Archive for July, 2010
Heathcott goes deep on Independence Day
Posted by: | CommentsOne more bullet pointer on American’s birthday…
- Triple-A Scranton won. Jesus Montero singled and walked twice, Reid Gorecki doubled twice, and Greg Golson had four hits. Juan Miranda had three hits and launched his second bomb in three days since coming off the disabled list. He needs to come up to platoon at DH with Marcus Thames immediately, especially with Jorge Posada dealing with another injury. On the pitching side, Tim Redding gave up one run in eight innings of work, and Mark Melancon managed to throw a scoreless frame.
- Double-A Trenton won. Austin Romine and Brandon Laird each singled and scored. Hector Noesi gave up one run in seven rather dominant innings of work.
- High-A Tampa was rained out yet again. Graham Stoneburner was supposed to start, and he hasn’t pitched since June 23rd.
- Low-A Charleston lost. Slade Heathcott hit his first professional homerun, an inside-the-park solo shot. DeAngelo Mack also went deep, and J.R. Murphy picked up a single as well. They were shut down pretty well for the first six innings by the 11th overall pick in the 2009 draft.
- Short Season Staten Island won. Kyle Roller had three hits including a pair of doubles and Kevin Mahoney reached base three times. Nothing too interesting pitching wise.
- Rookie GCL Yanks had a scheduled day off.
Open Thread: America, F**k Yeah!
Posted by: | CommentsEnjoy the nation’s birthday everyone, and for the love of Mo, be careful. Leave the big stuff to the pros. Ten fingers is decided advantage in life.
Posada leaves game with sprained left ring finger, x-rays negative
Posted by: | CommentsUpdate (4:49pm): Posada is day-to-day with a sprained left ring finger. X-rays were negative. Well that’s good news.
2:33pm: Jorge Posada left today’s game in the 7th inning after being hit by a foul tip off his left (glove) hand. Looked like his fingers bent back pretty far on the replay. We’ll update this post with info as it comes in.
Game 81: Beat Canada
Posted by: | CommentsAs I said on Friday, I find it amusing that for the second straight year the Yankees play the Blue Jays at home. I suppose one team has to face Canada’s own today, but it’s interesting that it’s the Yankees at Yankee Stadium, what with all the stars and stripes and George Steinbrenner‘s birthday.
The Yankees, of course, cannot lose to a foreign team today, during the celebration of our independence. Last year it took 12 innings, but they managed to defend the nation’s honor.
On a more serious note…
While yesterday’s offensive barrage was a nice change, all the runs came in one inning. The Yanks still missed opportunities with runners in scoring position. But who knows. Maybe that inning spurred them on, leading to a nice little streak before the break.
As I write this they’re announcing the All-Star game rosters. So that will be interesting. Scroll around the posts to see what’s up. At publication time it’s Jeter and Cano as starters, Hughes, CC, and Mo as pitchers, and A-Rod in reserve. There’s a chance that Pettitte could end up taking CC’s spot, since CC is lined up to pitch the game before the break.
Also, make sure to check out our Fourth contest. Best story gets a $100 eBay gift certificate. This also seems like an appropriate time to plug our RAB Tickets, where you can get all of your game tickets at the best possible prices.
And back to my overly patriotic rhetoric: Beat Canada!
Lineup:
1. Derek Jeter, DH
2. Nick Swisher, RF
3. Mark Teixeira, 1B
4. Alex Rodriguez, 3B
5. Robinson Cano, 2B
6. Jorge Posada, C
7. Curtis Granderson, CF
8. Brett Gardner, LF
9. Ramiro Pena, SS
And on the mound, number sixty-five, Phil Hughes.
Cano, Jeter named All Star starters
Posted by: | CommentsRobbie Cano and Derek Jeter were named the AL’s starting middle infield for this year’s All Star Game in Anaheim. The rest of the AL starting nine consists of Joe Mauer, Justin Morneau, Evan Longoria, Ichiro, Josh Hamilton, Carl Crawford, and Vlad Guerrero. Can’t say I disagree with any of those picks.
CC Sabathia, Phil Hughes, and Mariano Rivera were named to the AL pitching staff. Sabathia lines up to start the Sunday before the All Star Game, which makes him ineligible to pitch in it according to the new rules. He’ll be replaced on the roster, and it could be by Andy Pettitte. Francisco Liriano and Jered Weaver are certainly deserving of that spot, though.
Alex Rodriguez was named as a reserve, and Nick Swisher is on the Final Vote Ballot. Let’s get that man to Anaheim!
Thames activate, Huffman optioned to Triple-A
Posted by: | CommentsOut just about a month with a hamstring issue, Marcus Thames returns from the disabled list today to give the Yankees a little bit of pop off the bench and in the designated hitters spot. Unsurprisingly, Chad Huffman was optioned to Triple-A to make room on the roster since he’s basically a lesser version of Thames. Hopefully Marcus hits like he did in April and not like he did in May and June.
July 4th Eve DotF
Posted by: | CommentsSorry folks, going to take the quick way out of this one tonight…
- Triple-A Scranton won. Jesus Montero had the day off, but Eduardo Nunez went hitless while Juan Miranda and Jorge Vazquez picked up one and two hits, respectively. Eric Bruntlett and Chad Moeller went deep. Zach McAllister gave up three runs in six innings, and Jon Albaladejo closed it out with a four out save.
- Double-A Trenton won. Austin Romine hit a solo bomb, his first of the year at home. Brandon Laird singled, but Luis Nunez, Dan Brewer, and Jose Gil each went deep. D.J. Mitchell was blah in six innings, but Tim Norton nailed down the win with two perfect innings.
- High-A Tampa was rained out.
- Low-A Charleston lost. Slade Heathcott and J.R. Murphy each picked up a pairs of hit, and no one on the pitching staff did anything noteworthy.
- Short Season Staten Island won. Eduardo Sosa and Kevin Mahoney each had two hits, Francisco Arcia three. Shane Greene threw six scoreless.
- Rookie GCL Yankees loss. Gary Sanchez singled three times, Ramon Flores twice. Evan DeLuca gave up four runs in four innings.
I was at the SI Yanks game, so here’s some observations…
- Sosa was the best player on the field. He’s a bit of a hacker, but he can really run. Beat out two infield singles, one to the second baseman. Also, dude’s a total ballhawk in center, caught everything hit in his general direction and then some.
- Kelvin DeLeon hasn’t met a pitch he won’t swing at, but the ball made a different sound off his bat, as cliche as it sounds. He didn’t pick up a hit, but he just missed a homer right down the leftfield line.
- Kyle Roller is a big boy. Hit a ball off the top of the right-centerfield wall and it bounced away from the outfielders for a triple. That’s the only way that guy is getting three bases on one hit.
- Kevin Mahoney reminds me of Nick Johnson, just super calm, very managed at-bats. He ripped a pair of doubles.
- Jeff Farnham got an error when he threw a ball into center on a stolen base attempt. Of course, neither the second baseman or shortstop bothered to cover. Seriously, there was no one at the base except the runner. Gotta love A-ball defense.
- If Luis Parache gets above A-ball, I’ll be surprised. He doesn’t swing, he just kind of flicks the bat at the ball, almost as if he’s got two strikes and is just trying to protect, except all the time.
- Shane Greene was very good, took a perfect game into the third and no-hitter into I think the fourth. Lots of ugly swings at whatever the hell kind of offspeed pitch he was throwing, maybe a changeup.
- Chase Whitley loaded the bases with no outs in the 9th, then struck out side. He must have thrown 90% sliders, no joke.
- The seats at MCU Park in Coney Island are a good three or four inches wider than the ones at the New Stadium. How the hell does that happen?
- The Beach Bums are a nice touch. Nothing wrong with scantily clad women dancing on top of the dugouts between at-bats and innings. More teams should embrace the concept.
Open Thread: Which one would you rather have?
Posted by: | CommentsHere are the stat lines for two players (doesn’t include today’s games), which one is better?
Player A: 284 PA, 48 R, 67 H, 6 2B, 6 3B, 3 HR, 26 SB, 5 CS, 26 BB, 40 K, 3 GIDP, 3 HBP
Player B: 282 PA, 49 R, 76 H, 6 2B, 4 3B, 3 HR, 24 SB, 5 CS, 31 BB, 40 K, 3 GIDP, 3 HBP
The identities are revealed after the jump, but seriously, which player would you prefer?
Anyway, here’s tonight’s open thread for those of you who aren’t going out and enjoying this fine evening. There’s a game on MLB Network, but who you see depends on where you live. Talk about whatever, just be cool.
Injury Updates: Thames, Mitre, Aceves, Johnson
Posted by: | CommentsIt’s hard to believe that we’ve been reduced to getting exciting about Marcus Thames returning, but that’s where we sit. The righty bat will play nine innings in the field during his third rehab game with Triple-A Scranton tonight, and if all goes well he could rejoin the team as soon as tomorrow. Given the current DH situation, that’s a good thing.
Meanwhile, Sergio Mitre made his first rehab appearance after an oblique strain last night, throwing just one inning for High-A Tampa before throwing some more in the bullpen. He’ll throw two innings on Monday, and right now isn’t expected to rejoin the team until after the All Star break. Al Aceves is going to throw 40 or so pitches off a full mound early next week, a rather significant step in his return from back issues. The Yanks are going to take is slow and be very cautious with him given the nature of his injury, so Ace is probably still a few weeks away.
Finally, we have Nick Johnson, who is actually going to swing a bat today. Granted, it’ll just be a fungo, but it’s progress. Assuming all goes well – not a safe assumption, of course – he’ll head down to Tampa and continue baseball activities there. NJ is still a ways off from rehab games and rejoining the team, but any news is good news at this point.





