Little Big Hit

Bronx, N.Y., July 16, 2007 — The second- and third-place teams in the AL East battled in the first of four in the Bronx Monday night when the visiting Blue Jays took on the Yanks. It was a gorgeous evening. The teams evenly divided six loud hits for a 4-4 tie midway through the sixth inning, but it was one of the quieter safeties of the game that sent the crowd home happy. Continue reading

Never Enough

Bronx, N.Y., July 8, 2007 — After a Saturday game Melky Cabrera will be trying to forget his whole career (1-for-6 with five strike outs), he stroked Sunday’s first hit, releasing a charging Yankee offense that was bottled up by Anaheim for 13 long innings the afternoon before. Melky would score a run, something all nine guys in the lineup did Sunday, and the Yanks rode three home runs to a 12-0 laugher. Continue reading

Offense Becomes a Strange Land

Bronx, N.Y., July 7, 2007 — The Bombers strung together six hits in the second inning Saturday afternoon, and seven over two frames. Unfortunately, they played the Clippers, not the Angels, and the hit total matched what the 2007 team amassed in 13 innings in the contest that followed. The Bombers beat the Clippers 4-0 in the 61st Yankee Stadium Old Timers Day game, and Anaheim bested the current team 2-1. Continue reading

Yet Another Hard Day’s Night

Bronx, N.Y., July 6, 2007 — Something strange happened to the Yankees and the Minnesota Twins since they played a game in the Bronx Thursday afternoon, something that appears to have worn off on the visiting Anaheim Angels as well. (Market-driven alterations notwithstanding, by the way, they’ll always be the “Anaheim [or California] Angels” to me.) Following the Yanks’ 7-6 victory the day before, the Yankees, Twins, and Angels scored 53 runs among them Friday. Continue reading

Two (x2) Out Magic

Bronx, N.Y., July 5, 2007 — The Yankees and the Twins played a good, old-fashioned ballgame in a steamy Yankee Stadium Thursday afternoon. Minnesota jumped on Yankee starter Kei Igawa for two quick runs in the top of the first, and they reached Mariano Rivera for a score in the ninth. But the Yankees pounded three home runs in between, and they beat the Twins in a very uncharacteristic way. Continue reading

Metamorphosis

Bronx, N.Y., July 3, 2007 — “If you’re happy and you know it, clap your hands,” Yankee organist Paul Cartier played during one of the pitching changes the Twins made during their 8-0 loss in Yankee Stadium Tuesday. And judging by the response, quite a few fans were, and did. Continue reading

Pettitte Pounded in Loss to A’s

Bronx, N.Y., July 1, 2007 — The throng who made it to Yankee Stadium for a showdown and rubber match with the AL West A’s may have thought they were in for a long, though gorgeous, afternoon. After being one-hit for seven innings by a guy who had just 26 starts in 117 career appearances Saturday, this day they were matched up against AL era leader Danny Haren, sporting a 9-2 record with that gaudy 1.91 earned run average. Continue reading

A Former Number 53 Returns

Bronx, N.Y., June 29, 2007 — There he was, situated behind home plate just as I remembered him, exchanging lineups before the Friday night game pitting the Yankees and the visiting Oakland A’s. And Bob Geren was wearing no. 53 still, just as he had backing up catching luminaries such as Don Slaught and Matt Nokes for the Yankees from 1988-1991. Continue reading

Boys of Summer

Staten Island, N.Y., June 22, 2007 — I picked a great day to get a baseball game fix with the Yankees away on an extended trip to parts (and parks) virtually unknown (and wouldn’t it have been nice had it stayed that way?). Friday night, I attended the fourth game of the 2007 Staten Island Yankees season. And although things both started and ended badly for the Baby Bombers, they showed plenty of life in between, and the ballpark experience couldn’t have been nicer. Continue reading

Striking a Balance

Bronx, N.Y., June 17, 2007 — The Mets fan seated next to me Friday was delighted, a few shaky innings aside, that he had come to the Bronx to see his team play on a night when “the good Ollie Perez” pitched. And seeing how this Yankee team has been attacking anything but stellar pitching of late, one had to begrudgingly ackowledge his point. Perez dominated. But although it has become increasingly clear that anytime a Yankee fan comes to see Chien-Ming Wang throw, he’ll be good, a new question is coming to the fore: “How did he do it?” Continue reading