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And then there were four...

With the Yankees down 5-2, Derek Jeter, who was pretty well the only man on the team who played as if Mystique and Aura was something he knew about, homered in the seventh to cut the deficit to two runs. Jeter then led off the ninth with a single, bringing the tying run to the plate, in the person of the man who led the American League in home runs.

Alex Rodriguez hit into a double play, capping his 2-15 (.133) post-season.

The Angels pitched around Rodriguez (they walked him 6 times in the five games.) The Angels limited the damage done by Gary Sheffield, who had 6 hits in the series, but none for extra bases.

Mike Mussina pitched well in the opener, but his Game Score last night was 28. Which meant only that it was better than Randy Johnson's work in Game Three. Johnson pitched very well in relief of Mussina, and gave his team a chance to get back into the game. But you can't come from behind every time.

The beasts of the East are finished for the year. What next in Boston and New York? The Red Sox have some exciting young talent - Hansen, Papelbon, Ramirez - is it time to work them into the lineup? The Yankees have at least one big contract - Bernie Williams - coming off the books. They badly need a centre fielder, and Johnny Damon is a free agent... They brought in three starters last off-season, but they still need pitching, starters and relievers. Badly. And so do the Red Sox, of course. Equally badly.

These are strange divisional powerhouses.

I think that combination pretty much guarantees that A.J. Burnett won't be looking for a Toronto apartment any time soon Which doesn't bother me all that much...

There was other news. The Phillies dismissed GM Ed Wade after eight years on the job, and no trips to the-post-season. The Phillies have made just one trip to the post-season in the last 20 years, and that ended badly.

One half of the Orioles GM tandem - Jim Beattie - has been shown the door. The other half, Mike Flanagan, who at least has a distinguished Orioles pedigree, is expected to be assigned to different duties in the organization. The Orioles have received permission to talk to Jim Duquette of the Mets and Tim Wilken of the Devil Rays. Wilken, of course, was part of the Blue Jays organization from 1979 through 2003, serving as Director of Scouting (1995-2000) and Vice-President, Baseball (2000-2003.)

One game tonight, as the ALCS kicks off in the Windy City. The Angels obviously have to be very worried about Bartolo Colon's shoulder, and now there are concerns that Jarrod Washburn may have strep throat. Kelvim Escobar, who turned in some very gutsy work out of the pen against the Yankees (literally - Escobar has been sick as well), may end up starting some games at this rate:

Los Angeles (Byrd) at Chicago (Contreras) 8:00

This Day in Baseball, Playoff Edition: October 11 | 24 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
John Northey - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 07:42 AM EDT (#129960) #
This should be a fun offseason the AL East as the Jays are the most 'safe' team there is. Yankees and Red Sox will both be looking to make heads role over their loses in the first round (Stottlemyre looks likely to retire), the D-Rays and Orioles have already roled a few. I do love the idea of the Orioles looking to take people from Tampa though (even if Wilken is a very good guy at finding draft talent). Let the other 4 eat their own and we'll (hopefully) see the Jays sneak on in. Yes, I can be an optimist at times.
Jordan - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 08:46 AM EDT (#129961) #
Ever read The Tipping Point? One of the things Malcolm Gladwell suggests is that epidemics sometimes spread by people seeing other people do something, and they feel strangely more inclined to do it themselves.

The Devil Rays fired their GM a few days ago, and days later the Phillies fired theirs, and within mere hours the Orioles fired theirs. I wouldn't be the least bit surprised to see Brian Cashman let go by the Yankees (along with Joe Torre, who would be offered the chance to resign).
Craig B - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 10:22 AM EDT (#129967) #
The same guy caught both Berkman's grand slam and Burke's game-winning HR in that 18-inning game the other day.

Now THAT is weird.
Rob - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 10:32 AM EDT (#129969) #
As weird as Scott Sullivan getting hit in the face with a puck, some fan in the stands mocking him, then later in the game, that same fan getting hit in the face with a puck while Sullivan made fun of him?

It's definitely weirder than that guy who caught two foul balls on back-to-back pitches, that's for sure.
Jonny German - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 10:44 AM EDT (#129970) #
I'd say the homer incident is weirder than the puck incident, given that there were likely a lot of fans laughing at Sully. Hockey mentality...

The Tipping Point is excellent, as are Gladwell's New Yorker articles. Have you read Blink, Jordan? A little disappointing to me. Not nearly as tight as I've come to expect from Gladwell, and one huge non sequitur early on which put me in a doubting mindset for the rest of the book.

Wildrose - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 10:49 AM EDT (#129971) #
I think Torre might resign, but only if his $13 million in remaining salary in 2006/2005 is guaranteed. George is certainly not afraid to pay good money to the hired help.
Jordan - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 11:13 AM EDT (#129974) #
Yeah, I'd hard Blink wasn't so hot, and there have been some reasonable doubts expressed about some of his conclusions. I think Malcolm got a little hooked on the whole "counter-intuitive" think after Tipping Point and took it one step beyond.

The best thing I've ever read from Gladwell, and it has a direct sports application, is this. Just fascinating stuff about what makes people choke in the clutch.

Shortstop - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 11:17 AM EDT (#129975) #
Torre has said he will never resign, and i believe him. I do think Cashman is out the door and i think he will land in Philly. I would not put it passed the Boss to fire Torre and bring in Sweet Lou.
#2JBrumfield - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 12:20 PM EDT (#129976) #
Can we start calling the Yankees "Atlanta Braves North" now? I'm quite happy Mussina was the losing pitcher last night. It looks so good on him.

Even though I'm happy the Yankees lost, I think a White Sox-Yankees series would've been more compelling than the Sox-Halos. If the Pale Hose aren't up 2-0 in this series, there's something wrong with them. The Angels are going to be so dead tired with all that travel and not to mention the fact Colon and Washburn are question marks to see action in this series.

R Billie - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 12:56 PM EDT (#129978) #
I know it's silly but I feel for the Yankees. With a $200 million payroll they're expected to win. And yet in a short series, stuff happens.

I think this year though it was obvious they would have pitching problems. The Angels outclassed them in both the rotation and the bullpen. Not the Yankees didn't make it interesting to the last pitch anyway.

Although, I can't say I'm sad to see both the Yankees and the Red Sox out of it after one round of the playoffs. I hope this does at least suggest to the doubters out there that these are not teams that are invincible. Although it bears remembering that in a year where both teams were "vunerable" they still won 95 games each.
SK in NJ - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 03:01 PM EDT (#129982) #
Well, last year George was "furious" over blowing a 3-0 series lead to the Red Sox....and proceeded to throw near $20 million on Carl Pavano and Jaret Wright, while acquiring a 40-year old Randy Johnson. Two pitchers that were coming off career seasons in pitcher's parks, and a dominating pitcher who went south the second he wore the pinstripes.

Boston is likely going to move its best player (Ramirez) and will be in a bidding war over Johnny Damon with the Yankees. The SP market is mediocre (Burnett, Millwood, Morris, and then nothing worth noting), and so is the hitter's market.

If there is any off-season the Jays have the potential to gain serious ground, it's this one, IMO.
MatO - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 03:18 PM EDT (#129983) #
Looks like Flanagan is the Oriole's GM.
Magpie - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 03:23 PM EDT (#129985) #
How much will Yankees fans enjoy a Houston-Chicago WS? Starring Clemens, Pettite, El Duque?

Just wondering...

Ron - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 04:03 PM EDT (#129986) #
Besides Bernie Williams, I believe Kevin Brown (and his massive salary) comes off the books.

The off-season for the AL East is going to be really interesting. I think there's a chance none of the 5 clubs will be cutting payroll.

Bring on the Winter Meetings!!!
BrockLanders - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 06:14 PM EDT (#129987) #
Its the changing of the guard in the east. J.P. has no excuses the next two seasons with the two powerhouses facing major issues. Even Tampa could force their way into the picture with the acquisition of two starting pitchers.
Braby21 - Tuesday, October 11 2005 @ 11:44 PM EDT (#129990) #
The whole situation make's it tougher on JP. Now that the Yanks and Sox want to spend money, along with the O's again, probably will put the Market out of wack again. I could see the Yanks and Sox overpaying stars and JP refusing to over pay and us ending up with basically the same team as next.
CaramonLS - Wednesday, October 12 2005 @ 01:29 AM EDT (#129993) #
Wasn't there a rumor that the Braves didn't want to pick up Marcus Giles for another year (because hes going to earn 6.5 or something similar)?

For a very solid hitting 2B I would absolutely love to get him over here.


DepecheJay - Wednesday, October 12 2005 @ 03:09 AM EDT (#129994) #
Your right Braby, let's just give up because this task is definitely going to be too hard. Come on, this is the mindset that JP had for a little while and I think people are growing tired of it. Let's stop feeling sorry for ourselves, okay? It appears that J.P. doesn't care if the market goes out of wack because he's just going to spend to try and get some talent in here.

It's put up or shutup time for J.P. and I think he knows this too. If he takes the same "feel sorry for me" attitude and starts whining about players not wanting to play in Toronto or playing in the same division as the Sox/Yanks as some of the posters here, please Godfrey, do us all a favor and fire him.
Wildrose - Wednesday, October 12 2005 @ 09:35 AM EDT (#129996) #
I don't think Braby is "giving up", he's merely pointing out the reality of the situation.

Were all tired of losing, but overwrought emotional comments don't add much to the discussion.
Jonny German - Wednesday, October 12 2005 @ 10:20 AM EDT (#129998) #
Even Tampa could force their way into the picture with the acquisition of two starting pitchers.

Just two? That would give you a rotation of Scott Kazmir, new guy #1, new guy #2, and... Mark Hendrickson (5.90 ERA in 178 IP)? Casey Fossum (4.92 / 163)? Doug Waechter (5.62 / 157)? Seth McClung (6.59 / 109)? Hideo Nomo (7.24 / 101)? Dewon Brazelton (7.61 / 71?

As much as the Jays need bats, Tampa's need for pitching is much, much more severe. Kazmir and Danys Baez were the only Rays to toss more than 50 innings with an ERA+ over 100. The Jays currently have a better AAA pitching staff than what the Rays can put together.

Mike Green - Wednesday, October 12 2005 @ 10:56 AM EDT (#129999) #
It would be unlikely for Tampa to make a run in 2006. Upton and Young probably need another half-season in triple A. Niemann and Townsend are a year away at least (in Townsend's case probably 2 years). For them to end up at .500 in 2006 would not, however, be a surprise to me if they acquire a starter or two. That would set them up nicely for a run in 2007.

Incidentally, Baseball America's new stat pages are a real step forward. Not only is there G/F information for pitchers, but also opposition OBP and Slugging Pct.
Gitz - Wednesday, October 12 2005 @ 05:10 PM EDT (#130032) #
How much will Yankees fans enjoy a Houston-Chicago WS? Starring Clemens, Pettite, El Duque?

Let's not forget Jose Contreras.

I think Tampa Bay may surprise some people next year; not by winning the division or even contending for the Wild Card, but their offense really looks good, if a bit walk challenged. They're going to be competitive more often than not.

Gitz - Wednesday, October 12 2005 @ 05:22 PM EDT (#130034) #
The frustrating thing about the Jays's needing more hitters is that their needs -- 1B/DH/LF -- are supposedly the easiest to fill. I keep hearing this from some fans who have e-mailed me about the A's, but the A's have had the same problems for three years in a row now: no power from the corner OF slots (though Nick Swisher was adequate this year) and no power from 1B (though it looks like Dan Johnson may be OK). Long before Billy Beane "pioneered" the idea of free talent, Sandy Alderson was filling those holes with Geronimo Berroa, John Jaha, and Matt Stairs, among others. Other players, like Olmedo Saenz, had key, if limited, roles. But it's been a while since the A's have hit upon some success in the "free talent" market (Scott Hatteberg was ok for one season, but has more or less been a sink hole the last few years). There is the perception that, because the D-Backs didn't appreciate what Erubiel Durazo offered, he was "free talent," but that is not accurate. Free or not, he was mediocre his first year, good his second, and useless his third.

If the Jays do invest a lot of money in A.J. Burnett or B.J. Ryan -- not something, on the whole, I'm too keen on -- hopefully J.P. can dig up some free talent to fill in the team's holes on offense. Of course, it would also help if Alexis Rios develops some power, if Koskie can stay healthy/produce, if Eric Hinske re-discovers his stroke. That's a lot of ifs, and the Jays would be well served to bring in a reliable bat. Easier said than done, of course.
Craig B - Thursday, October 13 2005 @ 12:51 AM EDT (#130054) #
Well Gitz... power is harder to come by, period. Home runs and slugging percentage in the AL were at their lowest level since 1993. Finding good hitters, who can deal with the new breed of strike-throwing major league pitchers, is as tough as it's ever been.

The "free talent" is getting more picked over every year.
This Day in Baseball, Playoff Edition: October 11 | 24 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.