Thursday, April 29, 2010

Joe Torre has a horse in the Kentucky Derby.

Oh, and the Dodgers are going through the motions:

"The fallout prompted Colletti to call Kemp into a postgame meeting that also included Manager Joe Torre.

'I wanted to explain to him that I didn't single out Matt Kemp,' Colletti said. 'I was asked a question about it. It's not one guy's responsibility. It's a team effort. It's a team effort when it goes in the right direction. It's a team effort when it doesn't. It starts with me.'

Kemp declined to talk about the meeting, but Stewart said the reason Colletti offered for saying what he said wasn't a valid one.

...

Torre avoided taking sides.

...

Stewart was less restrained.

'A man panicking is what it sounds like to me,' he said of Colletti.

Stewart said Colletti should take more responsibility for the Dodgers' 8-13 start.

'He hired the manager,' Stewart said. 'He hired the coaching staff. The players on the team were selected by him and the coaching staff.' "

I caught Torre in a pregame interview.

Torre talked about Darryl Strawberry and Cecil Fielder. Torre said that the 1996 Yankees adapted their strategy based on the changing personnel on their team. This is an important managerial approach, Torre said.

Unclear if Torre could name five players on the 2010 Dodgers.

Second in the AL East, but first in our hearts.

Only a delusional whore like Mike Lupica would actually push the Yankees vs. Mets storyline:

"With the Yankees stuck in second, the Mets have gone from last place in the NL East to first place in the NL East as fast as Jose Reyes."

The Yankees are 13-7.

"Stuck" in second place is just 2.5 games behind the Rays ... only 2 games back on the loss side! ... with, ummm, let's see ... 142 games to play.

But maybe Lupica is upset because the Yankees are three games ahead of the Boston Big Papis.


Also, one other thing: The Yankees are the current World Series Champions.

The Mets are not the current World Series Champions.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Asleep at the wheel.

The players are ultimately responsible for the outcome.

But this disgraceful game-changing at-bat is Girardi's fault:

"Kendry Morales: Intentional ball, Ball, Hunter stole third, Ball, Morales homered to center, Hunter and Matsui scored."

At first, the Yankees were going to intentionally walk Morales, but then they changed their mind.

If you're going to throw an intentional ball, then you have to stick with the intentional walk. You can't just put your pitcher in a 1-0 hole.

The 3-0 pitch was grooved, despite the fact that the Yankee coaches were reminding Cervelli/Marte that Morales was going to swing.

Well, Cervelli/Marte didn't get the message.

That's Girardi's fault.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Wouldn't be steroids, would it?

"If David Ortiz is washed up, or just as old as some people seem to think he is, then the Red Sox are going to have to give up a bunch of prospects for Adrian Gonzalez sooner rather than later.

Because the Sox don't have enough stick."


Washed up ... or old ... or lacking steroids.


By the way, Lupica, Beltre has 0 HRs. and a .333 slugging percentage, while Lester has an ERA of 8.44.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Finally!

"But after becoming a World Series champion and offering little fodder for the gossip pages - he's reportedly dating Cameron Diaz after things ended with Kate Hudson - Rodriguez had the Yankee faithful wondering: What's taking so long?"

I know lots of Yankee fans and nobody was wondering.

But good to know he's reportedly dating Cameron Diaz.


"A-Rod put an end to the waiting Saturday in the Yankees' 7-3 victory over the Texas Rangers at the Stadium."


Yes, an end to the waiting. The world can resume its normal day-to-day activities.


"It came in his 42nd at-bat, ending the second-longest homerless drought of his career to begin a season, ..."

42 whole at-bats in the cold, in the rain, in April.


"... trailing only the 48 at-bat homerless streak he had at the start of the 1995 season with the Seattle Mariners."


Well, I give you credit for looking up an unimportant statistic.


"Yet for the 44,963 fans at the Stadium Saturday, A-Rod's first homer of the year seemed have the same effect as his first one last year: The focus was on the game, and the game alone, even as a graphic flashed on the big screen tracking Rodriguez's 'assault' on 600 home runs."


That's because nobody cared that he had gone 42 at-bats without hitting a HR.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Let's talk about Joe Torre.

"Kay then defended Girardi, his partner on 'The Joe Girardi Show' (Only on YES), saying he was a better manager than - yeah, you guessed it - Joe Torre.

'Joe Torre never managed at all,' Kay said. 'He managed men in the clubhouse, but he did nothing with X's and O's during a game.'

Kay went on to gush about what a great strategist Girardi, who managed the Yankees to a championship (he's still three rings shy of Torre) is. This is the same Girardi who, according to the other side of Kay's mouth, made those awful, confidence-shattering lineup changes Tuesday night.

So, there's a grand contradiction here."


It's not a grand contradiction to say that a great strategist made a few specific bad decisions. A great strategist is not necessarily a perfect strategist.

It's also not a contradiction to say that Girardi is a better strategist than Torre. Everyone knows that Torre couldn't be bothered with the lineups, roster, in-game strategies, bullpen management, etc.

Yet another baseball writer who doesn't like baseball.

"West should be applauded for speaking up. The game is way too slow. Speed it up, please.

We live in a fast-paced society. Everything has speeded up. E-mail, instant messaging, tweeting. But baseball has lagged behind, stayed in the horse and buggy era.

You would think all those finely tuned athletes, with millions in disposable income, would prefer a faster-paced game. But beating inside the chest of these guys with their fast toys is the heart of a traditionalist."


The games take longer to play, actually, so what you are saying is ignorant.

If the players were traditional, they'd play more quickly.


Talk about creating a problem where none exists.

The Yankees and Red Sox lead the league in attendance and ratings.

Taking their cue, I'd advise the rest of the league to slow down.

How long can the Daily News stick with Tim Smith?

Javier Vazquez has a bad start:

"You would have liked to see the 33-year-old Vazquez accomplish more in his first start."


Well, yeah.


"But you know Girardi is going to stick with him for as long as he can. How long did he stick with Chien-Ming Wang before pulling the plug last year? Wang had more of a body of work with the Yankees than Vazquez, so Girardi's Job-like patience was warranted in that case."

I think you meant to say Girardi's patience was not warranted. Since Wang's ERA was 199.00 and he was eventually cut from the team.


"How long do you stick with Vazquez? And do you start looking at Joba Chamberlain as a starter again? I know it's too early to start asking these questions, but Vazquez didn't inspire a lot of confidence Friday night."


How long will the Yankees stick with Vazquez as a starter and keep Joba in the bullpen?

The entire season, guaranteed.

Worst case scenario, let's say Vazquez gets hurt. The next starter would be Aceves, then Mitre, then a free agent, then somebody from the minors.

Joba will remain in the bullpen.

Monday, April 05, 2010

Chan Ho Park is vaunted by no one.

"Opening Day losses don't get more exasperating than this."

Sure they do, Mr. Imagination.

I'll bet the losing team in half the games today are more exasperated than the Yankees.

I'll bet at least one team loses when their closer blows the lead in the ninth inning. The most exasperating would be a walk-off balk. I don't think I've ever seen a walk-off balk.

Further, I'll bet the team that loses will leave two or three runners on third base with less than two outs and their manager will say they need to work on their situational hitting.


"When your ace can't hold a 5-1 lead, when your bullpen spits up a two-run lead quicker than you can say Chan Ho Park, your first thought is that 2009 suddenly seems like a long time ago."

Sabathia is the goat.


"Chan Ho Park?

He's the guy you want in the game holding a 7-5 lead in the seventh inning? Wasn't David Robertson supposed to be the next big thing in the Yankee bullpen? He got two outs in the sixth in relief of Sabathia, albeit after giving up a single that scored the tying run, and then he was gone."

That's why Sabathia is the goat.

Park is the 25th guy on the roster. Sabathia is a $160 million, 350-lb. ace.

Sabathia does his job and hands it to Robertson / Marte / Joba / Rivera with a 5-run lead in the 8th.

Chan Ho Park's job is to sweep up the peanut shells in the bullpen.


"Joba Chamberlain wasn't exactly the dominant reliever of old, either, allowing a vital insurance run in the eighth on a walk and two singles."

In 2007 -- three seasons ago -- Joba came up in the middle of the season and threw 24 incredible innings. One earned run.

He tanked a bit in the 2007 playoffs, but nobody seemed to hold it against him.

In 2008, Joba pitched successfully for 100 big-league innings, but he lost his fastball when he hurt his shoulder.

Since that shoulder injury, he has been usually good but not usually great.

If you're expecting an ERA of 0.38, you will be disappointed.

If that's what you mean by the "dominant reliever of old," it will never happen again.

I'm not sure what people are expecting from a setup guy. I just hope he's a little better than Kyle Farnsworth. Tom Gordon is probably setting the bar too high.

Sunday, April 04, 2010

Mike Lupica notices Mariano Rivera is great.

Lupica finally jumped on board about mid-season last year:

"The talk of this season will be a new contract for Jeter, who wants to play past 40 the way Alex Rodriguez does. Their hero, their role model, should be Rivera. He is the Yankee they want to be when they reach his age. There have been other Yankees, and other pitchers, who pitched at a high level at 40. Not like No. 42. Find another iconic New York athlete in any sport who has ever done it quite like this."


I think the talk of this season will mostly be baseball games the Yankees play. Jeter's inevitable contract, barring unforeseen events, will be negotiated after the season and that's the end of the discussion.


"The best of it last fall really was the way a whole new light was shined on the excellence of Rivera, the grace, the professionalism, the importance of the man, on his team, and in this time in sports, where we have been conditioned to be disappointed by the most famous names."

Saturday, April 03, 2010

Ian O'Connor decides who's good and who's bad.

ESPN's loss is the The Record's gain:

"These are the last words I will write for The Record, which makes them by far the toughest. I was a Record delivery boy in my youth in Englewood, wondering what it would be like to write for my hometown paper, but never actually thinking I’d get lucky enough to find out.

In my first column on Dec. 31, 2006, I wrote that my goal was to celebrate the good guys and chase the bad guys.' I hope I did more celebrating than chasing in the 39 months since."

Alex Rodriguez is bad, I would presume.

That's quite a mission for a sportswriter, though.

Instead of telling us who won the game and how, he basically wants to be God.