Results tagged ‘ Pedro Martinez ’

Comfort zone, what comfort zone?

Are all the radio sports talk shouters happy now? They have been calling for a piece of David Ortiz’s hide the past two days ever since he flipped his bat before starting his home run trot Tuesday night. “Big Papi” homered again Wednesday night, which only fueled the ire of the radio-heads who wondered why it was that Ortiz has never been hit by a Yankee pitcher.

These critics seemed to lose sight of the fact that Hector Noesi, the Yankees rookie against whom Ortiz went deep Tuesday night, had come in high and tight to the Red Sox designated hitter before he homered. Hitting a batter and pitching inside are two separate things, but there was a feeling that Ortiz was just a bit too comfortable at the plate against the Yankees over the years.

Well, there was nothing comfortable that happened to Ortiz in the fourth inning Thursday night, unless you think a 97-mph fastball from CC Sabathia off the right hip feels comfy. Only Sabathia can say what his motives were, but it was somewhat satisfying to see a Yankees opponent feel what too many Yankees hitters have felt this season.

Plate umpire Hunter Wendelstedt quickly jumped in front of the plate as Ortiz went to first base and issued a warning to both benches. He had good reason. Two, actually, since Red Sox starter Josh Beckett had already clipped Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez with pitches. That brought to 30 the number of Yankees hit by pitchers this season, 10 more than opponents, which became 9 more when Ortiz got his. It went back to 10 when Curtis Granderson, who had homered in the first inning, was struck in the right foot by Beckett in the fifth. Wendelstedt clearly did not see intent on Beckett’s part and was probably right.

This is part of the inside game whereby players on the field take care of appropriate business. Yankees fans tired of the days dating back to Pedro Martinez playing target practice with Jeter regularly got to feel some justification, Sabathia got through the inning without damage, and the game continued.

It was the proper way of things.

Andy Pettitte: He always took the ball

The day I arrived at what was the last spring training the Yankees had at Fort Lauderdale, Fla., in 1995, then manager Buck Showalter drove up to me in a golf cart on the sidelines of the main field and said, “Hop in; I want you to see someone.”

He drove to me to one of the back fields where two pitchers were warming up. I have long forgotten who one of them was, but the one I remember was Andy Pettitte. He wasn’t as cut as he would later become; he still had some love handles, but one pitch after the other sunk with stinging action.

Showalter, who grew up in the Florida panhandle and attended Mississippi State University, had an affinity for Southern players. Still does, probably, so I said to him, “Okay, which is it? Louisiana or Arkansas?”

“Texas,” Buck said. “You can’t quote me on this, but this guy might win 15 games for us this year.”

“Pretty tall order for a rookie,” I said.

Showalter missed on his prediction. Pettitte won 12 games, not 15, but he helped stabilize a rotation snagged by an injury to Jimmy Key, who finished second to David Cone, then with the Royals, in the previous year’s American League Cy Young Award race, and was a key ingredient in the Yankees’ reaching post-season play for the first time in 15 years, as the newfangled wild card.

Pettitte’s victory total was second on the staff only to another former Cy Young Award winner, Jack McDowell, who was 15-10. Pettitte’s 12-9 record and 4.17 ERA was not overwhelming, but it was good enough for him to finish third in the AL Jackie Robinson Rookie of the Year Award voting behind winner Marty Cordova of the Twins and runner-up Garret Anderson of the Angels, a couple of outfielders.

The lefthander started Game 2 of the Division Series against the Mariners at Yankee Stadium and was not involved in the decision, a 7-5 Yankees victory on a two-run home run in the 15th inning by Jim Leyritz that gave them a 2-0 lead in the series before they went 0-for-Seattle.

With Showalter gone after turning down a two-year contract offer from George Steinbrenner, Pettitte had to prove himself all over again to a new manager, Joe Torre, in 1996. It wasn’t easy, either. Torre at first thought Pettitte, a deeply religious person, was a bit soft. Yet start after start, Pettitte kept the Yankees in games, and he ended up winning 21 of them and becoming a Cy Young Award candidate, although he finished second in the voting to the Blue Jays’ Pat Hentgen.

Pettitte never came closer to winning that award, but even better he won over Torre with 8 1/3 gutty innings of shutout ball in Game 5 of the World Series at Atlanta, a 1-0 Yankees victory that put them up 3-2 and in position to take the Series two nights later, which they did. From that point on, Torre never questioned Pettitte’s toughness again.

Here is what Joe said about Andy the other day:

“Andy took the ball every five days, and if he had it his way, he’d get it more often than that. What’s really unusual about him is that a lot of times pitchers are more consumed with themselves. Andy was probably the consummate team player, especially for a pitcher. He was so concerned not only about the day he pitched but he always had his arm around a young guy in between starts.
 
“He has been a huge favorite of mine because he’s such a stand up guy, and he hasn’t changed from day one. He was a great teammate, and I think that’s why he won so many games. The guys that play behind him understand how intense he is, and it becomes contagious.
 
“I think the impact he had on the teams we had in the mid-to-late 1990′s was enormous even though he was never the guy in the spotlight. He liked the fact that he wasn’t the No. 1 guy even though I trusted him like a No. 1 guy. But he didn’t have an ego that dictated he needed all that attention.
 
“He did a great job of channeling his energy into competing, and he was about as consistent a performer as anybody in terms of getting your money’s worth. He glued our staff together. When you’re performing with the same people year-in and year-out, it’s always nice to have that security blanket. He was certainly that guy on the pitching staff.”

For other managers, the Astros’ Jimy Williams and Phil Garner and the Yankees’ Joe Girardi, Pettitte proved just as reliable in a career he brought to a halt this week. There were no tears at Friday’s announcement. Pettitte thought long and hard about this decision, and when he said “My heart isn’t in it anymore,” that’s all he needed to say. Once a player no longer has the stomach for the game, it is time to go.

That Game 5 of the 1996 World Series four nights after the Braves handed his head to him in Game 1 remains the centerpiece of Pettitte’s Yankees career, but there were plenty of other times when he gave the Yankees everything they needed from a pitcher.

He was the Most Valuable Player of the 2001 AL Championship Series when he won both his starts and held a Seattle team that had won 116 games during the regular season to four runs in 14 1/3 innings. Even in defeat, Pettitte could be magnificent, such as the Game 6 showdown with the Marlins’ Josh Beckett in the 2003 World Series, Andy’s last start for the Yankees before signing as a free agent with his hometown Houston club.

Three years later, Pettitte was back with the Yankees reunited with Mariano Rivera, Derek Jeter and Jorge Posada and helped ring in the new Yankee Stadium by winning the clinching games of all three post-season series in 2009 as the team achieved its 27th championship. Last year, he was a Cy Young Award candidate for half the season before a groin injury cost him at least a dozen starts. Now he is the first of the “Core Four” to call it quits.

“Andy was a great teammate and a wonderful guy,” Rivera said. “He was a fighter and all about winning, and he was respected by every person in the clubhouse.”

“I’m really sad that Andy is going to retire,” Posada said.”He was so much more than a teammate to me; he was one of my closest friends.  I admire everything that he has accomplished as a Yankee, but Andy was someone who always put the team first.  I’m going to miss him deeply.”

Added Jeter: “It has been a pleasure to play with Andy for all these years, and the Yankees have been fortunate to have him representing the organization both on and off the field. More importantly, it has been an honor to get to know him as a person, and I consider him family. I wish for nothing but happiness for him and his family, as I know how important they are to him.”

Of course, it didn’t take long for Hall of Fame talk about Pettitte to sprout. Let’s give it the five-year wait before getting serious about that. Pettitte has a lot going for him – a won-loss record more than 100 games over .500 at 240-138, a post-season record 19 victories, and winning five rings in eight World Series overall. He also has some things going against him – allowing more hits than innings pitched, a rather high ERA (3.88) and three more dangerous capital letters, HGH, which he admitted to using after his name surfaced in the Mitchell Report.

His path to Cooperstown won’t be smooth. Over the next few years, the ballot will contain the names of starting pitchers superior to him in terms of statistics – Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, John Smoltz, Randy Johnson, Roger Clemens, Pedro Martinez, even Curt Schilling and Mike Mussina.

“I’ve never considered myself a Hall of Famer,” Pettitte said. “I guess I’ve gotten close to having those kinds of credentials or guys wouldn’t be talking about it.”

The writers who do the voting will be talking about him for a while. But to Yankees fans, Pettitte will always be in their personal Halls of Fame for his competitiveness and remarkable consistency.

 

Cy Young holiday for Halladay

No American League club was happier to see Roy Halladay cross over into the National League this year than the Yankees. The one bad thing for the Yanks about Halladay going from the Blue Jays to the Phillies was that it triggered Philadelphia trading Cliff Lee back to the AL with the Mariners.

But it was good riddance for Halladay, who regularly thumped the Yankees to the tune of 18-7 with a 2.98 ERA, seven complete games (including three shutouts) and 195 strikeouts in 38 appearances (36 starts) covering 253 1/3 innings. Halladay did not find the new Yankee Stadium to his liking. He was 1-1 with a 6.16 ERA there in 2009 after having gone 7-4 with a 2.97 ERA in the old Stadium.

Halladay had a remarkable first season in the NL this year and was rewarded Tuesday by winning the Cy Young Award. He became the fifth pitcher to win the award in both leagues, having won in the AL with Toronto in 2003, and the 16th multiple winner.

The righthander was in Mexico on vacation when he received word of his election. I had the opportunity to tell him how popular he is in press boxes throughout North America because it is an extremely pleasurable experience to watch him pitch. He is a pro’s pro with no wasted motion and a focus that is sadly lacking among starting pitchers of this period.

“That’s very satisfying to hear,” the man called “Doc” said. “I hope the fans feel the same way.”

Halladay was the 13th unanimous choice in NL voting as he received all 32 first-place votes from two writers in each league city to score a perfect 224 points, based on a tabulation system that rewards seven points for first place, four for second, three for third, two for fourth and one for fifth. The Baseball Writers’ Association of America expanded the Cy Young Award ballot from three to five pitchers this year.

Halladay, 33, posted a 21-10 record with a 2.44 ERA in 33 starts and led the league in victories, innings (250 2/3), complete games (9) and shutouts (4) and was second in strikeouts (219). He pitched a perfect game May 29 at Miami in a 1-0 victory over the Marlins. Balloting takes place prior to the start of post-season play, so his no-hitter over the Reds in Game 1 of the NL Division Series was not a factor in the voting.

Cardinals righthander Adam Wainwright (20-11, 2.42 ERA), who finished third in 2009, was the runner-up with 122 points based on 28 votes for second, three for third and one for fifth. Rockies righthander Ubaldo Jimenez (19-8, 2.88 ERA) was third with 90 points. Halladay, Wainwright and Jimenez were the only pitchers named on all the ballots. Righthanders Tim Hudson (17-9, 2.83 ERA) of the Braves and Josh Johnson (11-6, 2.30 ERA) of the Marlins rounded out the top five. In all, 11 pitchers received votes.

Halladay joined the company of Roger Clemens, Randy Johnson, Pedro Martinez and Gaylord Perry as Cy Young Award winners in both leagues. Clemens won six in the AL (1986, ’87 and ’91 with the Red Sox; 1997 and ’98 with the Blue Jays; 2001 with the Yankees) and one in the NL (2004 with the Astros). Johnson won four in the NL (1999 through 2002 with the Diamondbacks) and one in the AL (1995 with the Mariners). Martinez won two in the AL (1999 and 2000 with the Red Sox) and one in the NL (1997 with the Expos). Perry won one in the AL (1972 with the Indians) and one in the NL (1978 with the Padres).

Unanimous winners in the NL were Sandy Koufax all three times he won and Greg Maddux twice among his four victories, along with Johnson, Bob Gibson, Steve Carlton, Rick Sutcliffe, Dwight Gooden, Orel Hershiser and Jake Peavy. There has been a unanimous winner in the AL eight times: Clemens, Martinez and Johan Santana twice each, Denny McLain and Ron Guidry.

It marked the seventh time a Phillies pitcher won the award, including Carlton four times. The other winners from Philadelphia were John Denny and Steve Bedrosian. In addition to Koufax, Maddux, Carlton, Clemens, Martinez, Johnson, Perry, Gibson, McLain and Santana, other pitchers to have won the award more than once were Tom Seaver and Jim Palmer three times each, Bret Saberhagen, Tom Glavine and Tim Lincecum twice apiece.

Halladay is in pretty heady company and deserves to be.

Bosox post-season losing streak challenged

The Yankees are trying hard to remove the Red Sox from the record book for a dubious achievement, but they can’t do it this year.

Entering Game 3 of the American League Division Series, the Twins had lost 11 consecutive post-season games dating to Game 2 of the ALDS against the Yankees in 2004. Minnesota lost the last three games of that series, was swept by the Athletics in 2006 and the Yankees in 2009 and has dropped the first two games to the Yanks this year.

The Red Sox hold the mark for consecutive losses in post-season play with 13. Boston lost the last two games of the 1986 World Series to the Mets, were swept in the best-of-7 AL Championship Series of 1988 and 1990, both times to the A’s, and by the Indians in the best-of-5 ALDS in 1995. The streak ended when the Red Sox won Game 1 of the 1998 ALDS against the Indians, 11-3, behind Pedro Martinez and featuring two home runs by Mo Vaughn and one by Nomar Garciaparra. Cleveland came back to win the next three games to take the series.

The Twins cannot break that record this year because a loss Saturday night in Game 3 at Yankee Stadium would end the series, leaving Minnesota to take a 12-game losing streak into the 2011 post-season provided the Twins make it.

The Yankees’ eight straight comeback victories over the Twins in post-season play are also the most of any team against a single opponent in post-season history. The Elias Sports Bureau pointed out that there has not been a streak of that sort (one team beating another after coming from behind in each game) since an overlapping stretch in 1997 and ’98 when the Reds won 10 such games in a row over the Cardinals.

Here are some more Elias Bureau gems.

Yankees infielders were charged with 27 errors in 2010, the fewest in major league history. The Yankees’ overall .988 fielding percentage was the best in franchise history. Second baseman Robinson Cano (.996) and shortstop Derek Jeter (.989) are the first set of keystone teammates to finish the season as fielding leaders since the Indians’ Roberto Alomar and Omar Vizquel in 2001 and the first to do so for the Yankees since Jerry Coleman and Phil Rizzuto in 1949.

Series rematch? Not quite

No Hideki Matsui. No Johnny Damon. No Cliff Lee. No Pedro Martinez. No Jimmy Rollins.

You couldn’t write an account of the 2009 World Series without mentioning all of those guys prominently. So what’s all this stuff about the inter-league series between the Yankees and the Phillies at the Stadium the next three nights being a World Series rematch? The Phillies aren’t even in first place in the National League East while the Yankees are tied with the Rays for first in the American League East.

Rollins is still with the Phillies but is on the disabled list due to a strained right calf and won’t play in the series. Matsui, Damon and Lee are all wearing different uniforms, and Martinez is probably waiting to get one of those mid-season calls like he did last year from Philadelphia.

There is a sense of dj vu with the Yankees because their starting pitchers for the series are CC Sabathia Tuesday night, A.J. Burnett Wednesday night and Andy Pettitte Thursday night, the three starters they used exclusively throughout last year’s post-season. The Yanks’ lineup Tuesday night will not include Alex Rodriguez, who had a home run and six RBI in the World Series as part of a 2009 post-season in which he batted .365 with six homers and 18 RBI in 15 games. A-Rod has tendinitis in his right hip flexor. He is available as a pinch hitter Tuesday night and may return to third base Wednesday night.

Replacing Rodriguez in the cleanup spot has been Robinson Cano, who hit his 100th career home run Sunday against the Astros. Robbie is only the third second baseman in club history to reach that plateau. The others (minimum 50 percent of games played at the position) are Hall of Famers Tony Lazzeri (169) and Joe Gordon (153).

The Phils and Yanks also have the top two pitching tandems with the most combined career pitching victories. The Phillies’ Roy Halladay and Jamie Moyer have 420; the Yankees’ Andy Pettitte and Javier Vazquez are next with 383. Pettitte and Moyer will oppose each other in the series finale Thursday night.

There was talk last week that a Phillies rainout made it possible for Halladay, 18-6 in his career against the Yankees, to pitch in this series. Not so. While it is true that last Wednesday night’s rainout at Citizens Bank Park against the Marlins pushed “Doc” back to Thursday, he would have started Tuesday night against the Yankees anyway because Monday was an open date for the Phillies.

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