Archive for September, 2010
Game 142: Time for a rebound
Posted by: | CommentsLast night’s loss was one of the more … infuriating of the season (that’s a good word for it, no?), so now it’s time for the Yankees come out and remind Texas just who they’re dealing with. The Rangers walked off with a win in the first game the last two times these clubs met, but the Yanks came back the next day and not only beat Cliff Lee, but did so in comeback fashion.
Tonight, I just want a beatdown. Remind Tommy Hunter that he’s not destined for a long career with his 4.50 K/9. Remind Nelson Cruz why the Rangers tried to convert him to pitching just over two seasons ago. Let Ron Washington know that if he wants to made ten pitching changes a game, we’ll happily oblige as he looks for someone to stop the bleeding. No mercy.
Here’s the lineup…
Gardner, LF
Swisher, RF
Teixeira, 1B
A-Rod, 3B
Cano, 2B
Berkman, DH
Granderson, CF
Pena, SS
Cervelli, C
And on the bump, it’s A.J. Burnett.
Game starts a little after 8pm ET and can be seen locally on YES and nationally on MLB Network. Enjoy.
Pettitte one more rehab start away
Posted by: | CommentsAfter dominating AA hitters in a four-inning outing on Thursday, Andy Pettitte is now just one more rehab start away from rejoining the Major League rotation. As Mark Feinsand explains today, the Yankees want to stretch Pettitte out before he comes back to the Bronx, and since AA Trenton advanced to the Eastern League finals, they’ll be able to do so on Tuesday. “I’m extremely encouraged,” Yanks’ manager Joe Girardi said. “Our hope for Andy is that both minor league teams are still in it and he can make one more rehab start for us. After that, he could really, possibly be ready for us.”
Pettitte, 11-2 with a 2.88 ERA before hitting the disabled list, will take the ball for the Thunder in game against either Altoona or Harrisburg on Tuesday, and then Andy will most likely pitch against the Orioles on Sunday. By then, he will have missed nearly two months of the season with this groin injury.
The paramount importance of getting it right
Posted by: | CommentsWhen Francisco Cervelli‘s throw to Derek Jeter arrived at the bag six feet ahead of Ian Kinsler, Jeter knew the Rangers’ second baseman had been caught stealing. He applied the tag on Kinsler’s shoulder and, without waiting for second base umpire Alfonso Marquez’s call, flipped the ball to Cano to start the around-the-horn. Cano caught the ball and stood there agape. Marquez had called Kinsler safe.
Somehow, in the ensuing moment of disbelief that followed, no one on the Yankees was thrown out of the game. Francisco Cervelli ran toward second base with an “Are you kidding me?” look on his face. Jeter says “Wait a minute” and starts conversing with the umpire. Joe Girardi, looking as mad as I’ve ever seen him, comes charging out on the field. But the outrage was to no avail. Marquez wouldn’t reverse his call, and baseball, mired in some traditionalist past where an easily correctible human error is allowed to rule the game, can’t figure out how to implement a sensible instant replay review. In the amount of time Girardi argued, the play could have been called correctly.
It’s not stretch to say that Marquez’s call changed the pace of the game. After Kinsler stole, Mitch Moreland walked, and Bengie Molina sacrificed the runners. Pedro Borbon hit a tapper to second that plated Kinsler, and then Javier Vazquez induced an Elvis Andrus flyout to end the inning. Andrus shouldn’t have been batting, and if the fallacy of the predetermined outcome were to hold true, the inning should have ended with the score knotted at zero.
Of course, the game ended up being a tense and endless one-run affair that ended in a walkoff in the bottom of the 13th. Of course, the Yanks failed to hit with runners in scoring position, going 3 for 17 and stranded 18 runners over the course of the game. Of course, Joba, oh so good lately, couldn’t escape The Eighth Inning with a lead. Of course, the Rangers used their expanded roster to send every person in Arlington to the mound. While the game turned on any one of these moves, the fact remains that Kinsler’s stolen base/caught stealing changed the game.
In 2010, Marquez simply as no excuse. He was standing above the play; he had a great view of the throw and the tag; and yet he missed it. Just as Jim Joyce blew the call in Detroit, so too did Marquez. It happens. But that doesn’t mean it should be allowed to stand. A simple review — one shot of the tag on instant replay — would have been enough to get the call right, and it’s moments such as these — isolated plays where the one event in question triggers a dead ball — are ripe for replay.
Major League Baseball continues to insist that any version of instant replay review would mess with the pace of the game. Fans don’t want to wait, they say, while the umpires huddle. Maybe that’s true for some people, but I’d rather see the umps get calls such as the one last night right. If it means waiting a minute or two, that’s a-OK with me. It’s far more enjoyable to see the game called properly than it is to see Ron Washington make five mid-inning pitching changes.
I went to bed annoyed at the Kinsler call last night, and I woke up still annoyed. The Yanks could have overcome it with just another hit or two with runners in scoring position, but they shouldn’t have been in that position in the first place. And that is fully on Alfonso Marquez and Bud Selig’s obsession with some misguided notion of nostalgia.
Saturday morning links
Posted by: | CommentsSome Saturday morning links for your pleasure:
Here’s an update on former Yankee Matt Nokes. It’s pretty cool that he has stayed in the game and is so devoted to the art of hitting. Usually you hear about guys like Ted Williams and Tony Gwynn being students of the game, but Nokes seems to fit right in.
Bonus link to Nokes’ website with video of him catching a Roger Clemens fastball in the ribs and throwing it back to the mound.
A post at mlb.com takes a look at Andrew Brackman and the success he has had this year. There are lots of quotes from the Brackmonster himself and the piece notes that he is close with Austin Romine and how well they work together. We may see that battery in the Bronx in a few years.
A story about Roger Clemens and steroids that doesn’t immediately call him Former Yankee Roger Clemens. I’m sure it will never become public, but I wonder if Bud Selig will have anything to say to the Blue Jays if they knew all along that Clemens was juicing (if he was). I doubt the Blue Jays could have disclosed anything since it is personal medical records, but I wonder if there is/was any plan in place for what a major league team is supposed to do if they find proof that a player is using steroids. Clearly everyone looked the other way in the past, but if it becomes public that the team knew and did nothing to stop it, Selig will be none too thrilled.
While the Yankees had a banner year down on the farm, the rival Red Sox took a step back. While they appear to have had a solid draft to build some depth, many of the crown jewels of their system either didn’t take steps forward or took steps back in 2010. Just remember this the next time organizational rankings come out, just because someone says Team A is better than Team B, it doesn’t mean that can’t change.
Game 141 Spillover Thread
Posted by: | CommentsThe first thread appears to be broken, so keep the party going here.
Trenton routs New Hampshire to advance to finals
Posted by: | CommentsTriple-A Scranton (1-0 loss to Columbus) Columbus leads the best-of-five series two games to one … Hector Noesi gets the ball and will try to stave off eliminate tomorrow
Reid Gorecki, CF: 1 for 4, 1 K – got picked off second … he led off the game with a single, and that was all they got in the hit department
Kevin Russo, 2B: 0 for 2, 1 BB – he walked following Gorecki’s single and that was it, 27 SWB Yanks went down in order to end the game
Everyone Else: combined 0 for 18, 11 K – Justin Christian’s hitting streak ends at 21, though he did throw two runners out at the plate in the seventh inning, when the game was still scoreless
The Ghost of Kei Igawa: 7 IP, 4 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 6 K, 3-9 GB/FB – 61 of 93 pitches were strikes (65.6%) … check out the K-Man with the big performance, he retired 18 in a row at one point
Eric Wordekemper: 2 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 1 K, 2-2 GB/FB – 26 of 40 pitches were strikes (65%) … allowed the only run, but the replay showed the runner was out at the plate
Game 141: Javy’s wing and a prayer
Posted by: | CommentsIt seems like the Yankees were just in Texas to face the Rangers, and from what I remember, that was a frustrating series capped off by a dramatic, come from behind win. Kind of like the last four games of the homestand.
The pitching matchups don’t inspire much confidence this series, and it all starts tonight with Javy Vazquez. He’s bounced in and out of the rotation for the last few week weeks, alternating impressive long relief work with cumbersome starts. His nothingball was largely ineffective against Texas a few weeks ago, but he seems to have added some giddy-up to the pitch while in the bullpen. Really, no one knows what they’ll get out of Javy tonight, we just have to hope that whatever hole he puts them in won’t be too deep to get out of.
Here’s the starting nine…
Jeter, SS
Swisher, RF
Teixeira, 1B
A-Rod, 3B
Cano, 2B
Thames, DH
Kearns, LF
Cervelli, C
Gardner, CF
And on the bump, it’s The Pitcher Formerly Known As Javy Vazquez.
Texas is in another time zone, so this sucker doesn’t start until a little after 8pm ET. It can be seen on YES. Enjoy.
What’s it like to work in a front office?
Posted by: | CommentsAt his RAB-recommended blog Yankeeist, Larry Koestler interviews Alex Langsam, a baseball operations assistant with the Pittsburgh Pirates. While there’s some interesting Pirates stuff in there, most of the interview involves Langsam’s function in the baseball operations department. This has gotten plenty of play, so you might have already read it. But if not, it’s a great way to conclude the work week.
New Bronx parking lots proving too unpopular
Posted by: | Comments
Too many parking lots; not enough cars. (Graphic via Streetsblog)
As the plans for new Yankee Stadium took shape a few years ago, livable streets advocates and community activists bemoaned the seemingly ridiculous number of new parking spots included with the plan. While the new ballpark’s capacity would prove be around 7000 seats fewer than the old, the South Bronx would see over 2500 whose construction was to be subsidized through $237 million in tax-exempt bonds. To add insult to development injury, the company the city selected to build the parking lots had a history of defaulting on its bond payments.
It comes as no surprise then that Bronx Parking is in trouble. Because of the increased availability of public transit options and the smaller stadium capacity, fewer fans are driving to the games, and the company may soon default on its bond payments for the third time. According to Juan Gonzalez of the Daily News, revenue from parking was just $4.8 million through the first half of 2010, nearly half of Bronx Parking’s initial projections, and the company may have to run down its $4.5 million emergency fund, risking a potential default in the near future.
The company itself, says Gonzalez, blames three factors:
- More than 800 fans are heading on game days to the Gateway Shopping Mall five blocks from the stadium, where they pay only $10 to park instead of the stiff $23 self-parking fee ($35 for valet service) at the stadium garages.
- A new Metro North station has lured many fans (about 5,000 per game) to ride the train. [RAB note: Metro-North says it lures approximately 3200-3800 fans per game.]
- The Yankees prepaid for only 190 parking spaces this year for their season ticket holders instead of the 900 spaces they prepaid last year.
Some unnamed city officials, meanwhile, aren’t surprised. “If these garages are only at 60% of capacity after a World Series victory, you know it can only get worse from here,” one said to the News. “There’s just too much unused parking around the stadium.”
For Yankee fans who drive, the news will only get worse next year. Bronx Parking — or the surviving entity — will have no other option but to raise rates to cover the lost revenue. Parking at the stadium could cost nearly $30 next year, and such a steep price could perpetuate a cycle where even fewer people drive. Yankee Stadium is, after all, one of the most transit accessible ballparks in the nation, and the South Bronx neighborhood has very low car ownership rates.
It’s clear that the city, at the behest of the Yankees, botched this parking deal. The team wanted more modern and convenient parking lots, and now a South Bronx area suffering from a dearth of green space and high asthma rates has lots of vacant space surrounding the stadium. This parking decision was not the city’s Economic Development Corporation’s and the Industrial Development Agency’s finest hours.






