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Sunday, August 17, 2008

Nine Days of Other Teams

I have just returned from 4 days in Red Sox Nation. This was preceded by 2 days in Chicago and 3 days in Milwaukee. Chicago was a side trip due to the Nor'easter that shut down Newark Airport, preventing me from getting home.

I got a chance to watch the Brewers on local TV while in Milwaukee. The Brewers have the stuff to make a run at the Chicago Cubs, they are now only 4.5 games back. More than that they have the player talent that could assure a post season appearance by the Brewers in the Fall Classic.

Right now I see the the following teams representing the NL in October, The Cubs, the Brewers, Diamondbacks and possibly the Mets. The Mets are not a sure thing. Philadelphia still lurks in the curtains. For the Mets they need to stay one step in front of the Phillies in the home streak.

Chicago is clearly the land of the Cubs. My seven hours of waiting around O'Hare for my flight to be allowed to leave taught me that the White Soxs are just that other team. The success and domination of the Cubs in the NL Central has been like a shot of Adrenalin for the long suffering Cubs fans. They are counting on this Presidential Election year, in which a man from Chicago is on the slate as the a sign of hope. They remember how the Red Soxs upset the Yankees in the last Presidential election year. They consider 2008 their chance to erase the curse of the Billy Goat.

I spent Tuesday through Friday outside of Boston. There is no Yankee baseball in Boston unless you have access to the YES Channel in your room. I don't . To ask for the Yankee channel, even if they are playing Boston is grounds for ejection or a beating, maybe both. I quietly chose to watch the Red Soxs. And I am am concerned.

I am not concerned about the Red Soxs, I am concerned about the New York Yankees. The Yankees are 9.5 game back in 3rd place in the AL East. To make the playoffs, they need to win at least 32 games. I just don't see it happening. The Red Soxs are posed to take the Wildcard and worse yet, the Tampa Bay Rays mostly likely have the AL East sewn up; unless they collapse like the Mets did last year. Frankly I don't see that happening.

This may be the first year in his time with the Yankees, that Derek Jeter does not earn playoff bonus money. Clearly he will be a spectator and not a participant this year in October. September 21 will truly be the last game at Old Yankee Stadium.

This week the NYY Yankees also announced the Opening Day 2009 will be April 16 against the Cleveland Indians. The chose being made due tot eh fanfare that will surround the opening of the new digs. No one wants a postponement due to snow. Rain however is another issue. With all the money spent on the new digs, no roof was built. I would optioned for a roof, for those early and late season games and those foul weather days in summer when thunderstorms delay the start of games.

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