Quantcast
Channel: SB Nation - New York Yankees
Viewing all 4714 articles
Browse latest View live

A brief Yankees series preview

$
0
0

I don't have time for all of Ian's shenanigans and fancy charts about how the Rays compare. I have a job and a weekend coming up, and I want to go exercise some.

Here's what you need to know.

The Yankees are coming off two losses to the Mariners, as closed by Fernando Rodney, and host the Rays before leaving on a west coast road trip. This is their last battle against the AL East until the third week of June. The Yanks are sitting atop the division, but all five teams are separated by only three wins.

Masahiro Tanaka has still been killing it. He tallied 46 strikeouts in his first five starts, third all time in major league history for starting a career, walking a mere 1.5 per nine. He owns a 2.27 ERA, 2.95 FIP, and is now the 25-year old ace of the staff in the Bronx.

Ivan Nova, who the Rays might consider the Yankee ace due to his constant dominance of Tampa Bay, needed Tommy John surgery this week. We wont see him for the rest of the year. Michael Pinetar Pineda is also injured with a back strain.

Yangervis Solarte has also been killing it, just like everyone expected. The switch-hitter has slashed .303/.404/.461 with ten extra base hits and a 143 wRC+, playing at third base. He started the triple play incurred against the Rays in the last series against New York.

Yangervis_triple_play_medium

oof.

He's been manning third base for most of the month of April, when injuries moved Kelly Johnson to first base. Now the Mark Teixeira has returned to action (and been very good as well, with a 142 wRC+), Solarte has kept the starting role and Johnson has been benched for the foreseeable future.

Jacoby Ellsbury has been a stud in the field for the Yanks, manning center field with poise and ease, coupled with a .369 OBP, a 121 wRC+, ten extra base hits, and eight stolen bases.

Brian McCann and John Ryan Murphy are your current catching platoon. Francisco Cervelli is out until June with a strained hamstring, and backup short stop Brendan Ryan is on a rehab assignment in Double-A.

Matchup

Tonight, David Price faces off against Vidal Nuno, who held the Rays scoreless just two weeks ago in his major league debut. He's allowed only three earned runs on 9.1 innings at the major league level this season. Price will ostensibly have the edge tonight, but you know how the Rays do against inexperienced lefties.

Jake Odorizzi and Masahiro Tanaka face off on Saturday at 1:05, then Erik Bedard and CC Sabathia square off in a soft tossing show down on Sunday at the same time.

Tanaka went 6.1 innings against the Angels in his last appearance, striking out double digit batters for the third time this season. Sabathia gave up four runs in the fifth inning to the Mariners in his last go round, but before that out dueled David Price at the Trip on April 17.

This series will greatly impact the divisional standings, and will have extra importance to the tired Rays, who just crept back into contention yesterday by sweeping a double header in Boston.

Go Rays.


TB 10 - NYY 5: Rays run down Yanks in 14

$
0
0

After a strong performance by David Price, reliever Joel Peralta allows back-to-back home runs to blow the lead in the eighth. Fortunately, the Rays rallied to win in extra innings on the back of Heath Bell.

On a windy day in the Bronx, Joe Maddon only went with a slightly righty lineup against Vidal Nuno, starting Sean Rodriguez in left field and Logan Forsythe at designated hitter, but keeping James Loney in the game.

David Price has been somewhat at his worst in Yankee Stadium, with an ERA above 4.00 in his career at the Bronx. After an eight pitch first, Price needed twenty or more pitches to escape the second, third, and fourth inning. His fastball was touching 95, but Price's stuff didn't seem like it would last longer than five -- which is a shame.

Heading into the series, Rays starters had pitched more than five innings in only four of the last seventeen games, and the Rays were coming off a double header that used Jake McGee and Grant Balfour twice in the same day.

The good news is that Price was challenging hitters with pitches in the zone with decent movement. He would have eight strikeouts on the evening, and according to my memory, all of them swinging. Lots of pitches per frame, but quality work. That's as much as you can ask for against a team where it's a grind through the line up, like New York.

The game would go fourteen innings, hanging on to a thread as Heath Bell fought for the Rays to hold even. Somehow he battened down the hatches, and the Rays were able to tag New York for five runs and take the ball game in the 14th inning.

***

Sean Rodriguez got the scoring started with a liner to left center field, pulled between the fielders and a double with time to spare. On a pitch that skipped left of the catcher, Rodriguez advanced to third, and James Loney batted one past Jeter for the first run of the ballgame, and the Rays lead.

Brian McCann, tonight's designated hitter, dropped a fly ball just over the wall and into the right field porch for a two-run home run. David answered with swinging strikeouts of the next three batters, including Brian Roberts and Yongarvis Solarte to end the the second.

Evan Longoria also benefited from the breeze in the top of the fourth, knocking a flyball to the warning track that drifted feet behind Jacoby Ellsbury as he searched for it in the sky. Longo legged out a triple, and then scored the tying run on a single by Myers that bounced past that region of the field that Jeter is supposedly able to defend.

Nuno followed the Myers double with two free passes to Sean Rodriguez and James Loney to load the bases on one out, and Logan Forsythe knocked one to the outfield fora sac fly and a 3-2 Rays lead.

Desmond Jennings padded that lead the following inning, hitting his third home run of the season and his second in as many nights on Nuno's 80th pitch. Launched around 400 feet to the Tampa Bay bullpen, the Rays took a 4-2 lead, and the Yankees turned to their own 'pen for help with one out remaining in the fifth.

***

To start the sixth, Wil Myers had a shift put on to the left side, but the Rookie of the Year hit a line drive to right field. Sean Rodriguez did work again, dropping a beautiful bunt up the third base line and catching all off guard. A flat footed Loney, and a pinch hitting Matt Joyce whiffed and foul tipped for two outs to bring up Yunel Escobar.

From there, towering reliever Dellin Betances upped his velocity to 99 for strike one, got a generous breaking ball strike inside for strike two at 81, then a whiff on a curve cleared the frame.

Thanks to the strikeout work mentioned above, King David entered his share of the sixth on 85 pitches. With one out, Carlos Beltran batted through the shift on an otherwise standard grounder to short, but Price mixed well to Mark Teixeira for his eighth strikeout (again, swinging). Alfonso Soriano followed with a single under an outstretched Longoria glove, but pitch 107 was a tapper to the ranging third baseman, and Price escaped his jam as well.

To save the bullpen, Price returned in the seventh and earned a first pitch line out to Longoria to start the frame, then three pitches later a tapper to third for two outs. On pitch 113, catcher John Ryan Murphy read a breaking ball well and drove it to the wall in left-center for his first double on the season, but pitch 118 was a groundball to Yunel, who fired to Loney and beat the running Ellsbury.

Price had done his job, reaching his highest pitch count on the season thus far.

The Rays would put two on in the top of the seventh, thanks to a Jennings walk and steal that led to Longoria being intentionally walked, then again in the eighth on a Loney HBP in the forearm and a Yunel Escobar chopper to shallow center. Myers flew out to end the threat in the seventh, Molina tapped out to Jeter in the eighth.

Joel Peralta was trusted with the eighth inning, and on two outs he allowed Teixeira to launch into the right field porch, cutting the Rays lead to only one run, then Alfonso Soriano to go pull one far deeper to the left field stands.

Damage done, tie ball game.

***

Leading off the ninth against Yankee closer David Robertson, the top of the order was due and Ben Zobrist hit sharply up the right field line. Mark Teixeira couldn't field the play, and Zobrist ran through first base without a challenge.

Following a failed bunt by Jennings, Zorilla got a beautiful jump on Robertson's leg lift and swiped second base, but Jennings would strikeout shortly thereafter. It would be Longoria who singled him home, after taking two pitches in the zone and reaching for a base hit to right field, giving Zobrist all day to race home for the 5-4 Rays lead.

With Balfour on much needed rest for the evening, the Rays brought in Brandon Gomes -- no wait, they left Peralta in! With a 2-2 count, the easy out of Brian Roberts singled up the middle, leading the Rays to bring on -- oh, Juan Carlos Oviedo.

The former closer earned a tapper to first to James Loney, who scooped it off a hard chop as it approached the infield dirt, and the training staff had to come examine Oviedo in the effort, even after grimacing as he raced to cover first.

Our old friend Kelly Johnson was released from the dugout with one out and a man on second, and the runner Brian Roberts took off for third base. The Jose Molina throw to Longoria was a rocket, a near perfect throw, but the tag was not clean and the ball escaped the snowcone of his glove. Safe at third. Johnson tapped out to short, but with two outs, a runner in scoring position, and top of the order due, Jacoby Ellsbury would not go quietly.

The Rays stuck with Oviedo, and his first pitch -- a breaking pitch low -- was lined into center field for another tie ball game. Joe Maddon pulled the reliever immediately, this time for Brandon Gomes. With Jeter at the plate, Gomes turned and fired to first instead, and Ellsbury got caught sleeping, with his left leg six inches short of the bag. The initial call was safe, but Maddon challenged and the replay took less than a minute to overturn.

5-5 ballgame, on to extra innings.

***

Another ace reliever took the mound for New York, with Shawn Kelly starting Rodriguez with a tapper in front of home plate. James Loney singled opposite field, but Matt Joyce couldn't help hitting into a double play on a tapper of his own, and the Yanks would get another chance at winning a hard fought game.

Brandon Gomes came on for his proper turn, and worked three ground outs on eight pitches, starting with a chopper to the feet of Zobrist off the captain, followed by a tapper to the mound from Carlos Beltran, and an easy-to-field bouncer to second by Teixeira.

Both relievers were working efficiently, less than then pitches a piece and working quick outs.

Kelly returned for the New York eleventh and struck out the fucking side. He caught Escobar looking, then David DeJesus (career 2-for-4, HR off Kelly) was brought on to pinch hit for Jose Molina. He guessed off-speed on a B-hack, but it was a fastball outside. Zobrist had the same problem, fanning the heater.

Gomes, not to be outdone, worked a lazy flyball from Alfonso Soriano on three pitches, popped Brian McCann foul on a full count up the right field line, and then nearly had Brian Roberts after an 0-2 count. He knocked a basehit on a pitch high in the zone, and Maddon replaced Gomes with Heath Bell.

The former closer Bell -- I keep telling myself how he used to be excellent -- allowed a looper to left-center from Solarte to put two runners on, and the Yanks pinch hit Ichiro Suzuki in hopes of driving one home. He'd take a curve and a change in the zone before tapping softly to second base.

So many tappers.

***

In the twelfth inning, the outside corner was unforgiving to Desmond Jennings, who went down on strikes to new reliever Adam Warren. Evan Longoria followed with a 2-2 count of his own, but looped a broken bat single over the short stop.

Wil Myers moved the runner on a groundball to second, but with two outs and a full count S-Rod went down swinging over an 88 slider over the heart of the plate. Heartbreak.

Heath Bell returned for the top of the order, and a high fastball above the zone got chopped slowly to start the frame with an infield hit. Jeter then laid an easy bunt to the mound, but Bell sailed it to center field. The runners hold at first and second, no outs.

Beltran tried a bunt of his own, and a diving Longoria nearly had it in foul territory for a much needed out, but the game trudged on to a bizarre run down.

On a tapper up the middle, Derek Jeter worked his way through a run down after the out at first, back and forth no less than six times before Zobrist gave up and fired to third. Ellsbury would get caught by Ryan Hanigan at catcher, but Jeter worked his way around to third anyway, exhausted.

Two miraculous outs, man still on third for Mark Teixeira, and the 1-1 pitch caught Tex's sleeve. Awarded first base, it was now runners on the corners for Alfonso Soriano, who took a curve ball for strike one. Bell tried the same pitch, and this it was another groundball to second, sending the rivals to another free inning of baseball.

***

Warren returned for the next frame, and James Loney nearly started things right with a double in the right field corner but the liner was foul. Instead, Loney looped another single into left-center on two strikes. Joe Maddon lifted Loney for a pinch runner in Brandon Guyer -- finally giving him the base running chance I've thought he deserved, and surprisingly lifting the glove of Loney from the line up -- bring Matt Joyce up to bat.

Joyce would bounce one to second base, and Solarte was there to field it. Guyer challenged with his run into second, and the throw was slightly too wild. The umpire ruled Joyce safe at first, declaring Teixeira off the bag. The Yankees challenged the call, and Joyce was declared out on the replay.

Joe Maddon, collected but furious, had nothing but choice words about the ruling. He was immediately ejected for arguing in the slightest, but Maddon stuck around to make his thoughts known in what looked like a professor correcting a student more than an angry neighbor complaining about your dog's shit in his yard.

Yunel Escobar now had bases empty and two out, but still lined a shot into left-center on a mistake of a changeup. Then the clock corssed midnight. Tomorrow's start time is 1:05, against Masahiro Tanaka. This is getting exhausting.

Ryan Hanigan promptly shot a fastball through the right side to put two men on, bringing up Zobrist yet again, but he tapped to second base to end the threat. And I mean tapped. Frequent but soft hitting in this extra inning affair.

In the bottom of the thirteenth, Heath Bell returned -- just as you wished. Brian McCann shot one past the diving Escobar out of the shift, and Roberts went golfing on a changeup to put two on with none out.

Solarte batted a ball to first base for the first out and another run down ensued, but Ben Zobrist was too worried about the runner crossing third to get the second out -- who was Brian McCann running toward second. With two men in scoring position in one out, Davey Martinez (acting as manager) brought a fifth man to the infield in Wil Myers, praying for a ground ball out.

Hangian blocked the first pitch in the dirt, pinch hitter Brett Gardner whiffed on the next, then after watching a change qhisk by, he tapped another up the middle. Sean Rod was the man up the middle, and he fielded the throw to Myers at first base for the second out.

With Ellsbury back in the batters box, the defensive alignment returned to normal, and the Rays took no chances, walking him to load the bases.

Derek Jeter, bases loaded in the fourth extra inning with two outs, and would you believe it was another tapper up the middle? Groundball to the pitcher, and the Rays escaped. How? HOW!

40+ pitches from Heath Bell and the Rays survive to face another frame. You can't predict baseball.

***

The fourteenth inning: Where dreams are made of -- in other words, most people are sleeping. Chris Leroux took the mound for New York, and walked Desmond Jennings on six pitches. Longoria struck out for the first out on a pitch above the zone. Wil Myers followed and battled a 2-2 count before Desmond Jennings stole second (after seven pick off attempts).

Myers fouled another before tomahawking a fastball above the zone, and the Rays finally -- FINALLY -- scored another and took the lead. He then raced around the base paths four pitches later on a double by Rodriguez.

The following pitch, Brandon Guyer laced a hit past Jeter and Sean Rodriguez turned on the jets. S-Rod dove head first at the plate and just beat the tag with his left hand, surviving the challenge and giving the Rays a three run lead. It was remarkable how quick each replay was conducted in this game.

With one out remaining, Matt Joyce was intentionally walked with one out, but Yunel Escobar lined another into center field, plating Brandon Guyer . Ryan Hanigan followed with his own base hit up the middle -- the Rays 20th hit on the evening -- for a five run lead. Zorilla whiffed for the second out, and Jennings tapped to third to mercifully end it there.

The Rays let Josh Lueke close the door, returning to the mound with 95 MPH velocity.

Heath Bell was awarded the victory.

I was awarded sleep.

***

The Yankees would go 1-for-12 with runners in scoring position, the Rays 6-for-16 and most of those coming in the 14th.

With two out and one on in the fourteenth, Brian McCann bunted and the Rays broadcasters laughed heartily.

The next game starts in 12 hours.

Go Rays!

Yankees 5, Rays 10: Weird baseball turned into a weird nightmare

$
0
0

Can we just not talk about this?

The Yankees and Rays had never played a 14-inning game prior to tonight. After tonight, everyone subjected to the 5+ hour nightmare has to hope they are never forced to witness such failure on a baseball diamond again. In the end, the Rays' bullpen withstood more blows than the Yankees' bullpen did and the Yankees lost a game that they had multiple opportunities to win.

You'll have to forgive me for not wanting to recount all the gory details of this one back to you. Really, I'm doing it as a favor. If you missed it, you're lucky. If you didn't miss it, I'm not mean enough to make you re-live it. Instead, here is a brief breakdown of key events.

The Good:

- Jacoby Ellsbury had four hits (including a game-tying single with two outs), a stolen base, and reached base on an intentional walk. It was his tenth multi-hit game of 2014 so far.

- Brian Roberts came alive in extra innings, picking up crucial singles in the 9th, 11th, and 13th innings. He also stole third base.

- Mark Teixeira and Alfonso Soriano hit back-to-back home runs in the eighth inning to tie the game at 4-4. Brian McCann also had a home run on the night.

- Dellin Betances, Preston Claiborne, Shawn Kelley, and Adam Warren were brilliant in relief. The fact the game went on so long is a testament to how well they were able to give the offense a chance.

- Joe Girardi continues to be a master of replay, getting a crucial play originally called a fielder's choice turned into a double play off the bat of Matt Joyce. Joe Maddon was ejected for arguing the call.

The Bad:

- Derek Jeter went 0 for 7 for the first time in his career. He'd never been worse than 0 for 6 in 20 seasons.

- Ellsbury lost a ball in the lights and that, somehow, caused Vidal Nuno to lose the strike zone. Nuno really struggled to collect himself after the misplay.

- The Yankees failed to score in three innings against Heath Bell or one inning against Josh Lueke.

- Chris Leroux was the only available reliever left in the bullpen, and he pitched like the last guy out of the bullpen. He allowed five runs in the top of the 14th inning.

- The last time the Yankees had 18 hits and lost was 2002. I was in seventh grade.

- Masahiro Tanaka is pretty much going to have to pitch a complete game tomorrow. Good luck, new friend.

The Ugly:

- This happened:


Yeah, I don't know either. It was scored a 4-3-3-6-3-4-3-4-5-2 double play. Okay.

Erase the bad thoughts of all of this by whatever means necessary. Thankfully Tanaka Time comes soon. In about twelve hours, actually. See you then.

Around the Empire: New York Yankees News - 5/3/14

$
0
0

Last Time on Pinstripe Alley

  • Yankees 5, Rays 10: Weird baseball turned into a weird nightmare
  • Yankees vs. Rays weird baseball overflow thread
  • Yankees lineup vs. Rays - Tigers sign Joel Hanrahan
  • The Yankees should trade Dellin Betances
  • Who was the Yankees' Player of the Month in April?
  • Daily Yankees Predictions 5/2/14: Nuno Night
  • Current state of the AL East
  • Baby Bomber Recap 5/1/14: Aaron Judge picks up three more hits as RiverDogs split doubleheader
  • Yankees News

    NoMaas | Martin Riggs:Yangervis Solarte and Brian Roberts were among the best and the worst hitters in the month of April.

    SB Nation | Grant Brisbee: Yangervis Solarte makes the list for bad players who are having good seasons so far.

    It's About the Money | Brad Vietrogoski: The Yankees offense has basically disappeared as of late.

    Fangraphs | Jeff Sullivan: Ichiro Suzuki and Alfonso Soriano had some of the worst swings at the plate in the last week.

    LoHud | Brian Heyman: Last night was Joe Girardi's 1,000th game as manager of the New York Yankees.

    ESPN New York | Wallace Matthews: Hiroki Kuroda is still trying to figure things out this season.

    Pinstripe Pundits | Chris Mitchell: How have the Yankees' top pitching prospect done in the first month of the season?

    Baseball America | Ben Badler: Yankees prospect Ramon Flores makes it onto the prospect hot sheet

    SB Nation | James Dator: Someone wants to open a bar New York Yankees bar in New Jersey called Buck Foston.

    LoHud | Chad Jennings: Masahiro Tanaka has been unhappy with his early-innings performance so far.

    Kelly Johnson has been made non-existent by the Yankees

    $
    0
    0

    Is there a reason for Kelly Johnson's absence these last couple of weeks?

    Lost in the middle of the Yankees' spending spree this winter was the signing of Kelly Johnson. It was an under-the-radar move that cost the Yankees just $3 million and one year of his services. Even though it wasn't a huge addition, Kelly Johnson became an important part of the Yankees' infield. He got off to a good start with the bat, played a respectable third base, and filled in for Mark Teixeira at first base when the incumbent got hurt. Nowadays, for whatever reason, Johnson hasn't seen much of the field at all.

    On the season, Johnson has hit .215/.271/.446 with a 94 wRC+. That certainly isn't great or anything, especially with the batting average and on-base percentage, but he has hit for a good amount of power, as shown by his .231 ISO. In fact, that .231 ISO is second (excluding John Ryan Murphy, who has compiled only 16 plate appearances on the season) on the team behind Mark Teixeira's .271 ISO. Johnson's offensive performance, while not outstanding, isn't worth a demotion to the bench.

    Getting at-bats instead of Johnson are Yangervis Solarte and Brian Roberts. Solarte has hit the skids the past week or so (.504 OPS last 36 PA's), but still deserves an extended look, at least for now, to see if he'll right the ship or crater into 2013 Vernon Wells Land.

    On the other hand, there's Roberts. The Yankees have said time and time again since the signing of Roberts that he'll be the team's everyday second baseman, and, for the most part, or at least three-quarters of the part, he has done just that. A minor back injury sidelined him for a few games, but he has started 21 of the team's 28 games thus far at second. However, it is Roberts' bat, or lack thereof, that makes you scratch your head as to why he still gets to play on a mostly regular basis, especially over someone like Johnson.

    Thus far in 2014, Roberts is hitting just .235/.323/.296 with a 75 wRC+. That batting line would have been much lower if not for three hits late in last night's game after being completely over-matched by David Price earlier in the contest. I feel like those three hits gave him an extra month or so worth of at-bats before they finally cut bait. Anyway, the story with Roberts the last few years has been injuries, but the fact is he was still underwhelming with the bat (83 OPS+ from 2010-2013) even when he was healthy, and that still holds true in 2014.

    All told, from April 17-May 2, the Yankees have played 14 games as a team and Johnson has played nine of those games, but only five of them have been starts. The only somewhat logical explanation for this is that the Yankees just refuse to play him against left-handed pitching; during this 14-game run, the Yankees have faced a left-handed starter nine times and Johnson has started only two of those games. I'm aware that Johnson has struggled against left-handed pitching these last few years, but it comes to a point where, with the offense currently struggling, that you just have to play your best bats no matter the platoon match-ups and hope for the best.

    Roster move likely after Yankees' 14-inning marathon

    $
    0
    0

    The Yankees need a fresh arm in the bullpen after last night's extra innings loss.

    The reoccurring theme of the season so far has been "Who will the Yankees call up to the bullpen today?" At this time last week, I speculated that either Shane Greene or Bruce Billings would be sent down, in favor of Alfredo Aceves being called up. The Yankees ended up placing Billings on the DL and called up Chris Leroux instead. After last night's game, they're in a similar position again.

    Last night's fourteen inning extravaganza taxed the bullpen. Somehow, the Rays didn't run out of pitchers, despite the fact that they had played a doubleheader the day before, and the Yankees had to turn to Leroux as the lone guy left in the bullpen. He allowed five runs in the 14th inning, so it's likely that he'll be sent down in order to call up a fresh arm. Or Masahiro Tanaka will have to pitch a complete game regardless of pitch count, score, etc.

    And Just Like That...

    And Just Like That...

    Just like last week, it seems that Alfredo Aceves should be the reliever who is added to the bullpen. He's now pitched 13.2 innings, during which he gave up 12 hits, allowed 3 earned runs, walked 5 batters, and notched 14 strikeouts to the tune of a 1.98 ERA and 1.24 WHIP. Aceves is also scheduled to pitch in Triple-A today, so his arm is fresh and ready to go. Chase Whitley remains an option as well. Through 18.2 innings, he's allowed 17 hits, 7 earned runs, walked 7 batters, and recorded 21 strikeouts. 0 HR/9, 3.4 BB/9, 10.1 K/9. Brian Gordon pitched last night, so he is not an option on today's episode of As The Bullpen Door Turns. Gordon also remains the worst option of the three relievers, which makes it for the best that he won't be available to pitch for several days.

    Do you think we'll finally see Aceves called up, or that the Yankees will call up Whitley (or someone else altogether)?

    Daily Yankees Predictions 5/3/14: We need you Tanaka. Now more than ever.

    $
    0
    0

    The Yankees already played baseball earlier today, but they have to come back out and do it again this afternoon. Masahiro Tanaka could really help us out by pitching a nine inning shutout. More PSA DP coming your way.

    Mood Music:Game of Thrones Theme (Smooth Version) by Scott Bradlee ft. Dave Koz

    The only thing I'm going to say about yesterday's game is this: I was listening to the radio while driving home from work. Someone in the Yankee Radio Booth is a fan of Power Rangers, because I heard the Power Rangers message beep when John Sterling was talking. So that's cool.

    5/2/14 Daily Prediction Answers

    1.Combined number of innings from both starting pitchers?11.2
    2.Total number of Yankee hits?18
    3.Total number of opponent's hits?15
    4.Total number of Yankee runs scored? (not just earned runs)5
    5.Total number of Yankee pinch hitters?3
    6.Name one Yankee you think will have the most RBI's tonightMcCann
    7.Name one Yankee you think will hit a home run tonightMcCann/Teixeira/Soriano
    8.Best overall Yankee of the night?
    Ellsbury/Roberts

    The Aaron's don't want to talk to anyone right now. They threw a bottle of scotch at me when I asked them to do the math. The math has to get done regardless, because we need results. Blanky, yesterday's winner, scored another 3,000 points and almost went back to back. However, it was not meant to be. Tanya, the mother of dragons, scored 4,000 point and claimed the psychic Iron Throne for the glory of Pinstripe Alley. Fire and Blood!

    5/2/14 Daily Predictions & Fun Questions

    1.Combined number of innings from both starting pitchers?
    2.Total number of Yankee hits?
    3.Total number of opponent's hits?
    4.Total number of Yankee runs scored? (not just earned runs)
    5.Total number of Yankee pinch hitters?
    6.Name one Yankee you think will have the most RBI tonight.
    7.Name one Yankee you think will hit a home run tonight.
    8.Best overall Yankee of the night?

    Name your three favorite shows on TV, past or present.

    Do you use lip balm? If so, what is your favorite?

    Current phone ringtone?

    What is the best thing you cook?

    Yesterday's game was long and tiring and it sucked. The incredible pitching of Masahiro Tanaka will hopefully wash away the awfulness. He's pitching against what should be a tired Rays team, after 3 baseball games in 2 days. Here's hoping Tanaka continues to impress.

    Let's Go Yankees

    Yankes call up Alfredo Aceves and DFA Chris Leroux

    $
    0
    0

    Welcome back, Crazy Ace

    After the 14-inning marathon that was last night's game against the Rays, the Yankees bullpen was completely taxed. As Caitlin pointed out earlier, It was obvious that they were going to need to call someone up in order to get a fresh arm onto the team for tonight's game. Their choices were either call Matt Daley or Shane Greene back up or cut someone and bring in someone new. The Yankees decided to designate yesterday's last man out of the bullpen Chris Leroux for assignment after he gave up five runs on five hits and two walks in just one inning. In his place, they called up old friend Alfredo Aceves.

    As we correctly predicted

    This will now be the 14th reliever the Yankees have used already in this young season. Luckily, they haven't lost any of them to waiver claims as the previously DFA'd Cesar Cabral and Matt Daley (still on the 40) are still in Triple-A after both were designated for assignment. However, eventually the bullpen will need to stabilize or the Yankees will start to lose players to other teams if they keep doing this.

    After the Red Sox finally released him, Aceves spent the spring with the Orioles until he was eventually released just prior to the regular season. The Yankees re-signed him, making him a member of the organization he came up through for the first time since 2010. But this isn't the Aceves we remember; he's kind of lost his mind since then. He had a 1.98 ERA in 13.2 innings as a starter and reliever for the Scranton-Wilkes/Barre RailRiders. The Yankees likely chose Aceves because he was scheduled to start today.

    If this is true, it means that he was called up before the game had even ended yet.



    Baby Bomber Recap 5/2/14: Gary Sanchez, Kyle Roller, and Rob Segedin homer in Thunder win

    $
    0
    0

    Recapping the Yankees' minor league affiliates' results from May 2nd.

    Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders:L 0-10 vs. Norfolk Tides

    CF Ramon Flores 0-3, BB, K
    3B Scott Sizemore 1-4, 3 K - batting .316 this season
    SS Dean Anna 1-4, triple, 2 K
    RF Zoilo Almonte 0-4, K
    DH Zelous Wheeler 1-4, K
    1B Corban Joseph 1-3
    2B Jose Pirela 1-3, E4 - throwing error, second of the season
    LF Ronnier Mustelier 2-3
    C Austin Romine 0-2, BB - batting .116 this season

    Brian Gordon 5.2 IP, 8 H, 7 ER, 2 BB, 6 K - 67 of 102 pitches for strikes
    Yoshinori Tateyama 1.1 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 3 K
    Jim Miller 1 IP, 4 H, 3 ER, 0 BB

    Double-A Trenton Thunder:W 8-1 vs. Richmond Flying Squirrels

    CF Mason Williams 0-3, BB, K
    SS Brendan Ryan 2-4
    3B Rob Segedin 1-3, HR, 2 RBI, BB - fourth homer of the season
    DH Gary Sanchez 1-3, HR, RBI, BB - third homer of the season
    1B Kyle Roller 2-3, HR, 2 RBI, BB, K, SB - eighth homer of the season
    2B Rob Refsnyder 0-4, E4 - fielding error, sixth of the season
    RF Yeral Sanchez 1-4, RBI, K
    LF Taylor Dugas 1-3, RBI, BB, K
    C Tyson Blaser 1-4, 2 K

    Graham Stoneburner 5.2 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 3 K, hit batsman - 53 of 78 pitches for strikes
    Manny Barreda 0.1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 3 BB, K, E1
    Pat Venditte 2 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, BB, 4 K
    Aaron Dott 1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K

    High-A Tampa Yankees: Postponed for rain

    Low-A Charleston RiverDogs:L 3-4 vs. Delmarva Shorebirds

    SS Abiatal Avelino 0-3, RBI
    DH Tyler Wade 1-4, RBI
    RF Aaron Judge 1-4, double, K - batting .352 this season
    1B Mike Ford 0-4, K
    3B Miguel Andujar 1-4, double, 2 K
    LF Michael O'Neill 0-3, BB, K, SB, CS
    CF Jose Rosario 1-4, 2 K, SB
    2B Gosuke Katoh 3-4, double, K, SB - batting .232 this season
    C Eduardo de Oleo 0-2, RBI, 2 K

    Luis Severino 6 IP, 8 H, 2 ER, BB, 7 K - 5/2 GO/AO
    Jordan Cote 1.1 IP, 4 H, 2 ER, 2 BB, 2 K
    Andrew Benak 1.2 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, BB, 2 K

    Poll
    Who was the best Baby Bomber for May 2nd?

      44 votes |Results

    Yankees lineup vs. Rays - State of the bullpen

    $
    0
    0

    Happy Tanaka Day, everyone! After the game we just suffered through, I think we all deserve this and, more importantly, the Yankees need this.

    Today's lineup looks like it's a day of rest for some of the old folks. Both Derek Jeter and Carlos Beltran are out of the lineup because they're too old and frail to play a day game after an after-midnight game. Jacoby Ellsbury is in center field and batting in the leadoff spot, while Brett Gardner is in left and hitting second. Mark Teixeira, Brian McCann, and Alfonso Soriano are in the heart of the lineup. Kelly Johnson returns from the dead and gets a rare start at third base. Brian Roberts is in the game, because he has to be while Ichiro Suzuki is in right field. Yangervis Solarte gets his first start at shortstop, so we'll see how that goes.

    According to Joe Girardi, Adam Warren and Shawn Kelley are both unavailable today after pitching two innings each last night. That would mean the bullpen is David Robertson, Dellin Betances, Matt Thornton, and Preston Claiborne. Alfredo Aceves will be the long reliever for the time being and is going to be used as a reliever. That is probably for the best because he has a 3.53 ERA and 4.06 FIP out of the bullpen, compared to a 4.29 ERA and 5.52 FIP as a starter. Aceves was so valuable to the Yankees because he could work in both short and long relief as well as make a spot start if needed, but he shouldn't be a longterm rotation option, even compared to Vidal Nuno.

    Rays Suffer 9-3 Loss To Yankees As Odorizzi Falls Short Once Again

    $
    0
    0

    Jake Odorizzi fails to get out of the fifth inning. Yankees pound Lueke & Bell en route to 9-3 victory.

    The Tampa Bay Rays were defeated by the New York Yankees by a final score of 9-3. The victory went to Masahiro Tanaka (4-0, 2.53 ERA) and the loss goes to Josh Lueke (0-2, 4.82 ERA). The Rays drop to 14-17 on the year and 4-5 on their current 10 game road trip.

    The game went exactly as we may have guessed based on what we knew of each pitcher going in. Jake Odorizzi was solid the first time through the order retiring all nine hitters including three strikeouts while Masahiro Tanaka was not as good early as late giving up three runs in the first four innings he worked.

    Odorizzi fell apart the second time through and was unable to make it out of the fourth fifth inning. His final line was 4+ innings of work three runs (all earned) on five hits striking out four and walking two. He departed with two runners on base and nobody out and had his line score was saved by the effective work of Cesar Ramos who held the Yankees off the board to end the fifth inning.

    With Odorizzi not giving the Rays innings the taxed bullpen would be saved by turning to Josh Lueke who provided two ineffective innings surrendering the lead on a single run in the sixth inning and a pair of runs in the seventh.

    Heath Bell came in to work the eighth inning and allowed three more runs as the Yankees finished the day scoring nine unanswered runs.

    Meanwhile Masahiro Tanaka settled in and delivered seven strong innings allowing three runs (all earned) on eight hits striking out five and walking none. He was followed to the mound by Dellin Betances who worked a scoreless eighth inning and Preston Claibrone worked a scoreless ninth.

    Both Jake Odorizzi and the Rays needed a quality start on Saturday afternoon. For Odorizzi the prospect of not capitalizing on the opportunity to secure a spot in the Rays rotation was staring him down while the Rays bullpen has been taxed an overworked due to the inefficiency of the starting staff.

    Entering the game the Rays are 7-11 since Alex Cobb was placed on the disabled list on April 13th (left oblique strain) and their team ERA has ballooned from 2.55 to 4.26. In the 18 games the starting pitchers have pitched five innings or less in 13 of 18 of those games and have compiled an ERA of 5.84 (92.1IP, 60 ER). The group had only tossed 18 more inning than their bullpen (74.1 IP).

    Odorizzi's last four starts have been against the Kansans City Royals (5IP, 7ER), Baltimore Orioles (5IP, 3ER), Minnesota Twins (3.1IP, 4ER), and Chicago White Sox (4.1IP, 4ER). Overall in these four starts he has a record of 0-3 with a 9.17 ERA and has allowed 28 hits in 17.2 innings of work striking out 18 and walking 9.

    His biggest problems arise after the first time through the batting order. On the season he has held the opposition to .171 (7 for 41) average the first time though the order but the second time through the average increases to .444 (16 for 36) and the third time through it's is even worse .471 (8 for 17).

    Masahiro Tanaka had been very successful entering the game making five starts and owning a perfect 3-0 record with a 2.27 ERA. In his 35.2 innings of work he had only allowed 27 hits and struck out 46 while walking just five. He had won his last 31 professional decisions (28 in Japan and 3 with Yankees).

    If there is any blemish on his record it is the five home runs he has allowed and the opposition gets a quick jump on him posting a slash line of .286/.333/.476 the first time through the order.

    Desmond Jennings took advantage of both of Tanaka's blemishes hitting a solo home run that could have been a two run homer (See Doug Eddings missed ball four call on Ben Zobrist below) in the top of the first inning.

    675_zobrist_ball_tanaka_medium

    The Rays increased their lead to 2-0 in the bottom of the second on a 2-out single off the bat of Ryan Hanigan that scored James Loney from third. Prior to Hanigan's single Tanaka had held the opposition to an .074 (2 for 27) average with runners in scoring position.

    The Rays got their final run as Wil Myers led off the fourth inning with an opposite field home run that extended their lead to 3-0.

    While the Rays were building their 3-0 lead Jake Odorizzi was continuing his dominance of a lineup the first time through by retiring the first nine hitters including three strike outs on just 48 pitches.

    The fourth inning would mark the second time through the New York lineup for Odorizzi and a turning point from which the rest of the afternoon belonged to the Yankees.

    Jacoby Ellsbury led off the bottom of the fourth with a single and after Brett Gardner hit into a fielders choice erasing Ellsbury at second base Mark Teixeira delivered a two run homer to cut the Rays lead to 3-2.  Brian McCann followed with an opposite field double but Alfonso Soriano sent a shallow foul ball to right that Wil Myers made a nice leaping grab of for the second out. After a Kelly Johnson walk Odorizzi struck out Brian Roberts to end the long 29-pitch inning.

    The Yankees continued their assault on Odorizzi the second time through the lineup as Ichiro Suzuki led off the fifth inning with a double, Yangervis Solarte drew a walk, and Jacoby Ellsbury laced a ground rule double to tie the game at 3-3.

    With nobody out in the inning and runners at second and third his afternoon was over and the Rays turned to Cesar Ramos to come in and try to keep things from getting out of hand in the Bronx.

    Ramos did all that could have been asked for striking out Brett Gardner, intentionally walking Mark Teixiera, striking out Brian McCann, and getting Alfonso Soriano to ground out to short to end the inning with the score tied 3-3.

    Joe Maddon turned to Josh Lueke to enter the game in the bottom half of the sixth and selfishly hoped that Lueke could somehow keep the Yankees off the scoreboard and get two or more innings out of him. It took just one batter for the first part of the plan to be ruined as Kelly Johnson led off the bottom of the sixth inning with a solo home run to put the Yankees up 4-3.

    He gave up two more runs in the bottom of the seventh inning on three singles and a sacrifice fly. Jacoby Ellsbury and Brett Gardner each singled to lead off the inning and Ellsbury came in to score on a Mark Teixeira RBI single and Gardner moved to third and came in to score on an Alfonso Soriano sacrifice fly to push the Yankees lead to 6-3.

    After his two innings of work Heath Bell came in and was not effective. Brian Roberts singled and came around to score on a double by Ichiro Suzuki. Suzuki advanced to third on a Yangervis Solarte ground out. With one out Jacoby Ellsbury drew a walk and stole second base to get into scoring position for Brett Gardner who singled to score both Suzuki and Ellsbury to put the Yankees on top 9-3.

    The two teams finish the three game series tomorrow at 1:05. It will be a battle of lefties as the Yankees send lefty CC Sabathia (3-3, 5.11) and the Rays counter with Erik Bedard (0-1, 5.52).

    Yankees 9, Rays 3: Tanaka solid again, while the offense rebounds

    $
    0
    0

    Dingers and runs and Masahiro Tanaka are all cool things.

    After yesterday's extra-inning failure from the offense, the Yankees' lineup rebounded in a big way today. They got off to a slow start, but poured it on late. The Yankees scored nine runs on twelve hits to beat the Rays 9-3. Oh, and that Masahiro Tanaka guy was pretty decent again.

    The Rays got on the board early when Desmond Jennings hit a one-out home run in the top of the first. In the second inning, the Rays added another run off Tanaka. James Loney led off the inning with a single. After Wil Myers "grounded out" (bouncing ball hit him while he was in fair territory), David DeJesus singled on a grounder that deflected off Tanaka. The Yankees nearly got out of it as Tanaka got Sean Rodriguez to pop out and got two strikes on Ryan Hanigan. However, Hanigan got a single on a hard grounder that Kelly Johnson got a glove on, but could not make the play. That gave the Rays a 2-0 lead. Tanaka got Ben Zobrist to ground out to escape further damage.

    The Yankees' offense couldn't go much of anything, and the Rays were able to add another run in the top of the fourth. Myers led off the inning with a home run to make the score 3-0.

    The Yankees finally got on the board in the bottom of the fourth inning. Jacoby Ellsbury led off the inning with a single. Brett Gardner came up next and he grounded into a force out at second, but avoided the double play. Mark Teixeira came up next and he launched a home run into the second deck to make the score 3-2.

    An inning later, the Yankees tied the game. Ichiro Suzuki led off the inning with a double. After Yangervis Solarte drew a walk, Ellsbury laced a ground-rule double that scored Ichiro and tied the game at three. After Gardner struck out, the Rays intentionally walked Teixeira to load the bases. However, neither Brian McCann or Alfonso Soriano could make the Rays pay and after five innings, the game was tied at three.

    After failing to in the fifth, the Yankees did take a lead in the sixth. With Josh Lueke pitching, Johnson led off the inning with a home run into the Yankee bullpen. That made the score 4-3 and gave the Yankees their first lead of the game.

    After the Yankees took the lead, Tanaka came back out to pitch the seventh. Despite being near 100 pitches at the start of the inning, Tanaka retired the side relatively easily. The seventh would be the last inning that Tanak pitched. He finished his day with seven innings pitched, allowing three runs on eight hits, while striking out five.

    In the bottom of the seventh, the Yankees were able to add to their lead. Ellsbury and Gardner led off the inning with back-to-back singles. Teixeira then came up and he too hit a single. That scored Ellsbury and made it 5-3. After McCann lined out, Soriano came up. Soriano flew out, but it was deep enough to score Gardner and make it 6-3.

    Dellin Betances came in to pitch the bottom of the eighth for the Yankees. Betances allowed just one hit, a double to Loney, and kept the Yankee lead at three runs.

    The Yankee lead did not stay at three runs for very long but it was a good change. Brian Roberts led off the bottom of the eighth with a single. Ichiro then ripped a double down the right field line. That scored Roberts and made the score 7-3. After Solarte grounded out (moving Ichiro to third), Ellsbury walked and stole second. Gardner then singled to score both runners.

    Preston Claiborne was brought in to finish off the game in the ninth. Claiborne threw an easy 1-2-3 inning to give the Yankees the 9-3 win.

    The rubber match between the Yankees and Rays will be tomorrow at 1:05 eastern. C.C Sabathia will get the start for the Yankees, while Tampa Bay will send out Erik Bedard.

    Box score.

    Around the Empire: New York Yankees News - 5/4/14

    $
    0
    0

    Last Time on Pinstripe Alley

  • Yankees 9, Rays 3: Tanaka solid again, while the offense rebounds
  • Yankees lineup vs. Rays - State of the bullpen
  • Baby Bomber Recap 5/2/14: Gary Sanchez, Kyle Roller, and Rob Segedin homer in Thunder win
  • Yankes call up Alfredo Aceves and DFA Chris Leroux
  • Daily Yankees Predictions 5/3/14: We need you Tanaka. Now more than ever.
  • Roster move likely after Yankees' 14-inning marathon
  • Kelly Johnson has been made non-existent by the Yankees
  • Yankees News

    Double G Sports | Matt Kardos: Brendan Ryan makes a living off his defense and will be needed to backup Derek Jeter in his last season.

    ESPN New York | Andrew Marchand:Masahiro Tanaka will continue to adjust to avoid his early-inning struggles.

    An A-Blog For A-Rod | Brad Vietrogoski: The Yankees have a below-average bullpen, though most of the damage has been done by a select few.

    LoHud | Chad Jennings: Alfredo Aceves makes his return to the organization where he started his MLB career.

    Pinstripe Pundits | Chris Mitchell: A look at how several unranked Yankees prospects, like Taylor Dugas and Dante Bichette, are doing this season.

    NoMaas | SJK: Derek Jeter has been a below-average player so far this season.

    Baby Bomber Recap 5/3/14: Ian Clarkin tosses five scoreless innings in season debut

    $
    0
    0

    Recapping the Yankees' minor league affiliates' results from May 3rd.

    Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders:L 6-14 vs. Norfolk Tides

    RF Ramon Flores 1-5
    2B Scott Sizemore 0-5, 2 K, E4 - throwing error, second of the season
    SS Dean Anna 1-3, BB, K, E6 - throwing error (3rd), batting .200 w/ SWB
    1B Russ Canzler 0-4, K
    3B Zelous Wheeler 2-4, double, RBI - batting .417 this season
    LF Adonis Garcia 3-4, triple, 3 RBI
    C Francisco Arcia 1-4, RBI, 2 K
    DH Ronnier Mustelier 1-4, RBI, 2 K - batting .298 this season
    CF Antoan Richardson 0-3, K, HBP

    Zach Nuding 3 IP, 11 H, 10 R/8 ER, 2 BB, 2 K - 46 of 78 pitches for strikes
    Mark Montgomery 2 IP, 1 H, 1 ER, BB, 3 K
    Cesar Cabral 1.2 IP, 0 H, 3 ER, 4 BB, K
    Matt Daley 1.1 IP, 3 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, K

    Double-A Trenton Thunder:W 6-4 vs. Richmond Flying Squirrels

    CF Mason Williams 0-3, 2 BB, OF assist
    SS Brendan Ryan 2-3, 2 BB, K, E6 - fielding error
    LF Ben Gamel 3-5, RBI - batting .305 this season
    3B Rob Segedin 1-4, K
    C Gary Sanchez 0-4, 2 K, E2 - catcher interference, fourth error
    1B Kyle Roller 2-2, 3 RBI, BB
    2B Rob Refsnyder 1-4, triple, RBI, K
    RF Taylor Dugas 0-3, BB, 2 K, SB
    DH Carmen Angelini 1-4, K

    Jairo Heredia 3 IP, 2 H, 3 R/2 ER, BB, 5 K, hit batsman
    Charley Short 3 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 2 K
    Taylor Garrison 2 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, BB, K
    Branden Pinder 1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 3 K - hasn't given up a run this season

    High-A Tampa Yankees:L 4-7W 6-2 vs. Brevard County Manatees

    Game 1:

    CF Jake Cave 1-4, K
    SS Cito Culver 1-4, K
    3B Eric Jagielo 1-4, HR, RBI, K - fifth homer of the season
    DH Dante Bichette Jr. 2-4, double, HR, RBI - second homer of the season
    C Peter O'Brien 1-4, HR, RBI, 2 K, passed ball - ninth homer of the season
    1B Zach Wilson 1-4, RBI, K
    2B Angelo Gumbs 0-4, K
    RF Jose Toussen 1-4, 2 K, E9 - throwing error, first of the season
    LF Claudio Custodio 1-3, K

    Eric Wooten 3 IP, 7 H, 4 R/3 ER, 2 BB, K, pickoff
    Rafael De Paula 3 IP, 1 H, 3 ER, 6 BB, 4 K
    Evan Rutckyj 1 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 0 BB
    Kyle Haynes 1 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 0 BB

    Game 2:

    CF Jake Cave 1-4, double, 2 RBI, K
    SS Cito Culver 1-4
    DH Eric Jagielo 1-4, HR, 2 RBI, K - sixth homer of the season
    3B Dante Bichette Jr. 1-4, HR, RBI, K - third homer of the season
    RF Peter O'Brien 2-3, double - batting .337 this season
    LF Zach Wilson 1-3, K
    2B Angelo Gumbs 1-3, K, SB
    1B Reymond Nunez 2-2, RBI, BB
    C Trent Garrison 0-3, K, passed ball

    Dan Camarena 5 IP, 7 H, 2 R/1 ER, 2 BB, 4 K, pickoff
    Zach Woods 1 IP, 1 H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 3 K, WP
    James Pazos 1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB

    Low-A Charleston RiverDogs:W 6-5 vs. Delmarva Shorebirds

    SS Abiatal Avelino 2-4, double, RBI, 2 SB - batting .287 this season
    DH Tyler Wade 1-4, 2 K
    RF Aaron Judge 0-4, K
    1B Mike Ford 3-4, RBI, E3 - fielding error, third of the season
    3B Miguel Andujar 1-4, HR, 2 RBI, K, E5 - fielding error (9), first homer of the season
    LF Michael O'Neill 3-4, double, RBI, K, 2 SB
    CF Jose Rosario 0-4, 3 K, E8 - fielding error, first of the season
    2B Gosuke Katoh 0-2, BB
    C Eduardo de Oleo 0-3, K

    Ian Clarkin 5 IP, 4 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 5 K, pickoff - 42 of 61 pitches for strikes
    Omar Luis 2.2 IP, 6 H, 5 R/3 ER, 2 BB, K, 2 hit batsmen
    Stefan Lopez 1.1 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K

    Poll
    Who was the best Baby Bomber for May 3rd?

      143 votes |Results

    Daily Yankees Predictions 5/4/14: Sabathia going for the series win

    $
    0
    0

    Watching Tanaka pitch well when we really need him to is amazing. Watching the Yankees beat the Rays never gets boring. Having the Yankees win another series vs. a division rival has be scientifically proven to be a good thing. So do that.

    Mood music: Lapti Nek by The Max Rebo Band

    The love for Masahiro Tanaka is growing after every start. His "so-so" starts are not only fun to watch, but needed. Yesterday, we needed a long, relatively painless outing from Tanaka. That's exactly what he gave us. To quote Harlan from yesterday's game thread,

    The fact that Tanaka is able to go out there and give them 7 when he clearly didn’t have his stuff is even more of a statement about his long-term success than when he has it all working and lights it up.

    -Let's Talk About Tex Baby!

    I stuck with his original username, because we really do have to talk about Tex...baby. He's hitting extremely well. It's refreshing to see. Speaking of refreshing, let's drink down a tall glass of math!

    5/3/14 Daily Prediction Answers

    1.Combined number of innings from both starting pitchers?11
    2.Total number of Yankee hits?12
    3.Total number of opponent's hits?9
    4.Total number of Yankee runs scored? (not just earned runs)9
    5.Total number of Yankee pinch hitters?0
    6.Name one Yankee you think will have the most RBI's tonightTeixeira
    7.Name one Yankee you think will hit a home run tonightTeixeira/Johnson
    8.Best overall Yankee of the night?
    Tanaka/Teixeira

    The Aardvarks are sober again. Well, partially sober. Okay, they probably shouldn't be behind the wheel of a car. Or on a bike. Or on the bus for that matter. Either way, they did the math and it shows that thus far, May is Women's Prediction Month. The 1st of May belonged to Blanky. The 2nd of May belonged to Waffles. The 3rd of May belongs to xoxojackie. It hasn't even been a week since she joined, and jackie has already claimed victory with 4,000 points. Definitely a nice way to welcome yourself onto the best Yankee forum in the universe!

    Let this be a joyous lesson for other lurkers who are itching to join our merry little group! Anything is possible on the Pinstripe Alley!

    5/4/14 Daily Predictions & Fun Questions

    1.Combined number of innings from both starting pitchers?
    2.Total number of Yankee hits?
    3.Total number of opponent's hits?
    4.Total number of Yankee runs scored? (not just earned runs)
    5.Total number of Yankee pinch hitters?
    6.Name one Yankee you think will have the most RBI tonight.
    7.Name one Yankee you think will hit a home run tonight.
    8.Best overall Yankee of the night?

    If you hosted a sports talk show OR a specific segment on a sports talk show, what would you call it?

    What color would your lightsaber blade be?

    Is there a specific show or movie scene/sequence you can recite by heart? If yes, what scene/sequence?

    What is your pasta type of choice? (Penne, linguine, etc)

    CC Sabathia will take the mound for the Yankees in today's rubber match against the Rays. A win would mean a series win. Series wins are scientifically proven to be both fun and beneficial for further success. I think we all like both fun and further Yankee success. Victor wants to be posted again. Let's not disappoint him.

    Join the Dark Side of the 4th! We have rings!


    Visiting HOF is 'like stepping into a Rockwell Painting,' HOF president says

    $
    0
    0

    The museum has big plans this summer to commemorate its 75th anniversary

    Jeff Idelson, president of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum since 2008, made a stop in Omaha for the Bob Gibson Heritage Project banquet a couple of weeks ago. He spoke to the media before the event about the importance of preserving baseball heritage and the way baseball connects generations.

    "Preserving history, honoring excellence and connecting generations is our mission," Idelson said. "In Cooperstown, every day we see three generations of families who roll into town.

    "We're sort of remote, so it's a journey to get to Cooperstown, and maybe the parent and child and grandparent didn't really talk in the car for a couple of hours, but when they walk in the front door - say they came from downstate New York - the youngster will say, ‘Wow, there's Derek Jeter's jersey. He's the greatest of all-time.' The father might say, ‘You never saw Reggie Jackson play.' And the grandfather says, ‘Mickey Mantle could have blown them both away.

    "So baseball provides a language and a connectivity among generations that's great for families."

    Idelson got his start in the game as a vendor at Fenway Park before moving into the team's public relations department and then went on to serve as the director of media relations for the Yankees from 1989-'93, so he's worked with some of the greats in the game. But when he speaks about the HOF, he maintains his childlike wonder - saying stepping into the HOF is like stepping into a Rockwell painting.

    "I feel like if I close my eyes and then open them, everything might be in black and white because it is so timeless," he said. "It's Americana."

    This is the HOF's 75th anniversary and fans who plan to visit this summer have a lot to look forward to. In June, the HOF is opening a new Babe Ruth gallery - The Bambino broke into the majors one-hundred years ago. The HOF has a big induction class this year with six living inductees - the biggest class since President Nixon was in office. And the HOF is hosting a concert with Boston Pops and Paul Simon six days after the induction to celebrate the cultural aspect of baseball.

    Yankees lineup vs. Rays - Brendan Ryan on the verge of return

    $
    0
    0

    Brendan Ryan is close to being activated off of the DL

    The Yankees will look to build on their success from yesterday as CC Sabathia takes the mound.

    Jacoby Ellsbury, Derek Jeter, and Carlos Beltran are at the top of the order. Mark Teixeira, DH Alfonso Soriano, and (surprisingly) third baseman Kelly Johnson make up the middle of the order. Brian Roberts will be sitting with Yangervis Solarte at second base, Brett Gardner in left, and John Ryan Murphy giving Brian McCann the day off from behind the plate.

    After missing most of spring training, and the duration of the season so far, Brendan Ryan is finally close to making his season debut. Ryan originally went on the DL during spring training with an oblique strain, then when he had recovered from that, he started having cervical spinal nerve issues. Now he'll be back in a matter of hours:

    As of Saturday, Ryan has played in six rehab games. Four of those in Tampa, and two in Double-A Trenton. Considering the fact that he did miss spring training, and is rehabbing from a back injury, Ryan has been hitting well. He's hitting .381/.500/.381, with 8 hits and 5 walks through 21 at-bats. Joe Girardi had said that he wanted Ryan to get about 50 at-bats in before the Yankees activated him off of the DL, and he's gotten around 40 now (about 20 in extended spring training games, and 21 in the rehab games), so he should be ready to go soon.

    The good thing about Ryan coming off the of the DL is that his defense is much better than Derek Jeter's, and Jeter sure has been struggling. Of course, Ryan is just the backup shortstop, so we won't see him in games too often, but he should be an upgrade over Dean Anna. The bad thing is that Ryan's return could mean less playing time for Yangervis Solarte or Kelly Johnson. While Solarte has served as the backup shortstop (only because there is no one else to use), he still has options. For some reason, Girardi insists on starting Brian Roberts at second base, despite the fact that Solarte and Kelly Johnson have both been playing better, but could this mean the end of Roberts? Johnson has barely played, but his home run yesterday and presence in the lineup today could mean something in that regard. Either way, it'll be nice to see Ryan healthy and on the field again.

    Yankees 1, Rays 5: CC did bad, offense did nothing

    $
    0
    0

    Bad.

    The story for CC Sabathia this season has generally been that he's had "one bad inning". That was not the story today. Today, Sabathia had multiple bad innings and couldn't even make it out of the fourth. And the offense seemed to be trying to match his mediocrity every step of the way. After scoring nine runs yesterday, the Yankees managed just one today as the Rays won 5-1.

    For the second straight game, the Rays got a run in the first inning. Logan Forsythe led off the game with a double. After Desmond Jennings bunted Forsythe over to third, Evan Longoria hit a ground-rule double to score Forsythe and make it 1-0.

    The Yankees got that run back in the bottom of the second. Mark Teixeira led off the inning with a single and moved to third when Alfonso Soriano doubled. A Kelly Johnson pop up couldn't get the run home, but a Yangervis Solarte fly out did. Teixeira was able to tag up and score, tying the game at one.

    However, the Rays would retake the lead in the top of the third. With one out in the inning, Jennings doubled to left. After an unintentional but also sorta intentional walk to Longoria, Myers came to the plate. Myers hit one towards the wall in right-ish center. Jacoby Ellsbury tried to make a catch against the wall, but the ball hit off the wall and caromed away from him and to right field. In the four hours it seemingly took Carlos Beltran to get to the ball and get it in, both runners has scored and Myers was able to come around and score himself for an inside-the-park home run. That gave the Rays a 4-1 lead.

    The Rays then added more in the top of the fourth. With one out, Forsythe and Jennings reached on back-to-back singles. Longoria then grounded into a force out, which could have been a double play, but CC didn't get to the bag in time for Solarte to make a throw over. That brought Myers to the plate again. This time, Myers doubled down the line in left. That scored Forsythe and made it 5-1. That would also be the end of Sabathia's day. He went just 3.2 innings allowing five runs on ten hits and a walk. He was bad. Alfredo Aceves was brought in to make his first appearance since returning to the Yankees. Aceves struck out Sean Rodriguez to escape further damage. In the top of the fifth inning, it appeared as if Aceves might have to come out after injuring himself, but after a lengthy delay, he remained in the game.

    Following that injury scare, Aceves was pretty good. He ended up pitching all the way through the ninth. He went 5.1 innings allowing no runs on three hits, while striking out five. Problem was, while that was happening, the Yankees' offense couldn't do a thing. The Yankees stranded several runners, most notably in the seventh, when they stranded two after having first and second with no one out. And the ninth inning would feature one more stranded runner as Grant Balfour finished off a 5-1 Rays' win.

    The Yankees will now head out to California to take on the Angels in a series starting tomorrow. David Phelps will get the start in the first game of the series, tomorrow at 10 eastern.

    Box score.

    The Yankees' run differential is ominous

    $
    0
    0

    The Yankees are again yielding more runs than they're scoring and that's not a good sign.

    After a promising start to the season, the Yankees slipped out of first place in the American League East on Friday night. The writing has been on the wall for a while, though, as a healthy dose of luck had been covering the Yankees warts up to this point. That writing comes in the form of the team's run differential which tells an ugly and familiar story for the balance of the season.

    Just like last year, the Yankees have scored far fewer runs than they have given up, and just like last year the situation doesn't seem that bad because their actual record is defying the odds. Using pythagorean expectation, which is based on run differential and is a better indicator of future performance than actual record, the Yankees are playing like a team that is 4 games below .500. So it looks like they should get used to not being in first place. But wait, it gets worse.

    This underwhelming performance has come against some of the easiest competition in Major League Baseball as the Yankees are tied for having the third lightest schedule in the league so far. Taking into account the double whammy of a poor run differential and an easy schedule, the case can be made that the Yankees are the third worst team in baseball right now. That's the conclusion that the Simple Rating System comes to which says that the Yankees are more than a run per game worse than the average team. Yuck.

    As always, there's a bit of a bright side to the unfortunate situation the Yankees are in going forward. The season is still very young which means the sample size we're looking at is small and prone to being skewed. In fact, this team has already had three blowout losses where they fell on the sword early and yielded a bunch of runs in garbage time. Those should fall in the skew category and probably will occur less frequently from here on out. Furthermore, as pointed out in this space last week, peripheral metrics for the Yankees point to them either maintaining or reaching an above average production in all three aspects of the game for the remainder of the season. So there's still plenty of time for them to turn their run differential around and get back to their winning ways.

    Series Preview: New York Yankees

    $
    0
    0

    Do not let a dreaded Sunday loss bring down your Monday! The Yankees roll into Anaheim as the Angels aim to start the week on a good note.

    The good news is that Jered and C.J. get the nod to take the hill for the first two games this week. But Hector Santiago is still seeking his first win in a Halo uniform in May. Fortunately another C.J., the massive C.J. Cron, is coming in to jolt this offense with some pop.

    May 5 7:05pm (64, partly cloudy) -- FOX Sports West, YES Network

    W-LERAWHIPKBB
    David Phelps0-03.861.457167

    W-LERAWHIPKBB
    Jered Weaver2-24.001.2222812

    May 6 7:05pm (65, partly cloudy) -- FOX Sports West, YES Network

    W-LERAWHIPKBB
    Hiroki Kuroda2-35.141.371257

    W-LERAWHIPKBB
    C.J. Wilson4-23.181.1094113

    May 7 7:05pm (61, partly cloudy) -- FOX Sports West, YES Network

    W-LERAWHIPKBB
    Vidal Nuno0-06.871.7451710

    W-LERAWHIPKBB
    Hector Santiago0-55.011.4542815

    Injury Report

    NameStatusEst. Return
    LAARyan Brasier (right elbow)
    Sean Burnett (left elbow)
    Kole Calhoun (right ankle)
    Dane De La Rosa (right s/c joint)
    David Freese (right middle finger)
    Josh Hamilton (left thumb)
    Brian Moran (left elbow)
    *Don Baylor (right leg)
    60-day DL
    15-day DL
    15-day DL
    15-day DL
    15-day DL
    15-day DL
    Season over
    Resting
    TBD
    TBD
    Mid May
    TBD
    Mid May
    Late May
    2015
    Guesses?
    NYYBruce Billings (right forearm)
    Francisco Cervelli (right hamstring)
    Ivan Nova (Tommy John)
    Michael Pineda (back)
    Brendan Ryan (cervical spine nerve)
    15-day DL
    60-day DL
    Season over
    Day-to-day
    15-day DL
    TBD
    Mid June
    2015
    Late May
    May

    By the way, much longer previews will return in two weeks when JDawg's semester ends. Let's have a great start to the week! Go Halos!

    Poll
    Monday night goes...

      56 votes |Results

    Viewing all 4714 articles
    Browse latest View live




    Latest Images