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Daily Archives: June 12, 2003

HERE WE GO AGAIN…

HERE WE GO AGAIN…

The Yanks trail the Astros by the score of 5-4 after six full in the Bronx. The Yanks are 0-21 this year when they are behind after six innings. Do you feel lucky? I don’t, but what the hell: Let’s Go Yan-kees!

Remember how Bronx Banter reader Adam said it couldn’t get any worse than last night? He amended that statement when he saw who was batting clean-up today for New York.

It still hasn’t rained. I have tickets to tomorrow night’s game. Looks like the rain will wait until we jam the Stadium to watch Roger tomorrow night.

CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM Lee

CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM

Lee Sinins is reporting that the Mets have called a 4 pm press conference. They haven’t announced why, but it looks as if Steve Phillips will finally get kicked to the curb.

Meanwhile, after 4 innings the Yanks have a 3-2 lead on the Astros.

You know it occured to me that for all the ranting and raving I’ve done about the Yankees offense last night, the Astros do deserve a good deal of credit for their accomplishment. They are no zhlubs, and that is one Grade A bullpen they’ve got.

HOW LOW CAN YOU

HOW LOW CAN YOU GO?

Here is an e-mail I got today from Adam, a Yankee fan who saw the Yanks get no-hit in person:

I was at the game last night – it was even worst in person. Besides Posada swinging 3-0, and the obvious no-hitter, here are some other things that helped cause a sleepless night.
1. Other than Soriano’s sinking liner and a fly out to the warning track by Giambi, there wasn’t really anything close to a hit by the Yankees all night. The Yankees are flailing, and usually missing, at everything. Four strike outs in one inning, seven in a row at one point, thirteen for the game.

2. Jeter looked completely overmatched. He struck out three times, and, while it’s tough not to look bad while doing that, he looked like a rookie flailing away in his first at bat. Twelve strike outs in nineteen at bats, me thinks Mr. Jeter needs to do some help.

3. Soriano forgetting to cover first on the bunt. This is simply inexcusable, I’m not sure if this is a result of poor coaching or Sori’s spaciness, either way it was painful to watch.

4. Weaver stinks. He got booed and rightly so. He wasn’t fooling anyone on Houston, every hit was hard and usually in the gap.

5. More bouncers up the middle. It’s amazing how many singles up the middle the Yankees give up because neither Jeter nor Soriano can get to them.

6. Al Reyes – meet Acevedo Part Duex.

7. Pinch hitting Bubba Trammel for Ventura. Nothing like taking a guy who hasn’t played in about a month and asking him to break up a no-hitter.

8. Todd Zeile. Maybe it’s me but it seems like he’s in the hole 0-2 as soon as he steps in the batters box.

9. Juan Rivera is completely overmatched.
This is as low as it gets, I hope.

I hate to sound like a downer, but I think it get definitely get lower. Fortunately, it can also get a heck of a lot better too. Adam sent me another e-mail (which I inadvertantly erased) and added two more gaffes—Jeter’s throwing error, and the you-got-I-got-it-nobody-got-it dropped-fly ball between Juan Rivera and Hideki Matsui.
Here is another note regarding the game. According to Lee Sinins in his ATM report today:

None of the 6 pitchers the Astros used gave up a hit.

It was the first time the Astros didn’t give up a hit since Darryl Kile, on September 8, 1993.

It was the first time the Yankees didn’t get a hit since Melido Perez did it on July 12, 1990. It’s been inaccurately reported everywhere that the
last time was by Hoyt Wilhelm, on September 20, 1958. However, although the game only lasted 6 innings, let’s look at that game. Perez pitched all of the innings. He got credit for a complete game, he got credit for a shutout. He also didn’t get any hits added to his season total. If that’s not a no hitter, then no game in baseball history could qualify a no hitter.

Also, don’t forget to check out the Replacement Level Yankee Blog for an hilarious and insightful take on the Bronx Zoo.

BERNIE, MY DEAR

With his first full lenth album set to drop in a couple of weeks, Bernie Williams has just signed a deal with Paul McCartney’s company MPL Communications. McCartney’s company will market Bernie’s music for commericals and movies and anything else they can think of.

JOE BLASTS BOMBERS There

JOE BLASTS BOMBERS

There have been rumblings for over a month now that what these Yankees need is some tough love from their manager Joe Torre.

Yesterday, Joel Sherman wrote:

Torre has come under greater scrutiny – and not just by Steinbrenner.

If nothing else, this season is exemplifying just how much quality players and a self-policing clubhouse could elevate a manager. No knock on Torre, whose serene demeanor and dignity ideally uplifted the Yankee roster for years. But it sure is easier to push the right buttons when nearly every button offers a good option, and when the clubhouse core motivates and regulates itself.

Torre may still be right, that his reassuring manner will evoke the most from a talented team again. However, this group looks often like it needs a kick, not a hug.

Well, Yankee fans, the media, and even George got their wish, as Torre lit into his hapless team after being no-hit by six, count em, six Houston pitchers:

“Whatever kind of history it was, it was terrible,” he said sharply. “It was one of the worst games I’ve ever been involved in. I have no explanation. Usually I do, but I can’t find a reason for what happened. The whole game stunk.”

…”We didn’t play baseball,” Torre said harshly. “I don’t know what we were playing.”

Today Joel Sherman opined:

This 8-0 Houston humiliation even left the perpetually find-the-positive Joe Torre totally negative. He lambasted his team beyond closed doors, perhaps in the strongest way of his tenure, and called this the worst effort of his Yankee stint. He normally does not pin out players publicly, but said Jorge Posada missed a take sign when he grounded out with a 3-0 count and the bases loaded in the third, ending the Yanks’ one offensive glimmer. And he finally acknowledged that at least on this night his mentally adrift team was mentally adrift.

In describing this as “a total, inexcusable performance,” Torre’s anger seemed directed as much to his Boss as his 25 players. George Steinbrenner has wanted his manager sterner. You have to wonder if Torre’s fury will be enough now to satiate Steinbrenner. Especially since Torre had said he liked the team’s tenor in the last week, which meant the manager was either blind-sided last night or simply does not know his club anymore.

Mike Lupica added:

The door to the Yankee clubhouse stayed closed a long time. It turns out there had been a team meeting. When someone asked Torre who had spoken, he raised a hand like a kid in class. “Just me,” he said.

He would be asked later if he was hot addressing his team.

“I’m unhappy,” Torre said. “Whatever hot is.”

“I can’t find a reason for what happened tonight,” Torre said.

“It was a total, inexcusable performance,” he said.

“We can’t hide from this, or use any excuses,” Torre said. “We’re all responsible, starting with me.”

…He talked about Jorge Posada missing a sign and swinging at a 3-0 pitch.

“We weren’t thinking well tonight,” Torre said. “Once things started snowballing, we lost our composure.”

…Torre talked until he was talked out. His phone kept ringing. He ignored it. He was asked about the owner and said, “There’s really nothing he could tell me now – or do – that would make this worse than it is.”

It is fitting that the Yanks were no-hit. Considering how they’ve been playing it should not come as a surprise, as Rob Neyer noted in his column today. Neyer tells it like it is, especially regarding the declining play of Derek Jeter:

Jeter’s production has been falling steadily since 1999, when he might have deserved the MVP Award (which went to Ivan Rodriguez instead).

It’s tempting to assume that Jeter’s not fully recovered form his shoulder separation, and that he’ll start hitting either this season or, at worst, next season after he’s had a winter to recover.

Maybe. But the best evidence suggests that the power he showed in 1999 was something of a fluke, and also that his 2002 numbers were the rule rather than the exception. And if that’s the case, the Yankees’ fortunes this season could have a real impact on Jeter’s image. To this point, a lot of people don’t have any idea that Jeter has gone from being a truly great player to a merely good one, because he still has that postseason glow about him. But if Jeter finishes this season with another sub-.800 OPS and the Yankees don’t play in October, then what kind of case will his defenders make?

“Chemistry” is a great argument when you’re winning … but when the winning ends, you have to fall back on the actual performance. And when the performance looks like this, it’s pretty hard to justify $16.5 million.

Steve Keane asked me what was worse, the Yankees getting no-hit or Posada swinging 3-0 with the bases loaded. I think Posada swinging 3-0 felt worse to me, especially when I learned that he missed a sign. Posada may be the best hitting catcher in the game, but for someone who blasted his teammates after the Yanks lost to the Angels in the playoffs last year, for a guy who is a veteran of championship teams, Posada plays with his head in his ass more often than not.

The Yanks can save some face this afternoon if they come away with a victory, but the damage has been done. The wheels are in motion in George’s universe and the fallout is going to be dramatic. After weeks of cool weather and rain, it is suddenly hot and humid like August in New York. It’s like soup out there and it still hasn’t rained. The game today will probably get washed out. Either way, Hurricaine George is on it’s way. Right on the heels of Joe Torre’s rainstorm.

Yankee-haters rejoice!

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"This ain't football. We do this every day."
--Earl Weaver