Category Archives: Yankees

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Baseball Show with Marc Normandin

by Ted Berg on September 23rd, 2011 at 2:25 pm

Marc writes about the Red Sox at Over the Monster and Tweets @marc_normandin. Here’s me getting shticky:

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The save stat, nutshelled

by Ted Berg on September 20th, 2011 at 9:44 am

“I couldn’t believe they were cheering me for hitting into a double play,” Swisher said. “I said: ‘Whoa, what’s this? And then I looked at the bullpen and saw Mo coming out and I said: ‘Now I get it!’ This was the greatest double play of my life.”

“Runners at first and second…it was unbelievable,” Rivera said. “I don’t ever want my teammates to do bad so I can pitch, but this time I was happy for the opportunity. I’m listening to the fans and I said: ‘Wow, these guys are into it!’”

- N.Y. Daily News.

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Batting average with balls in play

by Ted Berg on September 16th, 2011 at 10:50 am

Can a newly single A-Rod smack more doubles and triples?

The Yankees slugging third baseman is due back in the lineup Friday night against Toronto for the first time since his split with Cameron Diaz – and fans hope the heartbreak means home runs….

Rodriguez, who was also linked with Madonna after his divorce, memorably dated “Almost Famous” actress Kate Hudson during the Yankees’ 2009 championship run.

The blond Hollywood honey received much of the credit when A-Rod reversed a disastrous post-season slump as the Yankees won the World Series.

- Larry McShane, N.Y. Daily News.

A-Rod’s hitting line, by celebrity girlfriend:

Madonna (August 2008 – end 2008): .258/.366/.511 in 50 games.

Kate Hudson (Late May 2009 – end 2009): .302/.419/.560 in 129 games, including postseason.

Cameron Diaz (July 2010 – Sept. 15, 2011): .274/.349/.498 in 156 games.

By my best estimates of when he started dating each based on the maximum number of celebrity-gossip articles I could stomach.

It’s worth noting that while dating Hudson, A-Rod enjoyed his best batting average with balls in play.

Oh, indeed.

 

 

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Mariano Rivera reaches inevitable milestone

by Ted Berg on September 14th, 2011 at 10:00 am

Presumably you’ve heard that Mariano Rivera saved his 600th game last night. Sometime this week he’ll save his 601st game, and before the season is done he’ll save his 602nd game and break the all-time saves record, just in case anyone is silly enough to need that figure for evidence that Rivera is the greatest closer of all-time.

By allowing a single hit last night, Rivera maintained his career 1.000 WHIP. To date he has thrown 1206 innings, yielded 932 hits and walked 274 batters. That is, if you’re scoring at home, awesome.

Adjusted ERA+ factors park- and league-effects into earned-run average and scales it so that 100 is average — sort of like IQ tests and the old SATs. Among pitchers with over 1000 innings pitched, Pedro Martinez has the second best ERA+ of all time with 154. Third is someone named Jim Devlin, who dominated hitters for three seasons in the 1870s and managed a career 151 mark. Fourth and fifth are Hall of Famers Lefty Grove and Walter Johnson, with 148 and 147, respectively. Those men were pitching geniuses.

Rivera’s career adjusted ERA+ is 205, more than 50 points higher than the next best ever. Isaac Newton stuff, in this imperfect metaphor.

Of course, any discussion placing Rivera among the best pitchers ever must be qualified with the fact that his dominance almost always came in one-inning stints. Who knows what Johnson or Grove or Pedro would have done if afforded that luxury? Who knows if Rivera would have been anywhere near as effective if asked to throw 120 relief innings every year the way Rollie Fingers once did, or — heaven forbid — to start games.

It never happened, so it doesn’t matter much now. Rivera happened to emerge and succeed in the era of the one-inning closer, a role he has come to define better than Tony La Russa ever could.

And though there’s evidence to show that teams leading after the 8th inning have won the same rate of games since the dawn of the closer as they did in all the years before that, perhaps increased specialization in bullpens was an adjustment necessary to maintain that percentage in the contemporary game rather than a needless rejiggering of an already effective system.

Either way, Rivera is awesome. That’s the main thing.

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Talking September call-ups with Alex Belth

by Ted Berg on September 7th, 2011 at 2:58 pm

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Talking Yankees with Mike Salfino

by Ted Berg on September 1st, 2011 at 3:22 pm

Mike’s from SNYWhyGuys.com.

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You have let me down, Internet

by Ted Berg on August 25th, 2011 at 1:56 pm

The lineup is in, and it’s Jeter, Jeter and more Jeter.

The Algonquin Seaport Theater, which is planning a Derek Jeter-themed one-act festival next month, revealed on Wednesday the plays that made the cut from the call for the competition last month, made shortly after Jeter reached his much-heralded 3,000th hit.

- Julie Shapiro, DNAInfo.com.

Dammit, how is it possible I’m only hearing about this now that the plays have been selected? This could have been my big break, Internet, and you failed to notify me in a timely fashion! I’m very disappointed.

I should probably check this out, though. And maybe get working now on my Mark Sanchez one-act for whenever that opportunity arises.

Via Bronx Banter.

MetsBlog Link

Baseball Show with Alex Belth

posted on August 16th, 2011 at 2:59 pm

The Bronx Banter Blog Hater Index, which is fun for us. Also, our producers asked us to pose for the screenshot for some reason:

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