Bronx, N.Y., May 27, 2005 — Boston knuckleballer Tim Wakefield, who was performing as expected in totally flummoxing the Yankee lineup in the opening game of three in Yankee Stadium Friday night, reacted angrily to first-base ump Hunter Wendelstedt as Derek Jeter and he nearly collided during an attempted 3-6-1 on a force out off the Yankee shortstop’s grounder in the third inning. The frustration was surprising as the Boston righthander was breezing through the Yankee lineup until Boston grabbed a mid-game lead, but if controlling the Yankee bats was coming easy, directing his pitches wasn’t, and the difficulty worsened as the innings passed. Continue reading
Monthly Archives: May 2005
The Phases of Brown
Bronx, N.Y., May 26, 2005 — Yankee fans and all of baseball are surprised at his resurgence, I’m sure, but Kevin Brown evened his record at 4-4 in Thursday night’s 4-3 Yankee win, and the aging righty with the balky back turned in another quality start. He allowed the Tigers three runs on 10 hits over seven innings, but he didn’t walk anyone and he struck out four. Continue reading
So How Cold WAS It?
Bronx, N.Y., May 24, 2005 — Would you believe the grounds crew brought out snow shovels to treat the mound in the middle of the fourth? Or that fans were so cold they were letting foul balls bounce around them without moving a finger to snatch them? Continue reading
Ministry of Silly Baseball
Bronx, N.Y., May 11, 2005 — On April 29, the Yanks lost a game to the Blue Jays in Yankee Stadium in two hours and eight minutes. Two hours into today’s getaway afternoon tilt with the Mariners, the teams were tied at 9 runs apiece through just four innings. The Yankees leave town after the 13-9 win in a much-needed and impressive five-game winning streak, but Joe Torre won’t be using this one next time he wants to illustrate the way the game is supposed to be played. Continue reading
A Rey of Offense
Bronx, N.Y., May 9, 2005 — Although I’m as enamored of Tino Martinez as any Yankee fan, he surprised me with a new facet to his game Monday night. With the exception of one ugly moment Friday, he has been supplying stellar defense at first base for the Yankees all season. And he has been swinging a hot bat of late that has Manager Joe Torre moving him up from the eighth to the sixth spot in the batting order. He comes to the ballpark every day ready to play, but what I didn’t know is that he has a sense of history too. One day after grabbing the major league lead among active players in Mothers Day home runs, he punctuated that achievement by blasting yet another exactly 91 years after President Wilson first proclaimed the honor to moms everywhere. Continue reading
Sweetheart of a Game
Bronx, N.Y., May 8, 2005 — The initial weather report for Sunday in the Bronx called for the voluminous Saturday rains to taper off, with the day becoming a nice one around the time the opposing managers would be going to their bullpens. But Saturday had dawned with iffy skies, and while the day drifted toward the charming, Mike Mussina brought Yankee fans back from the brink with a masterful shutout win. OK. The skies were inclined to cut us a break. How about the Yankees? Moose gave the team a boost. Could enigma Kevin Brown follow it up? Continue reading