Monthly Archives: February 2012

Back injuries could cost a pair of Yankees roster spots

They weren’t very likely to make the team out of spring training anyway, but a pair of Yankees, Russell Branyan and Austine Romine, have made it even harder on themselves as they have come down with back injuries. Romine has already missed a few days with a back injury that also caused him to miss games last season as well. He’s third on the catcher depth chart so a spot needed to open up for him to make the major league roster anyway. Now with the back issues, they may very well need to go to Gustavo Molina if Russell Martin or Francisco Cervelli aren’t available to start the season. Branyan was really only signed for insurance in case they didn’t land a left handed DH that they eventually got in Raul Ibanez. Still, there could have been a spot for him if Ibanez came down with an injury or just proved to be inadequate offensively at 39-years-old. Now Branyan is on the shelf with sore back, setting himself behind the rest of the team offensively. As he is a… Continue reading

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Burnett hit in face at Pirates camp

BRADENTON, Fla. — Pirates pitcher A.J. Burnett was struck in the face by a batted ball on Wednesday, and will fly from the team’s spring training complex to Pittsburgh to have his right eye examined by team doctors. The former Yanees pitcher was injured as he hit during… Continue reading

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Video: Francona interviews Girardi

ESPN’s own Terry Francona, formerly the manager of the Red Sox, talks with Joe Girardi. Continue reading

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How Much More Incentive Do Teams Need? – I’mGivingYouAQuestion

Mood Music – DoYaThing by Gorillaz As we all know, Bud “Further butchering my favorite sport” Selig and his cronies at MLB are going to expand the playoffs and add an addition Wild Card team to the mix. Furthermore, this new Wild Card team and the original Wild Card team will now duke it out in a one-game winner takes all match. Then, the playoffs resume like normal, with the LDS then the LCS then the WS. I’ve heard a couple of reasons why I should think this is a good thing, the two main ones being that the Wild Card will now be at a disadvantage and that teams now have further incentive to win their division. My problem lies more with the latter reason, that teams need further incentive to win their division. Seriously, I want to know how much more incentive teams need to win? What teams does not have the goal of winning their division, or being the best they can be? Granted, it looks like teams like the Athletics or Astros are making a case for that, but it’s probably more due to the reality of their current situation. But seriously, what baseball player or baseball team is not out there trying to win? I watch a lot of baseball thanks to my job, and I don’t ever think I’ve come across a situation where a team is intentionally trying to lose games to settle for the Wild Card. As talked about in the previous thread, Cashman stated that the 2010 Yankees conceded the division, which Girardi did not agree with and neither do I. Maybe he didn’t put out his best players, but it was a strategically intelligent move since they knew no matter what they were a playoff lock. However, just because you put out the B Team does not mean you are intentionally trying to lose games, which is what “further incentive” implies. It also implies that teams are not trying to win all the time, even in the early months of the season. That’s absurd. So, I pose these questions to you, Pinstripe Alley. Do you think this new playoff structure will somehow force teams to want to win their division even more than they already do? Do you think this new playoff structure will make the playoffs more or less exciting? Do you think my hatred of Selig is going to grow even more in 2013 with expanded interleague? Are there any other ways Selig could “improve” the sport? Showers or Baths? Continue reading

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Video: A.J. Burnett bunts ball off his face

A.J. Burnett, practicing bunting today as a Pirate, fouled one off his face. Burnett is returning to Pittsburgh to have his eye checked out. Continue reading

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Video: A.J. bunts ball off face

A.J. Burnett, practicing bunting as a Pirate, fouls one off his face. Burnett is returning to Pittsburgh to have his eye checked out. Continue reading

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Must-Read: Wally On Bobby V

I know, I know, I’m biased, but I always love Wally’s columns, even though I don’t always agree with them. This one is a keeper. Here is the lead: On the day Bobby Valentine invented baseball, that is not the way he drew up the relay play. The way he figured it out, on the ball hit to right field, the shortstop is supposed to go out and take the deep relay, the second baseman backs him up and the first baseman is the floater, roaming the infield for an overthrow and deciding whether the play should be to home or to third. Continue reading

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A-Rod talks with Kay & Don, roots for Heat

Alex Rodriguez talked with Michael Kay and Don La Greca and tried to “stay in his lane,” avoiding controversy. He was successful.Listen to the complete interview:   Mike and Don asked the right questions, but A-Rod wouldn’t bite on any of them. He was like an environmentalist as he even recycled some of his lines from his press conference. He offered Jeremy Lin a place to stay again. On baseball, he avoided the questions about Bobby Valentine and instead spoke about how great the Rivalry always will be. Continue reading

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Yanks need aging stars to produce

They call it the young man’s game and for good reason. The post-steroids industry has fallen in love with run-prevention, which is to say, pitching-and-defense is the new three-run HR. Every GM has the same prototype of the ideal asset, too: under 30 and under contract control. Look no further than the Rays for a vision of the future. But that doesn’t mean everyone is following the same path. The Yankees’ best hitter (Robinson Cano) might be only 29 and the next closer (David Robertson) will be 27 in April. And their prize acquisition this winter (Michael Pineda) is a tender 23. But the Bombers will have a hard time holding off the Rays in the East unless they get at least career-norm production from no less than three aging players. Consider Mariano Rivera (42), Derek Jeter (37) and Alex Rodriguez (36) — and that’s not even taking into account 37-year-old Hiroki Kuroda’s assimilation to the American League, or 39-year-old Raul Ibanez, the game’s oldest DH, as the new home run threat in the Bronx. Can the Yankees continue their run despite flaunting the industry’s business plan? Rivera is as close to a guarantee as the Yankees can count on, but it’s anyone’s guess whether Jeter can match his .338 average from the final three months of the 2011 season, or whether A-Rod can stay healthy enough to matter. Interestingly, some talent evaluators believe it’s Mark Teixeira who represents the key to the Yankees’ success. Unless he can improve his .224 average from the left side, the Yankees will again have to rely heavily on Curtis Granderson and Cano for run-production in the postseason. That’s a recipe for the same first-round exit they suffered in ’11 against the Tigers. That is, unless Jeter proves his second-half surge was no fluke, and whether Rodriguez can get back to playing 130-140 games a year. He’s been on the disabled list in each of the last four seasons, most recently dealing with the after-effects of a torn meniscus in his right knee. Doctors proclaimed A-Rod fit to return to the lineup at the end of August, but he still couldn’t rescue a lost campaign — which expired, fittingly, with a Division Series-ending strikeout against Jose Valverde. It feels like a million years ago that A-Rod dwarfed the mortals around him. It wasn’t just the home runs, it was the sheer indestructibility that separated him. Maybe it was all fueled by steroids, but Rodriguez appeared in 1,114 games in his age 25-through-31 seasons, an average of 159 per. But that was before a series of setbacks and injuries to his hip, shoulder, knee and thumb. “There’s no question I have limitations that I didn’t have when I was 27 or 28 or even 32 (when he won the Most Valuable Player Award in 2007),” said Rodriguez, who appeared in just 99 games last year, the first time he’s been under 100 in a decade. He insists he feels “great” this spring after deciding not to bulk up in the weight room and punish himself with cardiovascular drills. Instead, A-Rod has moved closer to a yoga-like regimen, focusing on stretching and range-of-motion exercises. As for that knee, Rodriguez is hopeful that an offseason trip to Germany, where he underwent Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) therapy, will allow him to play an entire season without pain. Rodriguez might not ever be the monster who terrified opposing pitchers, but he’s still counting on batting cleanup in the Bronx. But should he be? “Don’t give Joe (Girardi) any ideas,” he joked with reporters, although it’s probably too late for that. The Yankees are well aware that Cano is the team’s best run producer, and that the only remaining intrigue is how to best camouflage A-Rod’s and Teixeira’s combined deficits in the Nos. 3 and 5 spots. Of course, Joe Girardi won’t dare entertain questions about flip-flopping Cano into the No. 4 slot, hopeful that an A-Rod renaissance will snuff out any controversy before it mushrooms in April or May. The manager is just as thankful he isn’t being probed about Jeter’s decline as he was last spring. The captain bought himself some time with an impressive finish in 2011, easing the concerns that’d gained momentum between the start of 2010 and July 8 of last year. During that span, Jeter’s OPS had sunk to the mid-600s, nearly 200 points below his career norms. Nothing seemed to go right for the franchise’s most popular player — even his reputation for delivering in the clutch was tainted. Jeter’s average with runners in scoring position fell to .243. But all that changed with that 5-for-5 masterpiece against the Rays, the day Jeter finally reached his 3,000th career hit. After that, he invited the world into his personal time tunnel, batting .338 over a 266 at-bat span, including .355 with runners in scoring position, even solving right-handed pitching to the tune of .315. Jeter is loath to think he can’t duplicate those numbers in 2012, insisting, “it’s all about being healthy and feeling good.” Once he recovered from last summer’s torn calf muscle, the rest was just, “getting my timing back.” The history books aren’t quite as convinced. Only two shortstops have ever been as productive as Jeter as this age — Hall of Famers Luke Appling and Honus Wagner — and Jeter begins the season as the oldest player at his position. The same goes for Rivera, whose seniority trumps every other closer. At 42, however, the Yankee right-hander says the end is in sight, dropping one hint after another about retiring after the season. Rivera admits his perspective on baseball changed radically over the winter, when doctors found polyps on his vocal chords. Although biopsies revealed no malignancies, a shaken Rivera said, “I was worried about cancer.” The subsequent surgery left him unable to speak for an entire week, and he emerged from the episode convinced, “there is so much more to my life (than playing for the Yankees.)” The good news is that Robertson appears to have the swing-and-miss arsenal to succeed Rivera, although it remains to be seen if he’s emotionally equipped for the nightly stress. If nothing else, Robertson has the best possible teacher in Rivera, who could probably keep closing into his late 40s, if he could accept a slight age-related decline. But that’ll never happen, according to Rivera, who says, “I don’t want be to seen that way.” Gods never want to look like mortals, especially on the way out the door. Continue reading

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Al B. Al: The radio edition

Today’s Al B. Al comes to us courtesy of 1050 ESPN radio’s “The Michael Kay Show.” Michael Kay: “You’re going to turn 37 this year . . . can you actually see and sense your baseball mortality and is that tough to think of?” Alex Rodriguez: “I don’t understand the question, Michael.” Continue reading

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