Sunday, June 22, 2008
Is the DH an abomination or progress?
Last week, the Yankees lost ace Chien-Ming Wang while he was running the bases in Houston. A crazed Hank Steinbrenner said the NL should get into the 21st century and incorporate the DH rule. This brings up the question of our generation: is the DH an abomination or does it represent progress? Progress Argument The AL, minors, college, high school and some international play all use the DH. If everyone else is doing it, shouldn't the NL? It helps create higher scoring games, makes pitchers pitch to 9 betters instead of 8, forces managers to take the pitcher out when they should, instead of pinch hit, and extends the careers of fan favorites. The Abomination Argument If all of your friends were to jump off the Brooklyn Bridge, would you? Forget 100 years of history and that Abner Doubleday fully intended pitchers to hit. Forget that in my high school (a NYC championship team), our ace pitcher was also a rock star hitter. That argument holds no water because sometimes a tweak in the rules is necessary in a sport (see some of hockey's recent changes to make the game faster. And Steve has always been lobbying for a 19 second shot clock in the NBA and a 23 second shot clock in NCAA hoops). The real argument is that pitchers need to bat so they can be thrown at by other pitchers in retaliation for throwing at someone on their team. That simple. Add to the equation that pitchers are not special prima donna, but members of the team who will be counted on to pinch hit or run the bases in extra inning or other special situations. If your pitchers hit then they will be available to you in extreme situations like having Tom Glavine available to pinch hit in the bottom of the 9th in game 7 of the 2006 NLCS... (But who am I to question Willie?) While there are only 8 hitters in the NL, pitchers go get hits, homers, and stolen bases (el Duque has 2 last year in one game!) Having the pitcher hit also makes the game more strategic and double switches are fun! Lastly, some old farts still DHing just piss me off. Go retire already you fat slob! What is next DRs, or designated runners? Posted by Steve DHing for the Tank.
Saturday, June 21, 2008
Baseball is a Game of Streaks
The Yankees won seven in a row coming into Friday's game at the Stadium. The Cincinnati Reds lost three game losing streak. The Reds took a one run lead but the Yankees tied in the third. Damon
missed a ball in top of the fifth which was scored a double. A
sacrifice advanced the runner to third. Griffey hit to right and
Abreu's throw was on target but Molina just missed the runner's leg at
home. The Reds scored three runs and took a 4-1 lead. Giambi flied out to start the fifth. Cano singled to right. Abreu grounded out to first. A-Rod
singled to center. Matsui to right. Giambino flew out to Death
Valley. A-rod tagged and went to third. Cano singles to right
center. A-Rod scores. Cabrera is out. Reds 4 - Yankees 2. Moose was very impressive getting eight innings with 110 pitches. Betemit almost hit it out to right center. Darn it! Traber pitched a nice 9th inning. Maybe there is hope for setup men after Joba went to the starting rotation. Abreu
grounded out. A-Rod lined out to second. Matsui got an 0-2 count,
took three balls, and then singled to left. Yeah! Will the winning
streak be extended to eight games? No, as Giambino grounded out to end
the game. Double darn! Posted by a dejected Tank reporting live from Yankee Stadium in the Boogie Down Bronx.
Friday, June 20, 2008
Terrific Tiger
Tiger Woods won the U.S. Open on the 91st hole in sudden death after a full 18 playoff holes on Monday. Yes, that was amazing but he did it with a bad knee which everyone knew about his surgery after the Masters. But, he also had a broken leg. Amazing!
Tiger will be healing for the rest of the season. Best wishes on getting back better than ever.
Posted by a encouraged Tank in NY.
Thursday, June 19, 2008
First win in the Manuel Era
Jerry Manuel earned is 501st win as a major league manager yesterday as the Mets did all the right thing. A come from behind, extra inning game where Jose Reyes had three hits and scratched out three runs, clutch hitting from David Wright, good pitching, and a home run from Carlos Delgado. The Mets take a series from the first place Angles 2 games to 1. That was the good news. Now the Mets have to go in and finish off this road trip with the same level of play. If the Mets are to come back and take the Wild Card, they have to start playing like they did last night. Many the distractions are now gone and they can get back to playing baseball. Posted by Steve in New York
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Apocalypse Now
It's hard to find a more painful 24 hours in sports than on Tuesday. It started with the Mets firing Willie Randolph in the middle of the night, about 3:15 a.m. Eastern Time. It ended with the Boston Celtics
destroyed the LA Lakers 131-92 to win the NBA Finals. I had predicted a
Celtics Championship back on Halloween 2007 as part of the Boston Sports
Apocalypse. I don't like being wrong but wanted to be wrong about the
Celtics because the future of the sports world and how the rest of the
world may react to it. What
impact does the Boston Sports Apocalypse have on everyone else? Mr. Met
is frowning on the cover of the NY Post and that's even before Linda punches
his lights out. Steve is too depressed to write. The Yankees are
dealing with Ching-Ming Wang's injury by signing on-the-wagon-again/off-the- wagon-again Sidney Ponson. You don't have to be
Reverend Dr. Jack Van Impe to know where this is going. Food riots. Climate
change. Extreme heat and humidity. Much of the Heartland is under water. The US is about to bomb
Iran. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed below 12,500 for the first time since Saint Patrick's Day. Where Do We Go From Here: (1) Without sports and personal repentance, we are doomed to more Boston sports championships as well as global pestilence, wars, famines, etc. (2) If the Mets don't win this year, I
will recommend that the Wilpons' fire Omar and hire Steve as the Mets
next General Manager. I know it will be difficult for Steve to be Vice
President of the United States AND the Mets GM at the same time but I
only need him in Washington for time breaking votes in the Senate. If
past travel patterns are indicative of the future, he'll spend most of
his Vice Presidency and Mets General Managership in Pakistan, the
Netherlands, or wherever you throw a dart on the map. You know what to do. Pray to God/G-d/Allah/Buddha/etc for forgiveness and root for all Boston opponents. The fate of the (sports) world lies in your hands and hearts. Posted by a Repentant Tank at the edge of the Biblical Abyss.
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Unprofessional
Firing your manager is one thing. String him along is another. Making him get on a plane to California and wait until after the Mets win at 3:15am New York time is just unprofessional. The Mets really showed a lack of professionalism in firing Willie this morning. They fired him since they disagree with his on the field decisions and handling of the players. They replaced him with his bench coach, the same person who helped Willie make those decisions. We will see now if the Mets respond well. They sure better. Posted by Steve in New York Update: New York Newsday calls the Mets Ownership Cowards. Read here.
Monday, June 16, 2008
Apocalypse Averted
The Lakers huge collapse of a 24 point lead on Thursday night gave the Celtics a commanding 3-1 lead. I
liked Jimmy Kimmel's pre-game interview of Senator Barack Obama on
Sunday. But, I had to change the channel because I have seen too much
KG, either being offered one of Bill Russell's championship rings if he
doesn't win a championship and the annoying Gatorade commercials. One
thing for certain, I'll be boycotting Gatorade for the near future. I
changed the channel to CSPAN. BTW, Brian Lamb had a fascinating
interview with Michelle Bernard of the Independent Women's Forum. The Lakers came out on fire in Game 5 but the Celtics chipped away. Who will Bill Walton root for? His son Luke who plays for the Lakers OR
the Celtics he won a championship with. On Father's Day, you can see
Bill smile after Luke made a basket. The Lakers almost folded again on Sunday. The Celtics cut the 19 point Laker
lead to about four points with about 5:17 left in the third quarter.
But, Derek Fisher hustled to get and win a jump ball. A three pointer
followed and the Lakers finally won the third quarter. I know Steve and many other Knick fans wanted Mark Jackson as Knicks head coach. But, I really enjoy his commentary as an analyst, especially the "fake hustle" perspective. Former Knick Head Coach Jeff Van Gundy was Mark Jackson's broadcasting colleague. He also made great coverage points like Vladimir Radmanovic
not sealing the baseline against Paul Pierce. Van Gundy recommended
that Lamar Odom guard Pierce. I don't know why Phil Jackson didn't
make the adjustment until the fourth quarter. The Lakers thankfully won 103-98. Bottom
Line: I know the Celtics have a 3-2 advantage and will have the home
crowd behind them for Game 6 in Boston. But, if the Lakers can force a
Game 7 on Thursday, anything can happen. I like the Lakers' chances.
Keep the Faith! Go Lakers! Posted by a relieved Tank in LaLa Land.
Sunday, June 15, 2008
The case for Willie
The Mets lost a lot of games recently and once again the media speculates that Willie will go. This will continue for the rest of the season unless Omar will come out and say "Willie is our manager no matter what, stop speculating." Unfortunately he has not done that and the writing is on the wall, Willie may not last the whole season. He may not last past the All-Star break. Steve and the Tank will make one last appeal for Willie. Think of it this way, interim managers never work out. There is no body out there who can "save" the season. So the season is already pretty much done for the Mets, so why not just sick with Willie, he can't do any worse? Posted by Steve in New York
Saturday, June 14, 2008
Were the Mets Unlucky on Friday the 13th?
Steve is depressed about the Mets. He thankfully isn't going to jump but is considering covering
curling. He finally came around to my cricket suggestion of a year ago. Steve is nowhere to be found -- probably somewhere between New York and
Boston. Linda is at her niece's recital so I am going to have to put
the Mets on my shoulders and carry them home to victory. The Rangers haven't played at Shea Stadium since they played the Yankees there in 1970s during the Stadium reconstruction. You know I am superstitious, especially on Friday the 13th. My superstition was confirmed by Josh Hamilton's first inning home run. Were the Mets going to fold and lose their sixth in a row? I didn't think so and the Mets fought back with Reyes lead-off hit. A balk. A high throw to first. The Mets lead 2-1 at the end of the first. Reyes hit an infield single in the fifth. He stole second. Castillo sacrificed Reyes to third. DW sacrifice flied to right Field. Mets 3 - Rangers 1. Oliver Perez helped his own cause by singling in two in the sixth. The Mets added two more runs to make it Mets 7 - Rangers 1. Schoenweis and Sanchez came in the eighth and ninth innings to thankfully secure the win and the Mets won by a final of 7-1. Posted by The Tank reporting live from Shea Stadium in Queens.
Friday, June 13, 2008
Undoing the Boston Hex
Up here in Boston, the locals are enjoying the best sports quadfecta of all time. Patriots, Bruins, Celtics, and the Red Sox all went deep into the playoffs or won a championship. Since I can't stand to have Boston on top of all four major sports, I am rooting for the Lakers. I was excited last night when the Lakers had a 24 point lead. But unfortunately, the Celtics showed that they are true champs and overcame the 24 point deficit and won the game to take a 3-1 lead in the NBA finals. It is obvious that the Lakers have given up and the Celtics will win the title, depressing more and more sports fans in the greater New York area. How do we undo the Boston hex on New York? Voodoo dolls is all we have left. Posted by Steve in Boston (of all places)
Thursday, June 12, 2008
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