Wednesday, September 22, 2004

(M)ost (V)aliant (P)layer

Yankees right-fielder has earned his pinstripes and more




By: Russ Rose
Special to Yankees Talk Shop
September 22, 2004


It is always difficult for someone to admit when they’re wrong. It’s not something we like to do. But, as of today, I am doing just that. I am admitting I was very wrong about Gary Sheffield. I was wrong about him becoming a Yankee. I was wrong about him as a teammate and I was wrong about him as a person.

Back in the off-season when it became apparent the face and make up of the Yankees was going to dramatically change Gary Sheffield’s name popped up as one of the guys the Bombers were looking at to fill the void in right field. Gary Sheffield? You mean the same Gary Sheffield who’s had reported problems everywhere he’s played? What about that other guy from Montreal? You know Vladimir Guerrero? That’s the guy the Yankees needed to go after.

Sheffield, although a very talented player, is in his mid-thirties. Guerrero is only 27. Both have power. Both hit for average and both have great arms. The Yankees needed to get younger not older. So, why Sheffield? I just didn’t understand at the time. Now I do. However, it took some convincing.

It was very evident Yankees’ owner George Steinbrenner wanted Sheffield in the team clubhouse. He is very fond of Sheffield’s uncle, Dwight “Doc” Gooden and has known Sheffield for several years. Both he and the free agent slugger live in Tampa during the off-season. The Yankees’ made Sheffield a solid 3-year, $39 million offer, which he initially accepted. Then, it was reported Sheffield was demanding more money. At this time I thought, here we go. Mr. Confrontational was going to live up to his advanced billing. However, things were smoothed over and Sheffield signed with the club.

As the Spring Training camps opened the BALCO steroid case hit the press and Sheffield was one of the names being floated around as a possible recipient of said steroids. It was an allegation Sheffield vehemently denied. He even went so far as to say he would be the first in line to take a drug test to prove it. However, when Sports Illustrated’s Rick Reilly took him up on the offer Sheffield refused to step forward, saying the MLBPA didn’t want its players taking any unsanctioned drug tests. It seemed, like Sammy Sosa, another athlete didn’t want to back up his words with actions.

The next incident came when Gary injured his thumb in spring training and it looked like he might miss some significant time due to the injury. The injury appeared to have carried over from the 2003 season when Sheffield played for the Atlanta Braves. Brian Cashman, the Yankees’ GM, told the press Sheffield’s injury might keep him out of action for two to three months. Sheffield was shocked and angered Cashman would go to the press and talk about his injury without consulting him first. As it turned out Gary only missed a few days of practice. He and Cashman talked things over and Cash admitted he was in error for not having consulted with Sheffield first. However, Cashman reminded Sheffield he was now playing on the biggest stage in sports, the New York Yankees, and the New York media would put him under a microscope looking for a story.

Back in March, when all of these things were swirling around Gary Sheffield, I thought to myself, ‘this is going to be a long and contentious season with that guy on the bench.’ Now, here’s where I admit I couldn’t have been more wrong about someone as I was Gary Sheffield.

The 2004 New York Yankees, on paper, looked like an unbeatable dynamo. The line up boasted of Derek Jeter, Bernie Williams, Jason Giambi, newly acquired Alex Rodriguez, Hideki Matsui, Jorge Posada and Gary Sheffield. Looking at this line up you thought yourself you’d need a calculator to add up all the runs this team was going to score.

Then came Japan and one of the worst Aprils in Yankees’ history. The Yankees, who had a streak of winning Aprils going back twelve years, had to scramble to make it thirteen. They ended the month at 12-11, with 6 of those losses coming at the hands of the Boston Red Sox. Sheffield was virtually invisible. He had one home run and twelve RBI for the month. He had an OPS of .741. He was not exactly making a $13 million statement. To be perfectly fair, the rest of the team was languishing as well. April’s tortoise-like beginning was a team wide epidemic. As it turned out it was only a temporary chink in the Yankees’ armor.

As the season progressed it was revealed Gary Sheffield was playing with more than a bum tendon in his right thumb. On June 22nd the Yankees’ reported Sheffield had an unknown injury to his left shoulder and would be day-to-day. No one knew the extent of the injury and how long Sheffield would be out of action. As it was Gary only missed three games. Eventually, the injury itself has been diagnosed as an injury to the trapezius muscle. The injury is extremely painful and is aggravated by a sudden stopping of the shoulder joint (such as a check swing) or swinging without making contact. Sheffield has one of the hardest swings in baseball. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that each time Gary swings and either checks or misses it’s like sticking a hot poker in his shoulder.

Most other players would have shut it down by now. However, Gary Sheffield is not one of those players. He consulted Dr. Frank Jobe, the renowned orthopedic surgeon of the Los Angeles Dodgers, who told Sheffield he would need surgery in the off season. He was told he couldn’t damage the shoulder any more than he has and that a month of rest should fix the problem. For now Sheffield is bearing the pain and only when he has reached his pain threshold does he get a cortisone shot to relieve the agony.

Since May 1st Sheffield has done nothing but terrorize opposing pitching. He has raised his average from a season low .267 to a present .297. He has been over and just under .300 for the past couple of months. He has hit 35 home runs and driven in 105 runs. In other words, this guy has been playing with one arm all season long and carrying the team on his back.

Sheffield is a wonder to behold at the plate. When he connects with a pitch it’s not just a hit it’s a cannon shot. Sheffield is a classic pull hitter. I don’t care where you throw the ball, nine times out of ten Sheffield will pull the ball to left field. Third base coach Luis Sojo is so cognizant of a ball coming off Sheffield’s bat he stands some 10 feet behind the coach’s box. A runner on third base will stand in the coach’s box. The umpires knowing how hard and fast the ball comes off Gary’s bat overlook the fact the runner is basically out of the field of play. He is an imposing and intimidating figure at the plate. He stands in with his bat swishing back and forth. He pounces on a ball like a tiger pounces on a piece of raw meat. But when Gary misses you can see the pain in his eyes. It almost gets me teary-eyed knowing how painful those swings are. Yet Gary shakes it off, gets back in the box and starts that bat motion once again.

Another thing I want to address here is Sheffield’s citizenship. Since leaving Spring Training Gary has been a model citizen and from all reports a great teammate. I think it has something to do with putting on the pinstripes. Something comes over players when they don that uniform with the interlocking NY on it. Unlike, loose cannon Kevin Brown, Sheffield has been a source of quiet strength in the clubhouse. When things haven’t gone his way he hasn’t hit things with a bat or his hands. He let’s his play on the field do his talking for him. He doesn’t stand and watch when he hits home runs. He puts his head down and runs around the bases. If not for Gary Sheffield’s heroics the Yankees’ fortunes would definitely not be as good as they are now.

I know it’s early and I don’t have a vote, but if I did my vote would definitely go to Gary Sheffield. Not because I am a Yankees’ fan, but because the man has earned it. I hope when the Baseball Writers of America do vote they look at Sheffield’s name on the ballot and wonder what the guy would be doing with two good arms. If they do that there is no other candidate more deserving than Gary Sheffield.


PLAY BALL!



?© 2004 Yankees Talk Shop @ ezboard.com

Redistribution, rewriting, rebroadcast, or republication of this story is prohibited without the prior written consent of Yankees Talk Shop and it's affilitates

Wednesday, September 01, 2004

Don't Look Now, but There's a "B" In the Mirror

Worst loss in franchise history cuts Yankees' AL East lead to 3 1/2 games

By: Akino Yamashita
Special to Yankees Talk Shop

September 1, 2004

What a difference a month makes. On August 1, 2004, the New York Yankees beat their personal whipping boy of a team (that would be the Baltimore Orioles) 9-7 and had a 9 1/2 game lead over the Boston Red Sox. Comfortable? You could say that. You could even say, "I'm so relaxed I'm yawning, can you wake me in October?"

Now, on September 1, 2004, the Yankees find themselves only 3 1/2 games ahead of the Red Sox, and will take the field tonight hoping to erase the putrid aftertaste of a 22-0 drubbing administered by the Cleveland Indians yesterday. The game featured a Javier Vasquez implosion in which he didn't get out of the 2nd inning and gave up 6 runs, and the bullpen wasn't much better, giving up another 16 runs in total. The Yankee bats were frozen out, scoring zero runs and garnering only five hits (while the Indians collected 22 hits to match their run total). It all added up to the most one-sided loss in Yankees franchise history (the second worst margin of a loss was 18 runs). George Steinbrenner himself was in attendance for the game, and he was in all probability not pleased (despite his issuance of an upbeat "proclamation" today). Meanwhile, Boston is closing in on the Yankees with a hot seven-game winning streak.

A look at the records of the two teams over the dog days of August explains why a lead that seemed so insurmountable has shrunk to such an uncomfortable extent. The Yankees August record was a pedestrian 16-12, while the Red Sox had a 21-7 record, even though they traded away Nomar Garciaparra in a multi-team deal to the Chicago Cubs. The Red Sox pitching has been hot, second in the AL with a 3.71 ERA in the last 30 days, while the Yankees team ERA in the last 30 days was 5.12, tenth in the AL. In the last 30 days, Boston also led the AL with a team BA of .308 and a team SLG of .502. The Yankees batting for the most part is nothing to sneeze at, with a team BA of .281 and a team SLG of .479 in the last 30 days. While the bats were nowhere to be found yesterday, it's the pitching which is to blame for most of the Yankees' August woes.

If you look at the Yankees' losses in August, you won't find any hard-fought pitching duels, no agonizing 2-1 or 0-1 losses. The Yankees have given up at least 4 runs, and an average of 6.5 runs in each August loss without counting yesterday's 22-0 debacle. (If you do, the number goes up to 7.8). Another eye-raising fact is this: Until Kevin Brown's win on August 28 against Toronto, the Yankees had gone 14 games without a starter getting a win. Only 7 of the Yankees 16 wins in August were earned by starting pitchers, and 4 of those wins came in the first week of August. Yankee starters have been leaving games either with losing or tied scores, or too early in the game to qualify as a WP.

Ironically, the Yankees starter with the most wins in August (with three) was Orlando "El Duque" Hernandez, whose stamina I questioned in my last entry here. El Duque was also the last Yankee starter before Brown to get a win (on August 12), and he will pitch tonight against C.C. Sabathia with a 5-0 record and a 2.81 ERA to date. El Duque's August ERA of 2.63 was the best by far of all Yankee starters; Kevin Brown was second with an August ERA of 4.05, followed by John Lieber at 4.50. Mike Mussina and Javier Vasquez both had August ERAs above 7 (though the numbers might be somewhat misleading considering Mussina's limited action in August, and the skewing of Vasquez's numbers by yesterday's game). As for Esteban Loaiza, his ERA was over 8.0 after he was shelled in mop-up duties yesterday. And to think I cheered the Jose Contreras trade...

Before anyone starts to run out to the window ledges and fire escapes, I want to emphasize that I don't want to sound the alarms just yet. It is certainly possible that the Yankees will get everything turned around in September, and that Boston's hot streak is due to cool off soon. The Yankees have a rather easy September schedule, with games against mediocre to weak teams; after finishing the 3-game series with the Indians, they will be looking at Baltimore, Tampa Bay, and Kansas City before meeting up with the Red Sox on September 17. The Red Sox, on the other hand, start September off with games against Anaheim, Texas, and Oakland, all teams in playoff contention.

If the Yankees have a good showing against the Red Sox during their last six direct match-ups in September, the worries about the shrinking division lead will probably drift away. But right now, it seems that the September games between the Yankees and the Red Sox may have much more of a buzz than anyone would have imagined on July 1, when the Yankees swept the Red Sox at home to grab a 8 1/2 division lead. That pesky "B" is starting to loom large in the rear-view mirror.




آ© 2004 Yankees Talk Shop @ ezboard.com

Redistribution, rewriting, rebroadcast, or republication of this story is prohibited without the prior written consent of Yankees Talk Shop and it's affilitates