Tagged: Serena Williams

Easy Does It…

 

There might be something to this so-called “rest”…

 

R and R.JPG

 

Of course, we all know how well Alex Rodriguez responded to some rest and relaxation.  Mark Teixeira has not had any rest, and of course, we’ve seen the results of that…

 

Reuters

 

The latest recipient of rest was catcher Jorge Posada who sat out a couple of games with a bruised thumb.  He was back in the lineup on Sunday against the Toronto Blue Jays, and the results were, well, for the lack of a better word, very A-Rod-like.  On Sunday, in the 12th inning with the game tied at 5, Mark Teixeira doubled to open the bottom of the inning.  With first base open, Alex Rodriguez was intentionally walked.  Robinson Cano was up next, but true to form recently with men in scoring position, he failed to advance the runners as Tex was out on a fielder’s choice.  Jorge Posada came to the plate, and he ripped the third pitch to center, scoring A-Rod with the winning run.

 

Nick Laham/Getty Images 

 

Posada had also homered earlier in the game, a solo shot to lead off the bottom of the 4th inning.

 

Sabo/NY Daily News

 

Chien-Ming Wang had pitched well through five innings.  When the 6th inning started, Wang was nursing a 3-2 lead over Yankee killer Roy Halladay and the Jays.  He had retired 10 of 11 Toronto batters at that point.  With Halladay, it’s like what it used to be with Pedro Martinez when he pitched in Boston, you just want to keep it close until you can get into the other team’s bullpen and then take your chances.  Unfortunately, disaster struck Wang in the 6th.  Marco Scutaro led off with a double.  After Aaron Hill had grounded out, Adam Lind homered to give the Jays a 4-3 lead.  He threw one pitch to the next batter, Scott Rolen, but Posada knew that something was wrong.  Joe Girardi and trainer Steve Donahue came out to the mound, and Wang departed the game.  He was later diagnosed with a shoulder strain with bursitis, and had a MRI at a local hospital.

 

Mitsu Yasukawa/The Star Ledger 

 

Wang was relieved by David Robertson.  Robertson ended up walking Rolen, and subsequently walked the next batter (Lyle Overbay) too.  After striking out Vernon Wells, Alex Rios singled to score Rolen.  David Dellucci flied out to end the inning, but Doc Halladay and the Rays had a two-run lead.

 

Luc Leclerc/US Presswire

Brian Bruney, currently out as the 8th inning bridge to Mariano Rivera until he begins pitching more effectively, opened the 7th inning.  The results were mixed but at least he held the Jays scoreless.  The first two batters singled.  A sacrifice moved the runners to second and third, and Adam Lind was intentionally walked to load the bases with one out.  Fortunately, Bruney retired Rolen and Overbay to end the threat.

In the bottom of the 7th, Derek Jeter singled and scored when Johnny Damon homered to tie the game.  That was definitely a huge hit at a very critical time.  I think I forgot to thank Julia for failing to re-sign Johnny…

IMAGES HAVE BEEN DIGITALLY DESATURATED) Johnny Damon #18 of the New York Yankees poses during Photo Day on February 19, 2009 at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, Florida.  (Photo by Nick Laham/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Johnny Damon

Nick Laham/Getty Images

 

Phil Hughes pitched a 1-2-3 8th inning, and further cemented his status as the set up guy in place of Bruney.  I would have liked to have seen Hughes pitch the 9th with the game still tied, but Girardi went with Mariano Rivera.  The bullpen continued its stellar performance of late with two scoreless innings in the 10th and 11th by Phil ‘Coke, and then Brett Tomko put the team in position to win by retiring the three batters he faced in the 12th.  Clearly, the Yankees won because of their bullpen.  Back in April, games were routinely lost because of the pen.  The reversal has been very dramatic and clearly the two Phils share the credit, along with the continued domination of ageless closer Mariano Rivera.  It doesn’t mean that I now trust Brett Tomko, but at least there is no longer any reason to dread the arrival of a Yankees reliever into a game.

 

John Munson/The Star Ledger

 

A quick note on Robinson Cano…I am not quite sure what is wrong, but he was 0-for-6 and failed in several key spots.  For some reason, he has developed an aversion to hitting with men on base.  In the 12th inning, he missed a sign and bunted on a 3-0 pitch.  He caught everyone off guard, including Mark Teixeira who was standing on second.  He was thrown out at third by 20 feet.  “Let’s just say somebody missed something,” Girardi said. “A better way to explain is he misunderstood something.”  Cano left 10 men on base, 5 of whom were in scoring position.  In his first 5 at-bat’s, he ended the innings, including the 9th with runners at first and second.  I am starting to think that Julia swiped Robby and dropped Julio Lugo into his uniform!  😉

 

 

The initial word is that Chien-Ming Wang is headed for the DL, and will be gone for about a month.  At this point, I do not think there’s any way that Phil Hughes would be re-inserted into the starting rotation.  Peter Abraham of the LoHud Yankees Blog speculated that Sergio Mitre of AAA-Scranton/Wilkes Barre might be the choice, and I agree.  Mitre served a 50-game suspension earlier this season after testing positive for Androstendione (it was allegedly the result of an over the counter supplement purchased at GNC which contained an unlisted amount of the steroid).  Since his return, Mitre has pitched 30.1 innings and has compiled a 2-1 record in 5 starts with 3.26 ERA.  I’d definitely rather see him than Kei Igawa.

 

 

 

Backup catcher Jose Molina feels that he will be ready to rejoin the team on Tuesday in Minnesota.

 

File:José Molina 2007 (cropped).jpg

Wikimedia Commons

Sunday’s match up features Joba Chamberlain (4-2) versus Brett Cecil (2-1).  Cecil is a replacement for Scott Richmond, who was bumped because of a sore shoulder.  To me, it’s time for Joba Chamberlain to make a statement with a solid performance.

 

Gunn/AP

 

Today, in stadiums across the country, the words of Lou Gehrig filled the air in a day of remembrance.  70 years ago today, it was Lou Gehrig Appreciation Day at Yankee Stadium and the Iron Horse gave his immortal farewell speech:

 

“Fans, for the past two weeks you have been reading about the bad break I got. Yet today I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of this earth. I have been in ballparks for 17 years and have never received anything but kindness and encouragement from you fans.

“Look at these grand men. Which of you wouldn’t consider it the highlight of his career just to associate with them for even one day? Sure, I’m lucky. Who wouldn’t consider it an honor to have known Jacob Ruppert? Also, the builder of baseball’s greatest empire, Ed Barrow? To have spent six years with that wonderful little fellow, Miller Huggins? Then to have spent the next nine years with that outstanding leader, that smart student of psychology, the best manager in baseball today, Joe McCarthy? Sure, I’m lucky.

“When the New York Giants, a team you would give your right arm to beat, and vice versa, sends you a gift – that’s something. When everybody down to the groundskeepers and those boys in white coats remember you with trophies – that’s something. When you have a wonderful mother-in-law who takes sides with you in squabbles with her own daughter – that’s something. When you have a father and a mother who work all their lives so you can have an education and build your body – it’s a blessing. When you have a wife who has been a tower of strength and shown more courage than you dreamed existed – that’s the finest I know.

“So I close in saying that I may have had a tough break, but I have an awful lot to live for.”

 

This video is very fitting on a day when we remember Henry Louis Gehrig…

 

 

Posted on YouTube by kylethompson4

 

As the celebrity deaths continue, I was saddened to hear about the death of former Tennessee Titans quarterback Steve McNair.  I remember when Air McNair was being drafted from college, and I had been so hopeful that the Vikings would draft him.  I can still remember the disappointment when he was drafted by the Titans.  I vividly remember that it was a cloudy day as I listened to the draft.  Hopefully, Steve’s killer will be found and brought to justice.

 

Damian Strohmeyer, SI/AP

 

In more uplifting news, congratulations to Serena Williams for her victory at Wimbledon over her sister, Venus.  I was pulling for Serena so it was enjoyable to see her win in two sets.

 

Hamish Blair/Getty Images

 

Now, if Roger Federer can beat Andy Roddick, it will be a GREAT tennis weekend at Wimbledon!

 

Tennis.com

 

I am in the process of relocating back to my home in Northern California so my posts in the coming days may be more sporadic than usual.  But rest assured that I will be back and at full strength by August when the Yankees face the Boston Red Sox.  Julia has been lulled into a false sense of security.  The Red Sox dominance over the Yankees will end, and we are now just one game behind her beloved boys from Beantown.  All things considered, life is good…

 

 

–Scott

 

A Rainout Would Have Been Nice…

 

It was just a bad day all the way around…

 

Bad Day.JPG

 

The Yankees lost to the Seattle Mariners, 8-4, to end their seven game winning streak.  The loss also prevented the Yankees from closing the gap on the Boston Red Sox and they fell to three games behind the AL East Leaders.

 

Failure.JPG

 

You knew it was going to be one of those days when Mark Teixeira couldn’t snare Ichiro Suzuki’s lead-off hit which bounced off Tex’s glove for a double.  In the 6th, Ryan Langerhans led off with a hard grounder that Tex attempted to make a play on but missed, giving the newest Mariner a double.  But the official error that ended Teixeira’s 107-game errorless streak didn’t occur until the 9th inning.  He threw wide to pitcher Alfredo Aceves, who was covering first, and it allowed Ichiro to reach base safely.  He would later score on Russell Branyan’s 451-foot home run to dead center.   Texeira’s last error occurred August 19, 2008 while he was a member of the Los Angeles Angels.  He has also gone 65 at-bat’s without a home run…

 

Bad Day 2.JPG

 

CC Sabathia was throwing in the mid-90’s, but he could not keep his fastball or his change-up down.  With the pitches staying in the zone, CC gave up 10 hits and 6 runs in 5 2/3 innings of work.

 

William Perlman/The Star Ledger

 

Manager Joe Girardi said after the game, “We had been playing so well and CC was throwing well so I felt good about our chances. He showed he was human”.  The only problem is the Yankees don’t pay CC to be human.  Anything less than complete domination is unacceptable.  Okay, I am just kidding, but you’d expect more than a win-loss record of 7-5 for $161 million.

 


CCs Contract.JPG  
 

 

The Yankees had their opportunities, but the clutch hits never came.  In the 9th, it appeared the Yankees were getting something going when the first two batters, Robinson Cano and Nick Swisher, both singled.  But fly outs by Hideki Matsui and Melky Cabrera, and a swinging strikeout by pinch hitter Jorge Posada ended the game.

 

Noah K. Murray/The Star Ledger

 

It does not get any easier for the Yankees as they open the four-game holiday weekend series with the Toronto Blue Jays.  A.J. Burnett will face his former teammates in tonight’s opening game.  I’ve never heard of the Blue Jays starter, Brian Tallet, but it seems that’s never a good thing…

 

Chuck Crow/The Plain Dealer

 

Meanwhile, the Mariners travel north to Boston to face the Red Sox.  Felix Hernandez, who I am glad the Yankees missed, will open their series against 10-game winner Tim Wakefield.  If anything came out of the Mariners’ win on Thursday, I hope they can use the momentum to carry them to victory over the Red Sox.  I’ll borrow these words that Julia used all week,  Go Seattle!”

 

Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP

 

Speaking of Julia, she mentioned on her Julia’s Rants blog that it has been 70 years since Lou Gehrig gave his immortal farewell speech at Yankee Stadium.  She also has some good words to say about Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) or Lou Gehrig’s Disease as it is more commonly referred to.

 

 

Courtesy als.net

 

ESPN Outside The Lines has a great piece on their site about final letters written by Lou Gehrig.  The letters are primarily between Gehrig and a doctor in Minnesota, Dr. Paul O’Leary, who helped first diagnose Gehrig’s illness.  The letters cover the final two years of Gehrig’s life.  You can feel Gehrig’s hopes rise and fade through the letters, and I was surprised at how Dr. O’Leary and Eleanor Gehrig withheld the severity of the illness from him.  The letters are definitely an interesting read.  Saturday will mark the 70th anniversary of Lou’s farewell speech.  Lou is my favorite all-time baseball player, and it will be a day to remember how truly special he was…not just as a ballplayer but as a man.

 

Posted on YouTube by InitialBlackNotice

 

In other news, the Yankees signed 16-year old catching prospect Gary Sanchez from the Dominican Republic for a signing bonus of nearly $3 million.  One Latin American scout said, “He’s a big kid, with a big arm”.  Sanchez is 6’2″, 210 lbs.  The Yankees would seem to be set at catcher for years to come when Jorge Posada decides to call it a career.  Their best catching prospect is 19-year old Jesus Montero, but there’s been some talk he may physically outgrow the position.  Montero, 6’4″ and 225 lbs, was recently promoted to the Trenton Thunder (AA).  The other key catching prospect in the organization is Austin Romine.  Of course, Francisco Cervelli is probably wondering, ‘What about me?’  Cervelli will most likely head back to Scranton/Wilkes Barre for further development once Jose Molina completes his injury rehabilitation in the next week.

The Yankees also signed two other Dominican players, shortstop Damian Arredondo and right hander Christopher Cabrera.

 

 

Yet another all-Williams final at Wimbledon?  I was really pulling for Dinara Safina, who was ranked #1.  But she was a complete no-show, and Venus looked like she was practicing with a high schooler.  Nevertheless, for the final, I’ll go with Serena…

 

 

Let me close with a video of what Julia must have been like as a baby.  In fact, I am sure of it…

 

Posted on YouTube by dmccomp