Don’t Mean a Thing

Bronx, N.Y., June 30, 2011 – I would never have admitted it going in, but I really loved the Yankees’ chances for the three-game sweep of the visiting Brewers Thursday afternoon. And it wasn’t just that the Yanks had just beaten Milwaukee’s twin 7-2 (going in, 7-3 leaving) aces in the first two gamers of the series. Randy Wolf is a veteran southpaw, the kind of hurler that often has success in the ballparks in the Bronx, and the NL Central first-place Brewers must have been spoiling a for a fight off a bumbling loss in game 1, and a largely hitless one in the second contest. Continue reading

Payback

Bronx, N.Y., 2011 – For the majority of the 46,000-plus populating Yankee Stadium on a glorious Wednesday night, the Yankee 5-2 win over the visiting Milwaukee Brewers was an enjoyable win over a team the Yanks rarely see. The Bombers have played the Brew Crew two straight, faced back-to-back 7-2 aces, and have beaten both. And they moved two more games up on the Red Sox in first place in the AL East. Continue reading

Zack Attack

Bronx, N.Y., June 28, 2011 – The Tuesday contest between the visiting Milwaukee Brewers and the Yankees in the Stadium was an intriguing one on several levels, and not just because each club sits atop its division. With many a Yankee fan clamoring for starting pitching help over the winter, the Yanks never really set their sights on the available KC Royal righty Zack Greinke once the Cliff Lee plans were foiled, much to the displeasure of some of theiir fans. Continue reading

Yanks Take Rocks to the Matt

Bronx, N.Y., June 26, 2011 – The weather gods smiled on the Bronx Sunday afternoon on one of the most special Yankee days of the year, as the Old Timers came and entertained us – and each other – yet again. Five Yankee widows and 47 Old Timers were feted, and retiring Yankee trainer Gene Monahan came in for special attention. Before the longtime Yankee staffer was given a string of gifts including a Garth Brooks 10-gallon hat and concert, a multi-signed Nascar helmet, a trip to the Alps, a sitdown lawnmower and a Ford truck (perhaps with a dog?), laughing taped interviews with stars like Derek Jeter – “he’s been here 100 years, I think” – and Don Mattingly – “he worked on Babe Ruth, you know” – set a loving and comical tone. Continue reading

A Very Different 12-4 Win

Bronx, N.Y., June 15, 2011 – The Yankees played the part of very poor hosts yet again Wednesday night, humiliating the Rangers with yet another blowout. Texas manager Ron Washington was forced to call on three relievers once the Yank abused a quality starter for the second night running, although this time they more pestered southpaw Derek Holland to distraction rather drove him out, as they had with Alexi Ogando after he retired just five batters the night before. Continue reading

Jorge First

Bronx, N.Y., June 14, 2011 – Where do you start describing a game where the offense pounds out 14 hits good for 12 runs? Do you highlight home runs from Nick Swisher, Robinson Cano, and Curtis Granderson, or perhaps Curtis’s back-to-back two-run hits with Mark Teixeira that turned a crack in the door against 7-0 Alexi Ogando into a blowout? Continue reading

Let It Be

Bronx, N.Y., June 13, 2011 – Baseball in the Bronx. It was beautiful in Yankee Stadium Monday night. The sky was not cloudless, far from it, with a seemingly solid bank of white cloud, that turned to silver, then a deep vibrant purple, as the sky darkened beyond the stadium wall, to the East over the Bronx and south Yonkers. The pre-dusk sunlight dazzled as it glistened off the white facade just above the grandstand in deepest right and left field. Continue reading

Do the Freddie

Bronx, N.Y., June 11, 2011 – Coming off his worst start of the 2011 season and the news that, as expected, the Yankee rotation had taken a big hit with Bartolo Colon being added to the disabled list, Freddy Garcia took the mound vs. the Indians Sunday afternoon needing to provide a quality start. No nugget of baseball history was required, not a perfect game, or a no hitter. No minimum number of strike outs came to mind. He simply had to keep his team in the game until the Yankee bats could solve Tribe righty Josh Tomlin, off to a 7-3 start and one of the reasonss Cleveland has held first place in the AL Central for so long. Continue reading

The 10-Pitch Plan

Bronx, N.Y., June 11, 2011 – Despite succumbing to back-to-back strike outs starting Saturday’s contest in Yankee Stadium, the Indians seemed to not realize that early was their only chance in this game, at least until much later, due to unforeseen circumstances. Among the league leaders in strikes-to-balls thrown ratio, Yankee starter Bartolo Colon got off to what seemed a bad start, at least for him. With a pervasive mist covering the Bronx and a nasty, bone-chilling, unrelenting breeze blowing right from the first pitch, Bart uncharacteristically failed to a throw a first-pitch strike to any of the first seven Cleveland batters. Continue reading