Thursday, August 12, 2021

Lucky > Good

On Monday night, the Yankees began a roadtrip by blowing 4 saves against the Kansas City Royals, and still managed to win. Surely, such a defiance of luck would come back to haunt them in the next game.

It did. Nestor Cortes allowed 2 runs in the 1st inning. The Yankees scored a run in the 3rd, and 2 more on a home run by Kyle Higashioka to takes a 3-2 lead in the 4th. But Cortes and the bullpen couldn't hold it, and the game fell apart.

Royals 8, Yankees 4. WP: Josh Staumont (2-2). No save. LP: Cortes (0-1).

*

So the rubber match of the series was played yesterday afternoon. With their starting rotation depleted by injuries and COVID restrictions, and closer Aroldis Chapman also on the Injured List, Aaron Boone chose the bullpen-all-day route, with Lucas Luetge as the starter, and 99 percent of Yankee Fans were thinking....
But a funny thing happened on the way to falling behind 8-1 after 3 innings on the way to a 12-3 loss: We didn't. Cliché Alert: Walks can kill you, especially the leadoff variety. DJ LeMahieu led off the game with a walk. Brett Gardner struck out, but Aaron Judge singled, Joey Gallo added a walk, and this was followed by back-to-back RBI singles by Luke Voit and Rougned Odor. It was 3-0 Yankees before Luetge even took the mound.

He allowed a run in the 1st, and we were all, "Ah, shit... " But he settled doendown, and got to the end of the 2nd without further damage. Albert Abreu pitched the 3rd and the 4th, allowing another run. But the rest of the way, the bullpen was brilliant: Joely Rodriguez, Chad Green (who, somehow, got credit for the win), Jonathan Loáisiga and Zack Britton got through the last 5 innings, allowing no runs on 1 hit and 1 walk.

The Yankees didn't need any more runs, but they got them. Tyler Wade -- usually completely useless at the plate, so this is one for Ripley's Believe It Or Not! -- hit 2 doubles in the game, 1 of them leading off the 4th. After Rob Brantley (the emergency catcher with Gary Sanchez having had the weak J&J vaccine) flew out, there followed 3 straight singles, by LeMahieu, Gardner and Judge, driving home 2 runs.

Yankees 5, Royals 2. WP: Green (6-5). SV: Britton (1). LP: Brady Singer (3-8). The Yankees took 2 out of 3 in the series, and while they were lucky, they also got the job done when they needed to. As their Hall of Fame pitcher of the 1930s, Vernon "Lefty" Gomez, used to say, "I'd rather be lucky than good." He was both. Maybe, so is this Yankee team, which was hardly imaginable a month ago.

The Yankees closed the series 6 games behind the Tampa Bay Rays in the American League Eastern Division, and 2 games (only 1 in the loss column) behind the Boston Red Sox for the AL's 2nd Wild Card slot.

Tonight, they begin a series away to the Chicago White Sox -- but not in Chicago. It will be at the Field of Dreams complex in Dyersville, Iowa, a game that was planned for last season, but postponed due to the COVID shutdown. Assuming no further injuries or virus afflictions -- and, as that great fictional New Yorker Felix Unger taught us, you should never assume -- Andrew Heaney will start for the Yankees, against Lance Lynn for the Pale Hose.


Tuesday, August 10, 2021

Yankees Win Insane Game In Kansas City

Last night, the Yankees began a roadtrip at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, to play the Royals.

To paraphrase the old Crazy Eddie commercials, That game was not Christmas in August! For much of it, the Yankees seemed to be giving it all away! But, in the end, the Yankees beat 'em! That game was IN-SAAAANE!

It didn't start out that way. The Yankees' Jameson Taillon and the Royals' Carlos Hernandez each began the game with 6 shutout innings. This seriously belied what was to come.

What followed, partly thanks to Commissioner Rob Manfred's stupid new "ghost runner" rule, was the 1st game in the 150-season history of Major League Baseball that both teams scored in the 7th inning, did it again in the 8th, did it again 9th, did it again the 10th, and did it again in the 11th.

It was also the 1st time a team had four comebacks from the 7th inning onward, and lost; and the 1st time that a team had four blown saves in 1 game, and still won.

A Luke Voit single put the Yankees ahead 1-0 in the 7th, but Jonathan Loáisiga blew it. He didn't help his own cause when he made a bad pickoff throw that allowed a runner to go to 2nd. Then he got less help from home plate umpire Pat Hoberg, who called a balk on him that only Hoberg seemed to see. Aaron Boone came out of the dugout, and, according to lip-readers, yelled, "Fucking no way! Fucking terrible!" Hoberg threw him out of the game, and bench coach Carlos Mendoza had to manage the rest of the way.

An Aaron Judge single put the Yankees ahead 2-1 in the 8th, but Chad Green blew it. Voit hit a home run to put the Yankees up 3-2 in the 9th, but Zack Britton blew it. The Yankees took a 5-3 lead in the 10th, and Clay Holmes blew that!

In the top of the 11th, with Joey Gallo starting the inning on 2nd, DJ LeMahieu singled him home. 6-5 Yankees. Voit flew out. Rougned Odor grounded to 1st, which moved DJLM over to 3rd. Tyler Wade drew a walk. So did Kyle Higashioka, loading the bases. Brett Gardner, the senior Yankee, singled home DJLM and Wade. 8-5 Yankees. Giancarlo Stanton grounded out to end it.

Wandy Peralta was brought in, to get 3 puts while allowing no worse than 2 runs. He started out fine, getting a groundout and a strikeout. But it wouldn't be that simple. He allowed a single that got the ghost runner home. Then another single.

Now, the tying runs were on base, and the winning run was at the plate, in the form of the dangerous Carlos Santana. To borrow a phrase from the rock guitarist of the same name, the Yankee bullpen had to change its evil ways, baby.

Santana hit a grounder to 3rd. It was a tough play for Odor, requiring a long throw, but Santana was out.

Finally. Yankees 8, Royals 6. Remember: It was 0-0 after 6 innings. WP: Holmes (4-2, but deserving only according to the letter of the rule). SV: Peralta (3). LP: Greg Holland (2-5).

Yankees got some bad injury news last night. Gleyber Torres, who has been hitting very well lately, had to go on the 10-Day Injured List with a thumb sprain, and Luis Severino, who had been doing well in his rehab starts, suffered an injury setback with his groin. We had hoped to see him back with the big club before the end of the month, but now, that may not happen.

The series with the Royals continues tonight. Nestor Cortes starts for the Yankees, Daniel Lynch for the Royals.

Monday, August 9, 2021

Yankees Get Their Gioia di Vivere Back, Only to Lose It in 3 Hours

There's a French term that most English-speaking Americans know: "Joie de vivre." It means "joy of living."

With their new Italian-American acquisitions, Anthony Rizzo and Joey Gallo, the Yankees seemed to have found it again. In Italian, the phrase becomes "gioia di vivere."

On Thursday night, the Yankees began a 4-game home series with the Seattle Mariners, knowing that, due to injuries to Corey Kluber and Luis Severino, COVID protocols preventing the appearances of Gerrit Cole and Jordan Montgomery, and Jameson Taillon having pitched the finale of the previous series, none of the 4 games would be started by any of the 5 men they expected to make up their starting rotation this season.

Nestor Cortes started the opening game, allowing 2 runs over 5 innings. He left with the game tied. Chad Green pitched a scoreless 6th, but allowed a run on the 7th, and many fans thought the game was over.

It wasn't. Gallo hit a 3-run homer, and, despite the all-too-frequent unnecessary drama from Aroldis Chapman, the final score was Yankees 5, Mariners 3. WP: Green (5-5, not wholly deserved). SV: Chapman (23). LP: Paul Sewald (6-3).

*

The Yankees entered the series not knowing who would be the starting pitcher on Friday night. They went with the "opener" or "bullpen game" strategy, and it actually worked. Of the 27 outs they needed to get in the 1st (and hopefully only) 9 innings, Wandy Peralta got the 1st 5, Stephen Ridings the next 4, Joely Rodriguez 3, Clay Holmes 4, Lucas Luetge 4, Jonathan Loáisiga 4 and Zack Britton 3. Between them, they allowed 1 run (Holmes in the 5th inning) on 7 hits and 1 walk, striking out 8.

But the Yankees didn't hit, either, getting only 1 run, in the 8th, and that without the benefit of a hit. The game went to extra innings and ghost runners. Both teams scored 1 run in the 10th, as Green continued to be ineffective. 

Albert Abreu held the Mariners off with a 1-2-3 top of the 11th. The Yankees started the bottom of the inning with Joey Gallo on 2nd. Gleyber Torres popped up. Then the Mariners walked Rougned Odor to set up the double play. It didn't work: Kyle Higashioka struck out, but Brett Gardner had a heck of an at-bat, Paul O'Neill-style fouling several pitches before singling Gallo home. 

Yankees 3, Mariners 2. WP: Abreu (1-0). No save. LP: Keynan Middleton (0-2).

*

Newly-acquired Andrew Heaney started the Saturday afternoon game. He was shaky, allowing 4 runs in 6 innings. He did, however, give the bullpen, used so much the nhght before, a little rest, and, between them, Holmes, Rodriguez and Loáisiga allowed just 1 baserunner over the last 3 innings.

Aaron Judge hit a home run in the 1st, but the Yankees went into the bottom of the 6th trailing 4-1. Giancarlo Stanton led off with a single. Odor hit the shortest of "short porch" home runs to make it 4-3. Online Yankee Haters started with the "little league ballpark" talk -- as if Fenway Park doesn't have closer foul poles, and Kyle Seager hadn't already hit a cheap home run for the Mariners in the game.

Gardner flew out, but Torres reached on an error. The Mariners really did themselves in with bad defense. Higashioka hit a ground-rule double to tie the game. DJ LeMahieu singled, and Rizzo grounded to 1st, and nobody seemed to know what to do: A double play resulted, but not before Higashioka scored the go-ahead run.

Which held up. Yankees 5, Mariners 4. WP: Heaney (7-8, 1-0 as a Yankee). SV: Loáisiga (4). LP: Anthony Misiewicz (3-4).

The Yankees had now won 5 straight -- all since that cat ran into thebfield during their most recent loss -- 10 out of their last 12, and 15 of their last 20, getting themselves legitimately back into the thought-lost race for the American League Eastern Division title.

*

And then came yesterday. There were two big pieces of bad news. Aroldis Chapman was placed on the 10-day injured list, with inflammation in his throwing shoulder. That throws the bullpen out of whack. 

Possibly worse, Rizzo, who mentioned that he hadn't been vaccinated, was placed on the COVID list. Neither one of these guys will be available for a week and a half, at least. As a result, for yesterday's game, the Yankees 1st baseman would be Luke Voit, and he turned out to be a terrible option. 

About the vaccine situation: General manager Brian Cashman got the Yankees the Johnson & Johnson "one-time only" vaccine. For too many players, it hasn't worked. And now, he can no longer say, "I still deserve to have my job because I got Anthony Rizzo."

Luis Gil started the game, and pitched 5 shutout innings. He jas now pitched 11 innings in the major leagues without allowing a run. Unfortunately, he is not 2-0, because the Yankees just didn't hit. Torres, who has now broken out of a terrible slump, got three hits, but the rest of the team combined only got three. Yankees left 11 men on base.

Luetge blew it in the 8th inning, but can I really fault him for losing the game, when the Yankees didn't offset the 2 runs he allowed with at least 3 of their own?

Mariners 2, Yankees 0. WP: Sewald (7-3). SV: Drew Steckenrider (4). LP: Luetge (4-2).

The Yankees took 3 out of 4 in the series, but that 1 loss felt like it canceled out the other 3. It reminded Yankee fans of what life is like without Rizzo, and we don't like it. We just don't hit. The gioia di vivere is gone.

With 51 games, over 8 weeks, to go, the Yankees are now 6 1/2 games, 6 in the loss column, behind the Tampa Bay Rays in the AL East, and 2 1/2 games, just 1 in the loss column, behind the Boston Red Sox for the second AL Wild Card slot.

They now start a road trip, first to Kansas City, and then to face the Chicago White Sox, including a game at the Field of Dreams site in Dyersville, the 1st Major League Baseball game ever played in the State of Iowa. (Early in its history, the NBA had a team in Iowa, the Waterloo Hawks, but they didn't last long.) The Field of Dreams Game was supposed to be played last year, but was called off because of the COVID shutdown.

UPDATE: Gio Urshela has had an injury setback, and didn't make the roadtrip. 

Thursday, August 5, 2021

After a Bad Game, Yanks Roast Birds Twice

The Yankees returned home from the COVID hotspot of Florida what appeared to be an injury and illness crisis. At least they were facing a team that seemed to be easy to beat, the Baltimore Orioles. But the 1st game of the series, on Monday night, did not look like what the doctor ordered.

Andrew Heaney, newly acquired from the Los Angeles Angels, made his Yankee debut. He got through the 1st 2 innings without any runs, but allowed 2 in the 3rd and 2 more  in the 4th, and that would be it for him. Clearly, if he's going to be part of the solution to the Yankees pitching problems, he didn't prove it that night.

Jorge Lopez started the game for the Orioles, with a 2-12 record and an ERA over 6. Result? The Yankees only got 3 hits all game long. And their only run was scored without the benefit of a hit, in the bottom of the 5th, on 2 walks, a groundout, and a sacrifice fly by, you may have guessed, highly popular new acquisition Anthony Rizzo.

Orioles 7, Yankees 1. WP: Lopez (3-12). No save. LP: Heaney (6-8). All the optimism for  having taken 5 out of 6 in Florida was gone.

*

So what the Yankees really needed the next 2 nights was a couple of blowouts.

For the Tuesday night game, the Yankees did something they hadn't done since September 26, 1950: They sent out 3 pitchers making their Major League debuts. That day, it was Lew Burdette, Dave Madison and Ernie Nevel. Nevel never amounted to anything, and Burdette and Madison only did so after being traded. The Yankees lost to the Washington Senators, 11-8, because starter Tommy Byrne got shelled. In that case, it didn't matter, because the Yankees had already clinched the Pennant.

But for this game, the starter was Luis Gil (pronounced like "heel"), a 23-year-old Dominican righthander. Most fans were not optimistic.

Surprise: Gil went 6 innings, allowing no runs on 4 hits and 1 walk, striking out 6. No one had the right to ask for a better major league debut than that.

The 2nd debutant was Stephen Ridings, a righthander from Long Island about to turn 26. He allowed a double, but otherwise struck out the side. The last 2 innings were pitched by Brody Koerner, a 27-year old righthander from Virginia. He allowed a run in the 8th, but got through the 9th without any more.

A pitching performance like that deserve to be backed up by a lot of runs. It was. The Yanks got 1 run in the 2nd inning, 5 in the 3rd, 3 in the 4th including a home run by Giancarlo Stanton, and 4 more in the 8th including a home run by Aaron Judge. Every Yankee in the lineup except newcomer Joey Gallo got a hit.

Yankees 13, Orioles 1. WP: Gil (1-0). No save. LP: Alexander Wells (1-2).

*

Last night, the Yankees sent out the man intended as their 5th starter, but now the only starter they've got who isn't either injured or dealing with COVID-related issues, Jameson Taillon. He pitched into the 7th inning, allowing 3 runs, 2 of them earned, 4 hits, just 1 walk, and striking out 10. The problem is, the Yankees just haven't been hitting for him, and so he did not end up as the winning pitcher.

It didn't help that Baltimore was getting good pitching from former Met idol Matt Harvey, whom the Flushing Heathen had nicknamed "The Dark Knight," because he reminded them of Batman for reasons that made sense only to them. 

It was 3-0 Orioles going to the bottom of the 4th. Rizzo then hit a 2-run homer off Harvey, and the Yankees tied it in the 5th. Then they got 5 runs in the 7th and 2 more in the 8th. 

This included an RBI single by Rizzo, who thus became the 1st Yankee ever to have at least one RBI in each of his 1st 6 games with the team. That's in the entire history of the franchise. No, Ruth didn't do it, nor did Gehrig DiMaggio, Mantle, Berra, Maris, Jackson, Winfield, Jeter or A-Rod. Certainly, not Donnie Regular Season Baseball.

The last Oriole pitcher was Dusten Knight. Somebody on Twitter noted that the O's started with Matt Harvey and ended with D. Knight. For all the good that did.

Yankees 10, Orioles 3. WP: Jonathan Loáisiga (8-4). No save. LP: Cole Sulser (3-2).

So the Yankees outscored the Orioles 24-11, which makes it look like they roasted the Birds. But they only took 2 out of 3.

*

Nevertheless, the situation is improving. The Yankees now trail the Tampa Bay Rays by 6 games, 5 in the loss column, for the American League Eastern Division lead. The Boston Red Sox are 1 game behind the Rays. For the 2nd AL Wild card slot, the Yankees trail the Oakland Athletics by 2 games, 1 in the loss column.

Tonight, the Yankees begin a four-game home series with the Seattle Mariners. Unfortunately, between the injuries and the COVID recovery, here are the starting pitching matchups as they are currently projected:

* Tonight, 7:05: Nestor Cortes vs. Tyler Anderson.

* Tomorrow, 7:05: Undecided vs. Marco Gonzales. Yes, Undecided. This is not just a Major League Baseball team, this is the New York Yankees.

* Saturday, 1:05: Andrew Heaney vs. Chris Flexen.

* Sunday, 1:05: Luis Gil vs. Yusei Kikuchi.

Yeah. Another damning count in the indictment of Brian Cashman. If the Yankees can survive this with no worse than a split, I'll take it.

All 4 games will be on YES.

J.R. Richard, 1950-2021

From 1971 to 1997, Zander Hollander published The Complete Handbook of Baseball, including profiles of major league teams' key players. He usually began those profiles with a player's nickname. In the 1978 edition, he began his profile of J.R. Richard this way: "His name is James Rodney, but call him Sir."

James Rodney Richard was born on March 7, 1950 in Vienna, in Northern Louisiana. He grew up near Ruston, at the same time as quarterback Bert Jones, and, about 70 miles to the west in Shreveport, quarterback Terry Bradshaw. By the time he was a senior at Lincoln High School in Ruston, he was already 6-foot-8 and 220 pounds, so he certainly had the build of a football or basketball player.

But baseball was his sport. His idol was St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Bob Gibson, and it showed: Gibson was "only" 6-foot-2, but was a black man with a savage glare on the mound, and not afraid to throw close to a batter, and with good enough control to do it while scaring him but not hitting him. And Richard turned out to be the closest thing we've had to Gibson since Gibson.

Colleges saw his size and wanted him for their basketball programs. But in the 1969 amateur baseball draft, the Houston Astros made J.R. the 2nd overall pick, after the Washington Senators picked Jeff Burroughs. (Burroughs would become an All-Star for the Senators after they moved to become the Texas Rangers, and for the Atlanta Braves. But medical issues, in his case standard injuries, would cut his career short, too.)

He struggled with his control in the minor leagues, but secured it enough to pitch a no-hitter for the Cocoa Astros of the Class A Florida State League. He developed a 100-mile-per-hour fastball and a 93-mile-per-hour slider. In 1970, with the Class AAA Oklahoma City 89ers, he began wearing Number 50, and would keep that number throughout his career.

He made his major league debut on September 5, 1971, at Candlestick Park in San Francisco. He set a new major league record for strikeouts by a pitcher in his debut: 15 San Francisco Giants went down that way. Willie Mays? 0-for-3 with a walk and 3 strikeouts. He said after the game, "He nearly scared me half to death." Bobby Bonds? 1-for-4 with 2 strikeouts. Willie McCovey? Lucky him: He didn't play. (Mays played 1st base.) Richard went the distance, allowed 3 runs, 2 of them earned, on 7 hits and 3 walks. He was supported by 2 hits and 2 RBIs each by Cesar Geronimo and César Cedeño, and the Astros won, 5-3.

Richard still had control difficulties, and made only 4 appearances in 1971, 4 more in 1972, 16 in 1973, and 14 in 1974. He got into the Astros' rotation in 1975, but led the National League in walks and wild pitches, going 12-10. He was considerably better in 1976: Although he again led the NL in walks, he went 20-15 with a 2.75 ERA, and topped 200 strikeouts for the 1st time. He did it again in 1977, going 18-12.

In 1978, while he again led the NL in walks, he also led it in strikeouts, his 303 a new record for a righthanded pitcher in the NL. He went 18-11. In 1979, He went 18-13, led the NL with a 2.71 ERA, and broke his strikeout record, with 313. He finished 4th in the voting for the NL Cy Young Award in '78, and 3rd in '79.

*

In 1980, he was off to another great start, and was selected as the NL's starting pitcher in the All-Star Game at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. He went 2 innings, and struck out Reggie Jackson of the New York Yankees, Carlton Fisk of the Chicago White Sox, and opposing starting pitcher Steve Stone of the Baltimore Orioles. The only baserunners he allowed were walks to Rod Carew of the California Angels and Ben Oglivie of the Milwaukee Brewers, and a single to Bucky Dent of the Yankees. Under the rules, he could have pitched a 3rd inning, but left because of pain in his back and shoulder.

This was a big year for the Astros. After some close calls, team owner John McMullen, a naval engineer who had been a part-owner under the Yankees' George Steinbrenner, and would bring an NHL team to New Jersey as the Devils, decided he wanted to follow Steinbrenner's path: He opened the vault, and tried to buy a champion.

He gave Nolan Ryan the 1st $1 million-a-year contract, adding him to a rotation that already included Richard, Joe Niekro, Ken Forsch and Vern Ruhle. He also brought Joe Morgan back to the Astros, after 8 successful seasons in Cincinnati, to a lineup that already included CedeñoJosé Cruz Sr., Jeffrey Leonard, Enos Cabell, Terry Puhl and Art Howe.

And, despite Ryan being a native of the Houston suburbs, Richard looked like the centerpiece of the operation. In 2012, Atlanta Braves legend Dale Murphy was asked who the toughest pitcher he ever faced was. He said, "Anybody that played in the late Seventies or early Eighties will probably give you the same answer: J.R. Richard."

Dusty Baker, then an All-Star left fielder with the Los Angeles Dodgers -- and, today, the manager of the Astros -- said NL batters suffered from "J.R.-thritis": 

It was like J.R. was only throwing from about 50 feet. With his reach, and he was all legs, you didn't have much time to make up your mind... You didn't really feel comfortable at the plate. He was the toughest guy I ever faced.

Morgan, now grateful to be Richard's teammate, backed this up as well: "He had the greatest stuff I have ever seen, and it still gives me goosebumps to think of what he might have become."

On July 14, 1980, J.R. Richard started for the Astros against Murphy's Braves. At the time, the Astros had the best record in the NL, 48-36, and were half a game ahead of the Dodgers in the NL Western Division.

Richard was then 30 years old, and had a career record of 107-71, with a 3.15 ERA, a 1.243 WHIP, and 1,493 strikeouts. He pitched a 1-2-3 1st inning, then struck out the side in the 2nd: Gary Matthews Sr., Bob Horner, and the aforementioned Jeff Burroughs. Murphy ended up going 0-for-3 with a strikeout and a walk.

But Richard had trouble seeing the signs from catcher Alan Ashby, 60 feet away. By the 4th inning, his fingers were too numb to even hold the ball. He had to leave the game.

The Astros put him on the 21-Day Disabled List. On July 23, he checked into Methodist Hospital in Houston, to find out what was wrong. They found an arterial obstruction in his right arm, his pitching arm. They took his blood pressure in both arms. In his left, it was within normal healthy range. In his right, there was no blood pressure at all.

Every time he tried to warm up, he said he had pain in his forearm, his shoulder, and even his neck. Astro management refused to listen, and the Houston media reported leaks that he was "whining" and "malingering." It was also suggested that, making $195,000, which would have been an enormous sum in the reserve clause years that ended in 1976, he was jealous of Ryan making a cool million.

On July 30, 1980, having not made the Astros' trip to Philadelphia to play the Phillies, Richard went to see a chiropractor. This man thought the flow of blood in J.R.'s upper body would benefit by having his neck rotated. As occasionally happens to people, the "solution" turned out to be far worse than the problem.

He went to the Astrodome that night, and was warming up for a simulated game in the outfield. He later said that he developed a headache, heard a ringing in his ear, and felt complete weakness in his body. He collapsed. He was taken back to Methodist Hospital, and found to have had a stroke: The arterial blockage found in his arm had gone to his carotid artery, and required emergency surgery.

A CAT scan of his brain showed it was actually three separate strokes, and the arteries in his right arm were still obstructed. In other words, he was still heavily at risk for another stroke, which, in his weakened condition, would probably have killed him. Finally, Astro management took his earlier complaints seriously.
Without Richard, the Astros ended up needing to win a 1-game Playoff with the Dodgers, in Los Angeles, to decide the NL West title. They won it. They played the Phillies in the NL Championship Series, at the time a best-3-out-of-5 series. It turned out to be one of the greatest postseason series of the Divisional Play era. The last 4 games all went to extra innings.

The Astros scored 4 runs in the 10th inning to win Game 2. Morgan's leadoff triple and Denny Walling's sacrifice fly won Game 3 in the 11th. They led Game 4 2-0 after 7 innings, and were 6 outs away from the franchise's 1st Pennant, with a game to spare. But the Phillies rallied to win in 10 innings. The Astros again led after 7 in Game 5, 5-2, but, again, down to their last 6 outs, the Phillies came back, knocked Ryan out of the game, and won in 10 innings, to win their 1st Pennant in 30 years, and then the World Series against the Kansas City Royals.

Would a healthy J.R. Richard have made the difference? Almost certainly. In Game 4, the Astros started Vern Ruhle, a career 67-88 pitcher, who fell apart in the 8th inning. In Game 5, they started Ryan, who fell apart in the 8th. Had Richard started Game 4, or had Ryan done so and then Richard started Game 5, who knows? The Astros might have won their 1st Pennant, 25 years earlier than they actually did; and their 1st World Series, 37 years earlier than they actually did, and without cheating.

But, at age 30, J.R. Richard never threw another major league pitch. He tried to work his way back, to regain his strength. This did not include any rehabilitation starts in the Astros' minor-league system. When rosters were expanded on September 1, 1981, Richard was called up. But manager Bill Virdon did not think he was ready to enter a game, and he didn't.

In 1982, the rehab games began. He pitched well in 6 games with the Class A Daytona Beach Astros. He was called up to the Class AAA Tucson Toros. But in 6 games, he had little control: In 6 games, he went 0-2 with a 2.548 WHIP and a 13.68 ERA. Again, he was called up to the big club on September 1. Again, he made no appearances.

He was assigned to the Rookie League in 1983, and seemed to be pitching better, but felt pain in his left calf. This was where an arterial graft was taken to save his life 3 years earlier, and now, he needed a surgical bypass in the leg. That was it: On April 27, 1984, the Astros released Richard, and he never threw another professional pitch.

Since the Baseball Hall of Fame measures eligibility from a player's last major league game, he became eligible for election in the vote of January 1986. He received only 7 votes, 1.6 percent, and dropped off the ballot.

Baseball-Reference.com, a website that makes writing this blog a lot easier, has a "Hall of Fame Monitor," on which it says a "Likely HOFer" has a score of 100. Richard's is 64. It also has a "Hall of Fame Standards," which is weighted more toward career stats, on which it says the "Average HOFer" has a score of 50. Richard's is 24. He had Hall of Fame talent, but not Hall of Fame numbers.

Let the record show: In addition to possibly making a huge difference in 1980, a healthy Richard might have made even more of a difference. In the split-season format of 1981, the Astros won the NL West in the 2nd half of the season, and lost the NL Division Series to the Dodgers. Since they went on to win the World Series, it's reasonable to conclude that the Astros with a healthy Richard had a good chance to do the same thing. In 1983, they finished 6 games behind the Dodgers for the Division title. Richard could have made a difference that season as well. 

In 1986, with Mike Scott having a Cy Young Award season, the Astros won the NL West, and lost the NLCS to the Mets in 6 games. Scott won Games 1 and 4. Ryan lost Game 2. Bob Knepper started Game 3, and allowed the Mets to score 4 runs in the 6th. It's likely Richard, even at age 36, wouldn't have let that happen, or allowed the walkoff home run to Lenny Dykstra. And Knepper started Game 6, which turned into a classic that the Mets won in 16 innings.

If Richard had been available for Game 6, the Astros win, and then Scott, a former Met who had handcuffed the Mets all season long, would have started Game 7 at the Astrodome, and it would have been an Astros-Red Sox World Series. The Mets' "inevitable" title would have been ruined, they would be without a title since 1969, and we would be talking about The Curse of Amos Otis.

By that point, Richard would have had about 250 career wins, and might have gone on to become a member of the 3,000 Strikeout Club, and he would have been elected to the Hall of Fame sometime in the mid-1990s.

*

Instead, J.R. Richard was out of baseball. He went back home to Louisiana, and fell prey to an oil business scam. His 1st wife divorced him. Between these two events, he lost $1 million. He married a 2nd time, but was again divorced, and he lost his house in the Houston suburbs, along with whatever money he had left.

In 1989, the Senior Professional Baseball Association, a Florida-based league for players age 35 and up (the oldest turned out to be 54, and catchers were allowed in at 32), offered him, at 39, income and a chance to play baseball again. He tried out for the Orlando Juice, but didn't make the team. It might not have mattered, as the league folded after just 1 season.

By the Winter of 1994, one of the greatest pitchers in baseball history, only 44 years old, was living under the overpass of U.S. Highway 59 at Beechnut Road in Houston. The following March 7, he turned 45, making him eligible for his MLB pension, giving him an income.

He turned to the nearby New Testament Church and its pastor, the Rev. Floyd Lewis. The pastor got him a job with an asphalt company, and into divinity school. Soon, Richard was ordained himself, and became the Astros' team chaplain. It was also through this church that he met his 3rd wife, Lula. He is not known to have had any children.
The Astros have never retired his Number 50, but have elected him to their team Hall of Fame, and invited him to throw out the ceremonial first ball on several occasions, including postseason games.

In 2005, a film was made about him, titled: Resurrection: The J.R. Richard Story. David Ramsey, better known as John Diggle in The CW's "Arrowverse" shows, played Richard. In 2015, Richard he published a memoir: Still Throwing Heat: Strikeouts, the Streets, and a Second Chance.

J.R. Richard died yesterday, August 4, 2021, from complications from COVID-19. He was 71 years old.

UPDATE: He was buried at Houston Memorial Gardens, in suburban Pearland, Texas.

August 5, 1921: Baseball On Radio

Harold Arlin. Yes, that thing in front of him is a microphone,
not a tiki torch or a giant chesspiece.

August 5, 1921, 100 years ago: For the 1st time, a game in what would eventually be called Major League Baseball was broadcast on radio.

Radio station KDKA had gone on the air in Pittsburgh, at 1020 on the AM dial (hence the time of this post), on November 2, 1920, broadcasting election returns, and announcing that Warren G. Harding had been elected President.

So they were a natural to be the 1st station to broadcast baseball. On August 5, they brought their equipment across town to Forbes Field, home of the Pittsburgh Pirates, and set up to broadcast the Pirates' game against their cross-Pennsylvania rivals, the Philadelphia Phillies.

Harold Arlin was the announcer, as he had been for the Election Night debut. He was an engineer working for the station's owner, the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company. Although he had no background in the nascent radio industry, or in anything else that required the use of his voice, like stage acting, the company assigned him to call the game.
Forbes Field

The Phillies scored a run in the 1st inning, but the Pirates scored 2 in the 2nd. The Phillies came back with 3 in the 3rd, including a home run by Cy Williams. The Pirates closed to within 4-3 in the bottom of the 5th, and then took a 5-4 lead in the 6th.

The Phillies tied it in the top of the 8th. George "Possum" Whitted led off the bottom of the 8th with a single. James "Cotton" Tierney drew a walk. Three straight singles followed, by Ray Rohwer, Tony Brottem and Jimmy Zinn. This forged the final score: Pirates 8, Phillies 5. Zinn, who pitched 6 innings of relief, was the winning pitcher.
Jimmy Zinn

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Westinghouse must have been satisfied with Arlin's work: The next day, they assigned him to become the 1st person to broadcast a tennis match over radio, a Davis Cup match in which Australia beat Great Britain.

On October 8 of that year, he became the 1st football broadcaster, again at Forbes Field, watching the University of Pittsburgh beat West Virginia University 21-13, in a rivalry that would later be known as "The Backyard Brawl." On September 14, 1923, he became the 1st boxing announcer over radio, going to the Polo Grounds in New York, to announce Jack Dempsey's wild comeback to knock Luis Firpo out and retain the Heavyweight Championship of the World.

But after 1921, Arlin never broadcast the Pirates again. He became known as radio's first celebrity interviewer, conducting interviews with William Jennings Bryan, Lillian Gish, Will Rogers and Babe Ruth. He later moved to Mansfield, Ohio, and ran Westinghouse's plant there.

Eventually, radio helped baseball regain popularity during the Great Depression. At first, team owners were afraid to "give away" games, for fear it would cause attendance to drop. The opposite happened: People who were now hearing games for the first time wanted to see them, and they were willing to play.

The Pirates didn't start regular broadcasts of their games until 1934, with Jimmy Murray and Walter E. Sickles. Starting in 1938, their main announcer was Albert "Rosey" Rowswell. When a Pirate hit a home run, he would imagine a little old lady with an apartment window facing Forbes Field, and yell, "Open the window, Aunt Minnie, here it comes!" Then he would smash a light bulb, to simulate the ball breaking Aunt Minnie's window, and say, "Too late!"

In 1947, Rowswell was joined by Bob Prince. Rowswell's last year was 1954: By this point, television began to take over -- KDKA aired Pirate games on Channel 2 -- and fans could see that what was behind the outfield fence at Forbes Field was Schenley Park and the Carnegie Library, not apartments, so Rowswell's Aunt Minnie shtick was no longer any good.

Prince was known as "The Gunner," and one of the great "homers" of baseball broadcasting. His "Gunnerisms" included this line, for when the Pirates, or "Bucs" or "Buccos," came from behind to win: "The Buccos had 'em all the way." A ball just foul was "foul by a gnat's eyelash." And, long before John Sterling began using the phrase with the Yankees, Prince said a two-run deficit was easy to overcome: "We need a bloop and a blast!" If it was three runs, he would make it, "A bleeder, a bloop and a blast!"

In 1969, Steve Arlin, grandson of Harold, became an original San Diego Padre. On June 18, 1972 -- the day after the Watergate break-in -- Steve was penciled in to pitch for the Padres against the Pirates at Three Rivers Stadium. It had been 51 years since Harold Arlin had broadcast a game for the Pirates, and Bob Prince invited him to call the game with him. Steve pitched a 2-hit shutout, and the Padres won, 1-0. Harold died in 1986, age 90; Steve followed in 2016, age 70.
Prince (left) and Arlin, June 18, 1972

Prince was fired after the 1975 season. Unlike Arlin and Rowswell, he received the Baseball Hall of Fame's award for broadcasters. From 1976 to 2008, the voice of the Pirates was Lanny Frattare. His partners included former Pirate pitchers Steve Blass, Jim Rooker and Bob Walk. Walk is still part of a Pirate broadcasting team that also includes Greg Brown, John Wehner, Joe Block, Kevin Young, Matt Capps and Michael McKenry.

Monday, August 2, 2021

Rizzo Leads Yanks to Sweep Marlins

Yes, I know, it's only the Miami Marlins, who are not a very good team. And they were without their manager, Saint Donald Arthur of Evansville, who has come down with COVID. Fortunately, only minor symptoms. 

But the Yankees took 5 out of 6 in Florida this week, and damn, does that feel good, as both a Yankee fan and a Democrat.

On Friday night, the Yankees arrived at Lancelot Park in Miami, which is really giving Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg a run for the title of dumbest-looking stadium in Florida, not to mention all of Major League Baseball.

It was the 1st game as a Yankee for Anthony Rizzo. He drew a walk in the 1st inning, grounded to 2nd base in the 3rd, hit a home run in the 6th and singled in the 8th.

It was also the 1st game as a Yankee for Joey Gallo. On an individual level, he was not successful, going 0-for-4, although he did draw a walk.

Jameson Taillon started, and pitched shutout ball into the 6th. Yankees 3, Marlins 1. WP: Taillon (7-4). SV: Aroldis Chapman (21). LP: Zach Thompson (2-4).

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On Saturday, Domingo Germán started, but only went 4 innings, allowing 2 runs. He was subsequently placed on the 10-Day Injured List with shoulder inflammation. So now, 3 of the Yankees' intended 5 starters are injured: Germán, Corey Kluber and Luis Severino. All 3 are expected to return later this month.

But the Yankee bullpen was more than up to the task. Between them, Lucas Luetge, the newly-acquired Clay Holmes, Chad Green and Jonathan Loáisiga pitched 5 scoreless innings giving up 2 hits and no walks.

Rizzo led off the top of the 2nd by being hit with a pitch. Giancarlo Stanton doubled. Roughned Odor singled Rizzo home. Gary Sánchez hit a ground rule double to score Stanton. 

The Marlins tied the game in the bottom of the 4th. Rizzo led off the top of the 5th with a single, Stanton walked, Odor moved the runners over with a flyout, and Tyler Wade was walked intentionally,  to bring up the pitcher's spot in the order. (Interleague game, National League Park, so, no designated hitter.)

Gio Urshela was sent up, to face new Marlins pitcher Anthony Bender, who was just brought in to relieve David Hess. Big mistake: Bender threw a wild pitch that scored Rizzo, making it 3-2 Yankees.

Rizzo added an insurance run by leading off the top of the 7th with a home run. Yankees 4, Marlins 2. WP: Luetge (4-1). SV: Loáisiga (3). LP: Hess (3-1).

*

So the Yankees went for the sweep yesterday. But, yet again, Jordan Montgomery gave a fine performance with insufficient support. He left after 5 innings, trailing 1-0.

Holmes pitched the 6th and got the 1st 2 outs in the 7th. But he allowed a hit, and Aaron Boone brought in another new acquisition, Joely Rodríguez. He threw 1 pitch, and got an inning-ending groundout.

But it was still 1-0 Marlins, and the Yankees' season-long tendency to fail to finish a series sweep was again rearing its ugly head.

Brett Gardner led off the top of the 8th with a hit. DJ LeMahieu struck out. Stanton reached on an error. Rizzo singled home Gardner, and Aaron Judge singled home Stanton. 2-1 Yankees.

The Yankees got an insurance run on another Marlin error in the 9th, and Chapman pitched a drama-free inning. Yankees 3, Marlins 1. WP: Rodríguez (2-3, 1-0 as a Yankee). SV: Chapman (22). LP: Anthony Bass (1-6).

*

So, with 58 games, over a course of 9 weeks, left in the regular season, the Yankees are 56-48. In the American League Eastern Division, they trail the Tampa Bay Rays by 7 games, 6 in the loss column. 

My usual guideline is, You should be able to gain at least 1 game per week, so if you have more weeks remaining than you are games behind, you still have a chance. On that basis, the Yankees still have a chance.

For the AL's 2nd Wild Card, the Yankees trail the Oakland Athletics by only 2 1/2 games, and only 1 in the loss column. 

With these new acquisitions, the Yankees are not only alive, they are in business.

Tonight, the Yankees return home to face the Baltimore Orioles. Come on you Pinstripes!