Showing posts with label Brett Gardner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brett Gardner. Show all posts

Monday, August 18, 2008

Brian Bannister brought out the best in the Yankees’ offense. His line was pretty impressive:

1 IP 10 H 10 ER 3 BB 0 K 3 HR

Top to bottom, the offense did what many have been waiting for: exploded, and beat a team with a mediocre pitching staff to a pulp. Granted, something can be said for how bad the offense looked the first two games of the series against bona fide AL starters Gil Meche and Zack Greinke. However, even in those two low-scoring, hotly contested games, the Yankees had plenty of men on base and therefore had plenty of opportunities to push runs across.

Sunday could not have started worse for the struggling lineup, either: Mike Mussina immediately put the cold-swinging hitters at a 3-0 disadvantage as a result of a soft rally by the Royals that featured a lot of bleeders and bloops. A-Rod, however, turned the momentum around in the bottom of the 1st, when he launched a game-tying three-run home run off Bannister, the first of those three homers he would allow.

Mussina wouldn’t surrender another run on the day, and the Yankees pretty much kept their foot down on the gas offensively and bludgeoned Kansas City to earn an even split of the season series. As I said, top to bottom is how the production spread out. Be it Derek Jeter going 4-for-4 (they were all singles, though, so I guess he still stinks and can’t hit with any authority), or A-Rod’s 3-for-3, or Jason Giambi actually getting a big hit with numerous runners on base (a grand slam, no less). Brett Gardner had a 2-out RBI triple, Xavier Nady ended a small slump by going 2-for-4 and hitting the go-ahead longball in the bottom of the 1st, and even Cody Ransom blasted his first home run as a Yankee.

The team goes into the off day having gained 2 games on Boston in the Wild Card race this weekend after Josh Beckett had a disastrous 2.1 inning performance (8 hits, 8 runs) against Toronto in Fenway, as the Red Sox fell 15-4.

Those same Toronto Blue Jays are the next foe for the Yankees, as they start a 3-game set north of the border tomorrow night. The Yankees have drawn some tough pitching match-ups for the upcoming series, which I will spend more time in previewing tomorrow.

For now, though, yesterday was a good day in the Bronx. The Wild Card race will continue to include the Yankees as long as they continue to win series and perhaps begin to play some consistent offensive baseball. Help may or may not be on the way with Hideki Matsui set to return in Toronto, although it is unknown what his swing will look like and how he’ll perform after a lengthy time disabled, as well as how his knee will hold up.

Still, at least today is another day that the Yankees didn’t lose. Tomorrow may be a different story.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Professional sports always involves discussions of momentum. Baseball has a cliché to neutralize any speculation that a particular win can jumpstart a middling team: your momentum is only as good as the next days’ starting pitcher. In the Yankees’ case, at least Darrell Rasner is starting on Tuesday instead of this afternoon.

The team had a chance to win the series in Minnesota but the bats remained dormant in the third game of that series. They again have a chance to overcome two days of insipid performance with the bats in RBI situations with a strong showing this afternoon against soft-tossing Brian Bannister. At least Meche and Greinke can somewhat be attributed to the offense’s futility Friday and Saturday, although the “tip your hat to the pitcher” card as been played to ridiculous excesses this season. But if the bats aren’t swinging today, there are no excuses other than just not being capable of performing anymore this year.

After yesterday’s grueling almost 5-hour Chinese water torture session of stranding runners and pitching superbly keeping Kansas City scoreless for 11 innings, this afternoon is a sure-fire must win. Throwing around labels like “must win” on baseball games is never an exact science, but all the stars are aligned for the Yankees. They have to start this stretch of baseball against inferior teams with a 2-1 mark. Going to Toronto 1-2 against K.C. means the death knell has sounded.

Mike Mussina will be leaned on heavily to keep pitching like the reinvented maestro on the mound that he’s become—if he shows any signs of laying an egg today, it will be dually disastrous as the bullpen had to work a long long afternoon yesterday. They could use the rest, and the offense could use the assurance that they have their best performing up to his capabilities on the hill. Perhaps that will remind the hitters that they, too, should be performing up to their much-talked about but rarely seen “capabilities” this year.

Here are some other interesting notes to wrap up before today’s game:

Hideki Matsui has had 8 at-bats for the High-A Tampa Yankees over the last 2 days, and he also took part in a simulated game this morning in Tampa, according to Peter Abraham’s blog. Abraham also speculates that he could return to the lineup as early as Tuesday, if his knee holds up. I guessed that they might wait until Friday since they wouldn’t want him running on the artificial surface in Toronto, but a win today could increase the sense of urgency in terms of putting the best offensive foot forward for the stretch run. Either way, adding a professional hitter like Hideki into the #5 spot, which has been a black hole this year while he’s been disabled, could do wonders to help the lineup as a whole, as well as New York’s #1 head case who hits cleanup. Giambi looks like total dead weight at the plate, and Nady has gone into his first slump as a Yankee, so the spots in the lineup behind A-Rod could use some reinforcement.

Granted, though, a lot of this optimism needs to be taken with a grain of salt and also shrouded in the potential for a let-down. His knee is guaranteed to require surgery. Meaning he is not any healthier than he was when he first went on the DL, he’s only been able to get to the point where he can treat it, wear the right protective gear, and deal with the level of pain that comes with hitting and running the bases. However, if anything goes wrong, if there are any tweaks, or if it swells up again and just doesn’t respond to the grind of playing major league baseball, Matsui’s return will end up being very short-lived, and the lineup will go back to relying on Jason Giambi for big at-bats with men on base. Along that line…

Brett Gardner got the game-winning hit yesterday, but if Matsui returns his playing time most certainly will evaporate. Granted, Matsui won’t be able to play every day, but he will be in the lineup at DH as often as Girardi can swing it, meaning Damon will be in CF and Brett will be on the bench. It would be encouraging going forward, though, if Gardner could string together some good games at the plate until Matsui is ready to return. It gives him more confidence in his ability to hit at the big-league level, and it also makes the question of who will be starting in CF in 2009 a little harder to answer. Furthermore, if Matsui breaks down, there is already a backup plan in place, with Brett sliding back into center field and Damon mostly DHing and playing left. Also, looking ahead to 2009, a good stretch run for Brett may give him as much of a chance of winning a job in Spring Training as Melky or anybody else brought in from outside the organization. All in all, interesting consequences follow Brett’s at-bats at this point in the year.

Phil Hughes will make his 3rd start for Scranton today, with their game scheduled to begin at 5:35 pm. My hope is that if he pitches well, finishes strong and doesn’t fatigue once he gets up to around 100 pitches, he needs to make a start in Baltimore. He has too much ability and he could be too much of a stabilizer to their rotation to leave at AAA to continue to “work on some things”, as Girardi put it when probed about Phil starting on Tuesday in Toronto. At this point, a rotation of Mussina, Pettitte, Ponson, Rasner and Hughes is serviceable enough, and if Joba is ever able to return in September, their rotation looks a lot better, as Ponson and Hughes at the back end look extremely appealing. Still, though, Hughes will have a lot to prove upon his return this year—fans will not be accepting any guff about him having to work his way back into big-league form, as was the case last year when he returned in August. Coming off his putrid April and combined with his ceiling-free expectations in the eyes of the faithful, Hughes will be expected to step right in and contribute. It’s a lot to ask of a 22 year old starter that’s been inconsistent and injured most of his short career, but based on his handful of shining moments it is not out of the question for Phil to live up to those expectations.

That’s all for now, I’ll write again this evening to talk about this afternoon’s game and wrap up any other relevant pieces of information that pop up.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Last night’s game was one of the most frustrating regular season games I’ve ever watched. 9 innings of letting a pitcher off the hook has become the norm for this sad group of supposedly talented offensive players. The team has found more unique and mind-boggling ways to lose games this year than they ever have in the past. Any breaks that the Yankees used to be given from the hypothetical baseball gods have vanished and been replaced by a Murphy’s Law level of ineptitude. The loss doesn’t fall on the shoulders of pinch-runner Justin Christian getting picked off, but it was certainly a backbreaking error on the basepaths. Still, the team had so many other chances with all of their “best” run producers at the plate that one flop by Christian should not have killed their chances. In fact, it didn’t. When you get 2 rolling infield singles, a clean single, and a walk in the 9th inning of a one-run game and STILL can’t find a way to score, you have to know that this offense is completely done, completely in the tank and completely hopeless at this point in the season.

As I now check in on today’s game later into the action, I notice that nothing has changed miraculously overnight: the offense still squanders every opportunity to score runs that they’re presented with. Last night they were 3 for 13 with RISP and left 11 men on base. Now this afternoon, the 4th inning sees the Yankees load the bases with nobody out, and Alex Rodriguez and Jason Giambi coming up with ample opportunities to do damage. Predictably, A-Rod strikes out and Giambi hits into an inning-ending double play. Giambi last night made the final out with the bases loaded, and also struck out in a situation earlier in the game where a hit would have delivered a much-needed offensive lift.

To me, Giambi it the biggest culprit in terms of the year-long, team-wide epidemic of poor hitting with RISP. His season average is a putrid .212 with RISP, and a much-improved .224 with RISP and 2 outs. Sure, he has a good number of RBIs, but he could have produced so much more considering how many opportunities he gets while hitting out of the #5 spot in the lineup. And yet in spite of his futility, Joe Girardi NEVER takes him out of the slot in the lineup behind A-Rod.

It’s a stubbornness in both guys that is extremely frustrating: Giambi has done nothing to make adjustments with men on base, his swing remains long and home run-minded. Girardi has put blind faith in Jason’s ability to somehow turn it around in those situations, and has not backed off it all season long.

At this point, when the offense looks as awful as it does, why as a manager are you not just trying anything to try and shake things up? Demoting Melky Cabrera and playing Brett Gardner is doing nothing to get the offense turned around. The lineup hasn’t worked in months, so why keep running the same one out there day after day?

Honestly, it seems as though Girardi and his players have checked out. Today we’re about to be through 7 full innings, and the offense has yet to crack the scoreboard. Zack Greinke is a great young pitcher, but the Yankees have had enough opportunities once again—runners on 2nd to lead off the last two innings—and have yet to do anything productive. It is going to be a depressing stretch run, since the Yankees are already playing as though they’re ready for the offseason. Not the best way to say goodbye to Yankee Stadium.

Friday, August 15, 2008

The Melk Man has left the building, presumably riding out on the back of The Big Sexy like an excited young boy taking his first pony ride. Melky Cabrera has been demoted to Scranton-Wilkes Barre, replaced on the roster by Brett Gardner. In a corresponding move, Richie Sexson has been released and replaced on the roster by utility infielder and 32-year-old career minor leaguer Cody Ransom.

Glad to see Gardner get another shot with the big club. He’s an unbelievable threat on the bases and he grinds out long at-bats. Granted, speed and grinding didn’t help Gardner do better than a .153/.227/.169 line in his first stint, but the message is clear: ineptitude to the level of Melky’s will not stand, even if it was allowed to for three months too long. A real pessimist could argue that this is making a change for the sake of making a change and that it doesn’t change anything for the Yankees 2008 playoff hopes, and that pessimist would be hard to argue with because they’re mostly right. But addition by subtraction is a real concept, and perhaps both these moves are meant to do a little wake-up work for all parties directly affected:

Melky Cabrera: Pretty obvious, but it can affect him a lot of ways. He can’t take for granted that he’s a part of the team anymore, either this year or for next year, meaning it’s crystal clear that he’s going to have to earn whatever future he’s going to have with the Yankees. It’s a shame that he will undoubtedly be a September call-up when rosters expand, which is what makes this move too little too late. Instead of letting him stew in the minors and recalibrate and maybe figure out how to hit again via an extended stay, he’s really getting a 2-week excommunication to western Pennsylvania. In the bigger picture, though, it means that Austin Jackson’s chances of cracking the big league team in 2009 have increased exponentially, and it’s open season for who plays CF for the Yankees on Opening Day 2009.

Robinson Cano:
It takes away his number one buddy, and it means he’ll have to fly solo if he’s going to head out to Manhattan clubs to get ripped and pick up ladies dying to hang out with one or more of the New York Yankees. Also, Cody Ransom’s call-up shows that maybe his virtually unwavering playing time isn’t going to be guaranteed if he continues to play lazy, uninspired baseball. A start at 2nd for Ransom against a left handed starter would be an eyebrow-raiser, for sure.

Brett Gardner:
A chance to redeem his putrid offensive performance upon his first go-round with the Yankees. He has notoriously been a slow starter when he’s advanced a level through the minors, and the jump from AAA to MLB is arguably the hardest a professional player makes. It will be interesting to see if he adjusts to big league pitching the 2nd time around, if he’s more aggressive early in counts when he gets fat pitches, or if he sticks to always running a 2-strike count and too often being called out on strikes.

Johnny Damon: He will be expected to play more CF than he has in the last 2 years. His arm is still terrible so teams will still run on him when they have the chance, but his legs have been healthy all year. Hopefully he can still track down balls when he has to, and hopefully an extra level of exertion on his body by playing center won't negatively effect his sterling performance at the plate so far this year.

Wilson Betemit: Inexplicably, he backs his way into a bigger role on the team. Since I doubt Gardner will be seeing a starter’s amount of playing time, the lineup will frequently feature Johnny Damon in CF, Nady in LF and Betemit or Giambi as DH. Joel Sherman of the Post broke the news of these roster moves, and in his write-up he brings up the potential increase in his P.T. To me, this is a boneheaded move if it occurs; granted, tonight’s lineup does not feature Betemit (Gardner is in CF and Damon is the DH), but I don’t see that lasting, especially if Brett continues to struggle at the major league level.

Cody Ransom: He’s a 32 year old guy whose never played in the bigs before; to him, this is the chance of a lifetime. Hopefully he can get himself a couple of hits and play some good D when he’s on the field, and maybe catch another organization’s attention, maybe parlaying a big league roster spot for 2009.

Richie Sexson: Well, not a good couple of years for The Big Sexy. I’m sure some team will take a flier on him for Spring Training 2009, but he has suffered a precipitous fall from one of the league’s biggest power threats and a decent 1B option. He didn’t do a terrible job with the Yankees, but he also didn’t seem to be taking any different of an approach at the plate—meaning still a lot of swings and misses, and not much production.