8.31.2009

A NYY column: The reason behind their success

On why captain Derek Jeter is the reason the Yankees are earning their pinstripes this year.

Early in the New York Yankees’ 8-3 win over the Chicago White Sox this Sunday, the television commentators were engaged in their usual banter. They talked about all the jersey numbers the Yankees organization has retired, about Jorge Posada anchoring the plate, about Joe Girardi’s managing style, and, of course, the favorite topic whenever the Yankees play on a major network: Mr. Derek Jeter.

"Jeter" is one of those names imagined, bred, and birthed for sports, meant to be yelled as a one-word epithet, in gloating or in hatred. He’s been a player for the Yankees for 15 years, the captain seven years, an irreplaceable contributor every year.
Early in the New York victory on Sunday, though, Jeter was showing why he’s more than all that this year. Simply put, "Numbah Two," Derek Jeter, has been the main reason for the Yankees success this season.

His resurgence over the summer, in particular, has marked the return of the Bronx Bombers as real contenders.

Consider the bottom of the third inning in Sunday’s game. The score was closer then — with New York down 2-1. Jeter stepped into the batter’s box, complete with the usual repertoire of wriggling and shifting that does Broadway proud. Before his lurching legs were even planted, he was swinging at the first pitch — a liner over the infield’s heads that landed in the outfield grass with the nearest fielder 50 feet away.

The single looked routine, and even unimpressive. Such a hit is nothing compared to the slap-shot doubles that come off Johnny Damon’s bat, the sweeping perfection of Alex Rodriguez’s home run stroke, or the loose, hip-swinging cut of hard-hitting Robinson Cano.

But Jeter was on first. And one pitch later, he was on home plate, having completed his job as the leadoff batter.

That was exactly how it was supposed to work; Jeter did his job, then Damon did his — scoring them both with a rightfield homer.

The single was Jeter’s second hit of the night. He led off the Yankees’ half of the first frame with a double, on which he was also able to score, thanks to a sacrifice fly from the number three batter, Mark Teixeira.

After Jeter returned to the dugout in the third inning, having accounted for enough runs to tie the game, neither team scored for three innings. (The game might have ended with that one-run margin if not for a five-run explosion by New York in the seventh.) Jeter hadn’t been just a strong leadoff man; his runs were almost it for the home team.

Sunday’s win was exemplary of the types of games Jeter has been having all season — especially this summer — and the positive effect his performance has had on the team.

Remember, this is a lineup with troves of All-Stars, former MVPs, Cy Young winners, and would-be-the-top-player-on-any-other-team guys. It’s easy to forget how good Jeter is, how solid he’s been throughout the years, how important he is to this New York team.

People can be quick to dismiss the Yankees, with their millions invested in the payroll and their 26 World Series championships. They’re expected to be good, to win — but it’s not like the Babe or Joltin’ Joe are actually in that clubhouse anymore. Each Yankees generation has to prove itself, to overcome its hurdles of the times, to be just as good as the uniforms it wears.

That task has never been hard for Jeter. He entered the league as a hot prospect in 1995 (1996 was his first full season) and promptly won four championships in the next five seasons. He’s a lifetime .317 hitter, averaging 111 runs, 193 hits, 75 runs batted in, 16 homers and 21 steals a season. He fields at a .976 clip and is knocking down Yankees and league records systematically. And he’s also known for his standing in the community, his excellent attitude, his good-guy image, and his ability to never let frivolity affect the way he handles his life, or slip into his status as a Yankee. He is a professional, as a player and more, with little to tarnish his legacy.

But he is also aging. Critics have enjoyed the last couple years, when they’ve been able to talk down his ability as a fielder. Old, old, they say. Still playing that spot on the field because he’s Jeter. A flea on the back of four championships, not the legs that made them.

Jeter, in his usual Jeter way, hasn’t rebutted any claims, staying silent instead. Yankees manager Joe Girardi backed his shortstop, then gave him a vote of confidence that met accusations head-on — he moved Jeter to the leadoff spot in the lineup, where he’d have to leg out infield singles and steal second on hard-thrown fastballs. That’s not an assignment for an old, slow player.

Jeter has piled up 23 steals so far this season (he’s had more in only three seasons). And although he has only 60 runs batted in as he hits from the No. 1 spot, he’s stacked up 93 runs already (ninth in Major League Baseball). His best statistic: a hot .335 batting average, which is fifth out of all American League players and seventh overall. (If it holds, it will be Jeter’s fourth-best batting average in 15 years in the majors.)

But forget his numbers — look at the Yankees.

It’s a cliche that a team should perform as its captain does, but that’s exactly what’s happened in the Bronx this year.

For years, Jeter has been good, but not awesome. As the sprightly shortstop on the 1990s’ victory train (his first five full seasons), he batted around .323 and had 199 hits, 120 runs and 81 RBI a season. But in the last few years, as the Yankees have fallen short of their ultimate goal for nearly a decade, it’s been .312, 192 hits, 108 runs and 74 RBI (not including this season).

The Yankees have followed suit, being good, but not great. This New York team of the past couple years is the first one in a while to make its fans nervous — and legitimately so. The front office spends and spends; the "Bombers" choke and choke (or, bad pun: bomb and bomb). They can’t come back from a deficit; Rodriguez is horrid in the clutch; they’re absorbing double-digit losses.

The worst, of course, has been the early playoff losses — or last year, when there were no playoffs at all. That may have been added motivation for Mr. Derek Jeter.

This year, he’s on pace to break all his season averages. That includes a .357 batting average in July, and .374 in August. Some are saying he should be the American League MVP — but I won’t get into that here.

The point is that now, for the Yankees, anything can happen.

New York has had 11 walk-off wins this year, and a load of come-from-behind victories. Rodriguez has actually driven in runs when the Yankees are behind, and late in the game, too.

The Bombers have ripped through their schedule and racked up 82 wins (soon to be 89 in just one week — you read it here first) — four more than their closest challenger, the National League’s Los Angeles Dodgers (conveniently managed by ex-Yankees manager Joe Torre).

They’re rolling, decimating, controlling.

Go ahead, critics, complain about the Yankees again — they are finally as good as their paychecks and their pinstripes.

Top of the fourth, Sunday: Jeter spears a line drive. A little while later, he fields another ball and does "the Jeter" — a move named after the man who (may have invented and definitely) perfected it: snaring a grounder, planting, and flipping the ball, mid-air, to first, all in one motion, without a pause.

He may be slower; he is 35. But he’s also making the plays when he needs to, and hitting how he needs to, and getting his team to where it needs to be.

He’s as good as the lauding pundits say, as good as the paychecks read, as good as the pinstripes demand.

All the way this year, Jeter. It’s time for Numbah Two to get Number 27.

8.30.2009

Nooooooooo! Sad news for Pats fans

It's a sad day for New England Patriots fans, as well-loved veteran linebacker Tedy Bruschi announces he'll be retiring. The rest of the football world knows Bruschi as the gutsy linebacker who returned from a stroke to play in the NFL; Pats fans know him as the defensive rock that led the Patriots to their three titles earlier this decade. Timely interceptions, walking on his knees through the snow, screaming in intimidation from behind his facemask...he is not the last Patriots veteran to leave, but he was one of the best.

Sox sweep

The Yankees swept the White Sox today with another drubbing, this time an 8-3 win to top a weekend in which New York outscored Chicago 23-5.

With starter Joba Chamberlain only going three innings as the Yankees increase his workload to that of a fulling starting pitcher again, the bullpen had a creative afternoon, with five pitchers combining to close the last six innings.

Chicago held New York to a 3-2 lead from the third inning on, until the bottom of the seventh, when the Yankees exploded for five runs. The rally was capped by Mark Teixeira, who hit a towering home run (his 32nd of the season) to score three. Teixeira now leads the American League with 101 RBIs.

The win was New York's 82nd, and the Yankees sport no signs of slowing up as they head into Baltimore and Toronto for the next week.

I'll have more to say about the New York's season as a whole in my next post, but for now, how 'bout them Yankees?

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8.28.2009

A great Ted Kennedy package

The Globe ran a very strong series on the life of Ted Kennedy earlier this year, with this multimedia package online to go with it. This is the way newspapers should cover everything; it's excellent.

These letters from the Kennedy mother are especially funny.

8.26.2009

Payback

UPDATE: It's a win for the Yankees, in a game that saw Paul McCartney, Lorne Michaels and Jack Nicholson in the front row. Rats. I should have been there.

The Yankees are getting payback at Yankee Stadium, leading the Texas Rangers 9-2 in the bottom of the seventh.

As I write, A-Rod is at the plate with no outs, and New York has scored five runs in the frame.

It's just the kind of game Andy Pettitte needed to get back on track. After starting the season as New York's most reliable pitcher, he went through a dry spell then a spate of bad luck, watching his ERA shoot up and gathering a wad of no-decisions. (The Yankees' recent 20-11 win over the Red Sox was marred by Pettitte pitching a gem until a 38-minute inning by the Yankees batters that threw the lefty off his mark when he came back out to pitch again.)

Tonight, he's allowed only two runs and pitched a full seven innings, striking out seven.

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Ted Kennedy

Of all the obituaries for Ted Kennedy I read online, I liked this one from Slate the best (especially the opening paragraphs).

Stupid USA Today headlines

Now, I love USA Today just as much as the next small-minded, underinformed reader (that's a joke), but sometimes their headlines are just plain stupid.

I know they don't mean them to be dumb, but sometimes instead of announcing, let's say, the findings of a new study, they'll just run a headline saying, "90% of teens like to talk on cell phones."

Oh, really.

So, I've decided to start compiling dumb USA Today headlines, not to say the stories aren't good, but to highlight the poor construction of the bold, black type running above these stories.

Today's selection:
"Pirates fans fed up with years of losing."

This is news? (This is a serious feature on how Pittsburgh fans today are coping with even more losing, but the headline is written in a format that suggests breaking news of some kind, or at least a change in a commonly accepted trend. But the information is neither of these, and thus the headline is stupid.)

8.25.2009

Blech, Yankees!

I don't know what the worst part about New York's 10-9 loss to the Texas Rangers was; there are so many choices.

Joba Chamberlain had his first start in eight days and promptly gave up seven runs over four innings despite having a four-run cushion.

Every Yankee starter except Mark Teixeira (who's contributed plenty this year) and Nick Swisher had a hit, but the Yankees still lost.

New York stranded 17 runners.

And probably the worst, the Yankees entered the bottom of the ninth inning down five runs only to rally and pull the game to within 10-9 with runners on first and second with no outs. Then they blew it. Swisher bunted a ball into the air, and Jerry Hairston Jr. got caught off of second after a Melky Cabrera lineout to end the game.

Blech. Blechetty blech blech blech.

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Interesting graph

Here's an interesting graph from the New York Times about how people spend their time.

8.24.2009

Massarotti, on the ball

Tony Massarotti's column about how the Yankees and Red Sox pursue their respective players is spot-on.

Yankees blast Beckett

It was supposed to be a pitcher's duel, but the bats came out again tonight in the matchup between New York's CC Sabathia and Boston's Josh Beckett. The Yankees had the upper hand, homering off Beckett five times (the most home runs he's allowed in a game in his career), and New York won 8-4.

Sabathia now leads all Major League Baseball pitchers with 15 wins. He pitched into the seventh inning and struck out eight.

Derek Jeter homered in his first at-bat and overall had another stellar night, going 2-for-5 and making an awesome (classic Jeter) grab, twirl and throw to first for an early-inning out.

Alex Rodriguez was 1-for-4 with 3 RBI, including a homer that cleared the Green Monster.

Hideki Matsui (2 RBI, home run) and Johnny Damon (RBI) both went 2-for-4.

The Yankees have a homestand against the wild-card-pursuing Texas Rangers next, starting Tuesday night.

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8.23.2009

No. 15

CC Sabathia and Josh Beckett both have 14 wins, leading the American League. They face off in Fenway Park tonight to wrap up the Yankees-Red Sox series. One of them may walk away with the 15th win, but one thing's for sure: it's going to be a good game.

Meanwhile, Mark Teixeira's 92 RBI put him behind only Justin Morneau in the American League in that category.

8.21.2009

Bombs.

I'm not sure how to explain this game. Its tone kept changing, and things weren't always how the score appeared.

On one side, the Yankees scored a whopping 20 runs. Then their bullpen couldn't shut the door, and the Red Sox scored 11. (20-11, Yankees.)

On one side, Andy Pettitte pitched a gem, only to be thrown off his groove by a 38-minute inning where he watched his team score six runs. He ended up being tagged for five earned runs but still won the game. (20-11, Yankees.)

On one side, poor Michael Bowden allowed seven runs to score and was left in the game for two full innings while the Sox bullpen rested its arms. New York still won by nine, though. (20-11, Yankees.)

On one side, the Yankees scored 20 runs. But they left 19 men on base. (20-11, Yankees.)

On one side, the Yankees had eight doubles from seven players, and everyone got a hit, minus Johnny Damon (injured several pitches into the game) and pinch hitter Jerry Hairston Jr. (walked). But on the other, the Red Sox were able to score 11 runs on 12 hits.

So, it wasn't as lopsided as it looked; this game was confusing throughout.

The Red Sox came in with a seven-game win streak at Fenway, and they looked like a team ready to go after sweeping the Blue Jays. The first inning, when the Yankees loaded the bases, appeared to be nothing more than a fluke (Alex Rodriguez's single was barely a hit). Boston then countered with a Jacoby Ellsbury run, and it looked like a classic Boston out-last-'em type of game.

But really, it turned out it was Boston that was flukish. The Yankees exploded in the top of the second, and Pettitte didn't allow a hit until the last play of the third inning.

[Derogatory comment about the NESN announcers HERE: As the fourth inning started, with zero outs, and Sox starter Brad Penny having finally gone one inning without allowing a run, they said, "Penny has settled down." He was chased early in the fifth.]

Another fluke of the night (or maybe not) was Hideki Matsui showing up to record seven RBI on two homers. I guess that's why he's the New York designated hitter.

[Another derogatory comment about the NESN announcers HERE: Commenting on the Sox finally getting some hits, they said, "They'll scratch and claw their way back into the game with two runs in the fifth." The score at this point was 12-3 Yankees. Granted, Boston did edge closer (if keeping the game within nine runs constitutes "closer"), but really, NESN?]

A-Rod almost hit for the cycle tonight, if not for his plunking the ball off the top of the Green Monster instead of going over it, and for trying to stretch a single and getting tagged out at second. He was breaking up a slump, as were Melky Cabrera and Robinson Cano (details with the game recap here).

And finally, Brian Bruney just hasn't been good since he came back from injury. He escaped without an earned run tonight but isn't lights-out anymore.

This 20-run thing is unusual for the Yankees, despite what detractors may say. It's the first time this season they went over 15 runs (which they did once), and their previous high to that was 11 a few times. See their full game results here.

In New York's last four-game sweep of Boston, the first game was a slugfest before the beautiful pitching showed up. With A.J. Burnett, CC Sabathia and Josh Beckett filling out the next two days, that trend may repeat.

The Yankees (77-45) still have the best record in baseball.

Quick lines from tonight:
Hideki Matsui: 2 HR, 7 RBI, 2-for-6
Mark Teixeira: 3-for-5, 3 RBI
Alex Rodriguez: 4-for-4, RBI, triple
Melky Cabrera: 4-for-6, 2 RBI
Derek Jeter: 3-for-6, 2 RBI
Jorge Posada: 2-for-5, 2 RBI
Eric Hinske: 2-for-4, RBI
Nick Swisher: 2-for-6, RBI
Robinson Cano: 1-for-6, RBI
Andy Pettitte: 10th win of the season

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A Newsweek critique, updated

I've written about Newsweek several times, and the most recent edition has prompted me to comment again on the transformation on what used to be a nice news magazine for everyday people interested in, well, news.

(The increase in subscription price and the catering to high-end readers has pushed me to drop my subscription, but my current one runs through October.)

This week's Newsweek not only had diverse, interesting content but also TONS of advertising. Several promotional sections packed with ads peppered the pages, and in the columns section, each columnist had a glossy ad page opposite his mug and type, whereas in previous weeks, Newsweek has had to put two text-filled column pages side-by-side.

I was surprised by large amount of advertising (pushing the issue size to 78 pages) until I saw that it was a double issue. Unfortunately, this may be the only way Newsweek can really rake in the ad dollars, and I'm sad to see that it took an alien cover and a double issue to get substantial ad input. It may be a better marketing strategy to go after high-rollers, but it's killing the old Newsweek that I loved.

Also, what's up with the full-page photos of random stuff, with a quote superimposed, that have no refers to the stories they're actually referring to? Newsweek has three or four of these a week, and I find them frustrating, especially since the rest of their content lacks good art.

8.20.2009

Mark that W

Mark Teixeira batted in all three of the Yankees' runs tonight, putting New York over Oakland 3-2 with a two-run homer and an RBI groundout. The A's edged within one after starting pitcher Chad Gaudin was chased in the fifth, but Phil Hughes and Mariano Rivera combined to close the game for New York.

Derek Jeter and Johnny Damon both went 2-for-4 as the Yankees salvaged the series 2-1.

Meanwhile, the Red Sox have proved they are still very, very alive. With a 6-1 win over the Blue Jays tonight (which followed a 10-9 late-inning win last night), Boston is revving up for what will be a hot weekend series in Beantown against the Yankees. The Sox are seven games back, holding almost even with the Yankees since the sweep in New York (Boston has been 6-3, the Yankees 7-3).

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8.19.2009

Cocaine found on 90% of U.S. money

How depressing/outrageous.

And note this happens especially in Boston.

Let's hear it for the Jete

Derek Jeter is now batting .330 after his third straight game with three hits. (He's batting 20-for-36 (.556) over the last nine games.) Tonight his RBI sparked a five-run sixth inning, leading the Yankees to a 7-2 win over the Oakland Athletics.

CC Sabathia picked eight strong innings for New York, breaking the team's two-game losing streak and winning his 14th game this season, which ties him for the Major League lead (with Boston's Josh Beckett, of all people, and the Cardinals' Adam Wainwright).

Johnny Damon, Hideki Matsui and Melky Cabrera all went 2-for-4 in the win. Jorge Posada collected 2 RBI on a double.

The only bad news was that the Yankees scored a mere seven runs after loading the bases in the first, fourth and sixth innings. A total of 20 men were left on base throughout the night.

After one more game against Oakland tomorrow night, the Yankees get a day off before going into Boston for a three-game series over the weekend.

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8.15.2009

73, 38, you know

New York collected its 73rd win tonight, the 38th time this season the Yankees have come from behind to win. They beat the Seattle Mariners 4-2.

Mark Teixeira broke the 2-all game with a long homer in the top of the ninth.

Andy Pettitte, despite pitching through six innings and striking out a season-high 10, didn't get a decision since the game was tied when he left the game. (Pettitte has never been flaming hot this season, with a middling ERA, even win-lose numbers, and an average strikeout total. But in 23 games, he's gone five innings or more all but twice. And the Yankees are 15-8 when he starts, despite his 9-6 record.)

Every starter except Johnny Damon and Hideki Matsui had exactly one hit, with an RBI each from Derek Jeter, Nick Swisher, and Jerry Hairston Jr.

Phil Hughes got his fifth win of the season while striking out two of the three batters he faced in the eighth, and Mariano Rivera got his 34th save in 35 tries, which leads the majors.

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8.14.2009

HRs all around

It's home runs all around and an 11-1 drubbing for the Yankees as they visit Seattle in the first of a four-game series.

Hideki Matsui went yard twice, driving in five runs in a stellar 4-for-5 night. The Yankees also got a long ball from Derek Jeter, who, despite being plunked on the foot yesterday, went 2-for-4.

The real story, however, was the three-hit, one-run masterpiece from CC Sabathia, who is hitting his stride late in the season once again. Sabathia's 13th win (tied for 2nd in the bigs) came from a valuable eight-inning performance from the increasingly valuable, oversized lefty. Sabathia's 10 Ks and penetration deep into the game not only sealed the win but also took weight off the bullpen.

Johnny Damon and Mark Teixeira both went 2-for-4 on a night when New York collected 15 hits.

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8.13.2009

Back in his groove

It looks like Tiger Woods has finally found his groove after an early season of major hiccups (pun intended). While he trashed his early rounds at the Master's, the U.S. Open and the British Open (missing the cut across the pond), he's a crisp -5 in his first round today at the PGA Championship.

We've all seen it coming, of course, with the recent tear he's had in his (minor) tournament appearances.

Now it's time to see if he pulls it out.

PGA Championship Leaderboard

The Rick Pitino Mess

I don't care what kind of coach you are. If you get caught doing what Rick Pitino did, you shouldn't be coaching.

I agree with Christine Brennan's column for USA Today...Pitino needs to step forward and take action on this one, not leave it with Louisville.

The cost of selling hot dogs

Apparently, it's extremely expensive to be a New York City hot dog vendor. One guy just got in trouble for failing to pay his monthly rent bill, which was a tad over $50,000. Yikes.

8.12.2009

Downing the Jays

In a game when they were out-hit 14-6, the Yankees held onto a 3-3 tie into the 11th inning before Robinson Cano hit a walkoff single to win the game for New York, 4-3.

(Better yet, I saw that Cano was up to bat with a man on first and second, and the score was tied, and I wrote the above sentence, hoping it would come true. Then he fulfilled my prediction. That's what I'm talking about!)

A.J. Burnett absorbed most of the damage, allowing 10 hits and three runs over six innings. He also struck out seven.

Cano was 2-for-5 with two RBI, and Johnny Damon went 2-for-4 with an RBI off his solo shot in the third.

Derek Jeter left the game after being hit by a pitch on his right foot. He ran the bases and scored a run before being replaced.

With a 2-1 series win over the Blue Jays in its pocket, New York now heads west to Seattle for a series against the Mariners.

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8.11.2009

Can't keep the Yankees down

The Yanks trailed the Blue Jays 4-3 heading into the bottom of the eighth, but the same team that's been working magic all season (and especially this weekend) showed up again, piling up four runs in the bottom of the frame to pull New York past Toronto to win 7-5.

Hideki Matsui and Jorge Posada hit back-to-back home runs in the eighth, and Mariano Rivera closed the game to record his 33rd save in 34 tries.

Johnny Damon and Derek Jeter were both 3-for-5.

The win makes the Yankees the first team to reach 70 wins this season.

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8.10.2009

Revenge of the N.Y. front office

Tonight was the revenge of the New York front office, with three Yankee steals hitting homers to vault the Bronx Bombers past the Boston Red Sox 5-2.

The Yankees nabbed Johnny Damon out of the free agency market from under Boston's nose a few years back, then repeated the process while outbidding the BoSox for Mark Teixeira this year. And everyone remembers the bitter taste left in Boston's mouth when A-Rod chose the Bronx over Beantown.

Tonight, all three New York steals belted homers.

A-Rod, the new Red Sox-slayer, used his picture-perfect swing to put the ball past the fence in the same place as Friday night (or Saturday morning), breaking up an 0-0 tie once again, this time in the bottom of the 7th.

His bomb was especially important because the Yankees were facing a great pitcher in Jon Lester, whom New York had never beat (before tonight's game, Lester was 3-0, with a 3.43 ERA in six starts against the Yankees in his career, and 1-0 with a 3.46 ERA and 17 Ks in two starts this year). Lester had retired the previous nine batters before the home run.

One inning after A-Rod went yard, Damon plunked one over the fence, then Teixeira hit a towering fly that settled into the right upper deck. This is the sixth time this season Damon and Teixeira hit back-to-back home runs, a Yankees record.

Their blasts started a Yankee hit parade that put New York comfortably ahead 5-2, enough to leave a cushion for Mariano Rivera to close the game. (The rampage was interrupted by a two-run homer from Boston's Victor Martinez, who broke up a 31-inning shutout by New York pitchers when he scored. But I think the Yankees were just letting the Sox in to get their hopes up before crushing them again.)

With the win, the Yankees completed their four-game sweep of the Sox and jumped ahead six-and-a-half games in the American League East standings (the Rays are eight games back). New York still has the best record in the majors.

This was an awesome series, through and through, from the slugfest on Thursday night to the standoff on Friday, to the balanced attack on Saturday to tonight's late-inning explosion. The Yankees showcased their best batters, untouchable starting pitchers and a bullpen that is looking rock-solid.

Next up, New York hosts the Toronto Blue Jays.

In individual rankings, Rivera leads Major League Baseball with 32 saves, out of 33 chances. Teixeira leads the American League in home runs with 29.

And in case you're wondering, David "I didn't use steroids" Ortiz was 1-for-14 this series. Beautiful.

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8.08.2009

Globe Disappointments

I'm a loyal Boston Globe reader, and a subscriber, but I've been considering ditching my daily reading with the paper's recent price hikes.

Today, two Globe stories made me roll my eyes and gag at the poor level of journalism at the paper — which only helps me part with the broadsheet sooner rather than later.

First, the Globe chose what I considered a shoddy story for front-page prominence. Two photos, a 24-point (I approximate) headline and a deck — plus a good six six inches of copy — informed the Greater Boston area of the sad loss of Freddy the Turkey.

I'm not joking.

The bird was shot after stopping traffic and being aggressive toward some people, "but many are unconvinced and say the bird deserved better...his untimely departure has struck a wistful chord."

Apparently, local residents were very attached to this bird. I'll withhold judgment on them, but the Globe — ?

The other story I object to is also an animal story. Animal articles don't bother me, but I'd like to see some sort of relevance, especially if a story bunps a war or a massive fire off the front page of the Metro section, which today's "Deciphering the message in Fido's bark" did (the latter, that is).

The article talked about researchers analyzing a dog's bark and the reason for it, which I found mildly interesting until outrage hit at paragraph seven.

The quote, from some sort of expert: "They (dogs) are occupying such an important role in our lives. If you're trying to stop a dog barking, it makes a difference if you think it's barking because it wants to talk to you or because it's frightened and wants to call your assistance."

Can someone please tell Captain Obvious that we're aware that it's important to figure out whether we need to let the dog out or grab a shotgun to fight off a robber, but that doesn't mean we need a scientific analysis of a dog's bark?

Please tell me there wasn't public funding for this research. I'm pretty sure if you can't figure out why your dog is barking, you're not going to be reading a psychological finding on animal research of a dog's bark.

This had the potential to be an OK article, but that quote sunk it quick.

[A couple reader comments on this article were funny; check out MedfordMickey's and blahblah234's.]

That good.

There was only one way I wanted to see this game end, and in the 15th inning, it happened.

An A-Bomb! From A-Rod!

This is why I watch baseball.

Alex Rodriguez hit a home run in the bottom of the 15th to lead the Yankees past the Red Sox 2-0. His clutch hit wasn't the only abnormal thing to happen this night (or this morning, I guess), but it's the only anomoly from this slugfest I want to see repeated in the future. Other oddities included the first three New York batters in the lineup go 1-for-20 (including 0-for-6 from Mark Teixeira and 0-for-7 from Johnny Damon) and the Yankees churning through six pitchers.

But it was a stellar night for the pitching staff, showing that the bullpen that was considered all-but-dead at the beginning of the season can be playoff-caliber. The relief staff allowed three hits over its 7.1 innings, following A.J. Burnett's best performance of the year: 7.2 innings pitched, no runs allowed, six strikeouts, one hit. (When Jacoby Ellsbury got a hit to start the game, I remember actually saying to myself that it was a shame that Burnett's no-hitter was already gone. Little did I know how close to that he would actually pitch.)

The real hero, of course, was A-Rod.

I was in a bar right next to Fenway, watching the game drag on (it totaled five hours and 35 minutes by the end), clad in my Yankees hat and Rodriguez shirt. Each time he came up, I was ready to see him shed his unclutchness and win the game.

Bottom of the 11th, 2 outs: struck out.
Bottom of the 13th, 2 outs, man on first: flied out.
Bottom of the 15th, 2 outs, man on first: an A-bomb. For A-Rod.

A-Rod had gone 72 at bats without a homer, and his batting average has hovered around the Mendoza Line all season. But looking at the team's performance since he's come back (New York is 46-27 since his arrival, and just 13-15 before; plus better statistics for several players), and his strange ability to eventually come through in the clutch at points this season, you have to wonder if he's figuring out which kind of cog he needs to be in the mighty Yankee machine.

And thanks to the pitching staff for keeping the game close until he was ready.

Next up, 16 hours after the end of this win: the game of the week on Fox, at 4 p.m. Saturday.

As of right now, the Yanks are running away with the American League East, and with the Dodgers losing tonight, they have the best record in baseball.

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8.07.2009

1-0 so far

Let's leave those other Red Sox-Yankees series behind us and consider the one occurring today through Sunday, which New York now leads 1-0.

Tonight's 13-6 win by the Yankees had many beautiful moments.
Take your pick:
1. David Ortiz, the meat-headed juicer, going 0-for-5
2. Joba Chamberlain recording his third win in a row (he's now 8-2)
3. Three-run dingers from both Jorge Posada and Melky Cabrera
4. 3 RBI from Hideki Matsui in his recent return
5. Mark Teixeira tying the American League lead for home runs with his 28th deep shot (he was 3-for-4 on the night)
6. Johnny Damon going 3-for-5 with a homer
7. Robinson Cano batting 2-for-4, raising his average to .309
8. The largest crowd in the new Yankee Stadium (49,005)
9. Torching John Smoltz in the third inning (but really, who didn't
see that coming?)
10. Well, we could go on for a while...

And in the obligatory standings update, that puts New York up three-and-a-half games on Boston, with Tampa Bay six behind. Another three wins by New York could even the Yankees up with the Red Sox in the American League East loss column (a potential tie-breaker at the end of the season, if needed).

Oh, and this win gives the Yankees the best record in Major League Baseball, tied with the Los Angeles Dodgers. Good night.

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8.05.2009

Now the real test starts

The Yankees swept their two-game series with the Toronto Blue Jays tonight, winning 8-4, but the real test starts tomorrow as the Bombers host the Boston Red Sox for four games. The Yankees are a dismal 0-8 against the BoSox this season, and they need these games not only to keep a two-and-a-half game lead in the American League East but also to shore up their divisional standings in case of a Fall tie-breaker.

Johnny Damon (3-for-5, 3 RBI) and Nick Swisher (2-for-5) both hit home runs tonight to lead New York, and Robinson Cano went 2-for-4.

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8.04.2009

Home Run Derby

The Yankees have had trouble against Roy Halladay in the past, but three home runs was enough tonight to get New York a 5-3 win over Toronto.

Mark Teixeira, Johnny Damon and Hideki Matsui all went yard, and Andy Pettitte struck out six while allowing only one run. It was his first win in six games, and pulled him up to 4-4 at home, where he's had trouble all season.

The Yankees are trying to rev up their attack after a poor 1-3 series at the Chicago White Sox. New York plays Boston Thursday through Sunday before hosting Toronto. New York, at 64-42, has a one-game lead in the American League East over the BoSox (62-42), who are holding on in the ninth inning of a 2-2 game at Tampa Bay (58-48).

UPDATE: Boston falls 4-2 to the Rays in the bottom of the 13th, dropping them one-and-a-half games behind the Yankees.

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8.01.2009

Right-on news coverage

This article by the Los Angeles Times' Steve Lopez is what I considered right-on coverage of the Michael Jackson memorial service. I especially appreciate his take on Al Sharpton and CNN's "bulletin" (and look close for a nice jab at Rick Sanchez).