Anything Can Happen

Bronx, N.Y., August 3, 2008 — Everything went pretty much as expected through the first half of Sunday’s Angels/Yankees game in the Bronx, which is to say the hometeam was in trouble. Halos starter John Lackey had pitched a one-hit shutout in Boston last time out, and he was blanking the Yanks on three singles through four. On the other hand, struggling number five Yankees starter Darrell Rasner was beset by 10 baserunners and five runs already. Continue reading

New York Rain, Yankee Thunder

Bronx, N.Y., August 2, 2008 — On a day that broke poorly, and deteriorated quickly from there, ex-Yankees, Yankees, and their fans enjoyed a double dose of fun in Yankee Stadium Saturday afternoon. With more than 70 ex-players and five widows of players we have lost gathered together, the weather threatened to make short work of the last Old Timers Day in Yankee Stadium. Continue reading

Seven-Inning Sid-Dartha

Bronx, N.Y., August 1, 2008 — Following the devastation Anaheim wreaked upon the Yankees Thursday, fans could be forgiven for missing what was the turning point of the Friday night game. Few expected Sidney Ponson’s quick and efficient 11-pitch, top of the first, and before the 54,000-strong throng realized it, the Yanks were set up to take a lead. A 1-0 Derek Jeter single to right following Johnny Damon’s six-pitch leadoff walk against Ervin Santana had the home team set up. Continue reading

Second-Half Sizzle?

Bronx, N.Y., July 20, 2008 — Famously, a squirrel cavorted on the right-field foul pole last August as Andy Pettitte was pitching the Yanks to a win in a sweep of the Red Sox. The “Dog Days of August” have not arrived in the 2008 baseball season yet, but it could hardly have been hotter as the Yanks swept the A’s 2-1 behind Pettitte Sunday afternoon. But don’t take my word for it; we spied what could have been the same squirrel scurrying for the shade under a car in Parking Lot 8 after the game. Continue reading

Nine-Hit Nirvana

Bronx, N.Y., July 18, 2008 — Well, the A’s traded away Joe Blanton, and the Yanks slapped around lefty Greg Smith, who was pressed into duty Friday night in the Bronx after Joe was shipped out. And what chance did the lefty thrower have really, relying on the 88-mph fastball and the change of pace floating in at around 80? The opposition battered him for three hits in the first, one more each in the second and third, then two more in both the fourth and the fifth. Continue reading

‘Twas the Night…

Bronx, N.Y., July 15, 2008 — The grand old edifice that is Yankee Stadium gave a pretty strong indication on Tuesday night that it is in no rush to reach obsolescence. Perhaps sparked by a visit from a dazzlingly long list of some of the greatest athletes to ever play the game, the Baseball Cathedral hosted the longest All Star Game, by time, in baseball history. Continue reading

True Grit

Bronx, N.Y., July 8, 2008 — Despite having the superb Andy Pettitte on the mound Tuesday night for the first of two against the first-place Tampa Rays, it was hard not to be concerned watching southpaw Scott Kazmir’s dominance through two frames. Pettitte has been very good just when the team needed it most, or at least he was until Captain Derek Jeter’s uncharacteristic first-inning throwing error put him into a 2-0 hole last Thursday versus Boston. That game went downhill from there, Boston battered Darrell Rasner the next day, and it took two scintillating one-run victories to salvage the holiday weekend, and perhaps the Yankee season. Continue reading

Not Yet Begun

Bronx, N.Y., July 6, 2008 — What is it about 5-4 Yankees/Red Sox games in Yankee Stadium in the current millennium? After catching some of the July 1, 2004 classic in which Captain Derek Jeter bloodied himself with a full-bodied dive into the lower boxes before the Yanks came from behind to win 5-4 in 13 on TV, we fretted, sweated, and feted a 10-inning win by that same score on Sunday night. Continue reading

A Different One-Run Loss

Bronx, N.Y., July 1, 2008 — For the second straight day, the Yanks came up on the short end of a low-scoring, one-run game in the Bronx pitting two great offenses. The Yanks wasted good pitching in both losses, failed to make up ground against the Red Sox, and fell another game behind those “Devils,” the first-place Tampa Rays. Bottom line, 3-2 Tuesday was equally injurious and frustrating to 2-1 Monday. Continue reading