The Empire Strikes Back

Bronx, N.Y., May 22, 2008 — Four hours before game time Thursday night, hailstones peppered my house 20 miles north of Yankee Stadium, and I stared at the sky shaking my fist like Snoopy after the dastardly Red Baron had escaped his clutches one more time. The weather and the team’s play have both been gruesome in 2008, and it was after a full day of rain Tuesday that the Bombers were crushed 12-2 in a very ugly ballgame. Things improved Wednesday, but even then the rain started falling two minutes before first pitch, soaking all not covered before the team stormed to an 8-0 drubbing of Baltimore. Continue reading

Fundamental Things Apply

Bronx, N.Y., May 20, 2008 — Anyone picking up Wednesday’s newspaper and seeing that the reeling, last-place Yankees were crushed by the middling Baltimore Orioles 12-2 in the Stadium Tuesday night might assume that starter Mike Mussina just didn’t have it. And they wouldn’t be all wrong. Continue reading

What, Me Worry?

Bronx, N.Y., May 8, 2008 — Nature abhors a vacuum, or so I was told in science class a significant number of years ago. This thought popped up as I watched the Cleveland Indians not take batting practice about noon Thursday afternoon. The Stadium staff had it all set up for them, with green tarp stretched on the field around home plate, various screens propped up through the infield and outfield, and the big batting cage sitting empty as well. Continue reading

The Wizard of (the) Bronx

Bronx, N.Y., May 6, 2008 — Well, the baseball weather has finally arrived in New York, and the Yankees finally got a day off — at home — yesterday. All of which, sadly, made Tuesday night’s loss that much more disturbing. We’ve come to look on the young Joba Chamberlain as every bit as automatic as Mariano Rivera, and we got burned for that this night. Continue reading

(Just Like) Starting Over

Bronx, N.Y., May 4, 2008Well, beat the drum and hold the phone — the sun came out today

After a month of frigid temps, rain, everlasting road trips, injuries, and no days off, the baseball season arrived in the Bronx in earnest on Sunday afternoon. The Yanks had been home for six days, but the hard breeze that carried them here from Cleveland Monday night chilled the city and the ballpark all week, the Tigers swept the Yanks three straight, and the home team was earnestly trying to sweep the visiting Mariners in an effort to redirect a season seemingly headed south. Continue reading

Dial W(ang) for a Win

Bronx, N.Y., May 2, 2008 — For the third straight game the Yankees jumped out to an early lead Friday night, 1-0 over the Mariners after one, and 3-0 after two. There were two glaring differences, however. First, although Hideki Matsui and Melky Cabrera came up with huge base hits with runners in scoring condition, the quick lead this time was a gift courtesy of sloppy Seattle fielding. Second, and far more important, they hung on to win this one. Continue reading

Eighteen Minutes of Fun

Bronx, N.Y., April 30, 2008 — It seemed the perfect night for baseball in the Bronx Wednesday night. Well, not perfect really, but what are you going to do when major league baseball schedulers and Mother Nature have apparently conspired to keep your team from appearing under optimal conditions, seemingly forever? Continue reading

Robertson’s Revenge

Bronx, N.Y., April 30, 2008 — With the way the Yankee offense has been sputtering of late missing a few key performers, and the discouraging results gleaned so far from their two young starters, it was pretty difficult to approach any of the three games vs. the Tigers this week brimming over with confidence. The hope was that the team would be so happy to finally be home that the level of their play would rise dramatically. Continue reading

Two-Out Teases

Bronx, N.Y., April 29, 2008 — Well, the Yankees finally arrived home from the road trip that wouldn’t end Tuesday, or did they? Fans, and team members, I’m sure, have been praying that they could return to a schedule resembling normality, a little home cooking, and warm and dry conditions. Well, that’s a no, a yes, a no, and a yes. Continue reading