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Daily Archives: August 2, 2009

The Melkman Delivers More than Thrice

A writer friend once told me that one of the best things he ever did was play baseball in his Thirties. The experience gave him a true idea of how difficult the game is to play well. I played ball in high school but never competitively after that. And the truth is, I’ve become less physically active in my Thirties, which is to say I’m far from being in-shape. Still, I’ve been hanging around the Uptown Sports Complex near me in the west Bronx for a story I’m working on, and today I had my second hitting lesson in the past couple of weeks. Hitting off a tee, soft toss, live bp, ground balls.

batting

It was humbling. My mind remembers the mechanics: pivot and explode with the hips, keep your weight back, hands back and then swing down and through the ball, it’s just that my body can’t keep up. I lunged, shifting my weight to my front leg. In no time, I was exhausted, but the instructor kept up the pace. Finally, he had mercy on me. And I was happy, drenched in sweat.

It’s not that I expected to do much better. Hitting is too difficult to pick back up that quickly. But it was a good exercise. It reminded me what a science it is, and how tough it is to do well. My mind was thinking about my weight and my shoulder dropped; I concentrated on my hands and didn’t thrust my hips. Oy.  Think I’ll hit the gym, do some running, and work on the legs before I go back and hit again. 

Winning games isn’t easy, as the Yanks have shown us in Chicago. But they won today, 8-5 and something unusual happened. In the top of the ninth, Melky Cabrera booked around the bases and slid into third with a triple, making him the first Yankee to hit for a cycle since Tony Fernandez in 1995. He slid, yelled and raised his fist back at the Yankee dugout, and later scored. It capped-off a terrific day for Cabrera who helped bail-out CC Sabathia (“CC was so-so,” said Michael Kay on the YES broadcast) and the Bombers.

No sweep for the White Sox. Yanks are still a half-game ahead of the Red Sox who won again today. The Bombers have tomorrow off and then get to face Doc Halladay on Tuesday night.

Then, the fun starts back in the boogie down come Thursday: Joba, AJ, CC and Andy will go against the Red Sox. There will be no lack of drama.

Play Today, Win Today

What more is there to say?

Moment of Silence

thurman20munson

Thurman Munson died 30 years ago today.

Putting Out the Fire (With Gasoline)

Ah, wonderful. AJ Burnett finally had that lemon of a performance as he put his team in an early hole that buried them for the day. They had their chances but the Yankees have seemingly done everything wrong in the first three games in Chicago. Once again, they did not come through with the key hit with runners on base, did not mount any significant rallies. Meanwhile, the Sox piled on late and as the White Sox cruised, 14-4. Coupled with another Red Sox win, the Yanks lead is down to just a half-a-game. Boston and New York are tied in the loss column.

Anyone get a wee bit frustrated watching that game yesterday? Did the broadcasters on Fox put you over the edge? I was hanging by a thread myself.

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