Archive for October, 2009

Brett Gardner should stick to running.

Three more, Mo.

Categories : Game Threads, Playoffs
Comments (276)

And that’s why you don’t bunt.

Also, ML umpires are awful.

Categories : Game Threads, Playoffs
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Categories : Game Threads, Playoffs
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Third time through the order coming up…

Categories : Game Threads, Playoffs
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Whenever the Yankees feel like showing up…

Categories : Game Threads, Playoffs
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Woohoo Hairston. Can’t wait for Melky and Molina to lead off next inning.

Categories : Game Threads, Playoffs
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Thanks to the amazing Cliff Lee, the Yankees already come into tonight’s World Series game in a 1-0 series hole. Because that’s not difficult enough, Joe Girardi has decided to try to resurrect his struggling offense by playing lesser players.

Nick Swisher, who obviously is struggling in a big way, is on the bench tonight in favor of Jerry Hairston Jr. Hairston has some favorable numbers against Pedro (.370-.433-.519 in 31 plate appearances), however the last time he faced Pedro was over full seasons ago, when Hairston was 28 and Pedro had about five extra miles an hour on his fastball. Girardi said in the pregame that he liked the history, but how something that happened five years ago is relevant now is beyond me. Oh, and Hairston’s hitting seventh, not Swisher’s customary eighth.

If that’s not enough, Jose Molina is behind the plate to catch AJ Burnett for the fourth time this postseason. I guess the six earned runs last time out, or the 24 baserunners in 18.1 IP this postseason is irrelevant. I guess the info isn’t worth considering if it’s less than a half-decade old. Fear not Yankee fans, there’s 51 homers and .367 points worth of on-base percentage sitting on the bench for when the game gets out of hand.

It’s a good thing they play the games on the field and not on paper, because on paper the Yankees would get crushed tonight. Here’s the lineups.

Philadelphia
Jimmy Rollins, SS
Shane Victorino, CF
Chase Utley, 2B
Ryan Howard, 1B
Jayson Werth, RF
Raul Ibanez, LF
Matt Stairs, DH
Pedro Feliz, 3B
Carlos Ruiz, C

Pedro Martinez, SP (5-1, 3.63)

Yankees
Derek Jeter, SS
Johnny Damon, LF
Mark Teixeira, 1B
Alex Rodriguez, 3B
Hideki Matsui, DH
Robinson Cano, 2B
Enrique Wilson Jerry Hairston Jr., RF
Melky Cabrera, CF
Jose Molina, C

AJ Burnett, SP (13-9, 4.04)

Categories : Game Threads, Playoffs
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Oct
29

The Swisher of our discontent

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In just one season, Nick Swisher has fast become a fan favorite in New York City. Last night, he again displayed his antics in a moment that Amanda Rykoff caught on camera. She posted the above image to her Posterous site and called Swisher’s bow to Hideki Matsui during lineup introductions a sign of the Mohawk Godzilla Nation.

Tonight, Nick Swisher will rest though. After going 0 for 3 with a strike out against Cliff Lee last night, Nick is mired in a terrible slump. He is just 3 for his last 35 with 12 strike outs. Considering his 7-for-42 end to the season, Nick is now hitting just .130 since mid-September with 12 walks. No lucky Mohawk can save him for that.

When the Yanks released the lineup about 45 minutes ago, Nick Swisher found himself a part of the Yankee bench. On a night when Jose Molina will bat ninth and catch, Jerry Hairston will hit seventh and play right field. Apparently, it is a part of the Yankee strategy to put two inferior hitters into the lineup one night after scoring just one run. Hairston, for what it’s worth, has played just one game in right field all season. I could rant about this lineup forever, but back to Swisher.

As an aside, it appears as though Joe Girardi has opted for Hairston over Brett Gardner or Eric Hinske because of Hairston’s career numbers against Pedro. Although Hairston is 10 for 27 against Martinez, all but eight of those ABs came in 2002 and 2003. Hairston hasn’t faced Martinez since July 26, 2004. If Girardi is making his decision based upon numbers that are at least five years old, that is, honestly put, a stupid move.

I would never have advocated for benching Nick Swisher. He’s just off right now. Fack Youk, in a Nick Swisher futility report, summed it up best using a PitchF/x chart and some observations from the game:

Swish was even given a generous ball on the second pitch of the at bat – the green square which was clearly high enough and right down the pike. So what did Swisher do with the five (really 6) pitches that were in his – or Major League hitter’s – wheelhouse? He took three for strikes (and one for a ball) and fouled the other two off.

You don’t take four strikes in those respective locations in one at bat unless you are completely lost at the plate and are simply resorting to guessing. You don’t foul the other two off unless your rhythm and timing are out of whack. It was as if Lee & Ruiz had figured out that Swisher wasn’t going to hit the ball no matter where it was and decided to just lay it right down the middle…

Swisher is prone to extended slumps and he picked a pretty terrible time to have one of his worst of the year. The sporadic schedule has probably negatively affected as a switch hitter since he has two swings that he needs to keep working and both have seemingly fallen into a state of disrepair.

The best way for Swisher to move beyond this slump is more ABs, but the Yankees don’t really have the luxury of more at-bats. If they lose three more games, their season is over, and if they lose tonight, they face longs World Series odds on the road. And so Nick Swisher will sit, and I won’t mind.

Joe Girardi shouldn’t be employing a lineup without both Swisher and Jorge Posada, but tonight, he is. He should have used Brett Gardner or even Hinske over Hairston, but the ink has dried on that one. The top of the order can overcome some poor decisions at the bottom, and hopefully, Nick lets his head clear on this one. After an unexpectedly good season from Swisher, the last thing we want is a fade into oblivion after a bad postseason.

Categories : Playoffs
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For seven innings last night, CC Sabathia kept the Yankees in the game. After a rough first inning he settled down, hurt only by a pair of Chase Utley home runs. But, because he’d done such a good job of keeping the Phillies off the base paths, they were both solo home runs. Unfortunately, with Cliff Lee in his groove, it would take a serious offensive effort just to make up those two runs.

What the Yankees needed was for the bullpen to keep it a two-run game so that maybe, just maybe the offense could pull off a late-inning rally. That did not happen. Phil Hughes walked the first two batters he faced, and while Damaso Marte did his job, David Robertson failed to record the inning’s final out without allowing the Phillies to extend the lead.

His first opponent was Jayson Werth. With a righty on righty matchup, this is the guy the Yanks wanted to retire. Robertson started him with a fastball that ended up a bit low for ball one. To the fastball he went, and he missed three straight times for a four-pitch walk. But did he really miss? As pitchf/x records it, the second and third pitches of the at-bat were strikes. The second pitch was debatable, hanging up at the top of the zone, a place where umpires don’t always call strikes. But the third pitch was right there, a 93 mph fastball that came in a bit high, but certainly within the zone’s confines.

Robertson then missed badly for ball four, a fastball low, loading the bases for Raul Ibanez. Girardi could have gone to Phil Coke, but with three righties following Ibanez, and considering Robertson’s favorable splits against lefties, it was probably the right move to leave him in the game. Robertson then went to work, and he set up Ibanez nicely.

The first pitch he kissed the low, outside corner with a fastball for strike one. He then tossed another low fastball that missed the bottom of the zone to even the count. Keeping the ball low again, Robertson placed his third pitch, a 93 mph fastball, on the inside part of the plate for strike two. With Ibanez down in the count, he had to be prepared for the curveball, but Jorge and Robertson went back to the fastball, this one high and outside. It was a nice change of pace, and that’s going to get a swing and miss sometimes. Ibanez, though, managed to foul it off.

With the count still 1-2, and with Ibanez having seen four straight fastballs, Posada and Robertson went to the curve. It missed by a decent margin, though, evening the count at 2-2. I’m not sure if they were going for the swing and miss, or just poor contact, but again Posada called for the curveball and set up on the low outside corner.

Robertson delivered, and Ibanez bounced one through the hole on the right side for a two-run single that opened up the game for the Phillies. The pitch was supposed to stay away, but as you can see below, Posada had to move his glove towards the middle of the plate. That allowed Ibanez to get enough of his bat head on it to get it into the outfield.

Just how much of the plate did that curve get? The pitch sequence strike zone plot from Brooks Baseball shows us.

It was low and kind of away, but not where Robertson and Posada wanted it. It was still a decent pitch, but not a great pitch. Ibanez, a good hitter, did what he could with it. Cano, playing a bit to his right, had no shot.

Had Robertson placed that pitch just slightly further outside, perhaps Ibanez would have bounced it right to Cano. He might have even swung and missed. But, because the ball was towards the middle of the plate Ibanez could handle it, and while it wasn’t the difference in the game it certainly changed the tone. Instead of being down two with six outs remaining, the Yankees were down four with the bottom of their lineup due up in the eighth.

“A game of inches” is a cliche for a reason. Robertson had done a good job setting up Ibanez, but made a small mistake on one pitch and it ended up costing them big. It’s the nature of the game, and it happens to the best of them. Just ask CC Sabathia who, after throwing three good pitches to Chase Utley in the sixth, left a fastball right over the middle of the plate.

After all this, I can’t help but wonder how the game would have unfolded if Robertson got even one of those strike calls against Werth. If he’d retired him, our moods might be different right now.

Categories : Analysis
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It’s a three-for-one special this afternoon on RAB. You get three mini-posts about the Yankees’ business and rolled up into one.

Yanks break even in ’09
Generally, the New York Yankees with their gaudy $200 million payroll, don’t turn a profit. According to team officials, the club operates in the red due to the $100 million in revenue sharing and luxury tax payments it must make each year. In a way, that figure is a bit of an accounting slight of hand because it doesn’t count numerous other Yankee business ventures, including the YES Network, but that’s what the books read.

This year, though, the economics of the Yankees are different. As CNBC’s Darren Rovell reported yesterday, the Yankees are breaking even this year, and the team can thank the generosity and largesse of the City of New York for it. Reports Rovell:

But thanks to higher ticket prices, crowds filling the new Yankee Stadium seats to almost 94 percent of capacity and, perhaps most importanly, the tax shelter associated with new stadium costs that can be deducted from the team’s net revenues, sources say that the Yankees organization will make break even or perhaps even make money this year.

Sources say the savings on the tax shelter are expected to be at least $40 million.

I’ve long contended that taxpayers got a raw deal with the new Yankee Stadium. The city forewent far too much tax revenue and handed out far too many tax subsidies at a time when it could least afford it. The Yanks, though, are benefiting from it. The team has talked about maintaining or reducing payroll for 2010, but with this tax shelter, it appears as though the Yanks could add payroll next year and still come out fiscally stronger than they were a year or two ago.

World Series nets New York $40-$110 million
The New York City economy has long been sagging. Saddled with rising costs and a decreasing tax base due to the current recession, the city is in danger of running a deficit that would trigger state control of municipal finances. Perhaps, though, the World Series can alleviate some of the pain.

According to the Daily News, the World Series is very, very good for the economy. Each game brings in approximately $20 million in added revenue. From taxes on merchandise sales to bar tabs and crowded restaurants, business and the government enjoy the benefits of the Fall Classic. Even the MTA which sees 20,000 more riders per game gets in on the act.

For the Yankees and the City, the ideal outcome too would be a parade. A World Series victory would mean an additional $30 million economic activity. Here’s to No. 27.

NYY Steak roots for rain delays
Finally, we arrive at food. Crains New York spoke with David Miller, the COO of NYY Steak, about running a steak house in a stadium. While fans root for clear skies and warm weather, Miller says his restaurant benefits from rain delayed games and cool winds. “Rain and cold drive up business at the restaurant by at least 20 percent,” he said to Lisa Fickenscher.

According to Miller, the average tab at the steak house runs to around $98, and the place fills up pretty quickly once the game wraps up. It will be interesting to see how both NYY Steak and the Hard Rock Cafe do over the winter. These two establishments will keep their doors open all year long but won’t enjoy the benefits of 48,000 fans traipsing past their doors 81 times as they do during the summer.

Categories : News
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