Thursday, July 31, 2008

We want a pitcher, not a bellyitcher.

In 1993, Rickey Henderson hit .215 in 44 games with Toronto. He hit .227 in the World Series. So please explain how he could have possibly been an integral part of the team's Championship:

"The following year, Gillick obtained Rickey Henderson at the Deadline. Henderson, expected to be a shoo-in for the Hall of Fame next year, was an integral part of the Blue Jays as they won a second consecutive World Series.

Henderson was on second base, distracting Philadelphia reliever Mitch Williams, when Joe Carter blasted his walkoff home run in the sixth game that ended the series."

Oh.

Bad at pitching, great at mathematics.

"Taking a 3-2 lead into the fifth against the Philadelphia Phillies, Redding gave up a big inning that staked the visiting Phillies to an 8-5 win.

'Without those five runs, we might win the game,' Redding said."

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Managers are biased observers.

"Odd, isn't it, that the manager who sees and speaks no evil whenever Chamberlain attempts to come as close as possible to splitting Kevin Youkilis' melon without actually doing so whenever he faces the Red Sox, made no secret of his disapproval of the Daniel Cabrera pitch that hit Alex Rodriguezbelow the left shoulder in the eighth inning of last night's 7 -6 loss to the Orioles?"

It's not odd at all.

Let's say Alex Rodriguez hits three homeruns today. That is good for Joe Girardi. But not if Aubrey Huff hits three homeruns.

Let's say the Yankees win today. This is good for Joe Girardi. But not if the Orioles win.

Joe Girardi should never disapprove of Joba Chamberlain and always disapprove of Daniel Cabrera.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Tell us more, Unkie Joey.

"Maybe so, but what a shame if he leaves this game known better for the way he treated writers than opposing pitchers.

'That would be sad,' says Dodgers Manager Joe Torre. 'Some guys are like that, though, and need the curtain to separate themselves from everyone to be competitive. I caught for Bob Gibson in an All-Star game, went out to the mound and he wouldn't talk to me.' "

I think Joe Torre thinks he's friends with Bob Gibson, but Bob Gibson doesn't realize he's friends with Joe Torre.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Making 4-6-3 an art form.

You can do it! You can catch Vlad!

Mr. Blameshifter is one classy guy.

I didn't find this link on my own. I was directed here from nomaas. This is truly amazing:

"One of baseball's more heavily-used relievers over the past three seasons, Proctor said he began feeling elbow discomfort in May. He initially played through the pain before being placed on the disabled list on June 25.

'The abuse through the year got to the point where it needed to be addressed,' Proctor said. 'Right now, the steps that we're taking is to avoid surgery.'

Joe Torre, who was Proctor's first major league manager when the two were with the New York Yankees and now is the Dodgers' manager, told MLB.com that Proctor hates to sit out.

'This happened in New York,' Torre said of Proctor insistence to pitch through the pain. 'He would never acknowledge anything's wrong. He always says he's all right. You love him for his heart and bellyful of guts, but he doesn't always make the right decision.' "

LOVES Billy Wagner.

Clemens, not so much. ARod, not so much. Joba, not so much.

"You don't have to like Billy Wagner, or the way he blows sky high sometimes, or everything he says, whether he is standing in front of his locker or talking on the radio.

And if you are a Mets fan, you can already be wondering about whether Frankie Rodriguez or somebody else could be the closer here before long.

But you still have to say that Wagner is one of the most interesting people to ever hold down the job of closer in New York."

Even more interesting than John Franco? Even more interesting than Steve Farr? I find it hard to believe that anybody could be more interesting than Steve Farr.

I wouldn't even know how to make that assessment.

"Interesting" is the least descriptive adjective one can use. It's lazy and meaningless.

Why on Earth is Billy Wagner interesting in any way?

Unbeknownst to me, is he, like, a baseball pitcher/Renaissance man? Does he play avant garde jazz in his spare time? Did he donate his entire salary to a noble cause and is therefore forced to live out of the back of his car? Is he working on a Unified Field Theory in his spare time?

These kinds of behavior may qualify as "interesting."

I can name a sports figure who's "interesting." Joe Juneau built his own airplane and moved his family to a remote location in Alaska to pursue his altruistic endeavors.

Did Billy Wagner build his own airplane? Model airplane? Does he like Dungeons and Dragons? Is he an expert on ancient Persian warfare?

Billy Wagner merely pitches baseballs once every few days for the Mets, and he does so rather predictably, I might add.


Define interesting. Think of some precise ways to define this term. Compare this list to Billy Wagner. I guarantee Billy Wagner is the opposite of interesting.

Only one person thinks Billy Wagner is interesting and that person happens to write sports opinions for the New York Daily News.


"The Yankee broadcasters kept saying that it made no 'sense' for Joba to put a fastball up in Kevin Youkilis' eyes the other night, and I'm wondering what sort of 'sense' it made when Joba put two over Youkilis' head last season."

Hey, did you notice the seven shutout innings in Fenway?

Joba's not doing too shabby, especially since Joba is one of the crackerjack Yankee prospects over-hyped by the lunatics in Tampa.


Friday, July 25, 2008

So what?

A theme develops:

"The A's can't hit and the Twins' bowels lock every time they enter Yankee Stadium, so the six wins have a 'So What?' feeling attached to them."

I just felt, like, you know ... bleh.

You know when you feel bleh?

When the Yankees swept the A's and Twins, I needed a hug.

The A's are good and the Twins are good.

Six wins in a row is six wins in a row.

Also, the Yankees are not going to sweep the Red Sox this weekend:

"You don't announce you are back in play by beating fading teams such as the A's and Twins. The best place for this flinty Yankee team to make that kind of announcement is Fenway, starting Friday night."

Take the 1998 Yankees, or the 1978 Yankees, or the 1961 Yankees, or the 1927 Yankees, or the 1975 Reds, or the 1984 Tigers, or the 2008 Red Sox.

Take any winning baseball team ever.

I don't even have to analyze the game-by-game results because I already know.

All of these teams dominated bad teams and played .500 against good teams. (How do you think bad teams become bad teams, anyway? Somebody is beating them often.)

It may not be romantic, but pennants are won in front of 11,000 at Kauffman Stadium.


The A's and Twins are hardly "fading teams." They are solid playoff contenders. At least they weren't "fading" until the Yankees swept them.

I mean, just look at the records. The records will tell you more than Mike Lupica ever can.


The Cardinals are suddenly "fading," too, I suppose. The Brewers should try to beat a good team once in a while.

The Mets are back in first place, but that's only because the Phillies are "fading." So, the rest of you may be impressed, but I say it isn't impressive.


The Yankees are "back in play" because they are. Three games back. Even if the Yankees get swept this weekend, then they're just six games back. That's "in play," even if Lupica thinks otherwise.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Football.

Only one football topic makes seems to make its way onto my baseball blog:

"If you had to choose, there's no doubt Peyton is still the better player. "

Right.

So what are you talking about, exactly?


"But since quarterbacks are ultimately judged by their Super Bowl rings, the score is 1-1."

If your brain is so infantile that you can only judge quarterbacks by their Super Bowl rings, you should consider drastic measures.

Maybe the Sunday sudoku.


'I think Eli did more to win the Super Bowl than his brother,' said one GM, referring to the entire playoff run. 'He did more for the Giants than Peyton did for the Colts given all the adversity that the Giants had to go through to get there. It was a cakewalk for the Colts. I don't think you could say enough about what Eli did.' "

It was a cakewalk for the Colts (against superior competition, I might add) largely because PEYTON MANNING IS SO GOOD.

Cakewalks are good.

Winning by a lot is good.

The adversity the Giants went through is largely because they have a quarterback who can't throw spirals.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

The sun is really bad in right field.

I saw Bobby Abreu lose that ball in the sun the other day.

We all know that the sun often shines in the eyes of the leftfielders at Yankee Stadium.

What we didn't know is that, on Sunday, the Earth suddenly flipped on its axis.

That explains how Bobby Abreu lost the ball in the sun in right field.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Abreu is a dog.

"Alex Rodriguez did his best Derek Jeter impersonation Sunday with a flip play to help the Yankees beat the Oakland A's.

Of course, Jeter's came in a playoff game while A-Rod helped seal an otherwise routine July triumph."

Of course.


What is this guy's idea of "routine"?

The past two games were two of the most tightly-contested, bizarre games you'll ever see back-to-back.

Facing the league leader in ERA, with a wild card playoff race in the balance, the Yankees score a mere two runs. The first on a contested sac fly and the second on a 320-foot homerun.

Pettitte pitches a masterpiece in 99-degree weather, allowing only one run. Rivera has a 100% save percentage and I was thinking maybe Girardi should stick with Pettitte. Then, $18M Bob Abreu almost blows the whole thing because he drops a ball.

The day before, the Yankees strand 21 runners, strike out 18 A's, and win on a walkoff HBP in the 12th inning.

In the ninth inning, Giambi walked. Pinch-runner Justin Christian tripped while trying to steal second base. With two outs and nobody on, Cano doubled. Betemit looped a game-tying single to LF on an 0-2 pitch.


If this was in the playoffs or if this was against the Red Sox, nobody would say it's "routine." They'd say it's the reason they love baseball in the first place.

Finding ways to win is a sign of good character. No, not really, but it's a funny thing to say.

Winning is always better than losing:

"But much as the Yankee manager would like to believe his team is finally finding its groove, he would be advised not to use this particular series as a true measure of his team's abilities."

Okay. After 98 games, the team is 53-45, 4 1/2 games out of first, 3 games out in the wild card.


"If anything, Girardi ought to be concerned that his troops had to eke out a win as they did against a pitcher, Justin Duchscherer, who was still battling leftover ravages of the flu amid the 92-degree heat, and a lineup in which four of the last five hitters had batting averages of under .224."

No mention of Duchscherer's 1.82 ERA.

No mention of the fact that Oakland had a better record than the Yankees before the series started and will likely be contending for a playoff spot.


"For the third straight game, the Yankees got a strong starting pitching effort - this one from Andy Pettitte, who gutted it out for eight innings and 114 pitches, yielding just four hits, striking out nine and walking none in the steamy conditions."

Right.


"But again, look at the lineup he was facing!"


Look at the lineup he was facing! OMG!


"And it figures that the rest of this week - three games at the Stadium against the surging Minnesota Twins and then the weekend series against the Red Sox at Fenway - will give Cashman and Girardi a much better idea as to where this Yankee team is at than a nevertheless welcome sweep of the Triple-A-laden A's."


The A's are good.

You are dumb.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

LOVES Jonathan Papelbon.

Mike Lupica has concluded that a Red Sox player will never be the darling of Yankee fans:

"Jonathan Papelbon may need a filter on his mouth sometimes, and will never be the darling of Yankee fans, but if there is one thing the young man is not, it is overrated.

No matter how much Yankee Stadium sang that to him the other night."

Well, gee. I'm guessing the fans at the All Star Game weren't analyzing Papelbon's save percentage or WHIP.


"I loved the All-Star Game the other night, from the Hall of Famers on the field, to George Steinbrenner on the field, to Michael Young's sac fly.

I ended up sitting in the stands for the last half of it, stayed to the end, and had as much fun watching it play out as I've had watching any All-Star Game in any sport."


Mike Lupica actually slummed it by sitting in the stands at a sporting event.


Taken together, these two tidbits are quite intriguing.

When Papelbon came in to pitch, the Yankee fans were chanting "O-Ver-Ra-Ted!" Lupica was disagreeing.


"O-Ver-Ra-Ted!"

"Shut up, you guys!"

"O-Ver-Ra-Ted!"

"Shut up, everybody! You don't know what you're talking about! Papelbon is awesome!"

"O-Ver-Ra-Ted!"

"Don't listen to them, Paps! We love you!"


Somebody should have poured beer on his head.

Friday, July 18, 2008

I know something you don't know.

David Wright is batting just .246 with RISP.

See, RISP BA is not necessarily a stupid thing to look at. It's just stupid when one player and one player only gets scrutinized.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Monday, July 14, 2008

If you pay $650 to watch the Home Run Derby, you are either very wealthy or very dopey.

Watching Alex Rodriguez hit b.p. fastballs would totally make it worth it.


If you care to read a sampling, Ken Rosenthal, Jayson Stark, and John Donovan all make very lame arguments that ARod is obligated to participate in the HR Derby.


The whole time explaining how the fans don't like ARod, anyway.



Mark Kriegel has the nerve to call another grown man a "sheep." Because Mark Kreigel has achieved self-actualization. The key to salvation, apparently, is lots of one-sentence paragraphs. It's also stylistically edgy. Because Mark Kriegel wouldn't want to be a sheep who follows the Good Writing Herd.



You know who should participate in the Home Run Derby? Jeter. The King of New York.

Put a fielder at second base and throw high fastballs that tail across the outside corner.

Call it the 4-6-3 Derby.

The only thing I can think of right now is "GIDP."

A baseball columnist writes an article that praises Yankee shortstop Derek Jeter.

While doing so, the columnist contrasts Derek Jeter to Yankee third baseman Alex Rodriguez:

"Teammate Alex Rodriguez may have been the leading vote-getter for this All-Star Game. He may be on track to be the sport's all-time home run leader and arguably is the game's best player.

And Jeter, who turned 34 last month, is enduring arguably [the] most disappointing season of his career, both statistically and with the Yankees in danger of missing the playoffs for the first time in his career.

But New York is still Jeter's town, perhaps more than any other current athlete."

Wheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!!!!!!!!!!!!

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Mike Lupica is one weird dude.

If I could quickly run an archive of Lupica articles since 1996, I could probably find 50 - 100 articles that proclaim the pending demise of Mariano Rivera's career. Stuff like Rivera is still haunted by the 2001 World Series and Rivera can't beat the Red Sox.

If I went back about 18 months, I could easily find a dozen articles proclaiming Papelbon as the Cy Young winner, MVP, and the main reason the Red Sox were superior to the Yankees.

So now, out of nowhere, MOTO Lupica decides to heap praise upon Mariano Rivera.

This is the equivalent of a 2008 Robert Christgau article which gives an A+ to "Revolver."

Oh, really? So you're a rock critic who's heard of "Revolver," have you? The one by The Beatles?:

"But there will be others who say that the best player of them all was the great Henry Aaron or Willie Mays and maybe someday - if he ends up getting enough rest to hit 800 home runs - some will say that Alex Rodriguez, Mr. Fun, was the best ballplayer of them all."

I don't understand the "Mr. Fun" comment. I have fun watching ARod play. Don't you?

I also don't understand the comment about "enough rest." Has ARod been slacking or complaining about too much playing time? Or is that a crude and stupid reference to bedroom exploits?

Besides, aren't you the ignorant sports columnist who said ARod was gonna move to first base or maybe centerfield?


"There will always be the debate about starting pitchers, all the way back to the real Cy Young."

Actually, my pick is the imaginary Cy Young.


"But there is no debate, none, about Rivera, the best closer in history, the best money pitcher in history, a power relief pitcher and a power closer who has lasted longer than any power pitcher in his job ever has, in the history of baseball."

The only debate is between the intelligent, pro-Mariano fans and ignorant, anti-Mariano sportswriters, such as yourself.


I'm also not sure why Lupica distinguishes between "power" reliever and, say, a changeup pitcher like Hoffman or a slider pitcher like John Franco. OF COURSE, Rivera is far superior to Hoffman, Franco, Lee Smith, Jesse Orosco, etc. But Rivera has not lasted longer.


"In this Yankee Stadium, in the rebuilt Stadium and not the one Ruth built, the man running toward the pitching mound is the greatest Yankee of them all."


I'm perplexed.

I thought I was Rivera's biggest fan. Rivera is the clear MVP of the 2008 Yankees (largely due to ARod's trip to the DL), Rivera is obviously the greatest closer of all time, Rivera is probably the greatest playoff performer of all time in any sport, and, as far as I'm concerned, Rivera singlehandedly put Torre in the HOF.

But Rivera is not better than ARod and Rivera's not better than Babe Ruth. Not really Rivera's fault. Mr. Fun is a ss/3b who's going to hit 1,000 HRs and Ruth is, well, Ruth is the greatest ballplayer of all time.

Is Lupica really saying that Rivera is better than Babe Ruth?

A closer is better than Babe Ruth?

Is Lupica's brain simply unable to process subtleties? A year ago, Rivera was an overpaid albatross. Now, Rivera is the greatest ballplayer who ever played.

Grow up, man. You don't have to end every adjective with "est."

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Eight in a row.

"WILLIE Randolph was barely over Denver on his long flight to the rest of his life when Jerry Manuel announced that for Mets relievers, their long guessing game was over.

No more being used at the manager's whim. No more sixth inning one night, eighth inning the next. Hopefully, no more getting booed out of Shea for these creatures of habit, whom had fallen into the increasingly uncomfortable habit of too-often getting creamed.

Now the Mets, 2-1 winners of their seventh consecutive game last night, are on a roll, so it's gotta be because of the defined roles. As the zeroes pile up in the seventh and eighth innings, isn't it time to pile on Willie?"

Yes, it is time.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

As if I didn't know.

Team W L GB
Arizona 45 46 --
Los Angeles 45 46 --


The Dodgers will win 77 games and make the playoffs and win the World Series.

Because Torre is a genius.

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

No wonder you went to Wimbledon.

It was better when you ignored NY baseball:

"And they can make their run, hang in there with the Red Sox and Rays, if Alex Rodriguez finally starts carrying the team the way he did at the start of last season and the way he is supposed to."

When ARod hit 14 HRs in 18 games last season, it was a record. You never saw it before and you won't see it again. Because, despite being highly-paid athletes, baseball players are bound by physical laws of the Universe.


"When a team isn't scoring enough, isn't getting runners home, that is when the biggest run producer in baseball and the guy being paid the most to have the biggest stick (on the field) is supposed to be at his best, and hitting .253 with runners in scoring position shouldn't be his best."

In 2008, despite a three-week injury, ARod is the best everyday player on this team by such a wide margin, I can't even figure out who's in second place.

Giambi, I suppose.


Besides, I just told you that you are not allowed to bring up RISP BA. Because you just wrote an article praising Jose Reyes, and Reyes is hitting .235 with RISP.

Or is Jose Reyes not "supposed to" hit with RISP?

Didn't you ask "Mets fans" about Reyes's season so far and they were upset about that one time he grounded out?


"People will put up with almost anything from their sports stars, even the kind of low-rent, high-profile, gag-me publicity A-Rod is getting these days, as long as they produce."

I absolutely agree that the Daily News, and Mike Lupica in particular, are low-rent, high-profile, gag-me publicity sluts.


"But ask Yankee fans about A-Rod's season so far, and what they want to talk about is moments like the one in Friday's game, when he had the chance to bring his team back and grounded into a force play against Manny Delcarmen with the bases loaded."


The ground out against the Red Sox. In a game where ARod had two hits and two RBIs. Lupica is a parody of himself.

Jeter and Abreu can't even get on base. RISP BA doesn't mean quite as much when the Rs are never ISP in the first place.

Lupica, we know you never asked Yankee fans anything. Yankee fans are not talking about the ground out against the Red Sox. Yankee fans are not complaining about ARod. Yankee fans are saying keep ARod, Joba, and Mariano and trade the rest of the bums.

Sunday, July 06, 2008

This is just about baseball and the way it's being played.

"This isn't about who is the most famous shortstop in town, or the one with the most rings, or the one who is the captain of the New York Yankees, or the one who makes almost as much money as any player in big-league history. This isn't about class or resume.

This is just about the baseball season being played and the way it is being played, as the All-Star break comes up fast, by the two shortstops in town, only one of whom ever catches a real beating."

It's quite amazing that Lupica lives in a world where nobody criticizes Jeter.

I know lots of Yankee fans and every single one of them has been criticizing Jeter lately.

I mean, Lupica devotes an entire article to Jeter-vs.-Reyes and doesn't even mention that Jeter leads the World in GIDP.

Everyone knows that Reyes is having a better year than Jeter, though Lupica conveniently ignores RISP BA when it suits his position. Which is not really a big deal, except for the fact that he's going to bring it up the next time he claims that Joe Crede is better than ARod.

The criticism of Reyes is justified. He seemingly doesn't make the most of his talents. He acts very immaturely, he gets picked off second base at inopportune times, he often seems disinterested. Fans don't like that. Jeter can hit .212 and it's safe to say he'd never get picked off second base with the game on the line.

I'm flabbergasted by Lupica's sudden claim that this is just about the baseball season and the way it is being played. In an article where he mentions ARod's divorce not once, not twice, but three times.

Can you imagine a clown like Page Six Lupica claiming that the press is treating players unfairly by directing focus away from the players' on-field contributions?

Saturday, July 05, 2008

Everyone laugh at the guy who cares about the All Star Game.

"Read it and weep: more Red Soxers than Skanks will start All Star game"

Did you says "Skanks"?

That's crazy.

You're a nut.

Also, since this is in a New York newspaper, you're dangerous. You're kind of like Marlon Brando in "The Wild One."


"Bad news, Bronx boo-birds: the diamond will be filled with red B's, and not white interlocking NY's, when the American League all stars take the field for the final All Star Game at Yankee Stadium."

Great news, you mean.

I only wish every Yankee had three days off.


"Will the Bleacher Creatures do a roll-call and conveniently skip over Man-Ram, Peds and Youkie? Probably."

Okay, first thing, the Bleacher Creatures will not have tickets to the All Star Game.

Secondly, don't refer to grown men as "Man-Ram," "Peds," or "Youkie." You sound like a six-year-old girl at a tea party talking to her stuffed animals.

How am I going to end this article?

Screw it. I know what I'm gonna do. I'm going with a weird metaphor. I'm George A. King III, damn it, and the English language is the medium through which I sculpt masterpieces. I'm tired of a boring game recap. I'm going to Rock Your World right about now:

"At 45-42, the Yankees are close to being measured for pinstriped coffins before the All-Star Game lands in their yard a week from Tuesday. Should the losses continue to arrive at the current rate, the glow of hosting the Midsummer Classic will be reduced to a flicker in the wind."

I don't even understand what that means, exactly, but I think I might cry.

We are all merely flickers in the wind, man. Deep.

Once I rose above the noise and confusion
Just to get a glimpse beyond this illusion
And if I claim to be a wise man
It surely means that I don't know.


Even if there was a glow associated with hosting the All Star Game, don't think the metaphor worked out too well, because a glow is probably less intense than a flicker. The progression would probably be spark, flicker in a vacuum, flicker in the wind, glow, candle, fire, inferno, ragin' full on.

Friday, July 04, 2008

Next day's pitcher.

"The Yankees have held two team meetings over the last 10 days after bad losses. This one was loud, players said. Joe Girardi is never profane and wasn’t this time. But he and his coaches were forceful.

There’s a problem with meetings, however. What happens if you lose the next day?"

Girardi at least shows some guts for doing this the day before his team faces Josh Beckett. Beckett vs. Rasner is practically a guaranteed Red Sox win, aside from the standard disclaimers about how anything can happen.


"The Yankees played like they had a cab to catch. Or Madonna’s limo."

Madonna's the problem.

ARod's the problem.

Madonna's relationship with ARod is the problem.

Listen, if having sex with Madonna helps the players slug .600, then maybe it's time for a gangbang.

That wasn't a big game.

You know how you know yesterday's game wasn't a big game?

Because Andy Pettitte pitches well in big games.


Astonishingly, "sports" columnist Steve Politi once again completely misses the point. Politi actually is angry about the postgame interviews or lack thereof.

Pettitte can apologize all he wants to for a game like that. Does it change the performance on the field? Does it change a loss into a win?

It's not Pettitte's fault. It can not be Pettitte's fault. Pettitte is the most stand-up liar/cheater in Yankee history.


Now, ARod was 0-for-4 and didn't do much to help his team last night. But if ARod managed a sac fly in the first inning, then the Yankees lose 7-1.

Jeter apologized and Pettitte apologized, so it's not their fault.

It's ARod's fault.

It's Madonna's fault.

It's Lenny Kravitz's fault.

Thursday, July 03, 2008

The Guy.

"Need more evidence that the dollar isn't going as far as it used to?"

No.

But starting the article with a question really drew me in.

It's about as hackneyed as those movie commercials where the announcer asks a question and the peformer in the movie seemingly answers the announcer's question.


"Cool Standings says the Yanks have a 19.6 percent chance to make the playoffs. I think that's optimistic."

I would agree.

But it's hard to really whine about it too much when the Rays finish above .500 for the first time ever and your team misses the playoffs for the first time in over a decade.


"And remember, I'm the guy who said last spring and summer that the hand-wringing over the Yankees was overwrought and that they had a much better chance to make the playoffs then anyone was forecasting (including Cool Standings)."

I was just saying to a friend of mine, "Do you remember Michael Salfino?"

My friend says, "Michael who?"

I says, "You know: The guy."

He says, "The guy who said last spring and summer that the hand-wringing over the Yankees was overwrought and that they had a much better chance to make the playoffs than anyone was forecasting?"

I says, "Yup. That guy."

Lupica Jr. Tries to Sell a Book

Every now and then, when Giambi has a great game, I am reminded of Buster Olney who claimed that Giambi had the worst contract in baseball history. Olney may have even claimed that it was the worst contract in sports history. I don't recall precisely, but it was a dumb thing to say and Olney has been proven wrong.


Now, Olney wrote a book about the '96 - '00 Yankee Dynasty and, unfortunately, he was proven correct in this case. 2001 really was the end of the Yankee Dynasty, though they came close a couple of times.

In 2008, Olney is actually still talking abut the 2001 World Series:

"In Game 4 of the 2001 World Series, Tino Martinez accomplished something no player had done in a World Series game in 72 years -- a game-tying, ninth-inning two-run homer. The next afternoon, I loitered outside the Yankees' clubhouse at Yankee Stadium, and Scott Brosius turned the corner, with a grin that seemingly extended from one side of the Bronx to the other. Even if he hadn't said a word, you would've known the source of his smile: He was still overwhelmed by what he had seen the night before."

This is an article with a dateline of July 2, 2008.

Basically, Olney actually dissected -- I'm not making this up -- two recent losses by the Yankees to the Rangers and contrasted them to the back-to-back comeback wins vs. the Diamondbacks in the 2001 World Series.

His conclusion is that the current 2008 Yankees don't have the aura and mystique of the dynastic Yankees.


"This week, HarperCollins re-released 'The Last Night of the Yankee Dynasty,' with a 50-page addendum, so that team is at the front of my brain these days. And the differences between the Martinez-Paul O'Neill years and the current Yankees are apparent."

Wouldn't you know it? Buster Olney wrote "The Last Night of the Yankee Dynasty." What a happy coincidence that columnist Buster Olney has an opportunity to advertise a book by author Buster Olney.


"In the dynasty years, they would have taken the field with an enormous mental advantage: They would have been convinced they would win, and even if they had lost, they would have been convinced that the matter of success or failure was something firmly within their control."

The.

Diamondbacks.

Won.

The.

World.

Series.


I mean, I get the observation: Good teams are confident and confident teams are good.

You just realized this now, seven years later, and it was these two games vs. the Rangers that convinced you?

Seems more likely that you're finding any excuse to shill your book.


"The Yankees of 2008 are really no different than the Rangers or the Athletics or the Brewers or many other teams in the majors; they're just another team of talent trying to find a way to win more games."

Of course.


"There is no edge, no more mystique and aura, to borrow a phrase."

That's not why they won in the first place. Their #5 starter was Orlando Hernandez. That is why they won.

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Joe Buck doesn't like baseball.

I was directed to this link from another blog. Awful Announcing, I believe.


See, I don't think the fans complain too much about the length of the games or the length of the schedule. (Yes, I know, if they complained, then they wouldn't be fans in the first place.)

But think of Lupica who can't get jazzed unless he sees four HRs in a game and it has to be against the Red Sox. Think of how often Sterling and Waldman complain about the late-night travel. Think of all the umpires, coaches, managers, and GMs who want to speed up the games.

To them, it's a joyless job.

It's a baker trying to get excited about another loaf of bread.

It shows in their work.

It's fine if you're not a baseball fan. Really, it is. There's no particular pride in being a fan of anything, nor is there an obligation.

Joe Buck should be true to himself and do us all a favor: Find another job.

Love this guy.

This is, like, a week after he says he doesn't go on about subjects he knows nothing about:

"We all know they’re better than that. I don’t know. Maybe a little less outside distractions and a little more concentrating and they’ll start hitting better. I thought they would go on a consistent tear, and it hasn’t happened yet.”

Girardi's explanation was dumbfounding.

One sports journalist watches a baseball game and questions a managerial decision:

"The Yankees had a runner on first base with no outs in the bottom of the ninth and were down 3-2 tonight.

Derek Jeter was on the bench. But Melky Cabrera stayed in the game and grounded into a double play. This would be the same Melky Cabrera who was 0 for his last 18 when he stepped to the plate. Further, he didn’t try to bunt.

Am I missing something? The Yankees bunt with leads but not when they trail by a run in the ninth inning at home?"

I briefly listened to Girardi claim that the Yankee lefties (Damon, Abreu) had trouble with the Texas pitcher. Girardi actually said that he was worried about the intentional walk to Jeter (who would have pinch-hit for Gardner).

Okay:

1) If Gardner is so bad, don't bat him second.

2) If you can't trust Abreu with two on in the ninth inning, for cryin' out loud, don't bat him third. For the second season in a row, I can not figure out why Abreu bats third on this team.

3) Melky is very bad.

4) The Rangers never had to intentionally walk Jeter because Jeter never batted.

The thing is, I think the Yankees would have lost anyway. Melky bunts, Damon grounds out, Jeter grounds out. But the managerial decision was totally awful and now the Yankees are 7.5 games behind Tampa.


If you want to read about Madonna the singer, you can read gossip columnist Mike Lupica.

I'd like to meet Lupica randomly in a bar sometime. I'd give him $100 on the spot if he could tell me what team Ian Kinsler plays for. I know you've got the lowdown on the final 12 contestants on "American Idol," but have you ever heard of the arguable first-half MVP of the American League?

A baseball columnist who thinks Jimmie Foxx is spelled "Jimmy Foxx."

A baseball columnist who doesn't know the difference between Jimmie Foxx and Jamie Foxx.

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Jeter on the bench, available for pinch hitting.

Staggering decision by Girardi.


Look at Melky's splits.

May: .234, 1 hr.

June: .206, 1 hr.


This guy hit a whoop-de-doo 5 homeruns in April and Paul O'Neill declared that Melky would hit .300 with 25 homeruns this year.

Melky has 22 homeruns in 1,300 career at-bats to go along with a so-so .269 batting average.

The Bernie Williams Dream is turning into the Dave Collins Nightmare.

Another Freudian slip.

"Phils option scuffling Myers to Triple-A."

"Scuffling" Myers. Read the news, people.