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Larry Mahnken and SG's | ||
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Featuring: Larry Mahnken SG sjohnny TVerik Sean McNally Fabian McNally John Brattain ![]()
The New York Yankees Vintage World Series Films DVD Set, available from A&E. Yankees Tickets World Series Tickets MLB All Star Tickets NFL Tickets Purchase your Onlineseats.com is your #1 source for MLB tickets, NY Mets Tickets, Cubs Tickets, Yankees Tickets, Red Sox Tickets, Giants Tickets, Astros Tickets, Angels Tickets, Phillies Tickets.
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"Wow, Larry. You've produced 25% of the comments on this thread and
said nothing meaningful. That's impressive, even for you."
"After reading all your postings and daily weblog...I believe you have truly become the Phil Pepe of this generation. Now this is not necessarily a good thing."
"you blog sucks, it reeds as it was written by the queer son of mike lupica and roids clemens. i could write a better column by letting a monkey fuk a typewriter. i dont need no 181 million dollar team to write a blog fukkk the spankeees"
"i think his followers have a different sexual preference than most men"
"Boring and predictable."
"Are you the biggest idiot ever?"
"I'm not qualified to write for online media, let alone mainstream
media."
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Disclaimer: If you think this is the official website of the New York Yankees, you're an idiot. Go away. Wednesday, June 29, 2005
NY Times: Quantrill and Stanton May Be Let Go Thursday by SG
According to the linked NY Times Article,
Tuesday, June 28, 2005
by SG
A tie game in the ninth inning or beyond is the highest leverage situation in baseball. In that position, a smart manager will bring in his best relievers in order since a single run will likely decide the game.
Happy Birthday to Me by SG
Back in April, Larry wrote about the Yankees and his birthday. I started thinking back to the Yankees record on my birthday, and I seemed to remember winning most of the time. So I went back to check, and since 1991 the Yankees are 14-1 on my birthday.
Friday, June 24, 2005
Do or Die by Larry Mahnken
Wednesday afternoon's loss was not the disaster it may have felt like. The Yankees lost to Scott Kazmir, a young stud in the making, and sometimes you just lose to a good young pitcher, even a day after scoring 20 runs. Carl Pavano lost once again at home, but he didn't pitch as badly as he has in his previous struggles, he simply gave up two ill-timed home runs.
Wednesday, June 22, 2005
A Call To Duty by Larry Mahnken
Consider the following:
How to build a loser by SG
A) Sign Jaret Wright
Fun Stat Of The Day by Larry Mahnken
Yankees record when Shitmack starts: 29-30
OMG! U GOT PWNED!!!!! LOL, NOOB!!!1!!!!!111! by Larry Mahnken
Turning off a game when it seems hopeless, only to miss the dramatic comeback later on, is not that rare. It happened to my friend Jeff on October 31st, 2001. And then again on November 1st, 2001 (that time he turned it off after the second out was recorded in the ninth).
Wow. Just Wow. by SG
I don't know what to say about tonight's game. I started writing an entry ripping Randy Johnson's performance to shreds after the third inning. When Scott Proctor gave up another two runs to put the game 'out of reach', I added Joe Torre to my entry too. However, Proctor settled down after a shaky fourth, and the Yankee offense started chipping away.
Pitch 1 - In play, run scoring play by Sean McNally
Tonight's Tampa-New York game is pretty much a microcosm of the 2005 season to date: Crappy start, flashes of good play, more crappy play then a stretch of unbelievably amazing baseball.
Monday, June 20, 2005
Long Distance Request and Dedication by Sean McNally
Ten days ago, if someone told me the Yanks would be the hottest team in the division, I'd have laughed at you. Hell, you would have laughed at you.
Alive by Larry Mahnken
A week ago I was ready to give up. I didn't want to give up, but I was pretty much reconciled to the inevitability of the Yankees' season being lost. Most teams would see being two games below .500 -- and "only" 6½ games out of first -- as an opportunity to contend. But the Yankees are in a tough position, because they simply don't have the same flexibility that those other teams have. The Blue Jays may not be able to take on a lot of payroll, but they have pieces that can be moved to make a deal. The Yankees' most valuable parts are expensive, and it would be difficult for the Yankees to move them and get anything of value in return.
Sunday, June 19, 2005
Will the real Yankees please stand up? by SG
So far, 2005 has been a dizzying mix of highs and lows. After starting off 11-19, the Yankees reeled off 16 wins in 18 games to move to 27-21. This was followed by another slump, where the Yankees went 3-11 to fall to 30-32. Now, a 6 game winning streak has moved the Yankees back up to a 36-32 record, and has many Yankee fans excited again.
Stand up, stand up and shout... by Sean McNally
The Yankees needed to get this homestand off to a good start, but this has probably exceeded most people's expectations.
Saturday, June 18, 2005
by Larry Mahnken
Just a brief post about last night's game, as my time is brief.
A Good Wind's A-Blowin' by Sean McNally
When this homestand opened, I compared it to the Alamo. I really didn't think that the Yankees would be playing the part of Santa Ana's Mexicans. Last night's 9-6 win was the second comeback win in three days for the Bombers, though it didn’t start out that way After swapping scoreless first innings, New York touched Carlos Zambrano for a run in the second, then three in the third, highlighted (to Yankee fans at least) by a run scoring error by former bane of our existence Enrique Wilson. Carl Pavano, however, did his best to make sure that the four-run lead he was staked to didn't stand up - giving two back on three consecutive singles and a horrible throw to second by Jason Giambi that cost the Yanks a double play. The Cubbies got a run in the fifth, closing the gap to 4-3 and then overtook the Yanks in the sixth, scoring three runs to take a 6-4 win and chasing Carl Pavano in favor of Paul Quantrill. Quantrill stopped the bleeding in the sixth, and got the seventh off to a good start, retiring the first two he faced in the frame before yielding a double to Jeromy Burnitz and a walk to Aramis Ramierz and giving way to Mike Stanton, who retired Todd Walker to end the inning. Zambrano came out for the seventh, with a pitch count nearing, then eventually surpassing 115. Carlos retired Robinson Cano on one of his four flyouts to left, then the wheels came off. A screaming liner to the leftfield wall put Gary Sheffield on second with a double, then with the Cubs announcers on WGN discussing ARod’s unclutchness ("only seven of his RBIs have come in the seventh inning or later") the True Yankee blasted a Carlos Zambrano 1-2 pitch into center for an RBI-single, making Bob Brenly look pretty silly. That chased Carlos from the game and lefty Will Ohman came on to face Matsui. After looking at two balls, Godzilla turned on a fastball and hit a freakin’ rocket over the rightfield wall to put the Yanks in front 7-6. Godzilla came up in the eighth and the bases drunk with Yankees and put double into the rightfield corner scoring two more and giving the Yanks a little breathing room before the Sandman came in to slam the door. Few game notes: Derrek Lee is really good. He almost balances out the Cubs bad roster construction and Dusty Baker's lousy managing all by himself. Carlos Zambrano is fun to watch. He throws hard, he's animated and just intriguing. It was great to see Enrique Wilson screw another team, huh? Someone in the clubhouse should volunteer to smack Godzilla in the ankle before every game so he can keep this up. Since savaging his ankle in St. Louis, the beast is back, hitting: .533/.588/1.267 with three homers, two doubles, nine RBIs and five runs scored. Speaking of comebacks, Jason Giambi is looking Giambi-like lately. On the homestand so far, Jason's hitting .333/.467/.750 with a pair of doubles, a dramatic homer, 5 RBIs, 4 runs scored and perhaps most encouraging, just three strikeouts. With some modifications, for the first time in a while we saw the return of QuanGorMo. Quantrill was as effective as he's been this season, Stanton earned his money and retired some lefties in between and Tom Gordon revived his curveball in setting up for Rivera. A rejuvenated bullpen would give the Yanks a nice boost going into the dog days of summer.
Friday, June 17, 2005
Fee Fie Foe Fum by Larry Mahnken
Did Giambi's homer wake a sleeping giant? Well, we'll have to wait and see on that, but the Yanks came out looking like the team they're supposed to be last night.
Thursday, June 16, 2005
Next! by Sean McNally
So this is what Randy Johnson looks like?
A Win That Matters by Larry Mahnken
There's time yet this season for the Yankees to make something good happen, there's plenty of time to make the playoffs, to win the division, even, maybe, to bring home the best record in the league. It's mid-June, larger deficits have been erased in fewer games, and the Yankees have, at least, the talent to pull it off. There's time yet, but the Yankees have to make something happen now.
Wednesday, June 15, 2005
The breaks, they're turning... by Sean McNally
Also read SG's Finally, a comeback below Jeter led off with hard ground out to third, bringing up Bernie, who promptly drew a walk, bringing up Gary Sheffield. Here’s where the train has jumped the tracks this season - until tonight. Sheffield hit a screaming worm burner back up the middle off Pirate closer Jose Mesa, but right to Jack Wilson, who flipped to Jose Castillo who fired to first baseman Daryl Ward. Double play. Game over. But, the breaks, they're turning ... Tony Randazzo missed the call, ruling Sheffield safe. So with two outs, ARod singled Sheffield to third, bringing up Jorge Posada. Fresh off a solo homer in the second, Posada blasted a double to right. Sheffield scores, ARod gets pathetically thrown out after trying to score from first after Wilson bobbled the ball. Mo Rivera, who was dominant for two innings, set the Bucs down in the 10th, setting the stage. Tino Martinez worked a four-pitch, pinch-hit walk from Mesa, who was not nearly as sharp as Mo in his second inning of work. Tinostalgia was pinch run for by Russ Johnson. Tony Womack strode to the plate after pinch running for starting left fielder Ruben Sierra in the eighth. After looking at a ball and a strike, Womack apparently got the hit-and-run sign, but the Pirates pitched out. Russ Johnson was dead to rights out, but stopped, started back to first and the Jack Wilson throw from second to first hit him square in the numbers. Break number two ... Womack finally got to hit, and did one of the few things he does well - bunted Johnson to second, bringing the much maligned Jason Giambi to the plate. In 2002, Giambi would have been walked in favor of pitching to number nine hitter Robinson Cano. But not tonight. Giambi looked at a ball and a strike, then fouled one off down the right field line. So Mesa ran a 1-2, 94 mph fastball in on Giambi's hands and Jason did what sluggers do - turned on it and deposited it 10 rows up in the upper deck. Game over. Yankees win! Thhhheeeeeee Yankeeeeeees win! The Giambino! Now the Yanks did what they needed to do: won the series and started this homestand with two straight wins. A few thoughts briefly.
Finally, a comeback by SG
Entering tonight, the Yankees had not won a game which they trailed after six innings. This was even more frustrating when recalling last year's team and their propensity for late inning comebacks. I was concerned about the Yankees being able to follow up a strong game yesterday, which is not something they have done very well this year.
One Win by Larry Mahnken
For a team that's had pretty much everything going wrong lately, last night was a night where everything pretty much went right.
Tuesday, June 14, 2005
One down… by Sean McNally
Moose answered the bell. Ankle-zilla acted like it was 2004. Jeter, Womack and even Bernie made good defensive plays. Giambi hit the ball hard and the Yanks took their first step toward coming back.
Tramp the Dirt Down by Larry Mahnken
Well I hope I don't die too soon If there was a point in this season where it would be reasonable to lose hope in the Yankees making something of this season, it would have been Sunday afternoon, as Scott Seabol's home run flew over the left-field wall in Busch Stadium. With a losing record in mid-June, the end of the great Yankees run seems more in danger of ending than it ever has, and the "haters" are already releasing a torrent of schadenfraude only to be surpassed by what's to come on the day the Yankees are eliminated from contention. Now, the Cards have the second-best record in baseball, they had the best in all of baseball last season and won the National League pennant. It's not shameful to lose a series to a team like that, it's the context that matters, and it's the context that makes things look bleak in New York. The Yankees have played 21 series so far this season, winning 8 and losing 13. But of those 8 series wins, 6 have come against teams currently with losing records, leaving them 2-8 in series against team with winning records (10-17 overall). The two wins were the opening series against Boston, where they nearly blew the second win after Rivera gave up a homer to Jason Varitek in the ninth, and the series against the Mets, who are 1 game over .500 and in last place in the NL East. Again, not a disaster in and of itself, you don't expect to beat up on the good teams, you try to play them even and beat up on the bad teams. Unfortunatley, against teams below .500, the Yankees are only 5-4 in series, and 17-13 overall. That's not "beating up" on anyone. The Yankees are in trouble. Big trouble. Big, big, big trouble. Not only are they not winning against good teams, they're not winning against bad teams, and they're sometimes getting humiliated by really bad teams. They're just 6½ games back (for both the division and Wild Card), so they're not even remotely close to being out of it right now, but there are not positive signs. Alex Rodriguez is playing like the MVP, Gary Sheffield is having a good year (though he's currently in a bad slump), Mike Mussina appears to have returned to effectiveness and rookies Robinson Cano and Chien-Ming Wang have been reasonably impressive, but the good news ends there. Randy Johnson has been good, not great, and hardly dominant. Carl Pavano has been excellent on the road and miserable at home. Kevin Brown seemed to be back on track in May, but has been mediocre in his past couple of starts, and hurt his shoulder. The bullpen, once again, is down to three effective relievers, but at least this season they're not getting overworked, since there's generally few opportunities for the bullpen to finish off a win. Jason Giambi has 3 extra-base hits in his last 102 ABs, and only 22 hits. Hideki Matsui's lineup spot has him on a pace for 100+ RBI again, but he's having his worst season as a pro, and it's not even a "Groundzilla" effect, he's just not hitting. Tino Martinez was the team MVP for a couple of weeks, but he's had a .302 OPS in June. Jorge Posada's having a decent year, but has done nothing with runners on any base other than first. Bernie Williams has lost every ounce of value, yet still finds himself in center on an all-too regular basis. Tony Womack is unhappy to find himself in left field, and it seems that the only people who don't realize that he's not helping out there are the Yankees, and perhaps some of their most myopic fans. Things could turn around. There are guys who should hit better, guys who should pitch better, and guys who simply can do better. But it's not just the who, it's the when. The team seems to be in too much of a "homer or walk" mode -- they're 5th in the Majors in homers and 3rd in walks, while only 20th in doubles and 13th in total hits. Am I saying walks and homers are bad? No, but walks and homers shouldn't be the entirety of an offense. The Yanks are 3rd in MLB in OBP, but without getting singles and doubles to drive those runners home, the Yankees are only 12th in SLG, and constantly waiting for the big inning. The problem is, while a big inning is always nice, and it always helps you win, sometimes you don't need a big inning. Sometimes you need one run, or two. By waiting for the big inning, the Yankees have averaged 7.56 runs in their 30 wins, and just 2.78 runs in their 32 losses. Of course the solution to this is not to bunt and try make productive outs. The solution is to try and get hits, rather than hit homers or draw walks. The Yankees let too many good pitches go by trying to get a walk, and swing too hard at too many pitches trying to get a homer. Instead, they should take bad pitches and try to hit good pitches for singles or doubles, and the homers and walks will come when they get enough bad pitches and make good contact on good pitches. That's how you hit. That's what sabermetrics preaches. That's not what the Yankees are doing, and if you watch them, you'll see that. Of course, even if the Yankees were evening out their run production, they'd still be a .500 team, they need to score runs and prevent them more effectively than they have, and it's questionable whether they'll be able to do that. They'd better start soon.
Thirteen Games by Sean McNally
The Yankees open up a thirteen game home stand tonight and more and more Yankee Stadium feels like The Alamo.
Sunday, June 12, 2005
Flyover Country by SG
The Yankees' nightmare road trip continued over the weekend with a 3 game set at St. Louis.
Friday, June 10, 2005
Macon Telegraph.com - Jackson chooses Yankees over Jackets by SG
According to the article linked above:
Thursday, June 09, 2005
by SG
After dropping 9 of their last 10 games, the Yankees needed a game like last night in the worst way possible. Joe Torre shuffled the lineup in an attempt to wakeup his bats. It seemed to work, as a team that's been scuffling to score put up 12 runs and 16 hits, but let's hope it doesn't mean more playing time for Ruben Sierra in LF.
Tuesday, June 07, 2005
The Draft by SG
There's not much left to say about the Yankees, 2-1 losers last night. Carl Pavano made one bad pitch, and Ben Sheets managed to shut the Yankees down. A late rally fell a run short when Captain Clutch ended the game again. With things looking bleak on the major league front for now, I figured I'd throw up something about the big news from yesterday, which was the June entry draft. I don't know where Fabian is, and I'm not really a huge prospect maven like him, so I'll just throw up the list of draftees and the scouting reports from MLB.com(where available). Hopefully Fabian will come by with a more detailed look at some of these players later.
Sunday, June 05, 2005
.254/.296/.284 by SG
If you want to know one of the reasons the Yankees have floundered despite a $200 million payroll this year, the three decimals above give some insight into it.
Friday, June 03, 2005
by SG
Nothing can ruin a winning streak like a losing streak. Last night's 5-2 loss to the Royals has the Yankees creeping back down towards .500, with a brutal road trip only 1/4 over. Three games at Minnesota, three games at Milwaukee, and three games at St. Louis. The way this team is playing right now, if they are able to go 5-4 over these 9 games I would be pleasantly surprised.
Wednesday, June 01, 2005
Here we go again by SG
Fortunately for me, I've been on vacation for most of the last 2 weeks and didn't get to watch much of the Yankees. With today's 3-1 loss to the lowly Royals, the Yankees have lost four straight games.
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