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Daily Archives: March 3, 2010

Baseball!

The Yankees kicked off 2010 in classic 2009 style with a walk-off win in their first spring training game of the year, a 6-3 win over the visiting Pirates. It was a typically colorless spring training game. Neither team drew a walk, and the Yankees sent just three men to the plate in each of the first four innings, failing to get a ball out of the infield in those 12 at-bats. Alex Rodriguez got the first Yankee hit leading off the bottom of the fifth. Ramiro Peña and Nick Johnson got the Yankees a lead in the sixth. Jonathan Albaladejo blew that lead in the seventh, and Colin Curtis delivered the game-winning three-run homer in the ninth. Here are the details:

Lineup:

R – Derek Jeter (SS)
L – Curtis Granderson (CF)
S – Mark Teixeira (1B)
R – Alex Rodriguez (3B)
R – Marcus Thames (DH)
R – Jamie Hoffmann (RF)
L – Brett Gardner (LF)
R – Francisco Cervelli (C)
R – Ramiro Peña (2B)

Subs: Nick Johnson (1B), Reegie Corona (2B), Eduardo Nuñez (SS), Brandon Laird (3B), Mike Rivera (C), David Winfree (RF), Greg Golson (CF), Colin Curtis (LF), Jon Weber (DH)

Pitchers (IP): Chad Gaudin (2), Sergio Mitre (2), Alfredo Aceves (2), Jon Albaladejo (3 batters), Royce Ring (1 1/3), Jason Hirsh (2/3), Amaury Sanit (1)

Big Hits: A solo homer by Ramiro “Boom Boom” Peña off former Yankee Steven Jackson to lead off the bottom of the sixth and break the scoreless tie. An RBI double by Nick Johnson later in that inning. A three-run walk-off homer off Virgil Vazquez by Colin Curtis with one out in the bottom of the ninth. All three men went 1-for-2 in the game.

Who Pitched Well: Chad Gaudin pitched around an infield  single by Andrew McCutchen and his own error for two scoreless frames including a 1-2-3 second. Sergio Mitre and Alfredo Aceves each worked two perfect frames while striking out one. Royce Ring allowed an inherited runner to score on a groundout, but he entered with that runner on third and none out and retired all four men he faced, striking out two. Jason Hirsh struck out both men he faced. Amaury Sanit worked a perfect ninth. Those six pitchers allowed just one baserunner, McCutchen, and no runs while getting all 27 outs, seven by strikeout.

Who Didn’t: Jonathan Albaladejo started the seventh by hitting a batter on the thigh, then giving up a single and a two-run double, then got pulled.

Nice Plays: Nick Johnson made a nice, soft-handed pick at first base on a wide and low throw by Eduardo Nuñez.

Oopsies: Chad Gaudin fired a pickoff throw past Mark Teixeira in the first. Greg Golson threw wild on Erik Kratz’s RBI double in the seventh, missing two cutoff men and allowing Kratz to move to third, from where he was able to score on an groundout to first.

Ouchies: Francisco Cervelli was hit by a pitch on the meaty part of his left forearm in the third, but wasn’t injured, though is pride might have been when he tried to avenge the HBP with a steal and was thrown out. Joba Chamberlain (flu-like symptoms) threw his scheduled bullpen before the game, but looked tired and was sent home immediately after, in part to avoid his infecting his teammates, though Kevin Russo is already feeling sick. Joba is still expected to pitch in Friday’s game.

Other: It took Michael Kay less than a minute to annoy me . His narration over footage of Jeter breaking Lou Gehrig’s Yankee hit record during the YES broadcast’s opening montage included this sentence: “The record book was assaulted as milestones were etched into forever.” That’s the verbal equivalent of a Michael Bay explosion, making the similarity between two names seem like more than a coincidence. The inanity and wrong-headedness of his and, to a lesser degree, Ken Singleton’s commentary throughout the game reminded me why I started blogging. On the other hand, Jack Curry made his YES debut as a field reporter and brought some logic, wisdom, and restraint to the proceedings. I’m encouraged by his addition.

The new spring training hats worn by Pirates (the Yankees wore their regular season home duds) look really stupid, though less obnoxiously stupid than the ear-cutout caps they’ve replaced.

Curtis Granderson said he’s experimenting with contact lenses this spring, which suggests that he took his poor showing last year pretty hard.

Pitching In

Art of the Night

La Comtesse d’Haussonville, by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres (1843-44)

Beat of the Day

Batter Up

The Yankees’ first spring training game is this afternoon on YES.

Chat away, you lucky few who happen to be near a TV.

Taster’s Cherce

In a recent issue of Saveur, I saw this:

From the Lingham’s website:

The success of Lingham’s Chilli Sauce today can be partly linked to its continuing use of the original 1908 recipe. In those days there were no food preservatives as we find now, and so the sauce was and is still made from pure ingredients, fresh chillies, sugar, vinegar and salt. With the current use of colourings, flavourings, preservatives and all manner of other chemical additives in many of today’s sauces and condiments, Lingham’s sauce makes a pleasant change that consumers world wide appreciate. It is a natural, quality product, no chemicals, no bulking ingredients such as tomato added, and with a flavour that is popular in both the East and West. Incredibly Lingham’s now sells in over 25 countries, including UK, Finland, Switzerland, USA, Japan, Australia and Chile, well over 60% of production is destined for export. And being a pure product it meets with many international standards, Vegetarian Society approval, US FDA approval and it is of course halal certified. That is quite a success story for the company and also for Malaysia. Surely few other Malaysian products sell as widely as this sauce, a little bit of Malaysia on supermarket shelves in every continent bar Antarctica, and who knows I bet one could find the odd bottle there too, something to alleviate the icy cold!

The company now produces four other products alongside its original chilli sauce, and those are, chilli sauce with ginger, chilli sauce with garlic, chilli sauce with ginger and garlic, and Thai chilli sauce. Not to let the grass grow under their feet, the experts in the Lingham’s kitchens are working on new products as you read this, some still secret, but look out for 100% organic chilli sauce for one.

Everyone has their own preferred way to enjoy Lingham’s sauce, whether it be with noodles, nasi goring or chips. And now the company is compiling some alternative recipe ideas from Lingham’s fans world wide, look out for a chilli crab recipe from Asia, a gourmet beef burger recipe from the USA, not to mention recipes to make spicy new salad dressings, etc. using Lingham’s chilli sauces.

I love hot sauces and condiments of all kinds. I had a belated Christmas gift coming to me from my better half so I ordered a couple of bottles of this Lingham’s stuff from Amazon. They arrived Monday night. I eagerly unwrapped the package and tasted the bright red sauce. It was sweet, like chili sauce, and at first, I was disappointed. Sweeter than I thought. Good, a nice, clean and lasting kick, but it wasn’t love at first bite.

I tell you this because I cook all sort of healthiness for the wife–groats, flax seed, oat burgers, you name it. For Emily, food is primarily fuel–she is concerned with health, first and foremost. Her mother and her mother’s mother were health food nuts way before it became fashionable. They grew up eating tree bark, as Em likes to say. Taste, flavor, that stuff comes a distant second to nutrients.

Ninety percent of the time, I don’t eat what I make for her. But last night I was too tired to cook anything so I helped myself to a few spoonfuls of the lemon and dill brown rice, ricotta-feta, bell-pepper, olives and garlic casserole I made a few days ago (from the Fruitwood, er, Moosewood cookbook).

I got it down thanks to the Lingham’s hot sauce which was excellent in quantity and mixed with food. A little sweet at first but then not overwhelmingly sweet at all, with an appealing spicy aftertaste. Now, I wish I’d brought a bottle to work because all I can think about is that hot sauce. They also have garlic and ginger variations

I could get into this stuff.

Position Battles: Fifth Starter

There’s not a lot of intrigue in Yankee camp this year. The team arrives as defending champions and, as I wrote in my campers post, the 25-man roster is fairly predictable given the players in camp. Joe Girardi does have to work out how he’s going to distribute playing time in left and center field and decide on a basic batting order, but the roles of the players involved aren’t likely to change much no matter what he decides. The only significant suspense March holds for Yankee fans, save wondering if Nick Johnson can survive the month with all of his bones and ligaments intact, is in the battle for the fifth spot in the rotation. Fifth-starter battles are typically slap fights among assorted marginal minor leaguers and veteran retreads, but the battle in Yankee camp this spring pits the organization’s top two young arms against one another in a four-week competition that could have significant repercussions for the futures of both pitchers.

That would be a lot more exciting if there wasn’t as much fan fatigue over Joba Chamberlain’s pitching role as there is over Brett Farve’s flirtations with retirement, but it’s important to note that, for all of the debates, role changes, rule changes, and innings limits, the Yankees have Chamberlain exactly where they want him this spring, coming off a season of 160 innings pitched and ready to spend a full season in the rotation without having a cap placed on his innings pitched. For that reason, I believe that the Yankees are looking at the fifth starter’s job as Chamberlain’s to lose, though they’d ever admit it. Chamberlain is nine months older that Hughes and a season ahead of Hughes in terms of his innings progress (Hughes threw 111 2/3 innings between the minors, majors, and postseason last year; Chamberlain threw 100 1/3 in 2008). If Chamberlain claims the fifth-starter job this year, and the Yankees can find Hughes 150-odd innings, Hughes can follow Chamberlain into the rotation as a full-fledged starter in 2010 on the heals of the free agency of both Andy Pettitte and Javier Vazquez. If that happens, the Yankees will have established both young studs in the rotation before their 25th birthdays. They’re thisclose.

There are just two problems. First, Chamberlain got his innings to the right place last year, but his head and stuff seemed to go in the opposite direction. Second, getting Hughes 150 innings this year with Chamberlain eating up close to 200 in the rotation could prove to be as challenging as limiting Chamberlain to 160 last year.

Taking the latter first, the flip-side of the fifth-starter battle is the assumption that the loser will move back in to the eighth-inning role that both young pitchers have excelled at in recent seasons. In his 50 career major league relief appearances during the regular season, Chamberlain has posted a 1.50 ERA and struck out 11.9 men per nine innings while holding opposing hitters to a .182/.255/.257 line. Hughes, in 44 regular season relief appearances, all from last year, posted a 1.40 ERA and 11.4 K/9 while opposing batters hit .172/.228/.228. That sort of late-game dominance is hard to resist (thus the endless Joba debates), but both pitchers would be more valuable throwing 200 innings a year than 60, and given the impending free agency of Pettitte and Vazquez not to mention A.J. Burnett’s injury history, the Yankees have to resist slotting the loser of this spring’s competition into that role to such a degree that they’re unwilling to stretch him back out during the season, as they were with Hughes last year. Doing so would reset the clock on that pitcher’s journey toward the rotation and thus could severely damage his career path.

(more…)

West Coast Monster

Tyler Kepner catches up with Hideki Matsui at Angels camp (sniff):

Matsui is already comfortable in the clubhouse. He played with Abreu and Juan Rivera on the Yankees and has known Torii Hunter since an all-star event in Japan in 2002. Matsui and Hunter have adjoining lockers.

“He’s got a really good sense of humor,” Hunter said. “It’s unbelievable. I’ve been bringing him up in our meetings at 9:30 every morning. It’s like a comedy show. He gets us warmed up, laughing, cracking up, sweating, and we go out on the field happy. He fits right in. He told me, ‘Man, I feel comfortable here.’ ”

And here’s another bit from Kepner:

“You hear about the professionalism, you hear about the talent level, you hear about how he prepares,” Angels Manager Mike Scioscia said. “When you see it first-hand, it just validates everything that’s said about him.”

Scioscia added, “I think when a guy like Derek Jeter says he’s the most professional guy he’s played with in his career, that statement says it all.”

One last piece on Matsui, this one from Robert Whiting, author of the classic baseball book, You Gotta Have Wa.

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