Bronx, N.Y., May 10, 2011 – Freddy Garcia continued to defy Father Time Tuesday night, giving the Yanks yet another quality start in a 3-1 win vs. Kansas City in Yankee Stadium. As has been his wont, Garcia threw everything but the kitchen sink against them, starting second baseman Chris Getz with an 87 mph fast ball, and following with sliders, curves, a change of pace and, perhaps his plus-one pitch of the night, a nasty split-finger, all before getting three outs to get through the first. Continue reading
Category Archives: Regular season
Catch 21
Bronx, N.Y., May 1, 2011 – We got to see the bad and the good of Ivan Nova the starter in Yankee Stadium Sunday afternoon, in a 5-2 vctory over the Toronto Blue Jays. The young righty threw less strikes than balls in the second inning once Adam Lind reached him for an opposite-field home run off the foul pole in left. The blast evened the score at one because Mark Teixeira had reached righty Jesse Litsch for a homer to right center in the bottom of the first; Nova went to 3-0 on Juan Rivera next, the first of four batters he would fall behind on three throws. Continue reading
A Team Struggle, and Win
Bronx, N.Y., April 30, 2011 – Blame it on the quite vocal Toronto fans several rows behind me, but I had this game all wrong, at least for a while. Listening to them heckle ex-Jays hurler A.J. Burnett once Rajah Davis “tripled” leading off and scored, I witnessed the stalwart pinstriped vet respond to undeserved adversity. What I saw was a Yankee right-hander totally on his game, and looking even better when stacked up against the work of hot shot prospect Kyle Drabeck, who got the start for the visitors. Continue reading
The Word for Failure
Bronx, N.Y., April 28, 2011 – The Yankees fell 5-3 to the visiting Toronto Blue Jays Friday night, largely due to an unfortunate confluence of events: Freddy Garcia took the mound for his first start this season without his pinpoint control, David Robertson had a rare tough outing in relief where he couldn’t throw where he wanted no matter the target, and the Yankee offense showed what happens all too often when they fall behind even if they put runners in scoring position. Continue reading
Nick Comes Full Cir-cy-cle
Bronx, N.Y., April 28, 2011 – The Yankees surprised many in their fanbase Thursday night, first by getting a game in after a day of driving rain, then by evaporating a four-day slump, and four-inning no-hitter, in an offensive explosion in the fifth inning. The six-run frame was not just cathartic for the team and its fans. Not only did it merit a Yankee history mention with a team four-batter cycle; it may have fixed a couple of starting outfielders as well. Continue reading
Cano Clouts, Colon Captivates

Was any White Sox batter looking to pick off a change up several innings in? With the movement of Colon's fast ball, it would have seemed pointless to throw a soft pitch.
A Natural Disaster

If Ivan Nova, shown here just before Tuesday's game, was pitching for his spot in the rotation, he certainly earned it. But alas, though he left with a lead, he did not get a win.
Heartbreak Home Game
Bronx, N.Y., April 25, 2011 – I can’t help but wonder what column I would be writing now if the Yanks had done nothing more than returned from a short road trip and “entertained” their fans with a flat offense that barely threatened to score Monday night. Philip Humber, whose biggest notoriety in the sport preceding this one may have been that he was one of several unremarkable chips the Mets sent to Minnesota several years ago for Johan Santana, dominated Yankee bats with an assortment of effective pitches, and he did not allow a hit until Alex Rodriguez singled following a one-out Mark Teixeira walk in the seventh. Continue reading
Yanks Rock the Rangers

Hovering above what has become a magical right field foul pole, the full moon emerged from behind an invisible cloud. The distortion affecting the banks of lights should make it obvious just how unclear a clear night in the Bronx is these days.
Garcia Quiets the Rangers

Saturday's out-of-town scoreboard indicated that No. 42 was pitching for every team in major league baseball, except for No. 37, Sean O'Flaherty of the Kansas City Royals.