Tag: Derek Jeter

New York Yankees: Does Joe Girardi Have What It Takes to Manage This Team?

It’s hard to be a baseball manager. It’s even harder to manage in New York City. It’s even harder than that to manage the New York Yankees.

With pockets deep enough to absorb almost any contract and make any change at any time, the Yankees possess power no team can match.

That power has helped them create one of the best top-to-bottom lineups in baseball. And all of that power rests in the hands of manager Joe Girardi.

For the Yankees to be 10-6 and in first place in the AL East is quite a feat considering even general manager Brian Cashman declared the rival Boston Red Sox to be the team to beat this year.

The Yankees entered this season with serious issues in their starting rotation, and have already had to send Phil Hughes to the DL with a “dead arm,” replacing him with Bartolo Colon. Colon limited the Toronto Blue Jays to just two runs on five hits in 6.2 innings in his first start of the season Wednesday.

Throw in A.J. Burnett’s 3-0 start (4.37 ERA), and the Yankees rotation has played better than most expected.

The lineup has relied a bit too heavily on the home run (they lead the AL with 30), but you can’t argue with the results.

That said, this season is not without its problems for the Yankees, and Girardi seems unwilling, or unable, to take the necessary steps to fix some of them.

Case in point, the performances of Brett Gardner and Derek Jeter.

Coming off the worst statistical season of his career, many Yankees fans wanted to see Jeter dropped in the lineup. Jeter is batting just .219 this season with a .282 OBP, and Girardi has spent most of his time flip-flopping him between first and second in the lineup.

Gardner is off to an even worse start, batting a woeful .128 with a .196 OBP and three stolen bases in six attempts. The majority of Gardner’s at-bats have come in the leadoff spot, but he has just one hit in his last 26 at-bats.

Despite the obvious struggles of both Jeter and Gardner, Girardi is completely unwilling to make a change. It’s a small sample size and perhaps Girardi is taking his time, but no one would fault him if he dropped Jeter in the lineup.

Gardner, though, may need to take a seat on the bench. But Girardi has said he has no plans to bench Gardner in the near future. Part of Girardi’s decision, or lack thereof, comes from a shortage of options.

If Girardi were to move Jeter down in the lineup and put Gardner on the bench, it would leave the Yankees without a true leadoff hitter and a suitable No. 2 hitter.

Nick Swisher would be the first choice to bat second, but he’s only hitting .273 right now with no home runs, so there’s no significant upgrade there—at least not right now. But it was Swisher who batted second in the Yankees’ 6-2 win over the Blue Jays on Wednesday in Toronto.

A leadoff hitter is much more difficult to find than a No. 2. Andruw Jones would seem poised to take over for Gardner in left field should Girardi make a change, but he certainly can’t lead off.

Curtis Granderson is the only Yankee player who might be able to lead off, but his career OBP of .341 says otherwise.

Gardner’s days of leading off are over for now, with Jeter back in that spot. For now, Girardi simply doesn’t have any options that are solid enough to make any significant changes. But once he does, as the season drags on and if Jeter or Gardner don’t show any signs up improvement, does Girardi have what it takes to make the “tough” decisions?

When the Yankees hired Girardi as manager, the biggest problem he’d have to deal with would be his relationship with Jeter. Girardi and Jeter were teammates from 1995 to 2003 and it’s difficult to tell someone you used to share a locker room with that he doesn’t have it anymore, especially with a player of Jeter’s caliber.

When the time comes, and it might not this season, will the decision to move Jeter in the lineup (or to another position) come from Girardi or from the front office? The Steinbrenner brain trust already went around Cashman to sign reliever Rafael Soriano this offseason.

What makes anyone think they wouldn’t go around Girardi when it comes to Jeter?

The decision surrounding Gardner shouldn’t be nearly as difficult.

Despite the lack of a suitable replacement, Gardner doesn’t exactly have the credit that Jeter does. If he continues to struggle and it starts to have more of a negative impact on the lineup, Girardi can’t hesitate to bench him.

He can’t say, “It’s still early,” for too much longer. The only thing saving Gardner from a bench spot is a lack of production from other potential replacements. If that changes, Girardi has to be ready to pull the trigger. The same goes for Jeter.

Whether Girardi can, or will, remains to be seen. 

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New York Yankees: Derek Jeter’s Contract Far More Damaging Than Rafael Soriano’s

Courtesy of Yankees ‘n More

Caught this New York Post story Tuesday morning about New York Yankees setup man Rafael Soriano and his aversion to cold weather, which makes him just like every other baseball player in the history of the sport.

What caught my eye in this story was this line from Brian Costello: “The Yankees cannot afford for this partnership to fail. Soriano is armed with a three-year deal. He can opt out after each of the first two seasons…”

REALLY??? THIS is the deal the Yankees cannot afford to have go bad???

Ridiculous!

New York has already received more in return for the $36 million they, potentially, have invested in Soriano than they EVER got for the $39 million they wasted on Carl Pavano. By the way, in case you don’t pay attention to the news, the dollar bills the Yankees pay Soriano aren’t worth NEARLY as much as those they handed over several years ago to Pavano.

Moreover, if this Soriano deal has the potential to be a back-breaker for the Yankees, imagine the damage that will be done by the Derek Jeter contract. New York owes Jeter at least $15 million MORE than they owe Soriano, and over the same time frame.

The Yankees only WISH Jeter had opt-out clauses in his deal. Preferably one that kicks in the day after he finally limps past the 3,000-hit mark. At least Soriano is still a quality baseball player, one who is more than capable of performing at an All-Star level. Jeter could not be more done. He can’t hit mediocre fastballs and his range is nonexistent.

The reality, of course, is that NEITHER deal will significantly harm the Yankees baseball operation, at least not from a financial aspect. If Jeter and Soriano never play another inning, the Yankees can write those checks and never miss the money.

The only real issue is having to cater to Jeter’s ego and managing team morale and the temperature of the clubhouse. Only because Jeter is Jeter, the Yankees have to continue to start him at shortstop every day and bat him at the top of the order, neither of which is merited by his current level of play.

If Soriano completely flames out, at least the Yankees can, without the slightest hesitation, do what’s best for the team and toss him out with the next load of trash. No such luck with Jeter.

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New York Yankees: The 1927 Club and the Top 15 Teams in Franchise History

With 27 World Championships, the New York Yankees have dominated the MLB for nearly 100 years.

By employing some of the best hitters in the history of baseball, New York’s continuing professionalism mixed with the shear ability to consistently win has become the epitome of their championship swagger.

They’ve made their mark through historic achievements such as home run records, perfect games and no-hitters, HOF legends, and by becoming one of the most prominent sports teams in the history of U.S. sports.

The Yankees have posted 20 seasons with at least 100 wins, carrying that regular season success deep into the playoffs and capturing the prized possession of baseball almost three times more than the second most successful team (Cardinals with 10).

It’s hard to breakdown the Yankees’ championship teams of the past.  Decade by decade, players and teams are subject to different times in baseball’s evolution, making it difficult to compare a team from 1923 to a 2009 world series winner.

Every generation of fans has their own reasons in defending the championship seasons of their eras.  Mickey Mantle, Babe Ruth, Derek Jeter, and Mariano Rivera, make up the legends of New York championship teams and possess their own achievements that can be called “the best”.

With that said, here are the top 15 teams in New York Yankees franchise history.

Begin Slideshow


New York Yankees: There’s No Reason to Drop Derek Jeter in the Lineup

With every ground ball, with every out, the yells for Yankees manager Joe Girardi to drop Derek Jeter in the lineup grow louder. Not a day goes by without somebody saying Jeter needs to move out of the two hole and stop being selfish or stubborn or whatever adjective you want to use.

But quite frankly, there’s no reason for Girardi to move Jeter at this point in the season.

Simplest of all, the backlash within the clubhouse would be huge. Let’s not forget, Girardi is already in a difficult situation having to manage players who were once his teammates. When the Yankees first hired Girardi as manager, we knew this was going to be the issue.

Girardi was going to have to deal with two players, Jeter and Jorge Posada, whose skills are diminishing. Girardi made the decision to move Posada out from behind home plate soon after the 2010 season ended. Posada made it clear he didn’t like the decision, but he accepted it.

It’s different with Jeter. At the time Posada moved to DH, the Yankees had their eyes on other options. Aside from in-house candidate Francisco Cervelli, the Yankees also had several top catching prospects, including Jesus Montero and Austin Romine coming to spring training, hoping one of them could win a backup job.

They also added former All-Star catcher Russell Martin and immediately anointed him the starting catcher. Even if Martin’s offense didn’t return, his defense was a huge upgrade over Posada’s. It just so happens that Martin’s offense has returned, making the decision look all the better.

But where’s the replacement for Jeter? So far this season, Girardi has batted Jeter both second and leadoff in the lineup. In seven at-bats leading off, Jeter is hitting .429 this season, as opposed to .148 in 27 at-bats in the second spot.

But for the season, Jeter is only batting .206 with a sad .300 OBP. His ground ball issues have also returned (3.83 GB/FB rate).

When Jeter has been out of the leadoff spot, outfielder Brett Gardner has taken his place. But Gardner isn’t playing much better than Jeter this season. After posting a .383 OBP in 2010 (43 points higher than Jeter’s .340), Gardner is batting just .167 this season and his OBP stands at .265.

Where’s the upgrade over Jeter? Does Gardner have more speed at this point? Absolutely. But speed doesn’t mean anything when you’re not getting on base. On the season, Jeter’s OBP is 35 points higher at .300.

So really, Jeter leading off isn’t hurting the Yankees when their only other option, Gardner, isn’t getting the job done either. And even with Jeter’s down season last year, the worst of his career, he still managed to score more runs (111) than he did in 2009 (109) when the Yankees won the World Series.

The Yankee offense is more than capable of driving in a struggling Jeter when he gets on base.

But what about taking Jeter out of the two hole and dropping him even further in the lineup, to ninth perhaps?

The first thought among Yankee fans is to bat Nick Swisher second behind Gardner.

Well, what is Swisher doing this season? He’s only batting .219 with no home runs and six RBI. Like Gardner, his OBP (.289) is lower than Jeter’s and his GB/FB rate isn’t so slanted towards putting the ball in the air that it can’t tip the other way (16 fly balls, 12 ground balls).

For his career, Swisher has been predominately a fly ball hitter (career 0.59 GB/FB rate), but right now, Swisher isn’t doing enough offensively to really make any big change. Having Mark Teixeira behind him in the lineup might help his numbers, but having Posada batting behind him now isn’t a weakness either.

Teixeira does lead the team with four home runs and 10 RBI, but he’s only batting .182 so far and has just two hits in his last 21 at-bats.

Moving Gardner and Swisher into the first two spots in the lineup and dropping Jeter down isn’t going to make any difference right now. The numbers just don’t support the move.

If Jeter continues to struggle and hit the ball on the ground, while Gardner and Swisher begin to pick it up, Girardi can make the move more easily because he has actual reason. But right now, Girardi isn’t getting enough production to justify the move.

And quite frankly, Jeter deserves the time he’s getting to turn it around.

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2011 Fantasy Baseball Hot & Cold List W/E 4-10

Every Monday I will be bringing you the Top 3 hot and cold baseball players from around MLB. The twist, I’ll also be providing a buy or sell recommendation on the cold players to help you decide if this is a guy to target in a trade offer or someone you should cut if they’re clogging a bench spot. I’ll also give advice on those playing well, if you should sell high or buy the continued dominance.

 

For the last week, here are your Hot & Cold recommendations—

 

HOT

 

Paul Konerko

Last 7 games: .393 Avg, 5 R, 3 HR, 9 RBI, 0 SB

Call: Sell

Konerko will get you around 30 home runs and 100 RBI, but if an owner in your league is seeing over 40 homers and a .300+ batting average, sell high.

 

Matt Kemp

Last 7 games: .407 Avg, 4 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI, 5 SB

Call: Buy

Kemp’s average will cool off, closer to his career .290, but he’s on a mission this year and you can expect the stats to keep piling up for his lucky owner.

 

Jaime Garcia

Last 2 games: 1-0, 0.60 ERA, 0.73 WHIP, 18 K

Call: Sell

Garcia looked good last year, so a strong start is no fluke. However, these numbers aren’t sustainable. But if someone in your league thinks they are, sell!

 

COLD

 

Vernon Wells

Last 7 games: .094 Avg, 2 R, 0 HR, 2 RBI, 0 SB

Call: Buy

With the move to a less hitter friendly ballpark, you should expect lower numbers than last season, but he won’t hit .100 all year. Buy with the expectation of home runs in the low 20’s and an average in the .270 range.

 

Derek Jeter

Last 7 games: .179 Avg, 1 R, 0 HR, 1 RBI, 0 SB

Call: Sell

Jeter has become a ground ball specialist as he’s aged. The trends say he’s declining. Sure, he won’t hit below .200 for the season, but if he’s your starting shortstop for the year you may be in trouble. Especially when the Yankees make the inevitable move to drop him down in the lineup.

 

Phil Hughes

Last 2 games: 0-1, 16.50 ERA, 2.67 WHIP, 1 K

Call: Sell

The drop in velocity has me concerned. You can’t expect opposing teams to hit .400 off him all year, but he doesn’t look like he’s going to be the same pitcher as last year unless something changes drastically.

 

Brian is a Senior Writer for 4thandHome.com where this, and other work, can be found. Additionally, he is co-host of the 4th and Home Radio show on Blog Talk Radio.

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Boston Red Sox and Josh Beckett Find a Coffee Grinder

I have made a decision: The 2011 major league baseball season began on April 8th.

I don’t need to hear you tell me that I’m crazy, or stupid, or ugly, or a pervert; the voices in my head tell me that all the time (especially Paul; he’s such a jerk!) This is not about logic, this is about survival. And we all know that the most important thing any organism can do, after eating deep-dish pizza, of course, is to survive. Don’t argue with me, I didn’t make the rules.

I have some solid, scientific evidence to back up my claim, too:

1. It was revealed that the Red Sox were not given a coffee grinder in either Texas or Cleveland and have been living off only store-bought Red Bull for a week. Some could argue that this is in direct violation of the Geneva Convention, making both the Rangers and Indians guilty of war crimes. But above all, it most certainly nullifies the first six games.

2. The Red Sox were also only given a draft copy of the 2011 season that had an additional six preseason games listed, and were never mailed the updated copy. They clearly weren’t really trying against Texas or Cleveland, they were still tuning up! Therefore, the early season losses were the fault of the commissioner, and possible Jerry Remy, not the team.

3. Also, Cleveland sets its rivers on fire every few years, which offers them a clear unfair psychological advantage that the league should investigate immediately (send in the UN).

4. Texas doesn’t really exist.

Given the irrefutable proof listed above, combined with an eloquent, beautiful and spectacular 2-1 series massacre against the arch-rival New York Yankees over the weekend that was in no way only a mediocre performance, I can only conclude that this team is back in shape and ready to show what they are truly made of (meat).

Of course, there are still concerns. The Red Sox did get rather poor pitching performances out of both John Lackey and Clay Buchholz, both of which failed to get out of the fifth with even a shred of dignity. Also, the Sox offense managed to strand 32 base runners. They seemed to get a dozen hits every inning but somehow almost never scored a run, a feat only accomplished by a team with an intimate knowledge of physics and a desire to lose spectacularly.

But the signs of life were unmistakable. Pedroia racked up an astounding nine hits to raise his season average to .400 (is it too early to compare him to Ted Williams?) and David Ortiz had four hits (all while looking fabulous!) while Youkilis seemed to walk more times than he had legal plate appearances (I suspect evil was somehow involved). And the main event, Josh Beckett, pitched a stellar, lights-out performance on Sunday, throwing 11 innings of shutout baseball, allowing only -1 walks and amassing 29 strikeouts en-route to a two-win outing. He was so good that the President called him to congratulate him on his effort, but he hung up because he’s from Texas.

Also, Jason Varitek looked annoyingly comfortable at the plate, something he has no business doing, as I had him all but written off as a ludicrously expensive bench coach for the remainder of 2011.

Carl Crawford still sucks, though.

Up next, the Red Sox welcome the Tampa Bay Rays to Fenway. This is a team so ungodly awful that they managed to become the one shining beacon of hope during the Red Sox’ 0-6 season start, similar to the emotion of seeing a haggard homeless person just a few minutes after being dumped by your girlfriend. If the Sox can take at least two games in the series and face Toronto with a 4-8 record or better, then I’d say the team is back on track and ready to make some noise (with a vuvuzela).

Until our next meet-up, stock pile your nachos and get ready to ride out an assuredly pleasant stretch of Red Sox victories; the 2011 season has just began, and I can quite clearly recall the media being certain that this team would manage to win 100 games, the World Series and cure cancer. It should be a lot of fun to watch…

…Unless they start to suck again…

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Derek Jeter: A Legend or Overrated?

Is it possible to say a player is arguably the most overrated athlete ever to play professional sports and yet still believe his accomplishments make him a surefire first-ballot Hall of Famer?  Yes it is, and that player is Yankees legend Derek Jeter.

It seems every day Jeter is amassing some new milestone, passing another all-time great on some statistical chart and picking up yet another postseason honor.  He’s already the Yankees’ career leader in hits, and ranks highly on a number of other offensive charts.  By the time he retires, Derek Jeter will likely have compiled more than 3,000 hits, 250 home runs, 350 stolen bases and scored better than 2,000 runs.

The back of his baseball card is littered with statistics that spell out his address in Cooperstown.  Add in his multiple Gold Glove awards (whether or not you feel he deserved them), numerous All-Star appearances and the fact that he’s looking to begin filling his second hand with World Championship rings, and it appears that No. 2 might be one of the best players to ever grace the fields of Major League Baseball.

But he’s not.

Derek Jeter is merely a very good player who benefited greatly from being drafted by the right team, at the right time, playing in the right city.  Had he been drafted by any other team his legacy would be vastly different.  For starters, he would not be as recognizable, nor as well-paid—both on and off the field—as he is.  And he likely would not have spent the majority of his career surrounded and protected in a lineup filled with the game’s best and highest paid player.  Derek Jeter’s greatness is more a matter of happenstance.

To be fair, Jeter is a great player.  He plays the game’s second most difficult position and plays it well.  He’s a .314 career hitter with some power and speed, and seems to come up big when it matters most.  Most Yankee fans will argue that it’s what he does outside of statistics that makes Derek Jeter great.  He’s a leader; a team player more concerned with winning than anything else.  He will do whatever it takes to win, giving up his body and anything else for that “W.” 

His defensive play in Oakland a decade ago is legendary.  There is no defensible (pun intended) reason for a shortstop to be at that position on the field other than genius anticipation.  His diving play into the stands at newer-old Yankee Stadium in a mid-season game against the hated Red Sox, shows his guts and determination.  The home run he launched against Arizona on November 1, 2001 earned him the nickname “Mr. November.”  And he’s one of baseball’s good guys.

However, Jeter has never had to be “they guy”; he’s always been surrounded by players and pitchers better than him who have carried the majority of the load.  He’s never been the best player at his position, on his team or in the game.  He’s been given the benefit of the doubt all throughout his career by umpires, managers, players and fans.  Buck Showalter was correct to call him out.

Jeter has never been best at anything baseball-wise except extracting the most dollars out of the least ability and production.  (Compare Jeter’s earnings with his contemporaries.  Who in his pay-class have produced less?)  And when his team acquired a better player, both offensively and defensively at his position, Jeter showed no signs of being willing to give up his sacred shortstop spot.  (At 36-years-old and a few steps slower, he seems insulted the Yankees would suggest he’d ever have to give up a position meant for players a decade younger.)

If I were building a team from the ground up and had a chance to have Derek Jeter, I wouldn’t hesitate to gobble him up.  He’s a very good player who produces when needed.  He’s a clutch hitter who averages 120 runs per year (although getting more than 600 plate appearances in the lineups Jeter’s played in, he better score that many runs), and at one point was a solid defensive shortstop.  

Where would Jeter’s career be if he was drafted by the Mariners?  Or the Cardinals?  Would he be as successful or revered as Rodriguez and Pujols are?  No, because he’s not as good.  Where would Jeter be if he weren’t surrounded in a lineup with great hitters and players?  Without the likes of Mariano Rivera, David Cone, Andy Pettitte, Jimmy Key and CC Sabathia, would he have five World Series rings?  Not likely.

Derek Jeter is and was a great player.  He’s got a spot reserved for him in Cooperstown; a day at Yankee Stadium to have his jersey retired and a monument erected in left-center field.  However he’s not Babe Ruth.  He’s not even Barry Bonds or Alex Rodriguez (and we cannot be completely sure who did and did not use performance enhancing drugs; we know Bonds and Rodriguez did, but cannot be one hundred percent sure Jeter didn’t).

Derek Jeter is, simply put, slightly better than Ryne Sandberg, which is not a bad thing.  A very good, even great, player who winds up in Cooperstown one day.  But he’s not an all-time great, not one of the game’s legends, and for that he’s overrated.

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Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez: A Tale of Two New York Yankees

Protagonist and antagonist. Hero and villain.

Every novel has them, even poorly-written ones.  In many stories, they are easily defined. 

But what happens when it becomes difficult to delineate which is which?

It seems that the great stories—the ones that remain in our psyche—have a protagonist-antagonist dynamic that leans toward this type of ambiguity, causing tension and making us wonder:  Who is the good guy?

In the sports world, the New York Yankees are a living narrative, rivaling any classic prose in print. Their fabled history is lined with heroic characters matching those thought up by Homer (the Greek poet, not the bumbling patriarch in the cartoon series).

The mere mention of “the Yankees” evokes a visceral response.  It seems like everyone has an opinion—from the stage of Broadway in the play Damn Yankees, to the streets of Boston with the omnipresent “Yankees Suck!” chant.

Regardless of whether you love or hate the Yankees, all must concede that the team is as much an American institution as Fourth of July and Harley Davidson motorcycles.

Although many have played for the New York Yankees, it is the feats of their titans that create the persona of an organization that is woven not only into the fabric of baseball, but also into the tapestry of American folklore.

Within the Yankee continuous story, a constant protagonist-antagonist tension emerges eternal, with only the names changing.

Babe Ruth-Lou Gehrig

Mickey Mantle-Roger Maris

Thurman Munson-Reggie Jackson

Throughout the decades, Yankee fans have chosen sides and picked their favorites, sparking debate.

The current Yankee chapter is no different.  Today it is Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez filling the roles.

 

From the Ashes Rises the Phoenix

This tale begins in the decade of the Eighties, a time when George Steinbrenner’s micromanaging ways were no longer amusing as the Yankees were playing second fiddle to the Mets.  

It seemed that the entire organization was stuck on one sheet of music, namely Steinbrenner’s managerial hokey-pokey.

You put a Billy Martin in, you take a Yogi Berra out

You put a Lou Piniella in and you shake it all about…

Yes, Steinbrenner’s meddling created a Yankees’ personality dysfunction that made Sybil’s disorder look monochromatic by comparison. 

In 1990, Steinbrenner was eventually banned by Fay Vincent from the day-to-day operations of the team.

Unfortunately for certain players—specifically Don Mattingly and Dave Winfield—that era was a case of being in the right place at the wrong time.  Both of them left New York without a ring.  Winfield also left with a bitter taste in his mouth.

As the saying goes, however, it’s always darkest before the light.  For Yankee fans, the team was about to leave the shadows of the forest primeval and enter back into the spotlight of relevancy.

Under the charge of disciplinarian Buck Showalter, the Yankees improved vastly.  They were in first place before the strike ended the 1994 season and made the playoffs in 1995. 

However, Showalter’s act grew old and his downfall came after an early exit in the 1995 ALDS.

Enter Joe Torre, a man with a different, more player-friendly approach.

Also enter Derek Jeter, a young man with GQ good looks and a charming disposition.  He was just what the Yankees needed—a new poster child for the organization.

A perfect storm of managerial prowess, veteran leadership and youthful energy led the Yankees to a World Championship in 1996. 

Jeter played well in the playoffs.  He topped off the world championship sundae with a plump maraschino cherry—Rookie of the Year honors.

Gotham had found its new prince.

And this prince was a conqueror, leading the Yankee juggernaut to three more championships to close out the Nineties and usher in the new millennia.  Jeter ended the 2000 season with a World Series MVP.

The Yankees appeared to be invincible…until 2001.

That year, they lost a heartbreaker to the Arizona Diamondbacks in the World Series.  Derek Jeter struggled, hitting a lowly .148. 

In 2002, they lost in the ALDS to the Anaheim Angels, the eventual World Champions.  Jeter redeemed himself by hitting .500 and finishing with an OPS of 1.401.

They returned to the World Series in 2003 after beating the Boston Red Sox in a thrilling ALCS, but lost to the Florida Marlins, a team with a Lilliputian payroll.

Although other organizations would have been happy with this success, the Yankees and their fans demanded more.  Clearly, for those residing in Yankee Land, something had to be done.

 

Paradise Lost

In the early part of 2004, an opportunity to make the Yankee beast even stronger occurred.

A trade involving Alex Rodriguez between the Texas Rangers and Boston Red Sox fell through.  That left the door open for the Yankees.

In Rodriguez, the Yankees scored a player fresh off an MVP season.  Furthermore, Rodriguez, a Gold Glove-winning shortstop, agreed to move to third base, in deference to the wildly popular Jeter.

All seemed right again in the Bronx.

That is, until the 2004 ALCS against the Red Sox.  Depending on your perspective, what happened next was either a miraculous comeback or a colossal self-destruction

Suddenly, up three games to none in the series, the Yankees bullet train turned into a rickshaw. They proceeded to lose the next four games, losing the seventh game in embarrassing fashion, 10-3.  The Yankees became the first team in MLB history to lose a series after being up three games to none.

Neither Jeter nor Rodriguez played exceptionally well in that series, but it was Rodriguez who faced the greater scrutiny. 

After all, Jeter had won championships surrounded by lesser talent than the 2004 Yankees had.  And Jeter didn’t have a record-setting contract.

From 2005 to 2007, the Yankees never advanced past the ALDS, despite Rodriguez winning the MVP award twice in that time span.

What was happening? 

Could it be Rodriguez?

Were the Yankees suffering because of his presence?

During that World Series drought, Rodriguez became a target.  Some of the reasons were due to circumstance; other reasons were of his making.

In 2007, an article by Selena Roberts in the New York Times stated “He [Rodriguez] was once privately nicknamed ‘the cooler’ by his teammates in Texas for his habit of turning a hot team tepid.”

Committing a public relations’ faux pas, agent Scott Boras announced during the fourth game of the 2007 World Series that Rodriguez opted out of his contract.  This proclamation came moments before the Red Sox completed a sweep of the Colorado Rockies. 

Overplaying his hand with the move, Rodriguez was left to the mercy of the Yankee management, who helped him save face by signing him to a contract larger than the previous one.

It seemed that Rodriguez had become his own worst enemy and, in the process, developed into the antithesis of Derek Jeter.

After failing to make the playoffs in 2008, the Yankees needed to make a move, and fast.  Things were quickly eroding.

During that offseason, the Yankees made a huge media splash and a galactic financial commitment by signing the top three free agents on the market: CC Sabathia, Mark Teixeira and A.J. Burnett.

The World Series was theirs to lose. 

The pressure was on, especially for Rodriguez.  Unlike Jeter, who already had four rings, Rodriguez had something to prove.  His post-season batting average hovered around the Mendoza Line.

Then came a double-whammy for Rodriguez. 

Before the 2009 season, Joe Torre’s book, The Yankee Years, hit bookstores.  In it, Torre stated that Rodriguez was known as “A-Fraud” by Yankee teammates.  

Around that same time, the aforementioned Roberts and David Epstein reported in an article in Sports Illustrated that Rodriguez had used performance-enhancing drugs in 2003.

Predictably, by the end of the 2009 MLB season, the Yankees won the World Series.  Rodriguez played well during that playoff run, hitting over .400 in both the ALDS and ALCS, and finishing with 6 HR and 18 RBI.

However, even in victory, Rodriguez had lost. Everything that he had accomplished up to that point was now questioned.  He couldn’t escape his legacy.  He was tainted goods.

Meanwhile, Jeter remained revered by Yankee faithful.  He had gone through the decade unscathed.

 

The Sun Also Sets

Up until the 2010 season, Jeter and Rodriguez fell neatly into protagonist-antagonist roles, respectively.  It was easy to pick out the hero and the villain.

But something happened in 2010 that made things interesting—Jeter had his worst year statistically.  He was also in the final year of his contract.

Conversely, Rodriguez was signed to what seemed like perpetuity.  He wasn’t going anywhere.

The Yankees were faced with a conundrum: Sign an aging player and watch him decay at shortstop or face a public relations nightmare by letting him walk away.  In the end, they had no choice.  The Yankees chose the former, but with visible outward reluctance. 

It was obvious to everyone that Jeter was being paid for past performances, even though it wasn’t necessarily in the best financial interest of the club.

Now, all eyes are back on Derek Jeter, the weathered monarch.  In June, he turns 37-years old. 

He is signed until 2013, with a player option in 2014.  If he chooses to extend the contract, he will be 40 years old at the end of it.

Although Derek Jeter is beloved by New Yorkers, what happens if his play at shortstop deteriorates to the point of becoming a detriment?  How long can he rely on past glories to get him a free pass?

If he struggles, there really isn’t any other position for him to go. 

Some say the Yankees may move him to the outfield later. 

Really? 

The Yankees gave Bernie Williams “a thanks for the memories” kick to the curb at 37 and he was a former All-Star outfielder.  Jeter has never played the outfield at the major league level.

Jeter can’t move to first base because Teixeira is firmly ensconced there. 

Putting him at DH is out—Jeter is a prideful man and the DH position is usually reserved for broken down fossils like Jorge Posada.

And, what happens if Rodriguez has a productive season in 2011?

Next year, will he be willing to move again for Jeter, this time to DH?

Whose side will Yankee fans choose if Rodriguez doesn’t want to make the move? 

Will the tide finally turn against Jeter?  This may seem unlikely, but Yankees fans are still sports fans, nonetheless, and sports fans are notorious for being fickle.

No matter how the whole thing plays out, Yankees fans need to understand this sobering reality: the sun is quickly setting on the era of having two future Hall of Famers playing productively on the same side of the infield.

The Jeter-Rodriguez saga is coming to an end.  And unlike great works of literary fiction, it can’t be read over again.

So, quit taking sides, Yankee fans, and enjoy it all while it lasts—it may be a long time before a pair of Yankee pinstripes create such a magnificent yarn.

 

 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Derek Jeter, Ivan Rodriguez and the Top 20 MLB Milestones for 2011

Another baseball season has gotten underway with a smattering of baseball games on Thursday, and once again spring is here…figuratively, if not literally.

Baseball, of course, is driven by statistics more than any other sport, and the game is filled with wonderful statistical milestones that set apart the mortals from the immortals.

The 2011 season promises to see many players crossing significant career milestones, with Derek Jeter crossing that holiest of holy marks, the 3,000-hit barrier.

Let’s have a look at 20 significant milestones that we may see in 2011.

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Baseball Season Is Around the Corner, Ladies Are You Ready?

That’s right the Boys of Summer are back!

Baseball season kicks off this week and ladies, you have got to be prepared. The days of just knowing that A-Rod is a hottie, or that someone hit a home run, or who’s dating who are over.

Ladies, I need you to know a little bit more about what’s going on in the game, and if your guy is into baseball, these terms can definitely help you hit a “glam slam” in the relationship department.

So get out your pen and pad. Take notes because class is in session.

ACE

He is the best pitcher for the team; he’s the one that the team knows can get the job done. Think of this like your best friend or the guy that you are currently dating. Knowing what you bring to the table, these people will help you score ever time.

AROUND THE HORN

No, I’m not talking about the show on ESPN.

This is when one team hits a ground ball to the third baseman, who then throws to second base, and who then throws to first base to complete a double play.

SWEET SPOT

Okay, this can be taken so many different ways, so get your mind out the gutter: We’re talking about baseball here.

Focus! A sweet spot is the best part of the bat where the hitter knows the ball will travel the furthest. See, I told you to get your mind out of the gutter.

ERROR

I’m not talking about when you spilled coffee on your favorite white shirt on your way to work yesterday.

This baseball casualty is a defensive mistake that allows a batter to stay at the plate or reach first base, or that advances a base runner. If the other team scores off this error, trust me it’s going to be hell to pay when the team returns to the dugout.

INNING

Now, if you don’t understand any other term, you’re going to want to at least walk away knowing what an inning is.

The inning is the time played during the game. There are nine innings in a regulation game. Each team bats in an inning until they record three outs.

The visiting team always bats in the top half (beginning) of an inning. If the home team has a higher total after their opponents bat in the top half of the last schedule inning, the bottom half of the inning is not played and the score is final. A tie at the end of regulation play forces extra innings.

The game continues until an inning is complete and the visitors have a higher score, or until the home team breaks the tie. Then they don’t complete the three outs.

If you need to read this again for complete understanding, do so! You need to at least know and understand what an inning is.

DIAMOND

Ahhh…yes, every girl’s dream…a diamond. Mine actually comes from Tiffany’s with a cushion cut set in platinum with a carat weight of about 3.5.

In baseball, however, a diamond is referred to as the infield playing surface. Not as exciting or sparkly, but nonetheless just as important.

RBI

Every man needs a measuring stick to show how helpful he’s being (or not being!).

So in baseball that measuring stick is done with the RBI. This is the stat which shows how often a player has made it possible for his/her teammates to score while at bat.

A player who has 30 RBIs has caused 30 runs to be scored. A batter is not credited with an RBI if he hits into a double play or if the run is scored because of an error.

UNCLE CHARLIE

No, this is not your drunk uncle who always has too much at the family cookouts, but just a cute term for a curve ball. Nothing too significant, I just really liked the name.

TRIPLE

Any other time I would tell you to stay away from the triple scoop of ice cream, but in baseball this is a good thing.

This is a hit enabling the batter to safely reach third base. See, getting to third base is a good place to be.

SHORTSTOP

This is not the short man who’s trying to buy you a drink at the bar, but he’s the defensive player positioned between second and third bases.

And so you don’t embarrass yourself, he’s not short.

GRAND SLAM

This is the one that will definitely get you a highlight on ESPN. This is when a home run is hit with a runner on every base, which scores four runs. You get fireworks, your teammates lift you up, and essentially you are the man, at least for the night.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


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