Pete Nice remembers MCA at Gawker.
[Featured Image via: Cos]
David Robertson hadn’t given up a run since last September. He was due for a beatin’.
Then again, Jack Curry reminds us that Mariano Rivera blew3 of his first 6 save opportunities back in 1997.
Derek Jeter SS
Curtis Granderson CF
Alex Rodriguez 3B
Robinson Cano 2B
Mark Teixeira 1B
Nick Swisher RF
Raul Ibanez DH
Russell Martin C
Dewayne Wise LF
Phelps goes again. Plus, Chad Jennings has the latest on Mo.
[Photo Credit: MCNY]
Andy Pettitte is on his way but he’s not what the Yanks need writes Tyler Kepner in the Times:
Rays Manager Joe Maddon credited Ron Porterfield, the team’s head athletic trainer, for his pitchers’ durability, but Hellickson said he assumed all teams had the same kind of programs. Cashman said the pressure of New York makes the comparison unfair.
“I know they have a lot younger guys, but Pineda’s young and he just went down,” Cashman said. “I know the innings here are more stressful than the innings there, no doubt about that. Throwing 100 pitches in New York versus 100 pitches in Tampa are two different stresses. The stress level’s radically different on each pitch.”
Maddon said Cashman’s theory was worth considering. In a cosmic way, he could have added, the Rays deserve a benefit from playing before small crowds in an outdated home ballpark. In any case, Maddon said, the starters are essential to their model.
“Without that pitching, all the other wonderful stuff that we are, I don’t think really works nearly as effectively,” Maddon said. “It all starts with the starting pitching. That particular group and that part of our team really permits us to do all the other things well.”
While you are there, check out Hunter Atkins’s story about Joe Maddon–the King of Shifts.
[Photo Via Rays Renegade]
You’ve had a long day and seen hundreds or maybe thousands of people, faces that you’ve barely registered. You are tired and distracted and then, alone on a subway platform there’s a woman. She’s dolled-up, a vision.
Yes, life is good.
[Picture by Ramin Talaie via the New York Times; thanks to This Isn’t Happiness (again and again)]
My dear, my dear, my dear you do not know me very well but let me tell you of the feelings I have for you.
[Photo Via: The Complications You Could Do Without]
[Drawing of the Dominican Dandy posted at Josh Powell’s tumblr site; found via Pitchers n Poets]
Here’s Emma Allen writing in the New Yorker about April Bloomfield’s recent book party.
[Photo Credit: Cherry Patter]
Kudos to Rolling Stone who reprinted Jonathan Cott’s 1976 profile of Maurice Sendak:
In the Night Kitchen, one of Sendak’s greatest works, shows little Mickey falling naked through the night into the Oliver Hardy bakers’ dough, kneading and pounding it into a Hap Harrigan plane, flying over the city, diving into a giant milk bottle, then sliding back into his bed to sleep. It is a work that pays extraordinary homage to Sendak’s early aesthetic influences – especially to Winsor McCay – to the cheap, full-color children’s books of the period, as well as to the feelings about New York City he had as a little boy.
“When I was a child,” he told Virginia Haviland, “there was an advertisement which I remember very clearly. It was for the Sunshine bakers, and it read: ‘We Bake While You Sleep!’ It seemed to me the most sadistic thing in the world, because all I wanted to do was stay up and watch… it seemed so absurdly cruel and arbitrary for them to do it while I slept. And also for them to think I would think that that was terrific stuff on their part, and would eat their product on top of that. It bothered me a good deal, and I remember I used to save the coupons showing the three fat little Sunshine bakers going off to this magic place at night, wherever it was, to have their fun, while I had to go to bed. This book was a sort of vendetta book to get back at them and to say that I am now old enough to stay up at night and know what’s happening in the Night Kitchen!
“Another thing is: I lived in Brooklyn, and to travel to Manhattan was a big deal, even though it was so close. I couldn’t go by myself, and I counted a good deal on my elder sister. She took my brother and me to Radio City Music Hall, or the Roxy, or some such place. Now, the point of going to New York was that you ate in New York. Somehow to me New York represented eating. And eating in a very fashionable, elegant, superlatively mysterious place like Longchamps. You got dressed up, you went uptown – it was night when you got there and there were lots of windows blinking – and you went straight to a place to eat. It was one of the most exciting things of my childhood. Cross the bridge and see the city approaching, get there and have your dinner, then go to a movie and come home. So, again, In the Night Kitchen is a kind of homage to New York City, the city I loved so much and still love.”
I love this bit:
Maurice’s sister Natalie gave him his first book, The Prince and the Pauper. “A ritual began with that book,” Sendak once told Virginia Haviland, “which I recall very clearly. The first thing was to set it up on the tablel and stare at it for a long time. Not because I was impressed with Mark Twain; it was just such a beautiful object. Then came the smelling of it… it was printed on particularly fine paper, unlike the Disney books I had gotten previous to that. The Prince and the Paper – Pauper – smelled good and it also had a shiny laminated cover. I flipped over that. I remember trying to bite into it, which I don’t imagine is what my sister intended when she bought the book for me. But the last thing I did with the book was to read it. It was all right. But I think it started then, my passion for books and bookmaking. There’s so much more to a book than just the reading. I’ve seen children touch books, fondle books, smell books, and it’s all the reason in the world why books should be beautifully produced.”
Give the article a read. It’s terrific and well worth your time.
Yanks and Rays, first of three in the Bronx. Nova vs. Shields.
Derek Jeter SS
Curtis Granderson CF
Alex Rodriguez 3B
Robinson Cano 2B
Mark Teixeira 1B
Nick Swisher RF
Raul Ibanez DH
Russell Martin C
Eduardo Nunez LF
Let’s hope the weather cooperates. If it does for rest of the week Andy Pettitte will start on Sunday afternoon.
Never mind the storm clouds:
Let’s Go Yank-ees!
[Photo Credit: Bron Stadheim]
Check out this gorgeous photo gallery by John and Tina Reid over at Everyday I Show.
The Frick Collection, on the low. Secrets of the great museum from Gothamist.
[Photo Credit:Jake Dobkin/Gothamist]
Map Quest.
Course of Empire (Mixmaster 1), 2003, Matthew Cusick.
In town for a visit?
Serious Eats offers a guide of where to eat in NYC. Nicely done.
[Photo Credit: Trippy]
Here’s a vague update on Mo. The news is not good. What it means I don’t know.
[Photo Credit: Daniella Zalcman for The Wall Street Journal]