
League Championship Series NLDS on FOX; ALDS on TBS
Sat 10/11 BOS @ TBR 8:07
ALCS G2 (Kazmir v Beckett)
Sun 10/12 PHI @ LAD 8:22
NLCS G3 (Moyer v Kuroda)
Mon 10/13 TBR @ BOS 4:37
ALCS G3 (Garza v Lester)
PHI @ LAD 8:22
NLDS G4 (Blanton v Kershaw)
Tue 10/14 TBR @ BOS 8:07
ALCS G4 (Sonnanstine v Wakefield)
PHI 2, LAD 0
BOS 1, TBR 0
Division Series
BOS 3, LAA 1
TBR 3, CHW 1
PHI 3, MIL 1
LAD 3, CHI 0
33 Kat O'Brien
32 Marty Appel
31 Joe Sheehan
30 Emma Span
29 Bob Klapisch
28 Jon Weisman
27 Will Weiss: The Personalities
26 Cecilia Tan
25 Perry Barber
24 Bob Timmermann
23 Jay Jaffe
22 Will Weiss: The Games
21 Pete Caldera
20 Will Carroll
19 Ben Kabak
18 Tim Marchman
17 Charles Euchner
16 Maury Allen
15 Jane Leavy
14 Ed Alstrom
13 Peter Abraham
12 Brian Gunn
11 Phil Pepe
10 Allen Barra
9 Scott Raab
8 Repoz
7 Ken Rosenthal
6 David Pinto
5 Dave Kaplan
4 Ed Randall
3 Steve Lombardi
2 Dayn Perry
1 Anthony McCarron
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Important Dates
Alex:
Ray Negron part 1 2 3 4
Dad, Reggie and Me
Slaughterhouse Five
Way Out in Brooklyn
Heat Fave
Passing
Love, Death and Baseball
Cliff:
The Ugly Truth About the New Yankee Stadium
First-Half Review
2008 Draft Roundup
July Farm Report
2008 Campers
All-Star Game: 1977, 2008
The Holy "Trinity": 1904 1949
Yankees by the Numbers
SportsIllustrated.com archive
Alex:
Strikes and Gutters: A Year with the Coen Brothers: Part 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
My 20 Favorite Hip Hop Albums
Greatest Singles from Hip Hop's Golden Era (1986-1994)
Ten Neglected Hip Hop Classics
Cliff:
Tin Ear
Pazz & Jop ballots: 2007, 2006, 2005, 2004, 2003 (post), 2002, 2001
Clem Snide
Eminem
Sleater-Kinney
Roger Angell
Allen Barra
Jim Bouton
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Jane Leavy
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Alan Schwarz
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Tom Verducci
Juicing the Game by Howard Bryant Part 1 Part 2
Forging Genius by Steven Goldman Part 1 Part 2
How About That! by Stephen Borelli
The Crowd Sounds Happy by Nicholas Dawidoff
The Last Nine Innings by Charles Euchner
Clemente by David Maraniss
The Soul of Baseball by Joe Posnanaski
Glenn Stout and Richard A. Johnson:
Yankee Century: Part 1 Part 2
Red Sox Century: 1 2 3 4
The Dodgers: 120 Years of Dodgers Baseball
Major Leauge Roster:
Infielders:
J. Giambi BR BP E MLB
R. Cano BR BP E MLB
D. Jeter BR BP E MLB
A. Rodriguez BR BP E MLB
W. Betemit BR BP E MLB mi
C. Ransom BR BP E MLB mi
J. Miranda BR BC mi
Outfielders:
B. Abreu BR BP E MLB
J. Damon BR BP E MLB
X. Nady BR BP E MLB
H. Matsui BR BP E MLB mi
B. Gardner BR E MLB mi
M. Cabrera BR BP E MLB mi
Catchers:
I. Rodriguez BR BP E MLB
J. Molina BR BP E MLB
C. Moeller BR BP E MLB mi
F. Cervelli BR BC mi
Starting Pitchers:
M. Mussina BR BP BC E
A. Pettitte (L) BR BP BC E
P. Hughes BR BP BC E mi
C. Pavano BR BP BC E mi
A. Aceves BR E mi
Relief Pitchers:
M. Rivera BR BP BC E
J. Chamberlain BR BP BC E
D. Marte (L) BR BP BC E
J. Veras BR BP BC E mi
E. Ramirez BR BP BC E mi
B. Bruney BR BP BC E mi
D. Giese BR BP BC E mi
C. Britton BR BP BC E mi
P. Coke (L) BR BC E mi
D. Rasner BR BP BC E mi
S. Ponson BR BP BC E mi
D. Robertson BR BC E mi
H. Sanchez BC mi
15-day DL:
C. Wang BR BP BC E
60-day DL:
J. Posada BR BP E MLB
J. Albaladejo BR BP BC E mi
A. Brackman BC
Coaches:
J. Girardi (Mgr) BR BP BC
R. Thomson (Bench) BC
Kevin Long (Hit) BR
D. Eiland (Pitch) BR BP BC
B. Meacham (3B) BR BP BC
T. Peña (1B) BR BP BC
M. Harkey (Pen) BR BP BC
40-man Roster:
AAA
S. Duncan BR BP E MLB mi
J. Christian BR BP E MLB mi
I. Kennedy BR BP BC E mi
C. Wright (L) BR BP BC E mi
J. Marquez BR BC mi
Designated for Assignment:
B. Traber (L) BR BP BC E mi
Select Minor Leaguers:
AAA Scranton Wilkes-Barre Yankees:
B. Castro BR mi DL
C. Basak BR BP BC E MLB mi
E. Duncan BC mi
N. Green BR mi
B. Broussard BR mi
M. Carson BC mi
C. Stewart BR BP E MLB mi
J. Brown BC mi DL
K. Igawa (L) BR BP BC E JB mi
M. Melancon BC mi
J.B. Cox BC mi
S. Strickland BR BC mi
S. Jackson BC mi
E. Milton BR BC mi DL
V. Zambrano BR BC mi DL
AA Trenton Thunder:
K. Russo BR mi
R. Peña BC mi DL
C. Malec BC mi
M. Vechionacci BC mi DL
A. Jackson BC mi
C. Curtis BC mi
E. Gonzalez BR mi
P.J. Pilittere BC mi
J. Jones BC mi
G. Kontos BC mi
J. Nuñez BC mi
B. Smith BC mi DL
A. Claggett BC mi
O. Perez BR BC mi
M. Gardner BC mi
K. Whelan BC mi
W. Arias (L) BC mi
A Tampa Yankees:
E. Nuñez BC mi
C.J. Henry BC mi DL
T. Battle BC mi
K. Anson BC mi
J. Gil BC mi
A. Horne BC mi DL
Z. McAllister BC mi
W. De La Rosa (L) BC mi
C. Garcia BC mi
Low-A Charleston RiverDogs:
J. Snyder BC mi
M. Cusick BC mi
B. Suttle BC mi
A. Romine BC mi
J. Montero BC mi
D. Betances BC mi
J. Heredia BC mi
J. Ortiz BC mi
C. Heyer BC mi
Low-A Staten Island Yankees:
D. Adams mi
P. Venditte mi
Rookie Gulf Coast Yankees:
C. Joseph mi
C. Smith mi
K. Higashioka mi
Key:
BR = Baseball-Reference
BP = Baseball Prospectus
BC = Baseball Cube (past mL stats)
mi = MiLB.com (current mL stats)
E = ESPN (current splits, game logs)
MLB = MLB.com hit charts
JB = Japanese Baseball.com
2008 Yankees:
R. Sexson BR BP E MLB
M. Ensberg BR BP E MLB CLE mL
A. Gonzalez BR BP E MLB mi WAS
K. Farnsworth BR BP BC E DET
L. Hawkins BR BP BC E HOU
S. Patterson BR BC mi SD
Nady/Marte Trade:
J. Tabata BC mi
J. Karstens BR BP BC E mi
R. Ohlendorf BR BP BC E
D. McCutchen BC mi
2008 Campers/mLers:
C. Woodward BR BP BC E MLB PHI mL
J. Lane BR mi BOS mL
G. Porter BC mi WAS mL
J.D. Closser BR mi SD mL
S. Henn (L) BR BP BC E mi SD
H. Phillips (L) BR BC mi TB mL
S. White BR BC mi
2007 Yankees:
J. Torre (Mgr) BR BP BC LAD
D. Mientkiewicz BR BP BC E MLB PIT
A. Phillips BR BP BC E MLB mi CIN
J. Phelps BR BP BC E MLB STL
M. Cairo BR BP BC E MLB SEA
K. Thompson BR BP BC E MLB mi PIT
B. Sardinha BC mi SEA mL
W. Nieves BR BP BC E MLB WAS
R. Clemens BR BP BC E mi
T. Clippard BR BP BC E mi WAS
L. Vizcaino BR BP BC E COL $7.5m/2yrs
M. DeSalvo BR BP BC E mi ATL mL
M. Myers (L) BR BP BC E LAD mL
R. Villone (L) BR BP BC E mi STL
S. Proctor BR BP BC E LAD
J. Brower BR BP BC E mi CIN mL
C. Bean BR BP BC E mi ATL mL
2007 Campers and mLers:
E. Durazo BR BP BC E MLB mi
A. Cannizaro BR BP BC E MLB mi TB mL
A. Chavez BR BP BC E MLB mi LAD mL
K. Reese BR BP BC E MLB mi
R. Chavez BR BP BC E MLB mi PIT mL
O. Santos BC mi BAL mL
T. Pratt BR BP BC E MLB
T.J. Beam BR BP BC E mi PIT mL
B. Kozlowski (L) BR BP BC E mi Japan
Molina Trade:
J. Kennard BC mi
Abreu Trade
M. Smith (L) BR BP BC E mi PHI
C. Monasterios BC mi PHI
J. Sanchez mi PHI
Baseball Toaster runs on some experimental software called Fairpole. It's still under development.
For more information, please visit the Fairpole blog, or read the FAQ.
Jay Jaffe was at Tuesday night's game, screaming his head off as Alex Rodriguez smacked three dingers and drove in 10 of the Yankees 12 runs in their 12-4 win over Bartolo Colon and the Angels. Me? I was there last night, when the Yanks managed just one lousy run off of Jarrod Washburn (the elusive solo homer that would have made Rodriguez's Tuesday night performance the greatest in American League history).
It wasn't all for nothing, however. Last night I and two of my colleagues brought my 67-year-old boss, a man who has lived in New York City for nearly 40 years, to his first game at Yankee Stadium.
It was an interesting crew. With me was Dave, my best buddy at work. Dave grew up in Fairfax, Virginia. As a teenager, his favorite team was the Toronto Blue Jays club that won back-to-back World Series in the early '90s. When I informed him that Pat Borders made the Twins postseason roster last October he was both shocked and delighted at the news. Since moving to Queens, Dave has become a Mets fan. He is also something of a sports connoisseur, enjoying soccer, lacrosse, cricket, baseball, football, NCAA basketball and NASCAR equally. Dave also performs improv comedy at the Upright Citizen's Brigade theater and recently published his first humor book, a harrowing take on corporate drudgery in which he uses my name liberally and without permission.
Joining us was a strikingly handsome 6' 6" Croatian named Zelimir, a former coworker who left our office several years ago to get a masters from Harvard and is now back at work elsewhere in Manhattan. Dave introduced Zelimir to the Mets back when he worked with us and Zelimir quickly mastered a level of understanding of the intricacies of the game that far surpassed Dave's. Departing the game last night Zelimir informed us that his grandfather, while on shore leave from the Yugoslavian navy in the 1930s, attended one of the two sold-out Joe Louis-Max Schmeling fights at Yankee Stadium (how he managed this Zelimir did not know).
Ray, our guest of honor, is also a Virginia native (though he's from the southern part of the state), but has been working in publishing in New York since the '60s. Once a colleague of Jackie Onassis when she worked at Doubleday, Ray is one of the last of the great old-school editors (he still uses a typewriter, though I've taught him some rudimentary email skills). Over the past several decades, Ray has edited books by John Fowles and Thomas Pynchon, as well as a series of bestsellers by Martha Grimes and most recently the hit debut novel by Ron McLarty. A huge tennis fan, Ray is more significantly a connoisseur of art, food and literature. In fact, he had never paid baseball much attention at all until 2003 when, after several years of working with me, he decided to find out what my obsession was all about and became hooked on the Yankees. Not long after Ray started watching baseball, the Yankees defeated the Red Sox in the thrilling 2003 ALCS. Since then, Ray's become obsessed, watching every single Yankee game only to come to work the next day complaining about what a tremendous waste of time this "silly game" is while peppering me with questions about the game and why the players do this and why they do that.
Moved by his conversion, Dave and I decided we had to get Ray up to Yankee Stadium. As it turns out, Ray has only attended a handful of live sporting events in his lifetime, including a few tennis matches (including some at Madison Square Garden back in the day) and a football game at Soldiers Field in Chicago in the late 1960s. He had never been to a professional baseball game and, despite his newfound fascination with the sport, it seemed to take a considerable amount of arm twisting to get him to come along. Ray relishes being a grinch, it's all an act. He revealed the degree to which he was looking forward to going when we settled into our seats in the upper deck beyond first base and he expressed disappointment about not being able to see into the Yankee dugout.
With Zelimir in tow, we took the D train up to the Bronx, while Ray attempted to decipher the past five years of Mets games in Dave's scorebook. We arrived at the stadium in the midst of a thunderstorm and ducked into a bar to wait out the weather. Once the rain calmed down (right around the scheduled game time) we headed across the street to the stadium. Dave bought Ray a foam "#1" finger on the way in.
The game itself was a complete dud. Despite making it through seven innings, his longest outing of the year, Mussina pitched like Old Moose rather than the Moose of old, throwing 88 mile-per-hour fastballs and striking out just two men and giving up ten hits including two home runs which drove in four of the five runs he allowed. On offense, the Yankees got twelve men on base on 9 hits, two walks, and an error, but scored just once on a bases empty homer to dead center by Alex Rodriguez. With the eleven other men on base, a total of 16 plate appearances, the Yankees got just two hits, but ground into three double plays. Of the two hits, one was Bernie Williams' double in the first on which Luis Sojo got Derek Jeter (who lead off with a four-pitch walk) thrown out at home, the third time this year that he's sent a runner to a sure out at the plate (the other two being Tony Womack). The other was a two-out Jeter single following Tony Womack's fifth walk of the year (settling into place, Womack now ranks last among Yankee starters in walks, one behind Hack-Rod). Overall, the game was an even match for the weather, which held off despite a little spitting here and there. The best thing that could be said about both is that they were not completely unpleasant.
Nonetheless, I think Ray enjoyed his first trip to Yankee Stadium. Being a grouch, he complained throughout. When Dave and Zelimir rooted loudly for the Angles, Ray informed the Yankee fans around us that he was not with them and that they should feel free to kill them (Ray's sense of humor is not subtle). He also complained about not being able to see the field from multiple angles, not being able to see the strike zone head-on and not being able to watch endless instant replays. Although a country boy at heart, and hardly a refined gentleman despite his appreciation for the finer things, he was nonetheless out of his element in terms of the attitude of the surrounding fans and the available foodstuffs (myself, I chowed down on a dog and a sweet sausage). He also refused to waive his foam finger (in response to which I told him it was his fault that the Yankees were losing), but did cheer heartily and seems to think very highly of Tino Martinez, who went 2 for 4 but did not come to bat with a runner on base.
As much as he grumps about it (again, all for show), I take great pride in Ray's interest in baseball. In similar, but less extreme cases my passion for the Yankees has turned my mom from a casual rooter to a rabid fan (I'm taking her to a game for Mother's Day), and, of course, my girlfriend has gone from an otherwise disinterested girl who remembered liking the '86 Mets to a passionate fan who owns more Yankee gear than I do (though that's not saying much, I'm not big into merch).
Tonight Kevin Brown and John Lackey try to keep their opponents to single digits. Ray and I will be watching from our respective homes and the odds are that he'll pay closer attention than I will.
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