Results tagged ‘ Wrigley Field ’
Yanks have proper erasers for mistakes
The sixth inning Saturday was filled with mistakes by the Yankees until Brett Gardner, who had committed one of them, erased the miscues with a splendid play. And did the Yankees ever need it in what turned out to be another close game at Wrigley Field with them prevailing this time, 4-3.
The game was getting out of their hands even after they regained the lead on a sacrifice fly by Curtis Granderson in the top of the sixth. Gardner made the third out of the inning when he was caught off first base and thrown out in a rundown.
The Yankee had failed to make Cubs starter Ryan Dempster pay for walking six batters, none of whom scored (which is really strange; the odds are usually pretty good that at least of couple of the runners would have made it all the way home) but had taken a 3-2 lead behind A.J. Burnett.
Then just as quickly, the Yankees nearly gave it away. Burnett had good stuff, an above-average fastball and an effective curve, but as usual he was all over the place. He struck out eight batters but also walked three, threw a wild pitch (increasing his league lead to 11) and hit a batter.
The plunked batter came with one down in the sixth. Shortstop Eduardo Nunez then booted a ground ball (his eighth error in 37 games) and Robinson Cano dropped a throw for a potential force play (his sixth error, twice as many as he had all of last season), which loaded the bases for the Cubs.
Between the errors, Burnett was replaced by Corey Wade, who was able to get out of the jam in large part because of Gardner. Geovanny Soto hit a fly ball to left field. Gardner timed his catch perfectly and had his momentum taking him toward the infield when he unleashed his throw to the plate. It was straight and reached catcher Russell Martin on one bounce in plenty of time to get Carlos Pena trying to score to complete a double play. Pena tried a Pete Rose/All-Star Game move on Martin by running into him, but the catcher took the hit and held on to the ball.
Wade was the first of four relievers for the Yankees, and it isn’t every day that the least effective of them is Mariano Rivera. That is how strong the ensemble work of the Yanks’ bullpen has been these days. Hector Noesi and David Robertson followed Wade with a scoreless inning apiece to raise the pen’s steak of shutout work to 22 1/3 innings dating to June 10.
Cano and Nunez made up for their boots with ninth-inning doubles for an insurance run that proved necessary when Mo gave up a leadoff homer to Reed Johnson in the bottom half. This Johnson has been a ninth-inning Yankees killer in the series. Friday, he made a sliding, tumbling catch down the left field line to rob Cano of a potential extra-base hit.
Alfonso Soriano followed Johnson’s bomb with a single off his old teammate. Soto then did the Yankees another favor. Inter-league play is supposed to show the difference in the how the game is played in each league, right?
Okay, so with a National League team at home in the bottom of the ninth, and the potential tying run on first base and no outs, where was the sacrifice? Heck, Soto didn’t even make an attempt to push the runner into scoring position. He swung away on the first pitch and hit a ground ball near second that Cano gloved to start a rally-killing double play. That was the biggest mistake of all, and the Yankees took advantage of it.
Jeter loses plea to stay off DL
Derek Jeter tried to plead his case against going on the 15-day disabled list but eventually lost. After a pre-game meeting among team officials, including team physician Chris Ahmad, the Yankees placed Jeter on the DL and recalled infielder Ramiro Pena from Triple A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.
Jeter came out of the Yankees’ 1-0 loss to the Indians Monday night after an at-bat in the fifth inning and went to Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center for an MRI that revealed a grade 1 strain of the right calf. Jeter admitted that he felt the calf giving him problems as he ran off the field prior to his fifth inning at-bat. “I tried to stretch it out while waiting on deck,” he said.
As he broke out of the box on his flyout to right field, Jeter felt a twinge and ran gingerly down the first base line trying to avoid a strain. It didn’t work. Derek thought he had a charley horse.
Before seeing Dr. Ahmad prior to Tuesday night’s scheduled game against the Rangers, Jeter said the area felt the way it does when he is hit by a pitch. “I’ve been hit by pitches a lot, so I know,” he said.
Jeter naturally wanted no part of the DL. The only time he ever spent on it was in the first month of the 2003 season after that infamous collision at Toronto with Blue Jays catcher Ken Huckaby.
“I guess the timing wasn’t very good,” Jeter said, referring to his being only six hits away from 3,000 for his career. “I know a lot of people were hoping for the opportunity to see that happen here. I feel bad about that.”
That was not the concern of manager Joe Girardi. He had the precedent of Alex Rodriguez being out for 14 games last year from Aug. 20 to Sept. 5 because of a similar injury. The Yankees did not place A-Rod on the DL immediately, and he aggravated the condition when he tried to play. Instead of being lost for a few days, Rodriguez eventually was down for two weeks.
That is the scenario Girardi hoped to avoid with Jeter, particularly since the Yankees’ next six games after this homestand ends Thursday are inter-league games at Chicago’s Wrigley Field and Cincinnati’s Great American Ballpark where National League rules don’t permit the use of the designated hitter rule. That puts more of a premium on a thicker bench.
The Yankees already have another player, catcher Russell Martin, down with a quirky back.
“Derek believes that he can be back within a week’s time,” Girardi said. “The issue with me is what if he isn’t ready to come back in a week, tries to play and hurts it again and is out longer. It’s a matter of what’s best for Derek versus what’s best for the team.”
The ultimate decision may prove best for both. Jeter will have time to heal properly from the injury, and the Yankees can have a full, healthy roster for the games in NL parks. Pena will be used in a utility role with Eduardo Nunez playing regularly at shortstop while Jeter is out. On occasions when Girardi wants to rest Rodriguez or use him as the DH, Nunez will move to third base and Pena will play shortstop.
Brett Gardner was to bat in Jeter’s leadoff spot Tuesday night. He started the season leading off against right-handed starters with Jeter in the 2-hole. Against lefties, Jeter led off and Gardner was at the bottom of the order. Girardi will use Gardner again leading off against righthanders but probably not against lefthanders.
The Yankees will face left-handed starters Wednesday night and Thursday. Girardi mentioned Curtis Granderson, who has hit lefties well this year (.282, 9 home runs, 19 RBI in 71 at-bats), as a possibility. Another choice might be switch hitter Nick Swisher, who is batting .221 overall but .339 with a .429 on-base percentage against left-handed pitching.
So Jeter’s quest for 3,000 hits will be put on hold while the Yankees learn to live without their captain for the time being.
Will stars fall on Girardi?
There was an interesting column in Monday’s editions of the New York Times by Harvey Araton concerning Joe Girardi’s contract situation with the Yankees and the temptation posed by the managerial opening with the Cubs.
Speculation has been heated for some time that Girardi, who is in the final year of his contract with the Yankees, might be persuaded to return to his Illinois roots and take on the challenge of turning around a franchise that last won a championship when Teddy Roosevelt was in the White House.
Yankees fans might think it makes no sense for a manager to forsake a job with a storied team that puts together a championship caliber roster year after year. However, as Araton pointed out and with commentary from former manager Davey Johnson, there is an issue ahead for whomever the future Yankees manager is that makes the role as much of a challenge as there is at Wrigley Field.
Johnson, who led the Mets to the World Series championship in 1986 and went on to run three other clubs, said one of the most difficult decisions he made as a manager was during his time in Baltimore when it became clear to him that Cal Ripken Jr. needed to come off shortstop. This was not a view shared by Ripken, of course, who balked at the suggestion even though he had to be aware that it was inevitable. Ripken eventually accepted the move to third base, but it would not be long after that Johnson’s tenure with the Orioles ended.
I remember talking to a manager about 10 years ago who had a veteran player on the downside of his career and was forced to make hard choices about reducing his playing time. He told me off the record (which is why I will not identify the manager) that the advice he received from an older manager was the soundest he had received. “Never argue with your general manager about the 25th man on the roster,” he said, “and never let a star fall on you.”
It happens. Think back to Casey Stengel and Joe DiMaggio, Ralph Houk and Mickey Mantle, Johnson and Ripken. There are plenty of other examples. It is a real dilemma for a manager.
Now think of what could be ahead for Girardi. He might have not one but four players in that situation – the vaunted “Core Four” of Andy Pettitte, Mariano Rivera, Derek Jeter and Jorge Posada. And in Girardi’s case, the situation is further amplified by the fact that each player is also a former teammate.
I am not suggesting in any way that this quartet is ready to be phased out immediately, far from it. But the years are moving forward, not backward, and the day will come when one or all of those guys will have to face the reality of diminished skills resulting in a decrease in playing time or redefinition of duty.
Will Girardi have with Jeter the same situation Johnson did with Ripken, for example? Will he have to break the news to Posada that more time at designated hitter is in store or to determine that pitchers younger than Pettitte or Rivera are ready to supplant them?
“Give my best to Joe,” Davey told Araton, “and tell him to stay in New York.”
Johnson was saying that Girardi’s current job is still his best option, no matter how strong the tug to Chicago. Still, there is food for thought.
Expect to see Joe on the North Side
Prediction: Joe Girardi will be in the dugout at Wrigley Field in 2011.
Before Yankees fans get the idea that I am predicting that Girardi will fulfill the speculation that he might return to his native Illinois and become the next manager of the Cubs, hold the phone. What I am predicting is that Girardi will still be the manager of the Yankees, who will be at the Chicago landmark park for an inter-league series June 17-19 next year.
The 2011 American League schedule was released this week. For the first time, the new Yankee Stadium will be the site of the team’s season opener March 31 against the Tigers. The Yankees opened the season on the road this year and last in the first two years of the new Stadium.
Dates for the Yankees’ matchups against the rival Red Sox are April 8-10, Aug. 5-7 and Aug. 30-Sept. 1 at Fenway Park and May 13-15, June 7-9 and Sept. 24-25 at Yankee Stadium. The Rays have also become a rival in the AL East. The Yankees travel to Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Fla., May 16-17, July 18-21 and Sept. 26-28 and will be home against Tampa Bay July 7-10, Aug. 12-14 and Sept. 20-21.
The Yankees’ series against the Cubs indicated their inter-league series are against National League Central teams. The Rockies (June 24-26) and the Brewers (June 28-30) come to the Stadium, and the Yankees travel to Cincinnati’s Great American Ballpark to play the Reds June 20-22.
The other inter-league series, of course, are against the Mets May 20-22 at the Stadium and July 1-3 at Citi Field.
Just as this year, the Yankees will close out the season with a bevy of games against AL East foes. Their last 12 games will be against the Red Sox, Rays and Blue Jays.
Another rescue mission for Mo
U.S. Cellular Field played like Wrigley Field Saturday night. Illinois native Joe Girardi knows all about nights like this, which should give him pause if he is tempted to go home next year and manage the Cubs. Remember, Joe, you can’t bring Mariano Rivera with you.
Such games as Saturday night’s 12-9 slugfest are why Yankees fans celebrate having Rivera as their closer. He should have been cooling his heels in the bullpen, but relievers Joba Chamberlain and David Robertson had their first off nights in quite a while as the White Sox kept creeping back into the game. Mo was summoned in the ninth after Robertson gave up a home run, a triple and a single to the first three batters.
Rivera got two quick outs inducing a grounder from Carlos Quentin that was turned into a double play. Ramon Castro kept the inning alive with a single, and Andruw Jones, who turned back the clock with a perfect night (home run, double, single, two bases on balls, two RBI) worked out a walk, which brought the potential tying run to the plate. That was Mark Teahen, who finally ended it with a soft liner to second baseman Robinson Cano.
In the middle of the eighth inning, this looked like a piece of cake for the Yankees, who had an 11-5 lead with CC Sabathia becoming the first Yankees starter in eight games to pitch beyond the sixth inning. Sabathia almost let all of a 6-1, third-inning lead get away as a pair of two-run home runs by Paul Konerko and Jones got the White Sox to 6-5 in the fourth.
Two-run homers by Nick Swisher in the first, Eduardo Nunez (career No. 1) in the second and Marcus Thames (the first of two bombs for him in the game) in the third fashioned the early lead. For all that power, the biggest hit of the game for the Yankees was a two-out, two-run double by Jorge Posada in the fifth. It unnerved reliever Tony Pena, who walked the next two hitters and gave up a two-run single to Nunez, the rookie third baseman who had a game worthy of Alex Rodriguez.
Sabathia sort of sauntered his way over the first four innings, but after Jones’ home run CC struck out seven of the next 11 hitters and got through the seventh without yielding another run. His fifth straight victory raised his season mark to 18-5 with a 3.14 ERA, which are surely Cy Young Award numbers. Other impressive figures for Sabathia are a 38-10 career mark in August with a 3.14 ERA, a 16-4 lifetime record against the White Sox with a 3.72 ERA, including 9-1 with a 3.33 ERA at the Cell.
Still, he had to sweat through the later innings as the bullpen struggled until you know who did what he does best.
Heavenly day
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y.
While many people around the country are reading the book about George Steinbrenner, “Steinbrenner: The Last Lion of Baseball,” its author, Bill Madden, was honored Sunday with the J.G. Taylor Spink Award for contributions to baseball writing as part of the induction ceremonies at the Clark Sports Center.
It wasn’t this best-seller alone that earned Madden the honor that is presented annually by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America, but the bulk of his 40-year career as a baseball writer was spent covering the Yankees and their volatile owner since he joined the staff of the New York Daily News in 1978 after working for the United Press International wire service. The book is a reflection of that time when the Yankees returned to dynastic proportions as a team under an owner of quite frankly bombastic proportions.
Madden was the Yankees’ beat writer at the News from 1981 through 1988 and has maintained a close relationship with the team since becoming the paper’s national baseball columnist in 1989. He continues to break stories around the team on a regular basis and works closely with beat writer Mark Feinsand to keep Daily News readers informed of Yankees doings.
At UPI, Madden was a protg of Milton Richman, one of the most respected baseball reporters. At the Daily News, Billy was counseled by Dick Young, probably New York’s savviest reporter. Both are winners of the award Madden received Sunday and were saluted in his speech for their contributions in making him deserving of the same honor.
“For more than a century, newspapers and to a certain extent books have been the lifeblood of baseball in that they have been the primary vehicles in which the game has been handed down from generation to generation,” Madden said. “I know I speak for millions of people when I say I became a baseball fan by reading newspapers and learning about it through books. With all due respect to the famous broadcasters who became such a part of the fabric of this game, the printed word is forever. The ready reference to the game’s rich history is preserved forever in libraries and bookstores and newspaper archives.”
I have known Billy for 30 years and was delighted in my role as secretary-treasurer of the BBWAA to notify him of his election the morning of our announcement during the Winter Meetings last December in Indianapolis. The Hall’s Induction Weekend has been an annual sort of working vacation for the two of us the past 15 years. Billy’s time up here goes back even further. He noted that his first induction ceremony was in 1979.
It is akin to a pilgrimage this journey back to the game’s ancestral roots however misplaced historically. The fact is, if baseball didn’t really have its beginnings in this lovely central New York State village, it should have.
As umpire Doug Harvey, one of Sunday’s inductees, said in his speech, “In baseball, you have to touch home. This is the home of baseball. And before you die, you should come to Cooperstown to touch home, and I’ll be here to see that you do.”
Madden has done so dozens of times, but it was his own home that he touched on in his speech. Billy was spoon-fed newspapers by his father, Charlie Madden, a New Jersey businessman whose personal favorite was the New York Herald Tribune when young Billy was introduced to the work of Red Smith, Harold Rosenthal and Tommy Holmes. On his own, Billy also discovered the New York Journal American and Jimmy Cannon and the New York World Telegram and cartoonist Willard Mullin.
An irony of Billy’s career was that he made his name at the Daily News, the one paper his father would not let into the house. Charlie would allow Billy to read it in his office, a plumbing supply business. The plumbers brought the tabloid News and would leave copies there.
“My father regarded the Daily News as a scandal rag and would not allow it in our house,” Billy said. “But he did have to admit that Dick Young, who covered the Brooklyn Dodgers and later the Mets, was probably the greatest baseball reporter of them all. And so he would allow me to read Young’s stuff whenever I was in the store. Who then knew that someday I’d be working at the Daily News and have Dick Young as my mentor. I’m sorry, Dad, but the Herald Tribune was out of business when I got out of college, so the News was it.”
Ford C. Frick Award winner for broadcasting Jon Miller, the voice of the Giants and ESPN’s Sunday Night Baseball, also referred to his father taking him to Giants games at Candlestick Park and that Miller found himself paying more attention to what broadcasters Russ Hodges and Lon Simmons, both former Frick Award winners, were doing in the booth through his binoculars.
“I noticed that Russ would grab a handful of French fries and devour them between pitches,” Miller said. “Then he took a cup of whatever and gulped it down before the next pitch. I thought that’s the life for me.”
Unable to attend were former Yankees coach Don Zimmer, with whom Madden collaborated on two books, and former Yankees player, coach, manager and general manager Lou Piniella, “with whom,” Billy said, “I shared the Steinbrenner experience.” Zimmer’s knees don’t allow him to travel, and Piniella is managing the Cubs, at least for the rest of this season.
Gene Michael, who wore even more hats than Piniella with the Yankees including one as chief scout, did make the ride up from New Jersey for Madden and Hall inductee Andre Dawson, who played for “Stick” when he managed the Cubs in 1987. “Hawk” was the National League Most Valuable Player that year even though the Cubs finished in last place. It is a distinction he shares with 2003 American League MVP Alex Rodriguez, then with the Rangers.
Dawson’s speech, often emotional, ranked in eloquent intensity with that of former teammate Ryne Sandberg’s 2005 address, still the finest I have ever heard. Ryno, one of the most popular players in Cubs history, may well be their next manager once Lou leaves Wrigley Field. Sandberg has toiled in the minors for four years and produced winning teams, but he told me he has been given no indication that he is the first choice. In fact, a Chicago writer told me that there is a strong sense that Illinois native and Northwestern educated Joe Girardi, a former Cubs catcher, would have a step up on Sandberg is he does not stay with the Yankees beyond this year, the last on his current contract.
Whitey Herzog’s humorous speech included further references to Casey Stengel, who befriended the young player when he was an outfielder in the Yankees system and predicted he would become a manager.
“One of the most important things Casey told me was to hire good coaches and not be afraid of their taking your job some day,” Herzog said. “Casey said that unless you own the club or you die on the job, you’re going to get fired anyway, so you might as well have the best coaches.”
Herzog said that while he was managing the Cardinals, former St. Louis outfielder Enos Slaughter, who also played for the Yankees and Stengel briefly in the 1950s, finally got into the Hall of Fame and said in his speech, “It’s about time.”
“But I don’t feel that way,” Whitey said. “I believe that any time you get into the Hall of Fame is the best time. A lot of people have asked me what it’s like to get elected to the Hall of Fame, and I’d say, ‘I don’t know. I won’t know until July 25, the day it happens.’ Well, now I can tell everybody that it’s like going to heaven before you die.”
Amen.


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