"A New York Treasure" --Village Voice

(Gruesome, Isn’t it?)

For the second consecutive night, the Yankees looked old, flat, and old. Mike Mussina allowed six runs off eight hits and three walks over four innings as the Bombers fell to the Orioles, 6-4. The game lasted three hours and fifteen minutes, brief considering this was New York vs. Baltimore, but it seemed longer. The Yanks seemed out-of-it mentally. In the fourth inning, Melvin Mora stole second and neither Robinson Cano or Derek Jeter, who limped for most of the game after fouling a ball off his right foot in his first at-bat, covered the bag. When was the last time you remember Jeter making a mental mistake like that? The Yankee shortstop was removed in the ninth inning. Again, something you don’t normally see.

Sean Henn pitched well in relief, but the Yankees sorely need a strong outing from a starter:

“Every team in the league counts on its rotation, but we count on our rotation a lot,” said Mussina, who gave up six runs in four innings. “It’s going to make or break our season, and we didn’t do very well the first handful of starts here. It’s disappointing. We’ve got to improve.”
(Kepner, N.Y. Times)

Mussina nibbled all night and couldn’t hit his spots. In light of that, I’m not overwhelmed with confidence in Kei Igawa this afternoon. This might be one of those days were the bats have to carry the team.

Meanwhile, in Dunder Mifflin Land, Phillip Hughes pitched well in his Triple A debut.

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