June 2009

My Response to Ed Valentine at Pinstripe Alley…What Should Really Happen

First let me start this blog by apologizing…for what? The fact that I haven’t blogged in several days. I wanted to sit and watch the Nationals and Marlins sets, and see if the Yankees could avoid my wrath. Losing 4 of 6 to these steaming piles of dog poop have left me no other choice but to lose my mind on my beloved Bombers yet again. Before I do that however, there is an individual named Ed Valentine who writes his own blog called Pinstrip Alley that can be found on Yahoo. He has given what he believes is credible advice on how to fix the 2009 Yankees before it is too late…I will list direct portions of his advice, and then tell you #1 why it is severally flawed, and #2 what really should happen. Enjoy, and Mr. Valentine, if you happen to read this, don’t take anything personal, because we are both Yankees’ fans, I just don’t think you know as much as you think you do!

From Pinstripe Alley:
1.Get your best roster in uniform. That means waving goodbye to Brett Tomko and Angel Berroa. It means getting Mark Melancon into the Yankee bullpen and giving him a real chance to show whether or not he can help. We know Tomko can’t. Getting rid of Berroa would make space for Xavier Nady if/when he is ready to return, or for Shelley Duncan. Either of those guys would upgrade the bench and the offense. Ramiro Pena is better than Berroa, and right now should be the guy playing when A-Rod isn’t.

What’s Wrong with the Above Suggestions:
First let me open by stating that not all of Mr. Valentine’s ideas are off-base, as you will read that I agree with a few of them…but pay attention, because this is where it gets real. Every team needs a mop up man. Brett Tomko is and should be that pitcher. Why burn up the arms of Phil Hughes, Alfredo Aceves or anybody else when the game is on the line when a veteran like Tomko can handle it-plus he brings a good attitude and will do what is asked of him for the benefit of the TEAM. I will agree that the Angel Berroa experiment has failed miserably. Hitting well under .150 should spell the end of Berroa in pinstripes. I do like the youngster Pena, who is hitting .247 with 11 runs scored and 3 steals. He is built more in the mold of a middle infielder however, and should spell A-Rod once a week until the All-Star break. Add Mark Melancon to the bullpen? Give him a real chance? Are you kidding me? Melancon will be a nice bullpen fixture, just not right now. He walks more than he strikes out, blowing a lead against a light hitting Angels squad, and failed to record a single out in the Yankees’ 7-3 loss against the Red Sox. Melancon needs much more seasoning and a good secondary pitch before he gets another shot in the Bronx…a 5.40 ERA doesn’t lie. I on the otherhand, would give young Josh Schmidt a shot to fill out the bullpen. Who? A young man sitting in Double-A Trenton. Schmidt is sitting at 4-1, a 1.19 ERA, and has 40 Ks compared to only 15 walks issued ANDhe has only allowed one bomb in 2009. A young man who doesn’t yield bombs out of the bullpen is a perfect fit in the new Cathedral. And enough with the crazy Shelley Duncan talk already. The guy has proven over and over that he cannot make the adjustment to the next level, that being with the big club. I don’t care that he is hitting near .300 has 64 RBI and has only struck out 42 times in 223 at bats in 2009. Don’t care. The Yankees know what he is, which is a nice minor league player. You want to give a young player a shot, go with another all-around talent in Austin Jackson. In 2009, Jackson is hitting .336 and has 12 swipes. That is something that can be used off the Yankees’ bench, not another 3 swings and return to the bench that comes with Duncan. As for X Nady…there is no guarantee that he will even be able to play the outfield with his elbow issues. He may end up being yet another outfielder that is stuck DHing because of an injury.

From Pinstripe Alley:
2.Get serious about making a deal for Mark DeRosa. DeRosa (.277, 13 home runs, 50 RBI) is a huge upgrade over anything the Yankees have on the bench. Not to mention he might be a better every day right fielder than Swisher. He can play third, second, first and both corner outfield spots. Guaranteed that the Yankees could find a lot of at-bats for him, no matter where he played.

What’s Wrong with the Above Suggestions:
Mark DeRosa has struggled for the most part during the 2009 season. Even though his bat has come alive in recent weeks, he is still struggling to adjust to American League pitching. Cleveland will not give away DeRosa, and he is not worth more than a C-level prospect at best…Yes, I said PROSPECT as in 1! Cleveland will want to talk about Austin Jackson or any of the younger prospects such as Eric Fryer. If Brian Cashman is moronic enough to deal more than a bag of bp baseballs for DeRosa, he should be shot. Nick Swisher is the answer off the bench. He can play all three outfield spots, as well as first base. He provides a patient eye as well as a switch hitter at the plate. Nick brings a loosey goosey attitude to the clubhouse that has been missing for quite a few years. Swisher nor DeRosa are everyday players, so get that out of your collective minds right now.

From Pinstripe Alley:
3.Play Brett Gardner every day, at least for now. Center field is going to back-and-forth between Gardner and Melky Cabrera all season, and right now Gardner is clearly the better option. Melky was hot for a while, but he has hit .190 in June. Gardner hit .327 in May and is hitting .348 this month with a .464 OBP. The Yankees need some energy on offense, and the speedy Gardner needs to be given another every day chance to provide it.

What’s Wrong with the Above Suggestions:
The Yankees need to continue to use the Melky/Gardner platoon. It is obvious that you go with the hot hand, yet find a way to keep the other player involved. Yes, right now it’s Brett Gardner, next week it could be Melky again. Perhaps giving Austin Jackson a shot to work within the platoon may prove to be the better option in the end, and then you can use Gardner as the speedster off the bench, and deal Melky for another bench or bullpen piece.

From Pinstripe Alley:
4.Settle the bullpen. Get Melancon to New York. Give Phil Hughes and David Robertson important, late innings, not just mop-up ones. Let Alfredo Aceves handle the long stuff, which is what he is best at. Maybe, if you give these young guys the opportunity, you’ll find you don’t need Huston Street or another veteran reliever, after all.

What’s Wrong with the Above Suggestions:
I do agree that the bullpen needs to be settled, but as I provided the real numbers on Melancon above, he has no business in the Bombers’ bullpen in 2009. I also agree that Phil Hughes is being wasted in mop up roles, as Tomko should have that role exclusively, simply because he throws strikes, and he is a veteran, one in which getting lit up won’t crush him mentally under the bright lights of the big city. I love Aceves in the long role, and I like David Robertson in certain situations…but here is the ONLY REAL SOLUTION to the Yankees’ bullpen woes…put Phil Hughes in the #5 spot in the rotation and leave him there…put the fat toad part II as the 8th inning bridge to Mariano Rivera. It’s obvious. Well, obvious to those of us that remember the last dynasty and how well having Mo setup Wetteland and then having the Nelson/Stanton/Mendoza bridge for Mo worked as well. You need a dominant arm that runs on adrenaline and isn’t afraid of tight situations at the end of games to get the ball to Rivera. Why in the hell would Cashman make a trade to upgrade the backend of the bullpen when the answer is free, and is already in house? Probably the same reason that Cashman has gotten away from the recipe that worked to rebuild the farm system and the dynasty of the 1990s…after all, it’s only been about 10 years since HIS Yankees’ teams have won a World Series!

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From Pinstripe Alley:
What I don’t want to see
1.Joe Girardi or Brian Cashman getting fired. As of today, the Yankees are a playoff team. Firing the GM in the middle of the season isn’t going to help anything. As for Girardi … well, I have my issues with him, but now isn’t the time to fire him. Clearly, Girardi knows he is managing for his job. He knows he has to win to be back in 2010, and I think it is affecting his managing. How else can you explain his reckless handling of A-Rod, his erratic handling of the bullpen and some odd in-game decisions in the late innings? He is feeling the heat. No doubt Girardi goes after the season if the Yanks don’t make the playoffs. Right now, stay the course unless the wheels come completely off. If this current tailspin continues for a couple more weeks maybe we need to re-consider Girardi, but not right now. As for Cashman, I feel pretty much the same way. The thing he has done best in all his years as Yankee GM is do enough to keep his job. But, the Yankees of the past two years, on the field and on the bench, are clearly Cashman’s team. If they fail to make the playoffs again it is time for him to face the music. But, not just yet.

What’s Wrong with the Above Suggestions:
Some of the above statements are exactly was has been wrong with the Yankees since the end of the 2001 season. “As of today, the Yankees are a playoff team.” Really? Is that what we have come to accept as success as Yankees’ fans? The playoffs? Absolutely not. As Derek Jeter has said numerous times, if the Yankees do not win the World Series, it is a failed season. Last season was a failure, and as of today, 2009 is a failure. Whose fault is that? You guessed it, Brian Cashman’s and Joe Girardi’s. Cashman should’ve been fired after the 2003 debacle in the World Series (See the Jeff Weaver trade), and Girardi should never have been hired to replace Joe Torre in the first place. He is inexperienced, absent minded, and has absolutely no idea how to run in game strategy or a pitching staff. He hasn’t just been managing to keep his job the last few weeks or this season and been awkward or inconsistent now. He’s been giving away games since the day he filled out his first lineup card. At the end of the 2008 season, I could’ve given you readers AT LEAST 20 specific instances where Joe Girardi’s boneheaded moves eventually cost the Yankees the ball game. How many games out of first did the Yankees finish in 2008? That’s right 8! 20 games given away, and they still only managed to finish out of the money by 8 games. He never should’ve been hired, and he needs to go like yesterday already! I’ve said it on this blog numerous times, and I will say it again here right now…Buck Showalter, the taskmaster needs to be brought back to the Bronx to rattle the cages of these overpaid prima donna crybabies. Gene “Stick” Michael needs to replace Cashman, rebuild the farm system just as he did in the 1980s, just as he did in the 1990s, and make over the big club’s roster to mesh together just as the dynasty teams did. As a former drill sergeant of mine used to say…”Common sense prevails Private!”

From Pinstripe Alley:
2.Joba in the bullpen. He hasn’t been great, but you can make a case he is the Yanks’ second-best starting pitcher. Hard to remove that from a rotation that has been shaky at times. After all, you have to have starters who pitch well before you worry about the late innings.

What’s Wrong with the Above Suggestions:
Wrong, wrong and wrong. As with most of Mr. Valentine’s arguments and suggestions thus far, poorly constructed, poorly thought out. Joba as the second best Yankees’ starter? Get the f*^k outta here! In 2007, as the bridge to Mariano Rivera, Joba went 2-0 with a 0.38 ERA, 34 Ks and only 6 walks allowed. In 2008, the second coming appearance-wise of Hideki Irabu went 4-3, with a 2.60 ERA and 19 holds to go along with 118 Ks and 39 walks. There were only 2 instances where Joba stuggled in 2008 in the bullpen…2! As a starter last season, he did nothing but struggle, pitching less than impressive in at least 4 of his 11 starts in 2008. To say that he is the Bombers’ second best starter made me throw up in my mouth a little bit. He has already struggled to make it past the 4th inning in 3 of his 13 starts in 2009. His velocity is down to 91 or 92 mph in most of his 1st innings, thus putting the Yankees in an early hole. Second best? Wrong. He has less than a 2:1 K to BB ratio, his ERA is hovering around 4, and he has yet to show the dominant stuff that Girardi and Cashman believe he has as a potential starter. You heard it here first…if a new manager takes the reigns before 2009 is over, Joba is done as a starter, just as he should be!

From Pinstripe Alley:
3.Crazy changes. Like Pena for Cano. Like releasing Hideki Matsui. Like getting rid of Wang.

What’s Wrong with the Above Suggestions:
Desperate times always call for desperate measures. Drastic measures. If you as the most successful franchise haven’t won a World Series in almost a decade, changes need to be made. The Steinbrenners and Cashman blamed Joe Torre for the failures since the dynasty crumbled. Now we see that it is actually upper management, the ownership, and a lame duck field boss that continue to plague the Yankees. Who suggested Pena takes over at 2nd base for Cano? Keep the infield intact, and yes, that includes the highly criticized Jorge Posada. The man has won titles behind the plate, I think he knows what he’s doing. As for players like Hideki Matsui and Johnny Damon, they are dead weight. Unload both of them if you can. Matsui is a DH, nothing more, nothing less, and he’s not producing big offensive numbers. Johnny Damon is a defensive liability who has cost the Yankees several games with his lackadaisical attitude and play in the field. Everything he gives you on offense, he lacks with the glove. I don’t care if you deal him for a bucket of popcorn and a soda, just get some fresh legs in the outfield, again, Austin Jackson might be the answer…perhaps X Nady, Melky, whomever. Chien Ming Wang is still pitching hurt. I don’t care what the Yankees say, I don’t care what Wang says. Ever since the running accident in Houston, Wang hasn’t looked anywhere near the same. I say shelf him for the season. Let his legs heal and let him work out the kinks, just like the Red Sox are with Matsuzaka in extended spring training or in the minors. Over the last 3 seasons, Wang has gone 19-6, 19-7, and 8-2 before ending the season hurt. Another reason the DH should be in both leagues. Wang hasn’t just forgotten how to win. Winners don’t do that. His mechanics and his body aren’t right. Let him get things right before throwing him away.

From Pinstripe Alley:
Some Final Thoughts
Yes, things have been ugly for the past two weeks. I am not happy about it, and I am not going to excuse it. The Yankees left several winnable games on the table, and that needs to stop. Soon.

We all have to realize that no players are perfect. Mariano Rivera has blown saves every season of his career. Derek Jeter has hit into double plays every season. Players make errors. They occasionally do bone-headed things. Hitters will fail more often than they succeed, and pitchers will never throw every pitch exactly where they want to. It’s baseball. It’s a wild, unpredictable rollercoaster ride filled with lots of good times, and lots of bad ones, too.

In the end, what it comes down to for the Yankees is that the highly-paid key players on this team simply have to do a better job than they have done recently. If they can’t the Yankees don’t win. No matter who the manager or general manager is, and no matter what trades they make.

CC Sabathia and A.J. Burnett need to win games, Chamberlain needs to get deeper into his starts and Wang needs to get better. Rivera needs to close games. A-Rod needs to hit, especially when it counts. Jeter, too.

It’s still early, but it’s not that early. In the end, this season will come down to whether or not the guys on this team making the big money because of what they have done in the past, can still get the job done.

What’s Wrong with the Above Suggestions:
I hate to remind Mr. Valentine, but the issues with this franchise aren’t simply 2 weeks old. Hell, they aren’t 2 years old. We are going on a full decade with problems at the very foundation of this franchise. It does matter who the field manager and the GM are, because if you hire the wrong people, decisions can and will be made that can literally take decades to undo. How do I know? I am a Yankees fan. I lived through the 1980s when the Boss forced Stick Michael to trade every good prospect away and watched as my favorite player-Don Mattingly rotted on the vine, thus never getting his shot at legitimate October glory.

With Cashman’s dealing over the last several years, the Yankees have left hundreds of games and possibly at least 3 World Series titles on the table, so don’t tell me the Yankees are simply in a rut right now. The franchise as a whole are in a rut-a decade long rut, and the season is half over. Players such as Jeter and Rivera are getting older, and their future replacements need to be groomed and prepared for the day that these two cornerstones of a dynasty gone by are no longer around. When you put on the pinstripes, you are expected to have a career year every year. You are expected to win a World Series every single year. When you make more money than anybody else at your position in your profession, these are not unexpected expectations. You sign the contract, you best be prepared to take the heat of failure and the criticism that goes along with it from men like me.

I love the Yankees, and it pains me to watch this franchise year in and year out hand out money like Monopoly money to the wrong people. Damon was wrong. Clemens was wrong. Sheffield was wrong. Matsui was wrong. I could go on and on about the bad decisions of this franchise, but they appear nightly at a ball park near you. Moves must be made before the deadline. Bench and bullpen depth. The players that are here need to start earning their money. Girardi and Cashman need to be replaced. To say that it’s the wrong time, hey, Bob Lemon replaced the beloved Billy Martin and the Bombers recovered from a 14 1/2 game deficit to win another title. Showalter is a Martin prodigy, and Girardi is a lemon…literally.

As much as I enjoy reading Mr. Valentine’s blog multiple times per day, he is living in a dream world. A world where all is fair and that the right thing will happen if you believe. I live in a realistic world where expectations come with respect and money. I have been a Yankees’ dan long enough to know that anything less than a title is failure. I know enough about the Yankees to know that Joba Chamberlain will never, ever be a dominant starter in the Major Leagues, but could be the best closer in baseball within the next few years. I know that men like Joe Girardi and Brian Cashman talk a really good game, and yes they both have championship pedigrees…but neither was ever responsible for winning those titles on their own. For Girardi, there was O’Neill, Bernie Williams, Tino, Brosius, David Cone, Pettitte, Wetteland and Rivera. For Cashman, it was Gene Michael, Bob Watson and the Steinbrenner check book. At some point everyone must take accountability for their decisions and their actions in life. It’s time for the Yankees as a franchise to stand up, and act like adult men and take their whippings for being bad. Below is the link to the full article that Mr. Valentine posted on his wonderful blog, Pinstripe Alley!

http://www.pinstripealley.com/2009/6/23/921456/my-thoughts-for-fixing-the-yankees?ref=yahoo

 

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On to some happier thoughts and feelings regarding the Bombers…the All-Star Game in St. Louis is right around the corner, and there is a major cage match battle going on between the Yankees and Red Sox as to whom is going to start for the American League at 1st Base. We of course want Mr. Mark Teixeira to start in his first season in pinstripes, while Red Sox nation wants to see the crybaby, Kevin Youkilis start yet again. I will be the first to give Youk all the credit in the world. He is one of my favorite players to watch, simply because of his Paul O’Neill-like intensity. He is a Gold Glove caliber fielder and a great bat for both average and power. However, Tex is having a better 2009! My wife the Red Sox fan, argues that Tex is having his nice season simply because of New Yankee Stadium, and how easily the ball flys out of the yard. I argue that any right hand hitter is at an advantage in Fenway because of the Green Monster, so don’t blow that smoke up my butt! We as Yankee fans need to make sure that Tex gets out vote, over and over and over again as we can vote up to 25 times per email! Below is the link to do so, and if you feel like voting for any other Yankees, please do so!

http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/events/all_star/y2009/ballot_reg.html

 

As always, be good, take care of yourself, and take care of your buddy next to ya!

Bombers Make Santana Look Human…Still Need to Figure Out BoSox

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Anyone watching Sunday’s demolishing of the Mets by the Bombers has to question what exactly is going on in Yankeeland? The starting pitching once again looks pathetic. These high priced hitters (outside of Teixeira for the most part) are underachieving yet again, and Joe Girardi looks more and more less qualified to be holding his post by the inning. You might say, why does Billy trash the Yankees when they WON two of three from our cross town rival? The Yankees LOST ALL THREE AGAINST BOSTON….AGAIN! That’s why. The Mets are beat up, the Yankees should’ve swept them, and instead made Nieve look like Cy Young. Again, pathetic.

I ask this question every single week, and I am waiting for anyone to give me a legitimate answer…why does Joe Girardi still have a job? Here’s an example of his mornic managing of a game: Second game of the Yankees/Red Sox series, Swisher gets on base with less than two out in the eighth inning, and Girardi pinch runs Gardner. Now Yankeeland…what should’ve happened next? Gardner made it to second base by Teixiera drawing a walk…a right handed batter is in the box and Okajima is on the mound…why is the tying run not on third base within two pitches? Instead, Gardner is trapped at second and the inning ends with nothing to show for it. This isn’t the first of Girardi’s absent minded innings, and I’m sure it won’t be the last…

How much worse does Joba Chamberlain have to be to get his fat *** tossed back into the bullpen? He has looked awful in his last three starts, while Mr. Hughes has looked dominant out of the bullpen. Wang is a mess, and knowing his job is hanging by a string isn’t helping his psyche I’m sure. Let the kid pitch. He’s been successful in the past, and besides that, he’s not much worse than the other starters of late…Instead, Cashman will give up somebody like Austin Jackson and go get somebody like Jose Valverde to setup Mo Rivera. What a joke when you have the solution in-house…

The Yankees went into the Red Sox series up a game, and left Boston down two games. They lost another game on Saturday as the Red Sox were handling Philly and Nieve shut the Bombers down. Fortunately, the Bombers gained a game back in the standings with Josh Beckett’s implosion during the series finale with the Phillies. Boston gets the Marlins, the Yankees take on the Nationals. The Bombers should not overlook the Nats as most experts might have you believe. Martis is 5-1 and has shown promise…plus the Nats are playing for their manager’s survival, and unless they completely shut down, they will play desperate, and they will play hungry. Look for the Yanks to take two of three, even though talent-wise, a sweep should be inevitable.

As always, take care, be good, and take care of your buddy next to ya!

The Class of Baseball Shined Through at Fenway…

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2 2/3 innings…$82 million dollars…0-4….$180 million dollars…this is exactly the reason the Yankees haven’t won a World Series in almost a decade. The underachieving vomit performances of players-big ticket free agents like A.J. Burnett and Mark Teixiera have made me want to take those Gatorade barrels and bounce them off both of these bum’s heads…and that is not to mention Mr. $275 million and his ********* error last night that opened the flood gates in Fenway…ENOUGH ALREADY!!!!!

I’ve stated it before on this blog and I’m going to state it again…the Boston Red Sox ARE THE CLASS OF BASEBALL!!!! Yes, I am a Yankees fan, but I am also a true realist. From top to bottom, Major Leagues to amateur scouting, the Red Sox are the cream of the crop when it comes to Major League Baseball. Their owners are better, their management is better, their players are better, and hell, even their fan base is better! Wanna know why? Simply stated, they do things the way they are supposed to be done. We watch our ownership hand out millions to one year wonders like Burnett (who appears to be more in tune with Ed Whitson than Roger Clemens) and guys who melt under the bright lights of Yankees/Red Sox (Mark Teixiera). Here’s an idea for Yankees’ management…when looking at free agents, look at those players who ACTUALLY PERFORM AGAINST BOSTON! Jesus f*@^ing christ already! I am sick and frickin’ tired of watching these overpaid, underachieving jerkoffs make me think for a few short days that they are ready to take the next step as contenders…they fight their way to the top of the division after a wonderful month and this is how you reward me as a Yankees’ fan? 2 2/3 innings and an 0-4 en route to a 7-0 assbeating? F*$* off A.J. Burnett and Mark Teixiera! Go back to Toronto and Anaheim or whatever piece of crap rock you both came crawling out from under, and take ‘roid boy A-Hole with you too!

Congrats to the Boston Red Sox, who once again have shown that they are the class of baseball, now sitting at 6-0 on the season against my Bombers…this is why they are in the middle of a dynasty and this is why the Yankees are the early 80′s version of themselves…close but no cigar! The Red Sox may lose 2 of 3 to Texas…they may lose the occasional series to Toronto or Detroit…but when it comes to hammering home the idea that THEY OWN THE YANKEES….nobody does it better than the boys in Boston!

As always, be good, take care of yourself, and take care of your buddy next to ya!

Yanks Take 2 of 3 from Rangers, Burnett Suspended for Protecting Teammates

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With one swing of the bat, Melky Cabrera once again proved his worth to the Yankees as his two-run blast lifted the Bombers over the Texas Rangers 8-6 in the Thursday matinee finale. Chien Ming Wang looked good for about 15 minutes during Thursday’s start, then once again looked mortal as his sinkers were either too high or too low to fool batters into swining…and when they did, the new Boogie Down once again had trouble holding baseballs in the yard.

Girardi has stated that Phil Hughes’ move to the bullpen doesn’t necessarily mean that he won’t start again in 2009, as Girardi has labeled Hughes his “6th Starter”. I would give Wang a couple of more starts to get his feet under him, and if he continues to stink, then back to long man mop up duty for Mr. Wang in 2009. Mo Rivera came on and recorded yet another save as he approaches 500 for his brilliant Hall of Fame career.

MLB handed down a six game suspension to Yankees hurler A.J. Burnett for whizzing a high and hard one past the melon of Nelson Cruz during Tuesday night’s series opener. Typical Bob Watson…Padilla (who by the way has since been released by the Rangers) gets fined, Burnett (protecting his teammate after getting belted twice in the same game) gets fined AND suspended. Bob Gibson must be puking in his mouth a little seeing how MLB handles things today. Burnett has just as much right to pitch in, and warn hitters as retaliation as Padilla does to flat out bean hitters that own him statistically (Teixeira).

Of course leave it to the former Yankees’ GM to punish the Yankee big money contract rather than punish the player and/or team that started the whole mess. Burnett has already appealed the suspension, meaning he probably will make his next scheduled start on Sunday against Tampa in the Bronx.

The Yankees finish the day tied for 1st place in the AL East with the Red Sox, who are beginning to show signs of life again after a tough month of May. The Yankees can put the proverbial bullet in the heads of the Tampa Rays this weekend with a sweep at home, as Sabathia faces off against Price, Joba gets Garza, and Burnett gets Sonnanstine. It should be a well pitched series, but we now are all fully aware of what can happen when good hitters get their pitches in the new Cathedral.

As always, be good, take care of yourself, and take care of your buddy next to ya!

Beaning Fires Up Yanks, Helps Blasting of Rangers…

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One thing you can say about Vincente Padilla is that at least he is consistent. Last night in the Bronx, he beaned Mark Teixiera not once, but twice over the span of three innings. Did he get tossed? Nope. Double standard for say a guy like Burnett? Perhaps. Instead of hurting his team and charging the mound to put an ***-beating on Padilla, Tex instead took out rookie Rangers shortstop Elvis Andrus with a clean, hard slide that sparked the Bomber bats and helped them pulverize Padilla and the Rangers 12-3 last night in the New Boogie Down.

I was as angry as anybody when I saw Tex get belted again, and nothing had been done. No warning, no ejections, no nothing. Don’t be surprised however if one of the Rangers’ big bats gets his just due before this series is over…with last night’s big win, the Yankees have taken over the best record in the American League. Anybody wanna guess as to who has the best record overall? That’s right. Mr. Torre and his Dodgers…what kind of drama would October have if the Yankees and Dodgers-led by Torre and Donnie Baseball met in the Fall Classic?

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Now before I go much further, the one piece of interesting baseball outside of the Bronx tonight might be down the Atlantic coast in Washington, D.C. where former Yankee hurler Randy Johnson goes for win number 300. Okay, so he wasn’t to the Yankees what Curt Schilling was to the Red Sox. Johnson did win 34 games and struck out 383 hitters in his two seasons in the Bronx. He was consistent, he was cranky. He was a media nightmare, he was a winner. However much Randy Johnson hated playing in New York, or however much Yankee fans hated seeing the mullet/mustache combo every fifth day for the Bombers, he gave it his all, and at the end of the day, he will be remembered as one of the, if not the greatest lefty handed hurler in the history of baseball. Good luck tonight Mr. Johnson, and thanks for two solid years in the Big Apple!

As always, be good, take care of yourself, and take care of your buddy next to ya!

One last item, if you are looking for me on Facebook, I’m listed under Guillermo Brost in Las Vegas! Click and add me as your buddy! Take care~

1st Place…A New MLB Record…and Tex Comes Alive!

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I have to admit…I’ve been wrong. Wrong about quite a few things over the last month or so. Having watched the Bombers over the last 6 years or so, seeing less than stellar performances and effort when it really mattered, the first month of the 2009 baseball season looked eerily similar for the latest incarnation of the Bronx Bombers. I was wrong…for now. On May 1st, the Yankees sat in 3rd place in the American League East, 2 games back of the Toronto Blue Jays. The Jays appeared to be this year’s version of the Tampa Rays. Boy was I wrong about that….the bats died, and the young pitching looked young and beatable once again. Anyone who has followed baseball over the last handful of years who automatically think that if the Blue Jays stumbled, then in all likelyhood, the latest baseball dynasty, the Red Sox would ascend to their rightful place atop baseball’s toughest division. Boy, was I wrong yet again! Injuries along with inconsistent pitching from the likes of Josh Beckett and Jon Lester left the BoSox playing a mere two games over .500 for the month. Jason Bay cooled off to his more human-like self, and David Ortiz is still nowhere to be found…

The Yankees on the otherhand, rather than sitting pat at 13-10 after the first month, woke up along with the return of Alex Rodriguez. The first swing of the ’09 season for A-Rod produced a 3-run bomb and the Yankees never looked back for the entire month, posting a 17-11 record, and leapfrogged not only the Red Sox, but the Blue Jays to find themselves atop the division as of June 1st. Don’t get me wrong, the great thing about baseball season is that anything can happen, and that there is plenty of time for things to happen. I was left for dead in my ESPN Fantasy Baseball league a month ago…now, perhaps a few of my fellow competitors are somewhat interested in how my team does every night.

With A-Rod providing the much needed lineup protection, Mark Teixeira has come alive, much in the same fashion that Peter Frampton did over 30 years ago! Tex should be the American League Player of the Month of the month of May. He hit over a dozen home runs, and raised his average well over 60 points. The starting pitching has shown some consistency, as C.C. and Burnett are pitching up to their respective contract statuses, and the bullpen is still an 8th inning lockdown guy away from as Peter Gammons said “the team”. I would still like to see Xavier Nady come back and displace Nick Swisher in right field. Swisher is going to be a nice super utility guy, being able to play all three outfield spots, as well as first base occasionally. I still believe that Joba Chamberlain should be that 8th inning guy. Chien Ming Wang looks to have regained his filthy sinker in the bullpen, and Phil Hughes is a starter. Move Joba back and shorten the game to 6 innings. What is it going to take for Cashman and Girardi to realize this?

Melky Cabrera, even though he has been injured recently has proven his worth as the starting centerfielder when he comes back. I love Francisco Cervelli as the back up and the future catcher behind Posada. It’s time to let Jose Molina move on. Now that June is upon us, the Yankees finished off the Indians, taking 3 of 4 and extending their slim lead in the East to a single game. Tonight, the Bombers open a three game set with the Texas Rangers, who are one of the biggest stories of the ’09 season thus far. The AL West leading Rangers can still hit, but can now pitch just enough to get by. With the summer upon us, and the new stadium not holding baseballs very well, this series could be one for the ages offensively. Be sure to tune in and enjoy!

Last night, the Yankees set a Major League record by not committing an error for the 18th straight game, breaking the record of the 2006 Boston Red Sox. As I’ve always said, pitching, defense and timely hitting wins World Series titles, not payroll. The Yankees appear to be taking that advice to heart, as Mr. Teixeira once again shows why he was worth the $180 mil. Congrats Bombers and keep up the great work with the leather!

As always, be good, take care of yourself, and take care of your buddy next to ya!

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