It's the home opener today, and I'm sure everybody will be glued to that once it gets going, so here's the Linkapalooza a little early today. To the links.
- On Monday, Scott Ham of The Bronx View unveiled the Girardi Tracker to follow Joe's usage of his pitching staff. I've already reminded myself never to check this after a Yankee loss when I'm drunk.
- On Tuesday, Jay Jaffe of Pinstriped Bible stirred the pot a bit on the Yankees' 0-3 start by bringing up past instances of even worse starts in franchise history. Luckily, the team has rebounded since then.
- Joe Pawlikowski of RAB commented on Derek Jeter's hot start and what could be the major contributing factor.
- On Wednesday, Frank Campagnola of Pinstripe Alley voiced his opinion on Freddy Garcia, and it wasn't a positive one. This could have been a knee-jerk reaction to Freddy's poor first start, but Frank does make some valid points.
- Greg Corcoran of Bronx Baseball Daily became the latest to point out the fact that despite perception to the contrary, the Yankees are actually good at developing pitchers.
- Dan Barbarisi of The Wall Street Journal had an interesting piece on Eduardo Nunez and his desire to be Jeter's successor as the everyday shortstop. I admire his commitment and work ethic, but dude really needs to clean his game up to be a viable option.
- Mike Eder of TYA broke down Ivan Nova's first start of the season with PITCHF/x, and made some predictions on what we could see moving forward.
- On Thursday, Jamie Insalaco of Bomber Banter reviewed the trends from the first 6 games in preparation for today's home opener.
- William Juliano of The Captain's Blog crunched the numbers on early-season blown saves to disprove the theory that there have been more of them early in the season than usual.
- William Tasker of IIATMS commented on the small sample size-influenced last place ranking for the Yankees in defensive efficiency, and included a stellar Photoshop as well.
- Delia E. of Yankees Fans Unite used David Phelps' early-season success to form some comparisons between him and D-Rob. Phelps' MiL history doesn't project K dominance like D-Rob has had at the Major League, but I think we'd all be ecstatic if he developed into something close.
- On Friday, Kate Conroy of Lady Loves Pinstripes unveiled his first weekly MLB power poll of the 2012 season.
- George King of The Post had some quotes from scouts saying that Jeter looks quicker out of the box this season than he has in the past. No word on whether or not he's importing water from the fountain of youth.
I should be going with "Here Come The Yankees" for the Friday Jam again today for the home opener, but I don't want to use it 2 weeks in a row. Instead, I'm going with "Bulls On Parade" by Rage Against The Machine, one because I'd like to see the offense perform like a bunch of bulls on parade today, and two because Rage is the shit.
Enjoy your weekends, everybody.
Friday, April 13, 2012
Early Trade Returns
The season is still very, very young, but just for S's and G's here's where the pieces of the Montero-Pineda trade are at through the first week:
- Jesus Montero: 7-25 w/ 0 XBH, 2 RBI, 0 BB
- Hector Noesi: 1 GS, 3 IP, 7 H, 6 ER, 3 BB, 3 K
- Michael Pineda: On the DL, throwing light workout sessions
- Jose Campos: 2 GS, 11 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 3 BB, 10 K
And there's your Friday the 13th weirdness for the day. The least-heralded part of the trade, at least initially, blowing people's doors off in his first experience in a full-season league while the other 3 guys spin their tires a bit at the wave of the green flag. If this trade wase a tennis match, the Yankees would be up 15-love in the first game of the first set.
P.S.- Did I get enough completely unrelated sports comparisons in there?
- Jesus Montero: 7-25 w/ 0 XBH, 2 RBI, 0 BB
- Hector Noesi: 1 GS, 3 IP, 7 H, 6 ER, 3 BB, 3 K
- Michael Pineda: On the DL, throwing light workout sessions
- Jose Campos: 2 GS, 11 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 3 BB, 10 K
And there's your Friday the 13th weirdness for the day. The least-heralded part of the trade, at least initially, blowing people's doors off in his first experience in a full-season league while the other 3 guys spin their tires a bit at the wave of the green flag. If this trade wase a tennis match, the Yankees would be up 15-love in the first game of the first set.
P.S.- Did I get enough completely unrelated sports comparisons in there?
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Jorge Throwing Out The First Pitch Tomorrow
(Courtesy of Debby Wong/US Presswire)
Everybody probably already knows this by now, but if not, BREAKING NEWZ!!!!
Tomorrow is the home opener and the recently-retired Jorge Posada is scheduled to throw out the ceremonial first pitch. As someone (probably one of the few) who was always on the fence when it came to Jorge and not head-over-heels in fanlove with him like most Yankee fans, I will say that I am pleasantly surprised that this is happening.
Truth be told, I thought there would be a little more time between his retirement and return to Yankee Stadium because of how things ended between Jorge and the Yankees. There was the whole "taking himself out of the lineup" fiasco last the season, the outright declaration by the Yankees that they weren't going to offer him a new deal, and Jorge basically being forced to retire because no other teams were interested in him. I got the sense from watching the clips of his retirement press conference and reading some of the quotes that he really didn't WANT to have to hang them up, and I'm glad that there doesn't appear to be any ill will between him and the one organization he called home for so long.
Tomorrow afternoon's game will definitely be in the top 5 for games I wish I could have attended since I moved out to Wisconsin and it's simply because Jorge is going to be there to throw out the first pitch. The atmosphere is going to be INSANE! I'm literally getting goosebumps right now at my desk thinking about how loud that ovation is going to be. After the rough way Jorge went out as a player, it's only right to bring him right back to the place where he is universally loved so he can be reminded of just how important and beloved a member of the Yankee family he is.
** If any AB4AR readers are going to the game tomorrow, take some pictures or video of the days' events and send them to me. I'd love to get a sense of what the atmosphere was like and I'd love to throw some stuff up in a post. **
The Benefit Of 20/20 Foresight (And Failing To Use It)
I'm always the first to pipe up about Joe's on-field decisions when it comes to managing his bullpen, be they good calls or bad calls (usually bad). But for the Yankees to extend that questionable bullpen decision-making to the pre-game, well that's something I'm not familiar with and something I was very surprised to see play out yesterday. If you were not aware, the Yankees entered last night's game quite understaffed in their relief corps after the previous 2 games. Let's review:
That left the Yankees with just 2 guaranteed available arms out of the 'pen last night in Boone Logan and Clay Rapada, both guys who are best utilized as short-relief lefty specialists. Rafael Soriano was a game-time decision after ripping the nail off the middle finger of his pitching hand while warming up on Tuesday night, and I don't remember reading anywhere prior to the game that his availability had been confirmed. The Yankees knew all of this after last night's game ended. None of this was a surprise or something that caught them off guard, and they had plenty of time to make a roster move to add some depth, and yet they chose not to.
- David Phelps- Unavailable after pitching 2.1 innings in relief of Freddy Garcia on Tuesday night
- Cory Wade- Ditto
- D-Rob- Unavailable after pitching 1 inning in consecutive nights on Monday and Tuesday
- Mo- Ditto*
That left the Yankees with just 2 guaranteed available arms out of the 'pen last night in Boone Logan and Clay Rapada, both guys who are best utilized as short-relief lefty specialists. Rafael Soriano was a game-time decision after ripping the nail off the middle finger of his pitching hand while warming up on Tuesday night, and I don't remember reading anywhere prior to the game that his availability had been confirmed. The Yankees knew all of this after last night's game ended. None of this was a surprise or something that caught them off guard, and they had plenty of time to make a roster move to add some depth, and yet they chose not to.
Game 6 Wrap-Up
(Swishalicious! Courtesy of The AP)
I'm going to save my rant on the Yankees' decision to not add bullpen reinforcements for another post in a few hours. The important thing is they got the job done last night with the players they had and completed the series sweep in Baltimore.
Game Notes:
- After a so-so Opening Day outing where his fastball command was spotty and he had to battle through 6 innings, it was more of the same for CC last night. He struggled with his fastball again, missing up with it a lot and practically eliminating it from his arsenal after 3-4 innings. His slider was money as an out pitch and he used that to battle his way through a 6 IP, 8 H, 4 ER, 2 BB, 8 K line.
- Orioles' starter Jake Arrieta did his best Wei-Yin Chen impression, giving up a leadoff double to Derek Jeter and a follow-up HR to Curtis Granderson in the top of the 1st, but then settled down after that to mostly keep the Yankee offense at bay. He made it through 6.2 innings before succumbing to the vintage Yankee patience and giving up the game-tying 4th run in the 7th.
- After the last 2 games, the Yankees entered the game with only Boone Logan and Clay Rapada definitely available out of the 'pen, and Rafael Soriano a game-time decision after his fingernail tearing incident on Tuesday night. Logan and Soriano both came up big picking up CC in the later innings, combing for 0 R allowed on 1 hit in 3 innings.
- Despite using him in each of the previous 2 games, Joe channeled his inner Herm Edwards and played to win the game by going to Mo after Swish cracked a 2-run HR in the top of the 10th to give the Yankees the lead. Mo did what he does, and the Yankees left Baltimore with a sweep and a record back at .500.
F*ck Yeahs:
- C-Grand: 2-5, HR, 1 R, 3 RBI. Outside of him and Jeter, the Yankee offense was near non-existent last night for most of the game.
- Swish: Game-winning 2-run homers in extra innings will tend to get you in this section of the AB4AR recap.
Oh Nos:
- Robinson Cano: 0-5 with 4 LOB, and 2 pop-ups with RISP. Still needs to find his groove.
Next Up:
Thankfully, the Yankees get an off day to rest up the majority of their bullpen that wasn't available tonight before heading back to The Stadium for their season-opening home series against the Angels.
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Thoughts On The Cano Contract Situation
(Swag. Courtesy of MLB.com)
The future of Robinson Cano in pinstripes has become an increasingly popular and important topic of discussion over the past few months, both in terms of what kind of deal he could get and how the Yankees' efforts to re-sign him will impact their goals of getting below the $189 million payroll limit for 2014. That discussion has become even louder in the last day or so as the Rangers' recent re-signing of Ian Kinsler, combined with similar re-up deals for Brandon Phillips and Dan Uggla, has established a baseline for the numbers. 2 posts yesterday, one from Mike Axisa of RAB and another from Eric Schultz of TYA covered the current situation about as well as I could ever hope to, so rather than try to craft something as well put together as they did, I'll just put my Peter King hat on and offer up some of my own thought on the matter and what I think can, should, and will happen.
Game 5 Wrap-Up
(Love seeing the postgame handshake line. Courtesy of The AP)
Things didn't look great early, as the Yankee offense looked to once again be overmatched by a pitcher they had never faced before. But some timely late-inning hitting and a lockdown bullpen performance to pick up Freddy Garcia ended up being enough to get them their 2nd straight win.
Game Notes:
- A night after Ivan Nova turned in a sterling starting pitching performance, Freddy was off from the word go in his first start of the season. Maybe it was the cold weather affecting him, but he had little to no command of his offspeed stuff and became the first pitcher since 1989 to throw 5 wild pitches in a game. Like Phil Hughes a few days ago, Freddy failed to make it out of the 5th inning.
- Orioles' starter Wei-Yin Chen was solid through 5 innings, holding the Yankees to just 1 run on Derek Jeter's leadoff home run. But he tired in the 6th inning and the Yankees took advantage, aided by Buck Showalter sticking with Chen a little too long, scoring 3 runs to tie the game.
- As bad as Garcia was, the bullpen was that good and then some. Phelps, D-Rob, Logan, Wade, Rapada, and Mo combined to throw 7.1 inning of scoreless ball, allowing only baserunners and K'ing 12. Rapada even got a right-handed hitter out.
- The Yanks had a good chance to get a run in the top of the 11th after a leadoff walk to Russell Martin. Joe's decision to pinch run for Martin was questionable, as was his decision to have Brett Gardner lay down a sac bunt, but considering the hot-hitting Jeter was on deck and a failed SB attempt by Eduardo would have resulted in bases empty/1 out rather than runner on 2nd/1 out, I can't get too upset at the move.
- After pinch hitting for Andruw Jones in the 8th inning, Raul Ibanez picked up the game-winning hit with a 2-out double in the top of the 12th, his team-leading 6th RBI of the season.
F*ck Yeahs:
- Jeter: Continued to look great at the plate, going 2-6 with a HR, 1 R, 1 RBI. The homer to lead off the game was the 25th of his career, which set a new Yankee record.
- Gardner: 2-4 with 1 RBI, which came on a smart piece of hitting on Gardner's part to tie the game in the 6th. Facing a tiring pitcher who was losing his command and just failed to get out of the inning thanks to an error, Gardner was looking first-pitch fastball, got a good one to hit, and didn't waste it.
- David Phelps/Cory Wade: Put up matching 2.1 IP, 0 R, 4 K lines to keep the Yankees in the game and give the offense more chances to score the eventual winning run.
Oh Nos:
- Freddy: 4.2 IP, 4 H, 4 R (3 ER), 3 BB, 3 K. Just never looked comfortable out there.
- A-Rod: It pains me to say it, but an 0-5 with 2 Ks from the cleanup spot is not a good look.
Next Up:
The Yanks will look to get back to .500 and close out this series with a sweep as the 2 aces, CC for New York and Jake Arrieta for Baltimore, square off tonight.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
On Andy's First Comeback Outing
The plan was to take things slow, but Andy Pettitte has been on what seems to me like a pretty aggressive schedule since the announcement of his unretirement. He started throwing bullpens and BP very early in his short ST stint, got into a ST game earlier than expected at the end of camp, and last night made his first official appearance of the season for High-A Tampa. The plan was for Pettitte to throw just 2 innings but thanks to a low pitch count he ended up throwing another, once again an aggressive decision.
All reports on Pettitte's outing last night have been incredibly positive, and with good reason. He threw 32 pitches last night, 26 of them for strikes, and sat 85-86 with his fastball, which is not too far off from the 88-89 he was averaging when he last pitched in 2010. Granted, it was against much lesser competition than he'll face at the upper levels, but in what was essentially a ST start the results were everything you would want to see.
Andy mentioned at his comeback presser that his legs were much further behind his arm at that point, and given the injury problems he had with his legs at the end of 2010 I thought that was going to be the main reason to take things very slowly with him and for the Yankees to not even consider calling him up until he was absolutely 100% ready, even if it took until June. But Andy said his legs felt good after last night, and he's scheduled to make his next appearance on Sunday. He'll get an extra day of rest before that start because of the 3rd inning he threw last night, which is a wise decision, but early on it appears to be full steam ahead for the old pitching Jedi.
All reports on Pettitte's outing last night have been incredibly positive, and with good reason. He threw 32 pitches last night, 26 of them for strikes, and sat 85-86 with his fastball, which is not too far off from the 88-89 he was averaging when he last pitched in 2010. Granted, it was against much lesser competition than he'll face at the upper levels, but in what was essentially a ST start the results were everything you would want to see.
Andy mentioned at his comeback presser that his legs were much further behind his arm at that point, and given the injury problems he had with his legs at the end of 2010 I thought that was going to be the main reason to take things very slowly with him and for the Yankees to not even consider calling him up until he was absolutely 100% ready, even if it took until June. But Andy said his legs felt good after last night, and he's scheduled to make his next appearance on Sunday. He'll get an extra day of rest before that start because of the 3rd inning he threw last night, which is a wise decision, but early on it appears to be full steam ahead for the old pitching Jedi.
Just Say "No" To Raul Ibanez In The Outfield
As important as it is for the Yankees to keep their key veteran players healthy this season, and as much as I want to see guys like Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez get regular rest to avoid wear and tear and trips to the DL, I was a little surprised to see Eduardo Nunez starting at shortstop in the second game of the season while Jeter got a DH day on Saturday. I was even more surprised to see Raul Ibanez in the lineup in right field Sunday while Nick Swisher got a DH day. Seeing as how both Jeter and Swish are coming off of Spring Training injuries, it's perfectly understandable that Joe would want to err on the side of caution early in the season and give them a day off from the field. That being said, I would be lying if I said I wasn't against the idea of Ibanez getting regular time in the field this season at the expense of healthy, better defensive options. In fact, given the showing he had in the field in his first game, I'd go as far to say that Ibanez should never be playing in the outfield.
With Nunez, there really isn't much the Yankees can do as far as finding a better utility IF/OF option. As he showed on Saturday, he's more than capable of turning the most routine defensive play into an adventure, but we've already known this about him for some time now and when you factor in all the good things he does bring to the table, it helps a bit to balance out what he takes away defensively. When you consider that Nunez's issues in the field seem to be rooted more in focus and mechanics rather than physical ability, it does leave room for optimism that he can improve and clean up some of his error issues. With Ibanez, the situation doesn't look so rosy.
With Nunez, there really isn't much the Yankees can do as far as finding a better utility IF/OF option. As he showed on Saturday, he's more than capable of turning the most routine defensive play into an adventure, but we've already known this about him for some time now and when you factor in all the good things he does bring to the table, it helps a bit to balance out what he takes away defensively. When you consider that Nunez's issues in the field seem to be rooted more in focus and mechanics rather than physical ability, it does leave room for optimism that he can improve and clean up some of his error issues. With Ibanez, the situation doesn't look so rosy.
Game 4 Wrap-Up: Super Nova
(Goodbye. Screen cap courtesy of MLB.com)
The losing streak is over! The Yanks were able to put good hitting and good pitching together last night for the first time this season, and the result was exactly what you would expect.
Game Notes:
- Ivan Nova was on last night, no other way to say it. His fastball velocity was up, and he located it well to both sides of the plate. He threw a ton of strikes to keep himself in control of the at-bats and worked his offspeed stuff in brilliantly. There was no talk of missing command last night. Nova was damn good.
- It's a little weird to use the word "scattered" when describing an outing in which the pitcher allowed 10 hits, but that's really what Nova did last night. The only really bad pitch he made was the changeup he left up on the Matt Wieters HR. There were a couple instances of balls just finding spots in the field where the defenders weren't, but there was never a sense that Nova was losing control of the game.
- Derek Jeter was the big offensive star of the night, going 4-4 with a double and 1 R and RBI apiece. It marked the 37th time in The Captain's career that he had 4+ hits in a game and continued the positive trends we've seen from him at the plate since he returned from his ST calf injury.
- Joe wasn't playing around in the 8th and 9th innings, going right to D-Rob and Mo to close it out. It's nice when he doesn't have to make any real decisions with the bullpen. D-Rob decided to change things up for his escape act last night, striking out the first 2 batters of the inning, then giving up consecutive hits before finishing things off.
F*ck Yeahs:
- Nova: 7 IP, 10 H, 2 ER, 0 BB, 7 K. Command problems? What command problems?
- Jeter: Doing what you want your leadoff man to do.
- Andruw Jones: 1-2 with a HR, BB, 1 RBI, 2 R scored. He looks lean and mean this season and absolutely smoked that homer off of Darren O'Day in the 6th.
Oh Nos:
- The "Heart of the order: Cano, A-Rod, and Teix combined to go 2-13 with just 1 RBI and 11 LOB, although they did draw 2 walks.
Next Up:
The Yanks look to turn this one win into a mini-streak with a follow-up W in the second game of this series tonight. Freddy Garcia takes the hill for the Bombers against Wei-Yin Chen. Yeah, I don't know who the hell he is either.
Monday, April 9, 2012
There's One...
And hopefully the first of many more. After stumbling and bumbling through the series in Tampa, the Yankees were on their game tonight and got off their season-opening schneid with a 6-2 win over the Baltimore Showalters. Ivan The Terrible Great led the way in his season debut and was downright FILTHY. His fastball was mid-90s all night, his curveball was nasty, his slider was nasty, and he was aggressive with all of them. Dude didn't look very good at all in Spring Training but he turned in the best outing by a Yankee starter so far in this young season, which means only one thing.
YA JUST CAN'T PREDICT BASEBALL, SUZYN!!!
More on the game tomorrow morning. Frankie, tune up the band...
YA JUST CAN'T PREDICT BASEBALL, SUZYN!!!
More on the game tomorrow morning. Frankie, tune up the band...
A Shift In Defending The Yankees?
One of the more interesting subplots to this past weekend's season-opening series was the generous use of the defensive shift by the Rays against the big boppers in the Yankee lineup. The shift is nothing new for them, as they employ it more than any other team in baseball, and nothing new for hitters like Mark Teixeira. But to see it used against hitters like A-Rod and C-Grand was a new wrinkle, at least for me, and raises a question on whether or not the Rays uncovered a new way to defend against the powerful Yankee lineup.
Employing the shift against Teix is almost commonplace nowadays when he's hitting from the left side. With the way he's become a pull-happy, all-or-nothing hitter from the left side over the past few seasons, it's something that any smart team would do. Teix still hasn't shown enough in terms of his ability to consistently hit the other way from the left side to dissuade teams from using the shift and it worked to the Rays' advantage this weekend. The Horse and Curtis don't have reputations as being prime candidates for the shift, at least not to the degree that Teix does, but in looking at their career pull/opposite way splits, it's not all that surprising that the Rays utilized the shift against them as well. For the sake of comparison...
Mark Teixeira (left-handed):
- OPS Pull Side- 1.200 career/ 1.000 in 2011
- OPS Opp. Way- .632 career/ .187 in 2011
- wOBA Pull Side- .502 career/ .492 in 2011
- wOBA Opp. Way- .265 career/ .080 in 2011
Alex Rodriguez:
- OPS Pull- 1.164 career/ .916 in 2011
- OPS Opp.- .872 career/ .664 in 2011
- wOBA Pull- .490 career/ .393 in 2011
- wOBA Opp.- .358 career/ .280 in 2011
Curtis Granderson:
- OPS Pull- 1.219 career/ 1.494 in 2011
- OPS Opp.- .720 career/ .517 in 2011
- wOBA Pull- .512 career/ .625 in 2011
- wOBA Opp.- .303 career/ .218 in 2011
Employing the shift against Teix is almost commonplace nowadays when he's hitting from the left side. With the way he's become a pull-happy, all-or-nothing hitter from the left side over the past few seasons, it's something that any smart team would do. Teix still hasn't shown enough in terms of his ability to consistently hit the other way from the left side to dissuade teams from using the shift and it worked to the Rays' advantage this weekend. The Horse and Curtis don't have reputations as being prime candidates for the shift, at least not to the degree that Teix does, but in looking at their career pull/opposite way splits, it's not all that surprising that the Rays utilized the shift against them as well. For the sake of comparison...
Mark Teixeira (left-handed):
- OPS Pull Side- 1.200 career/ 1.000 in 2011
- OPS Opp. Way- .632 career/ .187 in 2011
- wOBA Pull Side- .502 career/ .492 in 2011
- wOBA Opp. Way- .265 career/ .080 in 2011
Alex Rodriguez:
- OPS Pull- 1.164 career/ .916 in 2011
- OPS Opp.- .872 career/ .664 in 2011
- wOBA Pull- .490 career/ .393 in 2011
- wOBA Opp.- .358 career/ .280 in 2011
Curtis Granderson:
- OPS Pull- 1.219 career/ 1.494 in 2011
- OPS Opp.- .720 career/ .517 in 2011
- wOBA Pull- .512 career/ .625 in 2011
- wOBA Opp.- .303 career/ .218 in 2011
Game 3 Wrap-Up
(The look of winlessness. Courtesy of The AP)
Another frustrating loss yesterday. But at least we can all take solace in the fact that the last time the Yankees started the season 0-3 was 1998, and they ended up winning 114 in that regular season on their way to a World Series title.
Game Notes:
- I know he was too rich for their blood, but the Yankees probably should have signed Carlos Pena this offseason just so they wouldn't have to face him. He cracked another HR off of Phil Hughes yesterday and went 6-12 w/ 2 HR, 3 R scored, and 7 RBI in the series. Dude is the definition of a Yankee killer.
- Hughes pitched the best out of the 3 Yankee starters this weekend, although I don't know how much that matters when he only made it through 4.2. His fastball velocity was up and he mixed his change in well, both of which are encouraging signs. He just needs to be more efficient and finish guys off with 2 strikes.
- Rough day for Swish at the plate. He came up twice with A-Rod and Teix on base, 2nd and 3rd and 1 out in the 4th inning and at the corners with 2 outs in the 6th, and couldn't bring them in.
- It wasn't an ideal situation, but David Phelps made his Yankee debut in the bottom of the 8th with his family in attendance, so tip of the cap to him.
F*ck Yeahs:
- Phelps: That less-than-ideal situation was 2 on and 1 out and Phelps handled himself very well in his Major League debut, getting a strikeout and a groundout to end the inning and the threat.
- A Rod: 1-3 with a 2B, BB, and a SB. He was the most consistent hitter in the whole series and looked very smooth at the plate, in the field, and on the basepaths.
Oh Nos:
- Jeremy Hellickson: I didn't really give him his due in my post-game rant, but he was very good yesterday. He mixed his fastball and change incredibly well and kept the Yankee hitters off balance all day, and was very efficient with his pitch count. Just a shutdown performance.
- Raul Ibanez: Went 0-4 at the plate with 4 LOB and had that ridiculous misplay on Matt Joyce's "triple" in the first inning that cost Hughes a run.
Next Up:
The cellar-dwelling, winless Yankees head to Baltimore to take on the undefeated, division-leading Orioles. Yep, you read that correctly. Ivan Nova takes on Brian Matusz, first pitch at 7:05PM EST.
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Being On The Wrong Side Of A Season-Opening Sweep Sucks
I know all the traditional sayings that are going to come out after today- "Still a lot of baseball to play;" "You can't win 'em all;" "Better luck next time;" "It's just one series." That's all true and I believe all of that. And I think it was incredibly nice of the Yankees to hand out all those free eggs on the scoreboard today for the kids on Easter Sunday. But starting the season off getting swept on the road is never a good look, especially not when you're arguably the deepest and most talented team in the Majors like the Yankees are. The way they lost these 3 games this weekend was disconcerting, as it harked back to last year's ALDS and all the things that did them in. There was shaky starting pitching, questionable managerial decisions when it came to handling the pitching staff, and the inability of the lineup to get a timely hit or 2 when they really needed one. Given the way that they closed Spring Training, it looked like the regulars were ready to go and would hit the ground running, and instead they came out and laid an egg in the season-opening series. As a Yankee fan, that's a tough pill to swallow.
There's a difference between losing and losing because you're not playing good baseball, and the Yankees really didn't play good baseball this weekend, which is the biggest thing that's sticking in my craw right now. None of their starting pitchers pitched into the 7th inning of any game; their pair of lefty relievers combined to allow 3 ER on 3 H and 3 BB in 2.1 IP (2 of the 3 ER against left-handed hitters); their offense combined to hit 5-25 with RISP in the 3 games; and their manager definitely overmanaged his ace starting pitcher in the 1st inning of the 1st game of the year, maybe overmanged his lineup yesterday by inserting the botch-tastic Eduardo Nunez in the SS spot for Jeter, and definitely undermanaged his bullpen yesterday by leaving Rapada in to face the right-handed Evan Longoria. Whether it's the first 3 games of the season, the middle 3 games, or the last 3 games, that's sloppy baseball.
Jeremy Hellickson was good today, but he wasn't THAT good. And Phil Hughes, as well as he threw the ball, fell victim to the same things that always kill him. He wasn't efficient with his pitches, couldn't put guys away with 2 strikes when he needed to, and couldn't get out of innings clean when he got 2 outs. As for Raul Ibanez being in the lineup in right field today? Ummmm, yeesh!
Everything the Yankees did in this series seemed to be a little bit off and that's just not what you want to see from your team to start things off.
This is not the end of the world, and it shouldn't have anybody jumping off a bridge or ready to throw the towel in on the entire season. That would be foolish. But anybody who says they are OK with how the Yankees played in this opening series or accepts that they lost these 3 games is a bullshit liar. Any fan, rational or irrational, would have been perfectly within their rights to expect the Yankees to win this series, or at least win one game. And they are perfectly within their rights to be upset about the Yankees getting swept out of Tampa given how they played in the series. It's over now, it can't be changed, and everybody (players, coaches, and fans) has to move on to the next series. That being said, the Yankees need to get their shit together and play better baseball in that next series. They're a step behind everything that's happening right now, and regardless of how many games are left that's not a good way to open the season.
There's a difference between losing and losing because you're not playing good baseball, and the Yankees really didn't play good baseball this weekend, which is the biggest thing that's sticking in my craw right now. None of their starting pitchers pitched into the 7th inning of any game; their pair of lefty relievers combined to allow 3 ER on 3 H and 3 BB in 2.1 IP (2 of the 3 ER against left-handed hitters); their offense combined to hit 5-25 with RISP in the 3 games; and their manager definitely overmanaged his ace starting pitcher in the 1st inning of the 1st game of the year, maybe overmanged his lineup yesterday by inserting the botch-tastic Eduardo Nunez in the SS spot for Jeter, and definitely undermanaged his bullpen yesterday by leaving Rapada in to face the right-handed Evan Longoria. Whether it's the first 3 games of the season, the middle 3 games, or the last 3 games, that's sloppy baseball.
Jeremy Hellickson was good today, but he wasn't THAT good. And Phil Hughes, as well as he threw the ball, fell victim to the same things that always kill him. He wasn't efficient with his pitches, couldn't put guys away with 2 strikes when he needed to, and couldn't get out of innings clean when he got 2 outs. As for Raul Ibanez being in the lineup in right field today? Ummmm, yeesh!
(Courtesy of Mock Session, via RAB.)
Everything the Yankees did in this series seemed to be a little bit off and that's just not what you want to see from your team to start things off.
This is not the end of the world, and it shouldn't have anybody jumping off a bridge or ready to throw the towel in on the entire season. That would be foolish. But anybody who says they are OK with how the Yankees played in this opening series or accepts that they lost these 3 games is a bullshit liar. Any fan, rational or irrational, would have been perfectly within their rights to expect the Yankees to win this series, or at least win one game. And they are perfectly within their rights to be upset about the Yankees getting swept out of Tampa given how they played in the series. It's over now, it can't be changed, and everybody (players, coaches, and fans) has to move on to the next series. That being said, the Yankees need to get their shit together and play better baseball in that next series. They're a step behind everything that's happening right now, and regardless of how many games are left that's not a good way to open the season.
Game 2 Wrap-Up
(Courtesy of The AP)
Not exactly the start to the season that everybody was expecting, especially from the starting rotation.
Game Notes:
- Hiroki Kuroda wasn't very good in his first start that mattered as a Yankee. He didn't have good command of any of his pitches and couldn't make a pitch when he needed to. Like with CC the day before, a lesser pitcher probably gets taken out before the 5.2 innings that he pitched, so at least Kuroda gave the Yankees a little bit of length, but definitely not a strong outing.
- Despite putting 16 runners on base, the Yankees could never string together enough hits to get back into the game after going down 4-0 early and 6-2 after 6 innings.
- The Rays used the shift to their advantage on multiple occasions, getting Teix, C-Grand, and A-Rod to all hit into it for outs. Hopefully other teams don't start employing this tactic against the Yankees regularly.
- The umpires correctly overturned a HR call to a ground-rule double in the bottom of the 7th after a fan reached over the wall and prevented Nick Swisher from making a catch on a ball hit by Evan Longoria. Ironically enough, the fan was wearing a Derek Jeter jersey.
F*ck Yeahs:
- Swish: 1-3, 3-R HR, 2 BB. Made Joe's decision to swap him and C-Grand in the lineup against a lefty look genius.
- C-Grand: 2-4, 3B, 2 R scored. See statement above.
Oh Nos:
- Kuroda: Wasn't sharp in his Yankee debut- 5.2 IP, 8 H, 6 R (4 ER), 4 BB, 2 K. Could never really find the command on any of his pitches.
- Eduardo Nunez: Went 1-3 w/ an RBI at the plate, but committed the error that led to Kuroda's 2 unearned runs. Like reader Scott put it: "That guy is a liability" defensively.
- Joe Girardi: Followed up his questionable Opening Day 1st-inning IBB with the equally questionable decision to let Clay Rapada face right-handed hitters in the 7th inning. Did he think Rapada's career slash against righties was a joke?
- Clay Rapada: In fairness to Girardi, if Rapada doesn't walk Pena and give up a hit to Joyce (the lefties he was in to face), the 7th inning doesn't turn out so bad.
Next Up:
The Yanks will look to salvage the series and avoid being on the wrong end of a sweep to open the season with a day game after a night game. Phil Hughes faces Jeremy Hellickson this afternoon at 1:40 EST.
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Joe's Not Going To Make This Season Easy On Me, Is He?
("Umm, Skip? Why the hell are you out here?" Courtesy of Reuters)
For the most part, Joe Girardi is the ideal type of guy to manage the New York Yankees. He's level-headed, he's a former catcher, the position that usually lends itself well to becoming a good manager, he's played in New York before so he understands how the handle the pressure and media scrutiny, and he understands how to handle his players' personalities. One area that he never seems to have a firm grasp on, though, is the management of his pitching staff. It's nothing else if not inconsistent and I would describe it as meddlesome; a strategy almost always formulated based on matchup history and pages in a binder rather than the entirety of the situation playing out in real time on the field. Yesterday was another classic example of Joe bowing to the numbers in the pages and not the game situation at hand, and it cost the Yankees 4 runs.
On paper, his decision yesterday to intentionally walk Sean Rodriguez to load the bases was solid. There were 2 outs, runners in scoring position, Rodriguez had experienced some success hitting against CC in his career, and the hitter coming up behind Rodriguez had a career 4-35 batting line against CC. That hitter, Carlos Pena, was also left-handed, playing into the almost always desirable lefty-on-lefty matchup. But baseball games are not played on paper, and what was happening on the field over the course of that half inning was not captured in Joe's binder notes, could not be captured in his binder notes, and should have been just as big a determining factor in Joe's decision making as Pena's career stats against CC were, if not bigger.
Opening Day Game 1 Wrap-Up
(I don't know if this Rivera kid is going to make it. Courtesy of The AP)
I'm going to try to take another step towards blog legitimacy and do game recaps for each game this year. There might be a few that I miss here and there, but my plan is to get as many of them as I can and to do them the morning after the game's played. For a first crack at it, yesterday's game certainly provided a lot of talking points, many of them centered around the Yankee pitching. If there was one word to describe the events that unfolded during yesterday's game, it would be "bizarre."
Game Notes:
- CC struggled early, loading the bases in the bottom of the 1st inning after Joe decided to intentionally walk the immortal Sean Rodriguez and his .302 career wOBA to get to Carlos Pena. It was definitely a case of overmanaging, as Joe wanted the lefty-lefty matchup with 2 outs. Pena ended up hitting a grand slam on a 3-2 pitch to put the Rays ahead 4-0.
- After fighting back and touching up Tampa starter James Shields for 6 runs on 9 hits and 3 walks in 5 innings to take a 6-5 lead, the Yankee offense did their best impression of last year's ALDS and went dormant, failing to get a single hit in the final 4 innings.
- With runners on the corners and 1 out in the bottom of the 8th, the Yankees were bailed out by a possible missed sign when Jose Molina tried to squeeze bunt with 2 strikes. He bunted foul, was out, and D-Rob finished off the inning by striking out Matt Joyce to preserve the lead.
- The most bizarre sight of all was Mo in the 9th, as it usually is when he doesn't convert the save. He blew the save on just 5 pitches, allowing a leadoff single to Desmond Jennings and a game-tying riple to Ben Zobrist. Then, after more intentional walks to load the bases and Eduardo Nunez entering the game as a 5th infielder, Mo gave up the game-winning hit to, you guessed it, Carlos Pena.
- Pena was 4-35 against CC in his career and 0-11 against Mo, and he picked up run-scoring hits off of both of them right after the previous hitter was intentionally walked to get to him. #YaJustCan'tPredictBaseballSuzyn
F*ck Yeahs:
- The Horse: 2-3 w/ a double, 2 R, 2 BB. Looked great at the plate and in the field.
- Raul Ibanez: Hit a 3-R HR in the 3rd to give the Yankees the lead. 4 RBI.
Oh Nos:
- C-Grand: 0-5 w/ 2 Ks. Not the start we expected after the way he hit in camp.
- Mo: Hopefully I don't have to say this often, but Mo was off yesterday in taking the loss- 0.1 IP, 3 H, 2 ER, 2 BB (both intentional), 1 K, 1 BS.
Next Up:
The Yanks will go for their first win of the season tonight in the 2nd game of this series. Hiroki Kuroda will be on the hill for New York against David Price of Tampa.
Friday, April 6, 2012
Friday Afternoon "Nobody Is Even Reading This Because The Game Is On" Linkapalooza: 4/6
It's Opening Day, so obviously sitting around checking the Yankosphere isn't anybody's highest priority. But that still won't stop me from giving the best of the best their props for a job well done. So when you're done watching the game, come check out the best of the week that was. Onto the links.
- On Monday, William Juliano of The Captain's Blog examined the Montero-for-Pineda trade through the lens of the recent trend of teams extending their young stars to long-term deals.
- EJ Fagan of TYA questioned the Montero-Pineda trade and explained why, given Pineda's recent injury issues, he wouldn't have made it.
- Brien Jackson of IIATMS took a stab at predicting how long Michael Pineda's rehab timetable will be.
- On Tuesday, Rebecca Glass of the recently resurrected This Purist Bleeds Pinstripes mused on Ivan Nova's spring struggles and why it's still important for him to pitch well this season.
- On Wednesday, FJ25 of Yankees Fans Unite discussed how the Yankees can use their failures with developing Joba and Hughes as a blueprint for how to get it right with Pineda.
- Mike Ashmore of Thunder Thoughts had a profile post on Trenton reliever Chase Whitley, who could make his way onto many top prospect lists with another good season this year.
- On Thursday, Curtis Clark of Bronx Baseball Daily took a position-by-position look at the Yankees defensively. If Brett Gardner doesn't win a Gold Glove this season, the award should be done away with.
- Josh Norris of Minor Matters got a quick interview with the rehabbing Jeremy Bleich. Bleich is a former top pick and hopefully he can make it back to the mound this season.
- Jay Jaffe of Pinstriped Bible weighed in with the 5 biggest questions he has about the 2012 Yankees.
- The always on point Mark Feinsand of the Daily News offered up his round of predictions for the 2012 season.
- Matt Hunter of Yanks Go Yard listed the 3 things to pay attention to in the first week of the season.
- Chad Jennings of LoHud had a great post on David Phelps' reaction to making the 25-man roster. His family will be in the house this weekend to hopefully see him make his big league debut. Major +1 to Phelps for the Willie Mays Hayes reference.
- On Friday, el duque of It Is High... offered his 5 predictions for the 2012 season. No surprise to see he's not confident in the rotation.
- Mike Axisa of RAB offered up his opinions on Joe's recent lineup decisions against right-handed and left-handed pitchers and how Eduardo Nunez factors into those decisions.
As for the Friday Jam, if you've been a regular reader of AB4AR for a while and you don't know what song I'm playing today for Opening Day, then I just don't know what to tell you. Happy Opening Day, everybody. Let's go Yankees!
Enjoy your Easter weekends, people.
- On Monday, William Juliano of The Captain's Blog examined the Montero-for-Pineda trade through the lens of the recent trend of teams extending their young stars to long-term deals.
- EJ Fagan of TYA questioned the Montero-Pineda trade and explained why, given Pineda's recent injury issues, he wouldn't have made it.
- Brien Jackson of IIATMS took a stab at predicting how long Michael Pineda's rehab timetable will be.
- On Tuesday, Rebecca Glass of the recently resurrected This Purist Bleeds Pinstripes mused on Ivan Nova's spring struggles and why it's still important for him to pitch well this season.
- On Wednesday, FJ25 of Yankees Fans Unite discussed how the Yankees can use their failures with developing Joba and Hughes as a blueprint for how to get it right with Pineda.
- Mike Ashmore of Thunder Thoughts had a profile post on Trenton reliever Chase Whitley, who could make his way onto many top prospect lists with another good season this year.
- On Thursday, Curtis Clark of Bronx Baseball Daily took a position-by-position look at the Yankees defensively. If Brett Gardner doesn't win a Gold Glove this season, the award should be done away with.
- Josh Norris of Minor Matters got a quick interview with the rehabbing Jeremy Bleich. Bleich is a former top pick and hopefully he can make it back to the mound this season.
- Jay Jaffe of Pinstriped Bible weighed in with the 5 biggest questions he has about the 2012 Yankees.
- The always on point Mark Feinsand of the Daily News offered up his round of predictions for the 2012 season.
- Matt Hunter of Yanks Go Yard listed the 3 things to pay attention to in the first week of the season.
- Chad Jennings of LoHud had a great post on David Phelps' reaction to making the 25-man roster. His family will be in the house this weekend to hopefully see him make his big league debut. Major +1 to Phelps for the Willie Mays Hayes reference.
- On Friday, el duque of It Is High... offered his 5 predictions for the 2012 season. No surprise to see he's not confident in the rotation.
- Mike Axisa of RAB offered up his opinions on Joe's recent lineup decisions against right-handed and left-handed pitchers and how Eduardo Nunez factors into those decisions.
As for the Friday Jam, if you've been a regular reader of AB4AR for a while and you don't know what song I'm playing today for Opening Day, then I just don't know what to tell you. Happy Opening Day, everybody. Let's go Yankees!
Enjoy your Easter weekends, people.
Opening Day Starting Lineup
Nothing fancy, nothing special. Just the A-team.
1) Derek Jeter- SS
2) Curtis Granderson- CF
3) Robinson Cano- 2B
4) Alex Rodriguez- 3B
5) Mark Teixeira- 1B
6) Nick Swisher- RF
7) Raul Ibanez
8) Russell Martin- C
9) Brett Gardner- LF
SP) CC Sabathia
Game on.
1) Derek Jeter- SS
2) Curtis Granderson- CF
3) Robinson Cano- 2B
4) Alex Rodriguez- 3B
5) Mark Teixeira- 1B
6) Nick Swisher- RF
7) Raul Ibanez
8) Russell Martin- C
9) Brett Gardner- LF
SP) CC Sabathia
Game on.
2012 AB4AR Season Preview: 10 Fearless Yankee Predictions For 2012
If you've been an AB4AR follower for a while, and you can remember back to last season and the first batch of fearless predictions I made, you know I'm straight money at this. Picking division winners and MVPs is child's play. It takes a real baseball genius to lay the type of future prognostication I'm about to lay on everybody right now. Bookmark this page, use it to lay a few prop bets for the season if you'd like, and then thank me in November. Here are the 2012 AB4AR 10 Fearless Predictions:
2012 AB4AR Season Preview: The Predictions
(Courtesy of Getty Images)
Well, we've reached the end of AB4AR Season Preview Week, which can mean only one thing...
IT'S YANKEES OPENING DAY, YEEEEEEAAAAAAAHHHH!!!!!
I've previewed everything I can preview, and from those previews I feel really good about this year's team. The lineup is stacked, the rotation is deep, the bullpen is tough, and the bench is serviceable. As long as Joe keeps his nose out of the bullpen binder and doesn't put the bunt on in situations that don't call for it, this should be a very good year for the Yankees. There's nothing more to analyze, so the only left to do is get on with the predictions, starting with the AL East. Because I have horrible math skills and don't feel like putting the effort in on a holiday, this is the only division for which I'm predicting records.
AL East
1) Yankees: 97-65
2) Rays: 90-72 (2nd WC)
3) Fraud Sawx: 88-74
4) Blue Jays: 85-77
5) Orioles: 66-96
Check out the rest of the AB4AR 2012 predictions after the jump
Thursday, April 5, 2012
2012 AB4AR Season Preview: The Bench
(It's a Swiss Eduarmy Knife. Courtesy of The AP)
We've reached the final piece of the 25-man puzzle for the 2012 Yankees, the bench. The Yankees tried to build a mix of young internal pieces and cheap veterans last season and it worked out pretty well for them. So as much as I was against holding out to spend less money on guys like Eric Chavez and his spotty health history again, and would have rather rolled with the young bucks in house, I can't really argue with the plan when it's worked for them before. The 2012 bench will be comprised of mostly familiar faces, with one new surprise entrant included after yesterday's surprising catching moves. There's flexibility in this group, and that's really the most important thing for the Yankees, as they aren't looking for consistent day in/day out production from anybody on their bench, but rather the ability to plug guys into spots for a day or 2 and keep their older veterans rested and fresh.
The first member of the bench is also the newest member. For some reason the Yankees decided they weren't comfortable with Francisco Cervelli as their backup, even though he's held the role for the past 2 seasons, and so they brought in former MiL farmhand Chris Stewart. Stewart is a defensive-only catcher and proved that last season in his first major chunk of Major League work, posting a .204/.283/.309 line, .259 wOBA, and 60 wRC+ in 183 plate appearances with the Giants. He can take a pitch here and there but anything the Yankees get from him with the stick is gravy. As a defense-only catcher, however, he is a very good one. He threw out 28 of 72 attempted base stealers last season, good for 38.9%, and was ranked as the 15th best defensive catcher out of 114 last season by Beyond The Boxscore. For all his offensive shortcomings, Stewart did rack up 1.2 fWAR last year in his limited work, and if he can quickly learn how to work with the Yankees' pitching staff he should be fine for the purposes of giving Martin a rest every now and then.
More after the jump
The 5 Most Important Yankees For 2012
A more appropriate title for this post might have been "The 5 Most Important Yankees For 2012 Besides the Obvious Choices." We can all agree that CC is important because he's the ace of the staff and if he went down that would be a problem. Same with Cano as the best hitter in the lineup or Mo as the closer. I wanted to think outside that box a little and find the 5 guys on the roster who I think will make the difference between the 2012 edition of the New York Yankees being a good team and a great team; between losing in the ALCS and winning the World Series. I'm sure there will be some disagreement with my choices, but these 5 guys are my most important Yankees for 2012.
1) Russell Martin
The abundance of upper-level catching depth that the Yankees had last season has vanished with the retirement of Jorge Posada, the trading away of Jesus Montero, and the continuing back problems of Austin Romine. Russell Martin's value to the team increased slightly with each of those occurrences, and now with the Yankees scrambling to replace the missing depth through minor moves he becomes even more important. No offense to the Francisco Cervellis, Craig Tatums, or Chris Stewarts of the world, but if they are getting regular at-bats as part of an everyday Yankee lineup in place of Martin, that's not a good thing. Martin is a former Silver Slugger at the plate and a former Gold Glove winner behind it. He's familiar with everybody on the Yankee staff and looking to make a big splash in a contract year. A healthy, productive Martin makes the lineup deeper and more dangerous, and the drop-off from his production to that of any of the current backup options is significant.
2) Derek Jeter
Jeter might be the biggest wild card in the lineup in terms of which way his production can go this season. The way he finished 2011 has created elevated expectations for him this season, and he has looked good again at the plate this spring since coming back from his calf strain. But don't forget that he was close to below average for the early part of last season, and history is working against him as a 37-year-old shortstop turning 38 in the summer. A repeat of 2011's second half, or something close to it, would be great from Jeter. It would create more RBI opportunities for the hitters behind him, inspire confidence that Jeter can at least remain serviceable through the end of his contract, and mask his defensive deficiencies to a certain degree. A step back towards his 2010-early 2011 numbers makes that contract look worse and brings back the "Joe should move Jeter out of the leadoff spot" media frenzy that nobody wants to deal with.
Last 3 after the jump
1) Russell Martin
The abundance of upper-level catching depth that the Yankees had last season has vanished with the retirement of Jorge Posada, the trading away of Jesus Montero, and the continuing back problems of Austin Romine. Russell Martin's value to the team increased slightly with each of those occurrences, and now with the Yankees scrambling to replace the missing depth through minor moves he becomes even more important. No offense to the Francisco Cervellis, Craig Tatums, or Chris Stewarts of the world, but if they are getting regular at-bats as part of an everyday Yankee lineup in place of Martin, that's not a good thing. Martin is a former Silver Slugger at the plate and a former Gold Glove winner behind it. He's familiar with everybody on the Yankee staff and looking to make a big splash in a contract year. A healthy, productive Martin makes the lineup deeper and more dangerous, and the drop-off from his production to that of any of the current backup options is significant.
2) Derek Jeter
Jeter might be the biggest wild card in the lineup in terms of which way his production can go this season. The way he finished 2011 has created elevated expectations for him this season, and he has looked good again at the plate this spring since coming back from his calf strain. But don't forget that he was close to below average for the early part of last season, and history is working against him as a 37-year-old shortstop turning 38 in the summer. A repeat of 2011's second half, or something close to it, would be great from Jeter. It would create more RBI opportunities for the hitters behind him, inspire confidence that Jeter can at least remain serviceable through the end of his contract, and mask his defensive deficiencies to a certain degree. A step back towards his 2010-early 2011 numbers makes that contract look worse and brings back the "Joe should move Jeter out of the leadoff spot" media frenzy that nobody wants to deal with.
Last 3 after the jump
Did I Jinx Cervelli Yesterday?
As Rob from Bronx Baseball Daily was kind enough to point out, I kinda blew my 25-man roster predictions yesterday. The Phelps-over-Mitchell pick I can't get too upset about. I know I'm more pro-Mitchell than most other Yankee fans out there. But the Cervelli demotion for Chris Stewart was a complete shock to me, and after suggesting in the comments that I might have jinxed Mitchell, Rob hypothesized that I did the same thing to Frankie.
So Frankie, if you're reading this, I'm really sorry. Seriously, dude. I know I've bagged on you for not being able to hit, not being able to field, not being able to throw anybody out, and for wearing that ridiculous Great Gazoo concussion batting helmet, but you didn't deserve what you got yesterday and you have a right to be pissed. Cash and Joe can say whatever they want about building depth and being solid at catcher from an organizational standpoint, but getting demoted for a guy with a .200/.273/.290 career tripleslash in the Majors is a pretty significant kick in the dick. They did you dirty yesterday, and if I in any way contributed to that dirty deed, you have my apologies. I'd much rather have you as the backup catcher than Chris Stewart.
P.S.- I should probably get on that whole t-shirt design thing, huh?
So Frankie, if you're reading this, I'm really sorry. Seriously, dude. I know I've bagged on you for not being able to hit, not being able to field, not being able to throw anybody out, and for wearing that ridiculous Great Gazoo concussion batting helmet, but you didn't deserve what you got yesterday and you have a right to be pissed. Cash and Joe can say whatever they want about building depth and being solid at catcher from an organizational standpoint, but getting demoted for a guy with a .200/.273/.290 career tripleslash in the Majors is a pretty significant kick in the dick. They did you dirty yesterday, and if I in any way contributed to that dirty deed, you have my apologies. I'd much rather have you as the backup catcher than Chris Stewart.
(Sad Frankie is sad. Courtesy of Kim Klement/US Presswire)
P.S.- I should probably get on that whole t-shirt design thing, huh?
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