Thursday, July 28, 2005

ROBINSON CANO CAN DO
Rookie second baseman continues to impress Yankees




By: Russ Rose
Special to Yankees Talk Shop
July 28, 2005


Looking at him reminds you a lot of Rod Carew. He is a contact hitter, with some power, who uses the entire field to deposit hits in. Robinson Cano has not just been a pleasant surprise for the New York Yankees he has been somewhat of a mild shock.

Cano’s sojourn into the Yankees line up has been an interesting one indeed. It all started with the outfield and Bernie Williams. It is no secret that over the past three seasons injuries have plagued Bernie to the point where many, in baseball circles, felt he could no longer patrol centerfield like the Bernie Williams of old. That Bernie Williams didn’t run to balls he glided. That Bernie Williams could hit for average as well as flash the power when needed. The Bernie Williams of this season has become increasingly slow of bat speed as well as afoot. So much so the Yankees brain trust decided to bench Bernie and/or DH him, move left fielder Hideki Matsui to center and put struggling Tony Womack in left. The question was who would the Yankees replace Womack with at second base. The answer was at Triple A Columbus in the name of Robinson Cano.

Cano, along with Eric Duncan, Chien Ming Wang and Dioneer Navarro were continually being mentioned as possible trade bait in order for the Yankees to obtain more veteran help if the need arose.

Cano, along with Wang, was promoted to the Yankees on May 3rd. He joined the Yankees after playing 24 games for the Clippers where he hit .333 with 24 RBI and 4 home runs. Cano played his first game for the Yankees that night at Tropicana Field, where he went 0-3 in his major league debut and the Yankees were pounded by the Tampa Bay Devil Rays 11-4.

Cano’s next night wasn’t very good either as the Devil Rays took advantage of a throwing error by Cano and scored two runs from it. The Yankees never recovered from the error and fell 11-8 to the Rays. The error erased a good offensive night for Cano as he went 2-4 with an RBI. What it did do was show the Yankees a glimpse of things to come.

Robinson Cano put his first two games behind him and started taking off like a rocket. The kid from the Dominican Republic didn’t let himself get down. He has continued to improve in both the field and at the plate. Eventually, the Yankees realized they had a diamond in the rough. Cano began meshing well with the rest of the infield and his play improved. At the plate, Cano looked like a guy who had seen major league pitching for years. By the end of May Cano had 83 at bats and an average of .253.

Cano’s bat has done nothing, but get better and better. In June Cano added another 100 at bats and hit .310 for the month. This included 4 home runs, 15 RBI, a SLG% of .520 and an OBP of .343. July has been just about as spectacular for the rookie second baseman. So far this month Cano has hit 2 home runs, driven in 11 and has hit .354. Cano’s SLG% is .521 and his OBP has risen to .367. In nearly three months of play Robinson Cano is hitting .313, with 8 home runs and 39 RBI. For the season Cano’s estimated numbers would be .313, with 13 home runs and 63 RBI. Not bad for someone who was, at best, thought to be a temporary replacement and was probably going to be penciled into a trade for a more veteran player. Not now though. Cano’s offensive input has moved him from batting 9th in the order to 2nd behind Derek Jeter. His play has caused Tony Womack to be benched as an occasional pinch-runner and utility infielder Rey Sanchez not to play at all.

Cano’s still learning to play second base at the major league level. He will still make an occasional error or bad throw, but his approach to the game overshadows any flaws he may have defensively. There is no doubt that as Cano plays more and more at second he will continue to improve. So far he has 11 errors in 368 chances for a fielding percentage of .970. Compare that with the stats of Alex Rodriguez (254 total chances, 10 errors, .961 FPCT) and Derek Jeter (443 total chances, 10 errors, .977 FPCT) and one can see Cano can play with the best of them.

What you have to like about Cano is how he approaches his at bats. He seems to be able to hit any pitch and not do too much with it. He’ll go with the pitch, flare a hit, hit a line drive or occasionally smack it over the fence. Cano has calmness about him and doesn’t appear to panic in key situations. This may be due in part to Ruben Sierra taking him under his wing. Big Ruben has been giving the young infielder his veteran insights. Cano must be listening to the right people, because he is playing well beyond his limited major league experience.

Although it’s early, Robinson Cano may be lining himself up for a Rookie of the Year nomination. His numbers, if they continue in the direction they’re presently headed, are good enough for serious consideration. There’s a lot of baseball left to play, but there seems to be no reason to believe Robinson Cano isn’t the real deal. It is going to be a pleasure to watch Cano’s career continue to unfold. He looks as if he is ready for a long calling in pinstripes. A calling that two months ago seemed to be a short one in New York.


PLAY BALL!



© 2005 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

Monday, July 25, 2005

MOOSE STOPS THE BLEEDING
Mussina Performance Aids Yanks Avoid 4-Game Sweep




By: Russ Rose
Special to Yankees Talk Shop
July 25, 2005


Anaheim – After attending the weekend series against the Angels at Angels Stadium I finally figured out what the Yankees strategy should have been all along in facing Orange County’s version of the red tide. You don’t score the first run of the game.

In the previous three games of the series the Yankees scored a run in the first inning only to have the Los Angeles Angels come back and knock around the Bombers’ pitching staff to take the first three games of this four-game set. Los Angeles/Anaheim is the only team to have a winning record against New York in the Torre era and they had no trouble proving why against the Yanks Thursday, Friday and Saturday.

Walking into the stadium it was the Angels’ fans who were boisterous, swinging the brooms they brought with them and fantasizing of a sweep over the bad boys from the Big Apple. Bad karma I thought to be doing that. It’s o.k. to think it, but it’s never a good idea to say it aloud.

Taking the mound for the Yankees’ last ditch effort to salvage something positive from a lackluster performance was Mike Mussina. The Moose has had his ups and downs this season, but entered the game with a respectable 9-5 record with an ERA of 3.95. His opponent was left-hander Jared Washburn. Wash as he’s called in Los Caliheim has been equally respectable with a 6-5 record and 3.27 ERA. Although the win-loss column wasn’t impressive Washburn’s ERA told me he keeps his team in games.

Once the game started the Yankees changed their approach. Instead of scoring a run in the first inning New York was set down in order, 1-2-3. The Yankees had the Angels right where they wanted them. They set the trap and the Halos fell right into it.

After leadoff hitter Chone Figgins walked and stole second Darin Erstad moved him over to third on a ground out. Yankee’ nightmare Vladimir Guerrero came to plate, but instead of hammering the ball over the wall Guerrero grounded out to third baseman Alex Rodriguez to score what would prove to be Los Angeles’ only run of the afternoon.

The pitching match up was just as good as advertised. Washburn and Mussina began a classic pitcher’s duel and matched zeros for the next five innings. The Halos got a few hits off Mussina here and there, but they were able to mount only one serious attack. Washburn was even more difficult allowing the Yankees just one hit through the first six innings. That was a leadoff double by second baseman Robinson Cano in the fourth inning, which went for naught as the Yankees were unable to get him across the plate. That was partly due to third base coach Luis Sojo sending Cano home from third on a shallow fly ball hit by Alex Rodriguez to Juan Rivera in right field. Rivera showed his arm as he threw Cano out by several feet to complete the double play and end the Yankees’ threat.

In the bottom of the sixth the Angels looked poised to do some damage as they had a first and third situation with two outs. However, with center fielder Steve Finley standing on third and third baseman Maicer Izturis on first Mussina induced Rivera to hit back to the box and Mussina softly tossed the ball to Tino Martinez to end the inning.

In the top of the seventh, with the Bombers running out of time, the offense finally answered the bell. With one out, Alex Rodriguez reached first base safely on a ball hit deeply to short. Orlando Cabrera made a great play and his throw was slightly behind Rodriguez crossing the bag. The next batter, Hideki Matsui, got to Washburn. Washburn finally threw a pitch which was over the plate and one Matsui could drive and Godzilla promptly deposited the ball over the right-center field fence. The Yankees had their first come-from-behind-lead in the series.

Washburn then plunked Jason Giambi who quietly jogged down to first base. The plunking brought a long glare to Washburn from home plate umpire Marvin Hudson, but no warnings were issued. Jorge Posada, who had done little in the series, followed with a lined single to left field. Jason Giambi, thinking he was Tony Womack, rounded second and slid into third barely beating the throw from the outfield. In the process Giambi knocked down third baseman Chone Figgins. Giambi didn’t acknowledge Figgins, who dusted himself off and went back to his position. The Yankees scored their third run of the inning when Tino Martinez grounded to second scoring Giambi.

Mussina started the seventh inning, but was pulled by manager Joe Torre after the Moose gave up a bloop single to Adam Kennedy with one out. As the Moose walked toward the dugout the large throng of Yankees’ fans attending the game gave Mussina a standing ovation. Tanyon Sturtze came on and closed out the inning for the Yanks

The Yankees were unable to score in the eighth inning, and then Joe Torre made a pitching move this reporter thought was dicey. Torre replaced Sturtze with Tom Gordon. Gordon has been hit by opposing batters of late, including Thursday’s grand slam by Vladimir Guerrero, which snatched a victory away from the Yankees. With a day off Monday, it seemed to be more prudent to leave Sturtze in to pitch the eighth inning then go to closer Mariano Rivera.

As feared Gordon gave up a leadoff single to Vladimir Guerrero. After getting Garret Anderson to fly out Gordon walked Steve Finley giving the Halos runners at first and second with one out. Torre quickly came to the mound with his hook and brought in the Sandman. Rivera quickly restored order as he persuaded Maicer Izturis to hit into an inning ending double play.

The Yankees scored the final run of the afternoon in the top of the ninth inning when Jason Giambi walked and was replaced by pinch runner Tony Womack. Jorge Posada popped out bringing Tino Martinez to the plate. Tino banged a double deep into center field and Womack scored all the way from first base. Bubba Crosby, who had replaced Bernie Williams, popped out and shortstop Derek Jeter grounded out to end the Yankees scoring.

Rivera came on in the bottom of the ninth and proved why he is the best closer in history. He struck out Juan Rivera, got Bengie Molina to fly out and closed out the game by striking out Adam Kennedy looking.

The victory over the Angels was a game the Yankees desperately needed. After winning three of four in Boston and two of three in Arlington the Yankees came into Los Angeles with a lot of momentum. The Halos quickly let the air out the Bombers’ balloon. The Yankees victory allowed them to avoid an ugly sweep, go home on a winning note and gave them a winning road trip with a 6-5 record.

Now the Yankees have a day off and will open up a home stand in the Bronx against the Minnesota Twins, followed by these same Los Angeles Angels. Although they can’t be looking past the Twins, you can bet that, in the backs of their minds, the Yankees are thinking of a little payback.


PLAY BALL!



© 2005 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

Sunday, July 24, 2005

ANOTHER BROWN OUT
Angels Batter Brown for Seven Runs, Then Hang On For 8-6 Win




By: Russ Rose
Special to Yankees Talk Shop
July 24, 2005


When are the Yankees going to get it? Kevin Brown is a guaranteed loss every time he takes the mound. He doesn’t have it any more. He goes on the DL, comes off the DL, gets shelled by opposing hitters, and then goes back on the DL. Kevin Brown is a $15 million-per-year bust. The next time his balky back goes out the Yankees should just leave him on the disabled list. He’s a cancer in the clubhouse and he’s a cancer on the mound.

After staking Brown to a 1-0 lead in the top of the first inning Brown started off well in the bottom of the frame. Leadoff batter Chone Figgins singled, and after Brown struck out Darin Erstad he induced Vladimir Guerrero to hit into a double play ending the inning. That was the highlight of Kevin Brown’s evening.

In the second inning Garret Anderson doubled to start the inning. He went to third on a Steve Finley single, then home on Bengie Molina’s ground out. Brown got fly ball outs from Jeff DeVanon and Orlando Cabrera to end the Angel threat.

The Yankees gave Brown more breathing room in the top of the third when Derek Jeter and Robinson Cano hit back-to-back home runs off Angel starter Ervin Santana. After a Gary Sheffield infield single Santana set down Alex Rodriguez, Hideki Matsui and Jason Giambi to end the inning.

The 3-1 Yankees’ lead didn’t last long as Brown walked both Adam Kennedy and Chone Figgins to start the bottom of the third inning. Darin Erstad flew out to left field bringing the always dangerous Vladimir Guerrero to the plate. The Vlad Man wasted no time as Brown threw a pitch in the same location Tom Gordon did Thursday night. It was knee high and over the center of the plate. The results were the same too. Guerrero deposited the ball over the centerfield fence to give the Angels a 4-3 never look back lead.

The Bombers failed to score in the top of the fourth inning, but the Angels didn’t. Taking up where they left off Anaheim went after Brown who gave up three more runs before finally closing the book on his night. Brown’s line for the evening was 3-1/3 innings pitched, seven earned runs and a game ERA of 20.32.

Alex Graman relieved Brown, but was ineffective as he allowed three runs to score (two charged to Brown) and was relieved by Felix Rodriguez. Rodriguez got Molina to ground out to Jeter to end the inning. However, the damage was done and the Angels enjoyed a commanding 8-3 lead.

The Yankees made the game close as they scored a run in the fifth inning and two more in the seventh. The middle relief did a good job in shutting down the Angels after the fourth inning. The Yankees actually out hit the Angels 12 to 11, but most of the output by New York was after two outs had been recorded. If your looking for any nuggets of good news it’s in the fact the middle relief (other than Graman) performed well and Jason Giambi hit another home run. That gives him three for the series and six in the last ten games. In fact, for the month of July, Giambi has a Ruthian OPS of 1.551 (SLG%=1.037 OBP=.507) and a .379 batting average. He has 11 home runs and 19 RBI. Alex Rodriguez continues to shine as well. Although he has cooled off some since the all-star break A-Rod is tied for the league lead in home runs (27), fifth in batting average (.317), fourth in RBI (78), and first in OPS (1.006).

However, pitching remains the key to any chance of success the Yankees might have for the rest of the season. No pitching, no playoffs. So far the only member of the entire staff that has been reliable is the closer. Unfortunately, for Yankees fans they might not see Mariano Rivera in Southern California this season. Not unless the pitching can hold down the opposition and keep a lead. The Angels will be trying as hard as they can to keep #42 in the bullpen. The brooms are out and ready to sweep the Yankees back to the Bronx. The only thing standing in the way is Mike Mussina. Hopefully, the Moose can salvage an otherwise disastrous series. We’ll all know the answer to that riddle soon.


PLAY BALL!



© 2005 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

Saturday, July 23, 2005

NO BEAST FROM THE EAST
Angels Expose Yankees Glaring Weaknesses in West Coast Showdown




By: Russ Rose
Special to Yankees Talk Shop
July 23, 2005


As my friend and I walked out of Angel Stadium Friday night I could hear the large throng of Angels’ fans yelling the all-to-familiar “Yankees Suck!” I turned to my friend and said, ‘You know I can’t disagree with them. They do suck.’ After the first two games of this series to a man the Yankees would agree.

The Anaheim Angels, who’ve had troubles of their own, both offensively and pitching wise, always seem to come to life when the Yankees come to town. This series has been no different. In Thursday’s game the Angels overcame four Yankee home runs to erase a 5-2 deficit and turn it into a 6-5 victory. How does that happen you ask? The ill winds of fortune began back in the first inning.

The Yankees’ Derek Jeter opened up the game against Bartolo Colon with a triple. Robinson Cano, the wonder rookie, did what he was supposed to do and knocked Jeter in with an RBI single to center. Gary Sheffield came up to the plate and promptly hit into a double play. What struck me most and what I have witnessed before is Sheffield’s failure to run hard down the first base line. A guy earning $13 million a year should be expected to run hard and at least try to stave off the double play.

With two outs, Alex Rodriguez homered to deep right center making the score 2-0. Had Sheffield done his job the score would’ve been 4-0 and would have really put the Angels back on their heels. Down by two the Angels were still in the game. Jason Giambi added a solo home run in the fourth inning to make the score 3-0. The Angels got a run back in the bottom of the frame to make it 3-1.

Yankees’ starter Randy Johnson kept the Angels at bay until the sixth inning when he gave up another run on a sacrifice fly by Bengie Molina, which scored Darin Erstad from third base. With the score at 3-2 Johnson finished the inning by getting Steve Finley to ground out to Jason Giambi. Unfortunately for the Yankees Johnson slightly tweaked his back when he slipped on the mound. His night was effectively ended.

The Yankees put more breathing room between them and the Angels when left fielder Hideki Matsui and Jason Giambi (his second) hit back-to-back home runs to make the score 5-2.

The game, however, became completely unraveled in the bottom of the seventh inning when Yankee manager Joe Torre brought in fireballer Scott Proctor to face pinch hitter Jeff DeVanon. DeVanon battled Proctor and was able to finally work a walk. Torre quickly pulled Proctor and brought in 40-year old left-hander Buddy Groom. Groom gave up back-to-back hits to Maicer Izturis and Chone Figgins. With the bases loaded Groom was able to strike out Darin Erstad, which brought the ever dangerous Vladimir Guerrero to the plate. Torre, again went to the mound, and called for set up man Tom Gordon. I had a bad feeling about the situation. Guerrero was nursing a 2 for 30 slump and was due to explode at any moment. Sadly, he picked this particular moment to do it. Gordon threw a cut fastball, which was low, but over the plate. Guerrero went down and got the pitch driving it over the centerfield wall for a grand slam. The Angels as they seemingly due against the Bombers took a 6-5 lead and held on to it to win the game. The Yankees threatened in the ninth inning when Alex Rodriguez led off the inning with a solid double against Angels closer Francisco Rodriguez. He made it as far as third base on a Hideki Matsui fly ball to center. Rodriguez struck out Giambi, walked Bernie Williams, and then got pinch hitter Jorge Posada to ground out to end the game.

It was a game the Yankees should have won. The middle relief let the game get away from them, and when a run really mattered the offense couldn’t get a lead off double home. It was a very demoralizing loss for New York.

If the Yankees had any thought of bouncing back Friday night, the Angels quickly put that to rest too. After the Yankees scored a run in the top of the second inning, lefty Al Leiter took the mound to face the Angels. Leiter, who was picked up from the Florida Marlins, was coming off a solid pitching performance against the Boston Red Sox. However, lightening didn’t strike twice as Leiter was lit up for six runs on 10 hits in six innings of work. Anaheim took advantage of Leiter’s, too much around the plate, pitching. Leiter added to his own demise when, in the second inning, his errant throw to Jason Giambi in a pick off attempt got by Giambi. The play scored the Angels Adam Kennedy from third base. The Angels put four across and led the game 4-1 after the second inning. Anaheim added another run in the third inning to lead 5-1.

The Yankees facing Anaheim’s hottest pitcher, John Lackey, were able to creep back into the game by scoring solo runs in the fourth and fifth innings to make the tally 5-3. Once again, the Angels went to work. With Maicer Izturis on first Leiter guessed right and threw a pick off attempt to first base. Izturis was seemingly hung out to dry. However, Giambi had trouble finding the ball in his glove and by the time he threw it to second base Izturis was sliding in under Derek Jeter’s tag. Izturis came around to score, when Kennedy’s ground got him to third and Erstad’s single got Izturis home.

The Yankees’ Gary Sheffield and Jorge Posada had a miserable night. Sheffield watched his average drop below .300 with an 0-3 performance and Posada was absolutely terrible. Posada went 0-4 with two strikeouts. Posada left 4 men stranded for the evening.

After the sixth inning the Yankees offense went on automatic pilot. They went very quietly in the seventh, eighth and ninth innings. The only positive for the night was both Boston and Baltimore lost their respective games so New York didn’t lose any ground in the standings. The fact of the matter is the Yankees have stalled all the momentum they gained in taking three or four games from the Red Sox at Fenway and two of three from the Texas Rangers in Arlington.

Today, the prospects for the Yankees don’t look any better as they have Kevin Brown starting the game. Brown, who has been MIA since he was traded for last year, has shown that he no longer has the stuff that made him one of the nastiest pitchers in baseball. There is little doubt Brown will not be in pinstripes after this season. Whether he is in baseball next year is up to conjecture. He certainly won’t command $15 million per year and private jet flights for his family. The Angels counter with Ervin Santana. Brown is 4-6 with a 5.91 ERA and Santana is 4-4 with a 5.66 ERA. Today’s game will depend on whose offense decides to show up and produce the most.

Looking ahead I think the Yankees only chance at making the playoffs will be to win the Eastern Division outright. There will be no wild card entry from the east this year. There is a little more than two months of baseball left and a trading deadline that is rapidly approaching. If the Yankees have any hopes of turning things around they need to do it now. They have to get better pitching performances from top to bottom, and they need to rediscover a killer instinct. Let’s try starting with tonight’s game.


PLAY BALL!



© 2005 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

Saturday, July 16, 2005

MELKY’S UNFORTUNATE EVENT
Rookie centerfielder plays Nixon’s line drive into 3-run inside-the-park-homer




By: Russ Rose
Special to Yankees Talk Shop
July 15, 2005


This game got out of hand in a hurry. For the Yankees there was no coming from behind. The Sox started out fast and furious and made sure the Yankees stayed buried. Boston laid waste to the Bombers in a 17-1 shelling before a crowd of 35, 083 rabid fans at Fenway Park.

One night after Alex Rodriguez hit a low breaking ball from Curt Schilling over Fenway’s centerfield wall to take the Yankees to a come-from-behind 8-6 win the two teams took the field to do battle. For the Red Sox ex-Yankee and self-described bad boy David Wells took the mound, and for the Yankees it was new pitching addition Tim Redding. Redding was traded to the Yankees, along with Darrell May for reliever Paul Quantrill.

Wells put the Bombers down in order, then it was Redding’s turn to do the same. Somewhere along the line Redding forgot to do that. The Sox scored three runs in the first and three more in the second. Redding was aided in his implosion by Darrell May and Melky Cabrera. In the second inning Redding walked Mark Bellhorn and Johnny Damon. He gave up a single to Edgar Renteria to load the bases. With no one out Joe Torre visited the mound, bringing his hook with him. He summoned May to face David Ortiz. He induced Ortiz to ground out into a fielder’s choice as third baseman Alex Rodriguez forced out Damon at third. Bellhorn scored on the play. May gave up a double to Manny Ramirez, which scored Renteria from second base and put David Ortiz on third.

The biggest mistake of the night came when Trot Nixon lined a shot into centerfield. Yankees’ centerfielder Melky Cabrera charged toward the ball, but as the ball curved to the right Cabrera was unable to make the adjustment and the ball glanced off his glove. As Cabrera fell down and the ball rolled to the centerfield wall. Cabrera got up, chased the ball down and threw it into cutoff man Derek Jeter. However, the damage was done. Nixon was able to make it all the way around the diamond for the first inside-the-park home run in his career. The Sox were up on the Yanks 8-0 by the time New York came to bat in the third inning.

The night didn’t get any better for the Yankees. May, Jason Alexander, and Buddy Groom gave up a combined 11 earned runs on 10 hits. The Yankees lone run came in the fourth inning when Robinson Cano scored from second base on a Gary Sheffield single. By that time the game was only a formality. The Yankees offense, which flexed its muscles the night before was unable to mount any significant threats against Wells. Wells cruised to an easy win over the Bronx Bummers.

For the Red Sox the victory gave them back the 2-1/2 game division lead they enjoyed over the third place Yankees. For New York it was another night of frustration as horrendous pitching continues to plague them. With only two of the original starting rotation healthy the Yankees second-half future doesn’t bode well. The offense can’t continue to pound teams into submission with scores of 10-8 or 9-6. Sooner or later somebody, anybody is going to have to step up and become the leader of this staff. It appeared that rookie Chien Ming Wang was poised to do that, but now that his season is in jeopardy with a shoulder injury someone else is going to have to do it.

The Yankees clearly need pitching help. The new additions, May and Redding, don’t appear to be any answers as they finished the game with ERA’s of 16.71 and 54.00 respectively. The rookies from Columbus had better step it up or they may end up on a short plane ride back to the great State of Ohio. The trading deadline is coming at the end of the month, so the Tampa and New York brain trust better start figuring out a way to fix the pitching problem or for the first time since 1994 the Yankees will be watching the 2005 playoffs from the comforts of their living rooms instead of their dugout.


PLAY BALL



© 2005 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

Tuesday, July 12, 2005

YANKEES PULL FIRST HALF ESCAPE
With all their problems Yanks are still only 2-1/2 games out of first place




By: Russ Rose
Special to Yankees Talk Shop
July 12, 2005



As the second half of the season approaches all the armchair analysts are throwing their two cents in about how well the Yankees have fared so far this season. I’m no exception. Feel free to agree or disagree, but there is both good news and bad news. Let’s start with the bad news first. A few things that have gone awry are:

The outfield
- Bernie Williams, Tony Womack, Hideki Matsui, Gary Sheffield and, occasionally, Ruben Sierra have been horrific. It is no secret Bernie Williams is not even half the player he used to be when patrolling centerfield. He looks tired and slow. He makes far too many miscues on balls hit in his direction and his throwing arm has gone from small sized cannon to a pop gun. Runners, who used to at least think about taking second base on balls hit to Bernie, challenge his arm all the time now. They know Bernie isn’t physically able to move and throw like he did a few seasons ago. Instead of being an asset in the field Williams has become a liability. So much so Joe Torre was forced to move Hideki Matsui to centerfield (his natural position) and throw Tony Womack in left field. That move in itself has become a point of contention. While Matsui is no Joe DiMaggio or Mickey Mantle he plays his position well enough to make occasionally great plays and doesn’t often hurt his team with his glove. He is a solid contributor. This year in 613 innings Matsui has a fielding percentage of 1.000. He doesn’t embarrass himself or his team.

Womack, on-the-other-hand, has been a monumental bust. He was originally signed as a second baseman to replace popular Miguel Cairo. Womack who was coming off a solid season with the St. Louis Cardinals was expected to fill the hole left by Cairo with both his bat and glove. He has done neither. Womack is hitting a very quiet .243 with an OBP of .276 and that translates into Womack not crossing the plate very often. He has scored less runs than his second base replacement Robinson Cano (32 to 35) and Cano has played in 14 fewer games. Womack is one of the Yankees fastest base runners, but it doesn’t do them any good if Womack isn’t occupying a base somewhere on the diamond. Additionally, Womack has looked very shaky in the outfield. With Cano performing like he has Womack has become the odd-man out and is sitting on the bench, along with Bernie.

Gary Sheffield, who is a terror at the plate, has been mediocre in right field. His .981 fielding percentage is a testimony to that. He often misplays balls hit off the right field wall, but his cannon-like right arm keeps opposing base runners honest. What he lacks with his glove he makes up with in throwing. With everything else Sheff brings to the table a manager will overlook his defensive flaws. Ruben Sierra, who’s only played in 12 games has a perfect record in the field, but gets an incomplete due to the small sample size. (Grade C)

The infield – Alex Rodriguez, Derek Jeter, Robinson Cano and Jason Giambi have been less than stellar so far this year. Between the four players they have committed 34 errors. No doubt Jeter (10 errors), who only committed 13 errors for the entire 2004 season, won’t be repeating as the Gold Glove recipient at the shortstop position.

The same goes for A-Rod (10 errors), who, also, only committed 13 errors at third base in 2004. He’s got over a year of experience at his position and should be cutting down on his mistakes.

Robinson Cano, who was brought up from Triple-A Columbus, to play second base when Tony Womack was moved to the outfield, is learning to play his position in the giant pressure cooker known as New York City. Cano has acquitted himself admirably in spite of a sporadic flub. Expect him to get better and better as time goes on.

Jason Giambi has had to overcome many obstacles this year since the news of his testimony in the BALCO case became public. Giambi, who was signed in 2002, to be the offensive monster he was in Oakland, has had numerous physical setbacks while playing in New York. Much of his physical ailments have been speculated to be correlated to his alleged steroid use. The New York press howled for the Yankees to dump Giambi. Many fans, too, wanted to see Giambi gone. He was washed up. He didn’t have it anymore. Recently, Giambi has had a tremendous surge offensively and seems to have rediscovered the stroke that made him one of the most feared hitters in the game. Maybe, once Jason becomes comfortable offensively, he can concentrate on his defense, and make better decisions at first base to cut down on balls getting by him.

Tino Martinez, who was signed in the off-season as a defensive back up to Giambi continues to shine defensively at first base. His presence raises the bar for an, otherwise, inconsistent infield. (Grade C+)

The pitching – Randy Johnson, Carl Pavano, Jaret Wright, Mike Mussina and Kevin Brown were the starting staff on Opening Day. As of today, the staff consists of Randy Johnson, Mike Mussina, and Chien Ming Wang, plus who can we throw in there, and who can we throw in there. Pavano (shoulder), Wright (shoulder) and Brown (back spasms) are all on the disabled list.

Johnson who was supposed to be the biggest acquisition of the winter, along with the Mets Pedro Martinez has been a big disappointment. He has been anything, but the intimidator he was while pitching for the Arizona Diamondbacks. Although, amassing a record of 9-6 Johnson’s ERA is a burgeoning 4.30. It is the third highest ERA in his Hall-of-Fame career. The Unit has given up more home runs (19) than any other pitcher on the staff. This is not exactly what the Yankees were hoping for when they signed Johnson and gave him a two-year extension.

Jaret Wright, another free agent acquisition, was coming off a very good season with the Atlanta Braves. However, Wright began imploding from the outset of the season and after letting his ERA mushroom to 9.15 his twice surgically repaired right shoulder was re-injured landing him on the disabled list.

Carl Pavano was supposed to be another cornerstone in the revamped starting rotation. Pavano first half record is 4-6 with an ERA of 4.77. He has given up the second most home runs on the staff (17) and, along with Wright, is sitting on the disabled list with an injured right shoulder.

Kevin Brown? What can you say about KB? Two words come to mind. Those words are over and never. He is overpaid, over-sensitive, overblown, over-the-hill and over here. He is never nice, never healthy, never available and never reliable. Brown is a head case. If he gets a hangnail he goes on the disabled list. The guy has a back about as sturdy as a house-of-cards. Brown, who at one time was one of the nastiest pitchers in baseball, has become a broken egg shell of his former self. He scares no one, except maybe kids, and his once un-hittable stuff gets launched all over the yard.

Mike Mussina started out the season terribly, but over the last part of the first half of the season has turned his performance up a notch. After logging a 1-2 record, with an ERA of 4.97, in April the Moose has gone 8-3 and lowered his ERA to 3.97. Mussina’s best efforts came in May when he went 4-1 with an ERA of 3.08.

This year’s biggest surprise has got to be Chien Ming Wang. Wang started the season in Columbus and didn’t arrive in New York until April 25th. Since then Wang has accumulated a record of 6-3 with an ERA of 3.89. Who would’ve expected this guy to become the ace of the staff? He came out of nowhere and if he gets bumped out of the rotation by one of the returning starters the Yankees brain trust needs a lobotomy.

The bullpen, which was supposed to retooled, has been a grade-A disaster. The Yankees signed Frankie Rodriguez, Buddy Groom and Mike Stanton to bolster an overused bully. Returning relievers were Tom Gordon, Paul Quantrill and Tanyon Sturtze. Frankie Rodriguez is on the DL and Paul Quantrill and Mike Stanton have been released. Quantrill and Stanton were a gas and a match. Since then the Yankees have called up Darrell May, Jason Anderson, Sean Henn, Steve Proctor and Wayne Franklin to help out a shaky staff. So far the only rookies who are even close to earning their pinstripes are Proctor and Anderson. The others are not making any points with the coaching staff.

Tom Gordon is still an effective set up man for closer Mariano Rivera. Gordon had a rough start to the season, but settled down to help the club get to Rivera. Right now Flash is banged up, so hopefully, the all-star break will give him a much needed breather.

Mariano Rivera is still the greatest closer of all time. He continues to shine at the ripe old age of 35. Mo still dominates opposing batters, specifically lefties, and saws off more bats than any other pitcher in baseball. Rivera’s only problem is with the Boston Red Sox. They seem to be the only team to solve Rivera. Mo has been roughed up by the Sox. However, with Rivera’s ability to concentrate on the task at hand no team is ever comfortable facing the Sandman. (Grade C-)

Now for the good news!

The offense
– The lineup, after a very slow start, has begun doing what they do best. Terrorize opposing pitching. The Yankees now rank third in the AL in team batting (.277). They rank first in OBP (.358), fourth in slugging % (.445), third in home runs (113) and first in runs scored (478). Alex Rodriguez ranks fourth in RBI (72), third in OBP (.416), sixth in SLG% (.582), ninth in hits (103) and second in home runs (23). He is turning out to be the player everyone expected last season. He is amply supported by Derek Jeter (.308, 37, 11, 105) *, Hideki Matsui (.320, 70, 14, 105) and Gary Sheffield (.298, 68, 17, 92).

Rookie Robinson Cano is swinging the bat well (.288) and Ruben Sierra is contributing from the bench (.284). Jason Giambi, who started out extremely slow, has seemed to have found his stroke and has been pounding the leather off of the ball. In June Giambi hit .308 while raising his OBP to .474 and his SLG% to .431. Like the weather, in July, Giambi has really raised his game by hitting a scorching .423. He has 5 home runs and 10 RBI in nine games. His OBP is a team high .545 and his SLG% is 1.077. The one guy who probably wishes he was still playing is Jason Giambi.

On the other side of the scale, Bernie Williams (.257, 35, 5, 63), Jorge Posada (.259, 39, 10, 66) and Tony Womack (.243, 12, 0, 63) have not gotten the job done. (Grade B+)

Now for the really good news!

Even with all of their problems the Yankees find themselves only 2-1/2 games behind the East Division leading Boston Red Sox. This team could’ve folded their tents and mailed the remainder of the season in. Many a team has before. The Yankees, however, stayed the course and kept with it. They are playing on the upswing, while the Sox are in a bit of a tailspin. So as the scheduling gods would have it the Yankees meet their archrivals this coming Thursday to start the second half of the season. Conceivably, if everything goes their way, the Yankees could find themselves in first place when they leave Fenway Park after Sunday’s game. That’s a lot to hope for, but something to look forward to. There should be plenty of fireworks. See you at the park.


PLAY BALL!

*(average, RBI, home runs, hits)



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