Friday, May 29, 2009

I Am Still Alive...

Much to Alec's disappointment, I'm sure. The posts have been scarce lately first because of finals, then because of a housing issue, and then because I began a summer-long road trip to attend a game in all 30 major league baseball stadiums. But I can't continue to neglect the blog, because DYFS will eventually come and take it away from me if I do.

One of the lovely things I've seen so far is the self-destructive nature of the Blue Jays' bullpen. Some bullpens, like the Phillies and Mets, essentially constitute throwing gasoline on the fire. What I observed from the Jays' pen on Wednesday wasn't just gasoline, I think it was more along the lines of an entire oil refinery being dumped on a fire. Highly amusing, though. In fact, our games so far have been an exercise in god-awful bullpen outings. Only the first game, in Fenway on Friday 5/22, did not feature some kind of grisly bullpen freak show on par with the finest ones Shea Stadium ever saw.

5/24 Phillies at Yankees
Brad Lidge 1 IP 2 H 1 R 1 ER 0 BB 1 K
This one was absolutely fantastic. Lidge blew the save in the 9th in ALMOST THE EXACT SAME FASHION as he had lost the game the day before. Robinson Cano single, a steal of second (this time by PR Ramiro Pena, but still), and then a Melky Cabrera single to plate the run. I honestly could not stop laughing.

5/25 Nationals at Mets
Bobby Parnell 1/3 IP 1 H 1 R 1 ER 3 BB 1 K
Just a generally attractive line. Good thing he was facing the Nationals, who got so confused at the concept of a late-inning rally that after Parnell was pulled, Adam Dunn went to the plate with his batting helmet on backwards and wet his pants in the batters box.

5/26 Marlins at Phillies
Chad Durbin 1/3 IP 1 H 3 R 3 ER 2 BB 0 K
Scott Eyre 0 IP 0 H 0 R 0 ER 0 BB 0 K (only batter faced reached on an error)
Brad Lidge 2/3 IP 0 H 0 R 0 ER 1 BB 1 K
This was horrible. You would think that sending Chad Durbin out to the mound in the 9th inning of a game you are leading 5-0 to face John Baker, Dan Uggla, and Cody Ross shouldn't be that dangerous of a move. Unfortunately, "you" would have been horribly, terribly, awfully wrong. And of course Lit Up Lidge had a role in this, allowing an inherited runner to score and walking a batter of his own. All in all, this game was a refreshing reminder of what it's really like to be a Phillies fan, i.e. all of those pre-2008 Phillies teams whose bullpens were always wonderfully combustible.

5/27 Blue Jays at Orioles
Jesse Carlson 1/3 IP 3 H 5 R 5 ER 1 BB 1 K 1 HB
Brian Wolfe 0 IP 3 H 3 R 3 ER 0 BB 0 K
Watching the Jays blow an 8-3, 8th inning lead to the Orioles was lots of fun. Watching them give the game away after they had taken the lead in the top of the 11th was even more fun. Carlson's line was part of that spectacular 8th inning meltdown, and Wolfe's line was part of the 11th inning final collapse. Until this game, I had never realized that the reason why pitchers are usually in the bullpen is that they aren't actually all that good. Apparently the way baseball works is that the really good pitchers start the game, and the kinda-not-as-good guys pitch later. I never would have guessed.

Next game is Giants at Nationals 6/3/09...going to see Randy Johnson take a crack at #300. If Johnson can stay in the game long enough for the Nationals' starter to be gone, I like his chances- right now the Nationals' bullpen is so unsightly, they actually think that Mike MacDougal will IMPROVE their bullpen. That isn't a typo.

Also, right now Matt Wieters' major league debut is being delayed by rain. Looks like even the Apocalypse can be rained out.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Guys you never heard of lead league in HR, Wins

SOMEWHERE YOU DIDN'T KNOW HAD A BASEBALL TEAM -- Baseball fans around the country were startled when it was reported that two guys you've never heard of lead the majors in homeruns and wins.

The story broke early this morning, as the ESPN Fantasy Sports department finally checked their email, and found hundreds of messages pointing out what many assumed to be a glitch, such as some guy who was 8-1 with a 0.84 ERA, as well as the obvious error that some guy playing for "SDP" had been credited with a laughable 18 homers.

However, ESPN checked with a trusted team of basement dwelling stats nerds, who revealed that the numbers were indeed correct. They reported that some guy named Zach Greinke (a name you may recognnize from your fantasy team's bench from when you left autodraft on while you went to get a beer after the sixth round) is dominating opposing hitters throughout the league. Even more stunninng is the fact that he reportedly has 8 wins while playing for the Kansas City Royals, a team that most experts were pretty sure had been demoted to AAA at the end of last year.

Meanwhile, a man supposedly named Adrian Gonzalez has 18 homers, though our sources are unsure as to where he plays. We hear it's San Diego, though we were pretty sure they don't have a team, and if they do, it's in the NL West or something and nobody cares about them. Upon further investigation, it was revealed that this Gonzalez had 30 homers and 100 RBI in each of the last of the two years, which seems odd, as you'd think we'd have heard of a guy like that, or that the Yankees would have bought his entire team in order to sign him.

More news as it breaks.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

World Series IV Game 6

The Yankees entered Fenway for a must win game, trailing in the series 2-3.

With the day off, it seems that the Yankees regained their plate discipline, tiring opposing pitchers and working counts in their favor. Even though he had struck out 11 and had only allowed 1 hit and no runs, Curt Schilling had to be pulled after 5 2/3 due to his rising pitch count. Gary Sheffield greeted Keith Foulke with an out of the park homer to left to give the Yankees an early 1-0.

1-0 was enough for the Yankees pitching staff, as El Duque and Mussina combined for a shutout, allowing only 3 hits and striking out 13.

Tim Wakefield came in in the top of the 9th with 1 on and 1 out to face Sheffield. When Jeter stole second (the first Yankees steal of the series), Wakefield was behind in the count and decided to intentionally walk Sheffield. But Matsui made him pay, golfing a hanging knuckleball to right for a 3-run bomb, giving the Yankees a 4-0 lead. His postseason ERA jumped from 0.80 to 2.19 with the outing.

The win seemed to take the air out of the resurgent Red Sox, whose postseason struggles at Fenway continued. Manny Ramirez reportedly left the stadium after striking out in the 8th inning to take a nap, and Kevin Millar was found on Yawkey Way, passed out drunk and wearing nothing but a cowboy hat.

Sox manager Alec admitted that the defeat was "demoralizing", and bemoaned the Yankees recaptured plate discipline. He stated "I don't take many pitches, the least they could do would be to not take pitches either. It's unfair." Yankees mananger Terence could not be reached for comment, though he was heard screaming "Yeah baby, GIT SOME!" and cackling in the visitor's clubhouse.

Yankees - 4 @ Red Sox - 0
WP: E. Duque (2-2)
LP: K. Foulke (0-2)
HR: A. Rodriguez (2), H. Matsui (3)

~~Red Sox~~
J. Damon: 0-4, 2 K
O. Cabrera: 0-4, 2 K
M. Ramirez: 1-4, 2 K
D. Ortiz: 0-0, 4 IBB
J. Varitek: 0-3, 2 K, BB
T. Nixon: 0-1, K
a.) K. Millar: 0-3, K
B. Mueller: 1-4
M. Bellhorn: 0-1, reach on error
b.) D. Roberts: 1-3, SB, GIDP
C. Schilling: 0-1, sac
-K. Foulke: 0-1, K

==Pitching==
C. Schilling: 5 2/3 IP, 0 ER, 0 R, 1 H, 11 K, 0 BB
K. Foulke L (0-2): 2 2/3 IP, 2 ER, 2 R, 2 H, 3 K, 0 BB
T. Wakefield: 0 2/3 IP, 2 ER, 2 R, 2 H, 1 K, 1 BB

~~Yankees~~
D. Jeter: 1-4, 3 K, R, SB
A. Rodriguez: 1-3, BB, HR, RBI, R, K
G. Sheffield: 0-3, K, IBB
H. Matsui: 1-4, HR, 3 RBI, R, 3 K
B. Williams: 0-4, 2 K
J. Posada: 2-4, K
J. Olerud: 0-4, 2 K
M. Cairo: 0-3, K
E. Duque: 0-1, K
a.) J. Giambi: 0-2, K

==Pitching==
E. Duque W (2-2): 5 IP, 0 ER, 0 R, 1 H, 6 K, 2 BB
M. Mussina: 4 IP, 0 ER, 0 R, 2 H, 7 K, 3 BB

Monday, May 25, 2009

John Mayberry Sr.... oh wait... no

We're too busy/lazy to make posts at the moment, but we will leave you will the brilliance thanks to FoxSports (until it is taken down)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LxiWDW-qsx8

Sunday, May 24, 2009

World Series IV, Game 5

With the series tied 2-2, Pedro Martinez and El Duque faced off to determine which team would have the lead when the series headed back to Boston.

A misplayed fly ball in the top of the first led to a one-out Orlando Cabrera double, and Manny sent a ball to the wall in right to knock in an out but he ran into an out as he was gunned down at second. The Sox extended their lead to 3-0 in the second with a 2-out, 2-run homer after Bellhorn reached on a questionable defensive play. Damon came through again in the 4th, following a Bellhorn double with an inside the park homer, again with two outs and one on, putting the Sox ahead 5-0.

This was plenty for Pedro, who did not allow a baserunner until Arod homered in the 4th. He escaped a two on, no out jam in the 5th by striking out Sierra, inducing Lofton to ground into a force, and then striking out Tony Clark when he pinch hit for El Duque. Pedro ended the day with 6 IP, 1 ER, and only 3 hits (the Arod homer and the pair of 5th inning singles).

With Duque out of the game and his team trailing by four runs, Mann decided to rest his chief reliever and instead sent out the "Man who Stephen King loved too much", Tom Gordon. Despite giving up an RBI double to Manny in the 7th, Gordon was effective in relief of the beleaguered bullpen, going 4 innings of 1 run ball in the loss.

Keith Foulke picked up the 3 inning save, allowing a solo shot from Gary Sheffield and giving Tim Wakefield some rest as the Sox swept the Yankees in Yankee Stadium to take a 3-2 lead back to Fenway.

In an interview after the game, Red Sox manager Alec Trevelyan stated "It feels great to come into Yankee Stadium and sweep them to get back into this series, but it isn't over yet. We haven't played that well at home in the playoffs, and [the Yankees] are too good of a team to take for granted. We just hope we can bring it home in the next two games"

The series heads back to Fenway tomorrow, where the Sox are 0-2 this postseason and 2-7 in historical postseason play. Neither team has yet won a game at home this postseason.

Red Sox - 6 @ Yankees - 2
WP: P. Martinez (2-0)
LP: E. Duque (1-2)
HR: J. Damon 2 (2), A. Rodriguez (1), G. Sheffield (1)

~~Red Sox~~
J. Damon: 2-5, 2 HR, 4 RBI, 2 R
O. Cabrera: 2-5, 2B, 2 R
M. Ramirez: 2-5, 2B, 2 RBI, 2 K
D. Ortiz: 0-0, 5 IBB
J. Varitek: 2-5, 2B, GIDP, K
T. Nixon: 0-4, K
B. Mueller: 1-4, 2 K
M. Bellhorn: 2-2, 2B, 2 R
a.) D. Roberts: 1-2, K
P. Martinez: 0-3, GIDP
-K. Foulke: 0-1

==Pitching==
P. Martinez (2-0): 6 IP, 1 ER, 1 R, 3 H, 8 K, 0 BB
K. Foullke: 3 IP, 1 ER, 1 R, 3 H, 2 K, 0 BB

~~Yankees~~
D. Jeter: 0-4, K
A. Rodriguez: 1-4, HR, RBI, R, 2 K
G. Sheffield: 1-4, HR, RBI, R, K
H. Matsui: 0-4, K
B. Williams: 1-4, K
J. Posada: 1-4, K
J. Olerud: 0-1
a.) R. Sierra: 0-2, 2 K
M. Cairo: 0-1
b.) K. Lofton: 1-2
E. Duque: 0-1
c.) T. Clark: 0-1, K
-T. Gordon: 1-1

==Pitching==
E. Duque L (1-2): 5 IP, 5 ER, 5 R, 8 H, 4 K, 3 BB
T. Gordon: 4 IP, 1 ER, 1 R, 4 H, 3 K, 2 BB

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Coors East

10 HR through 1.5 games in New Yankee Stadium vs. Phillies.

Arod now has 5 homers in his 8 games at Yankee stadium (1 homer on the road in 6 games). What are the odds he breaks the single season HR record by the All Star Break?

EDIT: Make that 11 homers through 2 games, with the 6th in 9 games for ARod.

World Series IV, Game 4

After their Game 3 win, the Sox sent Curt Schilling to the mound to try to even the series in Yankee Stadium.

The Sox caught a lucky break in the first, with left fielder Manny Ramirez narrowly gunning down Gary Sheffield trying to stretch a single into a double on a contested play to end the inning.

With both pitchers being effective, their was little offense through the first 3, but Manny Ramirez led off the 4th inning with a homer. The normal Ortiz IBB was followed by a Varitek single, but the Yankees got lucky when Ortiz tried to go first to third and was gunned down on the relay from the center fielder to the shorstop. Millar hit a pinch hit GIDP to end the frame, allowing the Yankees to escape further damage. This proved to be a big play, as the Yankees weren't behind long, getting a Matsui solo shot with two outs in the bottom half of the frame to tie it up 1-1.

Asides from that homer, Schilling was effective through 7 innings, allowing only 5 hits and the lone earned run. El Duque was pulled after 5 1/3 with a runner on third, an uncharacteristically short outing, but Mussina came in and struck out Manny and got Varitek to pop up to end the threat.

With the game still tied in the top of the 8th, the Sox got a two out double from Orlando Cabrera. Manny blooped a single into left with Cabrera running on the play, but the left fielder boppled the ball. Seeing this, Cabrera was waved around third, scoring on the play as Manny advanced to second on the throw, giving the Sox a 2-1 sox lead.

Wakefield came in in relief and got the two inning save, striking out 3 and allowing 1 hit. Tom Gordon was sighted in the top of the 9th, but managed NOT to blow the game so our eyes may have been deceiving us.

The 2-1 Boston victory tied the series, and guaranteed that the series will return to Fenway. Through four games, neither team has won a home game. Neither manager was available for comment.

Game 5 will feature Pedro vs. El Duque with the series lead on the line before heading home to Fenway.

Game 4: Sox - 2 @ Yankees - 1

~~Red Sox~~
J. Damon: 2-4, 2B, SB, K
O. Caberera: 1-4, 2B, K, R
M. Ramirez: 2-4, HR, RBI, R, 2 K
D. Ortiz: 0-0, 4 IBB, SB
J. Varitek: 1-4, 2 K
T. Nixon: 0-1
a.) K. Millar: 0-3, GIDP
B. Mueller: 0-4
M. Bellhorn: 0-4
C. Schilling: 0-2
a.) G. Kapler: 0-1

==Pitching==
C. Schilling W (1-1): 7 IP, 1 ER, 1 R, 5 H, 7 K, 0 BB
T. Wakefield SAVE (1): 2 IP, 0 ER, 0 R, 1 H, 3 K, 0 BB

~~Yankees~~
D. Jeter: 1-4, K
A. Rodriguez: 0-4, 2 K
G. Sheffield: 1-4, K
H. Matsui: 2-4, HR, RBI, R, K
B. Williams: 0-4, K
J. Posada: 1-4, 2 K
J. Olerud: 2-3
M. Cairo: 0-1, K
a.) R. Sierra: 0-2, 2 K
E. Duque: 0-2
-M. Mussina
b.) J. Giambi: 0-1

==Pitching==
E. Duque: 5 1/3 IP, 1 ER, 1 R, 4 H, 3 K, 2 BB
M. Mussina L (1-1): 2 2/3 IP, 0 ER, 1 R, 2 H, 3 K, 2 BB
T. Gordon: 0 IP, 0 ER, 0 R, 0 H, 0 K, 0 BB

Saturday, May 16, 2009

World Series IV, Game 3

After dropping the first two games at Fenway, the Red Sox sent Pedro Martinez to the mound in a must win game at Yankee Stadium.

The Red Sox continued their streak of early scoring in the top of the third inning. Orlando Cabrera singled with two down, and Manny knocked one off the base of the wall in left center for an RBI double. Ater an intentional walk to Ortiz, Varitek finally made them pay with an RBI bloop single that dropped in front of the right fielder, giving the Sox an early 2-0 lead.

The Sox put together another threat in the 5th, loading up the bases with two outs on a pair of intentional walks and a single, but El Duque got Mueller to ground out to end the threat. He was relieved the next inning by Mike Mussina, who got the Yanks out of another two out jam, but for once Mussina seemed fallible in the 8th. With Dave Roberts on first, Damon singled and stole second to make it second and third with two outs. Orlando Cabrera hit a line drive that split the fielders in left for a two-out, two run double to give the Sox a 4-0 lead.

Meanwhile, Pedro Martinez was dominant on the mound. In fact, he did not allow a baserunner in 7 1/3 perfect innings of work, with 8 strikeouts. But his pitch count was rising and he was obviously exhausted after 7 innings, and after striking out Matsui on a 50 mph fastball, he was pulled in favor of Wakefield, who gave up a single to break up the perfect game. But Wakefield settled down to close out the game, getting all 5 outs on strikeouts while allowing 3 soft singles.

Orlando Cabrera had a big game, going 2-5 with a two-run double. Varitek had a breakout game, going 3-5 with an RBI, while Manny was productive as usual (2-4, RBI). Pedro got the first Red Sox win of the playoffs.

When interviewed after the game, Yankees manager Terence Mann reported "I'm just glad he didn't no hit us. And we got hits off Wakefield. So suck it."

Game 3: Sox - 4 @ Yankees - 0

~~Red Sox~~
J. Damon: 1-5, K, R
O. Cabrera: 2-5, 2B, 2 RBI, R, K
M. Ramirez: 2-4, 2B, RBI, R, K, IBB
D. Ortiz: 0-0, 5 IBB
J. Varitek: 3-5, 2 K, RBI
T. Nixon: 0-1
a.) Millar: 0-3, K, IBB
B. Mueller: 2-5
M. Bellhorn: 0-1
b.) D. Roberts: 1-4, K, R
P. Martinez: 0-4
-T. Wakefield: 0-1, K

==Pitching==
P. Martinez W (1-0): 7 1/3 IP, 0 ER, 0 R, 0 H, 8 K, 0 BB
T. Wakefield: 1 2/3 IP, 0 ER, 0 R, 2 H, 5 K, 0 BB


~~Yankees~~
D. Jeter: 0-4, 2 K
A. Rodriguez: 1-4, 2 K
G. Sheffield: 0-4, 3 K
H. Matsui: 0-3, 2 K
B. Williams: 1-3
J. Posada: 0-3, K
J. Olerud: 0-2
a.) R. Sierra: 1-1
M. Cairo: 0-2, K
b.) K. Lofton: 0-1, K
E. Duque: 0-2
c.) J. Giambi: 0-1, K

==Pitching==
E. Duque L(1-1): 6 2/3 IP, 2 ER, 2 R, 6 H, 6 K, 5 BB
M. Mussina: 2 1/3 IP, 2 ER, 2 R, 5 H, 2 K, 2 BB

Thursday, May 14, 2009

2009 Spring World Series Game 2: Yankees @ Red Sox

(games being posted way late)

In Game Two of the much anticipated 2009 RBI Baseball Spring World Series, Curt Schilling faced off against El Duque in his second start in as many games at Fenway Park.

The Sox opened the scoring in the bottom of the second with a two out double from Curt Schilling to score Mark Bellhorn, giving the Sox an early 1-0 lead. But they were able to muster little more offense against El Duque, getting only two more hits over the next 4 innings.

Schilling was effective through the first 5 innings, allowing only 2 baserunners, but it all fell apart in the 6th. After a Derek Jeter single, Arod grounded out to advance the runner. With two outs and an open base, the Red So elected to intentionally walk Gary Sheffield, the Spring 2008 World Series MVP. But Hideki Matsui made the Sox pay, blasting a three run bomb into the right field bleachers off Schilling to give the Yankees a 3-1 lead.

The Yankees got more insurance in the 7th. After a leadoff error by the second baseman, Schilling retired Lofton but the pinch hitter Sierra lanced a double down the right field line. But thanks to a strong throw from Nixon in right field, Jorge Posada was gunned down at third for the second out. With his pitch count rising, Alec elected to leave Schilling in, and he gave up back to back singles to Tony Clark and Derek Jeter to score a run and give the Yankees a 4-1 lead. Keith Foulke came in to strike out Arod to retire the side.

Mike Mussina came in in the 7th and shut down the Red Sox offense with 3 hitless innings, getting the save the hard way with 5 strikeouts.

Hits were hard to come by, but Matsui had the big three run homer, while Jeter went 2-4. The Sox had only one extra base hit (the double from Schilling) and no batter had multiple hits.

Asked about losing the first two games at home, Red Sox manager told reporters "It's tough to take, especially after how we were playing in the regular season. After our season [going 15-3] you don't expect to drop the first two games, but they got some good balls to hit and punished our mistakes, while El Duque and Mussina didn't really make any. We have a day off tomorrow, so we'll drink heavily tonight and hopefully have a revelation about how to get a ball out of the infield against Mussina."

Game 3 at Yankee Stadium will feature Pedro Martinez at El Duque.

Yankees: 4, Red Sox: 1

~~Yankees~~
D. Jeter: 2-4, R
A. Rodriguez: 0-4, K
G. Sheffield: 0-3, IBB, R, K
H. Matsui: 1-4, HR, 3 RBI, R, K
B. Williams: 0-4, 2 K
J. Posada: 1-4, 2 K
J. Olerud: 0-2
a.) K. Lofton: 0-2, K
M. Cairo: 0-2, K
b.) R. Sierra: 1-2, 2B, R
E. Duque: 1-2
c.) T. Clark: 1-1, RBI

==Pitching==
El Duque W (1-0): 6 IP, 1 ER, 1 R, 5 H, 7 K, 3 BB
M. Mussina SAVE (1): 3 IP, 0 ER, 0 R, 0 H, 5 K, 1 BB

~~Red Sox~~
J. Damon: 0-4, 2 K
O. Cabrera: 0-4, K
M. Ramirez: 1-4, 2 K
D. Ortiz: 0-0, 4 IBB, CS
J. Varitek: 1-3, K, GIDP
c.) K. Millar: 0-1
T. Nixon: 1-4, SB
B. Mueller: 0-4, K
M. Bellhorn: 1-1, R
a.) D. Roberts: 0-3, 3 K
C. Schilling: 1-2, 2B, RBI, K
-K. Foulke:
b.) G. Kapler: 0-1, K

==Pitching==
C. Schilling L (0-1): 6 2/3 IP, 3 ER, 4 R, 7 H, 5 K, 1 BB
K. Foulke: 1/3 IP, 0 ER, 0 R, 0 H, 1 K, 0 BB
P. Martinez: 2 IP, 0 ER, 0 R, 0 H, 3 K, 0 BB

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Roger Clemens, Family Man

Roger Clemens claims that he didn't take steroids, and lists one of his reasons as a family history of heart problems, based partially on the fact that his stepfather had a heartattack.

Can somebody get this guy a second grade explanation of inherited characteristics?

Unless there is something the Rocket is not telling us, I'm pretty sure a guy he has NO blood relation to should not have an effect on his health...

http://www.newsday.com/sports/baseball/ny-sproger0513,0,3602215.story

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Dying Quails

After his game-tying, two-out, pinch-hit home run Sunday, Micah Owings now has a .934 career OPS, which is higher than that of Hank Aaron, Frank Robinson, and Ken Griffey Jr. Remind me why this guy isn't playing in the outfield on days he isn't pitching?



Just to add one more element to the whole Josh-Hamilton-is-a-really-great-guy storyline, as if it needed any more additions: during his minor league rehab assignment this past weekend, Hamilton and his mentor/Rangers coach Johnny Narron went out to dinner at a local Cracker Barrel. When they were done, they called a cab to go back to the team hotel. The cab never showed, so Hamilton hitched a ride back to the hotel with a local Little League team that was having dinner at the Cracker Barrel. In Hamilton's words, "I signed a few autographs and away we went." I know some people are probably tired of endless stories about how awesome a guy Hamilton is, but that is pretty damn cool. This guy started the All-Star game last year, and he's hitchhiking with a Little League team in Round Rock, Texas on his rehab assignment? What a baller.



And finally, Matt Stairs. I've been a casual fan of Stairs for a while now; it's hard not to like a fat guy who swings like all holy hell and actually makes it work. Stairs, though, isn't unaware that this is the reason why people like him- he knows damn well, and he actually embraces it! Here are a few quotes from the Big Guy:


[on whether his approach at the plate changed when he came to bat in the 8th inning the other day while the Brewers' Dave Bush was throwing a no-hitter] "Of course. It doesn't change. It will never change."

[Stairs hit a ball off the top of the foul pole in that at-bat to break up the on-hitter]


"Let’s face it, I’m not 6-foot-2 and trim. I’m 5-foot-9 and 2-I-really-don’t-care – I still keep myself in good shape," he said of his physique. "I don’t want to give the fans an excuse not to like me, but I guess when I hit a big home run they say, ‘Hey, that guy is just like us.'"

"I always say I take one swing for the fans, and the rest for my teammates."


And then there are his comments after Game 4 of last year's NLCS- as much as I love the Big Guy, sometimes people really don't think before they speak...which is a good thing. Keeps life interesting, that's for sure.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IqZDe4364BI

I have no earthly idea how anyone at that press conference kept a straight face. I really don't.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Yanks Take Game 1 of Series; History (Kind of) Repeats Itself

May 10, Fenway Park-

Game 1 of the RBI Baseball World Series began today, to much fanfare and anticipation. The Yankees, losers of the regular season by a wide margin to the Boston Red Sox, return to the Fall Classic led by their manager Terence Mann, who has guided his teams to victories in the first three World Series. While the Twins' title in 2007 and the Yankees' 2007 and 2008 titles came after regular seasons where the competition was at least somewhat even, the 2009 regular season was handily and convincingly won by the Red Sox, managed by Alec Treveleyan; Treveleyan leads his Red Sox squad into the Series after losing only three games in the regular season. The pitching matchup for Game 1 had all the hallmarks of a postseason classic- right-handers Orlando "El Duque" Hernandez and Pedro "God" Martinez were opposing each other.

The Series opened in Fenway, and the Sox drew first blood in the third inning. Johnny Damon led the inning off with a single, and was followed by Orlando Cabrera. Cabrera lofted an easy fly ball to center field, but Bernie Williams dropped it, allowing Cabrera to reach base and Damon to advance all the way to third. Following a Cabrera steal of second, Manny Ramirez lofted a fly ball to right field, and when Damon easily beat Gary Sheffield's throw, the Sox were on the scoreboard.

The Sox would strike again in their next turn at bat. Dave Roberts, who had entered the game in the second inning as a pinch hitter, tripled to deep center field with one out in the fourth for his second hit of the game. Bernie Williams attempted to cut the ball off, but since he is old and slow, it skipped past him and to the wall allowing Roberts to make it to third. Pedro Martinez then managed to put the ball in play, sending a chopper down the line that Alex Rodriguez inexplicably threw to first rather than home, which plated Roberts for the game's second run and a 2-0 Sox lead. Rodriguez, when asked about the rather odd play after the game, had this to say: "Well, I figured that if I am utterly incapable of doing anything at all that might constitute 'good baseball' during clutch situations, I might as well put my teammates in position where they might be able to do clutch things, and throwing away a run in a World Series game seemed like a good way to do that."

The Yanks would show some life in the next half-inning, though. John Olerud, the light-hitting and often pinch-hit for first baseman, lifted a two-out fly ball directly down the right field line. There was some debate as to whether it went through the wall or over it, but regardless of where it left the field of play, the right field umpire twirled his finger in the air and the Yankees were on the scoreboard. The Fenway crowd was briefly rendered silent; this was believed to be Olerud's first home run since his skull consisted entirely of bone.

Other than the Olerud home run, Pedro had dominated the Yankees' lineup; Bernie Williams' second-inning double was the Bombers' only other hit through six innings, and Pedro had struck out six, including Gary Sheffield twice. In the seventh, however, Pedro began to tire, and the Yanks took advantage. With two outs, Bernie Williams lofted his second double of the game to deep center field. Given Williams' prior RBI career, this is roughly the equivalent of winning the lottery once a month for a year. Jorge Posada, who has spent most of his RBI life in a slump, then doubled off the very top of the right field wall to drive home Williams and tie the game. Pinch-hitter Kenny Lofton followed Posada's double with a single to right, but Posada was thrown out in a close play at the plate to end the inning.

[This is the part of the write-up where we all take the time to muse at the irony/coincidence and humor of Jorge Posada hitting a game-tying double in the late innings of a Red Sox-Yankees postseason game off of a tiring Pedro]

Both Pedro and El Duque left the game after the seventh; they gave way to Keith Foulke and Mike Mussina, respectively. Derek Jeter tripled with two outs in the 8th off Foulke, but Alex Rodriguez followed that by hitting a ball with his steroid-filled purse that rolled weakly to the second baseman, ending the inning. Foulke dispatched the Yanks in the 9th with ease, but in the 10th inning he ran into trouble. Jorge Posada opened the inning with a weak tap-out to Foulke. Kenny Lofton then hit an infield single deep to the shortstop hole. Mann then pulled second baseman Miguel Cairo for pinch-hitter Ruben Sierra. On a 2-2 fastball middle-out, Sierra hit Foulke's offering halfway up the left-field stands for a 4-2 lead. Mike Mussina finished off the Sox in the bottom half of the inning to seal the win.

After the game, Yankees' manager Terence Mann had this to say: "Sure it's nice to come into their park and win the first game, but it's a seven game series and we have a long way to go. That's a tough Red Sox team over there, they've got Manny and Ortiz in the middle of that lineup, who no one wants to face, and almost every man on that squad is capable of hitting it into the parking lot on any pitch." Game 2 will be tomorrow at Fenway Park, at a time to be determined.

Box Score
~~YANKEES~~
D. Jeter: 1-5, 3B
A. Rodriguez: 0-4, 2 K
G. Sheffield: 0-4, 2 K
H. Matsui: 0-4, 2 K
B Williams: 2-4, 2 2B, R
J. Posada: 1-4, K, 2B, RBI
J. Olerud: 1-2, HR, RBI, R
a.) K. Lofton: 2-2, R
M. Cairo: 0-3, K
b.) R. Sierra: 1-1, HR, 2 RBI, R
El Duque: 0-3
c.) M. Mussina: 0-1

==Pitching==
El Duque: 7 IP, 1 ER, 2 R, 4 H, 7 K, 3 BB, 2B, 3B, SF, SB
M. Mussina W (1-0): 3 IP, 0 ER, 0 R, 0 H, 1 BB, 5 K, CS

~~RED SOX~~
J. Damon: 1-4 (reached on error), R, K
O. Cabrera: 0-4, K (reached on error), SB
M. Ramirez: 0-3, RBI, SF, K
D. Ortiz: 0-0, 4 IBB, CS
J. Varitek: 0-4, K
T. Nixon: 0-3, K
c.) K. Millar: 0-1, K
B. Mueller: 1-4, 2B, K
M. Bellhorn: 0-0
a.) D. Roberts: 2-4, 3B, R, K
P. Martinez: 0-2, K, RBI
b.) G. Kapler: 0-1

=Pitching=
P. Martinez: 7 IP, 2 ER, 2 R, 5 H, 7 K, 0 BB, 3 2B, HR
K. Foulke L (0-1): 3 IP, 2 ER, 2 R, 3 H, 1 K, 0 BB, 3B, HR

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Summary of "Holy War" Sox/Yanks 2004 Cartridge

THE LINEUPS…
~~~Boston~~~
STARTERS:
Johnny “Judas/Matt” Damon: Fast. Flashes of power. Otherwise he’s just gonna ground out. Constantly. But if he gets on with a fielder's choice he might have a chance at a stolen base.

Orlando Cabrera: He has a magical ability to make sac bunts turn into double plays. And occasionally accidentally gets a base hit. Not fast enough to leg out an infield hit often, not enough power to launch onen out, not enough "being good" to "not suck".

Manny “Bad Mang” Ramirez (aka Mandy Ramirez): I’ll start off by quoting Manny’s 2007 ALCS Game 2 postgame conference “[heavy accent] Varitek came up to me in the clubhouse today, and he said… he said “choo know manny, choo never leave fengway widout a homerun”, and I said “choo know it” … he’s one of the best closers in the game but I’m one of the best hitters, and when you hit a ball like that, that’s when choo know you’re a bad mang." Good hitter, batted in front of Ortiz that season which kills me here because I can't take advantage of Ortiz's IBBs.

David “Big Papi” Ortiz: Terence has compared his hatred for David Ortiz with most of the world’s hatred of Hitler. This has been exacerbated by many clutch homeruns, a game where he hit homers in 4 consecutive at bats, and the fact that he’s much better hung than Terence (though you may have trouble finding it). Ortiz has been pegged in almost every at bat for the last two years after a game winning hit in World Series II, Game 4.

Jason Varitek: Ah, that was nice. The Sox lineup was really awesome for… two players. Now it goes back to mediocre. Sure, he’s not a complete abortion, but you want more out of a 5 spot who has a man on base in front of him almost every at bat. I’m pretty sure he has more career GIDPs than hits, but if Manny and Ortiz get on base in front of him, Usain Bolt could ground into a double play to the center fielder if he went to third and second for the force outs.

Trot “Irony” Nixon: It is ironic that he’s named Trot but so rarely trots around the bases. He sulks back to the dugout after a soft ground out much more oftenn, but “Sulk” Nixon isn’t as catchy. Basically he exists just to make absolutely sure that any rally by the big guys that has not come to fruition and dies a painful death by sodomy. And not just any sodomy. Like, being sodomized by a pack of velociraptor. Or worse, signing Julio Lugo to a multiyear deal.

Bill “Gedman” Mueller: Bill Mueller is the spiritual successor to Rich Gedman from the original version of RBI Baseball for NES. Every time Terence would have a late lead against Boston in the original, Rich Gedman “Destroyer of Dreams” would somehow blast a homer. Though this Boston team is not nearly as infallible, Bill Mueller has a tendency to blast homers at inopportune times for my opponents, such as when they’re carrying a no hitter into the bottom of the ninth of a 1-0 game.

Mark “Bellwhore” Bellhorn: In real life, the guy was a league leader in strike outs and hit second for most of the season in 2004. Luckily, he has cut down on the strikeouts by grounding out softly instead. And usually getting pinch hit for.

THE BENCH:
Kevin “Cowboy Up” Millar: Best pinch hitter off the bench for the Sox, he has the power to launch a ball into the parking lot if you make a mistake. Unfortunately, he isn't very fast, and with no protection the opposing pitchers can be very careful around him, so he doesn't get on base much these days. Had a big year in Holy War I (World Series II) and in the regular season, but not so much in the last world series.

Dave “Faster Black Man” Roberts: If only we could pinch run. He rarely gets on base with his crappy hitting, but if he grounds into a forceout he is almost a lock to steal second, sometimes third, and even occasionally home. Great speed is a huge help for the team... when he gets on base.

Doug “Alphabet” Mientkiewitcz: Can anybody really spell his name? I don’t. I bet he spends all that time on the bench coming up with acronyms for it. Because he’s never on the field. I actually tried to pinch hit the pitcher for him once and was unsuccesful. True story.

Gabe “Mazel Tough” Kapler: I'm just gonna go with am awesome quote here "Decent hitter. Awesome jew." Decent pinch hitter but only comes in for the pitcher.

THE STAFF:
Curt Schilling: Power pitcher. Good stamina. Devastating fastball. Terence hates him and wishes to cathadorize him with barbed wire.

Pedro “Your Daddy” Martinez: Great control, great curveball, stamina could use some help, velocity tends to dip mid game. Prone to late game implosions, but always comes through in relief in extra innings.

Tim “Knuckle-balla’ Wakefield: His knuckleball has yet to be scored on, average better than a strikeouts per inning, and has a WHIP under 1.00. Positively devastating. Only has a handful of losses or blown saves, but 1 of them was in the playoffs in Game 5 of the World Series II. He only pitches when absolutely necessary (so opponent don't get used to him), and rarely more than one inning, but he tends to dominate opposing hitters.

Keith “WTF” Foulke: For the first year, Keith Foulke had a pact with the devil. He almost always blew the game, either destroying a small lead or rendering stressful tie games “less stressful” by giving up the lead. But he never lost. He blew about a third of the games that he has appeared in, but the team only lost two of those games. He gave up 5 runs in the top of the 10th in one game, yet got the win. Foulke blowing the game was once viewed as a sure signal that his team will win.

Then the playoffs came. He started sucking horribly. And he has sucked ever since. First world series 4 ER in 5 1/3 innings, second world series 4 ER in 6 innings, this year he's expected to give up 4 ER in 6 2/3 inning.

~~~New York~~~
STARTERS:
Derek “GIDP” Jeter: Occasional homers, a few doubles, and then double plays. Lots of them. Even with the bases empty. Also seems to have an uncanny ability to reach on errors. He's frustrating as hell to face.

ARod: Smashes the ball, hits lots of homers, but tends to choke. On cocks. Actually, this is the anti-Arod, he is mediocre in the regular season but really good in the post season.

Gary “Sheff-Boy-R-Dee” Sheffield: He would fit in very well on the original Red Sox what with his ridiculous right handed power. And whenever I strike out Arod, he seems to figure out my pitching patterns and hammer the first pitch out of the park . Oh, btw, in the previous description, that was a blow job reference and a questioning of his sexuality in case you missed it.

Hideki “Godzilla” Matsui: Another big homer hitter, rounding out the big 4. He sucked early in the World Series in Holy War I, goingn 2-18 with 14 Ks before hitting a walkoff ninth inning single in the final game.

Those top 4 hitters can all hit homers and basically devastate the Red Sox. The lineup drops off pretty quick, but it is a brutal four hitter punch.

Bernie “NO!” Williams: Bernie is the Tim Laudner of this game. He will get out every single time. Unless the other pitcher takes him for granted. Then he will homer. So, if Matsui is walked to face Bernie, the next pitch will be out of the park. Then he’ll sit on his ass for another few days til you go back to assuming he’s an out ("Damn, this guy grounded out softly the last 10 times, why was I afraid of him? *HOMERUN* Oh... that's why"). Named for the scream of anguish when he grounded into a game ending triple play with a one run deficit.

“Hip hip Jorge” Posada: Occasional longball, but usually just grounds out. Decent protection from pinch hitters behind him, good for getting on base, but not too much power.

John “Dark Helmet” Olerud: This guy doesn’t actually get at bats much anymore. He has no power, no speed, but he does occassionally get on base, which is always very confusing. Usually replaced by Lofton.

Cairo: Sucks. Horribly. Career postseason line is .000/.000/.000. Usually replaced by Giambi or Sierra.

BENCH:
Kenny “Fast Black Man” Lofton’s: Kenny is fast and hits the ball well enough to get a good number of doubles. Solid hitter, legs out base hits, and defies logic by ACTUALLY getting a world series ring in this game, unlike real life.

Jason the Giambino: Steroids boy. Oily enough to solve the world's fuel problems for years. He is 2-3 in postseason career with a pair of homers.

Ruben Sierra: This guy sucked until a breakout performance in the Holy War I playoffs. Ever since then, he's been devastating as a pinch hitter. If he can get a hold of a ball it's pretty easy for him to knock a homer.

Tony Clark: Generally low power, but hits the occasional pinch hit homer, usually coming in nfor the pitcher.

THE STAFF:
El Duque: Starts every game. Good stamina, good curveball, good fastball, but usually makes a few mistakes that get hammered.

Mike “Moose” Mussina: Comes in in relief almost every game. Good in regular season, dominant in postseason (3-0, 0.66 ERA in Holy War I, 0-1, 0.73 ERA in Holy War II). His first pitch is usually around 79-80, then the next pitch and all further pitches are like 74 mph or so. But after El Duque is throwing slow from exhaustion, when he comes in the hitters can't handle it right away.

Mariano “Mo” Rivera: Terence wants to save him for emergencies. He rarely ever pitches because Mussina is so constant. But he's usually solid when he comes in. No postseason pitching though, ironically.

Tom Gordon: Although his fastball is hotter than Jessica Alba, it’s flatter than Kiera Knightley’s chest. The only thing about him that is straight is the trajectory of his curveball. If he were as good at pitching as he were at getting men… well, he’d still fail, but maybe in a more dazzling way.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Jamie Moyer, Tim Wakefield test positive for steroids

Reports confirm that Red Sox pitcher Tim Wakefield and Phillies pitcher Jamie Moyer have been suspended indefinitely due to their use of performance enhancing drugs banned by Major League Baseball.

Commissioner Bud Selig revealed in a press conference that they had been specifically interested in Moyer and Wakefield due to the "unnatural" extra speed on their fastballs. The two players, who joined the Major Leagues in 1867, have long been the center of controversy regarding their bizarre habits and suspected substance abuse, but nobody had ever been able to pin anything on them. Complaints from opposing hitters had been piling up for years, but they finally came to a head this week when Moyer managed to strike an opposing batter out, a feat that most people believe should be physically impossible.

The tests proved conclusively that both Wakefield and Moyer had been using anabolic steroids, HGH, amphetamines, alcohol, IV adrenaline, and the blood of virgins in order to maintain their edge.*

Moyer responded to reporter's questions by stating "You know who I am? I played this game when you were still a twinkle in your grandfather's eye. I don't have to put up with you snot nosed little kids trying to ruin my life, now mind your own business and get off my lawn you little bastards before I get my musket"

When cornered after tonight's game, Wakefield reportedly said "[expletive deleted] you you little [expletive deleted] s I should [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] you in the face with a [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] and then [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] you with a [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] in the [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] until you can't [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] without [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted] out your [expletive deleted] ."

Sabremetricians everywhere have long questioned the unusual length of their careers. It is well known that most baseball players peak in their late 20s or early 30s, while decling at the end of their 30s and early 40s. However, rather than declining, the two pitchers have been fairly consistent for most of their careers according to the OAF system (inset). Sabermetricians maintain that this is a clear reason to suspect PED use.


Reactions in MLB clubhouses were mixed

"What the [expletive deleted] are you talking about?" responded Chicago manager Ozzie Guillen when questioned by phone. He continued "Seriously, is this some kind of [expletive deleted] joke? Who are you? How did you get this number? I'm calling the [expletive deleted] cops on your [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted]."

Other baseball figures reacted differently. Many were shocked, such as former player Julio Franco, who stated "I played with those guys ever since I got back from my tour with the Army of Virginia during the Civil War. Now I don't know how to feel. I mean... you think you know a guy. I don't know, I guess I feel... betrayed"

Some were more aggressive. "I knew there was something up with those guy since the moment I set eyes on them" maintains some player on some National League team nobody cares about. "All cocky up there with his 75 mph fastball. Like he owned the place. You could tell even then that they'd be the kind of guys who think they wouldn't get caught, that they're above the rules."

But others were more accepting "You know, maybe they didn't knowingly take it. I mean, there's that one guy on TV who prescribed a guy cigarettes, maybe they didn't know they were taking it?" said nice guy but gullible dumbass Jim Thome.

Some just seem to be in denial.
"Dude, there's no way he was taking steroids back in '04" maintans former Wakefield teammate Kevin Millar. "I pantsed that [expletive deleted] in the clubhouse after we beat the Yanks in '04, and let me tell you... if that's what his testicles look like after steroid shrinkage, that man must have elephantitis down there. You know, his saddle pommel. His boots and spurs. The chambers of his ole' revolver. His down south barbeque sauce producers"

Fan reaction was even more mixed
"Dude, didn't Jamie Moyer die a few years ago?" -MarinersFan2001
"Bull**** dude, this is bull****, Arod gets off free and they don't?" -GoB0S0X
"This is all a lie made up by the media to manipulate us" -ConspiracyTheorist801
"Hank Aaron took greenies, Cobb sharpened his cleats, all of baseball is a sham!" - Dickweed15626
"I hear Jamie Moyer killed six people and then had sex with their children. True Story" PhilliesSuckzorz
"****" -EastCoastBias04
"Please God, let Julio Lugo test positive" - Red Sox Pitching Staff, Lineup

Some have already questioned how this will affect the two players hall of fame status. When asked whether this would effect his vote, a source who requested to remain anonymous responded "Wait, you thought these guys ever had a chance? Are you an idiot?"

The eventual fallout is unclear, but this is clearly a bad day for baseball.

"Any time this happens, it's bad for the game" says Moyer teammate Brett Myers. "It's a black eye for the game, and not like the kind I give my wife, because baseball can't make me a sandwich afterwards"

-

* (Sources confirm that this virgin blood came from the readership of one "Two Strike Bunt").

Ohhhh. Shit.

Well, this isn't good.

http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=4148907

As much as Manny has absolutely destroyed every team I like over the years, this is just bad for baseball. Absolutely nothing good can come of this. It'll be interesting to hear what additional information comes out...Boras has already had some damage control practice with regards to the steriods issue and superstar clients of his, so let's see if this one plays out any different. I know Manny claims that it wasn't a steriod that he tested positive for, but we'll see where this goes. A bad day for baseball.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Fatasses and stealing their co-blogger's pringles

Those seem to go together a lot.

Forgot one earlier.

Carl Crawford stole 6 bags vs. the Red Sox this week. We haven't seen a baseball player run with such enthusiasm since Prince Fielder heard it was snack time.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Haphazardry

I could not help but notice that my partner in crime has used three different names for his three different "potpourri"-type columns: "Pluses and Minuses," "Bits and Pieces," and "Swings and Misses." As our misson statement boldly asserts, we don't have much of a plan for this, just going to see where it goes- so why bother with consistency? I'm not criticizing, I'm embracing- and I thought I'd take this opportunity to suggest some more pairs of things that always seem to go nicely together, since I may never leave the library again:

Odds and Ends
Sneezes and Farts
Dicks and Balls
Matches and Gasoline
Hatchets and Foreheads
Soap and Jail
Tea and Crumpets
Bears and Children
Heartattack and Vine
Hairdryers and Bathtubs
Buggerers and Bull Dykes
Hopscotch and Land Mines
Beer and Sex
Tequila and Bad Sex
Sheep and Alec

That should keep you covered for a while...mostly the point of this exercise was to say something absurd while buried under too much work.

Swings and misses

Rick Ankiel was hospitalized after crashing headfirst into the outfield wall. Luckily, he didn't bang his head against a wall as hard or as often as those who drafted David Ortiz early in fantasy.

Texas second baseman Ian Kinsler is second place in the majors with 9 homers so far this season. This really is an accomplishment when you consider he's only the only team in the AL that doesn't get to face the Texas pitching staff.

Brewers pitcher Yovani Gallardo went 8 scoreless innings and belted a homerun in a 1-0 victory over the Pirates. The Pirates hadn't been embarassed like that since about two-thirds of the games in their last dozen seasons.

The New York Mets have demoted Oliver Perez from the starting rotation after an abysmal start to the year. Perez's pitching was so abysmal that many Mets fans thought that they had accidentally time travelled to September.

I Believe We Have a New Patron Saint

Wow.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/34592-sox-on-deck-pawsox-lose-on-2-out-2-strike-bunt-in-bottom-9th


Danny Sandoval is a former Phillies SS prospect who was last seen playing for the Tiburones de la Guaira this past winter and is currently, according to milb.com, still a free agent. Much more importantly than that, though, I believe he is now a candidate to be the first Patron Saint of Two-Strike Bunt; I'm pretty sure a walkoff two-strike bunt gives you a damn good shot at that honor. I must confess, I found the article because I forgot the web address for my own blog, I Googled "two strike bunt," and this article was the next one down. But holy shit does that take some balls- two strikes, two outs, runner on third? What a baller. What an absolute baller.

Also, on a completely unrelated note, I have terrible work habits.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Heated Toilet Seats > #1 Starter?

As a man, I understand that the toilet seat is a special place. We have a certain affinity for the "throne;" I couldn't tell you why, just because I am not well-versed in the psychology of excrement, but I know it's true and so do you. Apparently though, I might have underestimated just how important the throne is to both men and women; it seems that in Japan, having a comfortable commode is worth selling your team's ace and national hero halfway around the globe.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/03/sports/baseball/03lions.html?_r=2&ref=sports

I shit you not. If you take a look at the article, there are some seriously strange quotes in there. "Daisuke made such a great contribution to the team for 10 years, so these are kind of his memorial places"? Does that strike anyone else as a rather strange thing to say? And then there's the couple from America, clearly enjoying all that Japan has to offer:
“It looked like a women’s room in a nice hotel with the vanities and sinks,” said Tere Garcia-Pena, visiting from Manhattan with her husband, Miguel. “It was just so nice and clean, I felt like I just wanted to keep going in there.”
I can see it now. "Hunny, let's fly halfway around the globe so we can see what a real stadium can looks like- if I ever have to take one more shit in Yankee Stadium, I think I might cry." And she wanted to keep going in there? Jesus Christ- I know women get bored at ballgames, but seriously? You cannot find anything more compelling to do at a baseball game than taking a piss? Good God.

For clarity's sake, I would like to say that I'm not criticizing what the Lions did with the Matsuzaka money- if your stadium is a shithole, and $51 million falls into your lap, it makes sense to do a little renovating. I am, however, observing that a) this is a seriously strange article and b) I'm pretty damn sure that a #1 starter is more valuable to the long-term success of a franchise than heated toilet seats, an opinion that the writer of the article, a Mr. David Waldstein, seems not to share: "...based on the new amenities, it has been a rather equitable exchange." No, Mr. Waldstein, it hasn't. The fact that Ms. Pena feels exquisitely comfortable while dropping the kids off at the pool will not help the Lions win a single ballgame, or sell a single ticket; no one shows up at the ballpark because they want to take a shit. If you wanted to make the argument that the Lions have made out well because they upgraded the stadium and more importantly they used the Matsuzaka money to get several players to win a championship, then I would have no issue with you. Look at the Mariners in 2001- they lose Johnson, Griffey, and A-Rod 3 years in a row, but win 116 games in 2001 because they then spent that money on a number of other players that filled a number of holes on their team.* But you dedicate one throwaway line to that and spend the rest of the article fawning over the all-powerful hot seat.

I must say, though, I can find no argument whatsoever with this:
“If the bathrooms are nice and convenient, then you do not hesitate to buy another cup of beer,” Takahashi said.
Goddamn right, Takahashi. You're goddamn right.


*Important 2001 Seattle Mariners signed as free agents between Johnson's departure and the 2001 season: Jeff Nelson, Ichiro, John Olerud, Bret Boone, Aaron Sele, Arthur Rhodes, Kaz Sasaki. Important 2001 Seattle Mariners acquired in the Johnson or Griffey trades: Freddy Garcia, Carlos Guillen, John Halama, Mike Cameron. According to BaseballRef, the Mariners' payroll in '98, their last season with all three, was about $53 million, and their payroll in '01 was about $73 million. Obviously there are several factors at work here- maybe ownership didn't want to spend as much money on the team in those years, or there could be something I have no idea about. Also, the 1998-1999 offseason was the offseason when salaries exploded, so it is slightly unfair to compare the before/after years, but what the hell else am I going to do?

Ouch


That's Carl Crawford's throw from left field nailing Dustin Pedroia in the balls this Saturday. Ouch.

Higher res image if it becomes available.

A-Rod Already Providing Relief for Yanks

Unfortunately for Joe Girardi's already receding hairline, it is of the comic, rather than the offensive or pitching, type. (Although Joe already has Nick Swisher, God among Men, to solve all his bullpen woes) As someone who knows that the old-time romantic/nostalgic view of baseball is largely a fictionalization and a marketing tool but holds it anyway, I wish A-Rod could be clean and normal and just hit home runs (in the "clutch," of course) without keeping 37 different tabloids in business. Essentially, I wish he could be Albert Pujols. (I really, really, really want to believe Pujols is clean- I know steriods don't actually help you hit a baseball, and personally I am so sick of hearing about the issue that I more or less don't give a shit anymore, but it still bothers me and I'd like people to be clean) El Hombre, however, A-Rod is not. He's not even The Man. (Yes, El Hombre > The Man. Just ask yourself, which one sounds more badass?)


A-Rod is an extraordinarily talented ballplayer, and statistically is easily one of the best ever. But there is so much shit constantly swirling around him that it's easy to forget just how absurdly good he has been since he first broke into The Show. I'm not a big A-Rod fan; I'd have to say I'm rather ambivalent about him. When I was younger, I somewhat resented him because he was significantly better than my favorite player (Derek Jeter) but now I don't really have strong feelings one way or the other. Obviously I want him to succeed because he plays for the Yankees and because I love seeing great players play well, but beyond that I have no particular attachment to him.


I have to say though, I think it's absolutely hilarious that he cannot do ANYTHING anymore without creating yet another mess in his life. The man has taken his life, which a few years ago seemed to be about as clean-cut and straightforward as it gets for a major league ballplayer, and turned it into the sporting world's greatest walking clusterfuck. Steriods? Check. In high school? Check. Extramarital affairs? Check. With Madonna? Check. Strippers? Check. Mystical religions that most people don't understand? Check. Selling out his team's relievers so he can pad his batting stats? Check. Strangely sensual pictures involving himself and...a mirror? Check. I am honestly eagerly anticipating the next utterly ridiculous headline involving Mr. Alexander Emmanuel Rodriguez. It's past the point where you feel bad just because there's been so much of it; it either has gotten to him at this point or it hasn't, and if it hasn't already, it won't. Which means that the thing to do is simply revel in it- not because A-Rod is someone to be hated, but because he is providing us with some serious first-class entertainment. He has managed to put himself in a situation where although he plays a fucking game for a living, and is paid an exorbinant amount to do so, there are probably about seven people in the universe that would actually want to put themselves in his place.

Returning to my point though, I am seriously looking forward to the next piece of news that comes out concerning the man they call Mrs. October. One loyal reader (and the only reader that I know of other than us...so I guess that makes him loyal) suggested "in a couple weeks it'll be made public that he killed four hookers with a pair of cleats in the Rangers' clubhouse." Personally, my money's on something so outlandish that even Britney would say "Seriously dude? What the fuck?" Maybe a highly suggestive music video? Or perhaps Selena Roberts discovers that A-Rod is actually funneling money to Somalian pirates? Or following another season where he fails to lead the Yanks to a World Championship (not what I'm hoping for, but that's probably what'll happen) he decides to train in Siberia all winter and fight Kevin Youkilis in a battle to determine the outcome of the global arms race between Red Sox Nation and Yankees Universe? Or maybe he decides to forsake the material world and become a Buddhist monk in Nepal? God only knows what that shitclown will do next, but I can't wait.


I seriously think it's good for baseball and America though. A-Rod's shenanigans are good for baseball because baseball always needs a villian. That's what the Yankees and Red Sox exist for- they are the villians of the major leagues; everbody hates them. But you have to have some players that are the bad guys too- and that's where A-Rod fits in. Now that Bonds is retired, there has to be someone in the majors who gets booed in every single visiting park he sets foot in; it gives baseball fans common ground, something fans of every team can identify with and participate in. And it's good for America because A-Rod stands as a reminder that even though the economy's tanked more than the Mets in September, life can be shitty even for people who have obscene amounts of money.


If we have more readers out there, feel free to offer up your own suggestions as to what Mrs. October will do next- I'm curious to see just how little faith we have in his ability to act like a normal human being.