Sunday, April 30, 2023

Eovaldi Burns Yankees Again

I am in no position to make it official, but I'm gonna call it anyway: We can debate which of Brian Cashman's acquisitions was his worst, but his biggest mistake in letting a player go was Nathan Eovaldi.

On December 19, 2014, Cashman got Eovaldi, Domingo Germán and Garrett Jones in a trade with the Miami Marlins, for David Phelps and Martín Prado. Based solely on Eovaldi's 2015 season and Germán's 2019 season, it can be argued that this was one of Cashman's best deals.

Eovaldi went 14-3, including an 8-0 stretch, in 2015, before developing elbow inflammation and getting shut down. The Yankees lost the American League Wild Card game to the Houston Astros, whom, it can now be presumed, were already cheating. (Don't tell me the game was at Yankee Stadium: Like the Red Sox, the Astros have forfeited any presumption of innocence.)

In 2016, Eovaldi was 9-8 before he was shut down due to another injury, which required Tommy John surgery. The Yankees did not make the Playoffs. Eovaldi was set to miss the entire 2017 season. So, on November 23, 2016, Cashman released him. He would be 28 on Opening Day 2018, and Cashman probably figured he was done.

He wasn't. He was picked up by the Tampa Bay Rays, and in midseason, they traded him to the Boston Red Sox. He turned out to be key in their winning the 2018 World Series, including beating the Yankees in Game 3 of the AL Division Series. If the Yankees had had Eovaldi to start Game 1, instead of J.A. Happ, it could have been a very different result.

Eovaldi was hurt again in 2019, and the Red Sox made him their closer. They didn't make the Playoffs. The Yankees did. Imagine having Eovaldi in the bullpen in the 2019 ALCS against the cheating Astros. It could have been a very different result.

He got hurt again in 2020. But, again, the Yankees could have used him in the Playoffs. In 2021, he was able to pitch a full season. The Yankees lost the Wild Card Game to the Red Sox. Had he been on the Yankees instead, yet again, it could have been a very different result. That could also have been true for the injury-riddled Yankee rotation of 2022.

Think about that for a moment. Let's presume that having Eovaldi would have gotten the Yankees at least one more round every season. Without even counting 2017, when he wasn't available for anybody, it would have meant, at the least: The ALCS in 2018, the Pennant in 2019, the ALCS in 2020, the ALDS in 2021, and the Pennant in 2022 over the cheating Astros.

(Yes, I'm going to keep calling them "the cheating Astros." What they've already done means that I have more evidence of their guilt, before that and after that, than you have of their innocence.)

I'm not saying the Yankees would have beaten the Astros in the '18 ALCS, the Washington Nationals in the '19 Series, the Tampa Bay Rays in the '20 ALCS or the '21 ALDS, or the Philadelphia Phillies in the '22 Series. None of that would have been guaranteed had we gotten that far. But even if we had lost all of those, it would have been a huge improvement over what we got, all because Brian Cashman lost faith in a 26-year-old Nathan Eovaldi.

And here we are in 2023, with Eovaldi pitching for the Texas Rangers, while the Yankees are plugging the holes in the rotation caused by the injuries to Luis Severino and Carlos Rodón with Clarke Schmidt and Jhony Brito. And it was Brito who they sent to oppose Eovaldi last night.

Brito pitched pretty well again, going 5 innings, allowing 2 runs on 4 hits and a walk, with 5 strikeouts. Nor can the bullpen be blamed: Between them Ron Marinaccio, Ian Hamilton and Wandy Peralta pitched 3 innings, allowing 3 baserunners and no runs.

But the Yankees aren't hitting anybody lately, and they certainly couldn't hit Eovaldi. He gave up singles to Isiah Kiner-Falefa in the 3rd inning, Anthony Rizzo in the 4th, and Willie Calhoun in the 5th. And that was it. That was all the baserunners the Yankees got in a complete-game shutout by a man who should still have been pitching for them.

Rangers 2, Yankees, 0. WP: Eovaldi (3-2). No save. LP: Brito, who really has deserved better than his current won-lost record (2-3).

The series concludes this afternoon. Nestor Cortés starts against Martín Pérez.

Saturday, April 29, 2023

Yankees + Schmidt + Hicks + Cordero - Judge - Stanton = Loss

Last night's game between the Yankees and the Texas Rangers began with bad omens. Two of them: Each team's starting pitcher. The Yankees sent Clarke Schmidt to the mound. Although his most recent start had been a good one, he had been the biggest roadblock to Yankee success this season.

The Rangers sent Jacob deGrom. For 5 seasons -- the last 3 of which, he pitched a grand total of 224 1/3rd innings -- Met fans told us deGrom was what Tom Seaver frequently was, was Dwight Gooden seemed to be, and what they falsely claimed R.A. Dickey and Matt Harvey were: The best pitcher in the world. And who was now pitching for another team, because all of Steve Cohen's money couldn't change the fact that the Mets are a joke.

Neither man lasted longer than 5 innings. In deGrom's case, it was because he got hurt in the 4th, and had to leave the game. In Schmidt's case, it was because he once again stunk up the joint. He gave up 2 runs in the 2nd inning, and 3 runs in the 3rd, the latter including a home run by Robbie Grossman. That batter's name sums Schmidt up: He's gross, man.

Lefthanded batters are now batting .396 against Schmidt. Almost .400. He is turning every lefty hitter into Ted Williams. In contrast, these were the postgame batting averages of the players Aaron Boone sent out last night: DJ LeMahieu .265, Anthony Rizzo .295, Gleyber Torres .253, Willie Calhoun .235, Oswald Peraza .160, Oswaldo Cabrera .213, Franchy Cordero .151 (with a pinch-hitting appearance from Anthony Volpe, .226), Aaron Hicks .135, and Kyle Higashioka .184.

Yes, Hicks is batting .135. And Cordero is not only batting .151, but his mishandling of a ball hit by Jonah Heim became a double, and was immediately followed by the Grossman home run.

I'm not saying these 2 guys are bad guys. But, at the moment, they are bad ballplayers. Cordero gets a bit more leeway, because he's new, as opposed to Hicks,  who has been hurting the Yankees for a while.

I'm also not saying these two guys are intentionally sabotaging the Yankees. But I am asking: Would they be doing anything differently if they were?

With no Aaron Judge, and no Giancarlo Stanton, in the lineup, deGrom held the Yankees without a baserunner over the 1st 3 innings. When he allowed a walk to Rizzo and a single to Calhoun in the 4th -- or maybe only when he allowed a single to Calhoun, now batting .235 -- he must have realized something was wrong, and he was taken out of the game.

Higashioka singled home a run in the 5th, and Calhoun brought a run home with a sacrifice fly in the 6th. But that was it for the Yankee scoring: Rangers 5, Yankees 2. WP: Dane Dunning (2-0). SV: Will Smith (3). LP: Schmidt (0-3). The Yankees are now 7 games behind the Tampa Bay Rays, and we're still in April.

The series continues tonight. Jhony Brito starts against former Yankee Nathan Eovaldi. I'm not lookin' forward to this.

Friday, April 28, 2023

April 28, 1923: Wembley Stadium Opens

April 28, 1923, 100 years ago: The Empire Stadium opens, in Wembley, West London. It was renamed Wembley Stadium in 1927. The 1st event is the Football Association (FA) Cup Final. West Ham United, from the East End of London, crosses town to face Manchester-area team Bolton Wanderers.

The official capacity of the stadium was 125,000, making it the largest in the world at the time. But so many people came in that many were standing on the field -- or, as they say in Britain, the pitch -- thus threatening to make it impossible to play the game. Some sources have the total at 300,000 -- probably an exaggeration, but it may still have been the most people who ever attempted to attend a sporting event on planet Earth.

Finally, mounted policemen were brought in, to clear the crowd from the pitch. George Scorey, a London policeman, was not on duty that day, but answered a call for emergency assistance at the stadium. He mounted his horse, Billy, and drove the crowd back. Although Billy was gray, this event became known as "The White Horse Final," as most people in the British Empire saw the newsreel in black and white, and saw Scorey on Billy as a heroic "man on a white horse."
The game began 45 minutes late, with fans standing around the pitch, kept back by the mounted cops and a string fence. Bolton forward David Jack scored the stadium's 1st goal just 2 minutes into the game, and Jack Smith added another in the 53rd minute, giving the Wanderers a 2-0 win.

After the game, a tradition was born: The Bolton players climbed the 39 steps from the pitch to the royal box, and their Captain, forward Joe Smith, received the FA Cup from none other than King George V, father of the eventual King Edward VIII and King George VI, grandfather of Queen Elizabeth II, and great-grandfather of King Charles III.
The original Wembley opened 10 days after the original Yankee Stadium opened in New York, and 3 days before the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum opened. The Twin Towers at its front gate became iconic long before anyone thought to design New York's World Trade Center that way, and its roof was extended around the ends in 1963.
It hosted the FA Cup Final every year until it closed in 2000. It was the main stadium for the 1948 Summer Olympic Games. It hosted the Finals of:

* The 1963 European Cup: AC Milan of Italy defeated Benfica of Lisbon, Portugal.
* The 1966 World Cup: England won on home soil over West Germany.
* The 1968 European Cup: Manchester United defeated Benfica.
* The 1971 European Cup: Ajax Amsterdam of the Netherlands beat Panathinaikos of Athens, Greece.
* The 1978 European Cup Final: Liverpool beat Brugge of Belgium.
* The 1992 European Cup Final: FC Barcelona beat Sampdoria of Genoa, Italy. And...
* The 1996 European Championship: Germany beat the Czech Republic.

It also hosted 9 NFL preseason exhibitions between 1983 and 1993, the London Monarchs of the World League of American Football in 1991 and '92, and home games in the UEFA Champions League of soccer team Arsenal in the 1998-99 and 1999-2000 seasons, due to their North London home field, Arsenal Stadium, a.k.a. Highbury, seating only 38,000.

The last event was a match between the national soccer teams of England and Germany, a Group Stage match for qualification for the 2002 World Cup, and a restaging of the stadium's most famous event, the 1966 World Cup Final (when Germany was still West Germany). This time, the Germans emerged victorious, 1-0.

The stadium was soon demolished. A new, 90,000-seat Wembley Stadium suffered serious construction delays, finally opening on March 9, 2007.

Cole and Homers Lead Yanks, But Judge Injury a Concern

The Yankees opened a 4-game series against the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field in Arlington last night. They opened up a lead in the top of the 2nd inning. DJ LeMahieu and Gleyber Torres opened it with back-to-back home runs. Oswald Peraza was hit with a pitch. After Isiah Kiner-Falefa flew out, Jose Trevino singled, Aaron Hicks drew a walk, and Anthony Volpe singled Peraza home. It was 3-0 Yankees.

Gerrit Cole started, and pitched shutout ball for 5 innings. In the bottom of the 6th, he loaded the bases with nobody out. He got a strikeout for the 1st out. On the next play, LeMahieu took a grounder at 1st base. He did the right thing by going to 2nd base for the 2nd out, and Volpe got it. Volpe made a good throw to 1st, but Cole didn't get there in time, and he dropped the ball, and a run scored. The next play was a slow bouncer to 3rd, and Peraza couldn't make the throw, making it 3-2. Another grounder ended the inning. Given the circumstances, the Yankees were lucky to get out of it with only 2 runs.

Cole pitched into the 7th, and Michael King pitched the rest of the way. Trevino provided an insurance run with a home run in the 9th. Yankees 4, Rangers 2. WP: Cole (5-0). SV: King (1). LP: Andrew Heaney (2-2).

There was one rough note: Aaron Judge had to leave the game in the 4th inning, with an apparent hip injury. He has played in all 26 games this season. This will surely end tonight, but manager Aaron Boone says he is "not too concerned about it," and he might need only a day or two off.

The series continues tonight. Clarke Schmidt, coming off easily his best start of a rough season so far, will start against former Met ace Jacob deGrom.

Thursday, April 27, 2023

Dick Groat, 1930-2023

Dick Groat played basketball at Duke University long before it was cool, and played baseball for the Pittsburgh Pirates while it was very cool.

Richard Morrow Groat was born on November 4, 1930 in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania, just to the east of Pittsburgh. Though only 5-foot-11, he was a basketball star at Swissvale High School, and Duke recruited him to come down to Durham, North Carolina.

In 1951, he became the 1st college basketball player ever to lead the country in both points per game and assists per game in the same season. He was named Southern Conference Athlete of the Year (the Atlantic Coast Conference was founded in 1953), and was selected by the Fort Wayne Pistons as the Number 3 pick of the 1952 NBA Draft. Duke went on to make his Number 10 the first they ever retired. He played 26 games for the Pistons in the 1952-53 season, averaging 11.9 points per game.
He was also a shortstop in baseball, and his hometown team, the Pittsburgh Pirates, signed him as a free agent. On June 18, 1952, with the Pirates on their way to a franchise-worst 112 losses, he made his major league debut. In the top of the 8th, wearing the Number 24 he would wear for most of his career, he pinch-hit for pitcher Joe Muir, and grounded back to pitcher Jim Hearn. The Pirates lost to the New York Giants, 5-2 at the Polo Grounds.

As 1 of 13 men to have played in both MLB and the NBA, Groat played in 95 games as a rookie, batting .284. With the Korean War ongoing, he enlisted in the U.S. Army, and missed the entire 1953 and 1954 seasons, even though the war ended on July 27, 1953. The Pirates told him that he had to give up basketball in order to keep his place on their team. Given that he was playing in his hometown, and for more money, he chose baseball.

He would be the Pirates' starting 2nd baseman for the next 8 seasons, and was named team Captain. In 1959, he made the 1st of 5 All-Star Games. In 1960, he led the National League with a .325 batting average, although the vast expanses of Forbes Field meant that he only hit 2 home runs with 50 RBIs. Nevertheless, he was named the National League's Most Valuable Player, despite playing on the same team as future Hall-of-Famers Roberto Clemente and Bill Mazeroski and Cy Young Award winner Vern Law. The Pirates upset the New York Yankees to gain the franchise's 1st World Series win in 35 years.

After the 1962 season, the Pirates traded Groat to the St. Louis Cardinals. Big mistake: In 1963, he batted .319, hit 6 home runs, had a career-high 73 RBIs, and led the NL with 43 doubles. In 1964, he batted .292, hit just 1 homer, but had 70 RBIs, and helped the Cardinals win the World Series, again beating the Yankees. He nearly won another MVP, finishing 2nd to his teammate Ken Boyer.

He went into decline after that, last playing in the majors with the San Francisco Giants in 1967. He finished with a lifetime batting average of .286, with 2,138 career hits. He has never gotten serious consideration for the Baseball Hall of Fame, but there are only 3 players not in the Hall who have won a batting title, won an MVP, played on a World Series winner, and appeared in at least 5 All-Star Games. Two of those are Pirates: Dick Groat and Dave Parker. The other is Pete Rose, who is ineligible for the Hall.

In 1955, Dick Groat married model Barbara Womble. They had 3 daughters: Tracey, Carol Ann and Allison. The marriage lasted until Barbara's death in 1990. Dick later operated a golf course, and became one of the country's best senior golfers. And he returned to basketball, broadcasting games for the University of Pittsburgh.

"I’ve been very fortunate," he said. "We beat the Yankees twice for the World Series ,for one thing. I was able to play professional basketball, which was my first love and my best sport at least for one year. Because of that and my Pirate background, I’ve broadcasted basketball for the University of Pittsburgh for the last 36 years with the best broadcaster anywhere, Bill Hillgrove."
He died today, April 27, 2023, at the age of 92.

With his death, there are now 7 surviving players from the 1960 World Champion Pittsburgh Pirates, and 13 surviving players from the 1964 World Champion St. Louis Cardinals. Bob Skinner is one of both. The other surviving '60 Pirates are Bill Mazeroski, Bob Skinner, Joe Christopher, Vernon Law, Elroy Face, Bob Oldis & Bennie Daniels.

The other surviving '64 Cardinals are Roger Craig, Mike Shannon, Julián Javier, Dal Maxvill, Bill White, Carl Warwick, Gordie Richardson, Ray Washburn, Ron Taylor, Charlie James, Bob Humphreys & Bob Uecker.

It's All In How You Look At It

An optimist would look at yesterday afternoon's game, and note that the Yankees scored 12 runs.

A pessimist would look at the entire 3-game series at Target Field in Minneapolis, see the 5 runs scored in yesterday's 2nd inning and the 6 scored in the 4th, and note that, in the other 25 innings combined, the Yankees scored a total of 4 runs, and points out that this isn't good enough.

The Yankees struck early against Minnesota Twins starter Kenta Maeda, who left the game after 3 innings due to an injury. He may already have been hurt, which could explain why the Yankees hit him so hard.

They got 5 runs in the 2nd inning, including a bases-loaded double by Aaron Judge on his 31st birthday. They got 6 more in the 4th, thanks to RBI doubles by Anthony Volpe and Anthony Rizzo and a home run by Gleyber Torres.

An 11-1 lead should have been plenty for starting pitcher Domingo Germán to work with. But he gave up 3 homers on the afternoon, allowing the Twins to close to within 11-6 by the time he left after 6 innings. Fortunately, Ian Hamilton and Clay Holmes were able to pitch the last 3 innings, allowing only 1 baserunner. And the Yankees picked up another run in the 8th, on a sacrifice fly by DJ LeMahieu.

Yankees 12, Twins 6. WP: Germán (2-2). No save. LP: Meada (0-4). It should be pointed out that the Twins ended the game at 14-11, the same record as the Yankees, and in 1st place in the American League Central Division. In contrast, the Yankees are 6 games behind the Tampa Bay Rays in the AL East. It's all in how you look at it.

The Yankees now move on to Texas. That is due to a regularly scheduled 4-game series against the Rangers, not a punishment for poor play.

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

If the Yankees Can't Beat the Twins...

Nestor Cortés usually gets good run support from the Yankees. Not last night, at Target Field in Minneapolis. And it might not have mattered if he had gotten it.

He was staked to an early lead, as DJ LeMahieu singled a run home in the top of the 1st inning. But he gave up 2 runs to the Minnesota Twins in the bottom of the 3rd. A groundout and an error tied the game in the 4th, but that would be the best the Yankees could do.

Cortés gave up a 2-run homer in the 6th, and that was it for him. Ron Marinaccio gave up another before getting out of that inning.

Twins 6, Yankees 2. WP: Joe Ryan (5-0). No save. LP: Cortés (3-1). This clinched the Twins' 1st win in any series over the Yankees since 2001. Brandon Buxton, who hit one of the home runs, said of the last time it happened, "I was 6!"

The Yankees have had a lot of success against the Twins over the last 25 years. But if they can't beat the Twins anymore, there's a problem.

The team simply isn't hitting. Last night, Anthony Volpe got 2 hits, which raised his batting average to .211. Willie Calhoun, who shouldn't be playing at all, got 2 hits, and that raised his average to .192. Aaron Hicks got a hit, and that raised his average to .129. Franchy Cordero fell to .160, and Oswald Peraza to .158.

This is unacceptable. And we're already 7 games behind the Tampa Bay Rays in the American League Eastern Division.

The series concludes this afternoon. Domingo Germán starts against Kenta Maeda.

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Ghosts of Cashman Screw-ups Past Haunt Yanks In Minnesota

The Yankees' week-long road trip to Minnesota and Texas did not get off to an auspicious start last night. Especially since they were faced by 2 of the ghosts of Brian Cashman screw-ups past.

Sonny Gray started for the Minnesota Twins at Target Field. Not surprisingly, given that their lineup included Aaron Hicks, but not Giancarlo Stanton, the Yankees couldn't hit him. DJ LeMahieu got 2 hits, but the rest of the lineup combined for only 4. Even the 1 run the Yankees scored, at the very end, came on a fielder's choice by Oswaldo Cabrera.

Jhony Brito started for the Yankees, and while the rookie has been a nice surprise thus far, he didn't have it last night, being taken out in the 3rd inning.

And in the 4th, reliever Greg Weissert gave up a home run -- to Joey Gallo, another ghost of Cashman screw-ups past.

Twins 6, Yankees 1. WP: Gray (3-0). No save. LP: Brito (2-2).

Right now, Gallo is batting .243. That's not good, but compare it to these names in last night's Yanker lineup: Aaron Judge, .244 (remember, he was threatening for the batting title, and thus the Triple Crown, last September); Cabrera, .211; Jose Tevino, .208; Anthony Volpe, .194; Isiah Kiner-Falefa, .176; Franchy Cordero, .174; and Hicks, .107. Nope, that's not a typo: 3 hits in 28 at-bats equals one-oh-seven.

And that doesn't include these guys, who didn't get into last night's game: Oswald Peraza, .200; Kyle Higashioka, .194; Willie Calhoun, .136; and Josh Donaldson, who was at .125 when he went on the Injured List, presumably long-term.

The series continues tonight. Nestor Cortés starts against Joe Ryan.

Sunday, April 23, 2023

Quiet Yankee Bats Ruin Good Schmidt Performance

If I rip somebody when they deserve it, then I must also give credit where it is due.

Clarke Schmidt, who has been a big hole in the Yankees' starting rotation thus far, started the series finale with the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium II this afternoon. He pitched a perfect game for 4 1/3rd innings, before Alejandro Kirk hit a double in the 5th. He also walked a batter, but worked out of it.

But in the 6th, Anthony Volpe made an error, and that led to Schmidt giving up back-to-back home runs to Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Daulton Varsho -- both lefthanders, who have given him so much trouble -- to make it 3-0 Toronto. Still, for Schmidt, 3 runs over 6 innings is a huge improvement. Michael King was brought in to relieve, and he got out of the inning, but he allowed another run in the 7th to make it 4-0. Ian Hamilton pitched a 1-2-3 8th inning, but he allowed another run in the 9th.

Kevin Gausman, who used to pitch well against the Yankees for the Baltimore Orioles, started for the Jays, and limited them to 3 hits over the 1st 7 innings. Jays manager John Schneider -- with Yankee "legend" Don Mattingly as his bench coach -- brought Erik Swanson in for the 8th inning, and he did the job.

Schneider sent sidearm pitcher Adam Cimber out to pitch the 9th. Volpe led off with a sharp line drive that was, unluckily, caught. Aaron Judge lined out. Anthony Rizzo, pretty much the only Yankee who's been hitting lately, hit a home run. This was followed by back-to-back singles up the middle by Gleyber Torres and DJ LeMahieu, giving a little hope, but the team got no closer.

Blue Jays 5, Yankees 1. WP: Gausman (2-2). No save. LP: Schmidt (0-2). Hardly Schmidt's fault this time. And I'm not going to blame Volpe for his inning-opening error, either. The Yankees lost this game because they didn't hit.

In 27 innings in this series, the Yankees scored only 4 runs. It was enough to win yesterday, but not the day before, and not today. Giancarlo Stanton is injured, and out long-term. So is Josh Donaldson, and he may be done, anyway. And Torres is in a 4-for-35 slump. Nobody is providing protection for anybody.

The Yankees are 13-9, 6 games behind the Tampa Bay Rays in the American League Eastern Division. They now head out onto the road, for 3 games in Minnesota and 4 in Texas.

Saturday, April 22, 2023

Volpe & LeMahieu Lead Yanks Past Jays

Last night, the Yankees were totally flat in the opener of their home series against the Toronto Blue Jays. I was hoping they would be considerably better.

They weren't. They were just barely better enough.

Gerrit Cole started, but after letting him go the distance in his last start, this time, Aaron Boone panicked, and took him out after 96 pitches, when it was 0-0 in the 6th inning. Ron Marinaccio and Clay Holmes got the Yankees through the 7th with no damage.

So runs were required. But they didn't come. Alek Manoah was even more effective for the Jays. With 1 out in the 3rd, Oswaldo Cabrera doubled, and Oswald Peraza drew a walk, but Manoah stranded them. The Yankees didn't get another baserunner until Gleyber Torres singled in the 7th.

Finally, with 2 out in the 8th, Peraza singled, and Anthony Volpe hit a home run. It was 2-0 Yankees, and victory looked likely.

But Boone sent Wandy Peralta to the mound for the 9th, and he gave up a 2-run homer to Kenley Jansen, letting all the air out of the balloon in The Bronx. Jimmy Cordero had to be brought on to get out of the inning.

The Yankees didn't want extra innings. I certainly didn't. Anthony Rizzo led off the bottom of the 9th with a double. Isiah Kiner-Falefa was sent in to pinch-run for him. Torres hit a grounder to short, and there was no play: 1st & 3rd, nobody out. Torres stole 2nd without a throw, a play designed to get a throw and possibly get the runner on 3rd home. Willie Calhoun drew a walk to load the bases with nobody out.

I thought, "If we don't get any runs home here, and lose the game in extra innings, that's the season, right here."

DJ LeMahieu had been given the day off, but Boone sent him up to pinch-hit for Franchy Cordero. The Jays brought the left fielder in as a 5th infielder. It didn't work: DJLM singled to left anyway, and the game was over.

Yankees 3, Blue Jays 2. WP: Cordero (1-0, his 1st win as a Yankee). No save. LP: Jordan Romano (2-1).

The series concludes tomorrow afternoon. Clarke Schmidt, Mr. Hole In the Rotation, is scheduled to start against Kevin Gausman, who usually pitches well against the Yankees. Don't get your hopes up.

If I Search My Feelings

So, yesterday was not a good day for me. Usually, when I have a bad day, I can say, "At least the hips don't hurt me anymore, and I have my health." But I've been battling bronchitis for 2 months, and, to make literal the saying of civil rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer, I am sick and tired of being sick and tired.

Arsenal FC, still in 1st place in the Premier League, were playing at home to Southampton FC, in 20th and last place. They let in a goal in the 1st 30 seconds, and eventually trailed 3-1. They stormed back late to snatch a 3-3 draw. A win would have gotten them 3 points in the League standings, the draw only 1. And their next game is away to the team chasing them, Manchester City, who not only usually beat Arsenal solidly in Manchester, but have 2 games in hand. It doesn't look good.

The draw did, however, clinch at least 4th place in the League, meaning they will be in the UEFA Champions League next season. It also meant that they will finish ahead of their North London arch-rivals, Tottenham Hotspur. For the 1st time in 6 years, there was a St. Totteringham's Day.

After the game, I prepared the traditional St. T's Day meal: A lasagne. But it was a Marie Callender's TV dinner, and not very good. Fitting for a disappointing draw.

Then I headed out to Dunkin Donuts. Except, unknown to me at the time, the closest Dunkin to me is closed for renovations. I was like Luke Skywalker, hearing Darth Vader tell me he was dear old Dad: "No... No... That's not true... That's impossible!" ("Search your feelings: You know it to be true!") "NOOOOOOOO! No... " I had to settle for Starbucks. Yes, compared to Dunkin, Starbucks is "settling."

And then, I couldn't watch the Yankees, because of their Friday night deal with Apple. It was just as well. They started a 3-game home series with those pesky Toronto Blue Jays. Domingo Germán started, and he did not have good stuff, going 6 innings, allowing 4 runs on 5 hits and 2 walks. Albert Abreu didn't help matters out of the bullpen, allowing 2 runs in the 8th inning.

The Yankees didn't hit much, either. Oswaldo Cabrera hit a home run in the 2nd inning, but they couldn't follow it up at all. Blue Jays 6, Yankees 1. WP: Yusei Kikuchi (3-0). No save. LP: Germán (1-2).

And the Devils trail the Ranger Scum 2-0 in the Playoffs, with the next 2 at Madison Square Garden. We Devils fans will be lucky if they give us a Game 5 back at the Prudential Center.

The Yanks-Jays series continues this afternoon. Gerrit Cole starts against Alek Manoah. If I search my feelings, I know Cole is going to help. But will he be enough to make today a better day?

Thursday, April 20, 2023

Big 1st Inning Powers Yanks Past Halos

The Yankees played the finale of their 3-game home series with the Los Angeles Angels this afternoon. Nestor Cortés started for the Yankees. He got Shohei Ohtani to pop up, and then, just when it looked like no one was going to get it and it was going to drop in fair territory, made a basket catch He got through the 1st 2 innings without allowing a baserunner, and the 1st 4 without allowing a hit, with Isiah Kiner-Falefa -- not normally a center fielder -- making a spectacular diving catch to end the top of the 4th.

The Yankees struck right away, with a leadoff walk by Anthony Volpe, and singles by Aaron Judge and Anthony Rizzo, to make it 1-0. After Anthony Rendon robbed Gleyber Torres of a line-drive hit that was sure to be an RBI, DJ LeMahieu drew a walk. Oswald Peraza had been called up, and was walked with the bases loaded. Oswaldo Cabrera struck out, and Jose Trevino hit one all the way to the base of the left-field wall, clearing the bases and making it 5-0.

Brandon Drury broke up the no-hitter by leading off the top of the 5th with an infield single to 3rd. Luis Rengifo hit one into the right-field corner, putting men on 2nd and 3rd. Logan O'Hoppe singled Drury home to end the shutout. Tyler Ward hit a long drive into Death Valley, and IKF made another great catch, but it was still a sacrifice fly that brought Rengifo home. But Cortés got Ohtani to ground out to end the threat, and it was 5-2 Yankees.

Cortés walked Rengifo, and Aaron Boone brought Ron Marinaccio in. He gave up a double to O'Hoppe to make it 5-3. He then got 2 outs, but then, having had him pitch to the minimum 3 batters, Boone took him out. And brought in Wandy Peralta.

Why would you do that? Because he was a lefty, and the next batter was the Angels' only lefty, the previously 0-for-3 Ohtani. This move, reminiscent of Joe Girardi bringing Boone Logan in to face 1 lefty batter, was just asking for a game-tying home run.

And Peralta got called for a pitch clock violation before even threw a damn pitch. And then he walked Ohtani, to bring the even more dangerous Mike Trout to the plate as the go-ahead run. He hit one up the middle, and Peraza, playing 2nd base, kept it in the infield to momentarily save the run, but that loaded the bases. Fortunately, Peralta got Rendon to fly to left, ending the threat, and keeping the game 5-3.

LeMahieu loosened things up a bit in the bottom of the 7th, doubling home a run. The Yankees loaded the bases, and IKF, coming into the game batting a horrible .115, singled up the middle to get 2 runs home. They got another run in the 8th, and left loaded the bases. Ian Hamilton pitched a scoreless 8th, and Greg Weissert a scoreless 9th.

Yankees 9, Angels 3. WP: Cortés (3-0). No save. LP: Patrick Sandoval (1-1).

Tomorrow night, the Yankees welcome the Toronto Blue Jays to Yankee Stadium II for 3 games. Domingo Germán is scheduled to start against Yusei Kikuchi.

Yankees Hit Just Enough to Beat Angels In 10

After a very weak opening game of their home series with the Los Angeles Angels, the Yankees needed another bounce-back game. And it was another hole-in-the-rotation game, and, after 2 nice starts and 1 bad one, Jhony Brito needed one as well.

He gave us one. He threw 84 pitches before being removed in the 5th inning, allowing 1 run on 3 hits and 3 walks. He would not be the winning pitcher, but he would not be responsible for a loss, either. Nor would Michael King, who took it through the 7th without allowing any further runs.

Aaron Judge certainly took his 2022 replacement of Shohei Ohatani as American League Most Valuable Player to heart. In the 1st inning alone, he robbed Ohtani of a home run, and then hit one himself, to give the Yankees a 2-0 lead.

The Angels scored off Brito in the 5th, but it was still 2-1 going into the 8th thanks to him and King. But Aaron Boone made the mistake of bringing Wandy Peralta in to pitch. He allowed a single to former Yankee Gio Urshela, balked him to 2nd, and then allowed a game-tying single to Hunter Renfroe.

The Yankees got men on 1st & 2nd with 1 out in the 8th, but didn’t score. And when they wasted a leadoff hit-by-pitch in the bottom of the 9th, I could feel a Cliché Alert coming on: "I Hate Extra Innings."

But the long rest the bullpen got worked -- except for Peralta. Clay Holmes pitched a scoreless 9th, and Ian Hamilton pitched a 1-2-3 10th, standing ghost runner Mike Trout.

The Yankee ghost runner wad Isiah Kiner-Falefa. Anthony Volpe was told to bunt him over to 3rd. He tried, but popped up to the pitcher, Matt Moore, for the 1st out. A rookie mistake: He'll learn to be a better bunter, and we should appreciate his effort.

Judge was intentionally walked to set up the inning-ending double play. But Moore choked, hitting Anthony Rizzo with a pitch to load the bases. All that was needed was a long-enough fly ball, and Gleyber Torres hit one to center. Trout is good with the glove as well as with the bat, but, in the deepest part of the new Yankee Stadium, he was not going to throw IKF out at the plate.

Yankees 3, Angels 2. WP: Hamilton (1-1). No save. LP: Moore (1-1). A big win, showing that they could win when 2 runs over 9 innings wouldn't be enough. They hit just enough to win in 10.

The series concludes this afternoon, at 4:05. Nestor Cortés, no hole-in-the-rotation he, starts against Patrick Sandoval.

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Last Night's Games Ticked Me Off

Comedian Vic DiBitetto, the man who made the famed "Bread and Milk" Video in 2013, and the creator of the "Ticked Off Vic" rants, is a fan of the Yankees and the New York Giants. I've never heard him mention hockey, but, given his Brooklyn origin, if he likes hockey at all, he's probably a New York Rangers fan. Well, everybody's entitled to one flaw.

I am a fan of the Yankees, and, for reasons I won't get into here, the Philadelphia Eagles, the Giants' arch-rivals. But I long ago reached the point where I had no problems with Giants fans, perhaps because they join us in our hatred of the Dallas Cowboys. Nor do I have problems with New York Jets fans, because they had the New England Patriots, and, as a Yankee Fan who hates the Boston Red Sox, I can relate.

When I was 12, the NHL version of the Colorado Rockies moved to the Meadowlands, and became the New Jersey Devils, and I became a fan of theirs. What team did I root for before that? The Rangers? No. Their regional arch-rivals, the Long Island-based New York Islanders? No. Not that far from me, in the other direction, the Philadelphia Flyers? No. All 3 were dirty teams, and I didn't like that. It was the Montreal Canadiens. The "Flying Frenchmen" were smooth, speedy, and classy, but still able to stand up for themselves when necessary, and they were the team that defined hockey in my youth, and indeed for the entire period from the late 1950s to the late 1970s.

The Canadiens have won only 2 Stanley Cups since 1979, none since 1993. The Devils went through 2 hard Playoff series with the Rangers, in 1992 and 1994, before winning their 1st Stanley Cup in 1995, and then again in 2000 and 2003. The Rangers' Cup of 1994 remains their only one since 1940, yet they act like it means more than the Canadiens' record of 24 Cups does.

The majority of people who are Yankee Fans from Spring to Autumn are also Ranger fans from Autumn to Spring. How can these people be so smart and reasonable half the year, and so dumb and jackassed the other half?

(As far as the other sports are concerned: To me, Devils fans seem to be about 3 to 1 Yankees to Mets, 5-1 Giants to Jets, and I can't judge their basketball fandom at all, because they don't seem to care about either the Knicks or the Nets all that much.)

The Devils, having made the Playoffs just once in the 10 years since reaching the 2012 Stanley Cup Finals, which was their 1st since moving to the Prudential Center in downtown Newark in 2007, put together one of their finest regular seasons, and got the 2nd seed in the NHL's Eastern Conference. That gave them home-ice advantage over the 7th seed -- the Rangers, the Broadway Boozehounds, The Scum.

We'd beaten them in the Playoffs in 2006 (a sweep) and 2012 (Adam Henrique's double-overtime goal to clinch the Conference Finals a counterpoint to the Stephane Matteau goal that beat us in the same round in 1994), but they'd beaten us in 1992, 1994 (still the most crushing defeat in Devils history), 1997, and 2008 (the 1st Playoff series at the Prudential). So it's 2-4 against them in Playoff series.

Last night's Game 1 was good from an attendance standpoint: Normally, Ranger fans buy up tickets for the games between us, because it's close to Manhattan, cheaper than Madison Square Garden, and we usually don't sell out. The result is that it sounds like a Ranger home game in our building. Not this time: It was about 80 percent Devils fans.

But the game was a total wipeout. The Rangers are experienced, whereas most of the Devils are young, and hadn't played in a game this big. The Rangers won, 5-1, and the Devils were never really in it. They didn't make the effort, and they threw away the home-ice advantage. That ticked me off.

*

Last night was also the 100th Anniversary of the opening of the original Yankee Stadium. Which, of course, is now gone. That ticks me off.

The new Yankee Stadium has had its moments. Last night was not one I'd like to remember. Once again, one of the injury-caused holes in the rotation came up, only to be filled by Clarke Schmidt, who can't pitch. He didn't get out of the 4th inning, allowing 4 runs on 6 hits, although he didn't walk anybody and struck out 5. Good control, bad command.

This included giving up a home run to Shohei Ohtani. For those of you who keep track of such things, on the night, Ohtani went 1-for-3, the hit being his 4th home run of the season, and 2 RBIs; Mike Trout went 2-for-4; and former Yankee Gio Urshela went 0-for-4 for the Halos.

Gerrit Cole gave the bullpen a day off on Sunday, and there was already a day off on Monday, and, perhaps sensing that his game was already lost, Aaron Boone gave the good relievers another day off last night, letting guys who had something to prove try to prove it. Greg Weissert got us out of the 4th. Ron Marinaccio pitched the 5th and the 6th, allowing an unearned run (albeit on his own throwing error). Jimmy Cordero pitched a scoreless 7th and 8th, and Albert Abreu a scoreless 9th. So, nice jobs done by some guys who needed to show they could do it. No ticking-me-off there.

But the Brian Cashman philosophy of "Bomb them out of the yard, and you don't have to pitch well" didn't get backed up last night. The Yankees left the bases loaded in the 1st inning, and did it again in the 2nd.

In the 4th, they responded to a 4-run Angels inning with 2 of their own, but neither RBI was a hit: Anthony Volpe drew a bases-loaded walk, the 3rd walk of the inning for Angel starter José Suarez, and Aaron Judge, whom the entire Stadium was hoping would hit a grand slam to give the Yankees a 5-4 lead, could only manage a sacrifice fly, and it was 4-2.

The Angels took a run back in the 5th. And, after the Judge sac fly, the only Yankee baserunner for the rest of the game was Oswaldo Cabrera beating out a grounder to 3rd in the 8th.

Angels 5, Yankees 2. WP: Andrew Wantz (1-0 -- Suarez didn't get out of the 4th, either, and the rule states that a starting pitcher has to go at least 5 innings to get credit for the win. SV: José Quijada (3). LP: Schmidt (0-1, but his ERA rose to 8.79, and his WHIP to 1.884).

The Yankees are 1-3 in games that Schmidt had started this season. In all other games, they are 9-4. This is what another comedian, Arsenio Hall, would have called one of things that make you go, "Hmmm... "

Losing. Seeing Clarke Schmidt as the starting pitcher. Not hitting. Not seeming to even make an effort. That's what ticks me off!

*

Also last night, the Mets lost to the Los Angeles Dodgers, 5-0 at Dodger Stadium. That did not tick me off, although I usually don't like seeing what I have come to start calling "The Los Angeles Baseball Team" win.

I point this out not to rub it in, but to point out that Clayton Kershaw, his Hall of Fame ticket pretty much already punched, pitched 7 innings of 3-hit ball, while 2 relievers finished the 4-hit shutout -- meaning the Mets got the same number of hits as the Yankees, albeit against a real starting pitcher.

I note it because it was the 200th win of Kershaw's career. With the way pitching is handled by MLB organizations today, we may not see many more 200-game winners, let alone the 300 that once seemed to be tantamount to election to Cooperstown.

Kershaw joins Justin Verlander (244), Zack Grienke (223) and Max Scherzer (203) as the only active pitchers with at least 200 wins. At 35, Kershaw is easily the youngest of them, and the most durable, never having missed a significant stretch of a season due to an injury. Adam Wainwright, who has said this will be his last season, is knocking on the door at 195. The next-closest is all the way back at 163, and it's Cole Hamels. I forgot he was still pitching. He's pitched only 3 1/3 innings in the majors since 2019, and none since 2020. But there he is, trying to work his way back into the majors with the San Diego Padres at age 39.

The only active pitchers under age 35 with at least 100 wins are Gerrit Cole (134), Madison Bumgarner (also 134, but he looks done), Chris Sale (115) and Stephen Strasburg (113, and he's only pitched 31 1/3rd innings due to injuries since he led the Washington Nationals to the 2019 World Championship).

April 19, 1943: The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

The best-known photo from the Uprising, after its failure.
The boy has never been positively identified,
and there is no way to know if he survived the camps.

April 19, 1943, 80 years ago: The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising begins, the most famous resistance movement against an occupation of a nation by Nazi Germany.

The Nazis had invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, starting World War II. Overwhelmed, the country fell in 10 days, and the deportation of the country's Jews to concentration camps began -- first to use them as slave labor, and later to execute them in what became known to the Germans as "the Final Solution," and to the civilized world as "the Holocaust."

There were 2 main groups launching the Uprising, which would normally have been opposed to each other, but united in the face of a common enemy: The left-wing Jewish Combat Organization (Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa, or ŻOB), and the right-wing Jewish Military Union (Żydowski Związek Wojskowy, or ŻZW).
The ŻOB flag. The ŻZW flag was much the same,
but without the Star of David.

It was the largest single revolt by Jews during the War. Ultimately, the Uprising failed, due to being heavily outnumbered and outgunned: They killed 150 Germans, as opposed to losing 13,000 of their own people. Marek Edelman, the only surviving ŻOB commander, said the point of the revolt was "not to allow the Germans alone to pick the time and place of our deaths."

By the time the Allies finally put an end to the Nazi state, 5.8 million Polish citizens had died during the War. About 90 percent of Jews living in Poland, around 3 million, died.

Tuesday, April 18, 2023

April 18, 1923: Yankee Stadium Opens

 
April 18, 1923, 100 years ago: The original Yankee Stadium opens, at the intersection of East 161st Street and River Avenue in the South Bronx. What was then reported as 74,218 fans, a record crowd for a Major League Baseball game, but was later admitted to be "only" 62,000 or so (still a record at the time), filed into the massive structure.

The New York Yankees had needed a new home field for the 1923 season, because their lease had run out at the Polo Grounds, and their landlords, the New York Giants, had told them they would not get a new lease. This was out of spite, because, with their 1920 acquisition of Babe Ruth, and the home runs he was hitting, the Yankees were drawing more fans than the Giants.

The Giants, as landlords, made money off this, too. And when the Yankees won their 1st 2 American League Pennants in 1921 and 1922, the Giants won the National League Pennant both times, and beat the Yankees in the World Series both times. Still, the Yankees surpassing them in attendance was embarrassing from a public relations standpoint.

So the Yankees' owner, Jacob Ruppert, found a plot of land with an elevated branch of the New York Subway system going past it, and some room for parking lots for the recently increased use of cars. The fact that it was right across the Harlem River from the Polo Grounds, at 155th Street and 8th Avenue, where the Manhattan neighborhoods of Harlem and Morningside Heights meet, and could be seen from seats at the Polo Grounds itself, was a nice bonus, a counter-spite.
Jacob Ruppert

This is what the world was like at the time:

What we now call Major League Baseball had 16 teams: 3 in New York; 2, 1 in each League, in Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago and St. Louis; and 1 each in Washington, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Cincinnati and Detroit. No teams south of the Potomac and Ohio Rivers, and, aside from the 2 St. Louis teams, and they just barely, no teams west of the Mississippi River. Such regions had minor-league teams only.

There were no black or Asian players. The few Hispanic players who had played had been light-skinned enough to be accepted as "white." There were no stadiums with lights, no electric scoreboards, no artificial turf fields, and no stadiums with domes, retractable or otherwise. Of the ballparks in use then, only Fenway Park in Boston and Wrigley Field in Chicago are still in use today.

The NFL had been founded just 3 years earlier, and, at this point, could hardly have been called a "major league." The NHL had been founded 6 years earlier, and would not have a U.S.-based team until the Boston Bruins were founded a year later. The NCAA Basketball Tournament wouldn't be founded until 1939; the NBA, in 1946. As I said, the Giants were the defending World Champions in baseball; in the NFL, the Canton Bulldogs; and in the NHL, the Toronto St. Patricks, who were renamed the Maple Leafs in 1927. The Heavyweight Champion of the World was Jack Dempsey.

George Wright and Cal McVey, of the 1st openly professional baseball team, the 1869-70 Cincinnati Red Stockings were still alive. Along with Ruth, the biggest stars in the AL were, as they had been for years, Ty Cobb, Tris Speaker, Eddie Collins, George Sisler and Walter Johnson. In the NL, they were Frankie Frisch of manager John McGraw's fiesty Giants, Grover Cleveland Alexander, and Rogers Hornsby. Casey Stengel was still playing, for the Giants, and the idea that he would one day be a big-league manager must have seemed ridiculous.

Lou Gehrig would make his major league debut later in the year, for the Yankees. So would Bill Terry, for the Giants. Both 1st baseman would reach the Baseball Hall of Fame, which would not be established until 1936. Joe DiMaggio was 8 years old; while Ted Williams, Bob Feller and Jackie Robinson were 4. Stan Musial was 2. Roy Campanella was 1. Bobby Thomson would be born later in the year. Yogi Berra, Duke Snider, Mickey Mantle, Willie Mays, Hank Aaron and Sandy Koufax weren't born yet.

Soccer hadn't yet held a worldwide tournament such as the World Cup. The closest it had come was in the quadrennial Olympic Games. While the Games had held 6 Summer editions, they would not hold their 1st in the Winter until the following year. The games have since been held 7 times in America; 4 times each in France and Japan; 3 times in Canada, Germany and Italy; twice each in Britain, Switzerland, Norway, Australia, Austria, Russia, Korea and China; and once in the Netherlands, Finland, Mexico, Bosnia, Spain, Greece and Brazil.

There were 48 States in the Union, and 19 Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. One of those, the 18th Amendment, was for Prohibition, and it became the most-broken, and the most-brazenly-broken, law in American history, until the 21st Amendment, in 1933, made it the only Amendment ever to be repealed.

There had been no Civil Rights Act since 1875. There was no Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Interstate Highway System, Medicare, Medicaid, Environmental Protection Agency, OSHA, or Title IX. The idea that abortion and same-sex marriage would one day be allowed was ridiculous. Then again, so was the idea that corporations were "people," and entitled to the rights thereof.

The President of the United States was Warren G. Harding. But he would die later in the year, and his Vice President, Calvin Coolidge, would become President. Former Presidents Woodrow Wilson and William Howard Taft were still alive. Wilson was ill, and died within a year. Taft had been appointed by Harding to be the Chief Justice of the United States. To this day, he is the only man to serve both as President and on the Supreme Court.

Herbert Hoover was Secretary of Commerce. Franklin Roosevelt was out of active politics, recovering from polio. Harry Truman was in private business. Dwight D. Eisenhower was a Captain in the U.S. Army. Lyndon Johnson was 14 years old, Ronald Reagan was 12, Richard Nixon was 10, Gerald Ford was 9, John F. Kennedy was 5; and Jimmy Carter, both George Bushes, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, Donald Trump and Joe Biden hadn't been born yet.

The Governor of the State of New York was Alfred E. Smith. The Governor of New Jersey was George Silzer. The Mayor of the City of New York was John Hylan.

There were still living veterans of the Mexican-American War, the European Revolutions of 1848, and the Crimean War, including at least 1 known survivor of that war's Charge of the Light Brigade and its "noble six hundred." There was still a surviving participant of the Seneca Falls Convention, and a former Senator who had voted to convict the impeached President Andrew Johnson and remove him from office.

The Prime Minister of Great Britain was Andrew Bonar Law, and of Canada, William Lyon Mackenzie King. The head of State of both nations was King George V. Liverpool F.C. had just won England's Football League. Manchester-area team Bolton Wanderers were about to win the FA Cup, at the newly-opened Wembley Stadium in London. Indeed, it could be argued that the 3 greatest sports stadiums the world has ever known are the original Yankee Stadium, the original Wembley Stadium, and the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, and all 3 opened within a span of 14 days in the Spring of 1923.

The holder of the Nobel Peace Prize was Fridtjof Nansen, a Norwegian scientist honored for work with post-World War I refugees and the repatriation of prisoners of war. The Pope was Pius XI. The Soviet Union had been newly established. China was a young republic. There was no State of Israel. There have since been 18 Presidents of the United States, 5 British Monarchs, and 8 Popes.

Khalil Gibran published The Prophet. Ernest Hemingway published Three Stories and Ten Poems, although he hadn't yet published a novel. F. Scott Fitzgerald had published the novels This Side of Paradise and The Beautiful and the Damned, and was now working on The Great Gatsby.

C.S. Lewis had published 1 volume of poetry. J.R.R. Tolkien, 6 years older, had published 20 of them. But neither had published any fantasy work. When they met 3 years later, as professors at Oxford University, they still hadn't published any.

Films in 1923 were still silent, and still black & white. Among the films of the year were the Lon Chaney Sr. version of The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Cecil B. DeMille's original version of The Ten Commandments, and Safety Last! with its iconic image of Harold Lloyd clinging for dear life to the hands of a clock, several floors above a city street.

James Bond's creator, Ian Fleming, was 14 years old. Superman's creators, writer Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Shuster, were 7. Batman's creator, Bob Kane, was 6. So was Doctor Who's creator, Sydney Newman. Comic book writing icon Jack Kirby was 5, Gene Roddenberry was a toddler, and Stan Lee was an infant. George Lucas, Steven Spielberg, Stephen King and George R.R. Martin wouldn't be born for over 20 years.

George M. Cohan was still the biggest musical star on Broadway, but Al Jolson was right behind him as a singer and actor. As far as composing for the musical stage was concerned, Irving Berlin and the brothers George & Ira Gershwin were already giving Cohan a run for his money.

Notable songs of 1923 included "Charleston," "It Ain't Gonna Rain No Mo," "Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out," "That Old Gang of Mine," "Who's Sorry Now?" and "Yes, We Have No Bananas."

Louis Armstrong had made his 1st recording just a few days before. Bing Crosby had just joined a band -- as a drummer. The band didn't last long. Frank Sinatra was 7 years old. Neither Elvis Presley nor any of the Beatles had been born yet.

Inflation was such that what $1.00 bought then, $17.65 would buy now. A U.S. postage stamp cost 2 cents, and a New York Subway ride 5 cents. The average price of a gallon of gas was 14 cents, a cup of coffee 5 cents, a hamburger 5 cents, a movie ticket 22 cents, a new car $570, and a new house $4,000. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed that day at 102.24.

The tallest building in the world was the Woolworth Building, in Lower Manhattan. Telephone numbers were still based on "exchanges," based on the letters on a rotary dial. So a number that, today, would be (718) 293-6000 (this is the number for the Yankees' ticket office, so I’m not hurting anyone's privacy), would have been CYpress 3-6000. There were no ZIP Codes, either. They ended up being based on the old system: The old New York Daily News Building, at 220 East 42nd Street, was "New York 17, NY"; it became "New York, NY 10017."

Radio broadcasting was still new, and few homes had a radio set. Television was still in the experimental stage, and had not been "invented" yet. Photocopying wasn't even an idea. Computers, and everything they can do? Forget it.

There were no credit cards or automatic teller machines. Artificial organs were not yet possible. Transplantation of organs was not possible. The distribution of antibiotics was not possible: If you got any kind of infection, you could easily die. There was no polio vaccine. In spite of the fiction of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells, no one had yet launched a rocket toward space.

In the Spring of 1923, Prince Albert, Duke of York, married Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, which came in very handy 13 years later, when he had to become King George VI. The Irish Civil War ended. The 1st 24 Hours of Le Mans auto race was held in France. There were military coups in China and Bulgaria. Egypt approved a constitution calling for a parliamentary democracy. In America, Michigan received a rare (even for them) drop to single-digit temperatures.

Sarah Bernhardt, and George Herbert, and Alexander Calder died. Marcel Marceau, and Bettie Page, and Aaron Spelling were born.

That's what the world was like on April 18, 1923, when the 1st Yankee Stadium opened.

*

It was a sunny, warm Wednesday afternoon. John Philip Sousa conducted the U.S. Marine Band in playing "The Star-Spangled Banner," which would not be declared the National Anthem until an act of Congress in 1931. Governor Smith threw out the ceremonial first ball.
Babe Ruth was not happy that the Yankees were leaving the Polo Grounds. Its short foul pole distances made for easy pickings for his booming bat. But when he walked onto the field at Yankee Stadium for the first time, he looked around at the biggest stadium ever built for baseball to that point, and said, "Some ball yard." He saw that the right field fence was only 3 feet high, and the pole was just 296 feet from home plate. The money he'd brought into the Yankees got the ballpark nicknamed "The House That Ruth Built," but it also seemed to be a house built for Ruth. And he said, "I'd give a year of my life to hit the first home run in this ballpark."
The game got underway at 3:30 PM, with Yankee starting pitcher Bob Shawkey getting the Red Sox' shortstop, Wilson "Chick" Fewster, to ground out to his opposite number, who had also been his predecessor in Boston, Everett Scott. At the time, Scott held the major league for most consecutive games played, considered to be continuous in spite of his trade from Boston to New York. Scott's streak would end 2 years later. Within a few days, the streak of the man who would break his record, Lou Gehrig, began.
Bob Shawkey

What the Babe wanted, he usually got. In the bottom of the 1st inning, against Sox pitcher Howard Ehmke, he hit a fly ball down the right field line, but it was caught. He batted again in the 3rd, following an RBI single by Joe Dugan that made the score 1-0 in the Yankees' favor. With Whitey Witt on 3rd base and Dugan on 1st, Ruth crushed Ehmke's delivery deep into the right field stands, making it 4-0 Yankees.
He had hit the 1st home run in Yankee Stadium. Did he give a year of his life for it? Hard to say: The Babe was a heavy smoker, and it was throat cancer that took his life in 1948. He was only 53 years old.

The Yankees won that 1st game 4-1. The winning pitcher was Shawkey. As far as the Yankees were concerned, the Roaring Twenties were well underway.

In 1973, the Yankees celebrated Golden Anniversary Day, and invited Shawkey to throw out the ceremonial first ball. In 1976, following a 2-year renovation that required that they share Shea Stadium in Queens with the New York Mets, they reopened Yankee Stadium, and Shawkey threw out the first ball again.

The opening of the original Yankee Stadium began a 2-week stretch in which 3 of the greatest sports venues ever built opened. The original Wembley Stadium opened in London on April 28, and the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum opened on May 1.

In addition, Ohio State University opened Ohio Stadium in Columbus on October 7, 1922; the Rose Bowl stadium opened in the Los Angeles suburb of Pasadena, California on October 28, 1922; the University of Oklahoma's facility in Norman, now known as Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium, and the University of Nebraska's Memorial Stadium in Lincoln both opened on October 20, 1923; the University of Illinois' Memorial Stadium opened in Champaign on November 3, 1923; the original Soldier Field opened in Chicago on October 9, 1924; and the University of Texas' Memorial Stadium in Austin opened on November 8, 1924. So that's a lot of legendary stadiums built in a span of a little more than 2 years.

The Yankees won the World Series in 1923, beating the Giants, and confirming their status as the best team not just in the world, but in New York City. Before the original Stadium closed in 2008, they won 37 Pennants and 26 World Series while playing there. It hosted the All-Star Game in 1939, 1960, 1977 and 2008.
The original Yankee Stadium also hosted some legendary college football games, including Notre Dame's win over Army in 1928 that included coach Knute Rockne's invocation of late Notre Dame Star George Gipp, "Win one for the Gipper"; and another Army-Notre Dame game, in 1946, with both teams undefeated. It was billed as "The Game of the Century," but it didn't live up to the billing, ending 0-0. From 1971 to 1973, and again from 1976 to 1987, the Whitney M. Young Jr. Urban League Classic featured black college football teams.

The New York Giants football team played there from 1956 to 1973. They won the NFL Championship Game there in 1956, beating the Chicago Bears. But they also lost it there in 1958, against the Baltimore Colts in an overtime classic that has been called "The Greatest Game Ever Played." They lost another NFL Championship Game there in 1962, to the Green Bay Packers.

Legendary soccer teams have played there, including Brazilian club team Santos, the Brazil national team, and, in the 1976 North American Soccer League season, the New York Cosmos, all with the greatest player in the sport's history, Pelé. AC Milan and Internazionale played a Milan Derby there, and Glasgow giants Celtic and Rangers both played there, although not against each other. A 1952 match featured the last 2 Champions of England's Football League, with Tottenham Hotspur of North London demolishing Manchester United 7-1.

And the old Stadium hosted lots of prizefights, including Joe Louis knocking out Max Schmeling in 1938, Rocky Marciano knocking out Archie Moore in 1955, and Muhammad Ali beating Ken Norton in 1976.

A major renovation was necessary by the 1970s, and the Stadium closed after the last game of the 1973 regular season. It reopened on April 15, 1976, with an 11-4 Yankee win over the Minnesota Twins. That season began a run of 6 seasons with 5 Division titles, 4 Pennants, and 2 World Series wins.
The last game at the old Yankee Stadium was played on September 21, 2008. With regular catcher Jorge Posada injured, the last home run was hit by his backup, José Molina. The new Yankee Stadium opened across 161st Street on April 16, 2009, and Posada hit the 1st home run, but the Cleveland Indians spoiled the party, 10-2. The old Stadium was demolished in 2010.
The two Yankee Stadiums, side-by-side, 2008

In every measurable way, the new Yankee Stadium is superior to the old one. But some things simply cannot be measured. Yes, the new one has been home to Derek Jeter, Mariano Rivera and Aaron Judge. But it will never be home to Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, Mickey Mantle, Reggie Jackson, Frank Gifford, Sam Huff, Joe Louis, Rocky Marciano or Pelé.