Of the Yanks five latest October underachieving moments, this one might have
been the toughest to swallow. After all, the Halos had lost their ace, Bartolo Colon, to a
shoulder injury after the first inning in Game 5, leaving the $205 million All-Stars to
feast on a 22-year-old rookie who hadnt pitched in relief all season. All they did
against someone named Ervin Santana was score three runs over 5 1/3 innings, while the
Yankees pseudo-ace Mike Mussina was knocked out in 3 1/3 innings, rocked for five
runs and six hits.
Yankee fans love to talk about A-Rod, Jeter, Giambi, Sheffied and
Matsui as being the next Murderers Row at the plate, but they fail to mention the aspect
that, as the old saying goes, wins championships: Defense. In this series it proved to be
the difference maker, playing a key role in Games 2 and 5
both Angel victories.
The Bombers could have put a stranglehold on this series by winning
Game 2
a game they had a 2-0 lead and were cruising in going into the sixth, but
three unearned runs given up in the next two innings, including a Bill Buckner moment by
Alex Rodriguez, opened the flood gates in a 5-3 Angel victory.
Game 5 ended with the same result and in very much in the same
fashion. Again, the Yankees held a 2-0 lead, but once again defense played a key role:
This time by a game-changing playa replay that you may have seen 100 times by
nowof Gary Sheffield and Bubba Crosby colliding in right centerfield chasing a fly
ball that likely would have been caught if there was any communication between the two. By
the time the two untangled after the crash, the scoreboard read 3-2 for the home team.
Down 5-3 in the ninth, Joe Torres club did have a chance to
tie or take the lead with two on and two out, but Hideki Matsuis hot smash to first
was snared by Darin Erstada play Jason Giambi couldnt make 99 out of 100
timesand the game, the series and the 167-game season was over in an instant.
While Im clearly enjoying this moment, I do think that the
team itself is a very likable bunch. Jeter is all class and is the only player on the team
besides Posada that knows how to aggressively and intelligently run the bases. The humble
Mariano Rivera is the greatest closer you will ever see in your lifetime. A-Rod is a freak
at the plate (in the regular season, anyway) and never poses after hitting a home run.
Matsui is a consummant professional, as is Posada. And while players come and go, Bernie
Williams has been with the organization for a now-unheard of fifteen years. He will be
missed.
So why are so many people like me thrilled with the Yankees again
heading to a golf course near you?
Three reasons come to mind:
The announcers: For an organization that outspends every team
in the majors by a two-to-one, three-to-one and even as much as a six-to-one margin,
George Steinbrenner refuses to get a real play-by-play man in the TV or radio booth.
Instead, he assigned the prestigious honor of being "the voice of the Yankees"
to a former newspaper reporter named Michael Kay.
Besides being the biggest homer in the business (he defended the
Yankees last season after the team blew a 3-0 lead to the Red Sox in the ALCS by stating
that the team "had a season to be proud of"), Kay has zero ability to get away
from his play-by-play-playbook. Every home run call ("
looking up
See
Ya!") is exactly the same in tone and inflection, whether it is spring training or a
September game against the Red Sox. Just try to find a classic call from Kay for the
broadcasting Hall of Fame from the YES Network archives.
Double dare you
The same goes for John Sterling, the radio play-by-play assclown for
WCBS. Every Yankee home run is "high, it is far, it is gone!" The ball in
question could be a line drive inside the foul pole or a 500-foot moon shot
nothing
changes in the name of self-indulgent catch phrases.
Memo to Mr. Steinbrenner: Please, please hire Jon Miller or Gary
Thorne now!
The print media is no better. Classic example: Going into the
Angel series, the New York Post and Daily News focused on what a matchup with the Red Sox
might look like in the ALCS. Forget the fact that L.A. had home field advantage in the
ALDS or the White Sox had the best record in the AL
the Red Sox and Yankees are a
royalty rivalry, and any other teams participating in the big dance be damned if they have
the nerve of getting in the way.
Even going into Game 5 against the Angels, the Daily News
interviewed fans about how badly the Yanks would beat up on the White Sox, who only just
SWEPT the World Champs from Boston two days earlier.
The fans are the best in baseball, but also the most myopic.
Ask almost any of them who Garrett Anderson, Francisco Rodriguez or Adam Kennedy was going
into the Angel series and watch the blank stares begin. With most Yankee faithful, unless
the opponent is the Red Sox, the opposition is completely irrelevant. This aspect is
maddening to those who love the game and appreciate all of the skilled players the Yankees
havent signed yet.
For anyone who isnt drinking the Pinstripe Kool Aid, this kind
of coverage is borderline sickening. To watch the Yankees lose to those no names from
Anaheim, the happy thought process wasnt to witness the Jeters and A-Rods leave the
dugout in disbelief, but to see how the papers would spin this impossible loss to a team
that only embarrassed them in the same series three years ago.
Most Yankee fans are failing to accept that their heroes are quickly
becoming the Braves of the American League. Its not as if the team is simply losing
in October, but its the bone-in-the-throat way it has been occurring.
For those with selective amnesia, heres a quick review course:
2001 World Series: New York blows a 3-2 series lead and 2-1
ninth inning lead in Game 7. The great Mariano Rivera only records one out, hits a batter
and commits a throwing error to single-handedly lose the series.
2002 ALDS: Yanks have a 1-0 series lead and 5-4 lead in Game
2 going into the eighth until the Angels touch up the bullpen for three runs. Anaheim
would never trail in the series in any inning again, winning in four.
2003 World Series: Heavily favored New York takes a 2-1
series lead over Florida when Joe Torre inexplicitly leaves now-departed Jeff Weaver in
for two innings in relief. Predictably, Weaver gives up a game winning home run and the
Marlins go on to win Games 5 and 6, including a humiliating shutout in the series-clincher
in the Bronx.
2004 ALCS: Boston trails its hated rival 3-0 in the series
but accomplishes the greatest comeback in sports history that includes two extra inning
victories in Games 4 and 5 and a 9-2 thumping in Game 7 in the Bronx.
2005: See above.
So who will be the goats this year?
Mike Mussina: Comes up small in another playoff game. An $88
million contract makes him an easy target for the press and fans alike, but not as big a
bulls-eye is on his forehead as
Alex Rodriguez: The curse continues. Whereever A-Rod goes,
championships simply do not follow. Heres why the Yankee third baseman is not known
as the next Mr. October: In his last two playoff series (Boston 04 and LA 05),
Rodriguez has 4 hits in 32 at bats and no RBIs in twelve games. For those in the ADD
category, A-Rod hit into a rally-killing double play in the ninth of Game 5 Monday
night
a fitting end for a player who will never be accepted as a true Yankee until he
does something spectacular against a team other than the Twins or Devil Rays.
Joe Torre: Since no one else dared to bring it up a week ago,
why again did Torre sit all of his starters in the final game of the season with
home-field advantage against the Angels on the line?
So now the panic begins in the tri-state area. The questions will
dominate sports radio for months to come: What All-Stars will they sign in the offseason
to replace Bernie Williams, Robinson Cano, Jorge Posada, Randy Johnson, Mike Mussina,
Kevin Brown and Jeret Wright? Middle relief is also a big problem. And Gary Sheffield is a
cancer in the clubhouse. Do we have a suitable backup for Bubba Crosby?
Wow, is a $300 million payroll right around the corner?
Or will the Yanks take the track of other recently successful teams
and try to win with, I dont know, homegrown talent? That strategy helped them win
all of those championships in the 90s (Jeter, Williams, Rivera and Posada all came up
through the farm system), so maybe its time to get back to basics and stop the madness of
outspending its opponents.
Will that happen?
I wouldnt bet on it.
Because failure is not an option in Yankeeland
But it sure is in style lately.