Bronx, N.Y., April 29, 2005 Just when the Yankee offense is stumbling around and in need of a positive outing, the expected pitching duel between Randy Johnson and Roy Halladay fully materialized in Yankee Stadium last night. The Jays were rolling after a sweep of Tampa at home, while the Yankees had scratched just one run in each game of back-to-back losses to Anaheim (sorry, that’s what I’m calling them) after a win behind Alex Rodriguez’s three-home run outburst. In both of the losses, the home-standing Bombers ran themselves out of an early score, and the offense fizzled. Continue reading
Category Archives: Regular season
Who’s on First?
Bronx, N.Y., April 24, 2005 The skies Sunday in the Bronx approximated the condition of the team. The sun shone brightly for part of the afternoon, and the Yankees cranked out an impressive 11-1 win over Texas. But overall the weather was cool with big clouds thrown in, and hometown innings of four, three, and three runs could not cancel out the pitching and hitting failings of the prior two days, or the unsettled state of the Yankee starting rotation. Continue reading
Imitating the Immortals
Bronx, N.Y., April 18, 2005 The Yankees crawled back into New York for a Monday game against the Devil Rays, traveling north from a ballpark that has been a second home. But this most recent trip to Camden Yards resulted in three painful losses in what had become a four-game skid. Their owner had grumbled angrily in public, fans who had booed a sure Hall of Famer in the season’s third game were furious at the 4-8 record, and even Manager Joe Torre sounded embarrassed when discussing the quality of his team’s play. Continue reading
The Fundamental Things
Bronx, N.Y., April 5, 2005 “Turn the page” was the slogan we were repeating among ourselves in the Tier behind home plate Sunday, and with the Unit’s successful debut that’s exactly what the Yankees did. Gazing slant-eyed into the gleaming sky at 12:30 Tuesday afternoon, however, the overwhelming impression one got was that this was the real Opening Day. While it’s true that New York fans were delighted when Randy Johnson beat the Sox Sunday night 9-2 in the season’s first game, you would have been hard pressed to find anyone who agreed that that felt like an opener in the cold and dark of the Bronx night. Continue reading
Bang a Gong!
Bronx, N.Y., September 30, 2004 In so many ways it was an old-fashioned party in the Bronx Thursday night, as the Bombers clinched the AL East Division title for the seventh straight year, in the process guaranteeing themselves home field advantage throughout the coming playoffs. Unexpected sprinkles had dampened spirits early in the day, but although the announced humidity at game time was 100%, no rain fell on a cool night in New York. Continue reading
Ballplayers, or Band-Aids?
Bronx, N.Y., September 21, 2004 The Yankees have been making a habit lately of dropping the first games of series, and then proving that that’s not such a bad thing more often than not by recovering to win the night(s) after. They evened up their series with the Blue Jays on Tuesday night with a 5-3 win on a gorgeous night in the Bronx. Although the Stadium was not packed to what has become the usual 50,000-plus total, the 36,675 in attendance seemed quite a lot when compared with the 10,000 who dotted the seats in the schedule-patched contest the night before. Continue reading
Lords of the Flies
Bronx, N.Y., September 19, 2004 The stage was set for the huge rubber game in the Bronx on Sunday afternoon. The two teams in first and second place atop the AL East were meeting in the third of three with a shot at first place on the line, and with a look to a possible rematch in the month of October. The roaring crowd of 55,153 matched Saturday’s total exactly, and pushed the series number of turnstile turners over 165,000, resulting in a season crowd Yankee record of 3,555,298. Continue reading
I’ll Give Them This One
Bronx, N.Y., September 17, 2004 To battle your way down the interminable ramps leading to the exits at Yankee Stadium after Friday night’s game, you would have thought the days of a last-place finish in a 10-team league from 1966 were back to haunt us. Of course, a healthy percentage of the 55,000-plus who remained through two rain delays, five hours, and 300-plus pitches from eight hurlers were wearing red, and they were in a celebratory mood. But the majority were wearing some midnight blue, and they were unhappy. Continue reading
Suggestions, Not Rules
Bronx, N.Y., September 6, 2004 Well, I knew if I waited long enough the Commissioner’s Office would find yet another reason to ignore the rule book if applying it worked in the New York Yankees’ favor. Move over Mr. MacPhail, it’s Mr. Selig’s turn. I’m told that the Tampa Bay Devil Rays made their stand on principle. They would not leave their homes with a hurricane bearing down on Florida, even though they had much of Friday night and Saturday afternoon to do so, and MLB “suggested” that they do. If it involved a forfeit, so be it. Continue reading
Jorge Settles It
Bronx, N.Y., September 5, 2004 It took one Jorge five pitches to strike out another for the last out of a 3-1 Orioles win Friday night. On Sunday Jorge Julio made the mistake of throwing a sixth pitch and Jorge Posada unflinchingly took it, to drastically different effect. Yankee fans had groaned in dismay when Julio got a called strike one from home plate ump Dan Carlson after having walked the bases loaded (the latter two being by defensive choice) in the bottom of the ninth. But the two tosses that followed were off the plate, Posada swung and missed at the next, and Julio missed badly to set up a full count. Continue reading