Monday, August 4, 2008

Angels Series

The Yankees did a great job coming back to split the four game series with the Angels. After coming off a  sweep of the Red Sox and winning the first two games their series with the Yankees, the Angels looked like the team to beat in Major League Baseball, and still might be, but the Yankees for the first time in awhile played like they did during their latest dynasty.

Down 5-0, the Yankees showed heart, combining power with small-ball causing the opposition to make mistakes. The key was they finally came through in the clutch. They only left two runners in scoring position (Surprise: one of them was by A-Rod), stole bases, hit and ran (looks weird in the past tense), and got great bench play. Justin Christian was the player of the game as a pinch runner, immediately stealing second then causing an errant throw when stealing third allowing him to score. The Yankees have not had the Homer Bush/Dave Roberts speed guy off the bench in awhile and it is a good weapon to have.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Pudge

I think I like the Pudge for Farnsworth deal. Pudge is batting .295/5/32, a huge upgrade over either Molina or Moeller offensively. I haven't seen him play at all this year, but supposedly he is still a pretty good defensive catcher but nowhere as good as he used to be. I wonder how he is relative to Molina defensively.

Farnsworth, although having a good year since Joba moved to the rotation, still sucks. No matter how hard you throw people will hit it if the ball doesn't move. Answer me this: Would you trust him in a big situation? Girardi showed he didn't when quickly called for Mariano with one out in the eighth in Boston the other night once Farnsworth gave up two base runners (granted on weak hits) making him dispensable. Also, he is probably fourth to come out the pen behind Edwar Ramirez, Jose Veras, and Damaso Marte. Basically they gave up nothing to get a little. One other plus, Pudge's contract is up after this year so there will not be any position battle next year when Posada comes back.

Finally, I wonder if Moeller gets optioned to the minors. Earlier this year Girardi kept three catchers but that might have been because he understood Posada could not throw. Moeller has helped Rasner out (his ERA more than doubles when someone else catches him) and has entered games at third to try to increase his value. Still, it is hard to see Girardi keeping three catchers in this situation. One would think that the Yankees would have to call up another reliever to fill in for Farnsworth. Perhaps stud prospect Mark Melancon might finally get a chance. He could relieve for now and possibly start a game or two if Rasner and Ponson continue to suck. 

O's Series

It was a tough series to lose two of three from the Orioles. Making it especially hard was Boston getting swept by the Angels leaving a huge opportunity to pick up multiple games on Boston. 

Mussina and Robertson got shelled in game one. Guess you can blame me for jinxing Moose. I only hope he can turn it around his next start. Game two included a valiant comeback attempt that fell a run short. Aubrey Huff's homer off of Mariano in the top of the 9th proved the difference. It was frustrating to see Cano and Betemit both whiff after Gardner had successfully stolen second with one out. Christian got a great jump and beat a great throw on an easy pitch to throw off. Cano looked like a bigger fool than Betemit missing a 2-strike slider that was way outside. Cano, like many lefties, is susceptible to a sweeping curve coming from a low arm-angle throwing lefty. Betemit struck out by swinging at a ball. 

Today's victory included yet another impressive outing from Chamberlain. Missed the Edwar throwing at Millar's head so I can't really comment on it. Robertson came in and looked ok. Abreu had two HRs, A-Rod added another, and Xavier Nady had two doubles. Nady, along with the today's addition of Pudge (see newest post) will lengthen the lineup. 

As a whole the series was a disappointment for the Yanks, but at least they salvaged today's game to pick up a game on Boston, while only netting a loss of one to Tampa this week.

Commercial

The commercial currently running that rates highest on the unintentional comedy scale (ty Bill Simmons) has to be the MLB playoff ad where Spanish from Old School or the ghetto-drug-dealing-on-and-off-the-team-whose-uncle-is-actually-a-big-time-dealer-gets-shot-therefore-said-character-cries-on-Samuel-L.-Jackson's-shoulder-and-then-has-a-dramatic-quote-about-what-he-fears-most-in-life-player (however you wish to remember him) relives his memories of the past few playoffs before saying, "I cannot even remember where my keys are." That commercial is hilarious. 

In other news, this entry definitely contains a run-on sentence.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Melky v. Gardner

Melky Cabrera has been the centerpiece of most Yankee offers at the trade deadline which makes sense considering he is a 3rd to 4th OF and Austin Jackson, the number one ranked prospect in the Yankees' system according to Baseball America, seems like he will be ready by mid-2009, so why not sell on Melky when his value is about as high as it will get. 

Yet what I do not get is why insist that Melky be in a deal instead of Brett Gardner. ESPN's trade blog and several threads on ProSportsDaily.com are reporting the Yankees rather put Melky in a deal than Gardner in an offer to Seattle. ESPN is also reporting the Yankees turned down a deal that would land them Washburn for both young OFs, while the Mariners have no interest in Kei Igawa, the Japanese SP (who sucks and was a total reactionary pick up to Boston getting Dice-K) who the Yankees want to center a deal around. Cashman has been given the go ahead to pick up Washburn's salary over the next two years by Hank and Co. Cashman wants this to be the centerpiece of the deal, the absorption of the contract, not young prospects.

Getting back to the point, why deal Melky when you could deal Garnder? If an offer of Gardner and Igawa would get the deal done (which I cannot say it can considering I have no sources beside and ESPN Insider subscription) why not do it? Like I've written before, Gardner sucks. He would make make an excellent women's softball player with his quick swing and ability to get down the line quickly yet I do not think he would have the power to hit one over the 220 foot fence. Melky has a better arm, covers about the same ground in center (thanks to a great first step and ability to judge fly balls - not pure speed), and is a year younger than Gardner. He is also a switch-hitter who has proven to be only a below average hitter, not a fully incompetent one like Gardner (this may be a tough statement considering Gardner got 70+ ABs but he really looked like he had no clue at the plat taking countless pitches for strikes to fall into pitcher's counts). Plus, Melky had a decent year when he was 21, and as Rob Neyer notes, there is little precedent for players peaking at such a young age. 

The deal I would do if I was the Yankees would be to offer Melky for Brian Bannister. The Yankees' interest in the 27 year old Royals starting pitcher has been noted. Neyer (a Royals' fan) wrote that the Royals would have to accept that deal. As a Yankee fan, I think that would be a huge steal for the Yankees. Bannister, who started his career with the Mets, could be a legit 3rd starter. He is having a disappointing year so far, but last year he had a 3.87 ERA, a 1.21 WHIP, and a 4.20 K/9. Without doing much research I would rather him than Washburn, especially as he making less than half a million dollars and about 40k less than Melky. He will be eligigle for super-two arbitration, but will make nowhere near the 10+ million that Washburn will make next year. If the Royals would accept this offer, then by all means, I would make this trade. And if they would take Gardner instead then that would be even better.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Sunday Night Post

It's the top of the sixth and it looks like the Yankees are heading to their first loss since the All-Star break. Usually I would wait until tomorrow to write about this series but I figured I'd be considerate towards Matt Abromowitz's Monday morning reading schedule.

As was expected, Ponson blew up. He gave up 7 ER over 4.0 IP. I don't care what his record is with the Yanks, he sucks. I can't remember how the games panned out too well but I am guessing that pitching when getting 8 runs per game in support isn't too hard. My point being there is no fear of getting hit when you get support early and often.

The real problem with tonight's game came in the top of the fifth. Bases loaded and no outs and the Yankees only score two runs. ARod's line out to third is acceptable, but Nady and Cano making easy outs is not. Furthering the problem was Damon not tagging up on Nady's shortish fly ball. The inning illustrated the Yankees' inability to hit with RISP. I think John Miller (IHHD) said they were second to last in the AL in the category. Simply put, they are leaving a lot of runs on the table.

Finally, Richie Sexson sucks. He cannot hit, he cannot hit lefties, he cannot field, and on any ground ball to his right he immediately runs to cover the bag. He could have easily made a play on Jacoby Ellsbury's single in the bottom of the sixth. That would have been nice considering he easily went first to third on Youkilis's single to left. And it is not like Sexson hits lefties well. As has been pointed out by many, Sexson did not hit lefties last year or the year before making his .300+ avg against them this year more of an aberration than the norm. Subjectively speaking, Phillips mentioned during the broadcast that Sexson cheats for the fastball leaving him susceptible to off-speed pitches and cutters. So if he cannot hit lefties or field, the two things he is supposed to do in his current role, why get him at all.

On a positive note, Bobby Abreu just made a catch on the warning track without being scared for his life. 

And if you told me at the break the Yankees would be 3 games out of first after the Red Sox series I would have been ecstatic. 

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Moooooooooose

There have been a lot of "Moose" calls this year at Yankee Stadium as Mike Mussina must have drank from the fountain of youth. Last night was another great performance as he pitched eight shutout innings, striking out seven, walking none, while spreading out 6 hits over 105 pitches. Mussina's ERA is now 3.26 and he is tied for the league lead with 13 wins.

The other day while doing predictions for the second half, Mike Francesca of "Mike and the Mad Dog" said that anything Mussina gave the Yankees this year from now on is gravy. His point was that Mussina has pitched so beyond anyone's beliefs so far this year that it would be unfair to expect him to continue at a rate near to what he is at now.

I disagree.  With the way Mussina is hitting corners, mixing in and controlling his off-speed pitches, and (over the last few starts) lowered his batting average against, I think it is reasonable to assume he can continue pitching well for the rest of the year. Whether or not you want him to be, Mussina is probably the second best starter on the Yankees behind Joba. He is going to pitch in the playoffs and totally deserves to do so. I will now be looking forward to every fifth day when Moose gets to start.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Christian v. Gardner

After his 2-3,  2B, 2 RBI, and SB line on Wednesday, Justin Christian proved he deserve to be starting ahead of Brett Gardner in LF. Both players bring speed and defense to the team, but the real difference is Christian can at least hit a lick. In 21 ABs Christian percentages are .286/.375/.381 while Gardners are .161/.238/.179 in 56 ABs. Gardner only has 3 more hits than Christian in 35 extra ABs. Furthermore Gardner only has 2 more SBs with five, and would only be one more if Christian did not trip attempting to steal third in a pinch run situation in the ninth against the A's (he had a great jump). 

So if both players can run and field, but only one of them can hit for a decent average plus has the ability to hit a home run in a little league park isn't the choice obvious of who should play?

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Shockey

Jerry Reese had a headache. The only medication was more cowbell - - I mean trading Jeremy Shockey. In return the Giants received 2nd and 5th round choices in next year's draft.

John Clayton pointed out in his blog that the timing of the deal was the confusing aspect of it. If the Giants were just going to take a 2nd and 5th rounder, the same offer that was on the table on draft day, why not accept it then and take Fred Davis with the second rounder to help fill the void Shockey would create. Now the Giants have to go a year with Kevin Boss who cannot block a lick - see the third and short where Jacobs got stuffed versus Dallas - as the starter with Mike Matthews who cannot catch a lick -  see countless dropped balls when wide open in the flats - as the main back up. Reese's logic in the timing just does not make sense.

On top of all this I do not like the deal at all. Shockey was the heart and soul of the offense and when healthy (even just healthy enough to play) was still a top 5 TE. Granted he dropped too many easy balls, but he was Eli's safety outlet on third downs, and for some reason could make the tough catches (Amani Toomer has this problem as well).  If the Giants dealt Shockey for a first rounder, even in 2009, I might be more apt to accept the deal, but I think they are losing too much for what they received and are putting too much faith in Kevin Boss, a guy who in a small sample set looked like a nice pass catcher and proved he cannot block.

I know the Giants won a Super Bowl without Shockey but the key on offense during the hot streak was Eli Manning's play. I think he will continue to improve but cannot play at the high level he did in the Week 17 and the playoffs especially without Shockey. The disgruntled TE, no matter how many times he "showed up" Eli by throwing his arms up after a pass that was not intended for him, still made Eli better, and I think the Giants will unfortunately find that out this upcoming season. 

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Joba as SP

Joba Chamberlain makes his ninth start today and at this point not many people sans Goose Gossage are questioning the move to make him a starter. He has built up his arm strength to the point he can easily throw 110 pitches per start without a worry. So much of his power comes from his legs a la Roger Clemens (hopefully without the PEDs) that there is little worry about hurting his arm (knock on wood). 

The results have been there too. As a starter he has pitched 41.2 innings with a 2.81 ERA, 46 Ks, 21 BBs and a .245 BAA. He seems to dominate his starts except for one bad (meaning 2-3 ER) inning. If he can learn how to get rid of this inning (often this means not giving up the bloop hit with RISP and 2 outs - see his last Blue Jays start) and make it past the 6th inning (less wasted pitches and maybe pitching to contact more) then he can become a legitimate ace.

On the last parenthetical point, there is obviously a tradeoff between Ks and pitches thrown. SABR guys love pitchers with high K rates as it decreases the probability of lucky hits and illustrates a pitcher's dominance. Still, especially with a bullpen as streaky as the Yankees, at what point should a SP with Joba's stuff start pitching to contact to make it deep into games, especially if he can control the contact (i.e. weakly hit and/or ground balls). Personally I think he should not worry about changing his style, especially at such a young age. If he can continue to keep his K-rate up I would think he should, and hopefully the ability to make it deeper in games will follow.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

The Boss Looks Lost

George Steinbrenner's appearance during the All Star pregame ceremony brought mix emotions. Although it was clear that Steinbrenner understood the significance of the situation he was in, it was unclear whether he actually knew he was in Yankee Stadium. He almost looked like a king on his deathbed giving one last appearance in front of his kingdom's people.

The man has been in hiding for nearly two years now and has, according to reports, shown signs of aging and Alzheimer's.  Still, although he looked kind of sad, I felt happy for the man as he seemed to understand he was in front of people that appreciated the dedication (and dollar) he has put into the team.

On a personal note I feel like the man helped to create part of my childhood. I was eight years old when the Yankees won in 1996. My first conscious baseball memory is from the year before when the Mariners came back from a two game deficit to beat the Yankees in the ALDS. Needless to say I was spoiled to see four championships in the next five years. I still remember Charlie Hayes catching the fly ball to secure the first World Series. The glory years, which can even be extended to 2003 (that way we get two more pennants) include seeing Scott Brosius' game tying home run, Derek Jeter's and Tino Martinez's game winners against the Diamondbacks, Jeter's flip against the A's, Boone's homer off Wakefield, Jimmy Leyritz's game winner against the Braves (actually I was told about that one by my mother the next day because I had cried myself to sleep the night before) and countless other memories. I feel like I owe a thank you to The Boss. Even though one hears about all the incredulous stories about you, I would like to thank you, for making my childhood as a Yankee fan be so memorable. (Tear Tear.)

Impressive 2nd Half for Gallanari

Danilo Gallinari's first summer league game showed hints of brilliance that hopefully can translate to real NBA games. Granted the competition consisted of free agents, young players, and Tractor Traylor, Gallinari exhibited shooting, passing, ballhandling, and, most importantly, toughness. He scored 14 points all in the second half on a mixture of put backs and jumpers. The jump shots were both off the pass and the dribble. Furthermore Gallinari brought the ball up several times and initiated the offense, and looked comfortable doing so. The Euro did not seem to back down from anything he was asked to do even though he was thrown around early on by bigger, stronger competition. (Which is not to say he looked weak. More he was learning how to play defense strongly.) All in all the Knick fan should be excited about Gallinari who showed that he has, deep down, what it takes to be a good player in the league. 

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Knicks

The Knicks have made some moves lately starting with the drafting of Danilo Gallinari. Of course the Garden faithful booed him. Who can blame them? They are still waiting for Frederick Weiss to cross the pond; last time he was spotted he had Vince Carters nuts in his face. Plus to the common eye Gallinari looks dreadfully close to Andrea Bargnani.

But let us look at the facts. Gallinari was the go-to-guy for Armani Milan, a top tier Euro team. He can do everything offensively and with D'Antoni's offense who really cares about defense? He definitely will be at least a number two and is one of the only players in this year's draft who has the possibility of becoming a team's number one weapon. He should grow to be almost 7 feet tall and a true force in the league.

The Knicks also signed Chris Duhon. According to many he is the only true PG on the team. I disagree. I am one of the few who thinks Marbury is a real PG and a good PG but Zeke messed with his head. I do not know if he will recover to be a big time player ever again so I get the Duhon signing. Furthermore, it is only a two year deal so his salary will be gone in time for the Lebron-Wade-Bosh sweepstakes. Still, if the Knicks were going to try to sign a true PG to a short contract, why not go for a more high risk-high reward player like Shaun Livingston. The kid was billed as a Magic Johnson type PG and was just coming into his when he blew out his knee in 37 places. Not only would he come cheap but he could actually develop into an asset that would attract one of the 2010ers. Unlike Livingston, Duhon's maximum marginal benefit to the team is so slim to the point they probably won't resign him in two years. Why not take a chance?

My final thoughts stem from rumors on espn.com. Supposedly Baron Davis' first choice was the Knicks. Why? I am not sure. I do not see what they have to offer that the Clippers do not. Still, there were no reports that Donnie Walsh even looked into it. Furthermore it is being reported that Donnie turned down a deal in which the Clips would've taken Zach Randolph and his miserable contract. Walsh's logic was that he did not want to give away Z-Bo in something that
would amount to only a salary dump. My question is why not? Randolph might be the first player in the history of the NBA to die on the court! With him and Curry on the court the Knicks will be playing 5 on 3 for most of the game. They might be the first team to have the double cherry picking strategy with one staying on the defensive end and the other the offensive end so the team is constantly playing 5 on 4. Better than constant 5 on 3s with the two of them lollygagging back and forth between the 3-point lines. If I was Walsh I would've given the Clips Randolph for a bag of basketballs, they wouldn't even have to be new. They could be old with no grip. And flat.

So where does that leave everything? I am hoping not good enough for a first round playoff loss and just bad enough to get extremely lucky in the lottery in order to draft Euro PG Ricky Rubio and begin a new Knicks era with a European flavor.

I'm Baaaaack

Loyal readers, all four (generous figure) of you, I am here to announce I'm baaaaaaaaaaaaaack! I'll be wearing number 45 as my previous number, 23, has already been retired. Furthermore, as only I can, I will be dropping 55, double nickels, on the Knicks within two weeks. But no worries, next time I retire I will stay retired. No washed up comeback with another team including a missed dunk on a free path to the basket in the all-star game.

Friday, June 13, 2008

Worst Moment as a NY Sports Fan

Last night I may have had the worst moment in my sports fan life. I'm at the Bourbon St. Bar on Amsterdam Ave and the Celtic-Laker game is on. Mind you I've had a few since pints cost 50 cents and I'm not sure if the shot girl liked me or knew I was the fool. Let's just say I spent 35 bucks at a 50 cent beer night.

So the Celtics are in the middle of a comeback and the whole bar is going nuts. The whole bar! And we are in New York! (Aside: As a NY fan who am I supposed to root for? The Celtics are in the Knicks division but to everyone under 30 they do not compare to Indiana, Chicago, or Miami as rivals. The Lakers have played the Knicks in five NBA finals, beating us three out of five times, but all those were before I was born.) There is no reason everyone should be rooting for Boston. Yeah, they are in the middle of an all-time great comeback but I still would not expect it to be so heavily one sided. I even find myself rooting for Boston, but I'm excused. I had money on Boston plus I was with all my masshole friends. After a nifty Paul Pierce layup I find myself highfiving a total rando. Totally spontaneous. Looks normal to any outsider. Yet dude has been standing near my table for awhile and has no association to me. This is when the following comment and response occurred:

Me: "And I'm a Knicks fan"
Rando: "Me too"

Has this what it has come to! We Knick fans are openly rooting for Boston, a division rival, and not only rooting, but going nuts. I knew the whole city of Boston could not have taken over this bar even if it was a place meant for the Sullivans of the world. It had to be the booze that made Knick fans root for Boston. Right?

I was so embarrassed to be a Knick fan when I woke up this morning. So embarrassed I refused to email the story to the Sports Guy, a pastime of mine. (If you can call it that since I never have made an article.) I refuse to get in the bag with this story even though it would definitely make it followed by a two paragraph rant lambasting Isiah, James Dolan, Knicks fans, and the city of New York.

So where does that leave me? Confused.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Plax Wants that Green

Another Drew Rosenhaus wide receiver is not practicing wanting a raise in pay. It is hard to argue with Plaxico as he signed a six year deal worth as much as top notch receivers make in three. He is owed about 10 million dollars over the remaining three years, about the same as TO and Moss make annually. Plaxico was the Giants offense for much of the year. He also makes Eli look good routinely catching passes thrown three feet to high. In the words of Teddy "KGB", "Pay that man, pay that man his money."

Maybe the under looked story behind all of this is Ernie Accorsi stealing Plaxico three years ago. An unrestricted free agent from Pittsburgh, Accorsi refused to sign Plax during his first trip to New York knowing there would not be much of a market for a guy who had yet to emerge from Hines Ward spotlight. A few weeks later Plax came crawling back, accepting the $25 million deal. Hopefully Jerry Reese who has already shown his prowess in the draft, will be able to display some of Accorsi's shrewdness towards free agents.

Monday, June 9, 2008

Michael Strahan has retired. He is should be a first ballot hall of famer. His resume includes being fifth in career sacks and holding the single season record along with seven pro bowls and a super bowl title. Although he had a big mouth and was considered by some to hurt the team off the field, Strahan was the best at his position for quite awhile. Even after coming back from a pectoral injury he was a top 10 DE. Strahan was the total package. Unlike some DEs who are pass rush specialists (paging Simeon Rice) Strahan was a force against the run as well who could speed rush or bull rush. I am sure Jon Runyan is a happy man right now.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Alex Rodriguez

Alex Rodriguez is the most talented hitter in baseball which is why his lack of plate discipline makes it so frustrating to watch him. He takes good pitches and then swings at off speed pitches off the plate. When he finally does swing at good pitches he kills the ball like the monster home run he hit on Saturday. But then he lets pitches go like the pitch that ended the game on Tuesday. He already has an OPS+ around 150, it would be scary how much better it would be if he learned his balls and strikes.

Shockey Being Shockey

Jeremy Shockey speaks on his situation. Most people probably thought he was going to be traded to the Saints on draft day for a number two and Roman Harper. I doubt Jerry Reese can get much more than that and he probably knows that leaving you to believe the front office thinks they are a better team with him, which they are. Kevin Boss had a nice playoffs but he cannot block at all. Shockey, even with the growing number of drops, is still a premier pass catching tight end. If there is a problem with him it is that the offense does not feature him like it used to. He rarely splits out and gone are the days of the Shockey fade. People say he has been passed by the likes of Jason Witten, Kellen Winslow, and LJ Smith, and maybe some of them have, but those receivers are being used in innovative ways and are rarely asked to block, two duties that Shockey is still asked to do.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Yankee Game - Thurs June 5 vs. Toronto

The eighth inning was incredibly frustrating to watch and illustrated the problems the roster has as currently composed. Jorge Posada drew a walk to lead off the inning. With three catchers on the roster (Posada, Molina, Moeller) the obvious move was to pinch run. But with the only players on the bench being Shelley Duncan and Jason Giambi, Girardi did not have much of an option. He even waited two pitches before putting Duncan into the game. With a bench of Duncan to play first and the corner outfield positions, Betemit to play the infield, and Giambi to hit, the Yankees have no athleticism. They have no Dave Roberts, that guy who you know is going but you still cannot stop. So Girardi was forced to bring a guy who is on the roster to be a right handed power bat off the bench to pinch run because he is slightly faster than a 36 year old catcher; he would only get thrown out by two steps instead of three trying to score on a double.

The next batter, Robbie Cano, could not lay down a bunt. The frustrating aspect was not so much he did not get the bunt down as the two pitches he attempted to bunt on were clearly not just balls but high balls, pitches you learn in little league not to bunt. This is after Posada walked on five pitches where the pitch he swung and missed on was clearly a ball. He would have walked on four pitches. Instead on pitch five he grounds into a 6-3 double play. Scott Downs had two outs on ten pitches where only the pitch Cano hit would have been a called strike. The next batter, Wilson Betemit, then singles on the first pitch which would have easily scored the game winning run.

The top half of the next inning Kyle Farnsworth, Mr. I have yet to realize it does not matter how hard I throw as long as the ball goes straight major league hitters will continue to hit the ball, gave up another run.

Still, in late 90s Yankees fashion, the team got some luck when A-Rod hitting a seeing eye single off David Eckstein's glove and were able to come back with a two out rally capped off by Giambi's game winning home run.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Paging Johnny Damon - - SHUT UP!

Johnny Damon made headlines today by questing Joba Chamberlains move to the starting rotation.

Here is his quote in the Daily News:

"I just felt like our bullpen was our strength. I think it still could be, but when you move a guy like that, everyone's trying to find a role. Everyone's trying to replace a guy who was possibly the best in that role.

"I remember the teams the Yankees won (championships) with, if they were winning after five innings, it was pretty much game over. We kind of felt that way this year. If we were winning after six, we had (Kyle) Farnsworth in the seventh, Joba in the eighth, and Mariano in the ninth - we thought it was game over.

"Now, instead, we're trying to find out who's best suited for that eighth-inning role...

"We're trying to figure out what's going to be best for the team," said Damon, "and in the long run, that's what they're looking at. You'd have a starting rotation of (Phil) Hughes, Joba, Ian (Kennedy), and Chien-Ming Wang in the future. That's pretty good.

"I think we were still getting games into the late innings, and our offense is going to keep getting better. Now, you see what happens.

"You know what?" he said with a smile. "It's not up to me. But I like winning ballgames."


Johnny is point-blank wrong. It is time to move Joba to the rotation. Now some people argue that Joba as a starter helps the team once every five games whereas in the relief role he can influence every game. This is incorrect for two reasons. He cannot pitch everyday and will only come into a game when the Yankees are ahead (and usually only ahead by a few runs). As of May 21st when the transition to starter began, Joba had only appeared on 17 of 43 games or roughly every 2 in 5 games. In those games he had 33 IP, or roughly .8% of the innings the Yankees had played. These numbers show that Joba was not winning every game for the Yankees. As a starter he will have a chance to directly dictate how every fifth game goes instead of relying on others to get the team to a point where he is effective.

But the real reason to bring Joba to the starting rotation is the playoffs. The morale of the playoffs is starting pitching wins games. Over the past few years the Yankees have not had starters last in the playoffs. Sure Chien-Min Wang leads the league in regular season wins over the past two years but his low K-rate makes him a poor playoff pitcher. Simply put teams can easily put the ball in play off him leading to many weak hits. Mike Mussina gave up 2 runs in 4.2 IP last year leaving Andy Pettitte and Phil Hughes as the only Yankees to have a good outings pitching six and a third scoreless and five and two-thirds with run one respectively. Still, Pettitte is a year older and Hughes has shown nothing so far this year on his way to the DL. The Yankees need to begin to groom that ace who can win two games a series and Joba is that guy.

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Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Jeter Passes Mantle

Derek Jeter's RBI single in the third inning moved him passed Mickey Mantle into third on the all-time Yankees hit list. He now has 2416 hits. Barring injury he will definitely become the all-time Yankees leader and first Yankee to have 3000 hits with the team.

Many people have called DJ overrated. I say BS. Sure he might not have the range of other shortstops; sure he might not have the power numbers; and sure he might not be much of a threat on the bases anymore. But no other player is making plays like the flip in Oakland or the catch diving into the stands against the Red Sox. With the game on the line there is no other Yankee who you want at bat. There is a reason Jeter is the first captain since Mattingly. He has been the ultimate clutch team player and in the playoffs, a place that he could rely on his teammates to get him to in the past, there is no shortstop you would rather have

2008 Draft - - Knicks Perspective

We all know the Knicks suck. Nothing about them outside of possibly David Lee and Nate Robinson is good. The contracts are miserable. The talent is miserable. The chemistry is miserable. Before D'Antoni the coaching was miserable. Basically as long as James Dolan is around and making decisions they will be miserable.

But there is hope! He seems to have handed over reigns to Donnie Walsh who seems to understand that to compete again the team needs to get under the cap. His mission is to get the team under the cap by 2010 when Lebron, D-Wade, and Chris Bosh become free agents and seems content to let the current contracts run out to ensure this will happen. With this in mind the Knicks have to draft the player who will be best in 2010, not the guy who will help them now.

There are two studs in this draft in Derrick Rose and Michael Beasley. These guys are probably going 1-2 unless Pat Riley goes nuts and drafts OJ Mayo who many believe would be a great pairing with Dwayne Wade in the backcoourt. Chad Ford has reported that this is a possibility but it seems highly unlikely. Mayo, many believe, is the only one outside of Rose and Beasley with star potential. I disagree.

There are two players I believe who can become All-Stars at their positions but are high risk/reward players. These are Anthony Randolph and DeAndre Jordan. Randolph is a 6'10" small forward from LSU. He has Tyrus Thomas-esque athleticism. He seems to have a bit more handle and some touch around the basket. He also shows touch on his shot as evident by his 70% free throw percentage and 47& FG percentage. Neither of those are great but are decent for someone who is so raw. One fear, specifically regarding his free throw shooting is the lack of knee bend in his shot. Tim Duncan has had the same problems and has never developed into a good free throw shooter but Randolph already shows more touch from the charity strip than TD. Randolph would take some time to develop but could thrive in D'Antoni's fast paced system. Furthermore he could probably play both forward positions in it even with fears he will never gain bulk and only have a Tayshaun Prince type body.

DeAndre Jordan is even a bigger gamble but might have an even greater reward. People throw out the name Dwight Howard as a comparison but Andrew Bynum might be a better one. Jordan did not test nearly as well as Howard did only having a 26" vertical and bench pressing 185 lbs eight times. Neither of those numbers are magnificent. Furthermore there are questions as to how much he can play as he only 20.1 minutes per game. His averages of 7.9 ppg and 6.0 rpg were fairly decent however for such limited amount of playing time. Concerns include not finishing strongly when not dunking and lack of any mid-range or back to the basket game. Still, he could fit in D'Antoni's offense as he does run the floor well but will definitely need time to develop.

Many have written the Knicks should go after Danillo Gallinari or DJ Augustin. Supposedly those in the Phoenix organization have said D'Antoni does not like Gallinari even though he did play with the Italian's father overseas. Gallinari is a skilled big man and might be able to play SF in the league. There are questions about his athleticism and the more video I watch the more he looks like Andrea Bargnani; a tall guy who roams around inside the 3-point line and shoots jumpers all day. If they pick him he would get little patience from New York fans, and with little athleticism, if his shot is not falling early and often might not get a chance.

Augustin, a 5'11" PG from the University of Texas, is thought of as one of the top PGs in this draft behind Rose, Jerryd Bayless , and OJ Mayo with the latter two being combo guards. He can do a bit of everything but reminds me of Jameer Nelson. The Orlando PG has been a little too undersized and not quite quick enough to make it in the league. At six Augustin would be a reach as he does not project to be a top notch PG.

If the Knicks stay at six they should go for Randolph. He could become the finisher on fast breaks that D'Antoni's offense needs. If they can get a deal to trade down and still pick up Jordan that would be good too, but there are rumors that he has a guarantee in the top 5. Gallinari and Augustin would be safe picks but do not have the upside of Randolph and Jordan, especially in 2010 when the Knicks will finally be competitive again.


Height Height w/ Weight Wingspan Standing Body Shoes Reach Fat

David Tyree and Giants WR Outlook

ESPN.com ran a front page link to a story indicating David Tyree' s job may not be safe. The following is a preview of the WR position for the NY Giants in 2008:

Thought to be a position of weakness before the Super Bowl campaign of 2007, the Giants may have a glut of talent at Wide Receiver, possibly needing to keep six on their active roster. The four obvious players to make the rosters are Plaxico Burress, Amani Toomer, Steve Smith, and Mario Manningham, with David Tyree, Domenik Hixon, Sinorice Moss, DJ Hall, and Brandon London fighting for the remaining spots.

Plaxico emerged as a top notch receiver, single-handedly carrying the offense through the NFC Championship and catching the game winning touchdown. Although he may have lost a step and occasionally drops easy balls, Amani Toomer still is able to separate and made several difficult and clutch catches last year. Steve Smith emerged as Eli Manning’s safety outlet and is a poor man’s Wes Welker in the slot. Mario Manningham is a huge talent who comes with some off the field issues. Still the team believes he could emerge as the future number two to start opposite Burress and maybe even evolve into the X receiver.

Tyree, the hero of Super Bowl XLII and a pro bowl special teamer, is the most likely to make the team of the remaining receivers. Hixon, who joined the team from the Denver Broncos also contributed on special team including a kickoff return for a TD in Week 17 against New England. However, he does not help the team much offensively, and with Tyree being more valuable on special teams on both coverage teams, will probably be cut. Sinorice Moss, an injury plagued second round pick two years ago who is finally healthy may be the most interesting case. He is incredibly fast and quick making him a prime candidate to be a slot receiver. He was also an excellent punt returner for the University of Miami, a role he has yet to assume for the Giants. London spent last year on the practice squad and has had excellent mini camps so far this year. He is a big target and may remind many Giants fans of Anthony Mix, another former practice squader who has since made his way onto the Redskins roster. DJ Hall, an unsigned rookie free agent from Alabama, has also impressed at the rookie mini camp. Many had him graded as an early day two talent and should be considered a steal. He may need a year of seasoning on the practice squad but he could definitely help the team in the near future.

The 2008 wide receivers for the New York Giants will probably be Plaxico, Toomer, Smith, Manningham, Tyree, and Moss, with London and Hall on the practice squad. This leaves Hixon, a crucial special teamer, looking for work. Giants’ fans should be excited about both the present and the future of the wide receiver position.

What you'll get here

I am currently an unemployed college student with few plans for the summer so I decided to create a blog dedicated to the holy grail that is sport. I am a Giants, Yankees, Knicks, and bandwagon Rangers fan, but will try to devote some attention to other teams/sports as well. Still, when it comes to giving informed opinions, I will be best at those three teams.

Hope you enjoy.