Tuesday, October 29, 2019
Young Yankee players were very productive when Joe Girardi was the manager of the Yankees.
“I went through that with the Marlins and went through that with the
Yankees,” Girardi added. “And I felt that I was able to get the most out
of those (young) players. We were one game from reaching the World
Series, so if there was a problem, it didn’t show up in the wins and
losses.”
Saturday, October 26, 2019
Cashman is smarter than you.
Everything Cashman is saying is right.
When the Astros or Nationals lose the World Series, will a reporter ask the GM why his team's season was a failure?
After three games in the Ultimate Test of the World Series, which starting pitcher has pitched like an ace?
I can state with no hesitation that Tanaka, Severino, and Paxton would have pitched better than any of them. I could be wrong about that, but this is not about right and wrong -- it's about confirmation bias.
When the Astros or Nationals lose the World Series, will a reporter ask the GM why his team's season was a failure?
After three games in the Ultimate Test of the World Series, which starting pitcher has pitched like an ace?
I can state with no hesitation that Tanaka, Severino, and Paxton would have pitched better than any of them. I could be wrong about that, but this is not about right and wrong -- it's about confirmation bias.
Friday, October 25, 2019
Clayton Kershaw is the World Series MVP.
How adorable. A bunch of cigar-chomping scouts getting per diems to tell the Washington coaches that Jose Altuve is good:
"They don’t have a single person in their front office from Harvard, Yale or M.I.T.
"They don’t have a single person in their front office from Harvard, Yale or M.I.T.
They believe in pouring money into their scouting and player department.
They
have 10 scouts and advisers who are 60 or older – including two who
were alive the last time the nation’s capital had a team in the World
Series.
They are the Washington Nationals. And they are putting on an old-school beatdown on the Houston Astros."
This is such a nonsense narrative by scared old people.
Like when someone says this song from 20 years ago takes me back to when life was simpler. Of course life was simpler 20 years ago. Not because the world was simple, but because you were a kid in your jammies watching cartoons on television.
Or when people say they were happy that they experienced their childhood before technology took over. If you were born in the past 1,500 years, you were born in a technologically advanced age.
"The Nationals are proving that it’s still cool to believe in
old-fashioned scouting, treat players like human beings instead of
assets and value experience as a positive instead of a negative."
The Brewers "should have" beat the Nationals. I guess Hader was not treated as a ... human being?
The Nationals fell behind the powerhouse Dodgers 2-0 in a five-game series.
Then the Dodgers took the lead into the 8th inning of Game Five.
If Bob Nightengale didn't pick the Nationals before Game Three of the NLDS, then this article is BS. Which it is.
"This is an organization that values old-school
scouting and experience perhaps more than any other. They have a staff
that includes six former scouting directors, four former managers, two
former GMs and every member of their pro scouting staff played
professional baseball.
The
Nationals blanketed the landscape with scouts this postseason. They had
two on every team in the playoffs, including five alone on the American
League Championship Series.
The Astros, who don’t have a traditional pro scout, never bothered to send a soul to advance the Nationals during the playoffs."
Give me a break.
The Astros haven't been out-pitched, out-hit, and out-fielded. They've been out-scouted?
"And a subtle reminder this is still a people’s game,
played by players, not assets, where clubhouse culture is critical to a
team’s success."
It's such a lazy insult to the other 31 teams.
Boone played Hicks on a hunch and it paid off.
Boone also played Encarnacion and, whether Boone viewed Encarnacion as a "human being" or an "asset," Encarnacion sure played like a liability.
It's such a lazy analysis in other ways, too.
One team always wins the World Series. That team always does something right. They're always the team of destiny. That's just 20-20 hindsight garbage.
Before the playoffs started, I heard a lot about the importance of getting the home field advantage. BS.
Before the WS started, I heard a lot about the momentum-killing week-long layoff. BS.
Before the WS started, I also heard a lot about the starting pitching showcase it was going to be. Until they started playing the games. Good Pitching Always Beats Good Hitting ... Except When it Doesn't.
You know what no one said before the WS started?
Thursday, October 17, 2019
Another moot point.
Seemingly, the Yankees are clinging to Stanton and presumably losing a Tauchman roster spot because they're worried about losing Stanton for the World Series.
The World Series?
Riiiiiight.
The World Series?
Riiiiiight.
Since the Astros scored zero runs in Game One ...
... I find this to be a moot point and an ineffective strategy.
Fate.
"The good news for the Washington Nationals is that they are in their first World Series."
Full stop.
Thanks for your most recent contribution to MLB.com's coverage of baseball.
"They beat the champions of the National League West and now they’ve swept the champs of the NL Central."
Yeah.
We know.
"They were down two games to one to the Dodgers and came back to win Game 4. They were down 3-1 in the late innings of Game 5 at Dodger Stadium, and then Anthony Rendon and Juan Soto hit back-to-back home runs against Clayton Kershaw, and Howie Kendrick began turning into Mr. October for the Nats."
Yeah.
We know.
Who do you think reads articles on MLB.com?
People who have no idea what is happening in MLB?
"Now here they are."
Waiting."
This article will surely help them whittle away their precious time.
"That’s the bad news for the Nationals, riding all this crazy momentum. They wait and keep waiting until the series between the Astros and Yankees is over. And while they wait, they hope that when they start playing again, at either Minute Maid Park or at Yankee Stadium, that they won’t have suffered from the Curse of the Tigers."
You've never heard of the Curse of the Tigers, have you?
Because it isn't a thing.
There is no bad news for the Nationals.
They are waiting to play in the World Series.
The following teams are waiting until April, and all of them would trade their No News for the Nationals' Bad News:
Full stop.
Thanks for your most recent contribution to MLB.com's coverage of baseball.
"They beat the champions of the National League West and now they’ve swept the champs of the NL Central."
Yeah.
We know.
"They were down two games to one to the Dodgers and came back to win Game 4. They were down 3-1 in the late innings of Game 5 at Dodger Stadium, and then Anthony Rendon and Juan Soto hit back-to-back home runs against Clayton Kershaw, and Howie Kendrick began turning into Mr. October for the Nats."
Yeah.
We know.
Who do you think reads articles on MLB.com?
People who have no idea what is happening in MLB?
"Now here they are."
Waiting."
This article will surely help them whittle away their precious time.
"That’s the bad news for the Nationals, riding all this crazy momentum. They wait and keep waiting until the series between the Astros and Yankees is over. And while they wait, they hope that when they start playing again, at either Minute Maid Park or at Yankee Stadium, that they won’t have suffered from the Curse of the Tigers."
You've never heard of the Curse of the Tigers, have you?
Because it isn't a thing.
There is no bad news for the Nationals.
They are waiting to play in the World Series.
The following teams are waiting until April, and all of them would trade their No News for the Nationals' Bad News:
- Dodgers
- A's
- Rays
- Indians
- Cardinals
- Braves
- Twins
- Red Sox
- Mets
- Cubs
- Brewers
- Diamondbacks
- Phillies
- Reds
- Rockies
- Angels
- Blue Jays
- Giants
- Rangers
- Pirates
- Mariners
- White Sox
- Padres
- Marlins
- Royals
- Orioles
- Tigers
Wednesday, October 16, 2019
Almost a cheap home run.
A heck of a lot of talk about a warning track fly ball.
The Yankees were not intimidated by Cole.
The Yankees got a lot of runners on base and in scoring position.
But the Yankees could not cash in.
Cole gutted out seven shutout innings and won fair and square.
"Almost home runs" are also known as "fly outs."
"Foul home runs" are also known as strikes.
"Almost strikes" are also known as balls.
"Almost wins" are also known as losses.
Oh, and bunting wasn't going to save the Yankees.
Gardner wasn't going to bunt in five runs in the first inning.
The Yankees were not intimidated by Cole.
The Yankees got a lot of runners on base and in scoring position.
But the Yankees could not cash in.
Cole gutted out seven shutout innings and won fair and square.
"Almost home runs" are also known as "fly outs."
"Foul home runs" are also known as strikes.
"Almost strikes" are also known as balls.
"Almost wins" are also known as losses.
Oh, and bunting wasn't going to save the Yankees.
Gardner wasn't going to bunt in five runs in the first inning.
Monday, October 14, 2019
The sportswriter hall of fame must have a very high bar.
"Supposed to" is my favorite phrase in the whole wide world.
It is a lazy, meaningless observation:
"The Astros, who went out and got Zack Greinke at the Trade Deadline, were supposed to have the edge with starting pitching over the Yankees, who didn’t do anything about pitching at the Deadline. Then Masahiro Tanaka was brilliant in Game 1 of the American League Championship Series. Greinke got lit up by the Yankees the way the Rays lit him up in Game 3 of the Astros-Rays Division Series."
In all fairness, 3 runs in 6 innings is not being "lit up."
"Then the Yankees gave the ball to James Paxton, who’d been their best starter the second half of the season, in Game 2"
Then what happened?
"Only Aaron Boone pulled Paxton in the third inning. Paxton had only given up one run to that point, but there were two runners on and Alex Bregman was coming to the plate. Paxton was gone."
Wow!
Since I watched the game, I already knew this.
But please continue ... the tension is building!
"By the time Game 2 was over, Boone would have done what the Yankees have done since the Deadline: Made a bet that the best bullpen on the planet could carry the Yankees to what would have been their biggest victory of the season so far, and a 2-0 series lead."
The Yankees relied on their bullpen before the trade deadline, too.
You have not yet told me anything that I didn't know by looking at the box score.
"And his relievers nearly made that bet pay off. Boone used eight of them from the third to the 11th at Minute Maid Park. They only gave the Astros two runs from the third until the bottom of the 11th. By then, Boone was out of relievers and pitching J.A. Happ, who’d been one of his starters."
I knew it! I thought the whole time that J.A. Happ was one of the Yankee starting pitchers. I was right!
Sabathia, too! 'Member when he came in to pitch? He had (?) also been one of Boone's starters ... and he still is one of Boone's starters.
You know what else is weird? Boone wasn't actually out of relievers. Even though you said "Boone was out of relievers."
He just chose two of his starters instead of his relievers. It's true!
Granted, the remaining relievers are not the "high leverage" relievers. Their names are Luis Cessa and Tyler Lyons.
They are relief pitchers on the Yankees playoff roster, yes they are.
"Carlos Correa took Happ out of Minute Maid, and the Astros had won, 3-2, and the ALCS was even at 1-1 going back to New York."
No. Way.
Is that really what happened?
Is he the guy who was shushing the crowed while he rounded the bases? Or is he the guy who was holding his hand up to his ear while he rounded the bases?
Lupica is always first with the breaking news.
"So far in this series each team has gotten a big October game from its ace, Tanaka and then Verlander. But the Astros, who beat the Yankees because of their starters two years ago, have two aces this season. The Yankees? They decided they had enough starting pitching in July, because of their bullpen. Now they get the chance to prove it in October. They got the bullpen game they wanted Sunday night. They just did everything except win it."
You know what, Lupica?
Go screw yourself.
"The Yankees should have gotten a starting pitcher" late night WFAN moron caller garbage.
Who was the pitcher the Yankees were going to get?
Stroman? Meh.
Scherzer? Ridiculous.
Syndergaard? Even more Meh and even more ridiculous.
Say Anibal Sanchez with 20-20 hindsight and I'll slap you.
We all know aces are rare and therefore valuable.
What would it have cost the Yankees? Torres and Frazier, at a minimum.
For a guy who can take on Verlander pitch by pitch?
Even if that pitchers exists ... Buehler? Strasburg? ... obviously not available, but the Yankees would maybe have to throw in Sanchez, Urshela, Kahnle, Montgomery, and Andujar.
Remember when the Yankees picked up Encarnacion?
They didn't "need" more home run power, right?
The opportunity presented itself because the price was right.
The Yankees didn't "decide" they had enough starting pitching ... the market didn't allow them to reasonably acquire more starting pitching.
If the Rays were willing to trade Blake Snell for Greg Bird, Cashman would have been all over it.
The "bullpen" strategy worked in Game Two. The problem is the offense got two runs when they needed three.
It is a lazy, meaningless observation:
"The Astros, who went out and got Zack Greinke at the Trade Deadline, were supposed to have the edge with starting pitching over the Yankees, who didn’t do anything about pitching at the Deadline. Then Masahiro Tanaka was brilliant in Game 1 of the American League Championship Series. Greinke got lit up by the Yankees the way the Rays lit him up in Game 3 of the Astros-Rays Division Series."
In all fairness, 3 runs in 6 innings is not being "lit up."
"Then the Yankees gave the ball to James Paxton, who’d been their best starter the second half of the season, in Game 2"
Then what happened?
"Only Aaron Boone pulled Paxton in the third inning. Paxton had only given up one run to that point, but there were two runners on and Alex Bregman was coming to the plate. Paxton was gone."
Wow!
Since I watched the game, I already knew this.
But please continue ... the tension is building!
"By the time Game 2 was over, Boone would have done what the Yankees have done since the Deadline: Made a bet that the best bullpen on the planet could carry the Yankees to what would have been their biggest victory of the season so far, and a 2-0 series lead."
The Yankees relied on their bullpen before the trade deadline, too.
You have not yet told me anything that I didn't know by looking at the box score.
"And his relievers nearly made that bet pay off. Boone used eight of them from the third to the 11th at Minute Maid Park. They only gave the Astros two runs from the third until the bottom of the 11th. By then, Boone was out of relievers and pitching J.A. Happ, who’d been one of his starters."
I knew it! I thought the whole time that J.A. Happ was one of the Yankee starting pitchers. I was right!
Sabathia, too! 'Member when he came in to pitch? He had (?) also been one of Boone's starters ... and he still is one of Boone's starters.
You know what else is weird? Boone wasn't actually out of relievers. Even though you said "Boone was out of relievers."
He just chose two of his starters instead of his relievers. It's true!
Granted, the remaining relievers are not the "high leverage" relievers. Their names are Luis Cessa and Tyler Lyons.
They are relief pitchers on the Yankees playoff roster, yes they are.
"Carlos Correa took Happ out of Minute Maid, and the Astros had won, 3-2, and the ALCS was even at 1-1 going back to New York."
No. Way.
Is that really what happened?
Is he the guy who was shushing the crowed while he rounded the bases? Or is he the guy who was holding his hand up to his ear while he rounded the bases?
Lupica is always first with the breaking news.
"So far in this series each team has gotten a big October game from its ace, Tanaka and then Verlander. But the Astros, who beat the Yankees because of their starters two years ago, have two aces this season. The Yankees? They decided they had enough starting pitching in July, because of their bullpen. Now they get the chance to prove it in October. They got the bullpen game they wanted Sunday night. They just did everything except win it."
You know what, Lupica?
Go screw yourself.
"The Yankees should have gotten a starting pitcher" late night WFAN moron caller garbage.
Who was the pitcher the Yankees were going to get?
Stroman? Meh.
Scherzer? Ridiculous.
Syndergaard? Even more Meh and even more ridiculous.
Say Anibal Sanchez with 20-20 hindsight and I'll slap you.
We all know aces are rare and therefore valuable.
What would it have cost the Yankees? Torres and Frazier, at a minimum.
For a guy who can take on Verlander pitch by pitch?
Even if that pitchers exists ... Buehler? Strasburg? ... obviously not available, but the Yankees would maybe have to throw in Sanchez, Urshela, Kahnle, Montgomery, and Andujar.
Remember when the Yankees picked up Encarnacion?
They didn't "need" more home run power, right?
The opportunity presented itself because the price was right.
The Yankees didn't "decide" they had enough starting pitching ... the market didn't allow them to reasonably acquire more starting pitching.
If the Rays were willing to trade Blake Snell for Greg Bird, Cashman would have been all over it.
The "bullpen" strategy worked in Game Two. The problem is the offense got two runs when they needed three.
Sunday, October 06, 2019
The most misunderstood stat.
Heard a caller on WFAN say that the Mets had 28 blown saves.
Which is true.
Though not explored deeply, the intimation is that the Mets lost A LOT of games they "should have" won ... "would have" won if their bullpen was better.
Which, of course, is also true.
If any team was better at any aspect of the game, then they'd win more games.
But the stat itself is misunderstood.
Do you know how many blown saves the Yankees had in 2019?
28.
Ottavino had 7 blown saves. Probably in the 6th inning. The Yankees probably came back to win some of those games.
A blown save isn't what you think it is.
It's not always a 9th inning meltdown.
Though there is a stat which measures that. I think it's called "meltdown."
Diaz had some memorable whoppers. So did every team's closer.
Seth Lugo ... the "best reliever in baseball" had a save percentage of 54.5%.
Zach Britton is a good pitcher who had a good year.
His presence in the Mets bullpen is not turning an 86-win team into a 115-win team.
Which is true.
Though not explored deeply, the intimation is that the Mets lost A LOT of games they "should have" won ... "would have" won if their bullpen was better.
Which, of course, is also true.
If any team was better at any aspect of the game, then they'd win more games.
But the stat itself is misunderstood.
Do you know how many blown saves the Yankees had in 2019?
28.
Ottavino had 7 blown saves. Probably in the 6th inning. The Yankees probably came back to win some of those games.
A blown save isn't what you think it is.
It's not always a 9th inning meltdown.
Though there is a stat which measures that. I think it's called "meltdown."
Diaz had some memorable whoppers. So did every team's closer.
Seth Lugo ... the "best reliever in baseball" had a save percentage of 54.5%.
Zach Britton is a good pitcher who had a good year.
His presence in the Mets bullpen is not turning an 86-win team into a 115-win team.
How weird is it that Gardner is batting third?
A weird idea is floating about that he is a clutch playoff performer.
I looked it up just to make sure I remembered correctly.
.204 playoffs BA in 137 AB.
.000 WS BA in 10 AB.
Yes, he has been on the team a long time. The team has not made the World Series a lot during that time.
I looked it up just to make sure I remembered correctly.
.204 playoffs BA in 137 AB.
.000 WS BA in 10 AB.
Yes, he has been on the team a long time. The team has not made the World Series a lot during that time.
The Yankees take a 2-0 lead in the ALDS and I've heard the following complaints from both supporters and detractors.
- The games took too long.
- The rather contradictory observation that too many fans vacated their seats.
- The bullpen usage was not optimal.
- The fans were too quiet.
- The rather contradictory observation that the fans rowdily shouted "uber" at an opposing pitcher.
It's a little clever in the sense that it requires a deep knowledge of a nondescript major league pitcher.
It's obnoxious in the sense that it's quite clear that 90 percent of the people participating in the chant have no idea why they're doing it.
But that is sometimes part of the fan experience. You collectively and loudly celebrate the misery of your opponents.
I've heard a lot worse than "uber," believe me.
One time, in Minnesota, I remember when the fans referred to visiting player Mike Carp as a fish. Because his last name sounds like a fish. Vicious.
I also remember a time at Yankee Stadium when ... I can't remember who it was precisely, but it may have been Shannon Stewart ... sounds plausible early in his career ... and the fans in the bleachers were relentless for three hours ... "you have a girl's name" ... and the guy finally snapped in the ninth inning, turned around and flipped the bird to everyone in the bleachers.
As expected, that settled the fans down. They apologized for their obnoxious behavior, took their seats, and promised to refrain from drinking alcohol in public settings going forward.
Friday, October 04, 2019
Showalter is not going to manage the Mets next season.
Players who should be the next Mets manager: Buck Showalter, Tony Womack, Willie Randolph, David Ortiz, Theo Epstein, Mookie Wilson, and Evonne Goolagong.
Players who should not be the next Mets manager: Alex Rodriguez, Jacoby Ellsbury, Giancarlo Stanton, Aaron Judge, and Serena Williams.
I would be surprised if Showalter manages anywhere next year, but I'm not the Baseball Insider.
I'd be shocked beyond belief if Showalter managed the Mets next year.
Showalter's record doesn't hold up too well under scrutiny.
Lupica knows that Brodie isn't going to give up his decision-making power to an old school manager.
Showalter isn't shy about giving interviews.
Lupica doesn't need to do to print this garbage just to stay in good graces with the quote factory.
Players who should not be the next Mets manager: Alex Rodriguez, Jacoby Ellsbury, Giancarlo Stanton, Aaron Judge, and Serena Williams.
I would be surprised if Showalter manages anywhere next year, but I'm not the Baseball Insider.
I'd be shocked beyond belief if Showalter managed the Mets next year.
Showalter's record doesn't hold up too well under scrutiny.
Lupica knows that Brodie isn't going to give up his decision-making power to an old school manager.
Showalter isn't shy about giving interviews.
Lupica doesn't need to do to print this garbage just to stay in good graces with the quote factory.
Wednesday, October 02, 2019
Good teammates.
One by one, players approached Grisham with encouragement after the loss.
"I
can take solace in whatever these guys say to me, especially a lot of
the older veteran guys," Grisham said. "I have a lot of faith in them
and trust what they say."
Tuesday, October 01, 2019
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