Saturday, July 24, 2010

History on Hold

The Inside Corner blog discusses Saturday's frustrating loss to the Kansas City Royals, as well as what the Yankees need to do before the trade deadline to fix their starting rotation and bench.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Another Legend Passes



After a great victory which included two Yankee rookies homering in the same inning for the first time since 1929, the Yankee family was saddened by the death of yet another icon, former catcher and manager Ralph Houk. Houk spent 8 seasons with the Yankees as a backup to Hall of Famer Yogi Berra, and then had a successful career as a manager. Houk debuted as skipper of the Yanks in 1961, leading the team to his first of two consecutive World Championships. He won the American League pennant in all of his three seasons in his first stint as Yankee manager. Houk would then go on to pilot the Yankees again from 1966 until 1973, when he quit after the last game of the regular season. This is the third major passing that the Yankees have experienced in a week and a half.

On to today's game, the Yankees picked up a much needed victory over the L.A. Angels, and another game on the hapless Boston Red Sox. Javier Vazquez was great for four innings, and then a complete disaster after that. Although he wasn't good overall, he wasn't terrible. For a change, the offense and the bullpen bailed him out. Vazquez has lacked run support all season, and in his last start before the All Star Break, Vazquez left the game with a 1-0 lead after seven innings until Joba Chamberlain coughed it up in Seattle. Today, he left with a 6-5 lead and got some help.

Today, I witnessed one of the most interesting at bats I've ever seen in my life. Brett Gardner was ejected from the game in the seventh inning after complaining about an 0-1 strike call. He really did not deserve to be tossed, and Joe Girardi almost was given the gate for the second straight game. Once again, MLB umpires are on too much of a power trip and are ruining baseball. But the Yankees found a way to stick it to Paul Emmel: Colin Curtis. In the middle of someone else's at bat, Curtis stepped up, ran the count to 3-2, and hit his first big league homer. Earlier in the inning, Juan Miranda went deep. Curtis and Miranda were the first Yankee rookies to homer in the same inning since Lyn Lary and Sam Byrd in 1929.

The Yankees host the Royals for four games starting Thursday night, when CC Sabathia takes on Bruce Chen. You don't want to call these games "must-wins," especially with the Yankees still atop the AL East, but there is absolutely no reason that anything less than three out of four victories would be acceptable. On Saturday, Kyle Davies will take on Sergio Mitre. Davies, you'll remember, served up A-Rod's 500th homer back in 2007. If anything, at least Davies will have a chance to be the answer to an interesting trivia question, as will Colin Curtis after today.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Phull of Garbage



It's the same recipe for Phil Hughes and the Yankees again: mo' rest, mo' problems. That's not quite the way the Notorious BIG said it almost 15 years ago, but it's a similar concept for the Yankees' right-hander, who was embarrassed by the Angels in the Bronx Tuesday night. The Yankees were silenced by a pitcher they'd never faced before (shocking) in Sean O'Sullivan, who looked like Greg Maddux at Yankee Stadium after the first inning. All of a sudden, with Hughes' struggles and innings limit, it makes you wonder if the Yankees will be forced into trading away some prospects for a mid-season solution to their starting pitching woes.

It's tough to single out one hitter when the whole team struggles for eight innings at the plate, but let's continue to talk about Curtis Granderson. After noticing that Ian Kennedy defeated the Mets on Monday night, the Granderson acquisition keeps on getting worse and worse for Cashman and the Yankees. Phil Coke was at least a solid lefty, and Damaso Marte is on the DL. Austin Jackson has tons of potential and has a batting average about 70 points higher than the Grandy Man, and now, Ian Kennedy looks like he could have been a viable option for the Yankee rotation with Andy Pettitte out until late August.

The Yankees are really screwing up Joba Chamberlain and Phil Hughes with their innings limit rules. Hughes has been in the big leagues since 2007, so I guess I'm confused about why he still needs these limits. Hughes' worst start of the year (until Tuesday night) came against Seattle in late June, after he was skipped over by Joe Girardi and the Yankees' Brain Trust. Since then, he has been pretty shaky, including losing the All Star Game in Anaheim. Let the kid pitch. With Pettitte out, Hughes should not be skipped at all.

ESPN's Buster Olney had a great article about Derek Jeter on ESPN.com today. I respect Derek Jeter and am incredibly thankful for what he has done for this franchise. I greatly look forward to watching him get his 3,000th hit next season. In his article written before Tuesday's game, Olney discusses Jeter's .271 batting average. If the guy's name wasn't Jeter, what would YOU pay for a 36 year old shortstop who just finished up a .271 season? The Yankees have some serious thinking to do. Here's hoping Jeter turns it around and makes the decision even easier.

The Yanks have a tough one Wednesday afternoon. Javier Vazquez takes the hill for the first time in over a week against Joel Pineiro, who already wiped the floor with the Yankees way back in April. The Baltimore Orioles gave the Yankees a complete gift by coming back and defeating the Rays in extra innings, keeping Tampa Bay 2.5 games back in the American League East. If Vazquez can't have a strong second half, Hughes is on his innings limit, and Burnett continues to need a shrink, the Yankees may be in trouble. Of course, they could always call up Kei Igawa, who is riding out the last season of his well-deserved contract.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Winning Comes at a Cost

The Inside Corner's second video blog entry discusses the series victory over the Rays, Andy Pettitte's devastating groin injury, and what the Yankees can do to improve their short-staffed starting rotation.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Inaugural Video Blog



It's an historic moment in The Inside Corner's history, as yours truly has gone into the age of video blogging. The video blog covers one of the most tragic weeks in Yankees' history, as well as the first two games of a key series with the Tampa Bay Rays. Enjoy!

Sunday, July 11, 2010

A Yankee Icon Passes Away



I was going to write a post ripping Joba Chamberlain apart for causing the last two Yankees' losses by blowing 1-0 leads in the eighth inning, but on a day like today, that's about all I have to say about it. Bob Sheppard, the longtime, legendary Public Address Announcer of Yankee Stadium, sometimes referred to as "The Voice of God," died Sunday morning at the age of 99. This is a major loss for the Yankee family, and I won't be surprised to see the team wearing black armbands for the rest of the season, starting today.

Sheppard came to Yankee Stadium in 1951, and hardly ever missed a game up until 2007, when failing health caused him to be absent from the American League Division Series. Sheppard was not there for the final game at Yankee Stadium, but the Yankees did the right thing. They went to Sheppard's home in Baldwin, and had him record the starting lineup, as well as a brief "valedictory," which was played on the video board during the seventh inning. No icon was synonymous with Yankee Stadium the way Bob Sheppard was.

He will always be enshrined in Monument Park with a plaque. He will always be heard at Yankee Stadium when Derek Jeter steps to the plate. More importantly, he'll be remembered by every Yankee fan who ever sat at Yankee Stadium, took a moment, and really listened to the announcement of the starting lineup. He was not a screamer, or a rooter, just a professional announcer with a one-of-a-kind voice. I'm looking forward to attending Old Timers' Day next Saturday, when the Yankees are sure to pay tribute to the only Public Address Announcer in sports who was almost as famous as the team he worked for.

Friday, July 2, 2010

The Embarrassment Continues



Over the last couple of weeks, the New York Yankees have really made their fans question whether or not they are capable of repeating as champions. Today, for the first time, I lost confidence in their ability to do so. Not only do they lack a bridge to Mariano Rivera (see Joba Chamberlain's inflated ERA), but they have a plethora of hitters who are having horrendous seasons that can no longer be considered "slumps."

Today, the Yankees had a one run lead after seven innings. AJ Burnett pitched a great game, and as he usually does, Joba Chamberlain coughed it up. Since the Yankees couldn't hit another starting pitcher with an ERA over 5, the game went to extra innings. David Robertson was good for one inning, and bad for another. Chan Ho Park continues to make me scratch my head in terms of what Brian Cashman and the Yankees saw in his ability to get batters out. There have been several losses that I've declared the "worst of the year," but today's game has to be right at the top.

The Yankees scored one run in 11 innings against Toronto today, so it's really difficult to write a whole blog entry about how bad everyone in the bullpen has been, minus Mariano Rivera. The team has several hitters that are having bad seasons. It starts with Mark Teixeira, whose average is right around .230. In the first inning, Derek Jeter and Nick Swisher both get on base, and Teixeira follows with a slow dribbler to first base. Sure, Michael Kay, it's as good as a bunt, but Mark Teixeira is not getting paid to bunt. He's supposed to drive in runs and get the team off to a good start. Instead, he's making everyone regret the enormous contract that he received in December 2008, and it's concerning to think about 8 more seasons with Tex up there flailing at the plate.

Everyone is constantly saying that the Yankees need another bat. I'm not sure how one bat is going to fix this offense. I know in the offseason they will likely sign Carl Crawford and Jayson Worth. That's great, but what about this season? How is one bat going to fix the down years that guys like Jeter, Posada, Granderson, Teixeira, and even Rodriguez are having? If these guys aren't going to hit for average and they continue to leave runners on base, I don't think we need to worry about getting relief pitchers to get the ball to Mariano.

Brian Cashman really made some terrible moves in the off-season. We can't keep talking about them all the time. But the Curtis Granderson trade is looking like a horrendous deal, which may at some point become one of the worst in Yankee history because of Austin Jackson. Jackson continues to hit over .300 for the Tigers and is looking like a future Al Star, while Curtis Granderson is hitting a horrible .232, still cannot hit lefties, and has already spent about a month on the disabled list.

The Yankees will look to try not to embarrass themselves more this weekend by taking the next two against the Toronto Blue Jays. Doing so will allow them to salvage a 3-3 homestand, and it will keep them in first place. Do it for George Steinbrenner's 80th birthday, and be thankful that he's not around as much, or heads would be rolling and change would be in the air.