Archive for May, 2009

May
01

A RAB month to remember

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Already today, I’ve tackled the Yankees’ April. I’d like to take a quick few minutes before Mike’s chat to run down RAB’s month that was. For us, it was a record-setting month. We had just over 900,000 page views and have seen more comments in April than we ever anticipated. Besides our devotion to the site, the readers are what help make RAB strong, and we want to thank everyone for stopping by. The season is just getting started.

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We’re recapping April this morning on RAB. Earlier, I examined the offense. Let’s look at the team’s hurlers now.

As I mentioned a few hours ago, the Yanks’ pitching storylines have been dominated by Chien-Ming Wang. Returning from a foot injury, Wang looked downright terrible this spring. In three starts, spanning six innings, he gave up 23 earned runs and raised his career ERA by 0.29 runs. Ouch.

On the month, Yankee pitchers threw 188.1 innings. They have allowed 197 hits and 85 walks. The team WHIP of 1.50 is downright ugly, and the team ERA of 5.88 is even worse. Removing Wang from that equation drops the ERA to a still-ugly 4.94. In the early going, pitching just hasn’t been a strong suit for the Yanks.

Right now, we can point out fingers at the newcomers and the bullpen as the roots of the Yanks’ pitching woes. CC Sabathia, the highly-paid ace of the staff, hasn’t looked like himself. In 32.1 innings spanning five starts, he has a pedestrian 4.73 ERA. He has just 19 strike outs and has already walked 14. Last April, he went 1-4 with a 7.88 ERA but still managed a strike out an inning.

A.J. Burnett, the Yanks’ other high-paid ace, has been victimized by the home run. His strike out numbers — 7.11 per 9 IP — look great, but he has allowed six longballs 31.2 innings. His ERA stands at 5.40.

With the three front-end starters for the Yanks scuffling, the season’s pitching storylines have focused around a resurgent Andy Pettitte, an impressive Phil Hughes and an improving Joba Chamberlain. That trio has made nine starts, and they are 4-1 with a 2.72 ERA. That’s not exactly how I imagined the pitching to play out for the Yanks.

Of course, the starters are only half the tale. Half of the Yankee bullpen is currently sporting numbers uglier than CC Sabathia’s ERA. Jose Veras (5.73), Edwar Ramirez (6.48), Jonathan Albaladejo (8.18) and Damaso Marte (15.19) have left Joe Girardi with just a few reliable relievers. For the most part, those pitchers’ numbers are skewed by one or two bad appearances, but on any given night, the Yanks’ coaches are unsure which pitcher will show up. This inconsistency coupled with a Brian Bruney injury have thrust Mark Melancon and Phil Coke into the setup spot behind Mariano Rivera. It is a work in progress indeed.

So the Yankees have turned the page on April. It is just their second winning April since 2005, and it doesn’t even seem like that impressive of a month. The pitching has been scuffling, and the big bat hasn’t been producing. Yet, there they are at 12-10 and two games out of first. Despite the problems — the Boston sweep, the 22-4 loss — Yankee fans should feel confident knowing that once this team clicks, once the hitters are mashing and the pitchers dealing, it will be very tough indeed to beat this Yankee team.

Categories : Offense
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As the fallout from yesterday’s less-than-shocking A-Rod revelations continues to die before the end of the 24-hour cycle, Selena Roberts and her publishers are quickly jumping on the bandwagon. With A-Rod‘s rehab going better than expected, The Times reports that Roberts’ book will hit newstands on Monday, over a week before its original street date.

At this point, it’s tough to know what to make of this book. First, it was going to be printed in April around Opening Day. Then A-Rod got injured, and Roberts’ publishers announced the book would hit on May 13, two days before A-Rod was due to be activated. Now that Daily News reporters have spilled the beans — the rather unsubstantiated and hearsay-based beans — and now that A-Rod is set to start a rehab assignment soon, the publishers are again pushing the book forward to preempt A-Rod’s return from the DL and any more leaks. That sounds as sincere as A-Rod is.

Anyway, the A-Rod story never stops. After the jump, a round-up of the day’s news and notes.

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Categories : STEROIDS!
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With a fine mist blanketing Yankee Stadium, April ended for the Yankees last night with a lazy ground-out to Mariano Rivera. For the 12th time last month, the Yankees gathered behind the pitchers mound to congratulate themselves on a job well done.

While the Yankees find themselves over .500 in April for the first time since 2006, it was a rather uneven month. Still, without A-Rod and without Chien-Ming Wang, the Yankees are just two games back of the Blue Jays/Red Sox tandem and seem primed for a solid May.

For April, two numbers really leap out at me. On the month, the Bombers scored 128 runs without any help from A-Rod and with little production from the third base spot in their lineup. On the other side of that equation though is the pitching. The Yankees’ pitchers have given up 136 runs, more than 28 other teams in baseball. Only the Orioles have worse pitching.

We can, however, whittle that number away. Thanks to Chien-Ming Wang, the Yanks found themselves saddled with a few ugly games last month. They allowed 22 runs to the Indians and 15 to the Rays in back-to-back outings. Wang’s first start left the Yankees with just seven earned runs — and a loss. If we are to remove Wang’s games from the season, the Yankees are 12-7. In those 19 games, the Yanks have scored 114 runs while giving up 92. Much better.

Robinson Cano and Nick Swisher were the dueling players of the month, and it’s hard to pick one above the other. Cano has a hit in every game but one, and Swisher has been on base in all but one of his games. After a terrible April last year, Cano roared out of the gate with a .366/.400/.581 line. Swisher, after an unlucky 2008, is hitting .312/.430/.714. Nick leads the team with seven home runs, 19 RBIs and 21 runs scored.

Outside of the Robbie and Nick Show, Melky Cabrera deserves recognition for his April. After putting up a woeful 2008 campaign that saw him lose his starting job to Brett Gardner in August, Melky bore down over the winter and went to work. He had a great Spring Training, but the center field job was Gardner’s to lose. Lose it he did by hitting .220/.254/.271.

Melky, still young, had a better attitude than many benched players and made the most of his newfound opportunity. He’s hitting .327/.400/.571 in the early going, and Yankee fans are hoping that his near-repeat of April 2008 doesn’t turn into a rerun of last summer as well.

Otherwise, Derek Jeter, Johnny Damon, Jorge Posada and Hideki Matsui are doing what they do. The only really disappointing performer so far has been Mark Teixeira. He’s hitting just .200/.367/.371 with 3 home runs and only 10 RBI. Clearly, Teixeira, with his team-leading 17 walks, will benefit greatly from A-Rod, but right now, his numbers are not where they will be. Teixeira’s at-bats look good, but the ball just isn’t falling for Teixeira.

Considering the black hole of Cody Ransom and Brett Gardner, now removed from the bottom of the lineup, the Yankees offense has shown us why, come A-Rod’s return, this will be a feared team indeed. We’ll tackle the pitchers in a bit.

Categories : Offense
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For the third straight start, A.J. Burnett did not bring his A game. In the first he gutted through 6.1 innings against the Indians, allowing just three runs while throwing a paltry 54 percent of his pitches for strikes. The next was the infamous Saturday game against Boston about which we will not presently speak. At the beginning this looked more like Boston than Cleveland, but Burnett settled down after the 2nd and finished seven innings, putting the Yanks in a position to win 7-4. They couldn’t have done it without yet another big inning from the offense.

The game started in an inauspicious manner, with Chone Figgins tripling past the outstretched glove of Johnny Damon. It took just a groundout to plate him. Three batters later Burnett was out of the inning, but his troubles wouldn’t end there. Mike Napoli started it right back up in the second, homering to right on a low, outside pitch. It seemed like a typical New Stadium home run, a hard hit ball that just carried. A few batters later it looked to get worse, with Erik Aybar hitting a sac fly to deep right — while shattering his bat. It’s not like Aybar is a power hitter by any stretch. A broken bat that deep? Uh oh.

Thankfully, A.J. was for the most part able to keep things under control the rest of the way. The only damage was again caused by Chone Figgins, as he singled home Erik Aybar after the latter doubled to lead off the fifth. This was particularly disheartening, as Derek Jeter and Bobby Abreu had just given the Yankees the lead. Oh, Bobby. Your defense we do not miss.

Burnett finished the game having allowed four earned runs over seven innings. His strike percentage, 61 percent, was right in line with Saturday’s start, though obviously better than his previous one against Cleveland. In other words, he’s going to have to start throwing more strikes one way or another. However, of the 27 batters he faced 19 saw first-pitch strikes — though that includes Napoli and his damn home run. The Yanks will take this kind of start from A.J. from time to time, but we’d all clearly like to see more games like Tampa than like Cleveland.

The offense had another big inning last night, this time the eighth (or, should I say, teh eighth!!!11!1!!1!). The whole sequence unfolded pretty quickly, as the Yanks loaded the bases on essentially two pitches. Cano pulled the first pitch to right for a single, and Posada smacked the second pitch of his at bat into the gap for a ground rule double. Scioscia and company decided to intentionally walk Nick Swisher, and Melky Cabrera made them pay for it on the first pitch, singling to right and scoring Cano to take the lead for good. Not comfortable with a one-run lead, Ramiro Pena pulled the second pitch of his at bat to right for a two-run double. They could have gotten more, too, as Derek Jeter walked to re-load the bases with one out. But Johnny Damon looked like he wanted a grand slam bad and ended up popping out to short. Mark Teixeira then had a good at bat that ended with him getting fooled on a curve.

The game got frustrating at times, but the Yanks took advantage of their opportunities and came up with a big W. It’s still April (well, May by the time you read this), so checking the standings is kind of silly, but it’s nice to know that both Boston and Toronto lost. They’ll do it again tomorrow night, Andy Pettitte vs. Jered Weaver.

Categories : Game Stories
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