Cold Game, Doubly So

The only ball player who wears No. 42 every other day, Mariano Rivera is pictured with three of the Tuskegee Airmen, who were honored in a pregame ceremony on Jackie Robinson Day.

Bronx, N.Y., April 15, 2011 – The Yanks dropped a 5-3 decision to the Texas Rangers Friday night in yet another icebox experience that had 40-000-plus thinking, “Nineteen April home games in the Bronx, really?” The Yanks doubled the Rangers’ four hits, and blasted the only home run of the night, but the top six in the Yankee order each bounced into double plays, negating almost all rally opportunities. Continue reading

Phil’d With Concern

Bronx, N.Y., April 14, 2011 – Start No. 3 of Phil Hughes’s 2011 season Thursday night was more of the same, while game 2 vs. the hot Orioles was not. Both were disturbing developments. A mixture of 90 mph fastballs with regular cutters and a few curves got Phil eight outs against the struggling Baltimore bats until the sky started falling, and Jake Arrieta showed that Chris Tillman’s Wednesday start was just a bad outing, and the early promise the young O’s rotation has shown is for real. Continue reading

Would You Believe…

Bronx, N.Y., April 13, 2011 – The Yankee offense gave starter A.J. Burnett a huge gift Wednesday night, and if nothing else, the Yankee right-hander deserves a lot of credit for taking full advantage of the largesse. The Yankee bats jumped on Baltimore starter Chris Tillman for a 3-0 lead after one, and 6-0 two innings in, and A.J.’s game settled into automatic pilot. Continue reading

A.J. Number Two

Bronx, N.Y., April 7, 2011 – Early returns are in and, despite dire predictions about the Yankees and their rotation, they received their fifth quality start in six tries Thursday afternoon. The Yanks got by the visiting Minnesota Twins 4-3, plating exactly four runs for the third straight game, two of them 4-3 victories. A. J. Burnett went to 2-0 and the Bombers headed to Boston for their first 2011 road series having managed to win a game without hitting a home run. Continue reading

Please, Please Me

April 5, 2011, Bronx, N.Y. – I knew there was something I liked about the pitching matchup in the Bronx for another early-season frigid affair. The last time lefties CC Sabathia and Brian Duensing squared off in Yankee Stadium that I can recall was in the opening game of the 2009 ALDS. In that one the Twins broke out on top, scoring twice on several singles and a passed ball in the third, so when the Yanks blasted their way to a 3-0 lead after one and 4-0 in the second Tuesday night, I immediately (and foolishly) decided I preferred this contest. Continue reading

Under Lock and Key

The facade

Fans arriving at Monday's game saw what will be a common sight: a list of home games that will total 20 before May 1.

April 4, 2011, Bronx, N.Y. – The record is now 3-1 for the Yankees. They’ve won three of four games, yes, but perhaps more important in 2011 with the focus on the rotation, three of four starters have given the team a quality chance to win. Teamed with yet another show of power, it was enough to garner win No. 3 of the season. Continue reading

Out Pitch

April 3, 2011, Bronx, N.Y. – The 2011 Yankees made a lot of noise yet again Sunday afternoon, with four more home runs and seven runs scored. But an offseason bugaboo raised its ugly head, simply because they did not get a good start. Compounding matters, fifth-in-the-rotation candidate Bartolo Colon relieved a beleagured Phil Hughes and failed to stem the tide, dooming Yankee comeback efforts to failure. Continue reading

Often Upon a Season

A..J. Burnett

Tossing aside talk of a cold and temperature, A.J. consistently pounded strikes in his first start of the 2011 season.

Bronx, N.Y., April 2, 2011 – “I’m going to tell you how it’s going to be,” starts the song Not Fade Away by the Grateful Dead, and watching A.J. Burnett fashion four strike outs the first time through the Detroit batting order, I was doing a little predicting myself. It was clear from the outset that Burnett was comfortable on the mound, throwing his heat and his bender for strikes. High cheese at 94 and an 83 mph curve had Austin Jackson on his heels; a swing and a miss at a four-seamer two throws later sent the ex-Yank prospect to the bench. Continue reading

Pen Power

A welcome late-morning sight

The only people happier than baseball fans are typographers, at least with these two classic clubs playing the game.

Bronx, N.Y., March 31, 2011 — Twenty-four hours removed from all but starting the 2011 season on the disabled list, Curtis Granderson flew into New York a day after his teammates and ended up having the best day of all in a 6-3 Opening Day victory over the Tigers in a damp and very chilly Yankee Stadium Thursday afternoon. Facing ex-Yankee southpaw Phil Coke leading off the seventh inning, Curtis broke a 3-3 tie with a no-doubt-about it blast to right field. Oh, and he made a few plays in the field too.
Continue reading

Being and Time

Bronx, N.Y., September 26, 2010 — Joe Girardi restored his frayed relationship with portions of the Yankee fanbase Sunday night when he and the Yankees “went for it,” sending out young stud Phil Hughes to rescue a home series with the Red Sox, a last homestand of the season that stood at 2-4, and a shot at home field in the playoffs. True, the stubborn magic number of three needed to be subtracted from, but only the most pessimistic of the fans thought the game was a must-win, or the postseason could be lost. Continue reading