Do to circumstances beyond my control, I was unable to post yesterday, and thus we now have the same effect we used to have in the Pre-Internet Era, when it was possible to look in the newspaper for the previous night's score, and you remember the Yankees are on the West Coast, and instead of looking at the list of yesterday's scores and seeing...
Yankees 5, Oakland 4
...you see...
Yankees at Oakland, n.
Personally, I think the West Coast Score Effect is the reason the Internet was created.
Well, that, and men would rather look at naked women in the privacy of their own home rather than go out to a store and be seen buying X-rated movies.
*
So I'm a game behind. Including 1 in the All-Important Loss Column. (See what I did there?)
The Yankees did not play yesterday, so their last game was Wednesday night, the finale of their 3-game set in Baltimore against the Orioles.
Hiroki Kuroda started, but he didn't last long. In the bottom of the 2nd inning, he was hit on the calf by a line drive from Manny Machado. Even before that, he allowed home runs to Nick Markakis (who usually hits well against the Yankees) and Chris Davis, plus a double to Matt Wieters before getting out of the 1st inning.
The liner from Machado came in the 2nd. Kuroda got 2 batters into the 3rd inning, a double by Adam Jones and a single by Davis, before Joe Girardi decided he'd seen enough, and that he didn't want to risk Kuroda any further. He pitched 2 innings, 5 runs, 8 hits. (But no walks, so his control wasn't the issue. He falls to 6-3.)
This was the right move: With Kuroda having been the club's most consistent starter since April 2012, we can't afford to lose him for an extended period. With all the injuries coming into this season, and since it started, we've been lucky that the only pitcher added to that list has been Ivan Nova, who wasn't getting the job done anyway, and that David Phelps has stepped into Nova's spot in the rotation and done well.
Preston Claiborne, for the first time in his major league career, gave up a 3-run homer to Wieters. Since Kuroda had let the first 2 runners on, only the last run was charged to Claiborne. He pitched 2 innings, and his career ERA went from 0.00 to 0.82. But he still hasn't walked a batter. Adam Warren pitched the last 4 innings, giving up 5 hits, but no walks, and no runs.
Curtis Granderson has come back hard from the Disabled List. He went 3-for-3 with a solo homer, a double and a walk. But the rest of the Yankees combined only got 4 hits: A homer by David Adams, and singles by Robinson Cano, Vernon Wells and Ichiro Suzuki. Jason Hammel (6-2) pretty much handcuffed the Yankees otherwise.
Orioles 6, Yankees 3.
*
Kuroda is expected to be fine, and make his next start. In further good injury news, Mark Teixeira seems to be making progress. Michael Pineda, who still hasn't thrown an official pitch for the Yankees, went 5 innings in an "extended spring training" game. He will have one more such session, and will then begin minor-league rehab. We could see him on the mound in The Bronx (or on the road) in mid-June.
Tomrrow night, English soccer teams Chelsea and Manchester City will play each other at Yankee Stadium. I will not be going. Those same teams played last night at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, and Chelsea blew a 3-0 2nd half lead and lost 4-3. It's just a "preseason friendly" (or postseason, depending on how you look at it), so it's not as embarrassing as it would have been had it been a Premier League game or an FA Cup tie.
The Yankees and Man City (which, I must admit, sounds like the name of a West Village bar, if ya know what I mean) have teamed up to form New York City Football Club (NYC FC), which will begin play in Major League Soccer in 2015, playing at least their first season in Yankee Stadium, before a new stadium can open.
This throws a monkey wrench into the plans of both the New York Red Bulls, who will now have competition for the Tri-State Area's soccer-fan dollar; and the revived version of the New York Cosmos, who are now stuck on the outside looking in, with the name of the greatest team in the history of U.S.-based soccer and no place in MLS. (They are currently in the North American Soccer League, another revived name, but, effectively, North America's 2nd division.)
However, these 2 sports franchises known for their free-spending ways will be at a disadvantage, as MLS has something neither Major League Baseball nor the Premier League has: A salary cap. True, it's a "soft cap," meaning up to 3 "designated players" can make whatever you think you can afford to pay them; but you can't buy the title in MLS, the way Man City did in 2012, and Chelsea did in 2005, '06 and '10.
(As opposed to the way Manchester United bought the title in 1993, '94, '96, '97, '99, 2000, '01, '03, '07, '08, '09, '11 and '13: Bribing and intimidating the officials.)
The Red Bulls, as an organization if not always as a competitive team, have been good to me. So, in the spring of 2015, when "Metro" and NYC FC first play each other in The Bronx, for the first time ever, we will have...
The Awkward Moment when I walk into Yankee Stadium and boo the home team.
Friday, May 24, 2013
Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Ambivalence: Yankees Lose in 10, Rangers Get Embarrassed
The classic definition of "ambivalence" is the feeling you get when you see your mother-in-law drive off a cliff... in your new Cadillac.
The bad news: The Yankees lost to the Baltimore Orioles in 10 innings, 3-2. Nat McLouth hit a walkoff home run off Vidal Nuno.
I can forgive Vidal Nuno for allowing a walkoff home run, especially in the Harbor Bandbox. Rookies should be cut some slack. As NCIS' Tony DiNozzo (Michael Weatherly) taught us, "Never kick a probie when he's down." Whereas, if it was that other lefty reliever who'd done it, Boone Logan, I'd have Gibbs-slapped him so hard his grandchildren would feel it in 2050.
To make matters worse, McLouth got hit in the face with a cream pie during his postgame interview. That's our thing, you dirty Birds!
However, other than Nuno's 1 pitch (3, actually, but he made a mistake with 1, it was actually a good night for Yankee pitching. Phil Hughes went 6 innings, allowing 2 runs on 5 hits and 2 walks, striking out 5. Between them, Logan and Shawn Kelley pitched a scoreless 7th, David Robertson struck out the side in a perfect 8th, and then Joe Girardi put in Preston Claiborne.
With a name like a 19th Century Senator, Claiborne was trusted to protect a 2-2 tie against a Playoff team in a hitter's park. He got Matt Wieters and J.J. Hardy to ground out, before allowing a single to ex-Yankee Chris Dickerson. Then he went to a full count on Yamaico Navarro. Gut-check time. Claiborne had the guts: He struck Navarro out swinging.
The Yankees have spent the last few years looking for the successor to Mariano Rivera. It can no longer be Brian Bruney. It can no longer be Rafael Soriano. It won't be Joba Chamberlain. It may not be Robertson. I say, see what Claiborne can do. The 25-year-old righthander from Dallas has now pitched 9 innings in the major leagues without allowing a run, or even a walk. He has allowed 8 hits. His WHIP is 0.889. His ERA is 0.00. Which means his ERA+ is infinite. (Allowing 1 earned run in that time would have given him an ERA of 1.00, although I'm not sure what his ERA+ would be.)
Nuno, a righthander from the San Diego area who will turn 26 in July, had gone 8 innings without allowing a run, until that McLouth walkoff. His ERA is now a sensational (even for a reliever) 1.13, his ERA+ a shocking 386, his WHIP a somewhat unsettling 1.375. He's earned a pass on last night.
The Yankee runs both came at the hands of Travis Hafner, a single after Brett Gardner doubled in the 1st, and a single after Vernon Wells doubled in the 4th.
The series concludes tonight, with Hiroki Kuroda starting against Jason Hammel.
*
The good news: The Rangers lost 2-1 to the Boston Bruins at Madison Square Garden. They now trail the Beantown Brats 3 games to 0. Bye, bye, Scum.
The NFL, having already awarded Super Bowl XLVIII (48) to the Meadowlands, and XLIX (49) to Phoenix, awarded L (50) to the new San Francisco 49ers stadium (which will open as Levi's Stadium in September 2014 in Santa Clara) and LI (51) to Houston.
Apparently, Miami, which has hosted 10 times, a total matched only by New Orleans, was hosed by the selection committee because they were unhappy about how the Dolphins' stadium (whatever official name it's using this year) wasn't getting the demanded upgrades. It wasn't getting the upgrades because the local taxpayers refused to fund them, because they were hosed over the building of Marlins Ballpark (on the site of the Orange Bowl, no less, a 5-time host of the Super Bowl). So the Dolphins' stadium, which last hosted in February 2010 (New Orleans Saints over Indianapolis Colts), won't be hosting again until at least February 2018.
Presumably, Super Bowl L was awarded to the San Francisco Bay Area because they built a new stadium and the Los Angeles area, which hosted Super Bowl I, did not. Hopefully, some of the surviving Green Bay Packers and Kansas City Chiefs who played in Super Bowl I will be there as honored guests. Certainly, by that point (3 full seasons from now), the Packers should still be a good enough team that they will be a contender for it. The Chiefs? They were awful last year, but a lot can change in 3 NFL seasons.
*
Days until the Red Bulls play again: 4, this Sunday afternoon, home to the Columbus Crew. Their last 2 wins have been late wins over the New England Revolution (with a Thierry Henry bicycle-kick goal) and the Los Angeles Galaxy (with a Tim Cahill goal in stoppage time).
Days until the U.S. National Soccer Team plays again: 7, a week from tonight, in a friendly against Belgium, featuring Arsenal captain Thomas Vermaelen. Under 3 weeks. That game will be played at FirstEnergy Stadium, formerly Cleveland Browns Stadium. It, and the subsequent Sunday afternoon game against Germany at Robert F. Kennedy Stadium in Washington, will be warmups for our next game in the last, "Hexagonal" round of CONCACAF World Cup Qualifiers, for the region that encompasses North America, Central America, and the Caribbean nations.
Days until the next Yankees-Red Sox series begins: 9, a week from next Friday, at home. The first Yanks-Sox series of the year at Fenway Park won't begin until Friday, July 19. Then another series begins at Fenway on Friday, August 16. Then another in The Bronx on Thursday, September 5, and another at Fenway on Friday, September 13. Oh yeah, if you're a Red Sox fan, that's a day you want to play the Yankees: Friday the 13th!
Days until the Red Bulls next play a "derby," against either the New England Revolution, the Philadelphia Union or D.C. United: 32, on Sunday, June 23, away to the Philadelphia Union, at PPL Park in Chester, Pennsylvania. A shade over a month.
Days until Arsenal play another competitive match: 97, on Saturday, August 17. They beat Newcastle 1-0 this past Sunday, to clinch 4th place in the Premier League and a berth in next season's UEFA Champions League. This also enabled them to finish ahead of their North London arch-rivals, Tottenham Hotspur, who finished 5th and are stuck in Europe's second-tier tournament, the Europa League, which was just won by West London's Chelsea. (The Champions League Final is this Saturday, at London's Wembley Stadium, but it will be the top 2 finishers in Germany's Bundesliga playing for it, Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund. Chelsea beat Bayern in last year's CL Final.) The Sunday results also made the day "St. Totteringham's Day." I'll have a piece on that phenomenon in the near future.
Days until the next North London Derby: Unknown, since next season's schedule won't be released until June 19. It's been a long time since Arsenal vs. Tottenham was an early game (possibly 1988-89). Usually, they wait until November for the first meeting of the season between the teams.
Days until Rutgers plays football again: 99, on Thursday night, August 29, away to Fresno State University in California. The first home game of the 2013 season will be on Saturday, September 7, vs. Norfolk State. The schedule is now complete, with all opponents and locations set in this, Rutgers' last season in the Big East, before starting Big Ten play in 2014. The only thing that hasn't been set is the kickoff times, with TV in mind.
Days until East Brunswick High School plays football again: 103, on September 12 -- on a Thursday due to Rosh Hoshanah, the Jewish New Year, falling on a weekend. It's away to South Brunswick. Under 4 months. It will be the first game they play without Marcus Borden as head coach since Thanksgiving Day 1982 (a loss to Colonia High of Woodbridge), as he has left the program. (Did he jump, or was he pushed? I don't know.) A new coach has been named: Bob Molarz, who turned nearby Carteret High School, which couldn't buy a win while I was at EBHS, into a team that made the Playoffs 9 seasons in a row and won 3 Central Jersey Group II Championships. He comes to us from the head job at one of our rivals, St. Joseph's of Metuchen, where he coached their first 2 seasons of varsity ball. A great hire.
Days until the Devils play again: Unknown, as the 2013-14 NHL schedule has yet to be released. Most likely, the new season will begin on the 1st Friday of October. If so, and the Devils debut on opening night (rather than the next night, Saturday), that's 125 days. A little over 4 months.
Days until the Devils play another local rival: See the previous answer.
Days until the next East Brunswick-Old Bridge Thanksgiving clash: 180. About 6 months.
Days until Super Bowl XLVIII at the Meadowlands: 243 (February 2, 2014). A little over 8 months. Of course, we have no idea who the opposing teams will be. The possibility exists that either the Giants or the Jets could be in it -- or both. To this day, no team has ever played a Super Bowl in its own stadium -- in spite of multiple hostings by Miami, New Orleans and various California teams. Only 2 have done so in their home metro area: The 1979-80 Los Angeles Rams, whose home field was then the L.A. Coliseum, and they lost to Pittsburgh at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena; and the 1984-85 San Francisco 49ers, whose home field, then as now, was Candlestick Park, and they beat Miami at Stanford Stadium in Palo Alto, which had a much larger capacity than Candlestick.
Days until the next Winter Olympics, in Sochi, Russia: 251 (February 7, 2014).
Days until the next World Cup, in Brazil: 376 (June 12, 2014). Under 13 months.
Days until the next Summer Olympics, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: 1,161 (August 5, 2016). Under 3 1/2 years.
The bad news: The Yankees lost to the Baltimore Orioles in 10 innings, 3-2. Nat McLouth hit a walkoff home run off Vidal Nuno.
I can forgive Vidal Nuno for allowing a walkoff home run, especially in the Harbor Bandbox. Rookies should be cut some slack. As NCIS' Tony DiNozzo (Michael Weatherly) taught us, "Never kick a probie when he's down." Whereas, if it was that other lefty reliever who'd done it, Boone Logan, I'd have Gibbs-slapped him so hard his grandchildren would feel it in 2050.
To make matters worse, McLouth got hit in the face with a cream pie during his postgame interview. That's our thing, you dirty Birds!
However, other than Nuno's 1 pitch (3, actually, but he made a mistake with 1, it was actually a good night for Yankee pitching. Phil Hughes went 6 innings, allowing 2 runs on 5 hits and 2 walks, striking out 5. Between them, Logan and Shawn Kelley pitched a scoreless 7th, David Robertson struck out the side in a perfect 8th, and then Joe Girardi put in Preston Claiborne.
With a name like a 19th Century Senator, Claiborne was trusted to protect a 2-2 tie against a Playoff team in a hitter's park. He got Matt Wieters and J.J. Hardy to ground out, before allowing a single to ex-Yankee Chris Dickerson. Then he went to a full count on Yamaico Navarro. Gut-check time. Claiborne had the guts: He struck Navarro out swinging.
The Yankees have spent the last few years looking for the successor to Mariano Rivera. It can no longer be Brian Bruney. It can no longer be Rafael Soriano. It won't be Joba Chamberlain. It may not be Robertson. I say, see what Claiborne can do. The 25-year-old righthander from Dallas has now pitched 9 innings in the major leagues without allowing a run, or even a walk. He has allowed 8 hits. His WHIP is 0.889. His ERA is 0.00. Which means his ERA+ is infinite. (Allowing 1 earned run in that time would have given him an ERA of 1.00, although I'm not sure what his ERA+ would be.)
Nuno, a righthander from the San Diego area who will turn 26 in July, had gone 8 innings without allowing a run, until that McLouth walkoff. His ERA is now a sensational (even for a reliever) 1.13, his ERA+ a shocking 386, his WHIP a somewhat unsettling 1.375. He's earned a pass on last night.
The Yankee runs both came at the hands of Travis Hafner, a single after Brett Gardner doubled in the 1st, and a single after Vernon Wells doubled in the 4th.
The series concludes tonight, with Hiroki Kuroda starting against Jason Hammel.
*
The good news: The Rangers lost 2-1 to the Boston Bruins at Madison Square Garden. They now trail the Beantown Brats 3 games to 0. Bye, bye, Scum.
The NFL, having already awarded Super Bowl XLVIII (48) to the Meadowlands, and XLIX (49) to Phoenix, awarded L (50) to the new San Francisco 49ers stadium (which will open as Levi's Stadium in September 2014 in Santa Clara) and LI (51) to Houston.
Apparently, Miami, which has hosted 10 times, a total matched only by New Orleans, was hosed by the selection committee because they were unhappy about how the Dolphins' stadium (whatever official name it's using this year) wasn't getting the demanded upgrades. It wasn't getting the upgrades because the local taxpayers refused to fund them, because they were hosed over the building of Marlins Ballpark (on the site of the Orange Bowl, no less, a 5-time host of the Super Bowl). So the Dolphins' stadium, which last hosted in February 2010 (New Orleans Saints over Indianapolis Colts), won't be hosting again until at least February 2018.
Presumably, Super Bowl L was awarded to the San Francisco Bay Area because they built a new stadium and the Los Angeles area, which hosted Super Bowl I, did not. Hopefully, some of the surviving Green Bay Packers and Kansas City Chiefs who played in Super Bowl I will be there as honored guests. Certainly, by that point (3 full seasons from now), the Packers should still be a good enough team that they will be a contender for it. The Chiefs? They were awful last year, but a lot can change in 3 NFL seasons.
*
Days until the Red Bulls play again: 4, this Sunday afternoon, home to the Columbus Crew. Their last 2 wins have been late wins over the New England Revolution (with a Thierry Henry bicycle-kick goal) and the Los Angeles Galaxy (with a Tim Cahill goal in stoppage time).
Days until the U.S. National Soccer Team plays again: 7, a week from tonight, in a friendly against Belgium, featuring Arsenal captain Thomas Vermaelen. Under 3 weeks. That game will be played at FirstEnergy Stadium, formerly Cleveland Browns Stadium. It, and the subsequent Sunday afternoon game against Germany at Robert F. Kennedy Stadium in Washington, will be warmups for our next game in the last, "Hexagonal" round of CONCACAF World Cup Qualifiers, for the region that encompasses North America, Central America, and the Caribbean nations.
Days until the next Yankees-Red Sox series begins: 9, a week from next Friday, at home. The first Yanks-Sox series of the year at Fenway Park won't begin until Friday, July 19. Then another series begins at Fenway on Friday, August 16. Then another in The Bronx on Thursday, September 5, and another at Fenway on Friday, September 13. Oh yeah, if you're a Red Sox fan, that's a day you want to play the Yankees: Friday the 13th!
Days until the Red Bulls next play a "derby," against either the New England Revolution, the Philadelphia Union or D.C. United: 32, on Sunday, June 23, away to the Philadelphia Union, at PPL Park in Chester, Pennsylvania. A shade over a month.
Days until Arsenal play another competitive match: 97, on Saturday, August 17. They beat Newcastle 1-0 this past Sunday, to clinch 4th place in the Premier League and a berth in next season's UEFA Champions League. This also enabled them to finish ahead of their North London arch-rivals, Tottenham Hotspur, who finished 5th and are stuck in Europe's second-tier tournament, the Europa League, which was just won by West London's Chelsea. (The Champions League Final is this Saturday, at London's Wembley Stadium, but it will be the top 2 finishers in Germany's Bundesliga playing for it, Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund. Chelsea beat Bayern in last year's CL Final.) The Sunday results also made the day "St. Totteringham's Day." I'll have a piece on that phenomenon in the near future.
Days until the next North London Derby: Unknown, since next season's schedule won't be released until June 19. It's been a long time since Arsenal vs. Tottenham was an early game (possibly 1988-89). Usually, they wait until November for the first meeting of the season between the teams.
Days until Rutgers plays football again: 99, on Thursday night, August 29, away to Fresno State University in California. The first home game of the 2013 season will be on Saturday, September 7, vs. Norfolk State. The schedule is now complete, with all opponents and locations set in this, Rutgers' last season in the Big East, before starting Big Ten play in 2014. The only thing that hasn't been set is the kickoff times, with TV in mind.
Days until East Brunswick High School plays football again: 103, on September 12 -- on a Thursday due to Rosh Hoshanah, the Jewish New Year, falling on a weekend. It's away to South Brunswick. Under 4 months. It will be the first game they play without Marcus Borden as head coach since Thanksgiving Day 1982 (a loss to Colonia High of Woodbridge), as he has left the program. (Did he jump, or was he pushed? I don't know.) A new coach has been named: Bob Molarz, who turned nearby Carteret High School, which couldn't buy a win while I was at EBHS, into a team that made the Playoffs 9 seasons in a row and won 3 Central Jersey Group II Championships. He comes to us from the head job at one of our rivals, St. Joseph's of Metuchen, where he coached their first 2 seasons of varsity ball. A great hire.
Days until the Devils play again: Unknown, as the 2013-14 NHL schedule has yet to be released. Most likely, the new season will begin on the 1st Friday of October. If so, and the Devils debut on opening night (rather than the next night, Saturday), that's 125 days. A little over 4 months.
Days until the Devils play another local rival: See the previous answer.
Days until the next East Brunswick-Old Bridge Thanksgiving clash: 180. About 6 months.
Days until Super Bowl XLVIII at the Meadowlands: 243 (February 2, 2014). A little over 8 months. Of course, we have no idea who the opposing teams will be. The possibility exists that either the Giants or the Jets could be in it -- or both. To this day, no team has ever played a Super Bowl in its own stadium -- in spite of multiple hostings by Miami, New Orleans and various California teams. Only 2 have done so in their home metro area: The 1979-80 Los Angeles Rams, whose home field was then the L.A. Coliseum, and they lost to Pittsburgh at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena; and the 1984-85 San Francisco 49ers, whose home field, then as now, was Candlestick Park, and they beat Miami at Stanford Stadium in Palo Alto, which had a much larger capacity than Candlestick.
Days until the next Winter Olympics, in Sochi, Russia: 251 (February 7, 2014).
Days until the next World Cup, in Brazil: 376 (June 12, 2014). Under 13 months.
Days until the next Summer Olympics, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: 1,161 (August 5, 2016). Under 3 1/2 years.
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Oklahoma's Trail of Tears
The State of Oklahoma has produced some great athletes. Jim Thorpe. Johnny Bench. Heisman Trophy winners galore. And Yankee Legends Mickey Mantle, Allie Reynolds and Bobby Murcer.
They've also had a lot of trouble. The "Trail of Tears" of Native Americans in the 1830s. The Dust Bowl in the 1930s. Grinding rural poverty even in times of plenty for the rest of the country. The federal building bombing in 1995. And the State was called Tornado Alley long before yesterday's disaster. The State's history is one long trail of tears.
Jeremy Hefner may be having the worst season any baseball player has ever had, without being injured or killed himself. The Met pitcher is 0-5, his ERA is 5.00, the Mets have lost all 8 games he has started, and he's from Oklahoma. I had heard that he was from Moore, the town struck by that horrible tornado yesterday. Actually, he's from Perkins, 65 miles to the northeast. Maybe someone got the story wrong, and he's got family there. Either way, he doesn't deserve any of this.
In spite of the thrill of Cashman's Crushers getting the job done again last night, the Yankees' 6-4, 10-inning win in the opener of a series in Baltimore against the Orioles doesn't seem so important.
The Yanks got home runs in the 1st from Robinson Cano (his 13th) to take a 1-0 lead, in the 7th from Cashman acquisition Lyle Overbay (his 7th) to tie it 3-3, and in the 9th from Cashman acquisition Travis Hafner (his 8th) to tie it 4-4 to send it to extra innings.
In the 10th, last year's Cashman acquisition, Ichiro Suzuki, led off with a double. Cashman acquisition Vernon Wells followed it up with another double to score Ichiro. Austin Romine bunted Wells over to 3rd, and Hafner singled Wells home to provide the final score.
WP: David Robertson (3-0, in relief of a somewhat shaky CC Sabathia). SV: Mariano Rivera (now 17-for-17). LP: Pedro Strop (0-1).
The series continues tonight, Phil Hughes against Miguel Gonzalez.
They've also had a lot of trouble. The "Trail of Tears" of Native Americans in the 1830s. The Dust Bowl in the 1930s. Grinding rural poverty even in times of plenty for the rest of the country. The federal building bombing in 1995. And the State was called Tornado Alley long before yesterday's disaster. The State's history is one long trail of tears.
Jeremy Hefner may be having the worst season any baseball player has ever had, without being injured or killed himself. The Met pitcher is 0-5, his ERA is 5.00, the Mets have lost all 8 games he has started, and he's from Oklahoma. I had heard that he was from Moore, the town struck by that horrible tornado yesterday. Actually, he's from Perkins, 65 miles to the northeast. Maybe someone got the story wrong, and he's got family there. Either way, he doesn't deserve any of this.
In spite of the thrill of Cashman's Crushers getting the job done again last night, the Yankees' 6-4, 10-inning win in the opener of a series in Baltimore against the Orioles doesn't seem so important.
The Yanks got home runs in the 1st from Robinson Cano (his 13th) to take a 1-0 lead, in the 7th from Cashman acquisition Lyle Overbay (his 7th) to tie it 3-3, and in the 9th from Cashman acquisition Travis Hafner (his 8th) to tie it 4-4 to send it to extra innings.
In the 10th, last year's Cashman acquisition, Ichiro Suzuki, led off with a double. Cashman acquisition Vernon Wells followed it up with another double to score Ichiro. Austin Romine bunted Wells over to 3rd, and Hafner singled Wells home to provide the final score.
WP: David Robertson (3-0, in relief of a somewhat shaky CC Sabathia). SV: Mariano Rivera (now 17-for-17). LP: Pedro Strop (0-1).
The series continues tonight, Phil Hughes against Miguel Gonzalez.
Monday, May 20, 2013
How Did Cashman Know, and Those Pesky Blue Jays Not Know?
After dropping 2 of 3 at home to the Seattle Mariners -- who are now, as Bob Uecker might say, juuuust a bit below where they were from 1995 to 2001 -- the Ynakees needed to announce their freakin' presence with authority this weekend against those pesky Toronto Blue Jays.
(See? Even in this blog, Major League can't get away from comparisons to Bull Durham.)
On Friday night, Hiroki Kuroda started against Mark Buehrle, the former Chicago White Sox pitcher, one of those big new pitching acquisitions that led a lot of people to think the Jays were going to contend for the American League Eastern Division title, and the only one of those with significant AL pitching experience. But it hasn't worked out for them.
Buehrle gave the Jays 6 solid innings, but Kuroda was masterful, and the Yankees led 2-0 going into the bottom of the 7th. Trailing by only 2 runs, with your starter pitching well, you don't take him out unless he tells you he's tired or hurt.
(Unless, of course, you're Joe Girardi and you do whatever your Binder tells you to do.)
And the Yankees got to Buehrle in the 7th. Rookie outfielder David Adams led off with a ground-rule double. Ichiro Suzuki bunted him over to 3rd and beat it out, still fast at age 40. Austin Romine, who should be the Yankees' 3rd-string catcher, came through with a double to score Adams. A pitching change didn't help, as Brett Gardner singled to left to drive in Ichiro. And Jayson Nixon hit a sacrifice fly to get Romine home.
That made it 5-0 Yankees, and Kuroda in the 8th and Preston Claiborne in the 9th made it stand up. Claiborne looks like a keeper. But Kuroda was the story. He went 8, allowed no runs on 2 hits and just 1 walk, striking out 5. He's now 6-2 on the season, and his ERA is down to 1.99. In the American League. In the American League East.
Yeah, there should be a New York pitcher starting the All-Star Game -- but it should be Kuroda, not Matt Harvey of the Mutts.
Buehrle fell to 1-3, and his ERA is 6.33 -- and, remember, he's the one with AL pitching experience.
*
On Saturday afternoon, the Yankees sent David Phelps to the mound, hoping he'd continue to do well in the rotation spot of the injured Ivan Nova. At this rate, the spot may not be open to Nova when he returns. They say an athlete should never lose his job due to injury, but Nova wasn't getting the job done before, and Phelps is.
Phelps (2-2) sure got the job done on Saturday, going 7, allowing just 1 run on 6 hits and 3 walks. His ERA is now 3.83, which, by AL East standards, is good. David Robertson allowed a run in the 8th, but at that point it didn't matter, as the Yanks again had a 5-run lead. Which even Boone Logan couldn't blow, as he pitched a perfect 9th. (Sure, with no pressure on him... )
The Yankee bats got what Phelps needed. Nix opened the 3rd with a single to center. Adams grounded out but moved him over. Romine lined out, but Gardner singled Nix home. And then Robinson Cano, don't ya know, hit one out off Brandon Morrow (1-3). 3-0 Yankees.
The Jays pulled a run back in the 4th, but in the 5th, with 1 out, Romine singled. Gardner flew to left, but Cano launched a 2nd homer. (He now has 12 on the season.) 5-0 Yankees.
The Jays got a homer from Edwin Encarnacion in the top of the 8th, but in the bottom of the inning, with 1 out, Vernon Wells reached on an error, and Travis Hafner knocked one out of the park. (His 7th homer.) That made it 7-2 Yankees, and that was the final.
*
Yesterday's game was rained out, which is probably the best thing for the Jays. I can say that, because look at the AL East standings, with 7 of the season's 26 weeks gone -- that's 27 percent, more than 1/4 of the season:
New York Yankees 27-16
Boston Red Sox 27-17, 1/2 a game back, 1 in the loss column
Baltimore Orioles 23-20, 4 back
Tampa Bay Rays 23-20, 4 back
Toronto Blue Jays 17-26, 10 back
Now, this doesn't mean the Jays will end up 40 back, or 38, or whatever it prorates to. It does mean that they really blew it in the off-season, and the Yankees did what they have, so far, needed to do -- instead of the other way around, as was widely predicted.
General manager Brian Cashman really brought in the right newcomers. Batting average/on-base percentage/slugging percentage/OPS, home runs, RBIs. Let's start, appropriately enough, with the two ex-Blue Jays:
* Vernon Wells. .286/.343/.506/.850, 10, 23. Also, 4 stolen bases. Remember, the season is only 1/4 over.
* Lyle Overbay. .259/.297/.475/.772, 6, 24.
* Travis Hafner. .260/.378/.530/.908, 7, 20.
* Kevin Youkilis. Injured at the moment, no surprise there. But look at what he did before he got hurt: .266/.347/.422/.769, 2, 7.
* Brennan Boesch. .209/.244/.419/.663 doesn't look that good, but in just 43 at-bats he's got 2 homers and 5 RBIs. Prorate that to something close to a full season, 430 at-bats, and it's 20 homers and 50 RBIs. Not bad for an emergency fill-in.
* Francisco Cervelli. A backup the last 2 seasons, had to be the starter this season. Until he got hurt, .269/.377/.500/.877, 3, 8. That's in 52 at-bats. Prorate that to a full season, 520 at-bats, and that's 30 homers and 80 RBIs. That's more than Russell Martin gave us: In his 2 seasons, he hit 18 and 21 homers, with 65 and 53 RBIs. Certainly worth having, but Cervelli was on a pace to do better.
* Chris Stewart. This season, he was only meant to be the backup catcher, and is now injured himself, but he was getting the job done, too: .265/.307/.397/.704, 3, 6.
* Throw in last season's late emergency pickup, Ichiro Suzuki, and here's what he's done so far in 2013: .241/.281/.328/.609 doesn't look too good, but he's contributed 4 doubles, 2 homers, 8 RBIs and 5 stolen bases. He's still plenty capable, as seen with what was supposed to be a sacrifice bunt that he managed to beat out.
* Pitching. Look, out of Preston Claiborne, Vidal Nuno and Adam Warren, none of them may develop into a long-term Yankee success. But here's their short-term performance so far: Between them, 33 1/3 innings, 3 runs, 0.81 ERA, 1.050 WHIP, 25 strikeouts against 9 walks, 2-0 record.
Not too shabby.
Contrast that with the Jays' starting rotation, including 4 new acquisitions. Record, ERA, WHIP:
* R.A. Dickey, new. 3-5, 4.83, 1.35.
* J.A. Happ, already there. 2-2, 4.91, 1.55.
* Brandon Morrow, already there. 1-3, 5.16, 1.46.
* Mark Buehrle, new. 1-3, 6.33, 1.48.
* Josh Johnson, new, now injured. 0-1, 6.86, 1.88. His spot in the rotation has been, well, rotated among the following:
* Aaron Laffey, new, although he had previously pitched for them -- and for the Yankees, and for the Mets. 0-0, 6.75, 2.63, left his only start due to injury.
* Ramon Ortiz, a 40-year-old emergency pickup, roughly equivalent to what Cashman didn't have much choice but to do, who didn't pitch at all in 2012: 1-1, 2.35, 1.43 -- easily the best of the bunch.
* Chad Jenkins, already there. 1-0, 3.60, 1.60. Not a bad ERA, but a very high WHIP.
* Ricky Romero, already there. 0-2, 12.46, 2.77. Atrocious.
* So the Johnson spot in the rotation, overall: 2-4, 47 innings, 5.55 ERA, 1.85 WHIP.
And remember: As bad as the Blue Jays' defense is, that doesn't affect either the the ERA or the WHIP. None of that counts unearned runs. Although the Jays' D has been an F (or whatever Canadian schools call a failing grade), the only way it contributes to bad ERAs and WHIPs is if it rattles the pitchers involved. And if that's the case, then these were rattleable pitchers who should never have been brought in.
So Yankee GM Brian Cashman got it right, and Blue Jay GM Alex Anthopoulos got it wrong. Really, really wrong.
Maybe it's time to give Cashman a break. And stop acting like other GMs -- Anthopoulos, Billy Beane in Oakland, Theo Epstein of the Red Sox and now the Cubs -- are all that smart.
Look, I'm not saying Cashman is a good guy, or that all of his acquisitions have worked out -- although, that sure seems to be the case lately. I am saying, as those old ads for the New York Times sports section said, "Give the kid a break!"
*
As for the rest of baseball, after 7 out of 26 weeks:
The AL Central is led by the Cleveland Indians. The Detroit Tigers are 2 games back, the Kansas City Royals 4, the Chicago White Sox 6, and the Minnesota Twins also 6 (5 in the loss column, but in last place by .002 behind the ChiSox).
The AL West is led by the Texas Rangers. The Oakland Athletics are 6 1/2 back (7), the Seattle Mariners 9, the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 12, and the Houston Astros a whopping 17.
The National League East is led by the Atlanta Braves. The Washington Nationals are 2 1/2 back (3), the Philadelphia Phillies 4 1/2 (5), the Mets 7 (6), and the Miami Marlins 13 1/2 (14).
The NL Central is led by the St. Louis Cardinals. The Cincinnati Reds are 2 1/2 back (3), the Pittsburgh Pirates the same, the Chicago Cubs 10, and the Milwaukee Brewers 10 1/2 (10).
The NL West is led by the Arizona Dimaondbacks. The Colorado Rockies and the defending World Champion San Francisco Giants both trail by 1, the San Diego Padres by 4 1/2 (4), and the Los Angeles Dodgers, for all their payroll, by 7 (6). The talk that Don Mattingly's job as manager is in danger continues -- as if he had been the one making the high-priced acquisitions.
If the current standings hold until the end of the season, the AL's Wild Card entries will be the Red Sox and the Tigers loser. The NL's will be the Reds and the Pirates.
The Yanks are now in Baltimore to start a 3-game series against the Orioles.
(See? Even in this blog, Major League can't get away from comparisons to Bull Durham.)
On Friday night, Hiroki Kuroda started against Mark Buehrle, the former Chicago White Sox pitcher, one of those big new pitching acquisitions that led a lot of people to think the Jays were going to contend for the American League Eastern Division title, and the only one of those with significant AL pitching experience. But it hasn't worked out for them.
Buehrle gave the Jays 6 solid innings, but Kuroda was masterful, and the Yankees led 2-0 going into the bottom of the 7th. Trailing by only 2 runs, with your starter pitching well, you don't take him out unless he tells you he's tired or hurt.
(Unless, of course, you're Joe Girardi and you do whatever your Binder tells you to do.)
And the Yankees got to Buehrle in the 7th. Rookie outfielder David Adams led off with a ground-rule double. Ichiro Suzuki bunted him over to 3rd and beat it out, still fast at age 40. Austin Romine, who should be the Yankees' 3rd-string catcher, came through with a double to score Adams. A pitching change didn't help, as Brett Gardner singled to left to drive in Ichiro. And Jayson Nixon hit a sacrifice fly to get Romine home.
That made it 5-0 Yankees, and Kuroda in the 8th and Preston Claiborne in the 9th made it stand up. Claiborne looks like a keeper. But Kuroda was the story. He went 8, allowed no runs on 2 hits and just 1 walk, striking out 5. He's now 6-2 on the season, and his ERA is down to 1.99. In the American League. In the American League East.
Yeah, there should be a New York pitcher starting the All-Star Game -- but it should be Kuroda, not Matt Harvey of the Mutts.
Buehrle fell to 1-3, and his ERA is 6.33 -- and, remember, he's the one with AL pitching experience.
*
On Saturday afternoon, the Yankees sent David Phelps to the mound, hoping he'd continue to do well in the rotation spot of the injured Ivan Nova. At this rate, the spot may not be open to Nova when he returns. They say an athlete should never lose his job due to injury, but Nova wasn't getting the job done before, and Phelps is.
Phelps (2-2) sure got the job done on Saturday, going 7, allowing just 1 run on 6 hits and 3 walks. His ERA is now 3.83, which, by AL East standards, is good. David Robertson allowed a run in the 8th, but at that point it didn't matter, as the Yanks again had a 5-run lead. Which even Boone Logan couldn't blow, as he pitched a perfect 9th. (Sure, with no pressure on him... )
The Yankee bats got what Phelps needed. Nix opened the 3rd with a single to center. Adams grounded out but moved him over. Romine lined out, but Gardner singled Nix home. And then Robinson Cano, don't ya know, hit one out off Brandon Morrow (1-3). 3-0 Yankees.
The Jays pulled a run back in the 4th, but in the 5th, with 1 out, Romine singled. Gardner flew to left, but Cano launched a 2nd homer. (He now has 12 on the season.) 5-0 Yankees.
The Jays got a homer from Edwin Encarnacion in the top of the 8th, but in the bottom of the inning, with 1 out, Vernon Wells reached on an error, and Travis Hafner knocked one out of the park. (His 7th homer.) That made it 7-2 Yankees, and that was the final.
*
Yesterday's game was rained out, which is probably the best thing for the Jays. I can say that, because look at the AL East standings, with 7 of the season's 26 weeks gone -- that's 27 percent, more than 1/4 of the season:
New York Yankees 27-16
Boston Red Sox 27-17, 1/2 a game back, 1 in the loss column
Baltimore Orioles 23-20, 4 back
Tampa Bay Rays 23-20, 4 back
Toronto Blue Jays 17-26, 10 back
Now, this doesn't mean the Jays will end up 40 back, or 38, or whatever it prorates to. It does mean that they really blew it in the off-season, and the Yankees did what they have, so far, needed to do -- instead of the other way around, as was widely predicted.
General manager Brian Cashman really brought in the right newcomers. Batting average/on-base percentage/slugging percentage/OPS, home runs, RBIs. Let's start, appropriately enough, with the two ex-Blue Jays:
* Vernon Wells. .286/.343/.506/.850, 10, 23. Also, 4 stolen bases. Remember, the season is only 1/4 over.
* Lyle Overbay. .259/.297/.475/.772, 6, 24.
* Travis Hafner. .260/.378/.530/.908, 7, 20.
* Kevin Youkilis. Injured at the moment, no surprise there. But look at what he did before he got hurt: .266/.347/.422/.769, 2, 7.
* Brennan Boesch. .209/.244/.419/.663 doesn't look that good, but in just 43 at-bats he's got 2 homers and 5 RBIs. Prorate that to something close to a full season, 430 at-bats, and it's 20 homers and 50 RBIs. Not bad for an emergency fill-in.
* Francisco Cervelli. A backup the last 2 seasons, had to be the starter this season. Until he got hurt, .269/.377/.500/.877, 3, 8. That's in 52 at-bats. Prorate that to a full season, 520 at-bats, and that's 30 homers and 80 RBIs. That's more than Russell Martin gave us: In his 2 seasons, he hit 18 and 21 homers, with 65 and 53 RBIs. Certainly worth having, but Cervelli was on a pace to do better.
* Chris Stewart. This season, he was only meant to be the backup catcher, and is now injured himself, but he was getting the job done, too: .265/.307/.397/.704, 3, 6.
* Throw in last season's late emergency pickup, Ichiro Suzuki, and here's what he's done so far in 2013: .241/.281/.328/.609 doesn't look too good, but he's contributed 4 doubles, 2 homers, 8 RBIs and 5 stolen bases. He's still plenty capable, as seen with what was supposed to be a sacrifice bunt that he managed to beat out.
* Pitching. Look, out of Preston Claiborne, Vidal Nuno and Adam Warren, none of them may develop into a long-term Yankee success. But here's their short-term performance so far: Between them, 33 1/3 innings, 3 runs, 0.81 ERA, 1.050 WHIP, 25 strikeouts against 9 walks, 2-0 record.
Not too shabby.
Contrast that with the Jays' starting rotation, including 4 new acquisitions. Record, ERA, WHIP:
* R.A. Dickey, new. 3-5, 4.83, 1.35.
* J.A. Happ, already there. 2-2, 4.91, 1.55.
* Brandon Morrow, already there. 1-3, 5.16, 1.46.
* Mark Buehrle, new. 1-3, 6.33, 1.48.
* Josh Johnson, new, now injured. 0-1, 6.86, 1.88. His spot in the rotation has been, well, rotated among the following:
* Aaron Laffey, new, although he had previously pitched for them -- and for the Yankees, and for the Mets. 0-0, 6.75, 2.63, left his only start due to injury.
* Ramon Ortiz, a 40-year-old emergency pickup, roughly equivalent to what Cashman didn't have much choice but to do, who didn't pitch at all in 2012: 1-1, 2.35, 1.43 -- easily the best of the bunch.
* Chad Jenkins, already there. 1-0, 3.60, 1.60. Not a bad ERA, but a very high WHIP.
* Ricky Romero, already there. 0-2, 12.46, 2.77. Atrocious.
* So the Johnson spot in the rotation, overall: 2-4, 47 innings, 5.55 ERA, 1.85 WHIP.
And remember: As bad as the Blue Jays' defense is, that doesn't affect either the the ERA or the WHIP. None of that counts unearned runs. Although the Jays' D has been an F (or whatever Canadian schools call a failing grade), the only way it contributes to bad ERAs and WHIPs is if it rattles the pitchers involved. And if that's the case, then these were rattleable pitchers who should never have been brought in.
So Yankee GM Brian Cashman got it right, and Blue Jay GM Alex Anthopoulos got it wrong. Really, really wrong.
Maybe it's time to give Cashman a break. And stop acting like other GMs -- Anthopoulos, Billy Beane in Oakland, Theo Epstein of the Red Sox and now the Cubs -- are all that smart.
Look, I'm not saying Cashman is a good guy, or that all of his acquisitions have worked out -- although, that sure seems to be the case lately. I am saying, as those old ads for the New York Times sports section said, "Give the kid a break!"
*
As for the rest of baseball, after 7 out of 26 weeks:
The AL Central is led by the Cleveland Indians. The Detroit Tigers are 2 games back, the Kansas City Royals 4, the Chicago White Sox 6, and the Minnesota Twins also 6 (5 in the loss column, but in last place by .002 behind the ChiSox).
The AL West is led by the Texas Rangers. The Oakland Athletics are 6 1/2 back (7), the Seattle Mariners 9, the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 12, and the Houston Astros a whopping 17.
The National League East is led by the Atlanta Braves. The Washington Nationals are 2 1/2 back (3), the Philadelphia Phillies 4 1/2 (5), the Mets 7 (6), and the Miami Marlins 13 1/2 (14).
The NL Central is led by the St. Louis Cardinals. The Cincinnati Reds are 2 1/2 back (3), the Pittsburgh Pirates the same, the Chicago Cubs 10, and the Milwaukee Brewers 10 1/2 (10).
The NL West is led by the Arizona Dimaondbacks. The Colorado Rockies and the defending World Champion San Francisco Giants both trail by 1, the San Diego Padres by 4 1/2 (4), and the Los Angeles Dodgers, for all their payroll, by 7 (6). The talk that Don Mattingly's job as manager is in danger continues -- as if he had been the one making the high-priced acquisitions.
If the current standings hold until the end of the season, the AL's Wild Card entries will be the Red Sox and the Tigers loser. The NL's will be the Reds and the Pirates.
The Yanks are now in Baltimore to start a 3-game series against the Orioles.
Friday, May 17, 2013
Scandal Finale vs. Mariners
Last night was the finale of a 3-game series at home to the Seattle Mariners.
It was also the season finale of American Idol. Not to many idols in this game, American or otherwise.
It was also the season finale of Scandal. The Yankees played 3 games in this series, against the Seattle Mariners, and scored a total of 8 runs. Now that is a scandal finale.
It was also the season finale of Grey's Anatomy, which is set in Seattle. And, again, the Yankees resembled a medical drama.
In the top of the 5th, the Yankees were trailing 2-1, and Andy Pettitte started grimacing. Joe Girardi didn't like that, so he consulted his Binder. Under, "Pitcher, starting, grimace" it read: "Go to mound, talk to him, see how he feels. * " He did not check the asterisk, which read, "A pitcher is usually going to tell you he's all right, even if his arm feels like Jell-O." (Major League reference.)
Girardi pulled Pettitte, and the Yankees went on to lose, 3-2. Although we can't really blame the bullpen. Shawn Kelly allowed 1 run in 2 innings, 2 hits and no walks. Boone Logan actually managed to pitch an inning and a third without setting the Stadium on fire. And Adam Warren threw a scorelss 9th.
The Yankee pitchers allowed 3 runs on 7 hits and 3 walks. That should have been enough to win.
The Yankees got 8 hits. Three of them came from Curtis Granderson. Oddly, none of those hits drove in a run, although he did score 1 of them. The Yankee runs came on rookie David Adams doubling Grandy home in the 2nd, and Robinson Cano singling home Ichiro Suzuki in the 7th. Other than that, there were singles by Ichiro, Brett Gardner and Chris Stewart -- more on that in a moment.
Vernon Wells and Lyle Overbay, who've been lovely surprises thus far, went a combined 0-for-6 with 3 strikeouts. And Jayson Nix, starting at shortstop in place of the still-injured Derek Jeter, went 0-for-5, with 2 strikeouts and 5 men left on base. That's right, 5 LOB.
That is a scandal.
WP: Oliver Perez -- yes, ex-Met Ollie Perez, alive and well in the Pacific Northwest. SV: Tom Wilhelmsen (11). LP: Pettitte (4-3).
*
Pettitte has a tight left trapezius muscle: That's the neck, shoulders and upper back. Girardi thinks Pettitte will not miss his next start, which should be next Tuesday in Baltimore, although I wouldn't be surprised if Joe's Binder says, under "Pitcher, starting, muscle, tight, throwing side," "Hold him back another day."
But Stewart, who is already the Yankees' backup catcher, and is only starting because Francisco Cervelli is on the 60-Day Disabled List, pulled his groin in running out his hit in the 7th. He could be headed for the DL as well.
Which means Austin Romine and his 37 career major league plate appearances and his -34 OPS+ this season will be starting. (1-for-16, albeit the 1 hit is an RBI double. And a hit-by-pitch. So BA .063, OBP .118, slugging .125, .243 OPS.) Romine is 24, from Orange County, California. He should be better than this by now.
In case you're wondering: The starting catcher for the last 2 years, Russell Martin, has a sizzling 154 OPS+ for the Pittsburgh Pirates. However, Jesus Montero, whom the Yankees traded to the Mariners along with Hector Noesi for Michael Pineda -- who is apparently almost ready to throw rehab games and could reach the majors in June -- is batting a mere .204 with an OPS+ of 68. Stewart's is 89, and before he got hurt Cervelli's was 136. Montero's season, so far, would be an improvement on Romine's, but not Stewart's, and not by a long shot on Cervelli's, although Martin's would be.
So again citing the lousy trade of Montero for Pineda is pointless -- since, thus far, it's been a wash, and reversing it wouldn't be helping the Yankees much.
The Toronto Blue Jays come in for a weekend series. Here's the pitching matchups for Pinstripes vs. Peskies:
Tonight, 7:00: Hiroki Kuroda vs. Mark Buehrle. Could be a great pitchers' duel. (But then, as John Sterling reminds us, "You know, Suzyn, you just can't predict baseball," so expect a slugfest.)
Tomorrow afternoon, 1:00: David Phelps vs. Brandon Morrow.
Sunday afternoon, 1:00: CC Sabathia vs. R.A. Dickey. Battle of the initials, the Yankee ace vs. the Cy Young winner the Mets let get away (in this decade). So far, Dickey's found that pitching against American League teams is hard. Let's show him just how hard it is.
It was also the season finale of American Idol. Not to many idols in this game, American or otherwise.
It was also the season finale of Scandal. The Yankees played 3 games in this series, against the Seattle Mariners, and scored a total of 8 runs. Now that is a scandal finale.
It was also the season finale of Grey's Anatomy, which is set in Seattle. And, again, the Yankees resembled a medical drama.
In the top of the 5th, the Yankees were trailing 2-1, and Andy Pettitte started grimacing. Joe Girardi didn't like that, so he consulted his Binder. Under, "Pitcher, starting, grimace" it read: "Go to mound, talk to him, see how he feels. * " He did not check the asterisk, which read, "A pitcher is usually going to tell you he's all right, even if his arm feels like Jell-O." (Major League reference.)
Girardi pulled Pettitte, and the Yankees went on to lose, 3-2. Although we can't really blame the bullpen. Shawn Kelly allowed 1 run in 2 innings, 2 hits and no walks. Boone Logan actually managed to pitch an inning and a third without setting the Stadium on fire. And Adam Warren threw a scorelss 9th.
The Yankee pitchers allowed 3 runs on 7 hits and 3 walks. That should have been enough to win.
The Yankees got 8 hits. Three of them came from Curtis Granderson. Oddly, none of those hits drove in a run, although he did score 1 of them. The Yankee runs came on rookie David Adams doubling Grandy home in the 2nd, and Robinson Cano singling home Ichiro Suzuki in the 7th. Other than that, there were singles by Ichiro, Brett Gardner and Chris Stewart -- more on that in a moment.
Vernon Wells and Lyle Overbay, who've been lovely surprises thus far, went a combined 0-for-6 with 3 strikeouts. And Jayson Nix, starting at shortstop in place of the still-injured Derek Jeter, went 0-for-5, with 2 strikeouts and 5 men left on base. That's right, 5 LOB.
That is a scandal.
WP: Oliver Perez -- yes, ex-Met Ollie Perez, alive and well in the Pacific Northwest. SV: Tom Wilhelmsen (11). LP: Pettitte (4-3).
*
Pettitte has a tight left trapezius muscle: That's the neck, shoulders and upper back. Girardi thinks Pettitte will not miss his next start, which should be next Tuesday in Baltimore, although I wouldn't be surprised if Joe's Binder says, under "Pitcher, starting, muscle, tight, throwing side," "Hold him back another day."
But Stewart, who is already the Yankees' backup catcher, and is only starting because Francisco Cervelli is on the 60-Day Disabled List, pulled his groin in running out his hit in the 7th. He could be headed for the DL as well.
Which means Austin Romine and his 37 career major league plate appearances and his -34 OPS+ this season will be starting. (1-for-16, albeit the 1 hit is an RBI double. And a hit-by-pitch. So BA .063, OBP .118, slugging .125, .243 OPS.) Romine is 24, from Orange County, California. He should be better than this by now.
In case you're wondering: The starting catcher for the last 2 years, Russell Martin, has a sizzling 154 OPS+ for the Pittsburgh Pirates. However, Jesus Montero, whom the Yankees traded to the Mariners along with Hector Noesi for Michael Pineda -- who is apparently almost ready to throw rehab games and could reach the majors in June -- is batting a mere .204 with an OPS+ of 68. Stewart's is 89, and before he got hurt Cervelli's was 136. Montero's season, so far, would be an improvement on Romine's, but not Stewart's, and not by a long shot on Cervelli's, although Martin's would be.
So again citing the lousy trade of Montero for Pineda is pointless -- since, thus far, it's been a wash, and reversing it wouldn't be helping the Yankees much.
The Toronto Blue Jays come in for a weekend series. Here's the pitching matchups for Pinstripes vs. Peskies:
Tonight, 7:00: Hiroki Kuroda vs. Mark Buehrle. Could be a great pitchers' duel. (But then, as John Sterling reminds us, "You know, Suzyn, you just can't predict baseball," so expect a slugfest.)
Tomorrow afternoon, 1:00: David Phelps vs. Brandon Morrow.
Sunday afternoon, 1:00: CC Sabathia vs. R.A. Dickey. Battle of the initials, the Yankee ace vs. the Cy Young winner the Mets let get away (in this decade). So far, Dickey's found that pitching against American League teams is hard. Let's show him just how hard it is.
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Phil Hughes Compwetewy Impwoded
There was an early episode of The West Wing where White House Press Secretary C.J. Cregg, played by Allison Janney returns from a dental appointment and can't do the afternoon press briefing because she has a mouth full of novocaine. Deputy Chief of Staff Josh Lyman, played by Bradley Whitford, volunteers to do it. C.J. tries to stop him, to no avail. The briefing is a disaster, and he walks away knowing it. C.J. yells at him, "You completely imploded!" Except it came out, "You compwetewy impwoded!"
A season later, we found out that Josh, a native of Westport, Connecticut, is a Met fan. Served him right.
Last night, at Yankee Stadium, in the middle game of a 3-game series against the Seattle Mariners, whom the Yankees had beaten the night before, Phil Hughes compwetewy impwoded.
He'd been doing so well lately, but he didn't even get out of the 1st inning. Ironically, he got the first batter of the game out, a fly to left by Michael Saunders. But then...
* Dusty Ackley drew a walk.
* Kyle Seager singled to center.
* Kendrys Morales singled to left. 1-0 Seattle.
* Michael Morse singled to right. 2-0 Seattle.
* Justin Smoak drew a walk. Bases loaded.
* Our old friend Raul Ibanez, now with the Mariners, hit one out to right-center field, a grand slam. 6-0 Seattle.
* Our old friend Jesus Montero singled to center.
* Brendan Ryan grounded into a force play. At last, the 2nd out of the inning.
* Michael Saunders ripped a double to right. 7-0 Seattle.
Joe Girardi consulted his binder, which said, "In this rare situation, declare that you've had enough, and pull the poor guy before he's scarred for life." He brought in rookie Preston Claiborne, who struck Ackley out to end it.
Somebody went on Twitter yesterday and said it was the 4th-worst start in Yankee history. I don't know if that meant all the way back to the beginning of the team, 1903, 110 years; or if he meant modern history, whenever he defines that as having begun (1923 opening of the original Stadium, 1976 reopening after the renovation, 1996 start of the Jeter-Rivera Era, etc.).
And then, in the bottom of the 1st, Vernon Wells got the Yankees on the board with his 10th home run of the season. (And we're only 1/4 of the way through.) 7-1. Is this the beginning of a big comeback?
No. Claiborne pitched all right in the 2nd and 3rd, but, making his major league debut, Brett Marshall wasn't much better than Hughes. He pitched 5 2/3 innings, allowing 5 runs on 9 hits and 5 walks. After 1 major league game, his career ERA is 7.94.
It got so bad, Girardi did something that couldn't possibly have been in his binder: He brought in Alberto Gonzalez -- not the torture-loving idiot who was George W. Bush's 2nd Attorney General -- from shortstop to pitch. Hey, it's not like losing the DH and the pitcher having to bat was going to be an issue. Gonzalez got Robert Andino to fly to right.
Mariners 12, Yankees 2. WP: Hisashi Iwakuma (5-1). No save. (As NCIS' Leroy Jethro Gibbs, played by Mark Harmon, would say, "Ya think, DiNozzo?") LP: Hughes (2-3).
The series concludes tonight, weather permitting. (It's raining in Central Jersey as I type this.) Andy Pettitte takes the hill against Aaron Harang.
Cheer up, Phil Hughes: You're still a Yankee, and you've still got a World Series ring. How many active Mets can say that? Exactly none. (They just picked up Rick Ankiel, who was in the St. Louis Cardinals' organization in 2006, but was injured and didn't make an appearance that year, not even in the minors.) How many active Red Sox can say it? Six: David Ortiz, Dustin Pedroia, Jacoby Ellsbury, Jon Lester and Clay Buchholz remain from their 2007 team (and only the big fat lying cheating Ortiz remains from 2004), while new acquisition Shane Victorino got one with the 2008 Phillies.
Still, he compwetewy impwoded. And, unlike White House Communications Director Toby Ziegler, a Brooklyn native and a Yankee Fan (also true of his portrayer, Richard Schiff), who leaked classified national-security information in the last season of The West Wing, there's no chance of a Presidential pardon.
A season later, we found out that Josh, a native of Westport, Connecticut, is a Met fan. Served him right.
Last night, at Yankee Stadium, in the middle game of a 3-game series against the Seattle Mariners, whom the Yankees had beaten the night before, Phil Hughes compwetewy impwoded.
He'd been doing so well lately, but he didn't even get out of the 1st inning. Ironically, he got the first batter of the game out, a fly to left by Michael Saunders. But then...
* Dusty Ackley drew a walk.
* Kyle Seager singled to center.
* Kendrys Morales singled to left. 1-0 Seattle.
* Michael Morse singled to right. 2-0 Seattle.
* Justin Smoak drew a walk. Bases loaded.
* Our old friend Raul Ibanez, now with the Mariners, hit one out to right-center field, a grand slam. 6-0 Seattle.
* Our old friend Jesus Montero singled to center.
* Brendan Ryan grounded into a force play. At last, the 2nd out of the inning.
* Michael Saunders ripped a double to right. 7-0 Seattle.
Joe Girardi consulted his binder, which said, "In this rare situation, declare that you've had enough, and pull the poor guy before he's scarred for life." He brought in rookie Preston Claiborne, who struck Ackley out to end it.
Somebody went on Twitter yesterday and said it was the 4th-worst start in Yankee history. I don't know if that meant all the way back to the beginning of the team, 1903, 110 years; or if he meant modern history, whenever he defines that as having begun (1923 opening of the original Stadium, 1976 reopening after the renovation, 1996 start of the Jeter-Rivera Era, etc.).
And then, in the bottom of the 1st, Vernon Wells got the Yankees on the board with his 10th home run of the season. (And we're only 1/4 of the way through.) 7-1. Is this the beginning of a big comeback?
No. Claiborne pitched all right in the 2nd and 3rd, but, making his major league debut, Brett Marshall wasn't much better than Hughes. He pitched 5 2/3 innings, allowing 5 runs on 9 hits and 5 walks. After 1 major league game, his career ERA is 7.94.
It got so bad, Girardi did something that couldn't possibly have been in his binder: He brought in Alberto Gonzalez -- not the torture-loving idiot who was George W. Bush's 2nd Attorney General -- from shortstop to pitch. Hey, it's not like losing the DH and the pitcher having to bat was going to be an issue. Gonzalez got Robert Andino to fly to right.
Mariners 12, Yankees 2. WP: Hisashi Iwakuma (5-1). No save. (As NCIS' Leroy Jethro Gibbs, played by Mark Harmon, would say, "Ya think, DiNozzo?") LP: Hughes (2-3).
The series concludes tonight, weather permitting. (It's raining in Central Jersey as I type this.) Andy Pettitte takes the hill against Aaron Harang.
Cheer up, Phil Hughes: You're still a Yankee, and you've still got a World Series ring. How many active Mets can say that? Exactly none. (They just picked up Rick Ankiel, who was in the St. Louis Cardinals' organization in 2006, but was injured and didn't make an appearance that year, not even in the minors.) How many active Red Sox can say it? Six: David Ortiz, Dustin Pedroia, Jacoby Ellsbury, Jon Lester and Clay Buchholz remain from their 2007 team (and only the big fat lying cheating Ortiz remains from 2004), while new acquisition Shane Victorino got one with the 2008 Phillies.
Still, he compwetewy impwoded. And, unlike White House Communications Director Toby Ziegler, a Brooklyn native and a Yankee Fan (also true of his portrayer, Richard Schiff), who leaked classified national-security information in the last season of The West Wing, there's no chance of a Presidential pardon.
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
How to Be a Yankee Fan In Baltimore -- 2013 Edition

The Yankees' current homestand is 3 games against Seattle and 3 against Toronto, before going down I-95 to face the Baltimore Orioles.
I started my "How to Be a Yankee Fan In... " series with the Orioles, because they are actually the Yankees' closest opponents, if you don't count Interleague trips to Flushing and South Philly. They are closer to New York than the Boston Red Sox. It's an easy trip, or, as Yankee broadcaster Michael Kay once said, seeing a LOT of Yankee paraphernalia in the stands, "This is really the South Bronx. About 190 miles south." (Actually, it's 201 miles from The Stadium to The Yards.)
I saw 3 Oriole games at the old Memorial Stadium, and I've seen 4 games at Camden Yards, the last 2 involving the Yankees. I won't be going next week, though, due to work commitments. There will be additional Yankee roadtrips there June 28-30 (a weekend) and September 9-12 (midweek). Hopefully, I will be able to go on the late June trip.
I highly recommend this trip -- if not now, certainly in the future. Baltimore is a good city and a very good sports town.
Before You Go. Baltimore can get quite hot in the summer, but we're in May, so heat shouldn't be a problem. Check the Baltimore Sun website for the weather before you go. Fortunately, it's close enough that, if there's a rainout, your raincheck will be fairly easy to use.
Getting There. Getting to Baltimore is fairly easy. However, if you have a car, I recommend using it, and using the parking deck at a hotel near the ballpark. There are several.
It’s 193 miles by road from Times Square to Camden Yards, and 201 miles from Yankee Stadium to the Birds’ Nest. If you’re not “doing the city,” but just going to the game, take the New Jersey Turnpike all the way down to the Delaware Memorial Bridge (a.k.a. the Twin Span), across the Delaware River into the State of, well, Delaware. This should take about 2 hours, not counting a rest stop.
Speaking of which, the temptation to take an alternate route (such as Exit 7A to I-195 to I-295 to the Ben Franklin Bridge) or a side trip (Exit 4, eventually leading to the Ben Franklin Bridge) to get into Pennsylvania and stop off at Pat’s Steaks in South Philly can be strong, but if you want to get from New York to Baltimore with making only one rest stop, you’re better off using the Walt Whitman Service Area in Cherry Hill, between Exits 4 and 3. It’s almost exactly the halfway point between New York and Baltimore.
Once you get over the Twin Span – the New Jersey-bound span opened in 1951, the Delaware-bound one was added in 1968 – follow the signs carefully, as you’ll be faced with multiple ramps signs for Interstates 95, 295 and 495, as well as for U.S. Routes 13 and 40 and State Route 9 (not the U.S. Route 9 with which you may be familiar, although that does terminate in Delaware, but considerably to the south of where you'll be). You want I-95 South, and its signs will say “Delaware Turnpike” and “Baltimore.” You’ll pay tolls at both its eastern and western ends, and unless there’s a traffic jam, you should only be in Delaware for a maximum of 15 minutes before hitting the Maryland State Line.
At said State Line, I-95 changes from the Delaware Turnpike to the John F. Kennedy Memorial Highway, and you’ll be on it for about an hour (unless you want to make another rest stop, at either the Chesapeake House or Maryland House rest area) before reaching the Baltimore Harbor Tunnel and Exit 53, for I-395 which empties onto Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, and the ballpark will be right there. (The official address is 333 W. Camden Street.)
If all goes well (getting out of New York City and into downtown Baltimore okay, reasonable traffic, just the one rest stop, no trouble with your car), the whole trip should take about 4 hours.
Baltimore is too close to fly, just as flying from New York (from JFK, LaGuardia or Newark) to Boston, Philadelphia and Washington, once you factor in fooling around with everything you gotta do at each airport, don’t really save you much time compared to driving, the bus or the train.
The train is a good option, but not a great one. Baltimore's Penn Station is at 1515 N. Charles Street, bounded on the other side by St. Paul Street, which runs southbound. Get on Charles, and you'll be going northbound, away from downtown, and you'll end up near the Museum of Art, Druid Hill Park ("Droodle Park" in Baltimorese), and the site of Memorial Stadium (now senior-citizens' housing). It's not a good neighborhood (although there are worse ones in Baltimore), and it will be out of your way. In addition, Amtrak is expensive. They figure, "You hate to fly, you don't want to deal with airports, and Greyhound sucks, so we can charge whatever we want."
Still, if you have the money – it’ll probably be $177 round-trip – Amtrak is a good option. An Acela Express (they don’t call ‘em Metroliners anymore) will be much more expensive, but it will take about 2 hours and 15 minutes; a regular Northeast Regional about 2 hours and 45 minutes.
When you get to Baltimore’s Penn Station, pick up copies of the Baltimore Sun and the Washington Post. The Post is a great paper with a very good sports section, and as a holdover from the 1972-2004 era when D.C. had no MLB team of its own, it still covers the Orioles well. The Sun is only an okay paper, but its sports section is nearly as good as the Post's, and their coverage of their town's hometown baseball team rivals that of any paper in the country -- including the great coverage that The New York Times and Daily News give to the Yankees.
Once you have your newspapers, walk out to St. Paul Street, and catch either the Number 3 or the Number 64 bus, which will take you to downtown, to the Inner Harbor and Camden Yards areas.
Bus? The old Greyhound terminal was right downtown, but it was an absolute hole. It looked like a homeless shelter. The new one is a huge improvement in terms of cleanliness. The problem is that it's at 2110 Haines Street, south of downtown. On paper, it's not unreasonable to walk from there to the NFL Ravens' stadium (currently, M&T Bank has the naming rights) and then past that to ballpark. But you'll be walking under the elevated Interstate 395, and you won't like it.
From Greyhound, the Number 27 bus will take you right to the ballpark. If you want to see the Inner Harbor attractions, change by the ballpark to the Number 7 bus.
Unfortunately, New York to Baltimore -- or, more accurately, the return trip -- by Greyhound is a bad option on a weeknight. The last bus of the night leaves the "downtown" terminal at 7:30 PM. Anyway, the trip is around 4 hours.
Greyhound also has "Baltimore Travel Plaza." It's at 5625 O'Donnell Street, 3 miles east of downtown, just off Interstate 95, designed to cater to Baltimore and Washington travelers at the same time, while those going to the Haines Street terminal are pretty much only those going to Baltimore. To get from Travel Plaza to downtown (Harborplace or Camden Yards), take the Number 20 bus. A bus from there will leave at 11:00 PM, but it won't get back to Port Authority until 3:45 AM. And do you really want to be at Port Authority at 4 in the morning? If you're willing to risk that, a round-trip New York-Baltimore ticket will cost $66.
Tickets. It used to be that getting tickets to any Orioles home game, not just Yankee games, was hard, because they were selling Camden Yards out 44, 45, 46,000 per night. (Officially, seating capacity is 45,971, with the difference long being made up by standing room.)
Just as the 1954 arrival of the Orioles in Baltimore, 40 or so miles away, probably doomed the Washington Senators (twice, as it turned out, the originals-turned-Minnesota Twins in 1961 and the "New Senators"-turned-Texas Rangers in 1971), so, too, did the specter of a new team coming to Washington hang over the Orioles. Edward Bennett Williams, the "superlawyer" who also owned the NFL's Washington Redskins for many years, wanted out of Memorial Stadium, which was a fine place to watch a baseball game and a great one to watch a football game. It had two major problems, however: You couldn't get in, and you couldn't get out. Driving there was bad, and public transport was every bit as bad, with the Number 3 bus constantly getting stuck in traffic on North Charles Street and then on 33rd Street.
Williams wanted a ballpark close to downtown, with easy access to Camden Station and Interstate 95 -- and thus with easier road and rail access from his Washington hometown. For years, Baltimoreans were terrified that, if he didn't get what he wanted, he would outright move the team to Washington to share Robert F. Kennedy Stadium with the 'Skins. This fear expanded after Robert Irsay moved the Colts to Indianapolis in 1984. But, just before Williams' death in 1988, a funding plan for the new ballpark got through the Maryland legislature.
New team owner Peter Angelos, once one of the biggest-spending owners in the game, was desperate to keep MLB expansion from including the Nation's Capital and established teams from moving there. He was sure that one-quarter of the Orioles' fans were from the D.C. area, and he didn't want to lose those fans. Which explains why he got plenty of freebies to D.C. power brokers, including members of Congress, White House staff, and pundits, including George Will, who became a minority owner of the franchise despite his lifelong fandom for the Chicago Cubs.
The Orioles reached the American League Championship Series in 1996, but lost to the Yankees; and again in 1997, but lost to the Cleveland Indians. In fact, the O's have played 6 ALCS games at Camden Yards since it opened in 1992, and have won only 5. (This includes 0-3 against the '96 Yanks, so since they couldn't protect their house, their fans can shut the hell up about Jeffrey Maier.)
A beanball war at Yankee Stadium in 1998, in the midst of a Yankee sweep, marked the end of the O's would-be dynasty. But people still came to Camden Yards in droves, even as the team deterioriated. In 1997, attendance peaked at 45,816 per game. As late as 2000, it was 40,704. In 2001, still 38,686.
And then, in 2002, per-game attendance dropped to 33,122. Just like that. So what happened in 2002? Or in the 2001-02 offseason? Easy: The statue of Cal Ripken was removed from third base.
You've probably gotten the joke: That wasn't a statue. That was Ripken himself, who probably played 3 years too long. But after Cal left, and took his overrated legend with him, there was no reason to watch the Orioles anymore: They stunk, and had no drawing cards.
In 2004, the last season before the Montreal Expos moved to become the Washington Nationals, O's per-game attendance was 34,300. In 2005, the Nats' first season down the Baltimore-Washington Parkway, attendance fell to 32,404. The Nats weren't good, and RFK Stadium was inadequate for modern baseball, but the novelty of baseball being back in the Nation's Capital wasn't enough to make the one-quarter difference that Angelos long feared. In fact, instead of a 25 percent drop, it was a 6 percent drop. But it was a 19 percent drop from the last Cal season.
In 2010, O's per-game attendance bottomed out at 21,662, which was their their lowest since 1988, the year they lost their first 21 games en route to losing 107 for the season. That's little more than half the total from the last Cal season, but that's got little to do with the Nats simply existing an hour's drive away (at least, it's an hour's drive in theory; BaltWash Corridor traffic can be horrendous), and lots to do with the O's being pathetic. And with Stephen Strasburg having arrived, now it will be the Nats who have the iconic player (as if Ryan Zimmerman isn't already a damn good player).
So the O's were really up the creek, right? Nope, they found a way to bounce back: Winning. Last year, they drove the Yankees crazy all season long, taking the American League Eastern Division race down to the wire, and even facing the Yankees in the AL Division Series, before the Yankees finally emerged victorious. Per-game attendance rose to 26,610.
So what does this mean? It means getting tickets for O's games will still be relatively easy, although it may no longer be possible to just walk up to the ticket booth and give your request, and basically get pretty much any seat(s) you're willing to pay for. Field Box seats are $95, Terrace Boxes are $65, Upper Boxes are $35, and Upper Reserves are $24.
Going In. Baltimore is one of those cities whose interior population shrank due to "white flight," but the suburbs boomed. A city of 800,000 in 1970, it has fallen to 620,000, but the metropolitan area (roughly northern and eastern Maryland, plus Sussex County, southernmost Delaware including Rehoboth Beach) has about 2.7 million -- roughly as many as Brooklyn.
Keep in mind that Baltimore City and Baltimore County are separate entries. (This is also true of St. Louis -- but not Philadelphia, San Francisco or Denver, where the City and the County have the same borders. And the Counties of Los Angeles, San Diego, Dallas and Milwaukee include the cities with those names as well as and other municipalities.) So if someone tells you that such-and-such location is in Baltimore County, you'll know it's not anywere near downtown.
The city's centerpoint is Charles & Baltimore Streets: Charles separates east & west, Baltimore separates north & south.
Baltimore is way behind the curve when it comes to public transportation. They didn't have a subway (they call it the Metro) until 1983, and it didn't go anywhere near Memorial Stadium; as it is, the Lexington Market and Charles Center stops are each 8 blocks from Camden Yards.
The Light Rail system opened in April 1992, the same month as the new ballpark, and separate stops serve both the ballpark (and Camden Station, enabling MARC commuter-rail access from Washington and the suburbs between the two cities) and the football stadium. The Light Rail does serve Penn Station, although the closest stop to the Greyhound station on Haines Street is Hamburg Street, which is the stop for the Ravens' stadium.
As a result of not having a subway or a light rail until a generation ago, old habits die hard, and people overrely on the city's buses, jamming them, sometimes not even during rush hour.
I'll say it again: If you can drive, or if you can get someone to drive you, do it, and park in a downtown hotel's deck. You'll be better off walking around to the various downtown locations.
You're likely to walk in at the Eutaw Street gate, between the edge of the left field stands and the Baltimore & Ohio Warehouse. This area has several statues: Oriole legends Brooks and Frank Robinson, Jim Palmer, Eddie Murray, Cal Ripken and Earl Weaver, plus Baltimore native Babe Ruth.
But if you can, try to enter by the right field gate. You'll see some of the letters from the front gate of Memorial Stadium, which stood as a memorial to Baltimore City and Baltimore County losses in World Wars I and II. The bottom line of the inscription on the gate was saved: "TIME WILL NOT DIM THE GLORY OF THEIR DEEDS."
Entering by the right field gate will also enable you to get a good look at M&T Bank Stadium, home of the defending Super Bowl Champion Ravens, and its statue of Colts legend Johnny Unitas, and to get to what appears to be the only escalator bank at Camden Yards.
The park is not symmetrical. The left-field pole is 333 feet from home plate, left-center a nice, close 364, the deepest point in left-center 410, straightaway center 400, right-center 373, and the right-field pole 318. Unlike its predecessor, pitcher-friendly Memorial Stadium, Camden Yards is very much a hitters' park.
Food. Eat. You'll be glad you did. Baltimore is a really good food city, and the concession stands reflect this. There are plenty of stands, and the lines are usually of reasonable length. The Esskay hot dogs are good, and the beers are varied.
Boog Powell's barbecue stand, on the Eutaw Street walkway, sells good stuff, although his meats are a little too spicy for my taste. And sometimes, you can even see the big fella himself, the 1961-74 1st baseman monitoring the cooking, seeing to it that his recipes are well-cared-for.
Team History Displays. As I said, there is a nod to Oriole history at the Eutaw Street gate. The statues are the men officially honored with retired numbers: 4, 1968-86 manager Earl Weaver; 5, 1955-77 3rd baseman (and later broadcaster) Brooks Robinson; 8, 1981-2001 shortstop (and later 3rd baseman) Cal Ripken Jr.; 20, 1966-71 right fielder (and later manager) Frank Robinson; 22, 1965-84 pitcher (and later broadcaster) Jim Palmer; and 33, 1977-96 1st baseman Eddie Murray.
Number 7, worn by longtime coach and briefly manager Cal Ripken Sr., and Number 44, worn by former catcher and longtime coach Elrod Hendricks, have not been officially retired, and they don't have statues, but neither has been given out since these men died.
The 6 Pennants the American League version of the Orioles have won -- 1966, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1979 and 1983 -- used to be shown as painted onto the outfield fence. Now, they are restricted to flags on the big THE SUN scoreboard -- note the BALTIMORE SUN letters taking the place of the numbers on the clock, and the Oriole weathervanes.
The old, National League version of the Orioles won Pennants in 1894, 1895 and 1896. The Triple-A version of the Orioles won the International League Pennant in 1908, 7 straight from 1919 to 1925, and again in 1944 and 1950. And the 1901-02 American League version went on to win 40 Pennants (and counting) -- but that's as the New York Yankees.
There's a brick wall on the Eutaw Street walkway that features an Orioles Hall of Fame, with several inductees:
* From the pre-title period, 1954-65: Owner Jerry Hoffberger, manager/general manager Paul Richards, executive Jack Dunn III, GM Lee MacPhail, 1st baseman Jim Gentile, outfielder Gene Woodling (the Yankees sent him there in the 18-player deal that included getting Don Larsen), catcher Gus Triandos, pitchers Hoyt Wilhelm, Milt Pappas (famously traded for Frank Robinson),
* From the 1966-74 glory years: Hoffberger, managers Hank Bauer and Earl Weaver (the ex-Yankee right fielder preceded Weaver); 3rd base coach Billy Hunter, pitching coach George Bamberger; executives Frank Cashen and Harry Dalton; 1st baseman John "Boog" Powell; 2nd basemen Davey Johnson (yes, the later Met manager) and Bobby Grich; shortstops Luis Aparicio (better known for playing for the Chicago White Sox) and Rick Belanger; 3rd baseman Brooks Robinson; outfielders Frank Robinson, Paul Blair and Don Buford; catcher Elrod "Ellie" Hendricks; pitchers Mike Cuellar, Dave McNally, Jim Palmer, Stu Miller, Steve Barber, Dick Hall and Eddie Watt.
* From the 1977-84 contention: Hoffberger; GM Hank Peters; Weaver, coaches Hunter, Hendricks, 3rd base coach Cal Ripken Sr. and pitching coach Ray Miller; 1st basemen Lee May and Eddie Murray; 2nd baseman Rich Dauer; shorstops Belanger and Cal Ripken Jr.; 3rd baseman Doug DeCinces; outfielders Al Bumbry, Ken Singleton (now a Yankee broadcaster); catcher Rick Dempsey; pitchers Palmer, Dennis Martinez, Tippy Martinez, Mike Flanagan, Scott McGregor, Mike Boddicker,
* From the 1989-93 period that closed Memorial and opened Camden Yards: Both Ripkens, Manager Johnny Oates, coach Hendricks; catcher Chris Hoiles, pitchers Gregg Olson and Mike Mussina (later with the Yankees).
* From the 1996-97 Playoff berths: Davey Johnson (back as manager), Ripken, Hoiles, Mussina, coach Hendricks, 2nd baseman Roberto Alomar, shortstop Mike Bordick, outfielders Brady Anderson, B.J. Surhoff and Harold Baines.
* Crossing the eras: Broadcasters Chuck Thompson and Bill O'Donnell; public-address announcer Rex Barney (formerly a pitcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers); trainers Eddie Weidner, Ralph Salvon and Richie Bancells; public relations director Bob Brown; minor league director Lenny Johnston; scouts Don Pries and Walter Youse; traveling secretary Phil Itzoe; director of community relations Julie Wagner; clubhouse attendant Ernie Tyler; and Baltimore cabdriver turned superfan Wild Bill Hagy.
Stuff. The Warehouse includes a team store, but if you're looking for nostalgia items, your luck will be limited. They do see B. Robinson 5, Ripken 8, F. Robinson 20, Palmer 22 and Murray 33 jerseys, but that's about it. If you're looking for Oriole history DVDs, forget it, although it probably shouldn't be too hard, somewhere nearby, to find the official World Series highlight films, sold in an Orioles package of 1966, 1970 and 1983.
Souvenir stands dot the Camden Yards concourses every few yards, and when I was there in June 2010, some of them sold Yankee T-shirts as well as Oriole gear. I don't know if they do this for other teams -- I haven't been there for a game with an Oriole opponent other than the Yankees since 1999 -- but while I appreciate the effort to pander to visiting fans, I also find it troubling: It suggests that they think that their own stuff might not be good enough.
During the Game. You do not need to fear wearing your Yankee gear to Camden Yards. Although Baltimore is an old, tough, gritty Northeastern city, home to two tough, gritty, much-honored TV crime dramas (Homicide: Life On the Street and The Wire), their fans will not fight you or provoke you into a fight. O's fans are generally classy. And they know the game, and they don't want to ruin their experience by mixing it up with outsiders.
They will, however, boo you and your fellow Yankee Fans when you chant, "Let's Go Yankees!" They don't like it when you (and Red Sox fans, and, with Interleague play coming in, fans of the Mets, Phillies and Nats) take over their ballpark, but they know fighting isn't the answer. This is something some Red Sox fans have yet to learn.
But there is one thing that might bother you at the start of the game. "The Star-Spangled Banner," played at baseball games since at least 1918 and our official National Anthem since 1931, was written in Baltimore, by city resident Francis Scott Key, following the Battle of Fort McHenry on September 14, 1814. The city's connection with the song remains strong, and since the late 1970s, it has been a tradition at Orioles games for fans to yell out the "Oh" in the line, "Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner yet wave." In this case, "O" is short for "Oriole."
In theory, this is cute. In actual practice, I find it grossly offensive. It trivializes the event the song commemorates. My first visit for a Yanks-O's game was on September 11, 2004. As Baltimore was still (for 3 more weeks, anyway) the closest MLB team to D.C., they had Pentagon rescue workers throw out the ceremonial first ball to some Yankees, representing New York and the World Trade Center. But when they sang the "O!" I said, "Not today, people!" They still do it.
To make matters worse, this is done at other sporting events. I heard it in September 2009 when Rutgers went down to the University of Maryland to play football. I understand: While the College Park campus is inside the Capital Beltway, UM wouldn't be the athletic powerhouse it's become without kids from Baltimore City and Baltimore County. I heard it in the summer of 2006 when the Yankees played the Washington Nationals in an Interleague game at Robert F. Kennedy Stadium, and I heard it again that fall when I went to see the New Jersey Devils play the Washington Capitals at the Verizon Center.
Baltimore doesn't have an NHL team, and never has, although they briefly had the Baltimore Claws in the World Hockey Association. And a lot of Nats fans grew up with the O's as their MLB team, and old habits die hard. But the D.C.-area natives booed the hell out of the "O!" shouters at both the Nats game and the Caps game. (At the former, the Nats trailed the Yankees 8-2 but came back to win, 9-8, oy; at the latter, the Devils embarrassed the Caps, 4-1.)
I've never been to a basketball game in the D.C. area -- Washington Bullets/Wizards, University of Maryland, Georgetown University or George Mason University -- but I have it on good authority that the "O!" is done at games of the Ravens, the minor-league Aberdeen Ironbirds (owned by the Ripken brothers, adjacent to their Havre de Grace hometown), and the minor-league Norfolk Tides, even before it became the Orioles' top farm club in 2007. From 1969 to 2006, the team, previously known as the Tidewater Tides, was a Met farm club. That's 240 miles from Camden Yards, but apparently they still do the "O!" I don't know if they do it on at Delmarva Shorebirds games in Salisbury on the Eastern Shore. (They're in the Lakewood BlueClaws' league, and not far from Ocean City, Maryland. Maybe I'll check them out someday.)
At the 7th inning stretch, after they sing "Take Me Out to the Ballgame," they go into "Thank God I'm a Country Boy" by John Denver. It was suggested by shortstop Mark Belanger in 1975, as Oriole management was looking for "new songs" to appeal to young fans. During the 1979 World Series, Denver himself came to Memorial Stadium and sang it from the top of the Oriole dugout, along with the Oriole Bird mascot.
I hate that song. Come on, Baltimore, you're a Northeastern city of 620,000 people. You're supposed to be tough and urban. Stop with this "country boy" nonsense!
Well, you got you a wife, she's a cousin you diddle...
After the Game. Don't worry about Oriole fans talking trash to you if they manage to beat you. A few might, but most won't. This isn't Boston. It isn't even Toronto, where the Blue Jays fans take a lot more liberties than their team has earned (since 1993, anyway).
If you want to get a drink before or after the game, there are plenty of choices near the ballpark, including Slider's, Pickles, the Wharf Rat, and the Goddess. (I realize that the last one's name makes it sound like a strip club, or maybe a lesbian bar, but it's neither.) Going to Harborplace for a late meal/snack/drink only works for day games, as they close at 9:00 at night.
If you came to Baltimore by Amtrak, and you're not spending the night, be advised that the last train of the night leaves Penn Station at 10:46 PM (and arrives at New York's Penn Station at 1:50 AM), and since Yanks-O's games tend to last over 3 hours, you could be in trouble. Make sure you get on the Light Rail train marked "PENN STATION," not one of those marked "MT. WASHINGTON" or "HUNT VALLEY," or you'll end up in the suburbs of Baltimore County.
Better to come down early on a Saturday, get a hotel, enjoy downtown on Saturday afternoon, see the game on Saturday night, and then on Sunday, choose between going to a second game and seeing something away from downtown such as the Museum of Art. You'll be glad you did.
Sidelights. The Ravens’ M&T Bank Stadium is just to the south of Oriole Park. Three blocks from the ballpark, to the west, at 216 Emory Street, is the Babe Ruth Birthplace and Baltimore Orioles Museum, featuring exhibits on the Babe and the history of baseball in the City of Baltimore and the State of Maryland.
Also 3 blocks away, to the north, bounded by Baltimore, Howard and Lombard Streets and Hopkins Place, is the 1st Mariner Arena, formerly known as the Baltimore Civic Center. This arena, built in 1961, hosted the NBA’s Baltimore Bullets (now the Washington Wizards) from 1963 to 1973; the Beatles on September 13, 1964; Elvis Presley on November 9, 1971 and May 29, 1977; and Martin Luther King’s “Race and the Church” speech in 1966. Also home to minor-league hockey and indoor soccer, they’re talking about replacing it with a new arena on the site, but for now this arena remains in use.
The site of Memorial Stadium (1954-2002), and its predecessor Municipal Stadium (1922-1953), is at 1000 E. 33rd Street, at Ellerslie Avenue. It hosted the minor-league Orioles from 1944 to 1953, the major-league Orioles from 1954 to 1991, the Colts from 1947 to 1950 and again from 1953 to 1983, the Canadian Football League’s Baltimore Stallions in 1994 and 1995, and the NFL’s Ravens in 1996 and 1997. The Number 3 bus goes up Charles Street and turns right onto 33rd.
And no visit to Baltimore is complete without a trip to the Inner Harbor, home to the Harborplace mall. James Rouse, who revitalized New York’s South Street Seaport and Boston’s Faneuil Hall/Quincy Market, and designed Philadelphia’s Gallery at Market East Station, was from Baltimore, and he wanted to give his hometown the best one of all. He may have succeeded. Aside from the Orioles team store, the highlight may be The Fudgery, where the people making and serving the fudge sing all day. Harborplace is at the intersection of Light & Pratt Streets, and there’s a Light Street Pavilion and a Pratt Street Pavilion.
To the east of Harborplace is the USS Constellation museum, a pentagonal skyscraper named the World Trade Center (Boston, Montreal and San Francisco also have buildings with that name we so often associated with New York from 1973 onward), the National Aquarium, a Hard Rock Café, the Pier Six concert Pavilion, and the Star-Spangled Banner Flag House at 844 E. Pratt Street. That’s where the 15-star, 15-stripe Fort McHenry flag that “was still there” was sewn, not where it is now (it's at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington), and it’s also a museum dedicated to the War of 1812 and Baltimore’s pivotal role in that conflict, for which 200th Anniversary commemorations have begun. Beyond that is Fell’s Point, which is Baltimore’s Little Italy, which is loaded with kitschy stores and bars.
To the south of Harborplace is the Maryland Science Center, the American Visionary Art Museum (not to be confused with the Baltimore Museum of Art), and Federal Hill, a neighborhood which is the closest thing Baltimore has to a Greenwich Village, a neat (as in both "tidy" and "cool") place to walk around when you've got an hour or two with nothing to do until it's time to go to the game, a decent walk away.
Federal Hill includes the South Street Seaport-ish Cross Street Market, and my favorite Baltimore watering hole, the Abbey Burger Bistro. Officially, it’s at 1041 Marshall Street, but don’t let that fool you: It’s actually in a short alley off Cross Street between Light and Patapsco Streets, giving it the allure of an English-style pub. This is one of the reasons it’s the home of the Charm City Gooners, the local supporters club of my favorite English soccer team, London’s Arsenal FC. Like such new-to-New York chains as The Counter and Five Napkin Burger, you can build your own burger, and it caters to fans of the Orioles and Ravens; but they will put up with Yankee Fans if they're also Arsenal fans. And (assuming you have time either before or after the game), it's a reasonable walk from both the ballpark and the Greyhound terminal on Haines Street.
Baltimore doesn't have a lot of tall buildings. The tallest is theTransamerica Tower, built in 1973 as the USF&G Building and later the Legg Mason Building, at 100 Light Street at Lombard Street, 528 feet high. It succeeded the old Baltimore Trust Company Building, now the Bank of America Building, built in 1924 at 509 feet, at 10 Light Street at Baltimore Street.
Don't look for TV locations from Baltimore. The best-known series set there are Homicide: Life on the Street and The Wire, and they were mainly set in bad neighborhoods. In particular, stay away from the west side, and the neighborhoods to the north, east and south of the Memorial Stadium site. (This includes between downtown and the old Stadium site.)
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Baltimore's Sunday games are always 1:35 starts, barring switches due to ESPN Sunday Night Baseball (which, this being the Yankees, could happen). All other home games, including Saturday games, are 7:05 starts. Good luck, and have fun!
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