Monday, October 26, 2009




The Old Men and the C(hampionship)!
Pettitte; Rivera pitch Yanks to 40th World Series appearance



When everyone else questioned it manager Joe Girardi stuck to his guns. Nobody, but nobody was going to start Game 6 of the American League Championship, but “Old Reliable” Andy Pettitte. Not even with the one day rain delay, which set the game back from Saturday to Sunday night, did Girardi waiver from his decision. Pettitte was going to get the ball, and with it rode the New York Yankees’ hopes of returning to the Fall Classic.

In order for that to happen the Yankees needed to set aside a pesky Los Angeles Angels club that has been a thorn in New York’s side in what has seemed like forever. The Angels took 2-of-3 in Anaheim to pull the series back to the Big Apple and only trailing the Yankees 3-2.

As Angels center fielder Torii hunter said, “the pressure is all on them (Yankees).” Pettitte took the ball and said ‘no problem.’

Pettitte faced off against Halos lefty Joe Saunders. Saunders last appeared in Game 2 and pitched very well. He threw 7.0 innings, surrendering 2 runs while striking out 5 and walking one. The Angels bullpen, specifically Brian Fuentes and Ervin Santana, imploded and gave the Yankees a 4-3 win.

On the other hand, Pettitte started Game 3 and pitched well enough to keep his team in the game. He was staked to a 3-0 lead before surrendering it and leaving the game tied after 6-1/3 innings of work. The game went into extra innings and the Angels won it in the 11th when new Yankee killer Jeff Mathis doubled in the winning run .

No one in the Yankees clubhouse wanted this series to reach a 7th game. It was an attitude of winning it now that permeated the team. Girardi felt there was no better guy to give the ball to than Pettitte. After all, “AP” had made 37 previous playoff starts and was tied with John Smoltz for career playoff wins at 15 apiece.

Pettitte was masterful in his approach toward the Angels lineup. He reached back into his past and delivered a vintage Pettitte performance. He bent , but never broke as he kept the ever dangerous Halos hitters in check. Andy gave up 7 hits, but the Angels were only able to convert it into one earned run over 6-1/3 innings. Pettitte surrendered a single to left fielder Juan Rivera before Girardi came and got his trusty lefty.

As Pettitte walked off the field toward the Yankees dugout the Stadium erupted into a din of cheers for the man who has given the pinstriped faithful so many wonderful memories. Gratefully, Andy doffed his cap and waved it at the crowd before disappearing into the dugout.

Girardi called for embattled right-hander Joba Chamberlain. It was a huge leap of faith Girardi was showing Chamberlain who entered the game with the Yankees holding on to a precarious 3-1 lead. Chamberlain faced pinch hitter Maicer Izturis who grounded into a force play as 2B Robinson Cano got Rivera at second, and then induced shortstop Erick Aybar (sans dreadlocks) to ground out to Mark Teixeira at first to end the inning.

As Chamberlain walked off the mound he thumped his chest as a sign of some personal redemption.

As the Yankees took the field for the top of the 8th inning Girardi went to the one thing the Angels didn’t have, and that is the best closer in the history of the game. Mariano Rivera entered the game to the strains of “Enter Sandman” and was asked to get 6 outs.

At age 40 Rivera is still doing things that other relief pitchers can only dream of doing. At the end of the regular season Mo had recorded his 526th career save, second only to Milwaukee Brewers closer Trevor Hoffman (591). However, what separates Rivera from the rest is his performance in the post season where he has recorded 37 saves; more than twice the number of the second place closer, Philadelphia Phillies Brad Lidge.**

The never say die Angels opened the top of the 8th with Chone Figgins blooping a weak single to left field. Bobby Abreu grounded out to move Figgins to second, followed by Hunter who grounded to Cano for the second out. Figgins was unable to advance.

It didn’t matter though as Vladimir Guerrero stepped in and shot a low 3-2 cutter into right field to score Figgins. That would be the last Angel to cross home plate. Kendry Morales grounded out to second to end the Halos threat.

In the bottom of the frame Angels manager Mike Scioscia brought in lefty Scott Kazmir after Ervin Santana walked Cano on four straight pitches.

Then in something right out of the Twilight Zone the Angels saw their playoff hopes dissipate as Nick Swisher sacrificed bunted Cano to second. As Swisher was racing toward first, first baseman Morales picked up the bunted ball and fired to the bag being covered by 2B Howie Kendrick. Kendrick dropped the ball and everyone was safe.

The speedy Brett Gardner replaced Swisher at first and then it was center fielder Melky Cabrera’s turn. He laid down a bunt which was fielded by Kazmir. Instead of firing the ball to first Kazmir lobbed it right over the head of Morales allowing Cano to score and it moved Gardner to third and Cabrera to second.

Derek Jeter grounded out to first as the runners stayed put and then Kazmir walked Johnny Damon to load the bases. Teixeira hit a fly ball to center scoring Gardner to make it 5-2. Scioscia had seen enough and yanked Kazmir for Jered Weaver.

Weaver faced the dangerous Alex Rodriguez, but pitched around him; walking him on four pitches. With the bases again loaded catcher Jorge Posada who had had a miserable game (hitting into two inning ending double plays) looked at strike three to end the inning.

Rivera took the mound for the Angels last stand. The Angels went quietly into the night and into the winter as Kendrick grounded out to first, Rivera flied out to right and as only Mo could do it struck out pinch hitter Gary Matthews, Jr. to end the game and the series.

The Yankees celebrated in the middle of their house before retiring to the clubhouse to enjoy the win and spray champagne on each other. Honorary American League Vice President Jackie Autry presented the American League Championship trophy to Yankees managing general partner Hal Steinbrenner and lefty CC Sabathia was named series MVP.

For Andy Pettitte it was a game of satisfaction and new heights. In addition to winning his 16th career playoff game, breaking the tie with Smoltz, Pettitte set a new major league record with his 5th career series closeout victory.

Like old times it was Andy Pettitte and Mariano Rivera leading the way for the Yankees to the promised land.

Today is a new day and now the Yankees turn their sights toward the City of Brotherly Love and the Philadelphia Phillies. The Phillies have a boatload of hitters themselves, in Ryan Howard, Chase Utley and company. They also have the pitching with Cliff Lee, Cole Hamels, et. al.

The 2009 World Series is set to begin in the Bronx on Wednesday evening with FOX Sports televising the series in its entirety. It will be Sabathia vs. Lee for Game 1 in what should be a classic pitcher’s duel. The times will be announced by MLB later today.

Congratulations to the Yankees and to the Phillies. May the best team reign supreme.

4=27.

**Source: baseball-reference.com



© 2009 Yankees Talk Shop @ yuku.com

Redistribution, rewriting, rebroadcast, or republication of this story without the prior written consent of Yankees Talk Shop, Pride in the Pinstripes or its affiliates is strictly prohibited

Saturday, October 24, 2009




The Time is Now
Yankees need to win Game 6 to avoid 2004 talk


This is the closest the New York Yankees have been to the World Series since they blew a 3-0 2004 ALCS lead to the Boston Red Sox to become the first team in any major U.S. sport to lose a 7-game series in that fashion . It was the most humiliating loss in franchise history. Especially, losing it to their most hated rival. It was the year the Red Sox shed their history versus the Yankees and built on the future.

The Yankees , after missing the playoffs last season, are on the brink of returning to the stage they are quite familiar with. The hold a 3-2 lead in the American League Championship Series over the team that has given them the most trouble over the past decade. That team being the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.

The Angels have always played the Bombers tough. In fact, as has been noted many times, they are the only team to hold a historical winning record against New York. Over the past eight post seasons the Yankees and Angels have met twice in battle with the Angels coming out on top in the 2002 and 2005 AL Division Series.

The Yankees came into this year’s playoffs on a mission. After missing the playoffs in 2008 New York had one purpose in mind and that was to win their 27th world championship. They accomplished the first leg of that quest by eliminating the Minnesota Twins from the divisional series; sweeping them in three straight games.

On the other side of the coin the Angels were facing a long time nemesis of their own. The Red Sox had dominated the Angels in post season play by taking them out of the ALDS in 2004, 2007 and 2008 with a combined record of 9-1. The Angels met the Sox, once again, in the divisional series. However, instead of the Sox overpowering the Halos it was the Angels who dominated the Red Sox by eliminating them from contention with a 3-game sweep. This set up the first ever Championship Series collision with the Yankees.

History did not favor New York. Each time New York met the Angels in the post season the Yankees took the first game only to lose the series. Keep in mind history didn’t favor the Angels going against the Red Sox either, but the Angels took care of business. The Yankees were hoping to do the same.

The Yankees took care of business in the first two games in the Bronx. In less than ideal weather conditions the Yankees won both games with scores of 4-1 and 4-3. They flew out west with the two-game lead only to see the lead evaporate by half as the Angels came back to nip the Bombers in Game 3, 5-4.

The Yankees took control of the series again on Tuesday night by taking the air out of both the Angels and their fans as they clobbered Scott Kazmir and the Halos in a 10-1 beat down. CC Sabathia completely outdueled Kazmir for his second win in four games.

Both teams took the next night off, then came back on Thursday for Game 5. It was a golden opportunity for the Yankees to close out the series and finally exorcise the Angels from their past. AJ Burnett faced off against John Lackey.

Before an out was recorded Burnett placed the Yankees in a hole as the Angels put up a four spot in the first inning to lead the game 4-0. Afterward, Burnett seemed to settle down, but the Angels kept the lead going into the 7th inning.

After loading the bases with one out Lackey got Johnny Damon to fly out. As Damon was making his way back to the dugout Angel manager Mike Scioscia bounded out of the dugout and headed for the mound. An unbelieving Lackey looked angrily at Scioscia and said, “This is mine. Come on Scios.” It didn’t change Scioscia’s mind and he took the ball from Lackey who stomped away and marched into the Angels’ dugout.

Scioscia called for lefty reliever Darren Oliver to face Mark Teixeira. That’s when the wheels fell off the Angels wagon. The Yankees scored 6 runs to go ahead of the Angels. Right fielder Nick Swisher flew out to end the Yankees onslaught. For the Yankees the finish line was on the horizon.

It didn’t last long.

Yankees manager Joe Girardi decided to stick with Burnett to open the bottom of the frame and Burnett promptly gave up a single to Jeff Mathis and then walked Erick Aybar. Girardi pulled his starter and brought in lefty Damaso Marte. Chone Figgins moved the runners to second and third with a sacrifice bunt. Bobby Abreu grounded out to first scoring Mathis. Girardi made another pitching change and called for righty Phil Hughes to face center fielder Torii Hunter. Hunter walked and then Hughes gave up a run scoring singles to Vladimir Guerrero and Kendry Morales allowing the Angels to regain the lead. Hughes struck out Maicer Izturis to end the inning, but the damage was done.

New York made one last attempt to take the game back in the 9th inning when they loaded the bases against Angels closer Brian Fuentes. However, Fuentes got Swisher to pop out to short to end the game.

The Yankees now come home with the hopes of finishing this series on Saturday and then moving on to face the National League and defending World Champion Philadelphia Phillies on Wednesday. The Bombers will turn to their playoff stopper Andy Pettitte who will start his 38th playoff game. The Angels will counter with left-hander Joe Saunders. Saunders pitched well in Game 2 in New York, but left with a no decision as did Pettitte who gave up a 3-0 lead in Game 3 in Anaheim, which was eventually lost by the bullpen.

Heavy rains are predicted for the New York area on Saturday, which may push the game back to Sunday. That may be a break for the Yankees who have scheduled Sabathia to start Game 7 if necessary. An extra day would give him his full rest.

The Yankees want and need to close out the Angels in Game 6. It would help them exorcise their past playoff woes against the Halos and it will stem any comparison to New York’s ALCS collapse against the Red Sox in 2004.

Another part of this puzzle is what losing this series would do to Girardi’s future. Many believe that anything below a World Series appearance will cost Girardi his job. Some of the pressure is coming because of questionable pitching moves he’s made in the two Yankee losses and some from just being the manager of the New York Yankees.

The Angels will be playing Saturday like there’s no tomorrow, because for them there isn’t one unless they win. The Yankees need to do the same, because a loss on Saturday will put them in the same boat as the Angels.

Win and go to the World Series. It’s as simple as that.



© 2009 Yankees Talk Shop @ yuku.com

Redistribution, rewriting, rebroadcast, or republication of this story without the prior written consent of Yankees Talk Shop, Pride in the Pinstripes or its affiliates is strictly prohibited

Sunday, October 18, 2009




Another Chapter in Yanks 'Bronx Tale'
Bombers beat Halos in 13th; Take 2-0 ALCS lead


Another classic game and another nail biter between the two best teams in major league baseball. This game will end up on “Yankee Classics” for two reasons. First, the Yankees won the game in the 13th inning on a throwing miscue by Maicer, and secondly, because it was a classic duel between two longtime rivals striving for baseball supremacy.

The New York Yankees and the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim (I liked it better when it was just the Anaheim or California Angels) have been cross country rivals ever since 1961 when the Angels, under the ownership of the “Singing Cowboy” Gene Autry, was granted a spot in the American League. The Angels shared digs with the Los Angeles Dodgers, first at the Coliseum in LA, and then later at Dodger Stadium. This arrangement lasted until 1966 when the Angels opened up their own park in Anaheim and became the California Angels.

When you hear of a team having another team’s “number” you don’t have to look any further than the Angels and Yankees. The Halos are the only team who has a historical winning record against the Bronx Bombers. And, not just by a little either. These two teams have met 586 times in the regular season and the Angels are 52 game over .500 against New York.

Living out here on the west coast, but still rooting for the boys in pinstripes I have seen my share of disappointments over the years. More times than not I, like a lot of other displaced Yankee fans in and around Orange County, California, have seen the Angels make the Yankees look like a second rate team. Whether the Angels were in last place or first they’ve always played the Yanks like it is the 7th game of the World Series.

Earlier this season was no exception. In July (10-12) the Yankees traveled to Anaheim for a 3-game set with the Halos. It was their last series before the All-star break and they were coming in with a hot hand. The Yankees had just won 15 of their last 17 games, but that didn’t matter to the Angels. In Game 1 of the series the Yankees had a 5-0 lead, but blew it, and the Halos won 10-6. In Game 2 the Yankees rewarded me on my birthday by allowing the Angels to erase a 4-1 lead by giving up 7 runs in the 5th inning as the Halos won going away 14-8. Game 3 saw the Angels overcome a 1-0 Yankee lead by scoring four runs in the 4th inning and squeaking out a 5-4 win to sweep the Yankees going into the break.

Fortunately the Yankees didn’t stay down long and they ended up by going 48-25 in the 2nd half to win the AL East Division by 8 games over second place Boston and they garnered the best record in baseball by six games over the Angels. In fact, in September (21-23) the Yankees returned to Anaheim to take 2-of-3 from the Angels, splitting the season series 5-5. There was room for optimism. A glimmer of hope was on the horizon.

Both teams went into the divisional series with different expectations. The Angels were facing the Red Sox who, like the Angels are with the Yankees, had the Halos’ number. As many so-called experts saw the Red Sox winning the ALDS as those picking the Angels. In 2004, 2007 and 2008 the Red Sox ousted the Halos from the divisional series with a combined 9-1 record. You don’t even want to ask any longtime Angel fan about 1986. The Angels lone win came during the ’08 series. Although they lost the Angels won, because they finally had beaten their longtime playoff antagonists in a divisional game. Now, at least they knew they could beat those pesky (no pun intended) Red Sox in a playoff setting.

The proof of that pudding came in this year’s divisional series as the Angels swept the Red Sox out of the playoffs and did so convincingly. This set up this year’s confrontation with the Yankees.

On the other side of the coin, the Yankees were expected to beat the Minnesota Twins in their half of the ALDS quite handily. Most experts predicted an easy series with the Yankees sweeping the Twins. After all the Yankees won the regular season series 7-0, and the Twins have never played well at Yankee Stadium. Well, the Yankees did sweep, but it was anything but easy. In fact in all 3 games the Yankees had to come from behind to beat Minnesota to set up the first ALCS meeting between the Bombers and the Halos.

Depending on who you asked, the predictions about which team would win this series was as varied as could be. A lot of people point to the Angels historical success as well as post season dominance. The Angels rotation is better than the Yankees. The Angels defense is better or the bullpen. You would hear the same thing said about the Yankees. The only area the Yankees were given a clear advantage was in the role of closer. Mariano Rivera versus Brian Fuentes was a no-contest. Rivera wins hands down. Much of this predicting has been regional. Los Angeles/Orange County area papers said the Angels would win, but newspapers in the east picked the Yankees.

In Game 1 the Yankees behind CC Sabathia handled the Angels very easily, winning 4-1. The Halos helped by playing very sloppy and uncharacteristically poor defense. However, for anyone who knows the playoff history between these two teams, the Yankees also won Game 1 from the Angels in the 2002 and 2005 ALDS only to lose those series in the end.

Last night, it appeared that the Yankees were going to follow past playoff scripts. Game 2 was very important for both teams. If the Yankees won they go to Anaheim up in the series 2-0 forcing the Angels to have to beat New York in 4 of the next 5 games. Lose, and the series is tied 1-1 with the next three games played at Angel Stadium. That would mean that if the Angels sweep the Yankees in their park they send the Yankees down to another humiliating defeat without ever getting the opportunity to get back to New York.

The Yankees jumped to an early 2-0 lead behind a run scoring triple by Cano in the 2nd inning, followed by a solo home run in the 3rd by Derek Jeter. Yankee starter AJ Burnett was cruising through the Angels lineup in the first 4 innings, but, as has been the case in the past, Burnett got into trouble in the 5th inning.

Burnett surrendered a leadoff double to Izturis, a single to Erick Aybar scoring Izturis, then hit Chone Figgins with a pitch. After getting Bobby Abreu to fly out to left for the 2nd out Burnett walked Torii Hunter to load the bases. With the ever dangerous Vladimir Guerrero at the plate Burnett uncorked a wild pitch past catcher Jose Molina allowing Aybar to score from third, tying the game at 2 apiece. Fortunately, Guerrero cooperated by grounding out to short to end the inning.

Once again, it appeared that the Yankees were right where the Angels wanted them. Lose Game 1, give the Yankees a lead in Game 2 only to come back to yank the rug out from under New York’s feet and steal another playoff series.

However, something different happened. The Yankees refused to cooperate. For the next five innings the Angels and Yankees threw up zeroes. In the 11th inning Yankees RHRP Alfredo Aceves took the mound to face the Halos. All through the 2009 campaign Aceves has been the one guy manager Joe Girardi could point to in order to get the job done. If he needed an emergency starter or a pitcher who could come into the middle of the game to give the Yankees length Girardi called on Aceves.

Nonetheless, Aceves committed the pitcher’s cardinal sin by walking the leadoff batter. He gave Gary Matthews, Jr. a free pass and after moving to 2nd on a sacrifice bunt Matthews scored on a soft liner by Figgins to left field in front of Johnny Damon. Oh how many times had Yankee fans seen the Angels come back like this.

Aceves got out of the inning without any further trouble, but the damage had been done. The Yankees had dug themselves into another hole against the team whom they’ve suffered their greatest failures.

For Yankee fans this game took on the look of a bad car crash. It was ugly, but you had to watch.

In the bottom of the 11th inning Angel manager Mike Scioscia sent in his closer Brian Fuentes. Fuentes lead the American League in saves in ’09, but had blown 7 as well. The first man he faced was Alex Rodriguez. This Rodriguez was different from the Rodriguez the Angels have faced in the past. This guy has been hitting and driving in runs.

Fuentes quickly got ahead of A-Rod by throwing 2 four-seam fastballs by him. With the count 0-2 Fuentes made the mistake of going to the well once too often and tried to jam a third four-seamer by Rodriguez. A-Rod did what all good hitters are supposed to do. He promptly punched the ball over the right field wall to tie the game.

Said Fuentes to reporters after the game. "I was trying to elevate and didn't get it up enough," Fuentes talking about the pitch allowing A-Rod to drive the ball. "I felt like I threw the ball really well minus the one pitch. Unfortunately, it cost us the game. I take full responsibility for that."

The two teams traded zeroes in the 12th, and the Yankees kept the Halos off the board in the top of the 13th. This set up another improbable finish for a club who has been doing the improbable all season long.

Girardi started the bottom of the frame by sending up pinch hitter Jerry Hairston, Jr. to face the hard throwing Ervin Santana. Hairston responded by lining a single to center. Reserve center fielder Brett Gardner did his job by sacrifice bunting Hairston to 2nd base. Santana intentionally walked Cano in order to set up a potential inning ending double play. Outfielder Melky Cabrera tried to cooperate with the Angels by hitting a hard grounder to second baseman Izturis’ left. With Hairston moving to third and Cano to second Izturis made a beautiful grab, but instead of going to first to get Cabrera he decided to go to second. The ball sailed by Aybar allowing Hairston to score the winning run.

It was the second game in a row where a team, which prides itself on playing sound defensive, has made a poor decision costing them a game.

"It shouldn't have come down to that," Chone Figgins said when reporters asked him about Izturis wild throw. "We had too many opportunities that got away from us. That's why we lost."

Neither team did a great job in potential run scoring situations. The Halos stranded 16 runners and the Yankees 12.

However, when it counted most the Yankees came through.

Hairston put a personal spin on his contribution.

"I knew if I got a chance to do something, I wanted to do something positive," Hairston said after the game. "This game isn't easy. I just wanted to enjoy the moment. My grandfather never had the opportunity that I've had. That was definitely for him."

A-Rod who has now hit three, dramatic, late inning home runs told reporters, "I know I had a blast out there today. That was a great game. That's what I've been doing all year -- trying to keep things simple and not trying to think too much."

Perhaps Joe Girardi summarized the game best.

“We're fortunate to come out on top in this game, because it was a great game," Yankees manager Joe Girardi said. "And there were some miscues. Fortunately we were on the right side of it."

The series now shifts to Anaheim where the next 3 games are scheduled. Game 3 is scheduled for Monday at 4:13 EST for the first pitch. It will be Andy Pettitte versus Jered Weaver. In order to return to the Bronx the Angels have to take 2 out of 3. On the other hand, the Yankees have the opportunity to do what no other team before them has done. Celebrate a playoff series win on the Angels home field.

This series is hardly over and both teams know it. That said the Yankees are now treading on heretofore unknown territory. They are half way to a series celebration over their most successful playoff opponents.

Just another chapter in the Yankees latest 'Bronx Tale.'

NOTE: Derek Jeter just keeps adding to his legacy. His home run in the 3rd inning was the 19th of his playoff career moving him past Reggie Jackson and Mickey Mantle (18) for third place behind Manny Ramirez (29) and Bernie Williams (22).



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Tuesday, October 13, 2009




Evil Empire versus Halos
Yankees and Angels gearing up for classic ALCS


The American League Championship Series has finally been determined, and it should prove to be a doozy. It’s the kind of matchup that great sports movies are made from. It’s David versus Goliath or the bad guys versus the good guys. Black hats against white hats, and you don’t have to stretch your imagination very far to see which team is viewed as the good guys and the which is the bad.

On Friday, October 16, the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim invade the Bronx to face the New York Yankees in a best of seven championship series. The prize is a trip to the World Series to take on either the Philadelphia Phillies or the Los Angeles Dodgers who begin their own quests for the ultimate reward on Thursday in Los Angeles.

This series has oodles of side stories to it. The Angels are the only team to have a historical winning record against the Yankees. They hold 319-267 advantage over New York, and their fans and news media point that out to their opposite numbers quite frequently. They also like to point out how much money the Yankees spend to “buy championships,” even though the Yankees haven’t tasted World Series champagne in 8 seasons.

There is also the emotional connection with Nick Adenhart whose number every member of the Angels squad wears on his jersey in remembrance of the 22-yearl old pitcher who was tragically killed by a drunk driver on April 10, 2009 after pitching the best game of his short career against the Oakland Athletics. The Angels dedicated their season to Adenhart and his jersey hangs in the dugout at every game. The fans even erected a memorial for Adenhart in front of the stadium between the two, red, giant batting helmets adorning the Angels’ home. It is a very touching scene.

The Angels also come into the ALCS brimming with confidence. After being ousted from the ALDS in 2004, 2007-08 by the Boston Red Sox the Halos exacted revenge by sweeping the Red Sox from this year’s divisional playoffs setting off a celebration in the middle of Fenway Park before a stunned home crowd.

They also have assurance in knowing they have had playoff dominance over the Yankees as well. In 2002 and 2005 the Angels eliminated the Bombers in the divisional series to send them packing for an early October vacation.

However, for all the success the Angels have enjoyed by making the playoffs in six of the last eight seasons they have only converted it once into a World Series trophy. That was in 2002 when the Angels miraculously came back from a 5-0 deficit in Game 6 of the Series against Barry Bonds and the San Francisco Giants to win the game 6-5 and then closed it out with a 4-1 victory to become the King of the Hill.

Indeed, the 2009 season has been an poignant, up-and-down, roller-coaster ride for the Angels.

So how do the Yankees counter all this sentiment and history?

First off, it won’t be easy, but it can be done. The Yankees themselves are riding an emotional high this season. After 85 years playing across the street they opened a new ballpark in the Bronx and signed three of the most highly prized and sought after free agents in the off season.

The new Yankee Stadium opened to rave reviews. It is a visual masterpiece that captured the new advances and technology of the 21st Century while capturing the magic of the old stadium. Additionally, the Bombers signed CC Sabathia, AJ Burnett and Mark Teixeira and the three of them have contributed mightily to the Yankees success of posting the best record in the majors this year, along with a return to the playoffs after missing them in 2008.

This topic is also a sore subject with the players, especially those who’ve been around since before the four championship seasons in 1996 and 1998-2000. The Yankees had made the playoffs every year from 1995 through 2007. Every season, except 1995, was under the guidance of manager Joe Torre. Torre left after the 2007 for Los Angeles and the Yankees hired ex-Yankees catcher Joe Girardi as the new skipper.

Girardi’s team suffered numerous injuries throughout the season and there were also player issues that affected the clubhouse. It was too much to overcome and the Yankees failed to reach the post season after 13 straight years. It was an embarrassment for a franchise whose sole goal is to win the World Series every year. Anything less than that is viewed as an unsuccessful season.

What made it doubly humiliating was the fact that Torre went across the country to manage the Dodgers, and he guided them in his first season as manager to the post season. The Dodgers beat the favored Chicago Cubs in the divisional series before falling to the Phillies in the NL championship round.

By missing the playoffs Girardi came under the sights of the Yankees management, specifically George, Hal and Hank Steinbrenner. The start of the 2009 campaign didn’t help Girardi’s chances either. The Yankees, hamstrung by Alex Rodriguez’s well documented connection with steroids and other off the field scandals, started off the season very slowly.

On top of all that, A-Rod underwent surgery on March 9 to remove a cyst and repair a torn labrum in his right hip. It wasn’t looking good for the Yankees.

Rodriguez returned to the lineup on May 8 and it was a shot of adrenalin to the team, and especially to Teixeira who was mired in a month+ long hitting slump. Although, New York began to improve with A-Rod’s presence in the order there were still things not going quite right.

In the first 8 meetings with the Red Sox the Yankees lost every game and just before the All-Star break the Yankees traveled to Anaheim for a 3-game series with the Halos. The Yankees had beaten the Angels 2-of-3 (one rainout) in May at Yankee Stadium, and had won 13 of their last 15 prior to coming to Anaheim. That didn’t impress the Angels much as they swept the Yankees going into the break. It was another embarrassing setback.

Starting with the 2nd half the Yankees were 55-34 and trailing the Red Sox by 3 games. The rumors were flying that Girardi’s job was on the line. Then somebody threw “the switch.”

Beginning in Detroit the Yankees went on an 8-0 run, bypassing the Sox to lead the division by 2.5 games. By the time the Sox and Yankees met for the first time in the 2nd half in 4-game set, on August 6, at Yankee Stadium New York led the division and the Sox by 2.5 games.

This proved to be a turning point in the Yankees season. Get swept and they’d fall one half game behind Boston. Sweep and they’d expand their lead to 6.5 games. The Yankees swept.

In fact, in the remaining 10 games played in the second half the Yankees went 9-1 against the Red Sox to tie the season series at 9 games apiece. A Herculean feat that no one thought was possible given New York was down 8-0 in the first half.

The Yankees had similar, albeit a rare, success against the Angels. New York beat the Halos on September 14 in a makeup game from a rainout in May and then traveled to Anaheim to take 2-of-3 from the Angels in September to split the season series 5-5. The stat the Yankees point to is the reality they took 3 of the last 4 from them.

The Yankees finished the season 103-59. They were the only team to top the century mark in victories. They had 7 players with 20 or more home runs to tie a major league mark. CC Sabathia was tied for the major league lead in victories with 19 and is in the hunt for the Cy Young Award. Mark Teixeira tied Carlos Pena for the AL lead in home runs with 39 and he lead the AL with 122 RBI. He will be battling Minnesota’s Joe Mauer for MVP honors. Derek Jeter hit .334 this season and topped 200 hits (212) for the 7th time. Alex Rodriguez who entered the final game of the season with 28 HR and 93 RBI hit two bombs and drove in 7 to finish the year at 30 and 100. That was the 13th time he had reached that plateau in his career. Sabathia, Burnett and Andy Pettitte all reached double figures in wins.

The Yankees have as much to point to for momentum as the do the Angels. This is going to be a heavyweight confrontation with the two best teams in baseball (sorry Dodgers and Phillies) throwing haymakers at each other. The last team standing from this contest should have no problem dispatching their NL opponent for the World Series trophy.

One word of caution to the Halos. Don’t rely too heavily on emotion. The Yankees were dealing with the biggest shot of emotion provided this decade when the Twin Towers were felled by the acts of Al Qaeda terrorists. That year everyone, even fans in Boston, became New Yorkers and pulled for the Yankees. Still, it wasn’t enough as the Arizona Diamondbacks had other ideas and ruined a parade down the Canyon of Heroes by beating the Yankees in Game 7 of the 2001 World Series.

Enough talking. Let the games begin and may the best team win.



© 2009 Yankees Talk Shop @ yuku.com

Redistribution, rewriting, rebroadcast, or republication of this story without the prior written consent of Yankees Talk Shop, Pride in the Pinstripes or its affiliates is strictly prohibited

Saturday, October 10, 2009




The 800 lb. gorilla has left the room
A-Rod’s playoff woes quickly becoming a memory


Everybody is asking who is that masked man wearing number 13 in New York Yankee pinstripes? That can’t be Alex Rodriguez can it? Isn’t he the guy who has proverbially choked in the playoffs since coming to the Bronx?

Well look again. It is a new A-Rod. One who is delivering timely hits in run scoring situations.

Ever since Game 4 of the 2004 ALCS when the Yankees became the first team in sports history to blow a 3-0 series lead losing to the Boston Red Sox in 7 games A-Rod’s numbers had dwindled in the post season to microscopic proportions unfitting for a talented player of his magnitude.

Since signing on with the Yankees in 2004 Rodriguez has been a player of two seasons. In the regular season A-Rod has been a tiger. From 2004 – 2007 Rodriguez averaged a .303 BA, 42 HR and 123 RBI. His average on base percentage was .4004 and his slugging percentage was .5736. Add those two figures together and Rodriguez’s on base + slugging was .974. Lofty numbers indeed. Those numbers helped Rodriguez secure two MVP trophies in 2005 and 2007 to become only one of six players in Yankees’ history to win the MVP trophy. The others were Joe DiMaggio (3), Yogi Berra (3), Mickey Mantle (3), Lou Gehrig (2) and Roger Maris (2).

However, once the regular season ended and the calendar flipped to October those regular season heroics didn’t translate into post season magic.

In the 2004 ALDS against the Minnesota Twins Rodriguez amassed a .421 BA, a .476 OBP, and a .737 SLG%. He hit one home run and drove in 3 RBI. In the first three games of the ALCS, against the Red Sox, A-Rod hit .428 with one home run and 3 RBI. The Yankees won Game 3 19-8 with the offense collecting whopping 22 hits along the way. What flew under the radar at the time was the fact the Sox scored 9 runs of their own, next to 15 hits. Not exactly a pitching gem by the Yankees pitching staff either.

The roof caved in on the Yankees after that. It was like the well suddenly dried up and no more water was to be found. This was especially true in A-Rod’s case.

In the next 4 games Rodriguez batted a dismal .118 with one home run and two RBI. He wasn’t the only one. It was a total team collapse. It began back in Game 4 when the Yankees, leading the game 4-3 in the bottom of the 9th inning, brought in Mariano Rivera to shut down the Sox and lead the Yankees to their 40th World Series appearance.

Rivera did the unthinkable. He walked Kevin Millar to open the frame. Sox manager Terry Francona immediately sent in Dave Roberts to pinch run for Millar. Roberts then stole second to put the tying run into scoring position. The next batter, Bill Mueller, hit the first pitch he saw from Rivera into center field, scoring Roberts, and forever changing the course of baseball in Boston and the Bronx. Three innings later, after Manny Ramirez singled, David Ortiz sent a 2-1 pitch from Paul Quantrill into the night securing a 6-4 Red Sox victory in front of the Fenway faithful. Three nights later the Red Sox exorcised the so-called “Curse of the Babe” by beating the Yankees at Yankee Stadium 10-3 before a stunned home crowd of 56,129.

After that series things went totally wrong for A-Rod. Not the most liked person in the press or in the dugout A-Rod always tried to give the answer he thought people wanted to hear. He tried to say the right things, but often times it came out the wrong way, which just gave the press more fodder to write about. Rodriguez quickly became his own worst enemy. Both on and off the field, drama followed him everywhere.

During the next 3 season’s A-Rod’s individual numbers continued to flourish. Between 2005 and 2007 Rodriguez hit .321, .290. and .314 respectively. He knocked in 407 runs and sent baseballs over the wall 137 times. However, one of the continual knocks on A-Rod was, yeah he got his numbers, but rarely in key situations. He’d hit home runs if the Yankees were six runs up or down, but never when the game was on the line.

Not all was negative press in that time period for Rodriguez. On August 4, 2007 Rodriguez hit his 500th home run over the left field wall at Yankee Stadium to become the youngest player in major league history to reach that milestone. Statistically, 2007 was a monster year for him. Rodriguez finished with a line of .314 BA, 156 RBI and 54 home runs. His numbers were good enough for A-Rod to garner his second MVP trophy in pinstripes and third overall.

What happened to Alex Rodriguez during post season play was something out of the Twilight Zone. Inexplicably A-Rod would just stop hitting and driving in runs.

Over the three year period covering 2005 to 2007 the Yankees were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs. Three different teams sent the Yankees packing. The LA Angels in 2005, the Detroit Tigers in 2006 and the Cleveland Indians in 2007. In that time Rodriguez’s numbers were appalling to say the least.

In 55 at bats A-Rod had 7 hits for a .127 average with one home run, one RBI and he had struck out 15 times.

Last year was another good year for Rodriguez. He hit .302, plated 103 runs and knocked out 35 home runs. However, for the first time since 1995 the Yankees missed the playoffs under new manager Joe Girardi, who replaced the iconic Joe Torre. In fairness to Girardi, he was dealing with a lot of issues and injuries, but still managed to win 89 games. In other seasons that might have been good enough to make the playoffs, but unfortunately for the Yankees an upstart Tampa Bay Rays team won the division 8 games ahead of the Yankees, followed by the runner up Boston Red Sox who made it in as the wild card entry. The Yankees 3rd place finish was their lowest since the team came in 4th in 1992 under Buck Showalter.

It was embarrassing, nonetheless, for a team accustomed to playing in October.

Off the field, Rodriguez’s life was full of tabloid exploits well documented in the New York press, on sports talk shows and in the scandal rags.

In January of this year news leaked that the aforementioned Torre had written a sort of “tell-all” book about life behind the closed clubhouse doors of the New York Yankees. Rodriguez was prominently referred to by Torre. Torre said A-Rod’s teammates called him “A-Fraud” behind his back and he described the third baseman of having a “single white female” fixation on Derek Jeter. He also described Rodriguez as stat driven, not getting a job done in a particular situation.
Of course, this caused teammates to become involved in defending A-Rod, which they did.

Torre’s expose was barely out of the box when the next big bombshell hit. In February Sports Illustrated published that A-Rod’s name appeared on a list of 104 players who tested positive in 2003 for steroid and/or human growth hormone use. Once again, the Yankees were thrust into a negative spotlight because of their embattled third baseman.

Doing the right thing, A-Rod, in an interview with ESPN’s Peter Gammons, admitted he had taken illegal substances in 2001 – 2003 while a member of the Texas Rangers. He told Gammons he stopped prior to joining the Yankees in 2004. Without rehashing all of A-Rod’s excuses as to why he went down this road suffice it to say there has been absolutely no proof to this point to refute A-Rod’s statements.

Rodriguez private life became public as well. Allegedly, A-Rod was cheating on his then wife Cynthia while traveling around the country with the Yankees. He was photographed with a mysterious blond when the two of them entered the Four Seasons Hotel in Toronto. There were reports this same woman was seen at various other spots around the country with Rodriguez going to dinner and high end strip joints.

He was also romantically linked to singer/actress Madonna. Both denied any involvement, however, both parties were divorced from their spouses within a short time of each other.

And just when you think you had seen and heard it all another A-Rod left hook came out of nowhere flooring his teammates and Yankee fans alike.

A-Rod’s name was associated with well know madam, Kristin Davis, the lady who had supplied fallen New York Governor Eliot Spitzer with hookers. Email exchanges between A-Rod and Davis were published in the NY Daily News. One had to wonder how long a proud organization like the Yankees were going to put up with these continual embarrassments.

On top of all of that in the beginning of March Rodriguez learned he was going to have to have surgery on his right hip to remove a cyst and repair a torn labrum as well. Initially it was thought that the injury might cost A-Rod the 2009 season, but after an examination by Dr. Marc Philippon in Vale, CO Rodriguez was told he could have corrective surgery done initially and he could play after a period of rest. He would need another surgery to complete the repair after the season was over. (Recently, A-Rod learned that he would need no further surgery after the playoffs)

A-Rod opted for the surgery and was told he would be out of action between 8 to 10 weeks.

In the meantime, the Yankees opened a new stadium in the Bronx, but the 2009 campaign hardly started the way the organization had pictured it. With A-Rod out of the lineup the Yankees struggled to a 15-16 record after the first 31 games. Girardi’s name was continually being bandied about as a guy who was going to be fired at any time. However, the front office kept mum, apparently content to let Girardi, with the team’s help, hang himself.

On May 8, all of that changed.

A-Rod returned to the lineup after his recovery went much faster and better than predicted. His presence immediately helped a struggling Mark Teixeira, who had been signed in the off season to an 8-year, $180 million contract. Prior to Rodriguez’s comeback Teixeira was hitting a woeful .192. He had generated only 5 home runs and 15 RBI. Afterward, and until the end of the season Teixeira’s numbers took off like a meteor. He ended the season tied for the American League home run lead with Carlos Pena of the Rays with 39 bombs and led AL with 122 RBI. He also hit a very respectable .292 to put him in the hunt for his first ever MVP trophy.

A-Rod’s return also re-energized the team as a whole after going 15-16 the Yankees went on a tear compiling a winning record of 88-43 (.693 winning percentage).

What was significant about Rodriguez’s season this year was, not only did he miss the first 30 games due to his injury, but he sat out an additional 8 games for rest. That was almost 25% of the 2009 campaign.

Even more amazing was A-Rod’s deportment after returning to the lineup. He appeared more relaxed, and a lot less wooden in the clubhouse. In interviews, instead of giving company type answers to questions, he just talked. Everyone around him noticed Rodriguez was more at ease with everything and that translated into one of the most enduring seasons of his career.

Rodriguez hit the first pitch he saw of his new season for a home run off Jeremy Guthrie of the Baltimore Orioles and he also hit the last pitch he saw of the season for a home run off Andy Sonnanstine of the Tampa Bay Rays. In that last game Rodriguez had 28 home runs and 93 RBI. Dating back to 1998 A-Rod had hit no less than 30 home runs or driven in less than 100 RBI for 11 straight years. No one in their right mind thought he had a shot at reaching 30 and 100.

A-Rod proved us all wrong.

With the Yankees trailing 2-0 in the 6th inning Rodriguez hit a 2-run home run off the Rays Wade Davis to start the Yankees scoring and to make his numbers 29 and 96. Then, in what I consider a gutless move, Rays manager Joe Maddon walked Teixeira in what would prove to be his last regular season at bat so he wouldn’t have the chance to break his home run tie with Pena. That move loaded the bases and it also brought Rodriguez to the plate.

With the bases juiced Sonnanstine pitched to A-Rod and in a scene that only Yankee lore is made of Rodriguez made Maddon and the Rays pay for walking Teixeira by blasting a grand slam home run over the right-center field wall. The Yankees scored 10 runs in the inning and Rodriguez set a new American League record by being the first player to plate 7 men in one inning. He also set a new major league record for being the first player to hit at least 30 home runs and driving in 100 runs in 13 seasons (he also accomplished the feat in 1996).

With the regular season over the playoffs began against the Minnesota Twins who barely made it to the dance. They ended the season in a dead heat tie with the Detroit Tigers and the teams were forced to play one more game in Minnesota to determine the AL Central Champs. Minnesota took the game and the title to New York where they played the Yankees the very next day.

So far in the two games played against the Twins in the ALDS Alex Rodriguez has delivered in the clutch. On Wednesday in Game 1 A-Rod was 2-for-3 with RISP. On Friday he was 1-for-1, but even this statistic is misleading. A-Rod delivered a game tying single in the 6th inning to tie the score 1-1. After the Twins got to Hughes in the top of the 8th, taking a 3-1 lead, the Yankees got busy in the bottom of the 9th inning.

With super-closer Joe Nathan on the mound Teixeira singled giving the Yankee faithful a glimmer of hope. That brought Rodriguez to the plate. Nathan threw A-Rod a fastball down the middle of the plate and Rodriguez hit it over the right field wall, over the Yankee bullpen and into the seats adjacent to Monument Park. Rodriguez dropped his bat and as he was running toward first looked into the Yankee dugout and pumped his fist. A-Rod rounded the bases and headed back to an ecstatic Yankee dugout and a curtain call.


The game remained tied until the bottom of the 11th when Teixeira faced Jose Mijares and hit a 1-1 pitch which skipped off the top of the left field wall and into the seats for Teixeira’s first career walk off home run. Teixeira rounded the bases and as he approached home plate tossed aside his batting helmet and jumped into a pile of celebrating teammates.

Said Teixeira after the game, "I don't think there's anything better in sports. Best place to play in the world."

Rodriguez was also asked about his heroics and he told reporters, This whole year I'm playing with no expectations." A-Rod added this. "The fun part is I was just thinking base hit," he said. "Hit the ball hard somewhere. And it went to the seats."

Although it’s only been two games there appears to be a calmness in Alex Rodriguez’s approach to his game. His teammates have responded as well. So far A-Rod has a home run and 5 RBI, and has delivered in 3-of-4 run scoring opportunities. However, given the power of this club I would put his 2-run home run in the 9th inning of Game 2 in that category. That would make him 4-for-5 in scoring chances.

How the rest of the playoffs go for A-Rod and the Yankees is anyone’s guess, but for now it seems that A-Rod is finally shedding his demons and that 800 lb. gorilla that he’s been carrying around for so long has finally jumped off his back and left the room.



© 2009 Yankees Talk Shop @ yuku.com

Redistribution, rewriting, rebroadcast, or republication of this story without the prior written consent of Yankees Talk Shop, Pride in the Pinstripes or its affiliates is strictly prohibited

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