Posts tagged ‘texas rangers’

October 14, 2010

Quick ALCS Picks

by Jamie Insalaco

yankeesGame 1:  CC Sabathia vs CJ Wilson

Shock of shocks,  I like the Yankees in this one because I believe  the odds are in their favor:

  1. the Yankees are 2-0 on the road so far this post season
  2. the Rangers are 0-2 at home so far this post season
  3. CC Sabathia pitched poorly in his first outing and it’s unlikely he’ll pitch poorly again
  4. C.J. Wilson is good, but he’s not Cliff Lee

yankeesGame 2:  Phil Hughes vs Colby Lewis

Again, I like the Yankees in this one because I believe  the odds are still in their favor:

  1. the Yankees are 2-0 on the road so far this post season
  2. the Rangers are 0-2 at home so far this post season
  3. Phil Hughes pitched well in the ALDS against the Twins, and I don’t think the Rangers offense is that much better than the Twins
  4. Colby Lewis‘ first name is Colby.  Seriously?  I assume he spends a lot of time shopping at the Gap during the off season with Jacoby Ellsbery

rangersGame 3:  Andy Pettitte vs Cliff Lee

Ah, the plot thickens, as the kids like to say.  Given Cliff Lee‘s dominance against the Yankees this season (and against everyone else – ask Tampa Bay), it’s hard to expect the Yankees to suddenly give him a beating.  But Andy Pettitte could toss a gem… and still lose.  It’s a tough one.  I think the Rangers win this one.

rangersGame 4:  AJ Burnett vs the World

OK, maybe it’s not that bad, but I can’t expect the Yankees to play with any confidence behind A.J. Burnett, but AJ could surprise us and not get annihilated, but I’ll believe that when I see it.  The Rangers take this one, too.

Suddenly it’s tied at 2 games a each.  How’d that happen?

yankees

Game 5:  CC Sabathia vs CJ Wilson

CC pitches his humongous butt off – Yankees win.

colby lewisGame 6:  Phil Hughes vs Colby Lewis

Phil Hughes knocks Colby’s monocle off – the Yankees win.

Yep, Yankees in 6, folks. You heard it here… probably not first.  Also, if the Yankees are trailing in the series after the first 3 games, the entire world expects the Yankees to go to Sabathia on short rest – and I’m sure they’ll keep going that way until they win, which will screw them up in the World Series against the Phillies (yeah, the Phillies are winning the NLCS; seems pretty obvious when their opponent couldn’t a run to save their lives), but we’ll cross that bridge when we come to it.

October 6, 2010

MLB 2010 Playoff Preview and Predictions

by Jamie Insalaco

Today, the battle begins! Every game is a must win from here on out. The powerful will emerge victorious, while everyone else will get a seat on the long, shameful plane ride home. Unless you get eliminated at home. In that case, you just clear our your locker and bounce.

YANKEES AT TWINS
Obviously, I’m picking the Yankees to win – in four games. Between the Yankees throwing a three man rotation, two of which will be lefties, I think the Bombers can hold the Twins off the scoreboard. Between that and the absence of a big bat like Morneau, I like the Yankees chances here. I’d also love it if they put a whipping on Carl Pavano in game 2.

RANGERS AT RAYS
I have to go with the Rays in this one – again, in four games. (It’s pretty hard to sweep someone, never mind in a playoff series) I know the Rangers have Cliff Lee and a pen that includes only guys who throw one hundred miles an hour, but the Rangers just haven’t impressed me this year. Even the tight games they played with the Yankees, and the games they won against my boys, didn’t especially impress me. I feel like all those bullpen guys throw pretty straight fastballs, which might be their problem. Or mine.

REDS AT PHILLIES
Phillies in three – I know the Reds have some guy that throws 105 MPH, but the Phillies have a starting rotation that is going to be hard to score on, and the Phillies have serious bats, AL style.

BRAVES AT GIANTS
I think the Braves will steal one, but I have to go with the Giants starting pitching with the home field advantage – this series of the three probably features the biggest home field advantage of any series.

ROUND 2 PREDICTIONS:

YANKEES AT RAYS
I have to pick the Yankees in 6 here – if the Yankees control Evan Longoria, the rest won’t matter as the Rays won’t score – they’re the better team with the better bullpen.

GIANTS AT PHILLIES
Away from their home ballpark, I don’t see the Giants getting it done, and they can’t score runs anywhere. Phillies in five.

WORLD SERIES PREDICTION:

YANKEES AT PHILLIES
That’s right, I’m going repeat, with the same outcome. Yankees in six. Although the Phillies starting pitchers are probably better than the Yankees, the Yankees bullpen is much better than the Phillies, and Joe Girardi isn’t going to let any of his starters get hammered The Yankees have the best lineup in baseball, and their defense is also not to be trifled with.

I think it’s that simple, folks. The Twins are a man down. The Rays can’t score if you control Longoria. The Giants just can’t score. The Rangers are good, but flawed. The Phillies are good, but the Yankees are better.

September 20, 2010

Yankees Road Trip From Hell Ends

by Jamie Insalaco

Swept by Texas; lost 2 of 3 in Tampa and took 2 of 3 from the Orioles. That’s a 3-6 road trip for the Yankees, the worst of the year, as far as I recall.

How’d it happen? Injuries played a big part; whether players were unavailable or resting, the Yankees were never at 100% during this road trip. True, few teams are at this point in the season, but missing two of your corner outfielders is pretty tough, and that just scratches the surface.

I’ve already commented on the debacle at the hands of the Texas Rangers and the tough series loss at the hands of the Tampa Bay Rays, so today I’ll be focusing on the series with the Os, which, like the series with the Rays, could have gone either way.

AJ Burnett pitched decently in the first game, but every time he gives up a homer, its hard not to think, "Here we go again." But we all know how this one went; A-Rod saved the day with a 3 run homer with 2 strikes and 2 outs in the top of the ninth, which was largely made possible by Jorge Posada’s 11 pitch at bat to lead off the inning with a single. As soon as A-Rod’s bat touched the ball, it was gone. Mariano Rivera came in and got the save, and all seemed right with the world. The next afternoon, CC Sabathia earned his 20th win as the Yankees offense mowed down the Orioles pitching. No one was able to win 20 games last year, which makes you realize what a special accomplishment it really is – so hats off to CC! But Sunday’s blown save by Mo rained on the parade – perhaps one of the fastest blown saves ever as the lead off batter came on to hit a game tying home run. It was all over after that. But then, the game started out so promising with the return of Andy Pettitte, making his first start on the MLB level in about two months. Andy looked pretty sharp and didn’t seem especially fatigued; if he’s fresh in the playoffs and Burnett is decent, the Yankees could be dangerous this fall.

The Yankees can’t seem to win an extra inning game on the road this year – it’s a tough feet, but I feel like they’ve lost every one of them in 2010. Maybe it’s just the recent loses to Tampa and Texas in extras that are haunting me. Given Friday’s come from behind at the last second win, the Yankees could have easily lost this series. I hope all the resting of players and cortisone shots will pay off this week.

When all is said and done, the Yankees are still in first place. How can that be? They’re 3 for they’re last 9! But there it is. With four huge games against the Rays that may decide the fate of the AL East and possibly home field advantage for the playoffs, there’s a lot going on this week. Get pumped. Oh and the Red Sox are coming at some point… whatever, those guys are done. =)

September 15, 2010

Yankees reclaim first place from Rays

by Jamie Insalaco

Just like that, all the bad feels get washed away.

It’s kind of amazing, isn’t it? After Monday night’s extra inning loss to the Rays, the Yankees were amidst their first four game losing streak of the year and coming off their first sweep of the year courtesy of the Texas Rangers. Nick Swisher and Brett Gardner are banged up; A-Rod isn’t 100% yet. Andy Pettitte still isn’t back (although he’s probably only days away now), and Damaso Marte and Alfredo Aceves are never coming back. The road trip had been a disaster up to this point.

And by the fifth inning, things weren’t looking much better. Rookie right hander Ivan Nova has essentially dominated the Rays over the first four, but suddenly, like in his other starts, he began to falter in the fifth. Why this keeps happening, I don’t know; he’s a young guy and maybe he’s never pitched hits many innings before, or maybe you just have to work that much harder at the MLB level, and it’s tiring him. The bottom line is, after throwing about 50 pitches in the first four innings, the Rays put up a 7 spot in the 5th. Nova let four runs score before Joe Girardi finally lifted him for Boone Logan; I think Girardi wanted to see if Nova could wiggle out of trouble, and it didn’t happen. I don’t think he would have gotten that opportunity if the Yankees didn’t have such a big wild card lead and AJ Burnett wasn’t struggling the way he is. Logan came in and gave up a 3 run homer that gave the Rays a 7-6 lead, and all the optimism generated by Nova’s early performance and the home runs by Robinson Cano and Alex Rodriguez was whipped away. Logan was dominate after the home run, but the damage had been done… or so it seemed. Game Day.

The Yankees immediately tied the game on Robinson Cano’s double, scoring A-Rod, and it became a duel of the bullpens. Joba Chamberlain, Kerry Wood and David Robertson held the Rays in check until the top of the 11th, when Jorge Posada came up with a pinch hit homer that hasn’t landed yet. OK, maybe it didn’t go that far, but it was still pretty awe inspiring.

Mariano Rivera came on to get the save, and Carl Crawford got on board immediately, but was a base running disaster in the bottom of the 11th inning. He failed to tag out on a ball that was either going to be a home run or an out, and he made the last out at third. These are two fundamental no-nos that I wouldn’t expect Crawford to make, but he did, and the Yankees won the game because of it. Box Score.

I believe Girardi left Nova in to see if he could get out of a tough spot, as aforementioned, and he didn’t. I’d say that this eliminates any chance of Nova getting a start in the playoffs, despite Brian Cashman saying that they were going to start their best four guys and salary didn’t matter. Nova could be a candidate for the long man role in the pen for the playoffs, but if that’s something he’s never done, the playoffs might not be a good place for him to start.

Tonight’s the rubber game, and the Yankees really need to win this game, more for their psyche than for anything else. Sure, winning the AL East will get the Yankees home field advantage in the AL playoffs, but getting to the dance is what matters. Phil Hughes will match up against the one they call Big Game James, aka James Shields. If Hughes brings his A game, this could be a close game… They skipped his last turn, so who knows how that’s going to effect him – he might be fresh… or he might be rusty. I don’t know what to expect, so all we can really do is tune in and pray that our Lord and Savior, Mariano Rivera, gets an opportunity.

September 13, 2010

Attack of the Expanded Roster

by Jamie Insalaco

Full disclosure: I didn’t watch every inning of all three games, but here’s what I saw.

In game 1, Joe Girardi let Mariano Rivera go out there for 2 innings despite not having pitched in two weeks; Mo performed brilliantly, but the Yankees ended up losing the game on a walk off home run against… someone. I just couldn’t stay awake during the extra innings; I was in and out. The reason I bring this up right off the bat is I feel this was a case of losing the battle to lose the war: Mo blew the save Saturday night. His control was not good; pretty sure he hit a guy. You’d of thought Mo was not available after pitching two innings the day before, and although the bullpen was used pretty hard on Friday, I’d of liked to see somebody else in there on Saturday, if to only protect Mo’s health. The Yankees aren’t going anywhere in the post season without Mo. Joe Girardi usually handles the bullpen with such excellence, but I don’t understand what he was doing over the weekend in Texas; the Rays are nipping at the Yankees heels, but risking injury to Mo is pure insanity.

The Yankees left a small village on the base paths during the series; they just couldn’t score. It was frustrating. Hopefully, the Yankees will regain their swing in Tampa, but then, if Tampa has the expanded roster tools that the Rangers had (a million relievers who throw 95 MPH), then it might be another long series. Sure, the Yankees made a ton of moves during the series, but Ron Washington wore out a path between the dugout and the mound. That system is deep with guys who throw hard.

Yanks-Rays a must-CC, worth Price of entry Wow, MLB.com. You got corny all over me. Jeez.
Honestly, though, does it really matter who finishes in first in the AL East? I suppose I’d rather the Yankees play the Twins in the first round, but it doesn’t matter much to me; Texas isn’t going to come into the 1st round with a 40 man roster and a million relief pitchers. Anyway, the big Yankees vs Rays series starts tonight at 7:10 PM in Tampa.

August 12, 2010

Chuck Norris furious after Texas Rangers blow lead to Yankees

by Jamie Insalaco

After five innings of play, hope was dwindling that the Yankees were going to escape Texas with a split in the two game set. It was 6-1, and Javier Vazquez had already been knocked out of the game. A-Rod’s double to score Marcus Thames was the lone Yankee run, and it was starting to look like it was going to stay that way. Box Score.

But the tide began to turn in the 6th when Derek Jeter tripled and then scored on a wild pitch in the 6th. Then Lance Berkman doubled in Robinson Cano followed by Brett Gardner’s line hugging bloop single the other way to plate Austin Kearns, and suddenly, it was 6-4 Rangers, and the Yankees were in striking distance. Marcus Thames, in the middle of things all night, crushed a home run to deep left, a no doubter as soon as he touched it in the 8th, and then in the 9th, he plated the winning run after Derek Jeter singled in the tying run. Game Day.

On the pitching side, things were all over the place. Cliff Lee had 11 Ks in 6.1 IP, which is outstanding, but gave up 8 hits and 4 ER. Javier Vazquez was a 4.1 IP nightmare for 6 ER, but he’s pitched so good since April that his ERA is still under 5. The victory really belongs to Sergio Mitre and Kerry Wood, who combined for 3.2 IP of shut out ball.

On to Mo: Mariano Rivera converted his 24th save, and it was a very interesting one at that. After almost hitting Elvis Andrus in the head, Andrus responded with a triple. Got that? You already know the Yankees won the game – Mo pitched around a lead off triple. This is why I worship no Gods before Mariano. He never ceases to amaze me. The man is not infallible, but he is totally amazing. Being short handed with Mark Teixeira still being out for maternity leave (or should that be faternity leave, because he’s the dad and not visiting with frat brothers?), Joe Girardi pitch ran my boy Curtis Granderson (I know, he’s not having a good year, but I can’t help it, he’s awesome anyway) for Fat Elvis himself, Lance Berkman. This might Nick Swisher came in from RF to play 1B, Austin Kearns shifted over to play RF and Granderson took CF while Brett Gardener moved to LF. So after Andrus’ triple, Michael Young hit a ball off the heel of Kearns’ glove, which stuck in the webbing and kept Andrus at 3rd, which he might as well of sat down on, because he wasn’t going anywhere. Mo fell behind Josh Hamilton 2-0 before getting him to ground softly out to himself. Vladimir Guerrero also enjoyed some chin music before grounding out to Jeter. I can’t emphasis that enough – Mo’s control last night was not good. And he pitched around a lead off triple. How amazing is that?

So after a tough two games in Texas, the Yankees head to Kansas City to take on the Royals in a four game set that I insist they take a minimum of four games from.

August 11, 2010

Depleted Yankees lose to Rangers in extra innings

by Jamie Insalaco

D’oh!

The Yankees had Marcus Thames batting third last night. I’d usually say, ’nuff said,’ but where’s the fun in that? Robinson Cano sat for most of the game with the flu. I think Jorge Posada sat just because he needed a day off – and wouldn’t you know it, but Francisco Cervelli had a clutch RBI, showing shades of April. Mark Teixeira was home in New York celebrating the birth of his son. Brett Gardner sat against the lefty starter. So Thames was the DH, Ramiro Pena started at 2nd base and Austin Kearns started in left field.

In the top of the first, Derek Jeter was first called safe at first by the umpire, despite the appearance of being tagged out, and the call was reversed by the home plate umpire. I do agree that Jeter was out, but how the home plate umpire, who is so far away, can see the correct call and the guy standing right on top of it can’t, I don’t know how to explain.

AJ Burnett pitched a pretty good game; not great, but good. He tired as the night went on and gave up a 2 run bomb that made it 3-2 Yankees, but A-Rod had his back. Alex Rodriguez smashed career homer 601 into center field to tie the game back up. Burnett gave up the lead as soon as he got it, but I guess we should be pleased that he pitched decent in a home run hitting park.

David Robinson pitched well in multiple innings and worked with Cervelli to get out of jams. Mariano Rivera gave up some ground ball sinkers and nearly walked in the winning run in extra innings as he had to throw the ball right down the middle 3 times in a row after falling behind in the count 3-0. For all of Mo’s genius, he is almost always one of those closers who doesn’t usually do well in the non save situation – at least I’m pretty sure he doesn’t. Still, he’s Mo, so he’s allowed to blow it once and a while. I believe his ERA is still under 1.00 and he’s allowed less than 20 hits in nearly 50 innings. Again, I know he blew the game last night, but BOW DOWN TO HIM! Now! He didn’t exactly get smacked around, but the ball was hit hard enough to get the job done for the Rangers.

Michael Kay referred to last night’s game as a possible playoff preview, and if he’s right, it could be exciting. However, you’d hope the Yankees would play all of their regulars in a playoff game. Also, I don’t think Kay needed to mention the possible playoff game preview ten times, but it was an exciting game. The Rangers did look better than they did in April, but they committed more errors, so they’re not that much improved in terms of defense. Tonight, Cliff Lee faces off against Javier Vazquez in what could be a serious mismatch. Lee through a complete game against the Yankees last time and surrendered 3 runs, so we’ll have to see what he does. Both bullpens sent out their best guys last night, and most of them threw a ton of pitches, so both starters would be wise to go long – something Lee is good at and Javy is not.

August 10, 2010

Yankees split series with Red Sox

by Jamie Insalaco

I hate to say I told so, but, I did. It sucks being right.

But not that hard. It’s too bad the Yankees didn’t sweep the Red Sox, but then, with Jon Lester pitching one game, I never expected them to. Once they lost the Friday game, taking 3 of 4 was all but impossible as not only would they had to of beaten Lester yesterday (which is impossible, because, again, cancer can’t beat that guy), but also win 3 games in a row against the same team, which I’m sure is nearly a statistical impossibility. Nearly.

So it’s almost like the series never happened, accept a few games ticked off the schedule. The Yankees are still 6 games ahead of the Red Sox and 1.5 games ahead of the Tampa Bay Rays. I’ll take that. And with the Texas Rangers coming in, its time to turn the page. Last time the Yankees and the Walker Texas Rangers faced off, the Yankees swept them… by winning 3 games in a row… yeah. Oh, and Cliff Lee will be starting for the Rangers this series, and perhaps we’ll see him again when the two teams battle in September. Joy. I haven’t seen the Rangers since the last time they were in the Bronx and I’m curious to learn if they figured out how to field since then. They sure were sloppy in that series. But, the Rangers are not to be dismissed, despite the last series they played against the Yankees – they’re near the top in both pitching and hitting categories this year, so it’s time to battle.

Oh, and I heard it was Joe Buck who was insistently calling A-Rod when he turned his back and was struck in the leg with a ball during batting practice by Lance Berkman before FOX saturday baseball, which is one of the worst damnations every put on man, by the way. I also heard Mr. Buck has denied this while speeding away in a National Car Rental: it was his choice. He also said something about buying the Avatar on DVD and Blu Ray…

August 1, 2010

Jody McDonald of 1050 ESPN Radio is clearly insane

by Jamie Insalaco

A bold statement, I know; but then, when someone is talking crazy, I have to reign them in a bit.

Jody McDonald of 1050 ESPN Radio is calling for the Yankees to trade for Hideki Matsui.  I’m not kidding – I’ve heard him say it several times on his show last week.  I’d go to lunch, get in my car and he’d start in with the Yanks acquiring Adam Dunn, which in itself doesn’t seem necessary – the Yankees have the top offense in baseball – and then he’d move to to Matsui.  For the price Matsui is getting paid for the Angels, should the Yankees have signed him rather than Nick Johnson?  Probably.  But to trade for him at this point it totally insane.  The Yankees don’t need offensive help, they need bullpen help.

Secondly, and most importantly, why would the Angels trade Matsui?  I know they’re 9 games out, but the Texas Rangers aren’t the greatest team in the world.  The Angels also just traded for Dan Haren, they’re playing Texas this weekend and another series against them in September, not to mention a bunch of games they can win against the Royals, Orioles, Mariners and Athletics.  I don’t think the Angels need to throw in the towel at this point, however unlikely a comeback may be, and it’s certainly not the Angel way.

My point is that Jody Mack is nuts to bring in a guy who is a worse fielder than Marcus Thames and therefore a DH, particularly when he’d just be a part time DH because Jorge Posada, A-Rod and other guys on that team are going to need days at DH.  It’s the reason they didn’t resign him in the first place!  He just doesn’t fit on this team anymore.

Jody Mack must know these things.  Why would he make statements like this on the radio, where people can hear him?  Is he insane?  Does he just need attention?  The world may never know.

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