Tag: AL East

Blue Jays’ Big Sweep of Yankees Proves Even Tulowitzki Loss Can’t Stop Offense

The wins are great, but the injury curbs some of the enthusiasm. 

The Toronto Blue Jays went into the Bronx knowing a series win could give them a significant cushion in the American League East. On Saturday night, they secured that victory, taking the first three games of a four-game weekend against the New York Yankees to pump their division lead to 4.5 games. 

That is a commanding lead considering only 20 games remain in the Blue Jays’ regular season, while the Yankees have 21 to play without controlling their own fate within the division. The three Toronto wins, including Saturday’s sweep of a doubleheader, give it a 93 percent probability of winning the East, according to FanGraphs’ playoff odds.

Right now, the only thing dampening the impending triumph is shortstop Troy Tulowitzki’s left shoulder blade, which cracked upon impact with center fielder Kevin Pillar during the first of Saturday’s two games.

Tulowitzki, who went to Toronto in the blockbuster trade that sent Jose Reyes to the Colorado Rockies before the non-waiver trade deadline, will be monitored in the coming days before the Blue Jays’ medical staff determines his timeline for a return.

This certainly could be a significant blow, and Tulowitzki could be out for a while. Considering the role the shoulders play in a baseball swing, and considering a crack is the same as a break or a fracture, it seems like a long shot at this point that the Blue Jays will get their starting shortstop back at any point for the rest of the regular or postseason.

For now, the team has to wait and see. MLB reporter Gregor Chisholm and former NFL team doctor David J. Chao weighed in:

While the initial news is bad, this is not a deathblow by any stretch. The Blue Jays are the hitting-est team in Major League Baseball, and their lineup is the most intimidating the sport has to offer at this point. Even without Tulowitzki.

That is because he has mostly been intimidating in name only since joining the Blue Jays. Tulowitzki had a stellar debut with his new club, going 3-for-5 with a pair of doubles and a home run. Since then and going into Saturday, he had hit .221/.308/.329 with a below-average 90 OPS+ in 37 games, showing that the team’s 30-9 record since acquiring him—before Saturday’s sweep—was due to the team’s improved pitching and the boppers that come before him in a stacked lineup.

Despite Tulowitzki’s lack of offensive production, the Blue Jays had a .282/.354/.485 team slash line with an .839 OPS while averaging more than six runs a game in their previous 39 games entering Saturday. Then, they scored 19 runs in the doubleheader against the Yankees.

That is truly incredible offensive production, but the Blue Jays have become much more than a video game lineup over the last month-and-a-half.

The offense had been great all season, but the team lacked adequate starting pitching. That is why it traded for ace David Price along with bullpen help before the July 31 deadline. Since then, the staff had put up a 3.37 ERA in the 36 games before Saturday, when it allowed a total of 12 runs in the two games.

And they’ve also done well in meaningful games on the road with the division on the line. The Canadian Press’ Melissa Couto relayed this stat:

When your offense is capable of double-digit outputs on any night against any pitcher the opposing team has to offer—according to Chisholm, the Blue Jays have scored 10 or more runs 24 times this season, the most since the 2011 Boston Red Sox—that is plenty of production from the mound.

“That’s what our offense does, they score runs and today was a perfect example of that,” Blue Jays starter Marco Estrada told reporters Saturday. “We put it all together.”

That is why Tulowitzki’s injury will not derail the Blue Jays. A lineup that features MVP candidate Josh Donaldson (38 home runs), Jose Bautista (35 home runs) and Edwin Encarnacion (32 home runs) can absorb an injury to a so-so offensive cog and keep right on rolling. Plus, Ryan Goins, assuming he replaces Tulowitzki at shortstop, had a .420 OBP in his last 69 plate appearances before Saturday.

The Blue Jays might have started rolling right around the time they acquired Tulowitzki, but he clearly has not been the sole reason, nor one of the top ones, for the Blue Jays being on the verge of winning their first AL East title since 1993, the last time they qualified for the playoffs.

They are better with Tulowitzki, but even without him they look like one of the most complete teams in the league and are a legitimate contender to win the pennant.

 

All quotes, unless otherwise specified, have been acquired firsthand by Anthony Witrado. Follow Anthony on Twitter @awitrado and talk baseball here.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


David Ortiz’s 500-Home Run Milestone Leaves Polarizing Legacy in Its Wake

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — There is nothing small about Big Papi.

The smile. The swing. The “bombs.” The strut. The stature. The numbers. The persona. The divide among fans and media over his legacy. 

They’re all bigger-than-big, even in an era of supersized everything.

Saturday, Boston Red Sox designated hitter David Ortiz became the 27th major league player to hit 500 career home runs by hitting his second home run of the game off Tampa Bay’s Matt Moore. The milestone came off a 2-2 curveball that landed in the right field bleachers. The crowd gave Ortiz a rousing ovation, and his teammates greeted him after he rounded the bases. The solo shot led off the fifth inning and gave Boston an 8-0 lead. 

The 500th-home run milestone highlights Ortiz’s incredible history of production. His 442 home runs in Boston place him third in franchise history behind Ted Williams, who hit all of his 521 homers for the Red Sox, and Carl Yastrzemski (452).  

Ortiz becomes the fourth player to hit his 500th home run as a member of the Red Sox, joining Williams, Jimmie Foxx and Manny Ramirez. Saturday marked the 50th multi-home run game of his career. 

For Big Papi, and Major League Baseball, 500 home runs is a big deal.

Before hitting his 500th home run, Ortiz spoke with Bleacher Report about his place in baseball history, his polarizing legacy and his Hall of Fame chances. 

Producing 3,000 career hits, 300 career wins or 500 home runs once meant guaranteed admission to Cooperstown.

After the arrival of baseball’s performance-enhancing drug era, though, that is no longer the case.

“Those are tough numbers,” said Ortiz, who has hit 20 or more home runs 14 times and 30 or more homers nine times. He recognized that even with those superlatives, he had not yet hit home run No. 500. “Not a lot of us get to play 14 seasons or more. Not a lot of us get to stay consistent. That’s the most important thing, staying consistent. Look at the history of the game. Not many guys hit 500 home runs. It’s crazy.”

Ortiz tested positive for a performance-enhancing drug in 2003, along with then-teammate Ramirez, during a pilot testing program. The results were supposed to be anonymous, but the New York Times reported them.  

Ortiz, then and now, denies knowingly using any banned substances. He told Bob Hohler of the Boston Globe in March it would be “unfair” if anyone denied him a Hall of Fame vote because of the 2003 positive. “I was using what everybody was using at the time,” he added. 

This weekend, Ortiz continued to make the case that his on-field performance merits a Hall of Fame vote with his bat. His response to critics who believe his accomplishments are illegitimate is two-fold:

Focus on the positive. And baseball isn’t as easy as it looks.

“This game is hard enough. Some people look at this game, and they think it’s easier than what it is,” Ortiz said. “This game is not easy at all. This game burns your brain cells, even on your best day. Just for being consistent, and being able to perform at this level for years, I think that I deserve respect.

Ortiz turns 40 this November. In 273 at-bats from June 11 through Sept. 11, he offered a display of “old-man strength” at the plate. His batting rampage produced 26 home runs, 19 doubles, 70 RBI and a monstrous 1.062 OPS. 

“When the big man runs the court, you have to hand him the ball.” Red Sox interim manager and Boston Celtics aficionado-for-the-moment Torey Lovullo said after Ortiz was an unexpected insert into Saturday’s lineup. “The Chief [Robert Parish] didn’t run down the court not to dunk. D.J. [Dennis Johnson] had to give him the ball. You have to feed the Chief.” 

Indicative of the duplicitous nature of Ortiz’s legacy was the controversy that surrounded his absence from the Red Sox lineup on July 12 due to the flu, the last game before the All-Star break. Ortiz didn’t play in an 8-6 loss to the Yankees. Boston left 10 men on base that night and fell six-and-a-half games back with the loss. Boston would not score another run for a week.

“I was sick,” he said.

Nearly every discussion of his baseball legacy on talk radio, in social media or online triggers an immediate surge in the use of the words “steroids” and “cheater” among callers or commenters. It is an unwelcome but omnipresent part of his biography. In a first-person essay for the Players’ Tribune in March, Ortiz claims he’s been tested more than 80 times and never failed a single test.

That doesn’t necessarily mean he is clean, some say. Gordon Edes has covered Ortiz’s entire career in Boston, with both the Boston Globe and ESPN.

Edes wrote for ESPN.com in March: 

No one in 2015 — as Ortiz surely must understand — can offer passed drug tests as irrefutable proof of innocence, not when the two biggest drug cheats in sports, cyclist Lance Armstrong and Ortiz’s onetime close friend, Alex Rodriguez, used to make the same argument, in terms just as passionate as Ortiz, before they were exposed. 

Edes has a Hall of Fame vote and has voted for Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and Mark McGwire in the past. He said Saturday that Ortiz deserves his Hall of Fame vote when he appears on the ballot. 

When asked about his positive PED test, Ortiz chose to focus on the positive accomplishments of his career. “I like to have fun. Make people laugh. I’m not a negative. I don’t like criticism just for the sake of it. I choose to stay positive.”

Ortiz offered support of New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady via Twitter after Brady’s four-game suspension was lifted in early September. Not surprisingly, Ortiz picks the Patriots to repeat. Both Ortiz and the Patriots are dogged by accusations of cheating their way to success.

In 2007, coach Bill Belichick was fined $500,000 for his role in Spygate. Last week, ESPN The Magazine‘s Don Van Natta Jr. and Seth Wickersham (via ESPN.com), as well as Greg Bishop, Michael Rosenberg and Thayer Evans of Sports Illustrated, published stories detailing further allegations of wrongdoing by the team.

“It’s always going to be like that. You’re not always going to make everyone happy,” Ortiz said of the critics in both cases. “A lot of people who follow your career, and are on the positive side, that’s all you’ve got to care about.” 

Parts of Ortiz’s workout regimen were featured in the 2014 biopic David Ortiz: In The Moment.

“The workout I did 20 years ago, there’s a better way to do it 20 years later. Everything has changed,” he said. “Guys who got to the big leagues throwing a 92-, 93-mile-per-hour fastball, now they’re throwing harder. The game had gotten quicker through the years. I don’t do more than what I used, but I try to keep up. A lot of us can’t keep up with what we did when we were younger because your body can’t take it anymore.”

It was also “in the moment,” Ortiz dropped his televised atomic F-bomb (warning: link contains NSFW language) on April 20, 2013. It came at Fenway Park in the aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombing and subsequent manhunt. 

“People look at me differently because of what I do because I’m a baseball player. But I’m also a citizen,” Ortiz recalled. “It struck all of us. In 2013, we all suffered, not just if you were a baseball player, basketball player or a football player. But as a citizen. We all struggled with that. I said what I felt.

“I don’t think it was fair. Especially in the marathon, where everybody was racing to try and raise money to fight disease. There’s never a perfect time to do something like that. But the marathon? It was very frustrating. I said what I said as a citizen, as a member of the city of Boston, New England, who was affected by it.”

That moment, piled upon a litany of clutch postseason batting heroics, 400-plus career home runs with the Red Sox and the most recognizable smile in Boston sports history, has helped elevate Ortiz to a spot on the Red Sox Mt. Rushmore

The Red Sox signed Ortiz as a free agent before the 2003 season following his release by the Minnesota Twins. Ortiz boasts a .553 slugging percentage in 82 playoff games. Seven of his 17 postseason home runs have given Boston a lead.

Did we mention he has three World Series rings, plus some massive World Series MVP bling

As has been the norm at the original Fenway South for more than a decade, the crowds (14,796 Friday) at Tropicana Field this weekend were sprinkled with Red Sox hats and No. 34 jerseys. Saturday’s second home run, No. 500, set off a standing ovation that continued after he crossed the plate and hugged teammates. 

Heath Busa, 37, grew up in Massachusetts. Busa and his 11-year-old son Bryce, showed up at Tropicana Field on Friday wearing Red Sox attire and voicing hopes of seeing Ortiz hit No. 500. Heath Busa was unbending when it came to Ortiz’s entrance into Cooperstown.

“He’s a first-ballot Hall of Famer. Absolutely,” said Busa, who now lives in Tampa. “For what he’s done for the city of Boston, the three world championships, being one of the most clutch hitters of all time. One positive in ’03 doesn’t tarnish his legacy.”

Bryce showed support for his favorite player in form of a shirt that read “Big Papi Owns Boston.” Bryce’s generation will likely have the final say on Oritz’s historic legacy. If it does, Ortiz’s legacy is secure.

“I like him mainly because he’s cool, and he hits tons of bombs,” Bryce said.

Ortiz is often the coolest person in the room, even a room as vast and cavernous as Tropicana Field. Ortiz walked onto the field two hours and eight minutes before Friday’s game as the Rays completed batting practice.

The spotlight quickly found him. Ortiz worked the scene smoother than Goodfellas‘ Henry Hill waltzing into the Copacabana. And he didn’t have to hand out $20s along the way. Ortiz hugged it out with former teammate Daniel Nava, chatted and glad-handed with members of the Rays, the Tropicana Field grounds crew and Boston fans screaming for his autograph.

The Red Sox team stretch began without him, but Ortiz quickly joined in with Hansel Ramirez. The middle son of Hanley Ramirez—a mini-me of his dad—was in a mini-Red Sox uniform wearing No. 13 and celebrating his eighth birthday. Ortiz’s stretch quickly devolved into a playful wrestling match with Hansel, the young boy’s howls of laughter echoing off the empty seats along the third base line.

“Watch out for that kid. He can rake,” Ortiz said. 

Ortiz’s focus remains that of a full-time player (87 percent of his career games as a DH) who plans to play in 2016. His 550th plate appearance this season boosts a 2016 contract guarantee to $14 million, per Ricky Doyle of NESN. 

His contract has a club option for 2017.

He doesn’t see himself becoming manager—“I’m good at talking”—but has, at times, taken an on-field leadership role.

Ortiz had his own Belichickian “Do Your Job” moment during Game 4 of the 2013 World Series. With Boston trailing 2-1 in the series and the game tied 1-1, TV cameras caught him yelling at a gathering of his teammates in the dugout.

“It was like 24 kindergarteners looking up at their teacher,” Jonny Gomes noted at the time (via Boston.com’s Obnoxious Boston Fan). That inning, Boston scored three runs and never trailed again in the series.

“[Terry] Francona, when he was my manager, he used to call me into his office. He told me, ‘I just want to remind you that there’s a lot of guys watching you. So I don’t want to forget that. I don’t want you to forget that that’s going on, even if you’re in your own planet,’” Ortiz recalled.

“That team, it wasn’t all about me,” said Ortiz, who hit .688 against the Cardinals. “We were underdogs who made it to the World Series. There were a whole bunch of young guys who didn’t have playoff experience. There was a little bit of pressure on those guys.

“Watching my teammates perform [at that time in Game 4] versus how we got there, there was a gap. When I hollered at them, I just reminded them of who they were, and why we got there. ‘Let’s go back and not try to overdo things.’ I guess that kind of clicked. After that, it was nonstop.”

Here’s a photo of Ortiz’s “tutorial session” with Hanley Ramirez:

Ortiz said he’s willing to resurrect that on-field leadership mode whenever he sees the need.

“We have meetings. We talk. Young guys want to know what you have to say about things,” he said. “Experience, sometimes, you need to put it in play. I’m pretty much on the bench watching everybody. There’s a lot of guys they get concerned about. That’s what experience is for. It’s going to come from the veteran players—guys who pretty much know everything about their teammates.”

 

Bill Speros is an award-winning journalist and Bay State native. He wrote the “Obnoxious Boston Fan” column for Boston.com from 2011 to 2015. Follow him on Twitter @RealOBF.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


David Ortiz Records 500th Home Run: Highlights and Reaction

Boston Red Sox designated hitter David Ortiz became the 27th member of the 500-home run club against the Tampa Bay Rays on Saturday.

Ortiz’s second home run of the game pushed the 39-year-old into the distinguished club, as MLB noted:

MLB provided the video of Ortiz’s historic blast, hit off Rays starter Matt Moore in the fifth inning:

MLB also shared video of Ortiz’s 499th home run earlier in the game:

As Big Papi was marching toward the milestone, Red Sox interim manager Torey Lovullo told Alec Shirkey of MLB.com this was something everyone in the dugout was excited about seeing play out:

It’s exciting for every one of us. He’s downplaying it in his typical David humble way to not make a distraction. He doesn’t want to make it about himself. He wants to make it about the team and how we’re playing right now, but it’s exciting for all of us to walk in every day.

It’s bigger than a lot of things that are happening right now, and it’ll be fun if he gets that 500th.

Ortiz is the first player to break the 500-home run barrier since Albert Pujols did so in April 2014. He is also the fourth player to hit the milestone wearing a Red Sox uniform.    

Unlike previous Red Sox sluggers Jimmie Foxx, Ted Williams and Manny Ramirez, who had built legendary resumes as soon as they arrived in Major League Baseball, Ortiz’s march toward 500 home runs was something no one saw coming. 

The Minnesota Twins released him following the 2002 season, and he signed a free-agent deal with Boston in January 2003. He didn’t become an everyday starter in Boston’s lineup until June. Jon Heyman of CBS Sports weighed in on the value the Red Sox got from such a shrewd signing:

Former Red Sox general manager Theo Epstein told the Boston Herald (h/t ESPN.com’s David Schoenfield) in early 2003 after Ortiz signed with the team that there seemed to be a good future for him with the franchise. 

“I think, our scouts think and our analysis dictates that he has a really high ceiling,” Epstein said. “You’re looking at a player that has a chance to be an impact player in the middle of the lineup in the big leagues. That’s his ceiling and I hope he reaches it with us.”

Ortiz found his calling in Boston, exceeding even the most optimistic projection that Epstein or anyone else might have had for him. He’s hit at least 30 home runs in nine of 13 seasons with the Red Sox, made nine All-Star teams and has six top-10 AL MVP finishes.

In addition to all of his personal accolades, including the 500th homer celebration, he has helped lead the Red Sox to three World Series titles since arriving and was named MVP of the 2013 World Series after hitting .688 against the St. Louis Cardinals

Ortiz’s journey to 500 is even more remarkable because there were times when it looked like age was catching up to him. He had a .222/.317/.416 slash line in the first half of 2009 and a .231/.326/.435 mark at the break this season. 

Adjustments have been a hallmark of Ortiz’s long-term success, as noted by Rick Rowand of Sons of Sam Horn, who pointed out around early June that he started to put more weight on his back (left) leg to maintain his balance and power throughout his swing. 

Looking into Ortiz’s post-playing days, 16 members of the 500-homer club have been elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. Frank Thomas helped break down a barrier in 2014, becoming the first player whose primary position was designated hitter to be enshrined in Cooperstown, New York. 

Given the way Ortiz is going, even as he approaches age 40, it will be a long time before the Baseball Writers’ Association of America gets to put his name on a Hall of Fame ballot. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


A-Rod’s Blemish-Free Season Forcing Yankees to Play Nice

NEW YORK — The ceremony will be simple, the New York Yankees say.

Nothing elaborate. No special guests. Just a nice little acknowledgement of what Alex Rodriguez did by reaching 3,000 hits.

Simple…as if anything with Rodriguez can ever be simple.

Just like what the Yankees did after Derek Jeter’s 3,000th hit, except with A-Rod, nothing can be just like Jeter.

Look, this shouldn’t even be a big story. A guy gets 3,000 hits, and his team honors him. Except in this case, the guy is Alex Rodriguez, and the team is the one he was working on suing this time last year.

And now the Yankees are going to honor him? Well, as a matter of fact, yes, they are.

Not grudgingly, either.

“I think it’s a wonderful gesture, what the club is doing,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said Friday. “And I look forward to it.”

The ceremony will take place Sunday, before the Yankees game against the Toronto Blue Jays, a mere 86 days after A-Rod got to 3,000 with a June 19 home run off Detroit‘s Justin Verlander. The Yankees say the gap was a matter of scheduling, and Rodriguez seems too pleased that it’s happening to be concerned about why it’s happening now.

“I think it’s amazing, truly classy by the Steinbrenners and the Yankees organization,” he said last month, per George A. King III of the New York Post, when the date was announced.

Does he really believe that? This is A-Rod, so you never know for sure. But in this case, it seems like he does.

This ceremony could celebrate the dramatic turnaround in the relationship between the Yankees and the player they so often wished would just go away. It wouldn’t be right to say A-Rod is now a beloved star, or even that everyone in the organization likes him, but he has traveled the road from hated to tolerated and now all the way to accepted.

“He’s been great in the clubhouse, and great on the field,” said general manager Brian Cashman, who in other times wasn’t shy about making his negative A-Rod feelings known. “Everything’s been perfect.”

In the past, even the smallest A-Rod issue could become a huge controversy. This year, even the big issues became small. For all the talk about how the dispute over the home run milestone bonuses in Rodriguez’s contract could get ugly, the two sides ended up settling amicably, compromising on the amount of money and agreeing to donate it to charity.

That decision, announced July 3, came right when the Yankees had worked to get the ball back from the 3,000th hit. It was at that point, team officials say, the thaw in relations became real and Sunday’s ceremony became possible.

It’s real enough now that there’s no reason to think this ceremony will be a one-off occasion. Assuming there are no controversies to come (never a totally safe assumption with A-Rod), the Yankees say they’d be open to honoring Rodriguez again for future accomplishments.

None of this would have happened, of course, if Rodriguez weren’t having the season he has had. For one thing, there probably wouldn’t have been a 3,000th hit to celebrate. A season that began with him batting seventh on Opening Day (and not guaranteed an everyday lineup spot) is ending with him batting third or fifth on most nights for a team headed for the playoffs.

He hit his 30th home run of the season this past Tuesday night against the Baltimore Orioles. While it gave A-Rod 15 seasons with 30 or more, tying Hank Aaron’s major league record, it was the first time since 2010 he had hit that many.

He has 684 career home runs, and while the steroid cloud will never completely leave him alone, it’s once again possible to discuss his accomplishments without immediately mentioning his failures.

“Life moves on,” Cashman said. “Somebody once told me it’ll all be OK in the end, and if it’s not OK, it’s not the end.”

For A-Rod and the Yankees, it’s not the end. For now, though, as Sunday’s ceremony proves, it is all OK.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Mark Teixeira’s Absence, Blue Jays’ Dominance Leave Yankees Likely for Wild Card

Let’s face it. The possibility exists that the New York Yankees will render this article moot in no time at all. All they have to do is win their next three games, and they’re back atop the AL East.

But you sure get the sense that’s not going to happen, don’t you?

At least in the moment, things aren’t so good for the Bronx Bombers. Following Thursday’s rainout, they began a four-game series against the division-leading Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium on Friday night by getting thumped to the tune of an 11-5 final score. The Blue Jays hit five home runs, including two in a five-run first inning against young right-hander Luis Severino.

With the loss, the Yankees are now just 4-9 against the Blue Jays on the season. Five of those losses have come in the last seven meetings between the two clubs, and those have helped push the Yankees to 2.5 games behind Toronto.

That’s not an insurmountable deficit by any means. The Yankees have 23 games left on their regular-season docket, and the next three of those—two on Saturday, one on Sunday—represent a chance for them to fight right back and reclaim the AL East lead.

As far as the odds are concerned, however, the Yankees winning the AL East title is becoming more of a lost cause every day. 

Their deficit may only be 2.5 games, but FanGraphs puts the Yankees’ chances of winning the AL East at 20.4 percent. That’s compared to 79.6 percent for the Blue Jays. The Yankees are thus far better off setting their sights on winning one of the American League’s two wild cards, which they have a 76.9 percent chance of doing.

Of course, one’s first impulse is to try to argue with the numbers. Because numbers can be jerks. It’s always been that way. Probably always will be that way.

But these numbers? Nah. Considering the circumstances, they have the right idea.

One circumstance at play involves the Yankees falling apart. They found out earlier this week that recently red-hot right-hander Nathan Eovaldi is done for the rest of the regular season with a bad elbow. On Friday, they announced slugging first baseman Mark Teixeira won’t play at all again this year due to a broken leg.

“You can’t really put into words how disappointed I am,” Teixeira said, via Grace Raynor of MLB.com. “I feel like this team has a chance to win a World Series. I really do. And not to be able to be on the field during that run is really tough to take.”

On that last point, the feeling must be mutual as far as the Yankees offense is concerned.

Losing Teixeira for the rest of the season means losing a guy with a .906 OPS and 31 homers. And without him, the meat of the Yankees offense now consists of two slumping speedsters in Jacoby Ellsbury and Brett Gardner and a slugger in Alex Rodriguez who’s finally showing his age. After wearing the Golden Sombrero on Friday night, he’s now hitting just .174 since Aug. 1.

In Teixeira’s place, meanwhile, is 22-year-old Greg Bird. And though his .765 OPS in 25 games indicates there’s a slight chance of him picking up the slack for Teixeira on offense, Jack Curry of the YES Network notes that Bird likely can’t replace Teixeira’s defense:

This is a perilous notion for the Yankees’ starting rotation, which needs as much help as it can get without Eovaldi.

With him gone, the Yankees are banking on an over-the-hill veteran in CC Sabathia, two wildly unpredictable arms belonging to Michael Pineda and Ivan Nova, and two starters in Severino and Masahiro Tanaka whose talent doesn’t come free of red flags. Tanaka is extremely prone to coughing up home runs, and Severino has already put a career-high number of innings on his 21-year-old arm.

So, you need not use your imagination to picture a Yankees team that’s somewhere in the middle of the spectrum between “At Full Strength” and “A Flaming Ruin.” That’s what they are in reality.

And unfortunately for them, on the opposite side of the coin is the team they’re chasing.

There was a time when the Blue Jays were languishing around .500, at which point the great Immortan Joe would need only one word to sum them up. But that was a while ago. Since July 29—right around when general manager Alex Anthopoulos aggressively traded for Troy Tulowitzki, David Price and Ben Revere—the Blue Jays have won 30 of their last 39 games.

And goodness knows they’ve done so in decisive fashion. The Blue Jays have averaged 6.2 runs scored and 3.6 runs allowed, and racked up a run differential of plus-102. Basically, they’ve enjoyed a Steroid Era-esque offense and Los Angeles Dodgers-esque run prevention, and they have a better run differential in these 39 games than the Yankees do all season.

And now, the rich are poised to get even richer.

Young right-hander Marcus Stroman will be making his return from a torn ACL on Saturday afternoon. If he can look anything like the pitcher who was at times dominant in 2014, a Blue Jays starting rotation that’s already getting strong work out of David Price and R.A. Dickey will have been granted yet another weapon.

Technically, the AL East race isn’t over yet. The Yankees know that, at least in part because one of their old-timers once provided the very best definition of when things are over. With what time they have left, they’ll keep fighting the good fight.

But it sure does feel like it’s over. The Yankees are skidding, and ill-equipped to stop skidding. The Blue Jays, meanwhile, are streaking, and very much equipped to keep streaking.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

If you want to talk baseball, hit me up on Twitter.

Follow zachrymer on Twitter 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Good Guy or Not, David Ortiz Doesn’t Belong in the Hall of Fame

Let me preface this article by saying that if I had a Hall of Fame vote, I would definitely vote for Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and Mike Piazza. When the time comes, I’d gladly put Alex Rodriguez in as well. 

I grew up during the steroid era. I was playing Little League when some of the game’s biggest stars were having exciting home run races and breaking records left and right. It was fun. I loved it. 

Perhaps it’s generational, there’s definitely the possibility of that. But I can’t see how the greatest home run hitter in history and most feared hitter in my lifetime (Bonds) isn’t in. I can’t see how Clemens, who was dominant and has the most Cy Young Awards ever, isn’t in. I’m a New Yorker and lived through Piazza’s greatness, but he’s the greatest hitting catcher in baseball history, and he’s being held out of the Hall of Fame due to a suspicion of using steroids.

The simple fact of the matter is that if worthy first-ballot Hall of Famers such as Piazza are being held out due to a suspicion, there’s just no way that David Ortiz should be let in with a failed drug test on his resume.

The interesting thing is that most people either forget about Ortiz’s run-in with performance-enhancing drugs or just don’t care. It’s truly fascinating, and it may just have to do with the fact that Big Papi is a well-loved guy around baseball. It’s well known that he has a great personality and is a class act, so people seem to give him a pass due to it.

Unfortunately, we see this happen more frequently than you think.

It’s the reason Andy Pettitte, who admittedly used HGH, just had his number retired by the Yankees and now has a plaque in Monument Park among some of the greatest to ever play the game, and Clemens is essentially blacklisted from baseball. It’s the reason Ortiz is being considered for the Hall of Fame while notable baseball villain A-Rod, who blows him away in every statistic, is widely regarded as having no chance.

For Ortiz, it was a failed drug test 13 years ago with tricky circumstances, as his name was leaked from a list that was supposed to remain anonymous. He wasn’t even told he tested positive until years later.

Ortiz thinks he should still be in the Hall of Fame regardless of the test results. After all, he has been dominating opposing pitchers for nearly a decade and a half since with no other failed tests in between.

“If one day I’m up for the Hall of Fame and there are guys who don’t vote for me because of that, I will call it unfair,’’ Ortiz said, per Bob Hohler of the Boston Globe.

Now, Ortiz jokingly swore in his first-person story on Derek Jeter’s The Players’ Tribune that the only things drug testers will find in his urine are rice and beans. Still, he claims to have been tested over 80 times since 2004 and has never failed one of those tests.

He’s mainly frustrated because he’s never been told which substance he tested positive for back in 2003, when he was less careful with the substances he purchased and put in his body. He claims to never have knowingly used performance-enhancing drugs, which could very well be true. In a sport that was once infested with steroids, PEDs in locker rooms were probably more plentiful than chewing gum was in dugouts.  

Here’s Ortiz’s bottom line when it comes to his run-in with PEDs, per his essay on The Players’ Tribune:

Let me tell you something. Say whatever you want about me — love me, hate me. But I’m no bulls—–r. I never knowingly took any steroids. If I tested positive for anything, it was for something in pills I bought at the damn mall. If you think that ruins everything I have done in this game, there is nothing I can say to convince you different.

There’s no denying that Ortiz has put together a remarkable career and has been the key cog in three championships for a franchise that didn’t have one in 86 years. When you think of the great Red Sox teams over the last few decades, Ortiz’s name, along with Pedro Martinez and slugger Manny Ramirez, likely comes to mind. 

Ortiz has become the unlikely face of a franchise after being a relative nobody over his first six seasons in Minnesota. He has revolutionized the game and is undoubtedly the best designated hitter the game has ever seen. In fact, his prowess at the position is likely one of the reasons that Major League Baseball, though it has increased interleague play, has elected to keep the DH in the American League

Here’s a look at how Ortiz’s numbers rank all-time: 

What’s missing on Ortiz’s resume? An elusive MVP award.

While he has five finishes in the top five, he has never been able to win one.

His closest finish was in 2005, when he finished second to Rodriguez, who posted a monster season for the Yankees. Ortiz finished just one home run shy of A-Rod’s league-leading 48 homers, although he led the league with 148 RBI himself.

One obvious knock on Ortiz would be his lack of a defensive position. He is nothing more than a liability at first base when the Red Sox play National League teams, and that’s something that would likely be counted against him even if he never tested positive for any PEDs in the first place. 

No gold gloves, no defensive metrics to judge him by.

Not to keep bringing Rodriguez into the discussion, but he was a two-time Gold Glove shortstop before voluntarily switching to third base with the Yankees, alongside Derek Jeter. He was a plus third baseman as well, showcasing his defensive prowess and versatility. Bonds won eight Gold Gloves in a nine-year span with the Pirates and Giants.

So the DH argument can work both ways. While he is likely the best DH in the history of the game, it’s still a position in which there’s less attrition due to its one-sided nature. 

If circumstances were different, I wouldn’t mind putting Ortiz in the Hall of Fame. The problem is that current voters are trying to play judge, jury and God while deciphering who to let pass and who to deny at the gates of the Hall. 

Cooperstown has become a haven for solely clean players, whether it is just in the mind of the masses or not.

Ortiz is a great guy and a great player. He’s had a great career. But there are better players with steroid connections who have been blocked from entering Cooperstown. Unless voters change their minds and let those guys in first, Ortiz shouldn’t get preferential treatment and a free pass based on personality alone.

It’s either they all get in or they don’t. There’s no in-between.

 

Daniel Ferrara is a featured MLB columnist for Bleacher Report. You can follow him on Twitter to contact him and stay in touch.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Jays’ Donaldson Hits 100th Career Home Run in Loss to Red Sox

Toronto Blue Jays third baseman Josh Donaldson hit the 100th home run of his career in the first inning of Monday’s 11-4 loss to the Boston Red Sox, going deep off Rick Porcello to give the Jays an early 1-0 lead, per Sportsnet Stats.

Part of MLB‘s most dangerous lineup, Donaldson already has a career-best 37 home runs this season, after hitting 24 (2013) and 29 (2014) in his final two years with the Oakland Athletics.

He has more than justified the hefty price the Jays paid to acquire him in the offseason, with his 37 homers (third in MLB) complemented by MLB-leading totals in RBI (115) and runs (107).

Also boasting a .306 batting average and an excellent defensive reputation, Donaldson leads all American League players with 7.7 Wins Above Replacement (WAR), per Fangraphs.

With Los Angeles Angels outfielder Mike Trout in second place at 6.6 WAR and Baltimore Orioles third baseman Manny Machado in third at 5.5, it appears Donaldson is the favorite for MVP honors.

If he does in fact win, Donaldson will become the first AL player since 1972 (Dick Allen) to earn the award after being traded in the offseason, per ESPN’s Buster Olney.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


MLB HR Leader Chris Davis Positioned to Crash the Free-Agent Market in 2015

Chris Davis is back in line.

The man who looked primed to take over as Major League Baseball’s home run king before being derailed by an atrocious 2014 and a drug suspension is again performing his craft as well as anyone in the sport.

Back in 2013, Davis was the kind of player franchises like his Baltimore Orioles built around.

He was 27 years old, durable and hitting the ball with close to as much authority as anyone the game had ever seen on a one-year basis. His final line that season was .286/.370/.634 with a 1.004 OPS, 53 home runs, 42 doubles and 138 RBI. He finished third in American League MVP voting behind Miguel Cabrera and Mike Trout and still had two seasons before free agency, when he would be poised for a significant payday.

But 2014 was a disaster.

Davis, amid a nagging oblique injury that cost him 12 games, hit a major league worst .196 among qualifiers. His 96 OPS+ showed he was a below-average player despite his 26 home runs, and to top off everything, he was suspended 25 games for unauthorized use of Adderall. That ban kept him off the team’s playoff roster as well.

As drastic as that year-to-year swing was, this summer has brought another change—this one a tick closer to what he was in 2013. And after a big Friday night when he smacked two home runs—his second consecutive multihomer game—to take over the major league lead with 40 long balls in a 10-2 win over the Toronto Blue Jays, it is clear the 29-year-old Davis is back in position for a massive contract once he hits free agency after this season.

Davis told Eduardo A. Encina of the Baltimore Sun in August:

I think I spent so much of last season and even the offseason taking swings that I had taken last year that weren’t really the swings I was looking for. I think I was trying to protect [the oblique] and subconsciously there was a little uncertainty about letting it go. Really right around the All-Star break, I felt like I had a few at-bats where it just kind of clicked for me and I’m taking that swing that I was looking for. I’m getting that swing on a day-to-day basis.

That Davis has once again found his swing has shown in the second half. Entering Friday, he was sixth in the American League with a 1.042 OPS, 181 wRC+ and a .435 wOBA since the break. His 21 homers are the best in league since then.

But it is not just the second half. Davis, who has a therapeutic-use exemption for Adderall this year, as he had in the past before the suspension, has been a productive hitter all season. He went into Friday batting .253/.339/.538 with an .877 OPS and 136 OPS+. He also now has 100 RBI on the year.

Those aren’t quite the numbers he put up in 2013, but they are enough to get the attention of other teams in need of a big, middle-of-the-order bat. And with Scott Boras as his agent, nobody should be surprised if Davis wrangles in the kind of contract former teammate Nelson Cruz netted from the Seattle Mariners last offseason after he had a similar campaign to the one Davis is having now.

Cruz got four years and $57 million, and he turned 35 this season and had a performance-enhancing drug suspension stemming from the Biogenesis scandal in his past.

That puts it completely in the realm of possibility that Davis could get a bigger deal than Cruz’s, especially in another year when pitching is the superior, more available commodity. It would also mean the Orioles would lose the major league leader in homers in back-to-back offseasons.

There should not be much in the way of power on the free-agent market this winter, especially since the Toronto Blue Jays are likely to pick up their $10 million option on Edwin Encarnacion. Justin Upton and Yoenis Cespedes are the other big bats beyond Davis, but neither brings the kind of power the Orioles slugger does when he’s healthy.

That means Davis, who failed to come to an agreement with the club after it reportedly offered him an extension following the 2013 season, stands to be the highest-paid hitter on the market come the fall. For now, neither he nor the team will discuss any contract situations.

“That’s just the way it’s going to be,” Davis told Encina on August 13. “I think it’s selfish to sit here and talk about my future with this team when we have such a bright future for the next couple of months and I want my focus to be on the field and everybody’s focus to be on the field.”

That focus will soon change to the financial part of the game, and for Davis, the attention will be significant.

 

All quotes, unless otherwise specified, have been acquired firsthand by Anthony Witrado. Follow Anthony on Twitter, @awitrado, and talk baseball here.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Has Nathan Eovaldi Surpassed Masahiro Tanaka as Yankees’ True Ace?

If the New York Yankees‘ starting rotation were an ’80s sitcom, it’d be titled Who’s the Ace? And while Masahiro Tanaka might seem like the obvious answer—the Tony Danza character, if you willNathan Eovaldi is making his case.

Eovaldi has pitched into the sixth inning or later in 11 of his last 13 starts and allowed two earned runs or fewer in eight of them. The Yankees, uncoincidentally, have gone 11-2 in those games, and Eovaldi has gone 9-0 if pitching wins mean anything to you.

In short, he’s pitched like an ace.

Things didn’t start so swimmingly for the hard-throwing 25-year-old righty, who came over from the Miami Marlins in a trade in a trade this winter.

In his first 13 starts in pinstripes, Eovaldi posted a 5.12 ERA and coughed up 97 hits in 70.1 innings, an ominous sign considering he led the National League in hits allowed last season with 223.

So what clicked? What caused Eovaldi to flip a switch and go from liability to a credible rotation anchor?

It could be his slider, which Eovaldi has been throwing with increasing effectiveness, according to catcher Brian McCann.

“It gets him off his other pitches,” McCann said, per Wallace Matthews of ESPN. “He locates it well. He elevates it when he needs to. It’s changed the way he pitches, and he’s only going to get better and better.”

Add a fastball that touches triple digits and a plus splitter, and you’ve got the makings of a legitimate power arm, the type of pitcher a team can ride into the postseason.

Speaking of which, if the season ended today, New York would host the Texas Rangers in a one-game wild-card playoff.

Obviously the Yankees are still hoping to catch the Toronto Blue Jays, win the AL East and vault straight into the division series. 

But if they end up in a do-or-die scenario, with the whole season riding on a single contest, would Eovaldi get the ball? 

It’s no sure thing. Tanaka still has the pedigree, both from his dominant (if injury-marred) rookie campaign in 2014 and his years of excellence with the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles of Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball.

And it’s not as if Tanaka is stinking up the joint. His 3.73 ERA is tops among Yankees pitchers with 10 starts or more, and he’s fanned 115 in 128 innings. 

Right now, though, a case can be made that Eovaldi is New York’s top arm, a notion that would have seemed absurd just a couple of months ago.

In fact, after looking like an Achilles’ heel for much of the season, the Yanks’ rotation is suddenly a potential asset, as Joel Sherman of the New York Post recently pointed out:

Suddenly the best part of the team looks like a rotation front four of Eovaldi, Luis Severino, Michael Pineda and Masahiro Tanaka. They are going to need that quartet either to outdo the Blue Jays or simply make the playoffs.

Tanaka is the oldest of the foursome at 26. Obviously, health is an issue with all pitchers, and the frailty of Pineda and Tanaka is particularly worrisome. But this is potentially a strong top four.

Sherman also said New York might not “open the coffers this offseason to sign a big-time starter such as David Price or Johnny Cueto.” That makes Eovaldi—who won’t hit the market until after the 2017 season—an even more important piece going forward.

Whether he pitches in a playoff elimination game, assuming the Yankees get to that point, remains to be seen. But if he does, he’ll have the confidence of the Yankees faithful—along with that radar gun-singeing heaterbehind him.

So did we answer our original ’80s sitcom question? Let’s put it this way: If Eovaldi‘s not Tony Danza yet, he’s certainly on his way.

 

All statistics current as of Sept. 3 and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


When Cal Ripken Jr. Became a God, Broke the Unbreakable Record

Lou Gehrig’s record stood for a half-century, and it felt like it had been there forever.

Cal Ripken Jr.’s record has stood for 20 years, and it feels like…wait, has it really been 20 years since that fabulous night when he passed Gehrig by playing in his 2,131st consecutive game?

“It seems like yesterday in one way,” Ripken said. “And then there’s the realization that it’s been 20 years.”

Twenty years. It’s a lifetime for the guy who might be the best shortstop in baseball today. Carlos Correa was born two weeks after the game that changed Ripken from a great player headed to the Hall of Fame into a legend with a nickname.

When Ernie Johnson says “Iron Man” on those TBS baseball telecasts, we all know who he’s talking about. We all remember.

It’s about that streak. It’s about that night—that magical night that lives on in history.

“There’s never been another game like it,” Rex Hudler said. “And there’ll never be another game like it.”

Hudler was the starting second baseman for the California Angels that night at Camden Yards. He went 0-for-2 with a strikeout, before Spike Owens pinch hit for him.

“By far the greatest moment in my career,” he said. “And it had nothing to do with me.”

It truly was a game like no other ever played. And this Sunday, September 6, 2015, will mark the 20-year anniversary.

* * *

Baseball has plenty of records, but some always stand out. Part of the reason is the accomplishment itself, but who has held them is just as important. And just as 60 home runs always meant Babe Ruth and a 56-game hitting streak always meant Joe DiMaggio, 2,130 consecutive games played always meant Gehrig.

It was one of the game’s unbreakable records, and with good reason. For 40 years after Gehrig’s career ended because of the disease that would eventually carry his name, no one came within 900 games of catching him. Steve Garvey had the longest streak since Gehrig, and when it ended at 1,207 games in 1983, Garvey was still five-and-a-half years away from the record.

The 1983 season was Ripken’s second full year in the big leagues, and the first in which he played all 162 games. It was also the year he won his only World Series and the first of his two American League Most Valuable Player awards.

By the time he won the MVP again in 1991, Ripken was within 500 games of catching Gehrig, and the Iron Man legacy was building. At that point, though, it was still secondary to his reputation as one of MLB‘s best players.

Sometime around 1995, and maybe exactly on that magical night of Sept. 6, the dynamic flipped. Fans still celebrated Ripken for the way he played the game, but more than anything they remembered him as the guy who never missed a game.

“I said a long time ago that to be remembered at all is pretty special,” he said.

He’ll be remembered for ages, and his record will be, too.

Ripken’s streak ended in 1998 at 2,632 games, which, at 162 games per season, takes a little more than 16 years. As of last week, only one player (Manny Machado of Ripken’s Orioles) had played in every game this year. Machado missed the final 44 games of 2014, so his streak doesn’t go back any farther than that.

* * *

To understand what Ripken’s streak meant in 1995, you need to go back to that year and remember it began with the lockout and the ugly specter of replacement players in spring training camps. Baseball was still trying to overcome the strike and the cancellation of the 1994 World Series.

Baseball needed something to celebrate. Baseball needed Cal Ripken chasing down Lou Gehrig.

Ripken was 122 games shy of breaking the record when the strike hit in ’94, and the idea of the streak ending in a replacement game bothered people almost as much as replacement games being played at all. The lockout ended, and when real spring training began, Ripken was a little caught off guard when people began asking about the streak.

“I didn’t expect anything,” he said. “Hearing the interest on the first day of spring training, that was my first indicator.”

The interest kept building. John Maroon, in his first year as the Orioles public relations director (and still Ripken’s PR man today), suggested Ripken set aside time before the first game of every series to talk to local reporters in each town. Ripken insisted it be done early, and outside of the clubhouse, to avoid creating a distraction for his teammates.

Meanwhile, the Orioles began to plan for Sept. 6.

The consecutive-games record is different, because barring a rainout, everyone knew what day Ripken would pass Gehrig. You can’t plan for the exact day a home run record will fall or when a player will get to 3,000 hits, but this time we all knew Sept. 6 would be Ripken Day.

That meant special guests, like President Bill Clinton, Vice President Al Gore and even Joe DiMaggio. It meant writers from across the country, in numbers resembling an All-Star Game or World Series.

It meant ESPN, then in just its sixth year of carrying major league games, could arrange to carry the game nationally.

The Orioles had worked with MLB to make sure their 122nd game in 1995 would be a home game, so that Ripken could pass Gehrig at Camden Yards. MLB cooperated, but it would be the last game of a homestand—meaning even one rainout that wasn’t made up in time could ruin the plans. Game 123 on that year’s schedule would be in Cleveland.

“Fortunately, the Indians were running away with their division,” Maroon remembered. “The Indians called the Orioles and said if you need us to move that [123rd] game to Baltimore, we’ll do it.”

Even more fortunately, the Orioles got the first 121 games in without trouble. The record game would go off on schedule, Sept. 6 against the Angels.

As long as Ripken didn’t miss a game before then.

* * *

He hadn’t missed one in 13 years, of course. He had stayed remarkably healthy, and he had incredible pain tolerance, but there was always the chance of a pitch that would break a bone or a slide into second base that would mess up an ankle or a knee.

Or something else.

“I’d go in the clubhouse, and he’d be wrestling with guys,” Maroon said. “I’d be like, ‘What are you doing?'”

But Ripken wasn’t going to change the way he was. He was going to act the way he always had.

“Anything could happen,” he said. “Anything could have happened all those years.”

Nothing bad did happen, and the attention kept building. To use the phrase that became familiar at the time, everyone could relate to a guy who just kept going to work every day.

Ripken kept playing, and while 1995 wasn’t one of his best seasons, his numbers were close to being in line with what he did throughout his career. He had a .262 average and 33 doubles in a season that was shortened to 144 games because of the spring lockout.

The Orioles were building the team that would make the playoffs in 1996 and 1997, but in 1995 they were basically a .500 team. By August, while Ripken was still focusing on the games each day, the organization was focused on Sept. 6.

* * *

There were about a half-dozen Orioles staffers heavily involved in the planning, and as a group they came up with the idea of putting the numbers on the warehouse behind right field. They would start sometime in August, and as soon as each game became official, the number would change to reflect Ripken’s streak, finally getting to 2,130 on Sept. 5.

“When we came up with the idea [of the numbers], we weren’t sure it was that good,” Maroon said. “Our music guy came up with the John Tesh music that they played as the number changed. The first time we ran the idea past Cal, he said, ‘That sounds stupid.’

“Once he saw it, he said, ‘That’s cool.'”

The music would start after the top of the fifth inning if the Orioles led and after the bottom of the fifth if they didn’t. Only then was it an official game, so the decision was made to change the number then.

“I got pretty emotional the first time,” Ripken said. “I started to reflect on how I got there and who had helped me along the way. There was a realization that something special was going to happen.

“The music had something to do with it. The music felt really right.”

It was cool, and it was the image that has lived on. That, and the 22-minute impromptu celebration the night Ripken passed Gehrig.

That day, after all of the planning and all of the crossed fingers hoping that a rainout or an injury wouldn’t ruin everything, Ripken came to Camden Yards the way he always had.

The only issue was he was sick.

* * *

Ripken plays it down now, saying he just had a slight fever that he blamed on the accumulation of all of the effort, and on a lack of sleep.

“I was exhausted,” he said. “I was giving more and more to the process. I was staying up at night signing balls, because it was the only time I had.”

He had another autograph to sign at the ballpark, when Clinton and Gore came to the Orioles clubhouse before the game.

“He was signing for the president, and Cal was sweating like a pig,” Maroon said. “Everyone thought he was nervous. No, he was sick.”

There was no question that he was going to play, and Ripken overcame the illness and hit a fourth-inning home run that gave the Orioles a 3-1 lead. Orioles pitcher Mike Mussina set the Angels down 1-2-3 in the fifth, and one last time, the music played and the number changed—from 2,130 and a tie with Gehrig to 2,131 and a place in history.

The Orioles hadn’t planned anything any more dramatic than that, but what happened then lives on in memory. The fans were cheering, both teams were cheering, and on ESPN, Chris Berman and Buck Martinez were letting us all listen in.

“Brooks [Robinson] was sitting between us,” Martinez said. “We all had tears in our eyes. We couldn’t talk. And for Boomer [Berman] not to talk, that’s saying something.

“Boomer was great that night. He takes a lot of heat, but he recognizes moment. You couldn’t have outdone those pictures.”

Ripken, conscious as always of the game and the other players, acknowledged the crowd but wanted the game to go on. It took teammates Rafael Palmeiro and Bobby Bonilla to push him out of the dugout, beginning the trip around the warning track that remains etched in memory.

“That turned out to be one of the best human moments,” Ripken said. “It became quite intimate. And about three-quarters of the way around, I started thinking that I don’t care if this game ever starts again.”

It didn’t start again for 22 minutes, but no one was complaining. Even the Angels, who were in the middle of a pennant race that would end with their losing a one-game playoff to the Seattle Mariners, didn’t complain.

“That night, our pennant race didn’t matter,” Hudler said. “That whole thing revolved around the greatest streak that would never be broken.”

* * *

Hudler and Ripken had a little history themselves. They were drafted the same year, in 1978, and Hudler never let Ripken forget that he was a first-rounder (by the New York Yankees) and that Ripken lasted until the second round.

They were teammates, briefly, in 1986 with the Orioles. And for several years leading up to 1995, Hudler had been bothering Ripken about getting an autographed bat for his collection.

On Sept. 6, though, Hudler was much more concerned with getting one of the specially designed baseballs used for that game, with orange laces and Ripken’s No. 8. But home-plate umpire Larry Barnett said he could only keep one if he caught the final out of an inning.

Sure enough, moments after Ripken’s run around the park, Ripken batted with two out in the bottom of the fifth and hit a blooper that Hudler could catch for the third out.

“I was running, and the ball was in slow motion,” Hudler said. “I had to dive to get it, but to me that was a five-carat diamond. I was going to catch it, and when I did, I held it up and shook it. The fans booed because they thought I was trying to show Cal up, but all I wanted was that ball. I went right to the clubhouse and put it in my bag.”

And when the game ended, an Orioles batboy came to the Angels clubhouse with Ripken’s bat.

“To Hud,” it read. “I know we go back a long way, but right now I feel like you feel when you strike out with the bases loaded—visibly shaken. Cal Ripken.”

“I don’t know how many bats he signed, but that was special,” Hudler said. “What a classy, thoughtful, witty human being the Iron Man was.”

* * *

What an incredible night that was. Twenty years later, none of us who saw it will ever forget it, even those of us who watched on television.

“It was one of those perfect storms,” Maroon said. “There was no social media, thank goodness. No Facebook pictures. Everyone was just glued to the scene, watching.”

Twenty years later, we can still see it, and we can still feel it.

“It was super cool,” Ripken said.

Yes, it was.

 

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Copyright © 1996-2010 Kuzul. All rights reserved.
iDream theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress