Showing posts with label 2003 World Series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2003 World Series. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Sully Baseball Daily Podcasts for August 14 (and 13) 2013

Today is a strange episode of The Sully Baseball Daily Podcast!

 I talk about the subconscious, the Pirates, Roger Clemens, a stool for a catcher and an odd orangutan reference.

Ryan Dempster, Paul Goldschmidt, Alfonso Soriano and Jose Fernandez all owned baseball on August 13, 2013.

And I forgot to post yesterday's podcast to the blog...



To see the up to date tally of "Who Owns Baseball?," click HERE.

Subscribe on iTunes HERE.

Sully Baseball Daily Podcast- August 12, 2013

Wednesday, April 04, 2012

Things that will be true if my Marlins pick is right
























I picked the Miami Marlins to win the 2012 World Series.

That is horrible news for Miami fans because I haven't picked a World Series winner correctly since 1999. (Like YOU picked the Cardinals last year!)

But if that does indeed turn out to be a correct pick, some eye popping statements would become true.

OZZIE GUILLEN WOULD BE PUTTING TOGETHER A COMPELLING HALL OF FAME ARGUMENT

If the 2012 Marlins win the World Series, assuming that Ozzie Guillen doesn't get fired in mid season, he would join Tony LaRussa and Sparky Anderson as the only managers to win the World Series in both the National League and the American League. Not bad company.

He would be only the 16th manager over all to take two different teams to the World Series, with such Hall of Famers as Joe McCarthy, Billy Southworth, Dick Williams and Leo Durocher.

Among current managers, he would be alongside Jim Leyland and Bruce Bochy as multi team pennant winners.

Now I don't think he's quite at Cooperstown level yet. But all he would need to do is pad his resume with a few more Division titles. As he stands now, he already has as many World Series titles as Durocher, Earl Weaver and Bobby Cox.

If Ozzie gets to Cooperstown, be prepared to have the seven second delay on his acceptance speech.


 THE MARLINS WOULD ENTER SOME SELECT COMPANY OF WORLD CHAMPIONS

How many franchises have won World Series in three consecutive decades?

The Yankees logged in six straight decades (20's, 30's, 40's, 50's, 60's and 70's). If they win one this decade, that will be another three in a row.

The Philadelphia A's won in the 1910s, 1920s and 1930s.

The St. Louis Cardinals won in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s.

The Orioles won in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.

And cousin, that is it. If the Marlins win this year, put their name on the Cadillac board.

THE MARLINS WOULD HAVE MORE TITLES THAN MORE FRANCHISES THAN ANY TRADITIONAL FRANCHISES

The Marlins not only broke the hearts of Indians fans in 1997 and Cubs fans in 2003, but as of this writing, they have matched those old franchises in titles. (The Cubs won in 1907 and 1908. The Indians in 1920 and 1948.)

The big market Mets? They only have two. The mighty Phillies? They just have two as well.

A third World Series title would match the total of the Senators/Twins franchise, the Orioles and the Boston/Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves.

Miami fans better realize how good they have it.

MIAMI COULD BE THE GLAMOR SPORTS SPOT

If the Marlins win... and eventually the Heat win... and the players see how hot they can get in Miami, then this could be the greatest era in South Florida sports.

Of course they would really love to see Dolphins win, but hey! If three franchises could win it all this decade, it would be quite an era!

And of course a Marlins World Series title could take a little pressure off the Heat and their promised 7 titles!

MERCHANDISE WILL BE SOLD!

The F hat and the teal never seemed to fly off the shelves.

So now there is orange, blue, black, white... all sorts of choices.

And that M which is at least one Font Size too big. But if they win it all, that crazy colorful look would be cool.

(Take note Astros and every team that goes for a boring traditional look!)


THESE MAY NOT BE ONE YEAR WONDERS

One reason why the Marlins haven't been able to build a passionate following despite two titles has been the fact that the teams were dismantled so quickly.

That and the fact that they played in a football stadium.

Well the stadium issue has been solved and the stability of the players could be too.

Guess what Hanley Ramirez, Jose Reyes, Gabby Sanchez, Giancarlo Stanton, Logan Morrison, Emilio Bonafacio and Josh Johnson all have in common?

They will all be under 30 NEXT year.

Jose Ceda and Christian Yelich aren't far behind. With the Phillies showing their age and the Nationals and Braves still developing, the Marlins could make a few October trips and have the fans actually remember their names.


THIS COULD BE THE BEGINNING OF A NEW BIG MARKET FRANCHISE

It wasn't that long ago that the Marlins were the poster child of small market teams that can't compete.

Now with a new stadium, new stars and a city ready to embrace baseball that stars would want to move to, they could be one of the big market franchises that makes baseball so unfair. (Would that make Jeffrey Loria a great owner or a crook, pocketing that revenue sharing dough?)

With the Mets rudderless, the Cubs many years away and uncertainty (if new optimism) Los Angeles and age creeping up on Philadelphia and a small window open for San Francisco, Miami could become THE big franchise in the National League.



Of course I am getting ahead of myself.
They actually have to WIN the World Series and my prediction will have to come true.
So let's start this season! First pitch in Miami is in a few hours (appropriately enough against the reigning World Champion Cardinals.)

Miami fans. Hope that I am right.




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Sunday, June 19, 2011

It's a lot like 1985 in Florida

OK... the Marlins finally did what I thought they should do. Edwin Rodriguez's managerial tenure ended.

Someone named Brandon Hyde managed today. Technically Hyde is the 6th manager that the Marlins have had since Jeffrey Loria took over the team in 2002.

I am guessing that there will be an 8th manager in 10 seasons.

But wait.

What's this coming from the woodwork?

Jack McKeon could be coming back!

Look, I know he showed up midway through the 2003 season and led the fish to the World Series title... but Jack McKeon was no spring chicken when he took over the Reds in 1997, let alone 2003!

He was 74 when he last managed in 2005.
That was 6 years ago.

He's an 80 year old man.

Seriously, why not sign Earl Weaver? He's still alive.

Suddenly the Marlins are reminding me of two of my favorite movies from 1985.

With McKeon they are going Back to the Future.

But McKeon could use something to make him young and vibrant. Well, Cocoon DID take place in Florida!

If I could have found a connection to Pee Wee's Big Adventure, then I would have hit the 1985 movies jackpot.

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Friday, March 25, 2011

Sully Baseball Salutes... Braden Looper

















Pitcher Braden Looper retired today after failing to land a roster spot with the Cubs. He probably won't get a prolonged farewell in baseball circles nor a big celebration of his career.

Chances are he'll clean out his locker, say good bye to some old friends and leave Arizona for his home in Illinois.

But the staff here at Sully Baseball thinks his career in baseball is worth a salute.

The Oklahoma native pitched in the 1996 Atlanta Olympic games and starred at Wichita State. He was drafted third overall that year (after Kris Benson and Travis Lee) and worked his way up the Cardinals system.

But because of the on going Florida Marlins firesale, he was sent packing to Miami in exchange for former World Series hero Edgar Renteria after the 1998 seasons. In his five seasons in Florida, he developed into a solid if not spectacular reliever and a part time closer.

Though he lost the closer job to Ugeth Urbina, Looper became a key contributor to the 2003 Marlins playoff push. In the Division Series, he was the winning pitcher when Pudge Rodriguez laced a 2 run 2 out walk off single in the 10th inning of Game 3. In the NLCS, he got the save for the marathon game 1. And when Alex Gonzalez hit the walk off homer in Game 4 of the 2003 World Series, Looper got the win.

In 2004 and 2005 he pitched for the Mets as their closer before returning to St. Louis in 2006. He vultured off 9 relief wins in 2006 and got the final outs in Game 1 of the 2006 World Series. After earning his second ring in four years, Looper became a starting pitcher for the first time in his big league career.

His best start came on June 11, 2008, when he got 5 first inning runs and cruised to a complete game, 3 hit, no walk 10-0 shutout of the Reds.

He last pitched in the big leagues in 2009 when he posted a respectable 14-7 record with the Brewers. But he threw to a 5.22 ERA and led the league in runs and homers allowed.

I urged the Twins to sign him last year
, but alas it never happened.

So now he hangs up his spikes. He never was an All Star but a lot of top 3 picks never pan out as major leaguers. (Just ask the Pirates.)

And he has wrapped up 12 full big league seasons (and a partial season in 1998). He saved 103 ballgames and earned over $20 million in the process.

Looper can go home to Illinois with his head high about his career. And he and his wife are raising three children, including a girl they adopted from China.

And if any of the kids ask about daddy's baseball career, he can slip on one his two World Series rings and tell them some tales.










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Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Some Green from the Teal - Giving the Florida Marlins some credit

It is easy to trash the fish for their cheap ways. But right now they are looking to make the NL East very very interesting in 2012.

The Marlins are indeed the strangest franchise in all of American sports. On the surface they look like a classic Quadruple A team like the Royals and Pirates. They trade veterans for prospects, turn those prospects into big league players and when they ask for too much money, ship them off for more prospects.

Along with playing in a football stadium that isn't designed for baseball and having it be either too hot or too rainy, the inability for Marlins fans to get emotionally attached to any player is as big a reason to why they have had trouble drawing over the years.

And yet there is something so different about the Marlins as compared to Kansas City and Pittsburgh.

First of all they can have winning seasons. The Marlins played their first game in 1993. The Royals and Pirates have combined for two winning seasons in that stretch, both by Kansas City. The Marlins have had 6 winnings seasons in the same stretch.

And of course they remain the only MLB franchise to have never lost a post season series. They are 6-0 in October, winning it all in 1997 and 2003.

This little franchise that could has as many World Series titles as the Mets, the Cubs, the Indians and the Phillies. They are one World Series title behind the Orioles, who have a history of putting consistent winners on the field during the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.

One thing they do better than Pittsburgh and Kansas City is they actually get VALUE back when they make trades. When I wrote the Home Grown vs. Acquired post for the Marlins, their home grown talent was minimal. But the players they picked up from other clubs were the backbone for their winning teams.

And I'm not just talking about the Pudge Rodriguezes and Moises Alous and Kevin Browns of the world who came in, won a ring and split.

Hanley Ramirez, Dan Uggla, Derek Lee, Brad Penny, Anibal Sanchez, Carl Pavano, Dontrelle Willis and Ricky Nolasco were all picked up and blossomed in Miami.

But their spending habits have been laughable. In 2006 their opening day payroll was $16 million... or $4 million less than what the Yankees paid Jason Giambi. The fact that Joe Girardi almost led that team to a winning record was all he needed to win Manager of the Year that year.

In 2008 they spent $22 million on players and had a winning season.
Imagine if their payroll went from "Laughable pathetic" to merely "Small." They probably could have won the Wild Card.

With the Players Association trashing their payroll and forcing the Marlins to spend a little bit, a refreshing picture is starting to emerge in South Florida that has nothing to do with LeBron James.

The Marlins are moving into their new tax payer sinkhole in 2012. And for the first time in their history, the Marlins will have a ballpark to call their own instead of feel like they are crashing on the Dolphins couch.

Miami fans will be able to know they will have decent seats, they won't be rained on and it won't be stifling with humidity.

In other words there will be an incentive to actually GO to the game.

And unless the Marlins trade off a lot of salary between now and 2012, guess who will be under contract and wearing teal?

Hanley Ramirez.
Josh Johnson.
Ricky Nolasco.
Anibal Sanchez.
Mike Stanton.
Gaby Sanchez.
Logan Morrison.
Chris Coghlan.
Chris Volstad.

That's a decent core with an MVP candidate, a Cy Young candidate and some good young pitchers and hitters.

And with Ricky Nolasco signing an extension this year to go along with Hanley Ramirez's extension and Josh Johnson's pact, the Marlins will have three solid players entering their 7th year with the team when they go into the new ballpark.

That's enough time to attach some emotion to a player.

Add to that the new revenue and the fact that Miami, with its many transplanted Northeasterners to go along with the Latin population, should be a baseball haven. And with some money, big free agents should want to live in the low taxed, glamorous Miami lifestyle playing in a low pressure environment.

By 2012 the Phillies juggernaut may be slowing down.
Jimmy Rollins will be a free agent and the Cliff Lees and Roy Halladays and Ryan Howards would all be deeper into their 30s.

2012 could also be the time that Stephen Strasburg and Bryce Harper are ready to shine in Washington. And the Braves are continuing to build on their strong core.

By then a young Marlins team with a burst of energy in the new ballpark and some more money to spend might just be ready to make their move.

And with their post season good fortune, they might indeed win another World Series title. (How would THAT sit with the Cubs and Indians fans of the world?)

So I give you credit, Marlins. You are operating in the Cleveland Indians mold from the mid 1990s. Put together a talented core and by the time you have a new ballpark and new fans filing in, give them a good product.

And before long, who knows? Maybe the Marlins will be one of those teams that people say "It isn't fair. They always out bid other teams on free agents!"

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Friday, December 17, 2010

Bobby jenks and his bond with Josh Beckett and Jonathan Papelbon
















Today the Red Sox took a flier on former White Sox pitcher Bobby Jenks for some bullpen depth. How could it hurt?

But as Jenks changes the color of his Sox, he has a unique bond with current Boston pitchers Josh Beckett and Jonathan Papelbon:

All three were the pitchers on the mound when their team won the World Series.

Beckett tagged out Jorge Posada on a little dribbler to end the 2003 World Series for the Marlins.

Jenks got Orlando Palmeiro to ground out to end the 2005 World Series for the White Sox.

And Papelbon struck out Seth Smith to end the 2007 World Seris for the Red Sox.

Personally, I can't think of anything cooler in all of sports than being the pitcher to end the World Series. More than a game winning home run. I used to reenact clinching a World Series as a pitcher on our front lawn... jumping up and being mobbed on the mound.

And I've written a few posts like this one and this one about my fascination with the pitcher who got the final out.

I can't help but wonder if they will talk about it amongst each other in spring training.

They MUST talk about it. Heck, that's how I would preface every sentence. "As a man who clinched the World Series... I will order the chicken salad."

Maybe that's just me.
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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Walk away if you win #28, Joe


Hey Joe Girardi… take a good long look at what has happened to the legacy of Joe Torre. Only Joe McCarthy and Casey Stengel had ever managed three straight World Series winners before Torre and he brought class and dignity to the Yankee clubhouse along with his titles.

And today he is being portrayed as a manipulator, a man with a tarnished legacy and even those are questioning whether he belongs in Cooperstown.

His very rings are being questioned since he couldn’t win a pennant in Atlanta nor in Los Angeles (not to mention with the Mets or Cardinals.)

Now imagine if Joe had left the Yankees after the 2001 season…
He would have been the greatest New Yorker since LaGuardia.

Imagine if he had left after the 2003 World Series…
He would have won 6 pennants in his 8 years and maintained superiority over Boston.

Imagine if he had left after the 2005 playoffs (when EVERYONE thought he was going to.)
Yeah the collapse of 2004 would have hung over his head, but the perception would have been George and company were meddling and undermining him.

Instead it ended after 2007… when with more control he couldn’t make it out of the Division Series, lost the respect of his superstar and left town co authoring a petty (albeit fun) book.

Learn from Mr. Torre. If the Yankees win the 2010 World Series title… BOLT TOWN!
Seriously… don’t wait around for your Yankee legacy to deteriorate.

You’ve shown you could manage when you took the 2006 Marlins team with a payroll under $30 million and kept them in the running for the Wild Card into September. You won a Manager of the Year award. You can do it.

So make your Yankee legacy this if you win it all:
2008 was an adjustment year followed by back to back World Series titles.
Leave a WINNER and finish with more World Series titles than Billy Martin at the helm.

Go home to Chicago. If you win the World Series there, do you know how you will be treated?

Me neither! NOBODY knows. The team hasn’t won it since the series was called the World’s Championship Series and it was still an experiment. Win in Chicago and your ticket to the Hall of Fame will already be punched.

Have some other poor shmuck take over the Yankees and deal with this nonsense.

Heck, Joe Torre is available!



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Sunday, August 08, 2010

I hope Carl Pavano's agent has a pair















Carl Pavano pitched a terrific game today against his former team, the Indians. He went 7 strong innings letting up only 2 earned runs. Along the way he won his 14th game (tied for most in the AL), lowered his ERA to a respectable 3.28 and his 1.08 WHIP is third in the league.

He is also in the top 5 in innings pitched and complete games.

And did tonight sporting a porn stache and wearing the uniform of the old Negro League St. Paul Black Gophers.

Carl Pavano will probably get a few points in the Cy Young vote this year.

And guess what? He's a free agent after this year.

Now I am not sure who his agent is right now. (Evidently he's changed representation a few times over the last few years.) But I remember one of his agents called him a 1 or 2 starter good for 200 innings a year as he was wrapping up his Yankee tenure where he made nine starts total over the final three years of the contract.

Well whoever is making calls for him now, I hope he has the stones to call the Yankees for a new contract after Pavano became the poster child for ill conceived gluttony by Steibrenner.

How amazing would that call to Brian Cashman be?

"I got a guy... he's a Cy Young caliber guy. He's a World Series winner. He's one of the top winners in the league and a HORSE. He's a perfect fit for the Yankees."

"Who is it?"

"Carl Pavano... hello?... HELLO?... I think we got cut off."

Getting TWO obscene contracts from the Yankees would have to be the agent's legacy.

How would it be any less likely than the Yankees trading to get BACK Javier Vazquez?

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Tuesday, November 03, 2009

Sully Baseball Presents THE BEST WORLD SERIES GAMES OF THE 2000s


The World Series has got a bad rap this decade.

Yes there were only 2 Game 7s the entire decade...
Yes there were three sweeps and three five game series.

The two Red Sox series were great for us Sox fans, but lacking in any real drama for other fans.

But a close look at some of the games played in the World Series this decade shows there was quite a bit of drama.

The White Sox may have swept the Astros in four games... but the last three games were all thrillers.

There were big hits from unlikely sources. Little regarded infielders like Jose Vizcaino, Alex Gonzalez, Geoff Blum and Mark Bellhorn all turned into late inning World Series heroes.

And the last walk off homer in a World Series game was hit by someone who had zero regular season homers that year.

The Red Sox and White Sox broke long curses. So did the Yankees (who consider a 9 year drought to be alarming.)

Each of the recent expansion teams (the Marlins, the Rockies, the Diamondbacks, the Rays) made the World Series... and two of the original expansion teams (the Angels and the Astros) finally made it all the way to the Series.

And proud franchises like the Cardinals and Phillies won again while the Tigers, Mets and Giants managed to return.

One team blew a 5-0 lead in a clinching game... one saw their best chance to tie the series end when their superstar was picked off of first...

And one series in 2001 was so exciting it briefly made people forget the horrors that hit the U.S. just a month and a half before.

Perhaps there was more excitement in the World Series than we originally remembered!

As started in the Best of 2000s Post Season Home Page, I am picking the best game for each game of the series... Best Game 1, Best Game 2... etc.

And when need be, I'll have some honorable mentions.



Best Game 1 of the World Series for the 2000s
2000 – Yankees 4 Mets 3 (12 innings)

The first Subway Series since 1956 started with a thriller... and a classic bonehead base running mistake that would haunt the Mets.

For the first five innings, Al Leiter and Andy Pettitte kept the game scoreless. In the sixth with two outs and Timo Perez on first, Todd Zeile hit a long drive that sure looked like a 2 run homer.

Perez thought it was gone as he celebrated rounding second. The problem was it hit the wall and left fielder David Justice threw to Derek Jeter who relayed to Jorge Posada, throwing out Perez to end the inning. That run off of the board would come back to haunt the Mets.

The Mets would take a 3-2 lead into the ninth when they did something that is always dangerous: They handed the lead to Armando Benitez. The Yankees loaded the bases with one out and by a miracle all they could do was tie the game on a sacrifice fly by Chuck Knoblauch.

The Mets couldn't get a base runner in extra innings while the Yankees stranded 5 runners in the 10th and 11th. With 2 outs and the bases loaded in the 12th, Jose Vizcaino became an unlikely World Series hero by singling home the winning run.

How could the series have unfolded differently if the Mets won the opener? I am sure Timo Perez and Armando Benitez think about that.

Honorable Mentions for Best Game 1 of the World Series for the 2000s


Barry Bonds finally got to play in a World Series game and he made the most of it. Leading off the second inning, Bonds crushed a homer off of Jarrod Washburn to give San Francisco the early lead. Reggie Sanders followed with a homer of his own.

For such a low scoring game, it was a slug fest. Troy Glaus hit two homers and J. T. Snow smacked a 2 run shot.

In the end, the Giants bullpen did the job with 3 1/3 no hit innings as San Francisco won their first World Series game in 40 years.


Just 2 days after the Aaron Boone game and just 4 days after the Steve Bartman game, two exhausted teams met to play the World Series.

Torre used Roger Clemens, Mike Mussina and David Wells in the Boone game and it wasn't clear who would get the ball in Game 1. It turned out to be Wells.

The Marlins used speed and little ball to push a pair of early runs across. Juan Pierre drove the Yankees crazy, scoring one in the first and driving in a pair in the fifth.

Somehow Brad Penny, Dontrelle Willis and Ugeth Urbina made those three runs stand up. The Yankees left runners in scoring position in the first, third, fourth, sixth, eighth and ninth innings.


After the Red Sox made it past the Yankees in the ALCS, overcoming the 3-0 hole, they jumped right into the World Series swinging. The had an early 7-2 lead over the Cardinals and it looked like a laugher.

But St. Louis, who had their own tough series against the Astros in the LCS, fought back and tied the game... first 7-7 and then 9-9, thanks in part to errors by Manny Ramirez on back to back plays in the 8th.

The Curse looked alive and well...

But in the 8th inning, Mark Bellhorn, who had homered in games 6 and 7 of the ALCS, hit a go ahead homer off of Julian Tavarez. Keith Foulke, the most underrated hero of the 2004 post season closed the game out and the Red Sox were off and running.


Best Game 2 of the World Series for the 2000s
The Astros looked to even the series in Chicago and took a 4-2 lead into the 7th inning thanks to a Lance Berkman 2 run double.

With 2 outs in the bottom of the 7th, the White Sox rallied, thanks to a hit by pitch credited to Jermaine Dye. If that pitch hit him, it hit a thread of a jersey sticking out a few inches... but Dye took first anyway.

Reliever Chad Qualls came in for Houston and Paul Kornerko hit his first pitch into the stands for a no-doubt-about-it Grand Slam that gave the White Sox the lead.

In the top of the 9th, the White Sox were one out away from winning when pinch hitter Jose Vizcaino (hero of Game 1 of the 2000 World Series) smacked a 2 run game tying single.

In the bottom of the 9th, Brad Lidge made his first appearance since letting up Albert Pujols' home run in the NLCS.

With one out he served up a walk off homer to Scott Podsednik that sent Chicago into hysterics.

It's one thing to let up a game winning shot to Albert Pujols, the best hitter in the game. It's another thing to let one up to Scott Podsednik, who had a grand total of ZERO home runs in the regular season.

It would not be the last time Brad Lidge lost a critical World Series game.


Honorable Mentions for Best Game 2 of the World Series for the 2000s



The drama in Game 2 of the 2000 World Series couldn't be found in the box score. The game ended up being a 1 run game, but that is because the Mets scored 5 in the top of the 9th, but never did have the tying run on base.

The real drama came in the first inning when Mike Piazza fouled a ball off Roger Clemens and the bat broke. The barrel of the bat flew out towards Roger Clemens and he then threw the bat back at Mike Piazza.

Or that is what he did if you saw the event with your two eyes and had a brain.

Roger Clemens claimed he didn't throw the bat at Piazza (even though he DID throw the bat at Piazza.) He had no shortage of excuses... He was throwing it back to the Mets dugout (even though he threw it in the direction of the Yankees dugout)... He thought it was the ball (????)

But of course the two had bad blood between them and of course he flung the bat back at him as a sort of "That's the BEST YOU CAN DO?" macho display.

Clemens managed to throw 8 innings of shutout ball that game. A lot of Met fans felt like he should have been tossed in that inning. It wasn't a pleasant series for Mets fans.



The Angels came out smoking in Game 2, knowing they could not be down 0-2 going back to San Francisco. They scored 5 runs in the first off of Russ Ortiz including a steal of home. But the Giants responded with 4 the next inning on back to back homers by Reggie Sanders and David Bell.

The two teams slugged it out, exchanging leads until the game was tied 9-9 with 2 outs in the bottom of the 8th. Tim Salmon crushed a tie breaking homer off of Felix Rodriguez giving the Angels the lead.

Barry Bonds hit one of the longest home runs you could ever imagine with 2 outs in the 9th to make it a 1 run game, but the Angels held on... and Giants fans have to wonder how the World Series would have been different if they won a game where they scored 10 runs!



I know it is difficult to remember, but there WAS tension in the 2007 World Series.

After the Game 1 blow out, the Red Sox looked to take complete control of the Series in Game 2. But the Rockies did ever so briefly what the Cardinals couldn't during the entire 2004 World Series: They took the lead... and they did it in the first.

And suddenly the Rockies looked like they might be making the Series interesting. If the Rockies won Game 2, then the Red Sox would be throwing an inconsistent Daisuke Matsusaka and young Jon Lester in Games 3 and 4... could the Rockies refind their winning ways?

The Red Sox tied the game and Mike Lowell's double gave the lead back to the Sox... but it remained a 1 run Red Sox lead when Hideki Okajima relieved Curt Schilling with 2 on and 1 out in the 6th.

Okajima retired all 7 batters he faced. But when Papelbon relieved Okajima in the 8th, Matt Holliday greeted him with a single. Todd Helton came up as the go ahead run... but Papelbon picked Holliday off at first base, ending the inning and the threat.

The Rockies played well in Games 3 and 4, but after the pick off the suspense was over. 2007 was the Red Sox year and they would complete the sweep 3 days later.




Best Game 3 of the World Series for the 2000s
2005 – White Sox 7 Astros 5 (14 innings)



The Astros turned to NLCS MVP Roy Oswalt to stop the White Sox and through 4 innings, it looked like he was up for the job.

Houston built up a 4-0 lead going into the 5th and looked like they were cruising. But the White Sox erupted for 5 runs in the fifth, highlighted by a lead off homer by Joe Crede and a two out, two run RBI double by A. J. Pierzynski.

Now the White Sox seemed poised to take a 3-0 series lead. But with 2 outs and nobody on in the 8th, the Astros rallied, highlighted by a 2 run Jason Lane double to tie the game.

Then the White Sox kept dodging bullets. El Duque Hernandez worked out of a bases loaded jam in the bottom of the 9th. The Astros left men in scoring position in the 10th and 11th and squandered a lead off walk in the 13th.

Finally in the 14th, with 2 outs and nobody on, reserve infielder Geoff Blum homered to right field to give the White Sox the lead. Chicago then tacked on a second run.

In the bottom of the 14th, the White Sox turned to Game 2 starter Mark Buehrle to close out the thriller and put the South Siders on the verge of a sweep.

Honorable Mentions for Best Game 3 of the World Series for the 2000s




The Yankees had won the last 10 World Series games played. They were on a 14 game World Series winning streak and after the gut wrenching Games 1 and 2 wins, they seemed ready to sweep the Mets.

El Duque Hernandez was 6-0 lifetime in the post season and ready to go in Game 3.

In the 6th, the Mets managed to tie the game 2-2 but left the bases loaded. In the 8th, Benny Agbayani doubled off of El Duque giving the Mets the lead. Of course Armando Benitez let up a lead off single in the 9th, but he held onto the win and the Mets had life.


With the series tied at 1 back in Miami, Mike Mussina and Josh Beckett locked up in a classic pitchers duel. Mussina let up 1 run over 7 innings, striking out 9 and walking only 1.

Beckett pitched 7 1/3 innings, letting up only 3 hits and striking out 10. But Derek Jeter knocked him out of the game with a double... and Jeter would come around to score the go ahead run with 2 outs on Hideki Matsui's single.

The Yankees would tack on four more runs to make the score seem more lopsided that it was. Beckett got the hard luck loss... but he would get revenge later.


45 year old Jamie Moyer made his first ever World Series start count. He pitched into the 7th inning and left as the potential winning pitcher as the game went into the 8th.

But then Tampa Bay's B. J. Upton basically decided to tie the game by himself. He beat out a grounder to shortstop, stole second and scored when he stole third and the throw got away.

In the bottom of the 9th, the Phillies rallied without hitting the ball out of the infield.

A hit batsman, a wild pitch and an error by the catcher put Phillies left fielder Eric Bruntlett on third with nobody out.

Two intentional walks later, Grant Balfour faced Phillies catcher Carlos Ruiz who tapped weakly to third base. Evan Longoria's throw home sailed high and Bruntlett scored the winning run, putting Philadelphia up 2-1 in the series.


Best Game 4 of the World Series for the 2000s
2003 – Marlins 4 Yankees 3 (12 innings)

Thanks to Miguel Cabrera's first inning home run, the Marlins jumped on Roger Clemens early and took a 3-0 lead. Clemens settled down to pitch 7 strong innings and the fans in Miami gave him a prolonged standing ovation, knowing that this was probably the end of his career.

(He would pitch 4 more seasons.)

Carl Pavano pitched 8 masterful innings and the Marlins got to one strike away from tying the series at 2 each. But Ruben Sierra hit a game tying triple in the 9th, sending the game into extra innings.

Joe Torre opted not to use Mariano Rivera until the game became a save situation. Jose Contreras threw 2 shutout innings. Jeff Weaver, who hadn't pitched in 28 days, came in amd allowed a walk off homer to Alex Gonzalez.

Instead of a 3-1 series lead, the Yankees were in a 2 game tie. The decision to use Weaver would be mentioned as one of his biggest managerial blunders.

Honorable Mentions for Best Game 4 of the World Series for the 2000s


2001 – Yankees 4 Diamondbacks 3 (10 innings)

The first inkling that the 2001 World Series was going to be really special happened in Game 4. Oh sure, Game 3 was a tight game and the appearance of W. throwing out the first pitch at Yankee Stadium was great... but there was still a sense that the Yankees wouldn't be able to win with Johnson and Schilling pitching.

And it sure looked like that was the case in Game 4, the first World Series game ever played on Halloween. Schilling was tremendous for 7 innings, letting up only 1 run, striking out 9 and walking 1.

The Diamondbacks handed closer Byung-Hyun Kim a 3-1 lead with 2 outs and 1 on in the 9th, it looked like the Yankees were going to go down 3 games to 1 in the series.

Then Tino Martinez unloaded on a two out pitch and homered to center, tying the game. Kim managed to wiggle out of more trouble in the 9th but Derek Jeter's 2 out homer in the 10th after midnight won the game and tied the series, making him Mr. November.

Clearly a great series was brewing.


The Angels, behind Troy Glaus, looked like they were poised to take a 3-1 series lead. Glaus' homer gave the Halos an early 3-0 lead. But the Giants fought back to tie the game on Benito Santiago's RBI single in the 5th.

Francisco Rodriguez, the mysterious rookie that nobody could hit all post season, was brought in to pitch the 8th with the score tied. The Giants figured him out with two singles and a passed ball, giving the Giants a 4-3 lead.

In the 9th, the Angels put the tying run on, but Robb Nen induced Brad Fullmer to hit into a game ending double play, tying the World Series at 2 wins apiece.


When Johnny Damon hit a lead off homer to start the game, it was clear the Red Sox were hell bent to close the World Series out without any more delay. Derek Lowe pitched 7 shutout innings and Trot Nixon added two more runs to give the Sox some breathing room.

Then Keith Foulke came in and shut down the Cardinals... and we Red Sox fans finally got to see something we were never sure we were actually going to see: A Red Sox World Series celebration.

It seemed like a once in a lifetime celebration and we may have partied too much for your liking.

I don't care.

It was a great night, if not actually a great ballgame.




The Astros, barely clinging to life down 3-0, turned to Brandon Backe to save the World Series. He held his end of the bargain, throwing 7 innings of shutout ball, letting up 5 hits with no walks.

The problem for Houston was Freddy Garcia, a former Astros farmhand, was shutting them down as well. He kept the Astros off the board over his 7 innings of work, including striking out Jason Lane with the bases loaded in the 6th.

In the 8th inning, Brad Lidge was brought into the game. He let up a lead off hit to Willie Harris and two batters later Jermaine Dye singled him home for the game's first run.

The Astros put runners on the corners in the 8th but couldn't score.

In the 9th, with a runner on, Division Series hero Chris Burke hit a foul pop that White Sox shortstop Juan Uribe caught with a spectacular play into the stands.

Pinch hitter Orlando Palmeiro then hit a grounder to Uribe and was thrown out by a step to give the White Sox the sweep.

The City of Chicago finally had a World Series winner... and to the delight of White Sox fans, it wasn't the Cubs!



The heavily favored Tigers were down 2-1 in the series but took an early 3-0 lead off of NLCS hero Jeff Suppan. But Yadier Molina's double cut the lead to 3-2.

In the 7th, Curtis Granderson slipped on the wet Busch Stadium grass and allowed David Eckstein's fly ball to drop into a double. He would score when Detroit pitcher Fernando Rodney threw away So Taguchi's bunt (yet another error by a Tigers pitcher.) Preston Wilson would single home the go ahead run on a play where Albert Pujols was thrown out at third to end the inning.

In the 8th, the Tigers rallied with a Pudge Rodriguez lead off double and a Brandon Inge game tying double.

In the bottom of the 8th it was the Cardinals turn to rally. Yadier Molina led off the inning with a walk and with two outs David Eckstein again came through, this time with an RBI double.

The Tigers went down 1-2-3 in the 9th to give St. Louis a stunning 3-1 series lead.



Down 2-1 in the series and facing CC Sabathia in Game 4, the Phillies were in a very bad spot. And it looked even worse when the Yankees took a 4-2 lead into the 7th.

Chase Utley hit his third homer off of Sabathia to make it a 1 run game but the Phillies still trailed by a run with 2 outs and 2 strikes in the 8th.

But then Pedro Feliz hit a game tying homer off of Joba Chamberlain that made every Phillies fan think the same thing at the same moment:

"If the Phillies could hold the Yankees scoreless in the 9th, then they could win the game with a run in the bottom of the 9th... and have Cliff Lee pitching Game 5... and the Phillies could be up 3 games to 2 going back to New York."

Brad Lidge got the first two outs in the 9th and had 2 strikes on Johnny Damon... who... just... kept... fouling... off... pitches.

Finally Damon plunked a single into left. And then stole second... and realized nobody was covering third and took off for third.

Then Lidge hit Mark Teixeira... and every Phillies fan all started gulping at the same time.
A-Rod doubled home the go ahead run and Jorge Posada singled home two more.

With the Yankees up by three with Rivera on the mound, that potentially magical 9th inning turned into a 1-2-3 formality, and the Phillies best chances were dashed.


Best Game 5 of the World Series for the 2000s
2001 – Yankees 3 Diamondbacks 2 (12 innings)



On the heels of the startling Game 4 win by the Yankees, a decision by Arizona manager seemed to doom his club.

He pitched Curt Schilling on short rest in Game 4 hoping to put the series away. But with the blown save, he was now starting Miguel Batista with the series deadlocked.

As it turned out, Brenly's decision didn't backfire. Batista was tremendous, pitching shut out baseball into the 8th.

Once again the Diamondbacks gave Kim a 2 run lead in the 9th. Once again the Diamondbacks were one out away from winning their third game and sending the series back to Arizona where a rested and ready Randy Johnson was waiting to clinch the World Series.

There was no way the Yankees could do it again, could they?

Yup. Scott Brosius took the hero role this time and clubbed a game tying shot. As a Red Sox fan, I always hated Brosius. But with some distance (and the 2004 and 2007 Series to mollify me) I can admit his reaction was perfect. He couldn't believe he did what he did.

The Yankee bench couldn't believe it. The place wasn't so much cheering as they were reeling in disbelief. My friend, the great writer Adam Felber, was at the game and he said the people around him almost couldn't let themselves believe the Yankees did it in back to back nights.

After that, the rest of the game was a formality. The Yankees would win when Alfonso Soriano singled home Chuck Knoblauch. Now the World Series had entered the "All Time Great" category... and there would be one more heart stopper to come.

Honorable Mentions for Best Game 5 of the World Series for the 2000s


The Mets pinned their slim World Series hopes on the arm of Al Leiter, and manager Bobby Valentine seemed willing to lead on Al until his arm fell off.

The Mets took a 2-1 lead into the 6th when eventual World Series MVP Derek Jeter homered to tie the game.

Leiter looked ready to send the game into the bottom of the 9th tied when he struck out the first two batters in the top of the 9th. Then the roof caved in.

Posada walked on a full count and Scott Brosius walked. Then on Leiter's 142nd pitch Luis Sojo of all people singled home Posada with the go ahead run and Jay Payton's bad throw allowed Brosius to score.

The Mets brought up Mike Piazza in the bottom of the 9th as the tying run and he hit a ball to the deepest part of the ballpark where Bernie Williams tracked it down to give the Yankees the World Series title.




Down 3-1 in the Series, the Tigers looked defeated. They were making errors and throwing wild pitches and looked flat. Then Sean Casey launched a 2 run homer, briefly giving the Tigers the lead.

But yet another error by a Tiger pitcher (this time Justin Verlander) put runs on the board and helped give St. Louis the lead right back.

The 5th game became a validation of Jeff Weaver's strange up and down career. Labeled a loser in New York and cut by the Angels earlier in 2006, Weaver was masterful in the clinching game. He threw 8 solid innings, letting up only 4 hits and 1 earned run while striking out nine.

In the 9th, Adam Wainwright pitched around a walk and a double to strike out Brandon Inge and give the Tony LaRussa led Cardinals an unlikely World Series title.


In terms of elapsed time from first pitch to last pitch, this was easily the longest World Series game ever played. According to baseball-reference.com, the game lasted 3 hours and 28 minutes.

But that is not taking into account the fact that the game started on October 27th and ended on October 29th.

With rain in the forecast, Game 5 went on as planned with NLCS MVP Cole Hamels up against All Star Scott Kazmir. The two teams played in ridiculously wet conditions and a delay seemed inevitable and a shortened game seemed possible.

Could the World Series be clinched on a rain shortened game?

We'll never know because almost right after the Rays tied the game in the 6th, the tarp came out and the game was delayed... almost on cue from a commissioner who didn't want to see a 6 inning final game of the World Series.

Bud Selig suspended the game, citing a rule that existed only in his mind, and we all had to wait.

2 days later, the two finished the World Series in a Reader's Digest version of baseball. With the game resuming in the bottom of the 6th, Geoff Jenkins doubled and scored on a Jayson Werth single.

But Rocco Baldelli homered to tie the game again and preventing Cole Hamels from getting his second World Series win. In the 7th, Carlos Ruiz singled home Eric Bruntlett to give the Phillies the lead.

The Rays tried to rally in the 9th but with 2 on,Eric Hinske struck out to end the series. My wife thought he looked feeble at the plate.

Philadelphia went into a great celebration... 48 hours after first pitch!



The Phillies were clinging to life in Game 5, down 3-1. Chase Utley's 5th home run, matching Reggie Jackson's 1977 total, gave Philadelphia a 3-1 lead in the first inning. And a big rally in the 3rd inning made the score 6-1 Phils with Cliff Lee on the mound. The score was 8-2 going into the 8th and Charlie Manuel thought the game was so well in hand that he replaced Shane Victorino with Ben Francisco.

But these were the Yankees and no lead would be safe. A-Rod doubled home two off of Cliff Lee in the 8th and the Yankees would cut the lead to 8-5.

In the 9th, Manuel did not hand the ball to Lidge but rather to Ryan Madson, who let up a double and a single to the first two batters he faced. The tying run came to the plate with nobody out.

Jeter hit into a run scoring double play, but Johnny Damon singled bringing Teixeira to the plate as the tying run.

Madson got Teixeira out swinging, leaving A-Rod on deck and sending the series back to New York... where the Yankees would clinch in game 6.

Best Game 6 of the World Series for the 2000s

In many ways as cruel a game to tortured fans as Game 6 of the 1986 World Series was to Red Sox fans and Game 7 of the 1997 World Series was to Cleveland Indian fans.

The Giants were up 3-2 going back to Anaheim and looked ready to FINALLY win their first World Series since coming over to California in the 1950s.

And early on, the game looked more like a coronation than a contest.

Veteran Shawon Dunston homered giving the Giants an early lead. Bonds hit a monstrous homer off of Francisco Rodriguez and the Giants went into the 7th with a 5-0 lead and Russ Ortiz dealing.

And my dad, as big a Giants fan as you will ever meet, was sitting in Scotland listening to the game.

In the 7th with 1 out and 2 on, Dusty Baker took Ortiz out... then stopped and gave him the game ball, as if the game was already won.

Baaaaaaad idea Dusty.

Scott Spiezio fouled off about 400 pitches before hitting arguably the most underrated homer in World Series history. It literally changed the tone of the game and series and direction of both franchises with one swing.

It didn't give the Angels the lead... nor tie the game... or even make it a 1 run game.
But suddenly a 5-0 laugher was a 5-3 game... and there was a sudden feeling of desperation in the Giants dugout.

Darin Erstad hit a homer to lead off the 8th to make it 5-4. Then the Angels put the tying and go ahead runs on base with nobody out in the 8th. Robb Nen was called in to get a 6 out save, but he was in an impossible situation.

Troy Glaus doubled home both runs to give the Angels a 6-5 lead. But there was one more obstacle for Angels closer Troy Percival: Avoid Bonds in the 9th.

The Giants needed two base runners to get to Bonds... but Percival got them 1-2-3, forcing a game 6 and crushing Giant fans from San Francisco to Scotland.

Honorable Mention for Best Game 6 of the World Series for the 2000s



Leading the series 3-2, Marlins manager Jack McKeon gambled big time on Game 6. He threw Josh Beckett on short rest. If Beckett lost, he would throw Mark Redman in Game 7 of the World Series in Yankee Stadium. If Redman lost Game 6, then Beckett would throw Game 7 on full rest.

It seemed like the risk outweighed the reward.

The point was moot. Beckett was outstanding, throwing his second complete game shutout of the post season.

The Marlins rallied with 2 outs and nobody on in the 5th to push a run across Andy Pettitte and added another one in the 6th thanks to a Derek Jeter error.

Beckett retired the last nine batters he faced including Jorge Posada who grounded back to the mound and Beckett tagged him out.

Appropriately enough, Beckett ended the World Series unassisted.


Best Game 7 of the World Series for the 2000s
After Randy Johnson and friends blew out the Yankees in Game 6, the Series went the distance... as was fitting.

Also fitting was the fact that two aces were facing off. Eventual Cy Young winner Roger Clemens with playoff hero Curt Schilling.

Clemens struck out 10 in 6 1/3 innings. He left with the score tied 1-1.

Schilling pitched 7 1/3 innings, striking out 9, but letting up a solo homer to Alfonso Soriano in the 8th that gave the Yankees a 2-1 lead. Arizona manager Bob Brenly brought Randy Johnson out of the bullpen on no days rest to get the Diamondbacks out of more trouble in the 8th.

But by then it was too late. The Yankees had brought in Mariano Rivera for a 2 inning save on three days rest. Rivera got through the 8th and went to the 9th... poised to send a post September 11th New York into delirium and be the first team since the 1949-1953 Yankees to win 4 World Series in a row.

Mark Grace led off the 9th with a single. Then Damian Miller hit a ball back to Rivera that looked like it might have been a double play... but Rivera threw the ball into center field.

Was it possible? Could Rivera blow a game?

The next play was a Jay Bell bunt that Rivera fielded and threw to third for the out. Yankee fans (and evidently some Yankees) thought Brosius should have thrown to first to get the double play.

The very next batter was Tony Womack who doubled into right field. For a moment, I thought it was going to score both the tying and winning runs. Instead it tied the game. Womack's hit should be ranked as one of the most underrated in World Series history.

After Rivera hit Craig Counsell, Luis Gonzalez came up with the infield drawn in. Well we all know what happened. In fact Tim McCarver knew it was going to happen BEFORE it happened.

Gonzalez hit a floater over Jeter's head and the mighty Yankees were toppled.

The winner was baseball as the 2001 World Series has to be on anyone's short list for greatest World Series of all time.


Honorable Mention for Best Game 7 of the World Series for the 2000s


Lest we forget... the Giants had a Game 7 to play right after blowing the 5-0 lead in Game 6. And they took an early 1-0 lead.

But Dusty Baker's decision to start Livan Hernandez over Kirk Reuter proved to be disastrous. Hernandez looked awful over the first two innings and only a base running blunder by David Eckstein kept the Angels from scoring more than 1 run in the first 2 innings. Hernandez clearly shouldn't have pitched the third... or at least be lifted if he let up a base runner.

Instead he loaded the bases with nobody out... and then let Garret Anderson unload them with a bases clearing double. In the end, he didn't record an out in the inning. Kirk Reuter would come in the next inning and throw 4 innings of 1 hit shut out ball... but by then it was too late.

John Lackey pitched into the 6th and the bullpen did the rest. When Troy Percival got Kenny Lofton to fly out in the bottom of the 9th, the Angels won their first ever World Series... and the Giants had to ponder "What if?"



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Wednesday, July 01, 2009

17 years later... the Marlins break ground on a new park















The Marlins were supposed to play a few years in Joe Robbie Stadium before moving into a baseball park when they were formed in 1993.

And I guess they did only play a few seasons at Joe Robbie... from 1993 to 1996.

Then from 1997 to 2005 they played in Pro Player Stadium.

Then from 2006 to earlier this year they were in Dolphin Stadium.

And now they are in LandShark Stadium.

Of course they haven't MOVED! The park has been renamed over and over again.

But lo and behold either they are truly building a new ballpark or someone at the Marlins PR department hired a dude in a tractor for good press.

Hey a new ballpark could be great news for Marlins fans. They could add to their World Series totals which right now tie the output of the Indians, the Phillies and the Cubs (and they all had a 90 year headstart on World Series play.)

The best news for Marlins fans, of course, is they played the Nationals again.

Man they look like pennant contenders when they play Washington!

Monday, June 01, 2009

Cleveland Fans... MOVE TO FLORIDA!



























There are many reasons to move to Florida.

The sunshine... the affordable housing... the wonderful collection of loons that populate the state... easy to comprehend ballots...

But add to that list "Championship caliber sports" almost no matter what kind of sport you follow.

We Boston fans can be a little obnoxious in claiming this decade for ourselves in terms of sports titles.

Detroit fans can crow a lot with the Red Wings halfway to their third Stanley Cup this decade to go with an NBA Title for the Pistons and the 2006 AL Pennant for the Tigers.

But for the joy of rooting for a winner (a feeling that is delayed for 4 1/2 decades and counting in Cleveland) where can you find more winners and in more different categories than Florida this decade?


The Florida State Seminoles won the 2000 Sugar Bowl for the BCS Title
The University of Miami Hurricanes won the 2002 Rose Bowl for the BCS Title
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers won Super Bowl XXXVII in 2003.
The Florida Marlins won the 2003 World Series
The Tampa Bay Lightning won the 2004 Stanley Cup
The Miami Heat won the 2006 NBA Finals
The University of Florida Gators won the 2006 and 2007 Division 1 Basketball Title.
The University of Florida Gators won the 2007 and 2009 BCS Title

And some other highlights

The Florida State Seminoles played in the 2001 Orange Bowl for the BCS Title but lost
The University of Miami Hurricanes played in the 2003 Fiesta Bowl for the BCS Title but lost
The Tampa Bay Rays won the 2008 AL Pennant but lost the World Series to the Phillies.

And now the Orlando Magic has made it all the way to the NBA Finals.

Practically the only Florida team that HASN'T had a highlight has been the most famous Florida team, the Miami Dolphins.

(OK, fine... the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Florida Panthers haven't booked a parade route recently.)

I guess the best advice I can give to Cleveland fans is this...

Move to Florida!

Remember that 1997 World Series and 2009 Eastern Conference Final that put a bad taste in your mouth?

In Florida, those were HAPPY occasions!

Not convinced?

Here's winter in Cleveland.











Here's winter in Florida.














See the difference?

Come on. Book a flight.


Thursday, May 21, 2009

Folks... this is why you pay Joe Torre the big bucks

I know a lot of Yankee fans have been critical of Joe Torre's managing abilities. 

And truth be told, his skills as an in game strategist sometimes leaves a lot to be desired. 

But I always felt his greatest strength was to keep outside problems out of the clubhouse, unite a team against distractions and keep the cart moving even as the dogs bark.

Well, let's just say he is earning every cent of his three year $13 million contract this year!

When the whole Manny thing exploded on May 7th, I said the NL West was going to get interesting and that Joe would have to work his magic.

So how have the Dodgers done since their biggest star was removed from the lineup, sending L.A. into turmoil and making the NL West wide open?

The Dodgers lost 4 of the first 5 games without Manny... and are 6-1 since.

Their 8 1/2 game lead (7 in the loss column) is more than twice as big as the next widest Division Lead.

They are winning with clutch pitching and timely hitting. And they are beating teams like the Phillies, Marlins and Mets... teams with talent.

In other words the team is focused.

And the team isn't saying "Woe is me, we lost Manny."

THAT is the value of Joe Torre.

Yes, he shouldn't have had Jeff Weaver pitch in the World Series game in 2003. But he's a Hall of Famer. I stand by that.

Even the Padres can see that as they are starting their fire sale early.

This West is all but won.


Thursday, April 09, 2009

The Pros and Cons about being Carl Pavano


























The Good Things About Being Carl Pavano:

- You get to, at least for the time being, show up to work as a Major League Baseball player.

- You have won a World Series ring. And that 2003 ring with the Marlins was earned with an 8 inning 1 run performance in the Game 4 win.

- You were once traded for Pedro Martinez.

- You had the good timing of having your best season before your free agency walk season. (That's some coincidence!) 18-8 and a 3.00 ERA in 2004.

- You also timed your free agency when the Yankees and Red Sox were coming off of back to back classic ALCS match ups and were trying to one up each other. You cashed that into a 4 year $39.95 million deal with the Yankees.

- Your most recent agent has huge stones calling you a "1-2 starter" and a 200 innings guy.

- You have had sex with Alyssa Milano.




The Bad Things About Being Carl Pavano:



- That trade involving Pedro Martinez is considered to be one of the most lop sided deals in history... and not because you were so good.

- Not only were you in one of the most lopsided trades ever, but your contract with the Yankees was considered to be so bad that it is on the shortlist for worst free agent signings ever.

- You were so hated in New York that the Yankees made no attempt to mask their contempt for you. Joe Torre trashing you in his book wasn't even remotely surprising.

- Between June 27, 2005 and August 23, 2008, you threw 11 1/3 innings for the Yankees while cashing over $27 million in checks over that period of time. His agent calls him a 200 inning guy? Over how many seasons?

- Your agent might have some serious onions to call you a #1 starter... but he wasn't good enough to squeeze the last $50,000 out of the contract to make it an even $40 million.

- You might not be cashing many more big league checks. Your first outing for Cleveland today was a 1+ inning, 9 run, 2 homer horror show. 

- Alyssa Milano implied you were not well endowed. (You probably had to go on the DL with her too!)



THE VERDICT

IT'S GOOD TO BE CARL PAVANO

The good outweighs the bad...
Besides, isn't making millions of dollars a year while not working kind of the American dream?

That and shacking up with Alyssa Milano