The New York Yankees signed a player named— get this— Burt Reynolds.
No, not the mustachioed actor from such films as Deliverance, The Longest Yard and the Smokey and the Bandit series.
According to the YES Network, this Burt Reynolds might not have any relation to the movie star, but has a strong bloodline— he is reportedly the cousin of Yankees star second baseman Robinson Cano.
Last season, the 23-year-old Reynolds batted .232 with 13 homeruns, 36 RBI's and 11 stolen bases for the Newark Bears of the Can-Am Baseball Association.
The third baseman/outfielder was originally a 30th round pick of the Washington Nationals in 2006 and is a native of San Pedro de Marcoris, Dominican Republic. He spent three years in the Tampa Bay minor-league system before going to the independent Can-Am.
The 2011 Bears were managed by former-Yankee outfielder Tim Raines and had a couple of familiar names from the Yankees past in the lineup including Tim Raines Jr. and Todd Gossage, the youngest son of Hall of Fame closer Rich "Goose" Gossage.
It might have been nice to have the actor Reynolds— the world's biggest box office draw for most of the '70's— hanging around Yankees spring training.
The Yankees haven't had a good mustache on the team since the days of Don Mattingly.
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Robinson Cano. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Robinson Cano. Tampilkan semua postingan
Kamis, 23 Februari 2012
Senin, 03 Oktober 2011
Tigers Jose Valverde on ALDS: "It's Over"
Right after Detroit Tigers Jose Valverde barely shut down a ninth-inning rally by the New York Yankees, the closer couldn't keep his mouth shut and declared the AL division series-- now tied at 1-1-- was "over." Win one game and talk gets cheap... fast.
"It's over already," Valverde told reporters after escaping a Yankees comeback in the pouring rain yesterday. "[Justin] Verlander has it tomorrow. The next day we have a celebration in Detroit. They have a good team, but I think that's it for them."
When told his comments were being recorded by television cameras, Valverde laughed.
"No, no, I am just kidding," he recanted.
Besides producing some prime bulletin board material for the Yankees, Valverde forgot to mention that even if Verlander gets a victory, there is still another game to win in the best-of five series.
Valverde has good reason to be confident. The Tigers return home and put their 24-game winner Verlander on the mound.
The Yankees will counter with their own big man CC Sabathia but, after that, will go after the Tigers with a fragile and inconsistent A.J. Burnett on Tuesday.
Valverde sure picked a weird time to start bragging. He almost single-handedly blew Sunday's 5-3 victory by giving up two runs, putting the tying runs on base and had the dangerous Robinson Cano at the plate as the winning run.
Valverde did everything possible to keep his throwing hand dry in the pouring rain, then got Cano to tap a routine grounder to second in the driving rain for the final out.
Valverde, who was 49-for-49 in save opportunities this season, said he would be ready to pitch Monday night even after using 34 pitches to get the save yesterday. That was one pitch less than his season high.
After the game, Tigers manager Jim Leyland said that with then tying run at first base, he considered walking Cano to take a shot at struggling Alex Rodriguez, but Valverde wanted to go after Cano.
"No, right there, I wanted to end it," Valverde boasted. "I said, I'll win it."
"It's over already," Valverde told reporters after escaping a Yankees comeback in the pouring rain yesterday. "[Justin] Verlander has it tomorrow. The next day we have a celebration in Detroit. They have a good team, but I think that's it for them."
When told his comments were being recorded by television cameras, Valverde laughed.
"No, no, I am just kidding," he recanted.
Besides producing some prime bulletin board material for the Yankees, Valverde forgot to mention that even if Verlander gets a victory, there is still another game to win in the best-of five series.
Valverde has good reason to be confident. The Tigers return home and put their 24-game winner Verlander on the mound.
The Yankees will counter with their own big man CC Sabathia but, after that, will go after the Tigers with a fragile and inconsistent A.J. Burnett on Tuesday.
Valverde sure picked a weird time to start bragging. He almost single-handedly blew Sunday's 5-3 victory by giving up two runs, putting the tying runs on base and had the dangerous Robinson Cano at the plate as the winning run.
Valverde did everything possible to keep his throwing hand dry in the pouring rain, then got Cano to tap a routine grounder to second in the driving rain for the final out.
Valverde, who was 49-for-49 in save opportunities this season, said he would be ready to pitch Monday night even after using 34 pitches to get the save yesterday. That was one pitch less than his season high.
After the game, Tigers manager Jim Leyland said that with then tying run at first base, he considered walking Cano to take a shot at struggling Alex Rodriguez, but Valverde wanted to go after Cano.
"No, right there, I wanted to end it," Valverde boasted. "I said, I'll win it."
Kamis, 29 September 2011
A-Rod Will Be Yankees X-Factor In ALDS
If you ask Alex Rodriguez, his surgically-repaired right knee and sprained left thumb are fine and sitting out last night's season finale against the Tampa Bay Rays was just precautionary. The New York Yankees third baseman made it clear that he intends on being in the lineup tomorrow night for Game 1 of the ALDS against the Detroit Tigers.
Last week, Yankees manager Joe Girardi said that one of his intentions was to get A-Rod a full week of at-bats to get him ready for the upcoming series. Last night, all he got was a session in the batting cage.
"I was going to go out and take one or two at-bats, but we felt it was probably smarter to stay off the turf for one night," Rodriguez said. "Turf is always an issue when you play multiple days back-to-back. there was just a little soreness, but it's all the turf. Since surgery, I haven't felt any pain or discomfort."
If it's not the knee, maybe it's the thumb.
There must be some reason he is hitting .171 (6-for-35) with one home run and six RBI's over his last 10 games. Not exactly boot-shaking numbers.
Rodriguez, missed six games from Sept. 10 to Sept. 16 after the thumb flared up but hitting coach Kevin Long believes his aging charge is not favoring the knee or the thumb.
"His timing is off," said Long. "We are working with his leg kick and and getting better pitches to hit. As long as he is healthy, he can help us at the next level."
The next level is exactly where the Yankees will need A-Rod's help.
Just because the Yankees are loaded with power doesn't mean A-Rod is expendable. The team did lose the last four "meaningless" games of the season.
For the Yankees to battle the Tigers' 1-2 punch of Justin Verlander and Doug Fister, Rodriguez will have to revert back to his 2009 form. Remember when the slugger carried the Yankees to the World Series with his first certifiable monstrous postseason? During that run, he hit .455 in the ALDS and .429 in the ALCS with five home runs and 12 RBI's.
This year, the 36 year-old Rodriguez finished this regular season by playing in the fewest games of his career (99) with a .276 average and career lows in home runs (16) and RBI's (62). Not prototypical cleanup numbers.
If the Yankees can't depend on Rodriguez to be their big time bat, they have other offensive power at their disposal. Curtis Granderson, Mark Teixeira and Robinson Cano have combined for 108 home runs and an impressive 348 RBI's, but combine them with a robust A-Rod and you have the Roar Four.
All three of those players have been shuffled between the No. 3, 4 and 5 spots all season, but now with Granderson safely ensconced in the No. 2 slot, it's up to A-Rod to be No. 4 and make it more difficult for the Tigers pitchers to go around anyone in the middle of the lineup.
If Rodriguez is not healthy, Girardi will have to choose between either rookie Eduardo Nunez or veteran Eric Chavez.
Nunez is more of an offensive threat over the slumping Chavez-- although the fresh legs that gave Nunez 22 stolen bases belong to the same inexperienced head which made numerous mental errors in the field. The youngster has 22 errors and, in the playoffs where every play counts, that's a real concern.
Chavez, on the other hand, is flawless Gold Glove infielder who has been known to get timely hits but has faded down the stretch.
Both are capable, if not dangerous, replacements if Rodriguez's physical ailments continue to pester him. A bigger concern could be A-Rod's head.
After his sensational playoffs two years ago, A-Rod withered back to his old big-game habits.
He followed up 2009's breakout postseason play with a dismal outing last year against the Texas Rangers-- batting .190 with 2 RBI's in 25 plate appearances.
"I don't really have a concern about him [Rodriguez]," said Girardi about last night's sitting. "The turf can do that to you sometimes. He'll be ready to go (tomorrow)."
Now the hurting Rodriguez faces another October. Which A-Rod will show up?
Last week, Yankees manager Joe Girardi said that one of his intentions was to get A-Rod a full week of at-bats to get him ready for the upcoming series. Last night, all he got was a session in the batting cage.
"I was going to go out and take one or two at-bats, but we felt it was probably smarter to stay off the turf for one night," Rodriguez said. "Turf is always an issue when you play multiple days back-to-back. there was just a little soreness, but it's all the turf. Since surgery, I haven't felt any pain or discomfort."
If it's not the knee, maybe it's the thumb.
There must be some reason he is hitting .171 (6-for-35) with one home run and six RBI's over his last 10 games. Not exactly boot-shaking numbers.
Rodriguez, missed six games from Sept. 10 to Sept. 16 after the thumb flared up but hitting coach Kevin Long believes his aging charge is not favoring the knee or the thumb.
"His timing is off," said Long. "We are working with his leg kick and and getting better pitches to hit. As long as he is healthy, he can help us at the next level."
The next level is exactly where the Yankees will need A-Rod's help.
Just because the Yankees are loaded with power doesn't mean A-Rod is expendable. The team did lose the last four "meaningless" games of the season.
For the Yankees to battle the Tigers' 1-2 punch of Justin Verlander and Doug Fister, Rodriguez will have to revert back to his 2009 form. Remember when the slugger carried the Yankees to the World Series with his first certifiable monstrous postseason? During that run, he hit .455 in the ALDS and .429 in the ALCS with five home runs and 12 RBI's.
This year, the 36 year-old Rodriguez finished this regular season by playing in the fewest games of his career (99) with a .276 average and career lows in home runs (16) and RBI's (62). Not prototypical cleanup numbers.
If the Yankees can't depend on Rodriguez to be their big time bat, they have other offensive power at their disposal. Curtis Granderson, Mark Teixeira and Robinson Cano have combined for 108 home runs and an impressive 348 RBI's, but combine them with a robust A-Rod and you have the Roar Four.
All three of those players have been shuffled between the No. 3, 4 and 5 spots all season, but now with Granderson safely ensconced in the No. 2 slot, it's up to A-Rod to be No. 4 and make it more difficult for the Tigers pitchers to go around anyone in the middle of the lineup.
If Rodriguez is not healthy, Girardi will have to choose between either rookie Eduardo Nunez or veteran Eric Chavez.
Nunez is more of an offensive threat over the slumping Chavez-- although the fresh legs that gave Nunez 22 stolen bases belong to the same inexperienced head which made numerous mental errors in the field. The youngster has 22 errors and, in the playoffs where every play counts, that's a real concern.
Chavez, on the other hand, is flawless Gold Glove infielder who has been known to get timely hits but has faded down the stretch.
Both are capable, if not dangerous, replacements if Rodriguez's physical ailments continue to pester him. A bigger concern could be A-Rod's head.
After his sensational playoffs two years ago, A-Rod withered back to his old big-game habits.
He followed up 2009's breakout postseason play with a dismal outing last year against the Texas Rangers-- batting .190 with 2 RBI's in 25 plate appearances.
"I don't really have a concern about him [Rodriguez]," said Girardi about last night's sitting. "The turf can do that to you sometimes. He'll be ready to go (tomorrow)."
Now the hurting Rodriguez faces another October. Which A-Rod will show up?
Label:
A-Rod,
Alex Rodriguez,
Curtis Granderson,
Detroit Tigers,
Eduardo Nunez,
Eric Chavez,
Joe Girardi,
Mark Teixeira,
New York Yankees,
Robinson Cano,
Tampa Bay Rays,
Texas Rangers
Rabu, 21 September 2011
Surprised Kid Catches Game-Tying Home Run As Yankees Clinch Playoff Berth
A slightly apprehensive, but persistent kid, who caught Eduardo Nunez's game-tying home run at Yankee Stadium this afternoon looked totally shocked that the ball even landed in his glove.
The Tampa Bay Rays were leading the New York Yankees, 2-1, and Rays starter James Shields was cruising along through eight innings until Nunez smacked the ball into the left field seats.
The solo shot sailed over the wall and through the outstretched hands of other fans into the possession of the closed eyes and open mitt of the youngster to tie the game. Little did he know the homer would help the Yankees clinch a playoff spot.
Later in the same inning, the Yankees Robinson Cano doubled in Brett Gardner and Derek Jeter to give New York a 4-2 lead.
The Yankees used seven pitchers before Mariano Rivera came in to close the ninth and get save No. 603.
The win helped the Yankees clinch at least a playoff berth and the demoralizing loss hurts the Rays chances to catch the Boston Red Sox.
The Tampa Bay Rays were leading the New York Yankees, 2-1, and Rays starter James Shields was cruising along through eight innings until Nunez smacked the ball into the left field seats.
The solo shot sailed over the wall and through the outstretched hands of other fans into the possession of the closed eyes and open mitt of the youngster to tie the game. Little did he know the homer would help the Yankees clinch a playoff spot.
Later in the same inning, the Yankees Robinson Cano doubled in Brett Gardner and Derek Jeter to give New York a 4-2 lead.
The Yankees used seven pitchers before Mariano Rivera came in to close the ninth and get save No. 603.
The win helped the Yankees clinch at least a playoff berth and the demoralizing loss hurts the Rays chances to catch the Boston Red Sox.
Kamis, 11 Agustus 2011
Mariano Rivera Has Another 'Uh-Oh' Moment; Yankees Beat Angels, 6-5
Today, under the brilliant blue skies over Yankee Stadium, hot-hitting Robinson Cano made the Los Angeles Angels pay dearly for an error by Macier Izturis, after the second baseman muffed an easy ground ball that should have ended the seventh inning. The goof led to the winning margin of a Yankees victory. The only grey cloud in sight, on this sunny day, was the one hovering Izturis' head the rest of the game.
With the score tied, 2-2, and two outs, Mark Teixeira squibbed a soft blooper towards second. Izturis bobbled, then dropped the ball after it hit him in the chest. Teixeira was safe at first and the Yankees had the bases loaded. Hot hitting Cano came to the plate and sent the next pitch from Scott Downs over the right field fence for the fifth grand slam of his career and a 6-2 Yankees lead.
The Yankees held on to win the game and the series, 2-1, from the Angels but the 6-5 victory didn't come without any trepidation about Mariano Rivera. The Yankees closer had another "blip" in the ninth inning after another fine start from starter Bartolo Colon.
Colon went six strong innings although he ended up with his second straight no-decision. The rotund righty continues to build on one of the great comeback stories in the major leagues this season.
The only slip-up in Colon's day was giving up a two-run to Alberto Callaspo in the fifth inning which gave the Angels a 2-0 lead. Fourteen of Colon's 18 outs came from strikeouts or infield outs. Colon finished the day going six innings, allowing 2 runs and striking out three.
The Yankees once again called on the smoking bat of Curtis Granderson. The Yankees centerfielder skied--and I mean sent into orbit-- his 32nd home run of the season off Angels starter, Tyler Chatwood. The homer knocked in Derek Jeter to tie the score. It was Granderson's fourth dinger in three games.
Everything looked good for the Yankees after Robinson's curtain call. That was until Rivera was called in to bail out an ineffective Cory Wade with one out in the ninth.
Rivera came in after Wade struck out Vernon Wells and allowed two hits which put two men on base. The Hall of Fame closer was coming off a blown save and a loss-- "a blip" as manager Joe Girardi calls them-- and a lot of hand-wringing by Yankees fans. Rivera only needed to get the final two outs.
Digging in at the plate was the Angels pinch-hitter Russell Branyan. Branyan-- who had eight home-runs in 47 at-bats at Yankee Stadium-- immediately sent Rivera's first pitch into the right field stands to close the score to 6-5.
Rivera did a half-snarl/half-grin as he watched the ball sail over his head and into the hushed crowd. Uh-oh. Could what was once called a blip, now be an epidemic many anxious fans were probably wondering. Things were getting interesting-- and too close.
Not to worry. The usually reliable Rivera got the next batter to ground out and the final out was a short fly to left which Brett Gardner gathered in as he crashed into the box-seat wall.
Game over and Rivera picks up his 30th save of the season for a record-extending 14th time.
It's been a long time since Yankees fans held their breath when Rivera was on the mound, if ever.
It was the ninth straight home series the Yankees have won and gave the Yankees a comfortable eight game lead over the Angels in the wild-card race.
Except for Wade, the bullpen was nearly perfect. Rafael Soriano continued to play like the 45-save closer the Yankees spent $35 million for. He handled the seventh inning handily but gave up his first hit in five appearances since coming off the DL on July 30.
Dave Robertson was perfect in the eighth.
After the game, Girardi was asked if he was worried about Rivera. The manager joked, "If it happened for a month."
Girardi continued to downplay the anxiety surrounding Rivera and believes hitters are just being more aggressive with Rivera so they don't fall behind.
"He's close to the perfect closer as we'll ever see," said the manager. "[But] He's not perfect"
Rivera said he wasn't concerned about his weapon of choice-- the cutter.
"I didn't lose velocity, " said the 41 year-old Rivera. "I put the ball where I want it, that's about it."
Asked if he sees any trend to his last three outings, Rivera shook his head.
"It's always only one pitch, stressed the closer. "It's one pitch, but it can't be like that."
With the score tied, 2-2, and two outs, Mark Teixeira squibbed a soft blooper towards second. Izturis bobbled, then dropped the ball after it hit him in the chest. Teixeira was safe at first and the Yankees had the bases loaded. Hot hitting Cano came to the plate and sent the next pitch from Scott Downs over the right field fence for the fifth grand slam of his career and a 6-2 Yankees lead.
The Yankees held on to win the game and the series, 2-1, from the Angels but the 6-5 victory didn't come without any trepidation about Mariano Rivera. The Yankees closer had another "blip" in the ninth inning after another fine start from starter Bartolo Colon.
Colon went six strong innings although he ended up with his second straight no-decision. The rotund righty continues to build on one of the great comeback stories in the major leagues this season.
The only slip-up in Colon's day was giving up a two-run to Alberto Callaspo in the fifth inning which gave the Angels a 2-0 lead. Fourteen of Colon's 18 outs came from strikeouts or infield outs. Colon finished the day going six innings, allowing 2 runs and striking out three.
The Yankees once again called on the smoking bat of Curtis Granderson. The Yankees centerfielder skied--and I mean sent into orbit-- his 32nd home run of the season off Angels starter, Tyler Chatwood. The homer knocked in Derek Jeter to tie the score. It was Granderson's fourth dinger in three games.
Everything looked good for the Yankees after Robinson's curtain call. That was until Rivera was called in to bail out an ineffective Cory Wade with one out in the ninth.
Rivera came in after Wade struck out Vernon Wells and allowed two hits which put two men on base. The Hall of Fame closer was coming off a blown save and a loss-- "a blip" as manager Joe Girardi calls them-- and a lot of hand-wringing by Yankees fans. Rivera only needed to get the final two outs.
Digging in at the plate was the Angels pinch-hitter Russell Branyan. Branyan-- who had eight home-runs in 47 at-bats at Yankee Stadium-- immediately sent Rivera's first pitch into the right field stands to close the score to 6-5.
Rivera did a half-snarl/half-grin as he watched the ball sail over his head and into the hushed crowd. Uh-oh. Could what was once called a blip, now be an epidemic many anxious fans were probably wondering. Things were getting interesting-- and too close.
Not to worry. The usually reliable Rivera got the next batter to ground out and the final out was a short fly to left which Brett Gardner gathered in as he crashed into the box-seat wall.
Game over and Rivera picks up his 30th save of the season for a record-extending 14th time.
It's been a long time since Yankees fans held their breath when Rivera was on the mound, if ever.
It was the ninth straight home series the Yankees have won and gave the Yankees a comfortable eight game lead over the Angels in the wild-card race.
Except for Wade, the bullpen was nearly perfect. Rafael Soriano continued to play like the 45-save closer the Yankees spent $35 million for. He handled the seventh inning handily but gave up his first hit in five appearances since coming off the DL on July 30.
Dave Robertson was perfect in the eighth.
After the game, Girardi was asked if he was worried about Rivera. The manager joked, "If it happened for a month."
Girardi continued to downplay the anxiety surrounding Rivera and believes hitters are just being more aggressive with Rivera so they don't fall behind.
"He's close to the perfect closer as we'll ever see," said the manager. "[But] He's not perfect"
Rivera said he wasn't concerned about his weapon of choice-- the cutter.
"I didn't lose velocity, " said the 41 year-old Rivera. "I put the ball where I want it, that's about it."
Asked if he sees any trend to his last three outings, Rivera shook his head.
"It's always only one pitch, stressed the closer. "It's one pitch, but it can't be like that."
Label:
Bartolo Colon,
Curtis Granderson,
Dave Robertson,
Joe Girardi,
Los Angeles Angels,
Mariano Rivera,
Mark Teixeira,
New York Yankees,
Rafael Soriano,
Robinson Cano,
Russell Branyan
Selasa, 26 April 2011
Yankees Could Put Six Position Players on 2011 All-Star Team
Alex Rodriguez leads a team of nine New York Yankees All-Star hopefuls listed on the American League All-Star ballot released today. The way things look right now, six Yankees position players alone could be playing in the July 12 classic--maybe even seven.
A-Rod will be looking to be elected to his 14th All-Star game. He is one of the league leaders in batting and RBI's with 17 and having one of his best starts ever.
Shortstop Derek Jeter, while showing signs of inconsistency this year, is always a perennial fan favorite and will be looking to make his fifth straight appearance and 12th all-time. Even the one year Jeter wasn't there, other players said it didn't feel just right without The Captain. Could it be his last?
The Yankees have been sending the ball over the fence at an unbelievable rate and all those home-runs could lead to All-Star turns for their sluggers.
Surprisingly, centerfielder Curtis Granderson is tied for the league lead in home-runs with seven and is looking to make his second All-Star slot. His first and last was for the Detroit Tigers in 2009.
Another wonder has been catcher Russell Martin. The off-season pick-up, with the rehabbed hip, is lighting up pitchers with a .328 average, six homers and 16 RBI's so far this season. His OBP is one of the best in the league. Martin was a two-time National League All-Star with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Robinson Cano and Mark Teixeira round out the six Pinstripers who could be showing up at Chase Field in Phoenix for baseball's big showcase.
Cano, one of the best all-round players in the majors is batting .314 with 4 HR's and 14 RBI's. It would be the second-baseman's third appearance.
Teixeira, battling his usual m.o., started the season fast then slumped badly. Over the past week, the first-baseman has picked up steam and seems to be back on track. He has six home-runs and 16 RBI's already this year. His last All-star appearance was in 2009.
The Yankees could bring their own Home-Run Derby to the 82nd All-Star Game. Five players--A-Rod, Cano, Teixeira, Martin and Granderson have 28 home-runs between them. If you throw in Jorge Posada, who is on the ballot for the first time as a DH after five All-Star games as a catcher, you have a major-league leading line-up boasting 34 dingers between those six players.
A-Rod will be looking to be elected to his 14th All-Star game. He is one of the league leaders in batting and RBI's with 17 and having one of his best starts ever.
Shortstop Derek Jeter, while showing signs of inconsistency this year, is always a perennial fan favorite and will be looking to make his fifth straight appearance and 12th all-time. Even the one year Jeter wasn't there, other players said it didn't feel just right without The Captain. Could it be his last?
The Yankees have been sending the ball over the fence at an unbelievable rate and all those home-runs could lead to All-Star turns for their sluggers.
Surprisingly, centerfielder Curtis Granderson is tied for the league lead in home-runs with seven and is looking to make his second All-Star slot. His first and last was for the Detroit Tigers in 2009.
Another wonder has been catcher Russell Martin. The off-season pick-up, with the rehabbed hip, is lighting up pitchers with a .328 average, six homers and 16 RBI's so far this season. His OBP is one of the best in the league. Martin was a two-time National League All-Star with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Robinson Cano and Mark Teixeira round out the six Pinstripers who could be showing up at Chase Field in Phoenix for baseball's big showcase.
Cano, one of the best all-round players in the majors is batting .314 with 4 HR's and 14 RBI's. It would be the second-baseman's third appearance.
Teixeira, battling his usual m.o., started the season fast then slumped badly. Over the past week, the first-baseman has picked up steam and seems to be back on track. He has six home-runs and 16 RBI's already this year. His last All-star appearance was in 2009.
The Yankees could bring their own Home-Run Derby to the 82nd All-Star Game. Five players--A-Rod, Cano, Teixeira, Martin and Granderson have 28 home-runs between them. If you throw in Jorge Posada, who is on the ballot for the first time as a DH after five All-Star games as a catcher, you have a major-league leading line-up boasting 34 dingers between those six players.
Selasa, 12 April 2011
N.Y. Yankees Digging the Long Ball and Not Much Else
The New York Yankees are tied for the league lead in home runs with 18 but still look anemic at the plate. A .236 team average is something the team is not used to--even if it is only nine games into the season--and seems worse when you realize four regular starters are well below the Mendoza Line with two others barely above it.
The Yankees No. 4 and No. 5 hitters, Robinson Cano (.324) and Alex Rodriguez (.321), are batting at least 115 points over the leadoff and No. 2 spots--Brett Gardner (.167) and Derek Jeter (.206).
Out of the Yankees 70 total hits this season, 18 have gone over the fence. They are on pace for a record 324 jacks and only 1260 hits.
Hot starts by Jorge Posada, Curtis Granderson and Mark Teixeira are faded memories. The sliding threesome went 0-for-9 with 8 strikeouts against Josh Beckett and the Boston Red Sox on Sunday. They have combined for nine home-runs but, with an average of .182, Teixeira is the stud of that bunch. Take away the homers and those three are a combined 6-of-81.
Yankee hitting coach Kevin Long hasn't heard the Steinbrenner alarm yet--thanks to the awful start by the Red Sox and he puts on a happy face when asked about the slumping players.
"I've felt good about our offense thus far and I still do," Long said after the Sox ace struck out ten Yankees on Sunday. "This isn't any time to hit the panic button just because Josh Beckett came out and threw the ball really well."
True. But how does he justify the lack of hits against pitchers who didn't throw the ball as well as Beckett so far this year?
It seems unlikely that Jeter or Gardner won't pick it up at the top of the order or that Mark Teixeira won't be rattled from his annual April swoon. And there's no way that the DH Posada or outfielder Granderson will still be batting .138 and .172, respectively, at the end of the season, but there has to be concern--even with a 5-4 record.
If anything the Yankee hits have been timely. They were sixth in runs scored (50).
Manager Joe Girardi knows nine games do not make a season. "You can't make too much of a few at-bats," he said. "You can't just do it because early in the season you're going to see guys have ups and downs. You're going to see it, and then as they start getting more at-bats under their belts, they start to get more consistent."
The Yankees may be hiding their lack of hits behind their home-run onslaught. Everyone knows chicks really dig the long-ball, but I don't think hitting coaches do.
The Yankees No. 4 and No. 5 hitters, Robinson Cano (.324) and Alex Rodriguez (.321), are batting at least 115 points over the leadoff and No. 2 spots--Brett Gardner (.167) and Derek Jeter (.206).
Out of the Yankees 70 total hits this season, 18 have gone over the fence. They are on pace for a record 324 jacks and only 1260 hits.
Hot starts by Jorge Posada, Curtis Granderson and Mark Teixeira are faded memories. The sliding threesome went 0-for-9 with 8 strikeouts against Josh Beckett and the Boston Red Sox on Sunday. They have combined for nine home-runs but, with an average of .182, Teixeira is the stud of that bunch. Take away the homers and those three are a combined 6-of-81.
Yankee hitting coach Kevin Long hasn't heard the Steinbrenner alarm yet--thanks to the awful start by the Red Sox and he puts on a happy face when asked about the slumping players.
"I've felt good about our offense thus far and I still do," Long said after the Sox ace struck out ten Yankees on Sunday. "This isn't any time to hit the panic button just because Josh Beckett came out and threw the ball really well."
True. But how does he justify the lack of hits against pitchers who didn't throw the ball as well as Beckett so far this year?
It seems unlikely that Jeter or Gardner won't pick it up at the top of the order or that Mark Teixeira won't be rattled from his annual April swoon. And there's no way that the DH Posada or outfielder Granderson will still be batting .138 and .172, respectively, at the end of the season, but there has to be concern--even with a 5-4 record.
If anything the Yankee hits have been timely. They were sixth in runs scored (50).
Manager Joe Girardi knows nine games do not make a season. "You can't make too much of a few at-bats," he said. "You can't just do it because early in the season you're going to see guys have ups and downs. You're going to see it, and then as they start getting more at-bats under their belts, they start to get more consistent."
The Yankees may be hiding their lack of hits behind their home-run onslaught. Everyone knows chicks really dig the long-ball, but I don't think hitting coaches do.
Senin, 11 April 2011
Yankees Teixeira Deals With April's 'Funky Stats' Again
If New York Yankees Mark Teixeira is 0-for-18, it must be April. Never mind showers that bring flowers, it's usually his April slumps that bring a little power every spring.
Teixeira, notorious for his slow spring starts, may have been fooled by the season's early start date and stormed out of the gate. He batted .333 with 4 home-runs in his first five games leading fans to believe the first-baseman had conquered the spate of early-season struggles which have dogged Teixeira throughout his career.
The surprisingly great start had a reality check and now a dreadful 0-for-18 slump leaves Teixeira batting .182 in the third spot. The slide was highlighted by a hitless weekend against the Boston Red Sox. The Yankees dropped 2-of-3 against their division rivals culminating with Josh Beckett's 2-hit gem on Sunday night.
Teixeira, who turns 31 today, had a blistering start to the season. He hit four home-runs with 10 RBI's during that span. He now has six hits and 10 strikeouts in 33 at-bats.
The top of the Yankee order is, so far, pretty bland and can't be helping Teixeira much. Leadoff batter Brett Gardner is hitting .167 followed by Derek Jeter and his piddling .206 average. The healthy stats of the No. 4 and 5 batters, Alex Rodriguez (who sat out last night's game) and Robinson Cano, make Tex less of a concern to opposing pitchers than the hitters who follow him. Teixeira has become the cheese on a white-bread and multi-grain sandwich.
"They pitched me really tough this weekend," Teixeira said last night. "Any ball I hit hard got caught. They pitched me tough. [Today's] day off will be nice to just regroup and get back to work on Tuesday."
Teixeira doesn't have to feel relatively bad about last night's three-strikeout performance. Beckett made the rest of the Yankees team look just as small. The rejuvenated Boston right-hander mowed down 10 pinstripers on strikeouts and looked like the Beckett of old.
For the weekend, Tex was 0-for-12 with six strikeouts. When last seen he was arguing a strikeout call against Jonathan Papelbon.
"He [Beckett] was really good tonight," said Teixeira. "Some nights you beat yourself up and some nights you tip your cap and this was one of those nights."
It looks like the Yankees will have to just wait until May for Teixeira to get his groove back. While the four-time Gold Glove winner earns his keep in the field, Teixeira says he doesn't put too much emphasis on early-season swoons and batting stats.
"If I did, I would have retired years ago," he said. "The first nine games you're going to have some funky stats. You're going to have guys that you say that this guy is going to be the next MVP and he's sent down a month later. You're going to have guys that are hitting .050 and then he wins the MVP. It's a such a small part of the season."
Yankees manager, Joe Girardi, seems to take Teixeira's .232 career April average in stride.
"He's just missing balls a little bit, that's all," the manager said. " And you're seeing good pitching out there."
Teixeira may be sugar-coating his frustration. While the Red Sox were celebrating their win, after Teixeira's final swing, he followed the umpire to dispute the call.
"You guys saw it," Teixeira said. " I'm not allowed to say anything. I didn't yell at him. It is what it is. He said he might have missed it. I wasn't going to hit a grand slam with no one on. I might have gone nuts, but we didn't get the job done."
"It's raining, it's cold. You can't get a rhythm sometimes," said Teixeira. I'd love to be able to hit .300 from day one...that's the way baseball is."
Funky.
Teixeira, notorious for his slow spring starts, may have been fooled by the season's early start date and stormed out of the gate. He batted .333 with 4 home-runs in his first five games leading fans to believe the first-baseman had conquered the spate of early-season struggles which have dogged Teixeira throughout his career.
The surprisingly great start had a reality check and now a dreadful 0-for-18 slump leaves Teixeira batting .182 in the third spot. The slide was highlighted by a hitless weekend against the Boston Red Sox. The Yankees dropped 2-of-3 against their division rivals culminating with Josh Beckett's 2-hit gem on Sunday night.
Teixeira, who turns 31 today, had a blistering start to the season. He hit four home-runs with 10 RBI's during that span. He now has six hits and 10 strikeouts in 33 at-bats.
The top of the Yankee order is, so far, pretty bland and can't be helping Teixeira much. Leadoff batter Brett Gardner is hitting .167 followed by Derek Jeter and his piddling .206 average. The healthy stats of the No. 4 and 5 batters, Alex Rodriguez (who sat out last night's game) and Robinson Cano, make Tex less of a concern to opposing pitchers than the hitters who follow him. Teixeira has become the cheese on a white-bread and multi-grain sandwich.
"They pitched me really tough this weekend," Teixeira said last night. "Any ball I hit hard got caught. They pitched me tough. [Today's] day off will be nice to just regroup and get back to work on Tuesday."
Teixeira doesn't have to feel relatively bad about last night's three-strikeout performance. Beckett made the rest of the Yankees team look just as small. The rejuvenated Boston right-hander mowed down 10 pinstripers on strikeouts and looked like the Beckett of old.
For the weekend, Tex was 0-for-12 with six strikeouts. When last seen he was arguing a strikeout call against Jonathan Papelbon.
"He [Beckett] was really good tonight," said Teixeira. "Some nights you beat yourself up and some nights you tip your cap and this was one of those nights."
It looks like the Yankees will have to just wait until May for Teixeira to get his groove back. While the four-time Gold Glove winner earns his keep in the field, Teixeira says he doesn't put too much emphasis on early-season swoons and batting stats.
"If I did, I would have retired years ago," he said. "The first nine games you're going to have some funky stats. You're going to have guys that you say that this guy is going to be the next MVP and he's sent down a month later. You're going to have guys that are hitting .050 and then he wins the MVP. It's a such a small part of the season."
Yankees manager, Joe Girardi, seems to take Teixeira's .232 career April average in stride.
"He's just missing balls a little bit, that's all," the manager said. " And you're seeing good pitching out there."
Teixeira may be sugar-coating his frustration. While the Red Sox were celebrating their win, after Teixeira's final swing, he followed the umpire to dispute the call.
"You guys saw it," Teixeira said. " I'm not allowed to say anything. I didn't yell at him. It is what it is. He said he might have missed it. I wasn't going to hit a grand slam with no one on. I might have gone nuts, but we didn't get the job done."
"It's raining, it's cold. You can't get a rhythm sometimes," said Teixeira. I'd love to be able to hit .300 from day one...that's the way baseball is."
Funky.
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