Cannonball A meets Extra P.
[Photo Credit: Herbert List]
The Yanks play two against the O’s today as the trading deadline enters the home stretch. Rob Neyer has a piece on the summer trade-a-thon in today’s New York Times:
The most important thing to know about baseball trades made in July is that most of them do not amount to much. Few of the stars traded to contenders will be the difference between winning and losing, and few of the young prospects traded for stars will become stars. Still, we have had a flurry of activity leading to Sunday’s deadline for nonwaiver trades (don’t ask), with stars like Carlos Beltran, and numerous lesser lights changing teams and kindling hope among their new teams’ fans.
And although most of these deadline deals are ultimately good for all parties — contrary to popular opinion, baseball executives are generally intelligent — there have been a few notably disastrous deadline trades over the years.
Meanwhile, at the Stadium, Bartolo Colon takes the hill.
1. Gardner CF
2. Nunez SS
3. Teixeira DH
4. Cano 2B
5. Swisher RF
6. Chavez 3B
7. Posada 1B
8. Dickerson LF
9. Cervelli C
Long day of baseball ahead of us. Stay hyrdrated and:
Let’s Go Yank-ees!
[Photo Credit: Natasha Dominguez via Je Suis Perdu]
On July 28th, the St. Petersburg Times had nine journalists write about a game between the Yankees and Rays:
FIFTH INNING
Meter tells a story that the box score doesn’t
ST. PETERSBURG — In his taxi parked outside the stadium, Steven “Sven” Erikson cautiously admitted that he is not a big Rays fan. He followed the game on his laptop so he’d have something to talk about with his fares afterward.
In his 60 years, Erikson said he has been a wrangler in Colorado, sold men’s clothing in New York City, attended seminary in Pennsylvania and worked as a financial planner in Michigan. Tired of corporate culture, he moved to Treasure Island a couple of years ago and got a job driving a cab.
Some fans are giddy after a win, or despondent after a loss. Some drink too much and can barely remember where they live. A few offer an opinion on the Rays’ stadium debate. In the first inning, a woman who forgot to lock her car hired Erikson to drive her a mile to where she parked. She didn’t like the $5.80 fare and tipped him 20 cents.
Back in line, the Rays put two men on before Longoria hit it deep to center where Curtis Granderson snagged the ball at the wall.
The Yankees fans he drove home never mentioned it.
Chris Zuppa, Times staff writer
Most cool.
Yanks vs. the O’s. Four games. Preview, Clifford.
1. Gardner LF
2. Jeter SS
3. Granderson CF
4. Teixeira 1B
5. Cano 2B
6. Swisher RF
7. Chavez 3B
8. Posada DH
9. Martin C
Never mind the competition, just win, baby and:
Let’s Go Yank-ees!
[Photo Credit: the most gifted Joel Zimmer]
Food 52 gives us Flank Steak on Texas Toast with Chimichurri. Why the hell not?
The trade rumors continue to swirl. Yanks in the mix on many fronts, or none at all.
No game tonight so schmooze-away.
[Photo Credit: David Tribby]
There is a report (in Japanese) that former Yankee pitcher Hideki Irabu is dead. It is believed that he committed suicide.
[Photo Credit: Friday 1970]
Yo, I was on Jesse Goyd’s Buckshot Boogaloo Podcast recently where we talked about Lucian Freud, Francis Ford Coppola and Mariano Rivera. Dig it.
Well, it wasn’t going to last forever, was it? The M’s had to win sometime. Phil Hughes didn’t pitch poorly. He went six innings and was trailing 2-1 when the bullpen took over, the Yankee defense stumbled, and the Mariners hopped, jumped and skipped to a 9-2 win.
Tomorrow gives a day of rest then four games against the O’s this weekend.
[Photo Credit: particular particules]