Yankees and Red Sox Will Meet in 2009 MLB Playoffs

by Noiz 8. October 2009 11:49
Much to the chagrin of baseball fans sick of these two media darlings, the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox will battle one another in 2009 MLB Playoffs.   
 
We predict both high profile clubs will survive their opening round matchups and meet up in the American League Championship Series.  The Yankees will easily dispatch the Minnesota Twins while the Red Sox will eventually handle the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.

As for the National League, prepare to see the upstart Colorado Rockies go against the wily St. Louis Cardinals with a trip to the World Series on the line.  

The networks may not appreciate a NLCS without the Los Angeles Dodgers and/or the Philadelphia Phillies but we just don't see those teams moving on.
 
YANKEES-TWINS
On paper it's the Yankees, and then the Yankees and then some more Yankees.   

Even causal baseball fans don't think the Twins can defeat The Empire or even take a game.  It has nothing to do with the Yankees' superior starting pitching, bullpen and lineup.  It has nothing to do with the fact that the only guy on the Twins team you'd take over his Yankee counterpart is Joe Mauer.

The main reason why the Twins will be swept out of the playoffs is they had to play an extra game.  
 
That one-game playoff against the Detroit Tigers completely discombobulated the Twins' starting rotation.  Teams involved in a 163rd game usually don't fair to well in the post season (2007 Colorado Rockies notwithstanding).

Besides, the Yankees have to win.  Their $200 million-plus roster wasn't built to just win 103 games; it was built to win the 11 games necessary to be crowned World Series champions.
 

Yankees in 3. 

RED SOX-ANGELS
The Red Sox and Angels met in the postseason in 2004, 2007 and 2008.  In those three series, the teams played 10 games with the Red Sox winning 9 of them.

Will that trend continue in 2009?

The Angels have home field-advantage and the Red sox are a bad road team.  

The Angels added Bobby Abreu to the middle of their lineup and so far he's paying huge dividends.  

As for the Red Sox, catcher Jason Varitek is playing like he's 50 and David Oritz is no longer the Big Papi of old.

So should fans rip up their 2009 Boston Red Sox playoff tickets and concentrate on the Celtics and Patriots?

Not so fast.

The Red Sox have the best starting rotation in the majors while the Angels have a shaky bullpen.  And with the addition of Victor Martinez, the Red Sox's lineup is better than it was last year.   

We don't see any reason why The Nation's postseason dominance over the Halos will end.  The Angels win at least one game but the Red Sox advance.

Red Sox in 4.

PHILLIES-ROCKIES
In their championship year of 2008, the Phillies were 79-0 in games they led after eight innings.  In 2009, they're 79-10.

The culprit of their late inning demise (if you can call it that) is Brad Lidge.  Last season Lidge converted 48 of 48 save opportunities including 7 of 7 in the post season.  In 2009, he blew 11 saves on his way to posting a 7.21 ERA.

If the Phillies' closer problems weren't bad enough, the Rockies have a lineup that can actually exploit such a weakness.

Troy Tulowitzki, Todd Helton, and Clint Barmes possess the power necessary to really capitalize on mistakes.  Corner outfielders Seth Smith and Braw Hawpe must be reckoned with as well.

With analogous power on the Phillies' side—Ryan Howard, Chase Utley, Jimmy Rollins, Jason Werth, and Raul Ibanez—this series could break the scoreboard.

So who advances?

It's nearly impossible to predict anything when the Rockies are involved.  They were 15 1/2 games out of first place on June 3.  They didn't win the NL West but they did keep the Dodgers from running away with the division.   Eventually, their pluck and tenacity made 2009 a playoff year for the Colorado Rockies.

Therefore get your playoff tickets for the Philadelphia Phillies while you can.  The Rockies take this series.

Rockies in 5.

DODGERS-CARDINALS
This series is a matchup of the Cardinals' veteran starting lineup and the Dodgers' awesome bullpen.

The Cardinals have two perennial Cy Young candidates in Chris Carpenter and Adam Wainwright while the Dodgers have Hong-Chih Kuo, George Sherrill and Jonathan Broxton coming out of the bully.

This series obviously comes down to how well the Cards bullpen can hold leads and how many quality innings the Dodgers' starters can give manager Joe Torre.  

It should be noted that the Dodgers have the best ERA in baseball.  While part of that achievement is due to the vastness of Dodgers Stadium, most of it is because of their stellar bullpen—not their starting rotation.

Both these ball clubs come into the postseason struggling.  The Cardinals finished the 2009 campaign 1-6.  The Dodgers were slightly better at 2-5.

In order to get red hot and rolling, the Dodgers need Manny Ramirez to start hitting like Manny Ramirez.  They also need leadoff man Rafael Furcal to get on base.  When he's swinging the bat well the Dodgers' lineup is tough to contain.

For the Cardinals, someone other than Albert Pujols and Matt Holliday needs to be productive.  Maybe Ryan Ludwick or Mark DeRose?

Due to the way the Dodgers dominated most of the season it's hard to pick against them, but you have to go with starting pitching.

Cardinals in 4.

Cubs and Cards: One of Baseball's Oldest Rivalries

by Noiz 10. July 2009 17:04

Starting today, the Chicago Cubs and the St. Louis Cardinals begin a three-day, four-game series that is absolutely pivotal to the NL Central standings.

Entering the series, the division leading Cards had a 3.5 game lead over the third-place Cubs.  Sandwiched in between the two heated rivals are the Milwaukee Brewers.  
 
Lurking behind the Cubs, both within a game, are the Houston Astros and the Cincinnati Reds.  With a few other good teams scattered through the National League, like the Florida Marlins and the Colorado Rockies, winning the division is probably the only way any team from the Central is making the postseason.  

St. Louis manager Tony LaRussa definitely realizes this is a big mid-season series.  He moved the ace of his staff, Chris Carpenter ahead of right handed pitcher Brad Thompson in the rotation.  Carpenter will still be pitching on three days’ rest.

The Cubs recalled pitcher Jeff Stevens from Iowa so manager Lou Pinella can have seven relievers at his disposal.  Stevens enters the series having never pitched in the Majors.

This is the penultimate series of the year between these two teams.  The next and last time these two rivals face one another will be in mid-September.

The Cubs have not fared well against the Cardinals in 2009.  In May, the Cubbies fell to 3-6 on the year after being swept in a three-game series in St. Louis. The Cubs lead the all-time series 1,148-1,079.  

Good news for Cubs fans, after a slow start slugger Derrek Lee is starting to return to his usual MVP-like form.  This month alone he’s hit five homers and driven in 14 runs.  He had six home runs in all of June.

The club returned third baseman Aramis Ramirez to the lineup this week after being out with a shoulder injury.  The Cubs also welcomed back center fielder Reed Johnson and reliever Angel Guzman.

As those players returned to the club, starting pitcher Ryan Dempster was forced to go on the 15-day disabled list—he probably won’t be back until August.  The 2008 rookie of the year, Geovany Soto, went on the 15-day DL on July 10th.  He’ll probably be out for at least a month.

The Cardinals’ new utility man, Mark DeRosa will have his partially torn tendon sheath in his left wrist looked at after the All-Star break.  While there’s no word on when he’ll return, the team is hoping it will before the end of July.

DeRosa being out may actually be bad news for the Cubs.  His roster replacement, Brian Barden, is batting .556 against Cubs this season.

The Cardinals are also getting a player back, starting pitcher Kyle Lohse.  Look for the right hander to start the second game of the doubleheader on Sunday.  A strained forearm flexor in his right arm has kept the hurler out of the rotation since June 4th.

The Cubs and Cardinals rivalry doesn’t receive the same amount of attention (at least from ESPN) as the rivalry between the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox.  While the Evil Empire and the Nation attract national headlines, the Cards-Cubs series is in many ways more significant. 

The best explanation of the difference between the two rivalries can be found in the words of Buzz Bissinger. 

"The Red Sox and Yankees is a tabloid-filled soap opera about money and ego and sound bites. But the Cubs and Cardinals are about... geography and territorial rights." 

The city of Chicago and the city of St. Louis are separated by just 300 miles or 5 hours of driving on I-55.  That’s about 85 miles more than the distance between New York and Boston but for the Midwest 300 miles is practically next store.

With the exception of the Kansas City Royals and the Brewers (two teams no one roots for unless they absolutely have too), and if we can forget about the Chicago White Sox for a moment (sorry South Siders), the Cubs and the Cards are the only two Major League teams located in that neck of the Midwest woods.  

For decades baseball fans residing between the cities of Chicago and St. Louis have been forced to choose one team or other.  Not only that, but since the cities are so close to one another, regardless of where the Cubs and Cardinals meet there’s usually a lot of opposing fans in the stands. 

Of course the Cubs and Cards aren’t the only rivalry in the National League.  The New York Mets and the Philadelphia Phillies are bitter foes.  

Historically one team is usually winning while the other is losing, but in each of the last two years the Mets’ late season swoons have allowed the Phillies to capture the division crown.    

The Los Angeles Dodgers and the San Francisco Giants are the Major League’s oldest rivalry.  These two clubs, while both still in New York, started playing one another in 1883.  

The Cubs and the Cardinals are the league’s second oldest rivalry.  The teams’ first meeting was all the way back in 1885.  Between the two clubs they have been playing baseball for nearly 250 years,

Through the years fans have seen a lot of great players participate in Cubs-Cards rivalry.

For the Cardinals there’s been Rogers Hornsby, Stan Musial, Lou Brock, Bob Gibson, Ozzie Smith, Joe Medwick and Albert Pujols.  

For the Cubs there’s been Ernie Banks, Hack Wilson, Ryne Sandberg, Ferguson Jenkins, Frank Chance and Alfonso Soriano.

This series has been punctuated by several historic events including the infamous trade of pitcher Ernie Broglio.  In the middle of the 1964 season, Broglio was traded to the Cubs.  In return, the Cardinals received a rather obscure outfielder, maybe you’ve heard of him, Lou Brock.  It’s widely regarded as the most lopsided traded in MLB history.

Most people don’t know this, but legendary Cubs announcer Harry Caray, whose voice is still synonymous with the city of Chicago, started his career as a broadcaster in St. Louis. 

In 2002, Lee and Pujols battled for the NL MVP.  Both first basemen were worthy of the award but with the Cubs finishing 21 games out of first place and the Cards winning 100, Pujols was named most valuable player.

Also in 2002, the teams showed that the heated rivalry does not extend beyond the diamond.  Cubs catcher Joe Giradri, with his voice cracking, addressed Wrigley Field and asked fans to pray for the family of Cardinals pitcher Darryl Kile who died of coronary disease before a scheduled game.

Perhaps the greatest event to ever grace the Cubs-Cardinals series occurred in 1998.  In that year the rivalry saw Cardinals first basemen Mark McGwire and Cubs outfielder Sammy Sosa revitalize baseball as they chased Roger Maris’ single season record of 61 home runs.  

McGwire reached the historic milestone first.  He tied and broke the record against Cubs pitching.

No hallowed records will be set this year when the Cubs and Cardinals battle but their highly emotional series may decide who reaches the post season and who doesn’t.

Yanks vs. Mets: Subway Series 2009

by Noiz 4. June 2009 08:29

It’s June again in the Majors League and that can only mean one thing, interleague play.  More specifically, time for the Sunway Series and Yankees-Mets tickets.

On Friday, June 12th the Mets travel across town to play their very first game in the Yankees’ new stadium.  Two weeks later, the Yankees return the favor by travelling to the Mets’ new ballpark, Citi Field. 

Despite the opportunity to play in brand new stadiums, don’t be surprised if this highly touted interleague matchup is no where to be found on either of these teams’ radar. 

Prior to their intercity duel, each club has a big series against their respective division foes.  For the Yankees, they play a three-game set on the road against their arch enemy, the Boston Red Sox.  Meanwhile, the Mets host the NL East leading and defending World Series championships, the Philadelphia Phillies.

After a shaky start and falling behind 5 ½ games, the New York Yankees found their stride and sprinted to the top of the division standings.  Their turnaround coincides with the return of Alex Rodriquez. 

In the first 25 games of his return, the Bronx Bombers went 18-7.  That stretch includes 18 straight games without an error.  During that errorless streak, the Yanks went 14-4.

While A-Rod paid immediate dividends at the plate—he knocked the very first pitch he saw of the 2009 season out of the ballpark—he can’t pitch.  Fortunately, CC Sabathia can. 

The Yanks huge offseason signing has finally found his groove and is back to his usual great pitching-self.  In April, Sabathia was 1-2 in five starts with a 4.73 ERA.  In May, the former Milwaukee Brewer rebounded to go 4-1 in five starts with a 2.56 ERA while walking only 10 batters.

The New York Mets, on the other hand, have just been plain shaky.  They won 12 of 15 to start the month of May, but after that stretch they’ve struggled to string three wins together (that’s excluding games against the lowly Washington Nationals).  The Mets lost some games they should have won and despite some early success, their bullpen has begun to struggle, namely offseason acquisition J.J. Putz.

While the bullpen isn’t doing the team any favors, what’s really slowing down the Mets is injuries.  It seems like every day, a different Met gets banged up or comes down with some sort of illness (there was even discussion of a couple of Mets contracting the swine flu). 

Shortstop Jose Reyes, right fielder Ryan Church, pitcher Oliver Perez have all missed considerable time on the disabled list and slugging first basemen, Carlos Delgado, isn’t due back until late July.  Needless to say, when you’re a walking M*A*S*H unit, it’s hard to gain and then maintain momentum.

Still, the Mets have perennial Cy Young candidate Johan Santana.  He leads the National League in ERA and is second in strikeouts.  Offensively, the Mets rely on centerfielder Carlos Beltran, one of the National League leaders in batting average.

It will be interesting to see how the Mets do playing in their home town but still being the road team.  In their first 50 games they compiled an 11-13 road record.  That’s the second worst road record in the N.L. East, only the Nationals have done worse away from the friendly confines.

The Yankees will try to out slug their Big Apple brethren, they’re among the league leaders in runs scored, batting average and home runs.  They will also try to win via their steady defense.  The Yanks are among the league’s best in fielding percentage and fewest errors committed.

Meanwhile, the Mets will try to win it on the mound, their team ERA is near the top of the NL and it’s better than any team in American League.  They’ll also try to keep the game close.  As of June 3rd, the Mets are 10-9 in one-run games, they are tied for playing in the most one-run games in the National League.

Regardless of the numbers, or where they are in the standings, Yankees versus the Mets is annually baseball’s premiere interleague matchup.  This year is certainly no different.

Yankees and Mets: End of April Report

by Noiz 3. May 2009 20:22
Leave it to the Yankees.

The season isn’t even a month old and already the New York Yankees have generated more drama than most divisions generate in an entire season.

The Yankees lost their home opener 10-2 in their new $1.5 billion stadium to the Cleveland Indians.  The game wasn’t even as close as the score indicates.

Most of their pitchers have ERA’s bigger than the national unemployment rate.  The pinstripes ended April with the league’s third worst team ERA, 5.79.

In their first meeting of the season, the Yankees were swept in a three games series by their archrivals, the Boston Red Sox.  

New Yankee Stadium is disparagingly called “Coors Field East” after an inordinate amount of home runs left the ballpark via right field.  Even though the dimensions are identical to the old Yankee Stadium, critics blame the excessive home runs on “jet streams.”

In what’s an embarrassment to not only the franchise but the entire league, the Yankees lowered high-end ticket prices by as much as fifty-percent.  There were just too many empty seats showing up on television.  

Seemingly every day, a new incriminating excerpt from Selena Roberts’ new book about Alex Rodriquez is released to the media.   The book entitled “A-Rod” alleges Rodriquez took steroids in high school and had a Texas Rangers clubhouse attendant load up his toothbrushes with toothpaste after every game.   

As bad as April appeared, the Yankees finished the month 12-10.  While New York fans, and media, were expecting a 22-0 start, a lot of teams would kill to be two games over .500.

Rodriquez is set to return in mid-May, and despite being shrouded in controversy, he will help his team win.  Right handed pitcher Brian Bruney should also return to the club in May.  Bruney, one of the few bright spots in the Yanks’ bullpen, went down in late April with a strained right elbow.
 
Pitcher Chien-Ming Wang also went on the disabled list in April, but that might be a good thing.  His ERA is 34.50.  Wang's rehab in Tampa is going well but still no word on when he'll return to the club.

So far the Yankees' season can be summed up by one event.  That event happened during the final game of their series against the Red Sox.  Pitcher Andy Pettitte fell asleep on the mound and catcher Jorge Posada did the same behind the plate.  Their mental "naps" allowed Madras, Oregon’s own Jacoby Ellsbury to steal home.  

The entire team has been playing like that, lethargic, lackadaisical, and lacking focus.  If this teams wants to win anything in 2009 they need to snap out of their daze and start playing with some urgency.

Something similar is happening to New York’s other baseball team.

Before starting their first series in May, New York Mets General Manager Omar Minaya questioned whether or not his team has an “edge.”

Ouch!  Less than a month into the season and Minaya is already called his team soft?

The Mets finished April at 9-12, four and half games behind the Florida Marlins.  The stat that may have put Minaya over the top is the Mets are 1-9 when trailing after six innings.

Meanwhile their division foes, the Philadelphia Phillies, lead the major with nine comeback wins.

Yet, Minaya’s Mets are third in the National League in batting and middle of the pack in pitching.  Centerfielder Carlos Beltran is leading the league with a .391 batting average.  Ace Johan Santana is 3-1 with a league leading 1.10 ERA.  Closer Francisco Rodriguez is five for five in save opportunities.  

Those are good numbers and seem to contradict Minaya’s accusations.   So why are the Mets losing?  They’re 3-6 on the road and 4-5 in one run ball games.  Those numbers do support Minaya’s accusation.

Both New York teams have new stadiums and the same high expectations.  If these franchises want to sell a lot of Yankees-Mets tickets and win a lot of games, they each need to find a way to infuse their ballclubs with some vim and vigor.  

Sadly for these two franchises, urgency is not something they can buy.

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