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Friday, November 21, 2008

Leaving On A High Note


Many are doubting the decision of Mike Mussina to retire. Of course if he stayed and had a bad season, those doubters would be the first to harp on his being too old. Personally, while I will miss Moose, but I have to give him credit for getting out while his star is still sparkling.

Too often players stay too long and are remembered more for their last bad year then the impeccable resume they created. Some players try and come back on their own terms, instead of retiring, Roger Clemens is a good example.

Clemens' career could have ended on a quiet note when he retired from the New York Yankees, however he choose to continue to play. By playing, Clemens got pulled into the spotlight of steroid scandal and linked to a possible sexual scandal. Not the way Rocket should be remembered.

Happy Retirement Moose, hope to see you at Old Timer's Day soon.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

C.C. Sabathia Is Fiscal Irresponsibility


Granted Sabathia has a great arm, but that does mean he deserve millions, hundreds of millions that is from the New York Yankees. He's 28, 290 pounds, and been in the majors for 7 years. He's a coronary waiting to happen, and statistically he averages less than 14 wins per season. Come on Brian and Hal, is that the best use of money. This fan thinks not.
Sabathia represents decaying talent, yes he still has some, but how far did that get the Milwaukee Brewers this year? And why has no one gotten his weight under control? Why does he remind me so much of another Yankee mistake....Sidney Ponson. I guess since the NYY Front Office gave Sidney a second chance, a cheap chance, they are willing to blow millions on a pitcher who waning before he has even reached the age of 30.
I say pass on C.C. He's too much of a gamble. Take the money and see what you can trade for. At the very least give some to Pettitte and Mussina. C.C. is not worth it. And to boot he comes with lots of attitude.
C.C. in my mind should not be made a Yankee. He reminds me of another bad free agent deal, the Jason Giambi deal and look how long it took for the Yankees to get rid of Giambi's money.
There may be players in baseball worth millions, but they are rare. Sabathia is not rare and not worth millions.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Tranactions


Six days after declining his option the Yankees have signed Damaso Marte to a new contract. This is part of the Yankees off season pursuit of pitching. Marte appeared in 25 games this past season for the Yankees, with a 5.40 ERA. That however should not be held against him as in his 25 games he struck out 24, walked 11 (10 walks, 1 hit by pitch) and allowed 14 hits resulting in 11 earned runs. Not bad stats when you consider how bad the Yankees played behind him.

According to Yankee owner-son/blow hard Hal Steinbrenner, the Yankees plan to spend in the off season. According to Brian Cashman, the emphasis is again pitching. Numerous injuries and the questionable status of their home grown staff have the Yanks in the pitcher acquisition mode.

The most interesting pitching acquisition was actually Huston Street going to the Colorado Rockies. Street, a promising youngster seesaws more then the Dow Jones Industrials. It will be interesting to see what the Rocky Mountain air does to his pitching stats.

As to Hal Steinbrenner's spending. I hope he keeps it under control. In this economic downturn, the rich have money, but the fans don't. Any more payroll increases by the Yankees will price the common fan out of live stadium baseball. I guess Hal isn't following the global recession.

Sports could actually help the economy by drawing a line in the sand, but they won't. I would like to see a $1,000,000 salary max per year in sports. I am sure Jeter, A-Rod, et al can survive on that; especially with the endorsements. Think of how the fans would benefit: ticket prices would come down, concession prices would come down, and families could once again afford to include a sports event in the entertainment budget.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Were They Wright or Were They Wrong?


MLB has announced their Golden Glove Awards, and as usual everyone has an opinion. In case you missed it the list is to the left.
Most notable ESPN hot air Michale Kay has a problem with David Wright being named. I don't see the problem, Wright played the most innings of all players in his in the National League. Since errors go up with innings played, the award is not without merit on his behalf.
Kay's commentary then went on to claim that Bernie Williams never deserved his Golden Gloves, according to Kay he was a mediocre center fielder. I don't know what games he was watching, but for most Yankee Fans, Bernie commanded the outfield, chasing down balls like a gazelle. Yes he didn't have the strongest arm, but the award is for fielding, not for tossing. But then with Michael Kay no one can be as great a ballplayer as Alex Rodriquez.
Kay's commentary takes the shine off of Wright's award. Awards after all are for achievement. In this case voted by the baseball writers. Kay's negative commentary is reminiscent of how those in society sometimes react to other touted with an award. Negativity instead of acknowledging the accomplishment. Maybe you were up for an award and lost it to someone else. Did you acknowledge their achievement gracefully or go off with a sour puss to pout?
Often their is a lot more pouting then smiling on the part of the loser. Whether that loser is sports, a professional association or politics. The question becomes, why can't we all just be nice and accept we didn't win?
Its not that being gracious isn't in our nature; we start out that way. Somewhere along the line some of us become narrow minded and self centered. It becomes about that individual their needs and those needs being met. Instead of being gracious in defeat, they become mean. Sometimes the meanness become violence.
Tuesday was a day of great change for many people in the USA. The population elected Barack Obama the 44th President of the USA. The winning side is elated, the losing side, well some of them are being gracious and some are being mean. The mean ones need a good kick in the butt.
I'm a registered republican, I voted for Barack. I'm not a traitor to my party, I didn't elect a "nigger" as some are calling him. I voted for him because in my mind, he was the better candidate. One of my siblings voted for McCain, he's graciously accepted Obama as the President Elect, he is willing to give the man a chance.
Michael Kay is a professional hot air balloon. He always has something negative to say, his comments on the Golden Gloves are his style. However his style would be better left off the air. Children mimic what they see or hear. The negativity, even as commentary sets a bad example, begrudging David Wright his award. It can lead to violence in society.
My message is this, so you didn't win the prize, be gracious and acknowledge the winner. Act like John McCain did on Tuesday night, be willing to work with the winner.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

The Cinderella World Series

There is a phrase, paybacks are a bitch, and if there was ever a payback to MLB, this year’s World Series was it. They only good to come out of it was that many young Phillies fans were still not tucked in bed when the Philadelphia Phillies jumped joyously on field and were presented the 2008 World Series Trophy.

In a bygone age, my youth long past, playoffs and the World Series were viewable in under 4 hours. The World Series games started at 7:00 in their time zone, not 8:00, which is really between 8:30 and 8:45 due to televised pre-game crap, the TV viewer must suffer through. The games would end between 10-11:00PM, and school children were allowed to stay up and watch. The games did not impact on their being awake in school the next day. How do I know all this, I lived it before Bud Selig and his prime time marketing of MLB.

The 2008 World Series drew an overall 8.2 market share for all the televised games. This is the lowest ratings recorded in the history of the televised World Series. Prior to this the 2006 World Series between the Detroit Tigers and St. Louis Cardinals was the lowest with a 10.1 market share.

But who cares about ratings, the fans care about the game, and really the Rays don’t have a fan base. If it wasn’t for all those other MLB teams, in particular the Yankees, the Rays would have a negative a balance. Those who watched were most Philly Fans.

Now back to the ratings, are they are a big dud for Bud, of course; but considering the lopsided fan base, that the Phillies drew 8.2, that kudos for the Phillies. If a more fan oriented team like the Red Soxs, Yankees or Indians had been the AL opponent, the ratings would have been above 14.

What does that mean for the Rays, it means build on your market. You have a decent team, although no one batted well during the playoffs. But you played in the Fall Classic; the only competition were 2nd place means something; time to analyze your faults and build on your strengths. Despite what the sports pros are saying, about the World Series and the World Series ratings, the Rays are not a bad team.

The Rays now need to market to get fans. Hoisting the American League Championship banner will be the first step. Playing to that banner will be the second. In a league where the majority of the championship banners are held by the New York Yankees, you retired the Yankees from playoff participation for the first time since 1994.

The Phillies have always had a good team, ask all those NY Mets fans. Do they deserve their trophy, yes they do. They kept their eye on the prize. Are the Rays a bad team, no they are not, that AL banner they are designing for their 2009 Opening Day proves it; but unfortunately neither the Phillies or Rays are American sweethearts like the Yankees, Red Soxs, Cardinals or Cubs so the writers have to rate this a lackluster Word Series with stepsisters playing. Poo on the writers.

In my final act of Bud bashing for today, there was the $3,000,000 FOX took and paid a partial sum to MLB to delay Game 5 for the Barack Obama infomercial. Really Bud, can’t you stand your ground. Even Disney passed on the money and showed regular programming at 8:00PM.
Kudos to the Phillies, even more kudos to the Rays, this is was baseball is about, it’s not over to the last out and anything can happen. It’s not the divine right of the Yankees to win all the time and occasionally a Cinderella story unfolds. Most of of all thousands of young Philly Phanatics got to watch their team hoist the World Series Trophy live and not on the morning news because of the game delay on Monday. Only a Fairy Godmother could do that.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

There is No Snow In Baseball


It was bound to happen sooner or later, a World Series delayed on the premise of snow. Of course most of us with any sense believed it would only happen if Boston, Milwaukee or Colorado was in the Fall Classic, not a snow in Philadelphia in October.

Snow has been the vex of Bud Selig since he started tinkering with the schedule. First we moved up the start or the season, to give more off days. This cause a multitude of snow outs in the north.

Last year Selig announced he would schedule more off days so that prime time viewing of the playoffs and Fall Classic would benefit the fans. Who was Bud kidding, it was to benefit the advertisers who would then pay the channels big bucks, who would pass the cash onto MLB. Bud's affinity for snow would have better served him a the Commissioner of the NBA, at least the only snow the NBA deals with is the dry powdered kind sold illicitly to players who think that illegal drugs are not illegal for professional athletes.

Anyway the Philadelphia snow out of the delayed rain out is Bud's fault. Place the blame squarely with him. Bud Selig, not in it for the fans, it is for himself and his checkbook.

No one item I must note is the unfair chastisement of the delay of tonight's Game 5 Part II by Casey & Rossi, aka " The Jersey Guys" on NJ 101.5FM. They, Casey & Rossi, were chastising MLB for calling tonight's game because of the weather. Originally the rain was supposed to end by game time with high winds. There was never supposed to be snow. However by the end of the business most of eastern PA and most of NJ north of Trenton had been dusted with the white stuff. Most of NJ was a Shadow Traffic nightmare by 2PM when the Jersey Guys went on air.

The decision of MLB , rain or snow to postpone the Game 5 Part 2 was in my minds the only intelligent decision of Bud Selig in this decade. I had been at a client site in Princeton, and was traveling home through Pine Barrens at 2PM. The road conditions coupled with the visibility were extremely hazardous; and it was even rush hour yet.

For those listening to the Jersey Guys, there complaint was calling the game because of the weather conditions. I assume they tune out during the traffic reports, had they tuned in, they would have realized that asking 48,000+ to re-trek to South Philly for the game would have been irresponsible.

Was MLB right; to postpone the completion of Game 5 till Wednesday? I think so. I was out driving in daylight on slippery roads. It would have not been prudent to have people risk their lives in the current weather conditions with hazardous winds forecasts added. Winds that with a very wet ground might bring down trees and power lines. Add the alcohol factor to that, and you have a potential for catastrophe.

So what has been learned form this experience, not much, Bud Selig continues to demonstrate he is incapable of learning. yes a few weeks ago, he re-thought the scheduling of the playoffs, too many off days. In reality I doubt it was his brilliant original idea, but based on the lower ratings the baseball playoffs were getting in the face of the superior college football on Saturday, Sunday night NFL game,s and the start of the Hockey and NBA season. Loyal baseball fans will tune in, but those sports seasonal fans, weren't staying tuned to the MLB playoff.

Selig has yet to learn the season is too long. The addition of the Wild Card and the virtual extinction of weekend doubleheaders lengthens tunes out the fan. The only doubleheaders are for make up games. Outside of those games, they are not scheduled, too taxing on the players; high potential for injuries. For the first 40 years of baseball, the double header on a weekend was a staple of the sport. And look a the long list of talent, Gehrig, Mantle, DiMaggio, Ripken, and the others who played in the age of the doubleheader.

Shorten the season, start in mid April, not end of March, bring back the doubleheaders, and get the World Series over with by Columbus Day. But of course whats good for the fans, isn't' good for baseball; because Bud Selig like George Steinbrenner isn't dong it for the fans, he is doing it for the money.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Stains on the New Yankee Stadium

On Sunday, the ESPN program , "Outside the Lines" did a piece on the tax assessment scam the NYC Government of Major Bloomberg did for the New York Yankees. Seems concrete hardness is not the only problem with the New Yankee Stadium.

For those who missed it, the land the new stadium is built on was reassessed at 60 times it's worth. This was done to enable the New York Yankees Organization to qualify for US Government bonds to build the new digs. Yes George Steinbrenner and family are footing the cost, but on one of the greatest financing scams perpetuated on the Americans since Peter Minuet bought Manhattan for $24.00 in beads from the American Indians.
The issue of concrete hardness, much like the issue of financing of the new Stadium will not halt construction. However both elements loom bad for Major Bloomberg when he has sought to circumvent the law.

For those that care or those that don't, NYC Major Bloomberg is seeking a 3rd term. Three consecutive terms are not allowed by the NYC Constitution. Bloomberg, because he thinks he is the only one who can save NYC in our depressed economy feels the city needs him. As such he has won approval of the NYC Council to run for a 3rd term. The council has no legal authority to canhge the law, lawsuits are now being filed to overturn the vote. But apparently Bloomberg believes he can make law any way he wants; God forbid the citizens actually vote on the subject. The voted to ban 3 terms, they shoudl have the say in overturning it.
I find all the negative things unfolding around the new stadium scary. The scariest of which occurred today.

This morning I got a phone call from Joe in the Yankee Ticket Office. He explained the call was courtesy call, to inform me I would receive my invoice in Early January for the seats in the new Stadium. He asked me if I had any questions. I had plenty:

  • NET ?: "Where are my seats"
  • NYY Joe's Reply: "They will be assigned in a few weeks, we are too busy and overloaded to let each seat holder know their individual seat location personally. This will be your only call till you are invoiced."
  • NET ?: "What if I don't like them"
  • NYY Joe's Reply: "Reject them and you will be reassigned to a pool with other ticket holder who rejected their first assignment, then you will be given another assignment in order of seniority."

The concrete didn't bother me, that NYC construction.

The money game by Bloomberg's administration and the Yankees to inflate the land value to get US Gov't financing didn't bother me, because that's also NYC Construction.

The attitude of the Yankees, of not having time to call ticket holders to tell them their set options, that bothered me. It brothers it's not about the fans; if it were, I'd be getting a phone call before being invoiced asking me if I accepted my seat assignment.

At the ground breaking for the new Stadium, George Steinbrenner, said he was doing it for the fans. He lied, he's doing it for his self; and it got me to thinking. With all the lying and cheating around the new stadium , I hope it does not make it cursed. The honorable tradition of the NY Yankees, the mystique may prefer to stay at the old site. Why would the ghosts of historic Yankees want to inhabit the new place when it is shrouded in some much dishonor?

Old Yankee Stadium may be called the House that Ruth built, but it was more than Babe Ruth. Their was Gehrig, Mantle, DiMaggio, Berra and scores of honorable Yankees. For an team that prides itself in it's tradition and honor, it's management has a few lessons to learn from the ghosts. Yankee Management has not been honorable, at least not with fans.

It's time for Yankee Management to become honorable, because all the payroll in the world won't keep the fans in their seats if they play poorly and lose games. And besides Management should practice what it preaches. If they want the players to honor tradition, then Management must also honor tradition.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

What's In a Name?

You have to wonder what effects team names and uniforms have on the players. On a local note I look to the NY Mets and the NY Jets. Both closely linked in a name rhyme game, and both providing more misery and pain then joy and pride to their fans.

Look now at the Tampa Bay Rays. The Rays have languished at the abyss of the American League since their conception in 1998. Now in 2008 with a shortened name and modified uniform, they sit at the precipice of the Big Show, the World Series.

In 2006, the Rays began rebuilding. In 2008 , a new name and new uniform appeared. The changes being prominently marketed with these this team being the new and improved Rays. Who knew?

Is it the name or the new uniform or is it the attitude, the positive attitude. Yes the team is improved, but as the sports has shown you can be the best team on paper and not make the finals. The Yankees were great on paper the last two years. However they missed the Big Show. Why, because the Yankees seemed like not all of them believed.

The Rays will start their final quest for perfection this week, and if I were the Philadelphia Phillies I would worry and lose sleep. The Rays believe, maybe true believers that they are the best team in baseball. A positive attitude can go long for success, as as long as they believe they can succeed, the St. Petersburg Times will be able to showcase another Tampa area resident showing off his World Series Trophy. No not George Steinbrenner, principal owner of the New York Yankees, but Stuart Sternberg, principal owner of the Tampa Bay Rays.

In the minds of the Rays, they have conquered the best baseball has tossed at them. They have risen from the abyss of the AL East cellar to the American League Champs. In the course of that they have run over the almighty New York Yankees and the Boston Red Soxs. They may be concerned about the Phillies, but they have the edge, success and a positive attitude.

That said I predict a great world series, as the Phillies have been absent from the Big Show. Balance that with the we can do do it Rays, and anything can happen.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Photos Final Game

I have posted a slide show of photos from the Final NYY Home game at the bottom of my blog.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

The Last Yankee Stadium Yankee Game





This link above will take you to site where I have posted my pictures, good and not so good of Sunday's night's game. I will be posting a slide of those picture on this blog in a day or so, but this other link will enable those who actually want a photo to get one for their own scrapbook.


I never thought I would be part of something historical. However the Yankees and Yankee Stadium are history; and in recent years I have been privileged to be there for significant historical events. This game is history now, the last one ever at what will soon be labeled, Old Yankee Stadium. It surpasses the first game back after 9/11 and any playoff/World Series game I attended. Yankee Stadium , new or old will forever be historical, even after it is reduced to rubble and parkland.


Despite initial announcement, all the plans have changed. The first hint was when premium seats ticketing occurred in early summer, and then fans were told recently all ticket plans would change. A few days later the Yankees and the City of New York announced the stadium shell would not be preserved, the stadium would be demolished and made into a park. the City tool all efforts to protect Yankee Stadium Sunday, not to help the coffers of souvenir seat sales, but because nothing will be done with the stadium until the Yankees are absolutely sure new digs will be available. Until that time, no deconstruction will occur in the grand old Cathedral of Baseball.


For those still wishing a look, the Yankees are still running tours. Stadium tours will run until such time as the Yankees begin to ship operations across the street.


I will have further thoughts on Sunday's final baseball game in a few days. And while there will never be another MLB pitch thrown there, there is still a place to go and see for those who want a tour. But don't wait too long to go.