All hail Helen!!

All hail Helen!!
Helen Carmona and your humble blogger

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Yanks fall, but A-Rod on track for 81 homers

Fans will see more of the same after Wednesday

Last night's game seems a fitting sequel to Opening Night, because it's likely Yankee fans can expect a little of both this season.

Whereas the opener provided a paint-by-numbers template of the ideal Yankee game -- the Wang-Joba-Mariano pitching combo working to near-perfection -- last night's 5-2 setback provided what's more likely to happen between Wang's starts: nail-biting pitching, roll-the-dice defense, and the occasional home run to keep things manageable.

Grades

Mike Mussina: Despite the loss, Yankee fans will take what they got from Mussina (he wasn't god-awful, as many feared he might be). Moose was sturdy through five and two-thirds innings; only the Vernon Wells home run in the third inning made him look like the Moose of 2007.

Mussina got a lot of help from double plays (the Yankees turned five on the night, three with Mussina on the hill), and occasionally got a generous strike call at the plate from umpire Jerry Meals. A Jason Giambi error to open the game was a bad omen, and the Jays did score two runs in the inning, but by and large Moose managed the trouble spots without letting the game get out of hand.

For the night, 62 of his 91 pitches found the plate, so, if he was not spectacular, he was at least efficient, which is about all Yankee fans want from him in 2008.

Grade: a solid B

The Bullpen: LaTroy Hawkins made his first appearance, and wasn't terrible. He got a one-pitch out in relief of Moose to end the sixth, then allowed two hits and gave up a run in the seventh. Kyle Farnsworth relieved in the eighth and allowed two hits, the second a Lyle Overbay triple that probably should have been caught by Melky Cabrera at the centerfield wall. Farnsworth stranded Overbay by striking out Aaron Hill to end the inning. In the ninth, Ross Ohlendorf opened by nailing Marcos Scutaro, but got out of the inning behind New York's fifth double play of the night.

All in all, little harm was done, which is what these three guys are there to do. But Hawkins brings the grade down a half-notch, but only just. His 14-for-16, stikes-to-pitches-thrown ratio was astounding.

Grade: a workmanlike B-

Defense: Five double plays kept this game from being (at least) 8-2 instead of 5-2. Those five, flawless turns alone would warrant an A+, but Giambi's opening error -- booting a grounder from David Eckstein, then deciding too late not to toss it to a covering Mussina and being beaten to the bag by a hustling Eckstein -- got the ball rolling for Toronto. Giambi nearly made a similar gaffe later on, but recovered and made the out. His one redeeming moment came in the fifth when he kept his toe on the bag while diving to the dirt to snag an errant throw from Derek Jeter. The ensuing out ended the inning, giving Mussina his only three-up, three-down frame.

Elsewhere, Melky Cabrera failed to produce the highlights of Opening Night, which can't be expected every game. But on Overbay's triple, Cabrera wasn't under the ball the way he could have been.

And finally, Abreu's throw to the plate in the seventh was....... off line, just a tad. Ugly, is what it was.

Grade: the five DPs can't be ignored; A-

The Offense: A-Rods' home run was the single highlight, as Jays starter A.J. Burnett was sizzling Wednesday night. The Yankees managed six singles, but never strung together more than two in a row. Jason Giambi's ninth-inning fly would have tied the game at 5-all, but a wind in excess of 20 mph kept the ball on the warning track in left center.

On the bases, Abreu was caught stealing in the first inning, and in the fourth, Jeter was thrown out at second trying to advance after a throwing error allowed him to reach first. Manager Joe Girardi's take-the-extra-base policy needs a little fine-tuning.

Not a terrible night, but not the opportunistic Yankees we'll probably see by the end of the month. And several of the seven strikeouts were just plain awful to watch.

Grade: a wobbly C.

Manager: With Giambi semi-struggling in the field, why not bat Shelley Duncan or Morgan Ensburg against the right-handed Brian Tallet in the seventh inning? Giambi was 0-for-3 with two strikeouts against Tallet, and he whiffed again Wednesday night.

And letting Jeter try for second after the throwing error...? That ball that got away was not of the kind that would allow Jeter to make that turn successfully. Technically, it's Tony Pena's job to be on top of that situation, but the buck stops with the big man.

Otherwise, not much Girardi could do to overcome Burnett's efficiency.

Grade: B

5 comments:

Harry Steers said...

I agree with most of your analysis. With respect to Girardi, I think he is still finding his place. I sort of admire the "extra base" attitude. Kind of reminds me of the Billy Martin days. But, that being said, we need to be a little sharper.

Wolf Williams said...

First, thanks for commenting. This is a new blog, and I have no real traffic as of yet. But thanks for paying a visit.

Second, I LOVE the extra-base attitude. I think it's just going to take a little time for us to figure out what to do with it. Right now, it seems as if the players have a new toy and want to see if they can break it. But I dig the full-speed-ahead policy.

Finally.... any suggestions for the blog? It's my first, and I just do stuff that I like to read. I'm curious what other fans look for.

Again, a sincere thanks.

Harry Steers said...

Your blog caught my attention and I think it will catch others. I am sort of in the same situation as you... new blogger and all. My goal is to make a comment after each game. Not sure if it will happen but everyone needs a goal, right? I welcome you to check out what I write (nyy15.blogspot.com) although for some reason unknown to me my blog got tagged as spam and is currently locked. Should be back up in a few days though.
My advice would be to write about yours thoughts and like you said, "stuff you like to read". Your audience will find you. I did. I even subscribed to you... so keep writing dammit! I think it is awesome that I can connect with a Yankee fan in Taiwan!
Looking forward to Tampa this weekend. I will be in attendance tomorrow if it doesn't rain.
Be well.

Wolf Williams said...

I'll be looking forward to your blog opening up again... And I'll happily add it to my blogroll here.

I'm so damned jealous you get to see games at the Stadium. I would say have a beer for me, but what's a beer these days, $20....? I guess it's cheaper just to have you throw an ice cube at a Red Sox fan.... for me, of course.

Cheers, and see you on the blogs.

Go, Yanks!

Anonymous said...

Your blog keeps getting better and better! Your older articles are not as good as newer ones you have a lot more creativity and originality now keep it up!