them over the Green Monster, as well as, that other little pest called Dustin Pedroia.
Hughes (4-5) delivered a 3-2 pitch to Josh Reddick-- a ball-- setting up Jason Varitek's double where Reddick scored the tying run.
The Yankees had finally showed some measure of success against Red Sox starter Josh Beckett and were leading 5-4 when the moth ball incident occurred. Hughes was even up 0-2 against Reddick before walking him.
If you look closely at the video, you can see a lone moth buzzing around Hughes' head before the fatal toss and the pitcher wiping something from his eye as Reddick jogs towards first base.
Yankees fans might recall Joba Chamberlain and the "midge" attack in Cleveland in 2007. Those little buggers swarmed the sweaty pitcher and were blamed for the Yankees loss to the Indians and early playoff exit. At least you could see the bugs covering Chamberlain that night.
"From what I heard a moth flew into his [Hughes] eye when he made the 3-2 pitch," said Girardi. "You can't stop it and can't get a redo."
Call it The Mothman Prophecies because it may be a prediction of things to come.
Hughes showed signs of improvement last night but his fastball, which started out at a crisp 95 mph, wilted to 91 mph before he was pulled in the sixth. It still looks like he runs out of steam.
The struggling Hughes may have just pitched his way out of the starting rotation-- and not because of the moth.
"I really didn't want to tell you guys that, but, yeah, a moth flew in," said Hughes. "That's when I yanked it."
The Yankees might want to invest in some bug spray tonight when A.J. Burnett pitches because there's sure to be a lot of flies-- some of them over the Green Monster, as well as, that other little pest called Dustin Pedroia.
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Sabathia Gets Monkey Off His Back & Girardi Goes Ape As Yanks Beat Sox
It was like old times at Fenway Park on Tuesday night as tempers rose and benches emptied during the New York Yankees 5-2 victory over the Boston Red Sox. Batters from both sides were plunked and Yankees manager Joe Girardi was ejected.
The good news for the Yankees was that CC Sabathia finally won a game against their division rivals. The victory pulled the Yankees to within a half-game behind the AL East leaders.
It was Sabathia's first win this season against the Sox after losing his first four. The victory was no thing of beauty, but it had to look like Miss America to the Yankees ace.
Sabathia (18-7) scattered ten hits and struck out the same amount through 6 1/3 innings. He threw 128 pitches-- the most ever in one game as a Yankee-- and was lucky the Sox stranded 16 runners.
The Yank's bullpen wasn't perfect either, but were good enough to preserve the big guy's long-awaited win.
Boone Logan bailed out Sabathia by relieving him with two men on and one out in the seventh. Logan struck out two after loading the bases.
Rafael Soriano threw a scoreless eighth and Mariano Rivera wrapped up the game in the ninth.
The real excitement was centered around Red Sox starter John Lackey (12-10) and his penchant for hitting opposing batters. He now leads the league with 17.
While Sabathia did hit Jacoby Ellsbury to lead off the first, it was Lackey who was retaliating throughout the game.
In the first, Lackey bopped Curtis Granderson, who started towards first base, but was called back by the home plate umpire Ed Rapuano.
It was in the seventh, when Francisco Cervelli added a little spice to the game after Lackey's brush-back hit the Yankees player.
Cervelli, who sent a home-run ball sailing out of Fenway in his previous at bat, probably ticked off Lackey, who couldn't have liked the way the Yankees backup catcher clapped his hands as he emphatically hopped on home plate after circling the bases.
After Cervelli got popped, he started to rush the mound before being held back by Red Sox catcher Jarrod Saltamacchia. Yankees pitching coach Larry Rothschild rushed in and was tossed out of the game by third base umpire Mark Wegner.
In the ninth, Girardi took offense when a Saltamacchia's check-swing stopped a Rivera cutter on his arm. This time the batter was awarded first. Girardi stormed out and was hopping mad. He was quickly sent to the showers by Wegman after arguing that the Red Sox batter had swung into Rivera's pitch.
It's good to see a little fire in the old rivalry. They'll do it again tomorrow night.
The good news for the Yankees was that CC Sabathia finally won a game against their division rivals. The victory pulled the Yankees to within a half-game behind the AL East leaders.
It was Sabathia's first win this season against the Sox after losing his first four. The victory was no thing of beauty, but it had to look like Miss America to the Yankees ace.
Sabathia (18-7) scattered ten hits and struck out the same amount through 6 1/3 innings. He threw 128 pitches-- the most ever in one game as a Yankee-- and was lucky the Sox stranded 16 runners.
The Yank's bullpen wasn't perfect either, but were good enough to preserve the big guy's long-awaited win.
Boone Logan bailed out Sabathia by relieving him with two men on and one out in the seventh. Logan struck out two after loading the bases.
Rafael Soriano threw a scoreless eighth and Mariano Rivera wrapped up the game in the ninth.
The real excitement was centered around Red Sox starter John Lackey (12-10) and his penchant for hitting opposing batters. He now leads the league with 17.
While Sabathia did hit Jacoby Ellsbury to lead off the first, it was Lackey who was retaliating throughout the game.
In the first, Lackey bopped Curtis Granderson, who started towards first base, but was called back by the home plate umpire Ed Rapuano.
It was in the seventh, when Francisco Cervelli added a little spice to the game after Lackey's brush-back hit the Yankees player.
Cervelli, who sent a home-run ball sailing out of Fenway in his previous at bat, probably ticked off Lackey, who couldn't have liked the way the Yankees backup catcher clapped his hands as he emphatically hopped on home plate after circling the bases.
After Cervelli got popped, he started to rush the mound before being held back by Red Sox catcher Jarrod Saltamacchia. Yankees pitching coach Larry Rothschild rushed in and was tossed out of the game by third base umpire Mark Wegner.
In the ninth, Girardi took offense when a Saltamacchia's check-swing stopped a Rivera cutter on his arm. This time the batter was awarded first. Girardi stormed out and was hopping mad. He was quickly sent to the showers by Wegman after arguing that the Red Sox batter had swung into Rivera's pitch.
It's good to see a little fire in the old rivalry. They'll do it again tomorrow night.
Sunday, August 28, 2011
Showalter Fires Back at Girardi's Lack of Compassion
Buck Showalter wasn't too happy with his former team, the New York Yankees, complaining about how this weekend's games were rescheduled due to Hurricane Irene. The Baltimore Orioles head coach was making a reference to the O's plan of refusing to play a double-header on Friday. Showwalter directed most of his anger at Yankees head coach Joe Girardi for his lack of compassion.
The Orioles had scheduled a Friday night tribute to former-Orioles pitcher, team executive and broadcaster Mike Flanagan who took his own life last Wednesday.
Girardi was puzzled buy the Orioles decision not to squeeze in the make-up game the same night and said their final say was "silly to me."
This remark steamed Showalter and the Orioles organization, who were still reeling from Flanagan's sudden death.
"First of all, I felt that some of the stuff was a little disrespectful to Flanny, quite frankly," Showalter said when told about the Yankees condemnation of this weekend's scheduling. "That didn't sit well with me very well. I can tell you that. We didn't say much-- I think we had an April rainout there-- and they just told us we were playing. We were OK with that. Like I told you the other day, you tell us when we're playing, we'll play."
The Orioles had a moment of silence and a video tribute to Flanagan on Friday which highlighted his career. A large #46 (his number) adorned the visiting scoreboard instead of the out-of-town scores and the Baltimore players wore a patch on the right arm of their jerseys.
It was a nice ceremony-- even the Yankees team came out of their dugout, but didn't exactly take up a lot of time.
Yankees centerfielder Curtis Granderson also expressed his frustration at the O's decision by issuing a prepared statement to the press criticizing the Orioles handling of the schedule and saying the solution was inadequate.
Girardi wasn't quiet about not playing a double-header on Friday after Saturday's game was already considered a wash-out due to the hurricane.
Showalter said the Yankees called Orioles president of operations Andy McPhail only 24 hours before the series started-- asking to play two on Friday. The O's declined for a list of reasons -- including the short notice and loss of money in playing a Friday afternoon game.
The Yankees were not pleased with the outcome-- using a Sept 8 off-day to make up one of Saturday's double-header games.
Asked if there was any way avoid using the Sept. 8 off-day-- which is one of two remaining off-days for New York, Girardi opened up the idea of playing the game as part of a split-doubleheader in New York instead of Baltimore in a move that would help the Yankees because they travel cross-country to Anaheim to play the Angels on Sept. 9. while they are in the middle of a playoff race. I've got my own team to worry about says Bucky.
"We hope we can be as competitive as they are," said Showalter. "I respect where they are in the season and what their people are saying about the competitive part of it, but it means something to us too."
Girardi might want to stop whining and start winning. The Yankees Bartolo Colon was outdueled by the Orioles Zach Britton, 2-0, in the first game of the night-day doubleheader on Sunday.
The Yankees are 14-10 so far this August and head to Boston on Tuesday.
The Orioles had scheduled a Friday night tribute to former-Orioles pitcher, team executive and broadcaster Mike Flanagan who took his own life last Wednesday.
Girardi was puzzled buy the Orioles decision not to squeeze in the make-up game the same night and said their final say was "silly to me."
This remark steamed Showalter and the Orioles organization, who were still reeling from Flanagan's sudden death.
"First of all, I felt that some of the stuff was a little disrespectful to Flanny, quite frankly," Showalter said when told about the Yankees condemnation of this weekend's scheduling. "That didn't sit well with me very well. I can tell you that. We didn't say much-- I think we had an April rainout there-- and they just told us we were playing. We were OK with that. Like I told you the other day, you tell us when we're playing, we'll play."
The Orioles had a moment of silence and a video tribute to Flanagan on Friday which highlighted his career. A large #46 (his number) adorned the visiting scoreboard instead of the out-of-town scores and the Baltimore players wore a patch on the right arm of their jerseys.
It was a nice ceremony-- even the Yankees team came out of their dugout, but didn't exactly take up a lot of time.
Yankees centerfielder Curtis Granderson also expressed his frustration at the O's decision by issuing a prepared statement to the press criticizing the Orioles handling of the schedule and saying the solution was inadequate.
Girardi wasn't quiet about not playing a double-header on Friday after Saturday's game was already considered a wash-out due to the hurricane.
Showalter said the Yankees called Orioles president of operations Andy McPhail only 24 hours before the series started-- asking to play two on Friday. The O's declined for a list of reasons -- including the short notice and loss of money in playing a Friday afternoon game.
The Yankees were not pleased with the outcome-- using a Sept 8 off-day to make up one of Saturday's double-header games.
Asked if there was any way avoid using the Sept. 8 off-day-- which is one of two remaining off-days for New York, Girardi opened up the idea of playing the game as part of a split-doubleheader in New York instead of Baltimore in a move that would help the Yankees because they travel cross-country to Anaheim to play the Angels on Sept. 9. while they are in the middle of a playoff race. I've got my own team to worry about says Bucky.
"We hope we can be as competitive as they are," said Showalter. "I respect where they are in the season and what their people are saying about the competitive part of it, but it means something to us too."
Girardi might want to stop whining and start winning. The Yankees Bartolo Colon was outdueled by the Orioles Zach Britton, 2-0, in the first game of the night-day doubleheader on Sunday.
The Yankees are 14-10 so far this August and head to Boston on Tuesday.
Friday, August 26, 2011
Girardi Leaves A.J. Burnett Twisting In The Wind, But What Did It Prove?
To New York Yankees pitcher A.J. Burnett, Hurricane Irene should have come sooner to Camden Yards tonight. The struggling starter, fighting for his rotation life, was left in by manager Joe Girardi and had to fend for himself during a typical Burnett meltdown in the second inning against the Baltimore Orioles.
Girardi only watched as Burnett suffered through the disastrous inning. His starter allowed six runs, six hits with one error through the first two innings.
It looked like another early hook for the much-maligned pitcher, but it wasn't to be. There would be no rescue.
Girardi let the Orioles continue to tee-off on his ineffective hurler. Burnett looked as though he would have rather been stuck in a storm-lashed row boat in the turbulent Atlantic than the soul that was stranded on his solitary island-- the pitcher's mound.
It seemed like the only thing that could save the beleaguered pitcher would be a game called for rain-- or, more appropriately, a hurricane.
Maybe it was the manager's version of tough love. After all, wasn't it Burnett who walked off the mound cursing Girardi after being lifted after only getting eight outs in his last outing?
Could Girardi actually be thinking that the Yankees could come back from a six-run deficit like they did yesterday against the Oakland A's?
Whatever the reason for Girardi to let Burnett slowly lose whatever pride he is clinging to-- he gave up a home-run and four-straight doubles and dug a big hole for the Yankees, it was kind of sad to watch the pitcher throw what looked like an Orioles batting practice.
The game got off to a rough start after the Yankees committed two errors and nearly a third before Burnett escaped unscathed. It was only a preview of Burnett's eventual early-inning meltdown.
In the top of the second, the Orioles' bats and Irene's impending barrage began to rain down on Burnett.
A home-run followed by four straight doubles gave the O's a 4-0 lead. Yankees pitching coach, Larry Rothschild, came out to calm down Burnett. A two-run home-run by the O's made it 6-0. Burnett was probably the only person in Baltimore who wished the Category-3 storm would hurry ashore and wash out this game.
You didn't have to be a Burnett lover to feel some compassion for his slow death. There was one moment when it looked like the combustible Burnett was ready to blow. He didn't, but there was still more misery to follow.
In the fourth inning, Burnett threw two wild pitches where two runners advance, then Derek Jeter bobbles a possible double-play ball and it becomes a 7-0 O's lead.
Girardi left Burnett struggle through the fifth and even after a triple made it 9-1, let Burnett finish out the inning. Mercifully, Burnett closed out the embarrassing performance by striking out the final batter he faced. Too little, way too late.
Burnett knew it was over even before he got to the dugout. No cursing or public displays of insolence. The unusually stoic Burnett walked through the dugout, spoke with his catcher Russell Martin and brushed by Girardi on his way to the locker room. There was no eye-contact and the two passed like ships caught in Irene's swirling winds.
There must be some deep-rooted psychological reason for Girardi's actions tonight, but what did he accomplish and why? When did the manager turn into Dr. Phil?
In the fifth, it looked like the manager was purposely avoiding going out to the mound and pulling Burnett. Was he avoiding a confrontation, or was it a chance to let his pitcher finish the inning and march from the mound with a sliver of dignity?
Finally, at the end of the fifth, Burnett was put out of his misery. He struck out the batter and stiffly walked to the dugout.
What did Girardi's actions say? Was leaving Burnett in the game to sweat out a 9-1 losing effort some kind of pat on the back. It's like saying, 'Hey kid, I knew you could go five innings.'
Or was it retaliation for Burnett's outburst to stay in his last game? Like saying, 'You wanted it kid, you got it.'
Confidence builder or ego-breaker, Girardi's move possibly cost the Yankees a win.
There are a lot questions still to be answered. Did Burnett just pitch his way out of the five-man rotation? Phil Hughes-- who is in line to get the fifth spot-- was just as bad last night, but he was the beneficiary of three grand slams.
Tonight, there would be no grand slams, comebacks or Jorge Posada mopping up at second base for Burnett.
Hurricane Irene will have passed by Sunday, but for Girardi and his rotation the storm might just be brewing.
Girardi only watched as Burnett suffered through the disastrous inning. His starter allowed six runs, six hits with one error through the first two innings.
It looked like another early hook for the much-maligned pitcher, but it wasn't to be. There would be no rescue.
Girardi let the Orioles continue to tee-off on his ineffective hurler. Burnett looked as though he would have rather been stuck in a storm-lashed row boat in the turbulent Atlantic than the soul that was stranded on his solitary island-- the pitcher's mound.
It seemed like the only thing that could save the beleaguered pitcher would be a game called for rain-- or, more appropriately, a hurricane.
Maybe it was the manager's version of tough love. After all, wasn't it Burnett who walked off the mound cursing Girardi after being lifted after only getting eight outs in his last outing?
Could Girardi actually be thinking that the Yankees could come back from a six-run deficit like they did yesterday against the Oakland A's?
Whatever the reason for Girardi to let Burnett slowly lose whatever pride he is clinging to-- he gave up a home-run and four-straight doubles and dug a big hole for the Yankees, it was kind of sad to watch the pitcher throw what looked like an Orioles batting practice.
The game got off to a rough start after the Yankees committed two errors and nearly a third before Burnett escaped unscathed. It was only a preview of Burnett's eventual early-inning meltdown.
In the top of the second, the Orioles' bats and Irene's impending barrage began to rain down on Burnett.
A home-run followed by four straight doubles gave the O's a 4-0 lead. Yankees pitching coach, Larry Rothschild, came out to calm down Burnett. A two-run home-run by the O's made it 6-0. Burnett was probably the only person in Baltimore who wished the Category-3 storm would hurry ashore and wash out this game.
You didn't have to be a Burnett lover to feel some compassion for his slow death. There was one moment when it looked like the combustible Burnett was ready to blow. He didn't, but there was still more misery to follow.
In the fourth inning, Burnett threw two wild pitches where two runners advance, then Derek Jeter bobbles a possible double-play ball and it becomes a 7-0 O's lead.
Girardi left Burnett struggle through the fifth and even after a triple made it 9-1, let Burnett finish out the inning. Mercifully, Burnett closed out the embarrassing performance by striking out the final batter he faced. Too little, way too late.
Burnett knew it was over even before he got to the dugout. No cursing or public displays of insolence. The unusually stoic Burnett walked through the dugout, spoke with his catcher Russell Martin and brushed by Girardi on his way to the locker room. There was no eye-contact and the two passed like ships caught in Irene's swirling winds.
There must be some deep-rooted psychological reason for Girardi's actions tonight, but what did he accomplish and why? When did the manager turn into Dr. Phil?
In the fifth, it looked like the manager was purposely avoiding going out to the mound and pulling Burnett. Was he avoiding a confrontation, or was it a chance to let his pitcher finish the inning and march from the mound with a sliver of dignity?
Finally, at the end of the fifth, Burnett was put out of his misery. He struck out the batter and stiffly walked to the dugout.
What did Girardi's actions say? Was leaving Burnett in the game to sweat out a 9-1 losing effort some kind of pat on the back. It's like saying, 'Hey kid, I knew you could go five innings.'
Or was it retaliation for Burnett's outburst to stay in his last game? Like saying, 'You wanted it kid, you got it.'
Confidence builder or ego-breaker, Girardi's move possibly cost the Yankees a win.
There are a lot questions still to be answered. Did Burnett just pitch his way out of the five-man rotation? Phil Hughes-- who is in line to get the fifth spot-- was just as bad last night, but he was the beneficiary of three grand slams.
Tonight, there would be no grand slams, comebacks or Jorge Posada mopping up at second base for Burnett.
Hurricane Irene will have passed by Sunday, but for Girardi and his rotation the storm might just be brewing.
Saturday, August 20, 2011
A.J. Burnett Has Words For Girardi: Could They Be His Last As A Yankees Starter?
A.J. Burnett had some choice words for Joe Girardi after the New York Yankees manager pulled the frustrated pitcher out tonight's game against the Minnesota Twins. Girardi had seen enough after the ineffective Burnett had already given up four runs and left the bases loaded in the bottom of the second inning.
As Burnett walked towards the dugout, he turned back, glared at Girardi and let loose with a public diatribe directed at the manager.
Those words could be Burnett's last as a Yankee starter.
Girardi called in Luis Ayala to relieve the useless Burnett with two outs. Ayala promptly gave up two hits to the Twins batters and padded the Minnesota lead to 7-0.
After a few moments of mulling over Burnett's verbal assault, and the yanked Burnett's bee-line to the clubhouse, Girardi himself made his way into the same Yankees lounge from the team bench. Girardi returned to the dugout rail a few minutes later and, miraculously, Burnett reappeared on the dugout bench a couple of minutes later-- pouting.
The snarling Burnett abruptly returned to the clubhouse after watching Ayala deposit the three runs into Burnett's already bloated ERA.
What was said in the locker room between Girardi and his frustrated pitcher to make him come out of the clubhouse is unknown, but it probably had to do less with Burnett's feelings than a spot in the starting rotation.
This isn't the first time Burnett (9-9 before the game) has showed up Girardi-- his biggest, and maybe only, supporter. There have been other instances of Burnett barking at Girardi or slamming the ball into the manager's hand when he was being pulled from a game-- which has been a common occurrence this season.
Girardi has always defended Burnett from the fans and media who have called for the $82.5 million starter's head during his six-week losing streak. Before the game the manager said he just wanted "A.J. to compete."
Now, Burnett pays back Girardi with an embarrassing display of self-entitlement.
Tonight, it looked like the maligned Burnett has totally lost his control, his temper and his manager's respect in one game.
I guess Burnett thought Girardi was supposed to let the underachieving starter-- who almost let a 12-run lead dissipate a couple of weeks ago-- continue to get clobbered until he found his groove.
The bad news for Burnett is he pitched badly after a serviceable outing last week. The worse news is he probably yakked his way out of the rotation. There is no good news.
Burnett might have just made Girardi's daunting and long-awaited task of trimming his starting rotation down to five men a lot easier, and Burnett has no one to blame but himself.
Bartolo Colon and Freddy Garcia are veterans who have been consistent, if not overpowering, and young guns Ivan Nova and Phil Hughes look like everything the Yankees hoped they would turn out to be. CC Sabathia is the ace, so that leaves Burnett as the odd-man out.
Odd man is the right term in more than one way.
As Burnett walked towards the dugout, he turned back, glared at Girardi and let loose with a public diatribe directed at the manager.
Those words could be Burnett's last as a Yankee starter.
Girardi called in Luis Ayala to relieve the useless Burnett with two outs. Ayala promptly gave up two hits to the Twins batters and padded the Minnesota lead to 7-0.
After a few moments of mulling over Burnett's verbal assault, and the yanked Burnett's bee-line to the clubhouse, Girardi himself made his way into the same Yankees lounge from the team bench. Girardi returned to the dugout rail a few minutes later and, miraculously, Burnett reappeared on the dugout bench a couple of minutes later-- pouting.
The snarling Burnett abruptly returned to the clubhouse after watching Ayala deposit the three runs into Burnett's already bloated ERA.
What was said in the locker room between Girardi and his frustrated pitcher to make him come out of the clubhouse is unknown, but it probably had to do less with Burnett's feelings than a spot in the starting rotation.
This isn't the first time Burnett (9-9 before the game) has showed up Girardi-- his biggest, and maybe only, supporter. There have been other instances of Burnett barking at Girardi or slamming the ball into the manager's hand when he was being pulled from a game-- which has been a common occurrence this season.
Girardi has always defended Burnett from the fans and media who have called for the $82.5 million starter's head during his six-week losing streak. Before the game the manager said he just wanted "A.J. to compete."
Now, Burnett pays back Girardi with an embarrassing display of self-entitlement.
Tonight, it looked like the maligned Burnett has totally lost his control, his temper and his manager's respect in one game.
I guess Burnett thought Girardi was supposed to let the underachieving starter-- who almost let a 12-run lead dissipate a couple of weeks ago-- continue to get clobbered until he found his groove.
The bad news for Burnett is he pitched badly after a serviceable outing last week. The worse news is he probably yakked his way out of the rotation. There is no good news.
Burnett might have just made Girardi's daunting and long-awaited task of trimming his starting rotation down to five men a lot easier, and Burnett has no one to blame but himself.
Bartolo Colon and Freddy Garcia are veterans who have been consistent, if not overpowering, and young guns Ivan Nova and Phil Hughes look like everything the Yankees hoped they would turn out to be. CC Sabathia is the ace, so that leaves Burnett as the odd-man out.
Odd man is the right term in more than one way.
Thursday, August 18, 2011
Joe Torre Admits Umpires Blew Home-Run Call Last Night
Joe Torre, MLB's VP of baseball operations, admitted today that the umpires did make the wrong call last night after they called Billy Butler's fly ball a home-run in the Kansas City Royals' 5-4 victory over the New York Yankees.
According to the New York Daily News, Torre-- the Yankees former manager-- looked at the controversial fly ball ruling and backed the Yankees claim that the ball never cleared the foot-high chain-link partition on top of the padded wall. Torre said the hit should not have been called a home-run.
"It was a missed call, but there was also a misunderstanding on the rule," Torre explained. "He just missed it but his interpretation was that the the back fence was behind the wall and out of the ballpark. It certainly wasn't for a lack of doing his job, just a misunderstanding of the rule."
Let's get this straight. Aren't the umpires supposed to know the rules? It just seems logical that the men enforcing the rules-- including boundaries and what constitutes a home-run-- should be aware of each stadium's dimensions.
After second-base umpire Dana DeMuth ruled that the fly ball cleared the fence, and the umpire crew spent five minutes reviewing the initial call, they still upheld the home-run call.
It was pretty obvious the ball didn't clear the fence because the ball bounced back onto the field where Brett Gardner scooped it up and put it back in play.
An irate Mariano Rivera knew it wasn't a home-run. The KC broadcasters knew it. In the Royals dugout, even Billy Butler had the look of a five year-old with the stolen cookie while the umpire crew reviewed the call.
Yankees first-base coach Mick Kelleher said the umpires knew it. Before the game, Kelleher said the officiating crew explained that the ball had to clear the entire fence-- including the set back chain-link portion-- to be considered a home-run.
"It has to go over the padded bar," Kelleher was told. "If that wasn't the case, there would be a yellow line."
Torre said DeMuth "feels very badly."
"He was wrong," said Torre. "And there was a price to learn that lesson."
Torre stressed that the instant replay system didn't fail despite the muffed call.
"The game is over and that's what it is," Torre told the News. "It's unfortunate. Everyone had to cooperate to make it a one run game."
Girardi didn't file a protest after the ruling because he said he "believed the umpire" and figured "Dana knew the rules." Now, that boat has long sailed and any correction is out of the question.
It's too late for the Yankees to take any sort of action to correct the costly error. Girardi would have had to file a protest before the next pitch was thrown after the umpires made their final call last night to see any justice.
Yankees fans can blame the mistake on DeMuth's interpretation of the rules at Kauffman Stadium-- which had gone renovations in 2009-- but they should remember the image of Jorge Posada staring at a strike three with the bases loaded for the game's final out.
According to the New York Daily News, Torre-- the Yankees former manager-- looked at the controversial fly ball ruling and backed the Yankees claim that the ball never cleared the foot-high chain-link partition on top of the padded wall. Torre said the hit should not have been called a home-run.
"It was a missed call, but there was also a misunderstanding on the rule," Torre explained. "He just missed it but his interpretation was that the the back fence was behind the wall and out of the ballpark. It certainly wasn't for a lack of doing his job, just a misunderstanding of the rule."
Let's get this straight. Aren't the umpires supposed to know the rules? It just seems logical that the men enforcing the rules-- including boundaries and what constitutes a home-run-- should be aware of each stadium's dimensions.
After second-base umpire Dana DeMuth ruled that the fly ball cleared the fence, and the umpire crew spent five minutes reviewing the initial call, they still upheld the home-run call.
It was pretty obvious the ball didn't clear the fence because the ball bounced back onto the field where Brett Gardner scooped it up and put it back in play.
An irate Mariano Rivera knew it wasn't a home-run. The KC broadcasters knew it. In the Royals dugout, even Billy Butler had the look of a five year-old with the stolen cookie while the umpire crew reviewed the call.
Yankees first-base coach Mick Kelleher said the umpires knew it. Before the game, Kelleher said the officiating crew explained that the ball had to clear the entire fence-- including the set back chain-link portion-- to be considered a home-run.
"It has to go over the padded bar," Kelleher was told. "If that wasn't the case, there would be a yellow line."
Torre said DeMuth "feels very badly."
"He was wrong," said Torre. "And there was a price to learn that lesson."
Torre stressed that the instant replay system didn't fail despite the muffed call.
"The game is over and that's what it is," Torre told the News. "It's unfortunate. Everyone had to cooperate to make it a one run game."
Girardi didn't file a protest after the ruling because he said he "believed the umpire" and figured "Dana knew the rules." Now, that boat has long sailed and any correction is out of the question.
It's too late for the Yankees to take any sort of action to correct the costly error. Girardi would have had to file a protest before the next pitch was thrown after the umpires made their final call last night to see any justice.
Yankees fans can blame the mistake on DeMuth's interpretation of the rules at Kauffman Stadium-- which had gone renovations in 2009-- but they should remember the image of Jorge Posada staring at a strike three with the bases loaded for the game's final out.
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Mariano Rivera Loses It In Dugout Over Controversial Home Run
Yankees fans got to see a side of closer Mariano Rivera they've never seen in his 17-year Yankee career. After a debated home run was allowed, Rivera blew a gasket and had to be blocked from charging from the dugout.
At the center of the outburst was a Kansas City Royals fly ball that hit the top of a fence and was ruled a home-run. Rivera wasn't even on the mound and was watching the play from the Yankees clubhouse before he saw red.
It looked like Rivera got upset at the umpiring crew-- with good reason-- after they conferred on the controversial home-run, and opted not to overturn the call. This was a side of the usually stoic Rivera that fans never see-- the emotional side. If it was rare to see the always composed Rivera blow a couple of games last week it was even more unique to watch the 41 year-old Rivera lose his cool for a couple of minutes last night.
Last week, fans saw the infrequent failures of Rivera in a few consecutive set-backs-- or blips as Manager Joe Girardi calls them-- in the closer's march to the Hall of Fame.
Rivera was tagged for a blown save, a loss and a scare in successive games in relief. It had Yankees fans wondering if the reliable closer was slipping. Through it all, Rivera never showed any emotion-- as is his usual modus operandi on the mound.
While the outburst may have been out of character for Rivera, his intensity was not.
In the bottom of the third inning of the Yankees/ Royals game at Kauffman Stadium, Royals DH Billy Butler lofted a fly ball which bounced off the top of the padded wall in left-center but clearly didn't go over an eight-inch railing behind it. Rightfielder Brett Gardner played the ball like it was a double.
After the initial call and protest by Girardi, second-base umpire Dana DeMuth summoned the other umpires and reviewed the play. Replays showed the ball hitting the top of the pad but bouncing off the fencing which connected the railing and wall-- which means the ball is still in play.
The umpires stuck by the initial ruling and gave Butler his 15th homer of the season and the Royals a 4-2 lead. This prompted Girardi to approach the umpires again to no avail. As the Yankees manager approached the dugout, Rivera could be seen being held back by coach Tony Pena and then Girardi himself.
The irate Rivera looked like he was ready to bolt through the dugout rail. His laser like-glare alone could have cut the metal pipe.
Meanwhile, Butler grinned like he just got away with murder and paced in the Royals dugout waiting to see if he would have to take second base.
Butler's solo-shot would prove costly as Yankees starter, Bartolo Colon, was roughed up for five runs in five innings including the controversial home-run.
Alex Gordon tagged Colon for a three-run homer earlier in the third inning and the Yankees ended up losing 5-4 with the bases loaded and Jorge Posada called out looking.
Derek Jeter went 4-for-5 but was caught stealing right before Curtis Granderson smacked his 34th home-run in the first.
The Yankees still held a 1/2 game lead over the Boston Red Sox, who lost to the Tampa Bay Rays.
After the game, Girardi said he would not file a protest with the league. DeMuth had no comment.
At the center of the outburst was a Kansas City Royals fly ball that hit the top of a fence and was ruled a home-run. Rivera wasn't even on the mound and was watching the play from the Yankees clubhouse before he saw red.
It looked like Rivera got upset at the umpiring crew-- with good reason-- after they conferred on the controversial home-run, and opted not to overturn the call. This was a side of the usually stoic Rivera that fans never see-- the emotional side. If it was rare to see the always composed Rivera blow a couple of games last week it was even more unique to watch the 41 year-old Rivera lose his cool for a couple of minutes last night.
Last week, fans saw the infrequent failures of Rivera in a few consecutive set-backs-- or blips as Manager Joe Girardi calls them-- in the closer's march to the Hall of Fame.
Rivera was tagged for a blown save, a loss and a scare in successive games in relief. It had Yankees fans wondering if the reliable closer was slipping. Through it all, Rivera never showed any emotion-- as is his usual modus operandi on the mound.
While the outburst may have been out of character for Rivera, his intensity was not.
In the bottom of the third inning of the Yankees/ Royals game at Kauffman Stadium, Royals DH Billy Butler lofted a fly ball which bounced off the top of the padded wall in left-center but clearly didn't go over an eight-inch railing behind it. Rightfielder Brett Gardner played the ball like it was a double.
After the initial call and protest by Girardi, second-base umpire Dana DeMuth summoned the other umpires and reviewed the play. Replays showed the ball hitting the top of the pad but bouncing off the fencing which connected the railing and wall-- which means the ball is still in play.
The umpires stuck by the initial ruling and gave Butler his 15th homer of the season and the Royals a 4-2 lead. This prompted Girardi to approach the umpires again to no avail. As the Yankees manager approached the dugout, Rivera could be seen being held back by coach Tony Pena and then Girardi himself.
The irate Rivera looked like he was ready to bolt through the dugout rail. His laser like-glare alone could have cut the metal pipe.
Meanwhile, Butler grinned like he just got away with murder and paced in the Royals dugout waiting to see if he would have to take second base.
Butler's solo-shot would prove costly as Yankees starter, Bartolo Colon, was roughed up for five runs in five innings including the controversial home-run.
Alex Gordon tagged Colon for a three-run homer earlier in the third inning and the Yankees ended up losing 5-4 with the bases loaded and Jorge Posada called out looking.
Derek Jeter went 4-for-5 but was caught stealing right before Curtis Granderson smacked his 34th home-run in the first.
The Yankees still held a 1/2 game lead over the Boston Red Sox, who lost to the Tampa Bay Rays.
After the game, Girardi said he would not file a protest with the league. DeMuth had no comment.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
A.J. Burnett; One Game Does Not A Summer Make
A.J. Burnett finally won an August game wearing pinstripes and the New York Yankees are acting like they won the Powerball-- an $82.5 million lottery maybe.
The Yankees 7-4 victory over the lowly Kansas City Royals may be a sign Burnett, the much-maligned starter, has turned the corner on another season of desperation but it is nothing to cheer about.
The game proved that the ineffective righthander still can't make it through the sixth inning.
Burnett won his first game since since June 29 and, more importantly, finally won an August game as a Yankee after eight losses in-a-row. The No. 2 starter had an 0-8 record with an ERA of 7.18 over that span.
It's been almost seven weeks since his last victory in June. He slogged along with an 0-3 record, 6.00 ERA and four no-decisions during that losing streak.
If last night was an indication of Burnett lifting the monkey from his back, he can thank a cast of Yankees for the help.
Manager Joe Girardi lifted his starter after only 88 pitches-- probably because he's seen Burnett blow up enough times in the fifth and sixth innings this season.
"With a high salary is always high expectations," said Girardi. "I think he's thrown the ball better than some of his outcomes he's had."
Burnett's final line read: 5 2/3 innings, 10 hits and three earned runs.
A big night by Derek Jeter (3-for-4, 3 RBI's) and Brett Gardner (2 hits, 2 RBI's) helped Burnett on the offensive side and Dave Robertson and Mariano Rivera threw perfect innings in the eighth and ninth to save the struggling Burnett from the bench.
The Yankees 7-4 victory over the lowly Kansas City Royals may be a sign Burnett, the much-maligned starter, has turned the corner on another season of desperation but it is nothing to cheer about.
The game proved that the ineffective righthander still can't make it through the sixth inning.
Burnett won his first game since since June 29 and, more importantly, finally won an August game as a Yankee after eight losses in-a-row. The No. 2 starter had an 0-8 record with an ERA of 7.18 over that span.
It's been almost seven weeks since his last victory in June. He slogged along with an 0-3 record, 6.00 ERA and four no-decisions during that losing streak.
If last night was an indication of Burnett lifting the monkey from his back, he can thank a cast of Yankees for the help.
Manager Joe Girardi lifted his starter after only 88 pitches-- probably because he's seen Burnett blow up enough times in the fifth and sixth innings this season.
"With a high salary is always high expectations," said Girardi. "I think he's thrown the ball better than some of his outcomes he's had."
Burnett's final line read: 5 2/3 innings, 10 hits and three earned runs.
A big night by Derek Jeter (3-for-4, 3 RBI's) and Brett Gardner (2 hits, 2 RBI's) helped Burnett on the offensive side and Dave Robertson and Mariano Rivera threw perfect innings in the eighth and ninth to save the struggling Burnett from the bench.
Thursday, August 11, 2011
Mariano Rivera Has Another 'Uh-Oh' Moment; Yankees Beat Angels, 6-5
Today, under the brilliant blue skies over Yankee Stadium, hot-hitting Robinson Cano made the Los Angeles Angels pay dearly for an error by Macier Izturis, after the second baseman muffed an easy ground ball that should have ended the seventh inning. The goof led to the winning margin of a Yankees victory. The only grey cloud in sight, on this sunny day, was the one hovering Izturis' head the rest of the game.
With the score tied, 2-2, and two outs, Mark Teixeira squibbed a soft blooper towards second. Izturis bobbled, then dropped the ball after it hit him in the chest. Teixeira was safe at first and the Yankees had the bases loaded. Hot hitting Cano came to the plate and sent the next pitch from Scott Downs over the right field fence for the fifth grand slam of his career and a 6-2 Yankees lead.
The Yankees held on to win the game and the series, 2-1, from the Angels but the 6-5 victory didn't come without any trepidation about Mariano Rivera. The Yankees closer had another "blip" in the ninth inning after another fine start from starter Bartolo Colon.
Colon went six strong innings although he ended up with his second straight no-decision. The rotund righty continues to build on one of the great comeback stories in the major leagues this season.
The only slip-up in Colon's day was giving up a two-run to Alberto Callaspo in the fifth inning which gave the Angels a 2-0 lead. Fourteen of Colon's 18 outs came from strikeouts or infield outs. Colon finished the day going six innings, allowing 2 runs and striking out three.
The Yankees once again called on the smoking bat of Curtis Granderson. The Yankees centerfielder skied--and I mean sent into orbit-- his 32nd home run of the season off Angels starter, Tyler Chatwood. The homer knocked in Derek Jeter to tie the score. It was Granderson's fourth dinger in three games.
Everything looked good for the Yankees after Robinson's curtain call. That was until Rivera was called in to bail out an ineffective Cory Wade with one out in the ninth.
Rivera came in after Wade struck out Vernon Wells and allowed two hits which put two men on base. The Hall of Fame closer was coming off a blown save and a loss-- "a blip" as manager Joe Girardi calls them-- and a lot of hand-wringing by Yankees fans. Rivera only needed to get the final two outs.
Digging in at the plate was the Angels pinch-hitter Russell Branyan. Branyan-- who had eight home-runs in 47 at-bats at Yankee Stadium-- immediately sent Rivera's first pitch into the right field stands to close the score to 6-5.
Rivera did a half-snarl/half-grin as he watched the ball sail over his head and into the hushed crowd. Uh-oh. Could what was once called a blip, now be an epidemic many anxious fans were probably wondering. Things were getting interesting-- and too close.
Not to worry. The usually reliable Rivera got the next batter to ground out and the final out was a short fly to left which Brett Gardner gathered in as he crashed into the box-seat wall.
Game over and Rivera picks up his 30th save of the season for a record-extending 14th time.
It's been a long time since Yankees fans held their breath when Rivera was on the mound, if ever.
It was the ninth straight home series the Yankees have won and gave the Yankees a comfortable eight game lead over the Angels in the wild-card race.
Except for Wade, the bullpen was nearly perfect. Rafael Soriano continued to play like the 45-save closer the Yankees spent $35 million for. He handled the seventh inning handily but gave up his first hit in five appearances since coming off the DL on July 30.
Dave Robertson was perfect in the eighth.
After the game, Girardi was asked if he was worried about Rivera. The manager joked, "If it happened for a month."
Girardi continued to downplay the anxiety surrounding Rivera and believes hitters are just being more aggressive with Rivera so they don't fall behind.
"He's close to the perfect closer as we'll ever see," said the manager. "[But] He's not perfect"
Rivera said he wasn't concerned about his weapon of choice-- the cutter.
"I didn't lose velocity, " said the 41 year-old Rivera. "I put the ball where I want it, that's about it."
Asked if he sees any trend to his last three outings, Rivera shook his head.
"It's always only one pitch, stressed the closer. "It's one pitch, but it can't be like that."
With the score tied, 2-2, and two outs, Mark Teixeira squibbed a soft blooper towards second. Izturis bobbled, then dropped the ball after it hit him in the chest. Teixeira was safe at first and the Yankees had the bases loaded. Hot hitting Cano came to the plate and sent the next pitch from Scott Downs over the right field fence for the fifth grand slam of his career and a 6-2 Yankees lead.
The Yankees held on to win the game and the series, 2-1, from the Angels but the 6-5 victory didn't come without any trepidation about Mariano Rivera. The Yankees closer had another "blip" in the ninth inning after another fine start from starter Bartolo Colon.
Colon went six strong innings although he ended up with his second straight no-decision. The rotund righty continues to build on one of the great comeback stories in the major leagues this season.
The only slip-up in Colon's day was giving up a two-run to Alberto Callaspo in the fifth inning which gave the Angels a 2-0 lead. Fourteen of Colon's 18 outs came from strikeouts or infield outs. Colon finished the day going six innings, allowing 2 runs and striking out three.
The Yankees once again called on the smoking bat of Curtis Granderson. The Yankees centerfielder skied--and I mean sent into orbit-- his 32nd home run of the season off Angels starter, Tyler Chatwood. The homer knocked in Derek Jeter to tie the score. It was Granderson's fourth dinger in three games.
Everything looked good for the Yankees after Robinson's curtain call. That was until Rivera was called in to bail out an ineffective Cory Wade with one out in the ninth.
Rivera came in after Wade struck out Vernon Wells and allowed two hits which put two men on base. The Hall of Fame closer was coming off a blown save and a loss-- "a blip" as manager Joe Girardi calls them-- and a lot of hand-wringing by Yankees fans. Rivera only needed to get the final two outs.
Digging in at the plate was the Angels pinch-hitter Russell Branyan. Branyan-- who had eight home-runs in 47 at-bats at Yankee Stadium-- immediately sent Rivera's first pitch into the right field stands to close the score to 6-5.
Rivera did a half-snarl/half-grin as he watched the ball sail over his head and into the hushed crowd. Uh-oh. Could what was once called a blip, now be an epidemic many anxious fans were probably wondering. Things were getting interesting-- and too close.
Not to worry. The usually reliable Rivera got the next batter to ground out and the final out was a short fly to left which Brett Gardner gathered in as he crashed into the box-seat wall.
Game over and Rivera picks up his 30th save of the season for a record-extending 14th time.
It's been a long time since Yankees fans held their breath when Rivera was on the mound, if ever.
It was the ninth straight home series the Yankees have won and gave the Yankees a comfortable eight game lead over the Angels in the wild-card race.
Except for Wade, the bullpen was nearly perfect. Rafael Soriano continued to play like the 45-save closer the Yankees spent $35 million for. He handled the seventh inning handily but gave up his first hit in five appearances since coming off the DL on July 30.
Dave Robertson was perfect in the eighth.
After the game, Girardi was asked if he was worried about Rivera. The manager joked, "If it happened for a month."
Girardi continued to downplay the anxiety surrounding Rivera and believes hitters are just being more aggressive with Rivera so they don't fall behind.
"He's close to the perfect closer as we'll ever see," said the manager. "[But] He's not perfect"
Rivera said he wasn't concerned about his weapon of choice-- the cutter.
"I didn't lose velocity, " said the 41 year-old Rivera. "I put the ball where I want it, that's about it."
Asked if he sees any trend to his last three outings, Rivera shook his head.
"It's always only one pitch, stressed the closer. "It's one pitch, but it can't be like that."
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
Ivan Nova Makes Case For Permanent Spot In Rotation; Yankees Win, 9-3
Ivan Nova pitched six strong innings tonight and has made it almost impossible for the Yankees to send the pitcher back down to Triple-A. Nova's workman-like performance guided the Yankees to a 9-3 win over the Los Angeles Angels and snapped New York's three-game skid. It was Nova's seventh straight win.
You can add the word "stopper' to the 24 year-old Nova's resume. He is 3-0 this season in games after a Yankees loss. The only problem with Nova's victory, it didn't do anything to clear up the six man logjam in the team's rotation.
Nova was consistent, if not as overpowering as in recent games, through the first six innings. He gave up a couple of harmless singles and a hanging fifth-inning slider cost him a solo home-run to Peter Bourjos.
In the seventh, Nova started to lose his fastball. Up until then, it was clocked in the mid-90's and his slider was mostly good.
Vernon Wells' RBI single knocked in a run in the seventh, leading to Nova's exit with the bases loaded and no outs. He received a warm ovation from the fans in Yankee Stadium as he exited the diamond.
Enter Rafael Soriano into the precarious situation. The former-closer has been lights out since returning from the DL. Soriano didn't disappoint. He got the first batter to hit into a run-scoring double-play and the next batter, Jeff Mathis, popped up to end the threat. He threw a total of four pitches
Since returning from the DL, Soriano hasn't allowed a single base runner in four appearances. He pitched a critical inning in last Friday's win against the Red Sox and tonight, quite possibly, saved a trip to the minors for Nova.
"He's back to himself," said manager Joe Girardi when asked about the difference in Soriano at the beginning of the season and his appearance tonight. "Sometimes, coming here could be an adjustment. What he did tonight was huge for us."
Nova's final line read: six innings, three runs, three walks and no strikeouts. In his last outing, Nova dominated the White Sox and struck out 10. Still, since returning from the minors on July 30, Nova (11-4) has three quality starts under his belt but Girardi did notice a slight change from Nova's last outing.
"He [Nova] had to work a little harder tonight," said Girardi of his pitcher's adjustments. "It's a sign of maturity. He's made great strides as a starter since last year. He's more consistent and developed another pitch."
Nova agreed. "My fastball wasn't there, my slider wasn't there," he told the YES Network. "I battled to the end and got the win."
Luis Ayala came in to pitch the eighth and ninth innings. He allowed three hits and struck out three.
Offensively, the Yankees didn't make Angels pitcher Garrett Richard's major league debut a red carpet affair. The newbie walked the first two Yankees batters he faced, before Curtis Granderson hit the first of his two home-runs on the evening. Welcome to the big leagues Garrett. It could be Grandy was trying to atone for his base-running gaff which ended the game last night. Robinson Cano came up one single short of hitting for the cycle. He had a double, triple and home-run.
The Yankees victory was the first against a pitcher making his debut in seven years. Oddly, the team has lost the last six meetings to starters making their debut.
Nova's victory-- with Soriano's assist-- is sure to keep Girardi awake at night thinking about how to slim down his six-man rotation. Or at least until Saturday, when Phil Hughes goes to the mound.
How can the manager send Nova-- who has the second most wins (11) on the team, behind CC Sabathia (16)-- back to the minors?
Hughes got rocked by the Red Sox, in a relief role, last Sunday, and hopes to rebound this Saturday against the Tampa Bay Rays. The righthander needs a good outing to keep him from returning to the bullpen.
Meanwhile, Sabathia has been grumbling about the over-stocked rotation, and the extra day between his starts, and wants Girardi to "make a decision on who to pitch."
Tonight, Nova didn't make it any easier.
You can add the word "stopper' to the 24 year-old Nova's resume. He is 3-0 this season in games after a Yankees loss. The only problem with Nova's victory, it didn't do anything to clear up the six man logjam in the team's rotation.
Nova was consistent, if not as overpowering as in recent games, through the first six innings. He gave up a couple of harmless singles and a hanging fifth-inning slider cost him a solo home-run to Peter Bourjos.
In the seventh, Nova started to lose his fastball. Up until then, it was clocked in the mid-90's and his slider was mostly good.
Vernon Wells' RBI single knocked in a run in the seventh, leading to Nova's exit with the bases loaded and no outs. He received a warm ovation from the fans in Yankee Stadium as he exited the diamond.
Enter Rafael Soriano into the precarious situation. The former-closer has been lights out since returning from the DL. Soriano didn't disappoint. He got the first batter to hit into a run-scoring double-play and the next batter, Jeff Mathis, popped up to end the threat. He threw a total of four pitches
Since returning from the DL, Soriano hasn't allowed a single base runner in four appearances. He pitched a critical inning in last Friday's win against the Red Sox and tonight, quite possibly, saved a trip to the minors for Nova.
"He's back to himself," said manager Joe Girardi when asked about the difference in Soriano at the beginning of the season and his appearance tonight. "Sometimes, coming here could be an adjustment. What he did tonight was huge for us."
Nova's final line read: six innings, three runs, three walks and no strikeouts. In his last outing, Nova dominated the White Sox and struck out 10. Still, since returning from the minors on July 30, Nova (11-4) has three quality starts under his belt but Girardi did notice a slight change from Nova's last outing.
"He [Nova] had to work a little harder tonight," said Girardi of his pitcher's adjustments. "It's a sign of maturity. He's made great strides as a starter since last year. He's more consistent and developed another pitch."
Nova agreed. "My fastball wasn't there, my slider wasn't there," he told the YES Network. "I battled to the end and got the win."
Luis Ayala came in to pitch the eighth and ninth innings. He allowed three hits and struck out three.
Offensively, the Yankees didn't make Angels pitcher Garrett Richard's major league debut a red carpet affair. The newbie walked the first two Yankees batters he faced, before Curtis Granderson hit the first of his two home-runs on the evening. Welcome to the big leagues Garrett. It could be Grandy was trying to atone for his base-running gaff which ended the game last night. Robinson Cano came up one single short of hitting for the cycle. He had a double, triple and home-run.
The Yankees victory was the first against a pitcher making his debut in seven years. Oddly, the team has lost the last six meetings to starters making their debut.
Nova's victory-- with Soriano's assist-- is sure to keep Girardi awake at night thinking about how to slim down his six-man rotation. Or at least until Saturday, when Phil Hughes goes to the mound.
How can the manager send Nova-- who has the second most wins (11) on the team, behind CC Sabathia (16)-- back to the minors?
Hughes got rocked by the Red Sox, in a relief role, last Sunday, and hopes to rebound this Saturday against the Tampa Bay Rays. The righthander needs a good outing to keep him from returning to the bullpen.
Meanwhile, Sabathia has been grumbling about the over-stocked rotation, and the extra day between his starts, and wants Girardi to "make a decision on who to pitch."
Tonight, Nova didn't make it any easier.
Separated at Birth: A.J. Burnett and Elroy Jetson
It's hard to know if New York Yankees A.J. Burnett was going for the Elroy Jetson look on purpose but, it's safe to say the original spaceboy 'do didn't improve his game.
Burnett's newly bleached locks and 'his boy Elroy' cut did little to disguise the fact that it's the same old A.J. and his "I have to find a way to have fun" on the mound attitude has changed nothing either.
After throwing five strong shut-out innings last night against the Los Angeles Angels, Burnett turned into Rosie the Robot. He gave up four runs on two hits during the ugly sixth inning-- including two walks, a wild pitch a two-run double to a .181 hitter.
Burnett hasn't won a game since June 29 and the crowd at Yankee Stadium gave him a loud reminder of that fact as he walked to the dugout. The Yankees lost, 6-4.
Here's some fun facts. It was Burnett's league-leading 15th wild pitch, he has a winless streak of seven games and, not surprisingly, the righthander has not won an August start during three seasons in pinstripes.
It beginning to look like Joe Girardi has a better chance of seeing flying cars and the Little Dipper school on a pole before a Burnett win, but he refuses to bench his $16.5 million hurler.
To a frustrated Yankees fan, it feels like George Jetson walking Astro on that out-of-control treadmill (remember when treadmills were considered futuristic?)
Joe! Stop this crazy thing!!
Burnett's newly bleached locks and 'his boy Elroy' cut did little to disguise the fact that it's the same old A.J. and his "I have to find a way to have fun" on the mound attitude has changed nothing either.
After throwing five strong shut-out innings last night against the Los Angeles Angels, Burnett turned into Rosie the Robot. He gave up four runs on two hits during the ugly sixth inning-- including two walks, a wild pitch a two-run double to a .181 hitter.
Burnett hasn't won a game since June 29 and the crowd at Yankee Stadium gave him a loud reminder of that fact as he walked to the dugout. The Yankees lost, 6-4.
Here's some fun facts. It was Burnett's league-leading 15th wild pitch, he has a winless streak of seven games and, not surprisingly, the righthander has not won an August start during three seasons in pinstripes.
It beginning to look like Joe Girardi has a better chance of seeing flying cars and the Little Dipper school on a pole before a Burnett win, but he refuses to bench his $16.5 million hurler.
To a frustrated Yankees fan, it feels like George Jetson walking Astro on that out-of-control treadmill (remember when treadmills were considered futuristic?)
Joe! Stop this crazy thing!!
Monday, August 8, 2011
Nova Will Get Start Over Hughes When Angels Come To Yankee Stadium
It's official, but not really a shock. Phil Hughes' 13-pitch relief appearance against the Boston Red Sox, when he gave up the winning run in the tenth inning, cost the pitcher a start against the Los Angeles Angels this week. Hughes' spot will be filled by Ivan Nova.
Manager Joe Girardi tweaked the starting rotation for the upcoming three-game home series because of Hughes short stint in Sunday night's game. Hughes came in, after Mariano Rivera blew his fifth game of the season, and gave up two hits and Boston's walk-off score.
Hughes was set to open the series on Tuesday but struggling A.J. Burnett will be moved up one day. The ineffective Burnett will try and rebound from a disastrous outing against the Chicago White Sox, when the Yankees batters staked him to a 12-run lead, that he almost couldn't hold on to. Burnett gave back seven earned runs and was yanked before he could go five innings to qualify for a win. He will square-off against Dan Haren.
Nova will start Wednesday and is coming off an impressive 10-strikeout, six-hit and one earned run performance against the same White Sox team. Nova has won six of his last seven starts.
Bartolo Colon will close out the series on Thursday after a shaky outing (six-hits and two earned runs) against the Red Sox. He was pulled in the fifth after loading the bases and the bull pen took over. The Yankees won that game, 3-2.
Girardi's biggest concern had to be giving CC Sabathia an additional day off. Sabathia, who is notoriously fickle about throwing with extra rest, will now open the series against the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday night. Girardi thinks the rest is good for his ace after being banged up by the Red Sox on Saturday.
The manager said there wasn't anything in particular that presented itself to be a problem with Sabathia, but it seemed like a good time to give him a break.
Hughes, on the other hand, has to be wondering if the thirteen pitches he threw on Sunday are a bad omen. In his previous start, he gave up three hits and no runs in six sparkling innings and his ERA has dropped to 7.11 from a dismal 13.94 when he came off the DL.
"It's always disappointing if you're no starting," said Hughes. "I feel like I made some good progress in my last start, so if I have to wait around, it won't be something that's fun to deal with, but again, I don't make these calls or anything like that."
Manager Joe Girardi tweaked the starting rotation for the upcoming three-game home series because of Hughes short stint in Sunday night's game. Hughes came in, after Mariano Rivera blew his fifth game of the season, and gave up two hits and Boston's walk-off score.
Hughes was set to open the series on Tuesday but struggling A.J. Burnett will be moved up one day. The ineffective Burnett will try and rebound from a disastrous outing against the Chicago White Sox, when the Yankees batters staked him to a 12-run lead, that he almost couldn't hold on to. Burnett gave back seven earned runs and was yanked before he could go five innings to qualify for a win. He will square-off against Dan Haren.
Nova will start Wednesday and is coming off an impressive 10-strikeout, six-hit and one earned run performance against the same White Sox team. Nova has won six of his last seven starts.
Bartolo Colon will close out the series on Thursday after a shaky outing (six-hits and two earned runs) against the Red Sox. He was pulled in the fifth after loading the bases and the bull pen took over. The Yankees won that game, 3-2.
Girardi's biggest concern had to be giving CC Sabathia an additional day off. Sabathia, who is notoriously fickle about throwing with extra rest, will now open the series against the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday night. Girardi thinks the rest is good for his ace after being banged up by the Red Sox on Saturday.
The manager said there wasn't anything in particular that presented itself to be a problem with Sabathia, but it seemed like a good time to give him a break.
Hughes, on the other hand, has to be wondering if the thirteen pitches he threw on Sunday are a bad omen. In his previous start, he gave up three hits and no runs in six sparkling innings and his ERA has dropped to 7.11 from a dismal 13.94 when he came off the DL.
"It's always disappointing if you're no starting," said Hughes. "I feel like I made some good progress in my last start, so if I have to wait around, it won't be something that's fun to deal with, but again, I don't make these calls or anything like that."
Yankees Still Have Questions About Hughes, Soriano and Posada After Red Sox Series
Things looked pretty good for the Yankees after Brett Gardner slammed a seventh-inning pitch over the centerfield wall in Fenway Park on Friday Night. The hit gave New York a come-from-behind win over the Boston Red Sox and manager Joe Girardi looked like a genius for his bullpen moves. The Bombers were riding an eight-game win streak and their best pitcher, CC Sabathia, was scheduled for the next afternoon.
Girardi looked like he had all the answers that night. He made all the right moves by pulling Bartolo Colon with the bases loaded and using his bullpen to almost perfection. The Yankees were in first place for the first time since July 6. Everything looked sweet for the men in pinstripes.
Two nights later, by the end of Sunday night's typical Yanks/Sox marathon, there were more questions than answers after the Yankees dropped the final two games of the series and got knocked back into second place.
Neither of those losses were pretty and now Girardi is facing big questions regarding the starting rotation, the bullpen and the DH roles. How fast things change.
If Girardi thinks he had a bad weekend, think about old Jorge Posada. The veteran catcher could only watch from the bench Sunday after he was replaced by off-season acquisition, Eric Chavez. The newly-appointed right-handed DH went 0-for-4. Chavez is deserving and batting .304 so far this season
Posada didn't take the news as badly as he did when he was benched in May. After the first benching, he actually followed his temper-tantrum by hitting .326 with three home-runs and 12 RBI's over the next 32 games. Since the beginning of July, Posada has slumped and is hitting .205 with no home-runs and four RBI's in 26 games. He might not get a second chance this time.
Girardi's benching can't be going over good with the one-time power-hitter, who is slowly being forced off the roster. Reality struck hard yesterday, after the manager told the 38 year-old Posada his services as DH would no longer be needed. Girardi hasn't exactly been subtle when sending his message. In both instances, the Core-Four member was demoted to the bench before nationally-televised games against the Yankees bitter rivals, the Red Sox. That's gotta hurt.
"We're going to see how this works," said Girardi. "We're going to try some different things. We'll see how this works, and I told Jorge, 'You're still going to be a big part of this, and we're going to need you.' We're just going to do some different things."
And the check is in the mail. It sounds reassuring until Posada realizes that Triple-A slugger Jesus Montero is breathing down his neck.
The relationship between Girardi and Posada should be interesting the rest of the season. And the final chapter doesn't look good for the ex-catcher who first lost his backstop gig in spring training.
The bullpen's performance in last night's game opens up a slew of analytic equations.
Mariano Rivera blew his fifth save of the year--and at a most inopportune time. Marco Scutaro laced a lead-off double against the Sandman which led to the game-tying run. Getting to Rivera was instrumental in the Red Sox win. It was a moral victory as well. Sox manager Terry Francona put it bluntly," Getting that hit off Mo was big."
A situation which leads to the appearance of Phil Hughes in the 10th inning. Girardi made it clear his righty would be available from the bullpen all weekend, if that what it took to beat the Red Sox. After last night's game goes into extra innings, it gave Girardi the excuse he needed to use Hughes. The move ultimately takes Hughes out of this week's rotation, giving Ivan Nova one more chance to prove himself as a starter again this week.
Hughes showed nothing last night. He followed his best start of the season by giving up a confidence-breaking game winner in the rubber-game for first place. That 1/3 of an inning cost Hughes a shot at starting on Tuesday and possibly in the future.
Now Girardi has to decide what to with Hughes and Nova...again.
If Hughes allowed two hits and can't get three outs in relief, what does Girardi do now? The starting rotation and bullpen are both overstocked as it is and Hughes can't be feeling too secure. It appears to be a situation Hughes couldn't win. If he does well, he heads to the pen but that one out cost him a start.
This leads to the question of Rafael Soriano. After a disappointing and injury-plagued first half of a season in New York, is the $35 million man finally showing his true talent? Two perfect relief appearances in important games this weekend say 'I want a more prominent role.'
Since returning from the DL last week, the temperamental Soriano has retired all batters he has faced--including the 2-3-4 batters in the seventh last night.
The question surrounding Soriano is how long before the former closer mopes about his role on the team. Last year's 45-save pitcher for the Rays has been demoted from that esteemed spot to set-up man and now middle relief. After his fine performances this weekend, does Girardi move him up the pecking order to replace the All-Star Dave Robertson at times or even--this is blasphemy to Yankees fans--sometimes use him as an occasional closer? He would have fared better than Hughes in the tenth last night.
Soriano has a history of erratic behavior, beginning with his days in Tampa Bay, when he refused to shag flies or take batting practice on Sundays, leading up to his slipping away from the New York media, because he refused to answer questions about a bad outing in April.
How long until Soriano's well-known frustration boils over into wanting more? Girardi has to face the fact that Soriano could be a valuable weapon if the pitcher keeps his head.
Here's some extra credit questions for Girardi. Will CC Sabathia ever beat the Red Sox this season? The hottest pitcher in the American League--and the Yankees ace-- turns ice-cold against Boston. The big man is 0-and-4 vs. the Red Sox this season and it's no secret how he dominates the rest of the league, as his 16-2 record will attest.
Finally, where were all the fireworks between these two sworn enemies? Fans want Charlie Sheen-Chuck Lorre acrimony, not Alec Baldwin-John Krasinski cuteness.
This Yankees/Red Sox series had it's share of intensity-- especially in games one and three-- but something was missing. There was too much mutual admiration. Sure, the teams were only playing for first place in the beginning of August and it looks pretty much like both teams are headed to the playoffs, but where was the nastiness... the Pedro Martinez knocking down Don Zimmer hatred?
Oh, he was on the DL and his name is Alex Rodriguez. This rivalry needs A-Rod like Obama needs McCain or Osi needs the Giants. Every one's whipping boy is expected off the DL by August 15. The next meeting between the two teams is August 30 at Fenway Park.
Hope the Yankees have answered a few questions by then.
Girardi looked like he had all the answers that night. He made all the right moves by pulling Bartolo Colon with the bases loaded and using his bullpen to almost perfection. The Yankees were in first place for the first time since July 6. Everything looked sweet for the men in pinstripes.
Two nights later, by the end of Sunday night's typical Yanks/Sox marathon, there were more questions than answers after the Yankees dropped the final two games of the series and got knocked back into second place.
Neither of those losses were pretty and now Girardi is facing big questions regarding the starting rotation, the bullpen and the DH roles. How fast things change.
If Girardi thinks he had a bad weekend, think about old Jorge Posada. The veteran catcher could only watch from the bench Sunday after he was replaced by off-season acquisition, Eric Chavez. The newly-appointed right-handed DH went 0-for-4. Chavez is deserving and batting .304 so far this season
Posada didn't take the news as badly as he did when he was benched in May. After the first benching, he actually followed his temper-tantrum by hitting .326 with three home-runs and 12 RBI's over the next 32 games. Since the beginning of July, Posada has slumped and is hitting .205 with no home-runs and four RBI's in 26 games. He might not get a second chance this time.
Girardi's benching can't be going over good with the one-time power-hitter, who is slowly being forced off the roster. Reality struck hard yesterday, after the manager told the 38 year-old Posada his services as DH would no longer be needed. Girardi hasn't exactly been subtle when sending his message. In both instances, the Core-Four member was demoted to the bench before nationally-televised games against the Yankees bitter rivals, the Red Sox. That's gotta hurt.
"We're going to see how this works," said Girardi. "We're going to try some different things. We'll see how this works, and I told Jorge, 'You're still going to be a big part of this, and we're going to need you.' We're just going to do some different things."
And the check is in the mail. It sounds reassuring until Posada realizes that Triple-A slugger Jesus Montero is breathing down his neck.
The relationship between Girardi and Posada should be interesting the rest of the season. And the final chapter doesn't look good for the ex-catcher who first lost his backstop gig in spring training.
The bullpen's performance in last night's game opens up a slew of analytic equations.
Mariano Rivera blew his fifth save of the year--and at a most inopportune time. Marco Scutaro laced a lead-off double against the Sandman which led to the game-tying run. Getting to Rivera was instrumental in the Red Sox win. It was a moral victory as well. Sox manager Terry Francona put it bluntly," Getting that hit off Mo was big."
A situation which leads to the appearance of Phil Hughes in the 10th inning. Girardi made it clear his righty would be available from the bullpen all weekend, if that what it took to beat the Red Sox. After last night's game goes into extra innings, it gave Girardi the excuse he needed to use Hughes. The move ultimately takes Hughes out of this week's rotation, giving Ivan Nova one more chance to prove himself as a starter again this week.
Hughes showed nothing last night. He followed his best start of the season by giving up a confidence-breaking game winner in the rubber-game for first place. That 1/3 of an inning cost Hughes a shot at starting on Tuesday and possibly in the future.
Now Girardi has to decide what to with Hughes and Nova...again.
If Hughes allowed two hits and can't get three outs in relief, what does Girardi do now? The starting rotation and bullpen are both overstocked as it is and Hughes can't be feeling too secure. It appears to be a situation Hughes couldn't win. If he does well, he heads to the pen but that one out cost him a start.
This leads to the question of Rafael Soriano. After a disappointing and injury-plagued first half of a season in New York, is the $35 million man finally showing his true talent? Two perfect relief appearances in important games this weekend say 'I want a more prominent role.'
Since returning from the DL last week, the temperamental Soriano has retired all batters he has faced--including the 2-3-4 batters in the seventh last night.
The question surrounding Soriano is how long before the former closer mopes about his role on the team. Last year's 45-save pitcher for the Rays has been demoted from that esteemed spot to set-up man and now middle relief. After his fine performances this weekend, does Girardi move him up the pecking order to replace the All-Star Dave Robertson at times or even--this is blasphemy to Yankees fans--sometimes use him as an occasional closer? He would have fared better than Hughes in the tenth last night.
Soriano has a history of erratic behavior, beginning with his days in Tampa Bay, when he refused to shag flies or take batting practice on Sundays, leading up to his slipping away from the New York media, because he refused to answer questions about a bad outing in April.
How long until Soriano's well-known frustration boils over into wanting more? Girardi has to face the fact that Soriano could be a valuable weapon if the pitcher keeps his head.
Here's some extra credit questions for Girardi. Will CC Sabathia ever beat the Red Sox this season? The hottest pitcher in the American League--and the Yankees ace-- turns ice-cold against Boston. The big man is 0-and-4 vs. the Red Sox this season and it's no secret how he dominates the rest of the league, as his 16-2 record will attest.
Finally, where were all the fireworks between these two sworn enemies? Fans want Charlie Sheen-Chuck Lorre acrimony, not Alec Baldwin-John Krasinski cuteness.
This Yankees/Red Sox series had it's share of intensity-- especially in games one and three-- but something was missing. There was too much mutual admiration. Sure, the teams were only playing for first place in the beginning of August and it looks pretty much like both teams are headed to the playoffs, but where was the nastiness... the Pedro Martinez knocking down Don Zimmer hatred?
Oh, he was on the DL and his name is Alex Rodriguez. This rivalry needs A-Rod like Obama needs McCain or Osi needs the Giants. Every one's whipping boy is expected off the DL by August 15. The next meeting between the two teams is August 30 at Fenway Park.
Hope the Yankees have answered a few questions by then.
Saturday, August 6, 2011
Hey Kid! Curb Your Enthusiasm For The Yankees
Television curmudgeon Larry David and former TV bartender Woody Harrelson take in the Yankees/Red Sox game at Fenway Park. What do you get when you combine "Seinfeld" and "Cheers?"--a bored kid.
The little Yankees fan seated behind the two celebrities didn't seem to impressed to have the "Curb Your Enthusiasm" star and Boston's favorite dimwitted bartender from "Cheers" blocking his view.
I guess not everybody knows their names.
The Yankees come-from-behind victory extended their win streak to eight after defeating the Red Sox, 3-2, last night. It was the opening game of a three-game series and put the Bombers into sole possession of first place in the AL East and masters of their domain
Boone Logan picked up the win for the Yankees after coming in for Bartolo Colon and striking out Adrian Gonzalez, the best hitter in the American League, with the bases loaded in the fifth inning. It was only the second Yankees win in 10 games against Boston this season.
With two outs, Yankees manager Joe Girardi pulled Colon after his pitcher loaded the bases. It was a risk the manager felt he had to take and it paid off.
"You look at Gonzalez," said Girardi of the hard-hitting batter. "He has a lot of power and Bartolo was getting tired."
Yankee-killer Jon Lester (8-2 career vs. Yanks) then turned into Mayday Malone and got knocked out in the sixth after giving up three runs. Lester struck out seven, walked four and allowed five hits.
The move seemed to take the wind out of Boston's sails. Not that there is anything wrong with that.
Girardi used five pitchers from the bullpen, including Rafael Soriano who was asked to get big outs for the first time in three appearances since returning from the DL. He pitched a perfect seventh inning with one strike-out.
The Yankees haven't lead the division since July 6 or beaten Boston in Fenway since April 9. Girardi was philosophical about also getting the double-dip win against his rivals this season.
"Winning the game [was] more important than anything," said the manager. "There is a long way to go."
Yada, yada, yada.
The little Yankees fan seated behind the two celebrities didn't seem to impressed to have the "Curb Your Enthusiasm" star and Boston's favorite dimwitted bartender from "Cheers" blocking his view.
I guess not everybody knows their names.
The Yankees come-from-behind victory extended their win streak to eight after defeating the Red Sox, 3-2, last night. It was the opening game of a three-game series and put the Bombers into sole possession of first place in the AL East and masters of their domain
Boone Logan picked up the win for the Yankees after coming in for Bartolo Colon and striking out Adrian Gonzalez, the best hitter in the American League, with the bases loaded in the fifth inning. It was only the second Yankees win in 10 games against Boston this season.
With two outs, Yankees manager Joe Girardi pulled Colon after his pitcher loaded the bases. It was a risk the manager felt he had to take and it paid off.
"You look at Gonzalez," said Girardi of the hard-hitting batter. "He has a lot of power and Bartolo was getting tired."
Yankee-killer Jon Lester (8-2 career vs. Yanks) then turned into Mayday Malone and got knocked out in the sixth after giving up three runs. Lester struck out seven, walked four and allowed five hits.
The move seemed to take the wind out of Boston's sails. Not that there is anything wrong with that.
Girardi used five pitchers from the bullpen, including Rafael Soriano who was asked to get big outs for the first time in three appearances since returning from the DL. He pitched a perfect seventh inning with one strike-out.
The Yankees haven't lead the division since July 6 or beaten Boston in Fenway since April 9. Girardi was philosophical about also getting the double-dip win against his rivals this season.
"Winning the game [was] more important than anything," said the manager. "There is a long way to go."
Yada, yada, yada.
Friday, August 5, 2011
Phil Hughes Headed to Yankees Bullpen This Weekend
New York Yankees manager Joe Girardi said today that Phil Hughes will be used out of the bullpen, if necessary, in this weekend's series against the Boston Red Sox. Hughes, who is thick in the mix of the Yankees six-man starting rotation drama, will be available from the bullpen for the next three days as insurance, the manager told the YES Network.
According to the YES, Hughes is tentatively scheduled to start Tuesday against the Los Angeles Angels, but all that could change if he throws this weekend.
Meanwhile, Ivan Nova, who had a spectacular 10-strikeout performance against the Chicago White Sox last night, will be kept with the team and may start Thursday. The team is 13-5 in Nova's starts.
The six-man soap opera just keeps getting better and better every day.
One thing was made clear by Girardi; the the team's least effective starter, A.J. Burnett, will not be going to the bullpen.
In his last start on Tuesday, Burnett had a chance to pick up his first win since June 29 after the Yankees staked him to a 12 run lead, but the struggling hurler didn't last five innings. He is scheduled to pitch on Wednesday.
"We are not going to jump to conclusions due to one good start or one bad start," said Girardi.
Meanwhile, it's hard to figure out why the manager would make Hughes available from the bullpen during a mid-season series, other than that's where the pitcher started his Yankees career. The Yankees already have seven pitchers in the bullpen and Hughes threw a three-hit, six-inning gem in his last outing.
Girardi doesn't want anyone to start putting too much thought into which pitcher is the odd man out with these moves-- especially Hughes.
"I would love to get distance out of starters and not use him [this weekend]," said Girardi of Hughes. "But as I said these series get a little crazy at times and you've got to protect yourself."
It's not really the DaVinci Code, if you believe Girardi, it's about beating the Red Sox.
Nova is still hanging around on pins and needles about being called into Girardi's office.
"It's hard, especially in a moment like what if they call you into the office," said Nova. "I hope they don't call me today or the rest of the month because September is almost here."
If anyone thought last week's pitching performances by Hughes, Burnett and Nova against the White Sox cleared anything up, they were wrong.
Stay tuned for for more of the Yankees six-man drama for at least another week.
According to the YES, Hughes is tentatively scheduled to start Tuesday against the Los Angeles Angels, but all that could change if he throws this weekend.
Meanwhile, Ivan Nova, who had a spectacular 10-strikeout performance against the Chicago White Sox last night, will be kept with the team and may start Thursday. The team is 13-5 in Nova's starts.
The six-man soap opera just keeps getting better and better every day.
One thing was made clear by Girardi; the the team's least effective starter, A.J. Burnett, will not be going to the bullpen.
In his last start on Tuesday, Burnett had a chance to pick up his first win since June 29 after the Yankees staked him to a 12 run lead, but the struggling hurler didn't last five innings. He is scheduled to pitch on Wednesday.
"We are not going to jump to conclusions due to one good start or one bad start," said Girardi.
Meanwhile, it's hard to figure out why the manager would make Hughes available from the bullpen during a mid-season series, other than that's where the pitcher started his Yankees career. The Yankees already have seven pitchers in the bullpen and Hughes threw a three-hit, six-inning gem in his last outing.
Girardi doesn't want anyone to start putting too much thought into which pitcher is the odd man out with these moves-- especially Hughes.
"I would love to get distance out of starters and not use him [this weekend]," said Girardi of Hughes. "But as I said these series get a little crazy at times and you've got to protect yourself."
It's not really the DaVinci Code, if you believe Girardi, it's about beating the Red Sox.
Nova is still hanging around on pins and needles about being called into Girardi's office.
"It's hard, especially in a moment like what if they call you into the office," said Nova. "I hope they don't call me today or the rest of the month because September is almost here."
If anyone thought last week's pitching performances by Hughes, Burnett and Nova against the White Sox cleared anything up, they were wrong.
Stay tuned for for more of the Yankees six-man drama for at least another week.
Thursday, August 4, 2011
Could Ivan Nova Knock A.J. Burnett From Yankees Rotation?
If Ivan Nova is super tonight, does the young right-hander deserve a spot in the New York Yankees rotation? After A.J. Burnett's implosion last night, it might be a credible thought; although Yankees manager Joe Girardi confirmed Burnett would make his next scheduled start Wednesday against the Los Angeles Angels.
When last seen last night, Burnett was headed to the locker room, popping buttons all over the dugout as he ripped off his Yankees jersey.
Burnett's seven-run debacle against the Chicago White Sox at U.S. Cellular Field had to concern Girardi.
The Yankees pounded out 23 hits--five players had at least three apiece-- and handed the struggling Burnett a 12-run lead and he still couldn't get a win. It would have been his first W since June 29.
The Yankees were ahead, 13-1, and Burnett allowed five runs in the fourth-inning. In the fifth, Girardi made the decision to yank his inefficient starter with two men on the corners. He gave up seven earned runs in all.
Girardi did the exact thing with Phil Hughes a couple of weeks ago when the Oakland A's started to chip away at a big Yankee lead.
This four-game series against the White Sox was originally an audition for the No. 5 slot in the rotation between Hughes and Nova but now, with Burnett's flame-out, it could now be a rotation casting call.
Hughes passed his screen test with flying colors. His six-inning, three-hit, no runs, rain-shortened gem probably secured the slot for Hughes handily.
Tonight is Nova's turn to be seen. In what was essentially a go-see could possibly turn into something more important-- a spot on the roster.
Nova is making his second appearance after being sent down to Triple-A to make room on the roster for Hughes. He has won his past five decisions by sporting a 3.26 ERA, with 28 strikeouts and 12 walks in 38 2/3 innings. Nova has been the beneficiary of a robust Yankees offense. The team has averaged nine runs during those starts while Nova has given up six home-runs and 34 hits during that span. Amazingly, the 9-4 pitcher is fighting a demotion back to Triple-A.
Burnett is going in the opposite direction. His ERA has steadily climbed every month since April and his 4-0 start. He was 0-4 with a 7.80 ERA in July and is now 8-9 with a 4.56 ERA for the season.
A couple of things keep Burnett in the rotation . One, his huge contract ($16.5 mil-a year with two more to go) and two, the underlying hope (and capability) that the Sybil-like righty can throw a brilliant game. Still, Burnett is untradeable and will never see the bullpen for that price.
When Burnett is on, he is great but when he is alternately off, he is horrible. It's not uncommon for Burnett to strike out a side one inning then, in the next, throw a wild pitch, hit a batter and walk in a run. I'm not sure, but it wouldn't surprise me if he's done all three at the same time. Baseball's first Triple-Bobble.
Girardi has said all the right things regarding his overstocked starting rotation. He didn't pass judgement on Hughes until Tuesday night and it looks like the manager's support paid off. He's showing the same respect for Burnett.
"His day will be on Wednesday," said Girardi, putting the kibosh on any talk that Burnett's position is in jeopardy. "His numbers aren't that bad. We look at the whole year, and A.J.'s been decent for us. He's starting on Wednesday."
Girardi had that same 'look at the past' outlook with Hughes the past few weeks until Hughes came through. The Yankees are winning, even with the rotation distraction, and are only one game behind the division leading Boston Red Sox and have an eight game lead in the wild card race. So Girardi doesn't want to rock the boat.
As for last night's benching, Burnett was already off the mound when Girardi came out to relieve him. The embarrassed pitcher slapped the ball into his manager's hand and stormed off-- only two outs from a win. Girardi didn't take it personally but, didn't take chances either.
"I'm frustrated for him," said Girardi. "Because that's a night that he should be able to go out and get a win."
Burnett meanwhile, knew what was coming.
"I was a little upset, but then again, you got to look at how I'm pitching too," said Burnett. "I wasn't exactly doing anything out there. You've got to stop the bleeding somehow."
If Nova picks up his 10th win tonight, he may be the tourniquet the Yankees need.
When last seen last night, Burnett was headed to the locker room, popping buttons all over the dugout as he ripped off his Yankees jersey.
Burnett's seven-run debacle against the Chicago White Sox at U.S. Cellular Field had to concern Girardi.
The Yankees pounded out 23 hits--five players had at least three apiece-- and handed the struggling Burnett a 12-run lead and he still couldn't get a win. It would have been his first W since June 29.
The Yankees were ahead, 13-1, and Burnett allowed five runs in the fourth-inning. In the fifth, Girardi made the decision to yank his inefficient starter with two men on the corners. He gave up seven earned runs in all.
Girardi did the exact thing with Phil Hughes a couple of weeks ago when the Oakland A's started to chip away at a big Yankee lead.
This four-game series against the White Sox was originally an audition for the No. 5 slot in the rotation between Hughes and Nova but now, with Burnett's flame-out, it could now be a rotation casting call.
Hughes passed his screen test with flying colors. His six-inning, three-hit, no runs, rain-shortened gem probably secured the slot for Hughes handily.
Tonight is Nova's turn to be seen. In what was essentially a go-see could possibly turn into something more important-- a spot on the roster.
Nova is making his second appearance after being sent down to Triple-A to make room on the roster for Hughes. He has won his past five decisions by sporting a 3.26 ERA, with 28 strikeouts and 12 walks in 38 2/3 innings. Nova has been the beneficiary of a robust Yankees offense. The team has averaged nine runs during those starts while Nova has given up six home-runs and 34 hits during that span. Amazingly, the 9-4 pitcher is fighting a demotion back to Triple-A.
Burnett is going in the opposite direction. His ERA has steadily climbed every month since April and his 4-0 start. He was 0-4 with a 7.80 ERA in July and is now 8-9 with a 4.56 ERA for the season.
A couple of things keep Burnett in the rotation . One, his huge contract ($16.5 mil-a year with two more to go) and two, the underlying hope (and capability) that the Sybil-like righty can throw a brilliant game. Still, Burnett is untradeable and will never see the bullpen for that price.
When Burnett is on, he is great but when he is alternately off, he is horrible. It's not uncommon for Burnett to strike out a side one inning then, in the next, throw a wild pitch, hit a batter and walk in a run. I'm not sure, but it wouldn't surprise me if he's done all three at the same time. Baseball's first Triple-Bobble.
Girardi has said all the right things regarding his overstocked starting rotation. He didn't pass judgement on Hughes until Tuesday night and it looks like the manager's support paid off. He's showing the same respect for Burnett.
"His day will be on Wednesday," said Girardi, putting the kibosh on any talk that Burnett's position is in jeopardy. "His numbers aren't that bad. We look at the whole year, and A.J.'s been decent for us. He's starting on Wednesday."
Girardi had that same 'look at the past' outlook with Hughes the past few weeks until Hughes came through. The Yankees are winning, even with the rotation distraction, and are only one game behind the division leading Boston Red Sox and have an eight game lead in the wild card race. So Girardi doesn't want to rock the boat.
As for last night's benching, Burnett was already off the mound when Girardi came out to relieve him. The embarrassed pitcher slapped the ball into his manager's hand and stormed off-- only two outs from a win. Girardi didn't take it personally but, didn't take chances either.
"I'm frustrated for him," said Girardi. "Because that's a night that he should be able to go out and get a win."
Burnett meanwhile, knew what was coming.
"I was a little upset, but then again, you got to look at how I'm pitching too," said Burnett. "I wasn't exactly doing anything out there. You've got to stop the bleeding somehow."
If Nova picks up his 10th win tonight, he may be the tourniquet the Yankees need.
Tuesday, August 2, 2011
Yankees-White Sox Game Has Rain Delay Without Rain
Phil Hughes was ready to make his most important start of the season when officials at U.S. Cellular Field delayed the start of the game due to rain--only problem was, it wasn't raining. The New York Yankees pitcher was warming up to face the Chicago White Sox when the grounds crew started rolling out the tarps and it was announced that the start of the game would be evaluated 45 minutes later because radar showed rain. The sky was dark but the only moisture was the sweat on the players and fans in the sweltering humidity.
It was unusual, even by baseball standards, to delay a game before even one single raindrop fell or a pitch was thrown.
The game finally started at 7:55 CST, with nary a drop of moisture, and the skies looked a lot more threatening while the tarps were being rolled up, then when they were laid out earlier. The temperature dropped 9-degrees in that hour of time.
Broadcasters speculated that the delay was a way to keep a storm-break in that hour from affecting the pitchers once they started throwing. A long break in the action could stiffen their loose arms. Look what happened to CC Sabathia the other day--twice.
Hughes might even be most grateful for prolonging the start of tonight's game. The struggling righthander has a lot to lose with a bad outing and a real rain delay, after he threw, could hinder his motion and, more importantly, his comeback. He comes into the game with a 1-3 record and 8.24 ERA and is competing with Ivan Nova for the fifth spot in the starting rotation.
Nova (9-4, 4.01 ERA) is coming off a fine performance against the Baltimore Orioles (7 innings, 2 earned runs) in his first game back with the Yankees after coming off the DL. He faces the same White Sox team on Thursday. It's fair to say the pitcher who fares the worst in this series will be demoted--even though manager Joe Girardi won't say so.
"Let's [Hughes] just pitch well tonight," said Girardi. "And [I] have a tough decision later."
Tonight Hughes' fastball was hitting 94 mph with good control and the Yankees hitters staked him to a 6-0 lead. Then the skies opened up.
In the middle of the seventh inning, a second rain delay was called--with real rain this time. By then, Hughes went six strong innings and gave up three hits and no runs.
Ironically, if the first faux-rain delay wasn't called, the whole game would have been over.
Next time screw the radar and just stick your head out the window.
It was unusual, even by baseball standards, to delay a game before even one single raindrop fell or a pitch was thrown.
The game finally started at 7:55 CST, with nary a drop of moisture, and the skies looked a lot more threatening while the tarps were being rolled up, then when they were laid out earlier. The temperature dropped 9-degrees in that hour of time.
Broadcasters speculated that the delay was a way to keep a storm-break in that hour from affecting the pitchers once they started throwing. A long break in the action could stiffen their loose arms. Look what happened to CC Sabathia the other day--twice.
Hughes might even be most grateful for prolonging the start of tonight's game. The struggling righthander has a lot to lose with a bad outing and a real rain delay, after he threw, could hinder his motion and, more importantly, his comeback. He comes into the game with a 1-3 record and 8.24 ERA and is competing with Ivan Nova for the fifth spot in the starting rotation.
Nova (9-4, 4.01 ERA) is coming off a fine performance against the Baltimore Orioles (7 innings, 2 earned runs) in his first game back with the Yankees after coming off the DL. He faces the same White Sox team on Thursday. It's fair to say the pitcher who fares the worst in this series will be demoted--even though manager Joe Girardi won't say so.
"Let's [Hughes] just pitch well tonight," said Girardi. "And [I] have a tough decision later."
Tonight Hughes' fastball was hitting 94 mph with good control and the Yankees hitters staked him to a 6-0 lead. Then the skies opened up.
In the middle of the seventh inning, a second rain delay was called--with real rain this time. By then, Hughes went six strong innings and gave up three hits and no runs.
Ironically, if the first faux-rain delay wasn't called, the whole game would have been over.
Next time screw the radar and just stick your head out the window.