Bronx, N.Y., May 31, 2010 The 18 hits and 11 runs in the boxscore notwithstanding, Andy Pettitte and Cleveland’s Mitch Talbot actually enjoyed a dandy pitching duel for much of Monday afternoon in Yankee Stadium. The 11-2 Memorial Day victory, which gave the Yanks a three-games-to-one win in the wraparound weekend series, actually stood at 2-1 Yanks entering the bottom of the seventh. Continue reading
AJ, DJ and the Bomb
Bronx, N.Y., May 30, 2010 It was a shame that many Yankee fans approached today’s afternoon battle with the Indians in Yankee Stadium with trepidation. Despite the series of horrors that took place in the venue Saturday, fans attending this weekend need to be aware of what a rare treat we face, with three straight day games in the Bronx. The weatherman has cooperated through the first two, and at least on Sunday, attendees got to see a very good baseball game. Continue reading
Facts of Bad Baseball
Bronx, N.Y., May 29, 2010 If you’re expecting to read a blow-by-blow account of how the Yankees managed to lose a home game against one of the game’s worst teams when they had a 9-3 lead after four innings, you may be disappointed. But on the other hand, that should put us a similar wavelength. I was there the whole time. I know from disappointment. Continue reading
A Wonderful Game?
Bronx, N.Y., May 19, 2010 Twenty-four hours ago I was writing about the Yanks and Red Sox having played yet another four-hour game, yet another battle in which one team won in its last at bat. Admittedly, yesterday’s outcome thrilled me a great deal more, but I think both sides would admit that Tuesday’s 7-6 Boston victory featured teams trading critical mistakes more than rising to the occasion to emerge victorious. Continue reading
“Pathetic, Embarrassing” Encore
Bronx, N.Y., May 18, 2010 More than 48,000 fans seemed to be having quite an exciting time watching the Red Sox and the Yankees renew their rivalry in the Bronx Monday night. They were duped obviously. No less an authority than veteran umpire “Country Joe” West knows his baseball (you’d hope), and he offered the words in the title for the two teams’ tendency to play long games. The playing time on this one not only exceeded three hours to finish a regulation nine, it ended up just 11 minutes short of four hours. The humanity! Continue reading
That Da__ed Slam
Bronx, N.Y., May 16, 2010 The Yanks already had a series win in their pocket when they took the field against the AL Central first-place Minnesota Twins Sunday afternoon, but that didn’t make the loss of the third game in the set any more palatable. The Bombers have been having their way with the Twins for a few years, and in particular at home wearing the Pinstripes where they had won 10 straight of these in the regular season, plus the two games in last year’s ALDS Continue reading
7th Inning Star War
Bronx, N.Y., May 15, 2010 The Yankees, a team that has had its share of run-ins with Hall of Famer and mlb disciplinarian Frank Robinson, would do well to steer clear of any punishable behavior on May 14. Sixteen years ago on this day, ex-Yankee Dave Winfield supplanted Robinson for 12th place on the career rbi list. Friday night, Alex Rodriguez blasted his way past Robby to move into seventh place on the all-time home run list. I’d suggest the Yanks be on their best behavior in the coming days. Continue reading
Hughes Comes Up Huge
Bronx, N.Y., May 2, 2010 It would be easy to misunderstand how the Yankees overcame the White Sox in the third of three in Yankee Stadium Sunday afternoon. The Bombers blasted the White Sox, it’s true, running up a 12-0 lead before Mark Melancon allowed a meaningless three-run home run in the ninth inning. They amassed 16 hits, blasted three home runs (none of them of questionable length), and Yankee batters reached base 22 times in eight frames. Continue reading
Let’s Call It a Sycle
Bronx, N.Y., May 1, 2010 A great night was anticipated Friday in the Bronx. Not only were the seemingly never home Yankees returning to start a brief homestand following a nine-game, 10-day trip, but warm and dry temps were expected as well. It was almost 70 degrees and sunny in the afternoon, so we were confident in one half of the equation. Continue reading
Tex and the Texan

"Wily, gritty, gutsy"--Pick your adjective. It's why Yankee fans are happy when Pettitte is on the mound.
Bronx, N.Y., April 18, 2010 Five days ago, Andy Pettitte whipped Anaheim in the 2010 Stadium opener featuring a killer curve that netted him six strike outs in the first four innings. It was a different Pettitte who took the mound Sunday, mixing every pitch he had and searching for a few more to get the right combo against a game Texas team out to avoid a sweep.
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