"A New York Treasure" --Village Voice

Daily Archives: April 7, 2009

On the Mend

I just heard that Jack Curry, one of the most respected baseball writers in country, was in an accident on Sunday down in Philadelphia where he was covering Opening Day.  He suffered bruised ribs, according to an e-mail I received from a friend but is doing okay. 

Here’s wishing Jack a quick and full recovery.

Dude, this platter is for you:

Card Corner: Willie Stargell

stargell

As a young baseball fan growing up in the 1970s, I liked and admired Willie Stargell so much that I was once motivated to do something very foolish: at the age of nine, I stole his elusive 1974 baseball card from my next door neighbor’s house. (I’m not sure why I became so infatuated with the 1974 card; I actually liked the 1973 card a lot more, since it was an action shot, showing a massive Stargell stretching to receive a throw at first base ahead of the arrival of Philadelphia’s Del Unser. I also preferred the 1973 card of Bobby Bonds, which features an unexpected appearance by Stargell, who is attempting to retire Bonds in a rundown play. Two stars on one card, yes!)

Fortunately, my neighbor Hank Taylor—the older brother of one of my best friends, Alec—knew about my infatuation with the Pittsburgh Pirates’ slugger and quickly confronted me about the pilfered card. Feeling humiliated at being caught and guilty over what I had done, I returned the stolen item. As I look back at that incident today, I’m tempted to make the following conclusion: in a strange and indirect way, Willie Stargell taught me a simple but important lesson about how it was wrong to take things that didn’t belong to me.

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Beat Down

Russell Adams and Tim Marchman have an article in today’s Wall Street Journal about the grim future of the newspaper beat writer:

Beginning this season, the Washington Post will rely on the Baltimore Sun to cover the Orioles, while the Sun will leave its Nationals coverage to the Post, part of a broader content-sharing deal being replicated at papers around the country. The Hartford Courant quit sending a reporter on the road with the Red Sox, and the Worcester Telegram & Gazette has cut its Red Sox road presence to between 35-40 games from 70 last year. And the New York Times now sends only one person on certain road trips that in the past would have called for two, Mr. Jolly said.

Still, some major dailies are not about to take reporters off the baseball beat. The cash-strapped Boston Herald has cut its city desk by more than half in the past five years, but tinkering with Red Sox coverage “was never really an option,” said Tony Massarotti, who covered the team for the Herald for nearly 15 years before moving to the rival Globe last fall. “It would be suicide, quite honestly.”

Some teams and organizations say the decrease in newspaper coverage may hamper their ability to promote themselves. Mark Cuban, owner of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks, wrote recently on his blog that to let newspapers die is a “recipe for disaster” for professional sports leagues because newspapers, however weakened, remain the leagues’ best and only link to a mass audience. He said he has spoken to other sports executives about creating a league-backed “beat writer cooperative” to guarantee a minimum number of daily stories on each local team.

Today, Oscar Madison would be a blogger. Think his roommate would leave comments signed F.U.?

News of the Day – 4/7/09

Panic in the Streets … $207 million team starts 0-1!

OK … here’s the real news:

A $441 million spending spree brought the Yankees the winter’s biggest haul, but their self-loving $300 million slugger—a former steroid user, in case you hadn’t heard—starts the year on the DL as the team moves into its charmless $1.3 billion new ballpark, the House That Ruthlessness Built. This is the third consecutive year the Yanks top the pre-season Hit List, but money guarantees nothing in the top-heavy AL East. (800 RS/635 RA)

  • Tyler Kepner writes about the risks the Yankees are taking in signing CC Sabathia:

The Yankees gave him the most money ever guaranteed to a pitcher — $161 million for seven years — without any precedent to study.

“There’s no doubt there’s risk,” General Manager Brian Cashman said. “You try to assess the ability of the player and you look at body type and all those things. Regardless, even if there were some comparables, good or bad — which there weren’t — there are always stand-alones.” .  .  .

“You look at his legs, and they’re huge, but they’re solid muscle,” the Yankees’ pitching coach, Dave Eiland, said. “For me, that’s where most of his weight is, and that’s good weight. He’s 6-foot-7, big-boned, a thick guy. At 250 pounds, he’d look like Manute Bol, maybe.”

Sabathia’s bulk helps hide the ball in his delivery, and his height gives a better downward plane on his pitches. His reach allows him to release the ball a bit closer to the hitter.

[My take: Well, its not Wayne Garland-risky, but its still a LOT of money.  I don’t know if ANY pitcher is worth being in the top 5 in annual salary.]

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Rhythm Is Gonna Get You

Sabathia wipes his brow (Greg Fiume/Getty Images)CC Sabathia couldn’t command his fastball in yesterday’s season opener, and though the Yankee offense made a valiant attempt to dig out of the early hole their new ace put them in, they fell just short. Then the bullpen allowed things to unravel.

Sabathia struggled from the very beginning, opening his Yankee career by allowing a single to Brian Roberts, bouncing a wild pitch to move Roberts to second, and issuing a four-pitch walk to Adam Jones. Another wild pitch moved the runners to second and third with just one out, but Sabathia got out of that jam with a couple of ground ball outs.

Sabathia worked a 1-2-3 second, but started the third by giving up a leadoff single to Cesar Izturis on a 3-1 pitch and walking Roberts. Adam Jones tried to bunt the runners up on the first pitch he saw from Sabathia, but after bunting the first pitch foul, swung away and crushed a second-pitch fastball to the right-field gap for a triple, plating both runners. Jones then scored himself on a sac fly.

A slick 4-6-3 double play got Sabathia out of another jam in the fourth after he put runners on the corners with one out, but he wasn’t so lucky in the fifth. Roberts led off that inning with a soaring ground-rule double just beyond Brett Gardner’s reach in the right-field gap. After that, the Orioles bled him, scoring three more runs without getting another ball out of the infield.

Jones followed Roberts’ double with a single that tipped off the glove of a diving Cody Ransom, who had been playing in to guard against the bunt. With runners on the corners, Nick Markakis hit a tapper on a hit-and-run to the vacated shortstop position. Derek Jeter was able to get to the ball, but not in time to get an out. That scored Roberts. Melvin Mora followed with a well-hit ball down the left-field line that Ransom was able stop, but didn’t field cleanly, allowing Mora to reach with a bases-loading single. Aubrey Huff then plated Jones and advanced the other runners with a groundout to Cano. With first base open, Joe Girardi had Sabathia intentionally walk righty Ty Wigginton to pitch to lefty Luke Scott with two outs and a force at every base. Sabathia walked Scott, ending his Yankee debut with this line: 4 1/3 IP, 8 H, 6 R, 5 BB, 0 K.

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