Tag: Game Recap

San Francisco Giants: Cody Ross Breaks Roy Halladay’s Hitless Streak

Game 1 of the NLCS was supposed to be an epic pitchers duel between two-time Cy Young winner Tim Lincecum and no-hit wonder Roy Halladay. 

Instead, both pitchers did not have their best stuff, though Halladay continued where he left off with retiring the first seven Giants he faced. 

Then, No. 8 hitter Cody Ross stepped into the batter’s box. 

Ross has an unimposing figure, being 5’10” and 195 pounds, and had a career batting mark of 3-for-16 against Halladay before the game. 

However, that changed in a hurry.

Ross turned on two inside fastballs for home runs to help the San Francisco Giants win 4-3 to take a 1-0 lead in the best-of-seven series over the Philadelphia Phillies

The 30-year-old journeyman provided the necessary spark for the Giants to overcome Halladay. The first homer was in the third for a 1-0 edge.

After Carlos Ruiz tied it with his own blast, Ross put his team ahead 2-1 in the fifth. 

In the sixth, Buster Posey singled and then Pat Burrell doubled him home. Juan Uribe finished the scoring with an RBI single for the 4-1 lead. 

Jayson Werth had a two-run homer to cut the deficit 4-3, but Giants’ relievers Javier Lopez and Brian Wilson shut the Phillies down. 

Ross, a right fielder claimed on waivers from Florida on Aug. 21, also had key hits against the Atlanta Braves in Game 4 of the NLDS. 

He homered and had the go-ahead RBI to win the series for San Francisco. 

Not bad for Ross’ first postseason. 

And Halladay is now a peg lower after his legendary no-hitter, giving up eight hits and four runs in seven innings.

Having Ross and his teammates beat the Phillies’ ace could give them confidence when facing Roy Oswalt and Cole Hamels. 

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NLCS 2010: Philadelphia Phillies Drop Game 1 for the First Time in 3 Years

Early in the seven o’clock hour, the rally towels were already waving. The noise was already to the max, and the fireworks were already firing.

The historical city of Philadelphia always finds a way to write and rewrite history. The action was preceded by the world-famous Philadelphia’s boys choir opening with the National Anthem, and then it was time to play ball.

The Phillies came into the game on what can be considered a hitting slump by their standards. Turns out the irony of everything is, in a game that was thought to have been a pitching duel, turned out to be a battle of the bats.

Both teams started off swinging strong. The innings still ended three up, three down on hits sent into play.

At that point, it was evident, this wasn’t going to be your traditional pitcher’s duel: something was going to give. The question at the time still remained what? And who?

Each pitcher got through the first inning on seven pitches, which, quite frankly was symbolic of the match-up. 

Cody Ross, by far the Giants MVP of the night, hit two home runs to make it 2-1. That opened the door for the sixth inning when Roy Halladay got into trouble, a close umpire call kept Pat Burrell at bat.

That’s when Burrell took advantage of his extra life with a two-out/two-strike double which scored two, making it 4-1. 

Two pitchers that only allowed a total of two hits combined in Game 1 of the NLDS, turned around to belt 16 hits in Game 1 of the NLCS giving the Phillies their first game one loss of their four-year NL takeover.

“You find out what you’re made of. You never expect it to be easy,” Halladay said after the game. And it wasn’t easy; at all.

A series after Halladay’s gem, Lincecum had 14 strikeouts in San Francisco’s 1-0 win over Atlanta. He gave up six hits and struck out eight against the Phillies.

Lincecum, the reigning two-time NL Cy Young Award winner, had some adventures with a bat in his hands, though.

The notoriously rough Philadelphia fans came up with a unique way to mock Lincecum instead of the usual boos.

They serenaded him with whistles when he batted in the fifth and seventh, mocking his “beauty” with the long hair and innocent face.

Lincecum responded, in jest, “I must have a really nice butt. I was hearing a lot of them.”

In the end, though, that innocent face and long hair got the best of Philadelphia. The Giants took a 1-0 lead in the NLCS.

Game 2 is Sunday, Oct. 17, same place, at 8:19 p.m. EDT.

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ALCS Game 2: Texas Rangers Hold On, Even Series With New York Yankees

Neftali Feliz just couldn’t wait. The rookie closer for the Texas Rangers propped open the bullpen door just a crack, peering onto the field to watch the action in the bottom of the eighth.

The Rangers’ bullpen struggled in Game 1, surrendering a five-run lead to the mighty Yankee offense. Feliz was ever so anxious to redeem the unit. Redemption was the theme of Game 2 against New York. And the Rangers, seeking their first-ever postseason win at home, were in prime position to get it.

Just as C.C. Sabathia was shelled in Game 1, Phil Hughes struggled for the Yankees in the American League Championship Series’ second game. Sabathia was all over the place, and Hughes was as well.

This contest was as déjà vu as possible over the first four innings. Texas jumped all over Hughes early and often, while Colby Lewis shut down the Yankees bats. The Rangers started their scoring in the first thanks to a terrible decision by New York catcher Jorge Posada and Elvis Andrus’ intelligence on the base paths.

Andrus singled, reached second base on a wild pitch, stole third and then sprinted home as Posada foolishly took no notice of him while Hamilton attempted to steal second. Robinson Cano received the throw, and may have been able to tag Hamilton for the inning’s final out before Andrus crossed the plate, but fired back to Posada instead. Andrus slid in safely, and a 1-0 lead was taken by Texas.

They would add to this advantage and, just as they did in Game 1, tacked on more than just a couple more runs. David Murphy tagged a 2-0 cutter left high in the zone by Hughes into the upper-deck in right then, after the second out was recorded, three straight hits were acquired to plate a third run.

A doubles parade followed in the third as Hughes completely lost his command. Nelson Cruz pulled into second for a two-bagger leading off, then Murphy and Bengie Molina followed with back-to-back doubles, giving the Rangers a five-run lead.

Five to zero: a familiar score. It was the same lead Texas held not 20 hours earlier. The same lead they lost in such shocking fashion. Therefore, it was to no one’s surprise that the atmosphere was tense despite the margin. And it was only more so after what transpired in the top of the fourth.

Cano ignited New York in Game 1, ending C.J. Wilson’s shutout bid with a solo-shot, and attempted to do the same. This time it was a lead-off double, but it served the same purpose as Lance Berkman plated him with a two-out single down the right-field line. The Yankees were on the board. Here we go again, the Rangers fans had to think.

What had happened up to this point was eerily similar. But what took place next broke the familiarity. Though it really did nothing to calm the fans’ nerves (as the atmosphere in the latter innings would suggest), Texas managed to take an even bigger lead. Hughes was remarkably sent out to the hill to begin the fifth by manager Joe Girardi, and the decision backfired.

Cruz ripped his second straight double that was no more than a foot from leaving the park, then Ian Kinsler roped a liner past a diving Nick Swisher for a triple, scoring a sixth run and sending Hughes to the showers. A seventh proceeded to come their way, as Mitch Moreland delivered in the clutch with a two-out single to score Kinsler from third.

Yet, this 7-1 lead was far from safe. The fans knew what the Yankees were capable of. There isn’t an easy out in their lineup and they have been one of the game’s best comeback teams over the past few seasons.

So, when Cano once again did his part, the fans were either literally or figuratively on the edge of their seats. The MVP candidate slugged a blast into the right-field’s upper deck. Luckily for the Rangers, it was only a solo-homer, but it was another Yankees run nonetheless. New York is only getting started, their fans must have thought.

Within five, during the latter innings: Again, a familiar site. But, though minor heart-attacks were spread throughout the Rangers’ Ballpark in Arlington when two reached with two out, this lone run would be all the Yankees could muster. Lewis remained composed, and the four relievers succeeded in washing away their nightmarish Game 1 appearances.

Clay Rapada was the first, outlasted Marcus Thames for the final out of the sixth, Alexi Ogando was next, then the Darrens (Oliver and O’Day) continued the bullpen’s effectiveness.

The quartet handed the ball to Feliz with the unchanged margin, and Feliz gave the Rangers the win-clinching inning they were looking for. He made life interesting, issuing back-to-back walks with one out in the ninth to get the crowd’s blood pumping, but both Alex Rodriguez and Cano were retired.

With that, it was a 7-2 victory. The Rangers coaching staff shook hands in the dugout, players celebrated, and the crowd cheered. A redeeming win, and now the tied series shifts to New York.

Cliff Lee awaits for the Yanks, as Texas will try to ride this momentum to an advantage in the ALCS, an advantage they know they should already have.

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ALCS Game 2: Texas Rangers Pound Phil Hughes, Draw Even with New York Yankees

Maybe history doesn’t always repeat itself.

As we all know by now, the Texas Rangers blew a five-run lead in Game 1 of their ALCS against the New York Yankees. Well, after less than 24 hours of blowing that five-run lead, the Rangers once again found themselves up by five runs in Game 2.

However, this time the Rangers held on as they beat the Yankees 7-2 to even the ALCS at one game a piece. The Rangers didn’t make it easy on themselves, but they eventually got it done.

This game almost followed a similar trend to yesterday’s game. The Rangers jumped out to a 5-0 lead thanks to some great base-running by Elvis Andrus, a monster home run by David Murphy and RBI doubles by Michael Young, Murphy and Bengie Molina.

The Rangers really pounded Phil Hughes, who shouldn’t have been starting this game in the first place. Game 2 is Andy Pettitte‘s game. It’s been his game for the past 15 years. Why Girardi decided to change things up is beyond me.

Hughes had nothing in this game. He threw 88 pitches and only got seven swings and misses in his four plus innings of work. The Rangers had a game plan of attacking Hughes early and they succeeded.

The Yankees cut the lead to 5-1 on a Lance Berkman single and Ranger fans thought “Here we go again.” However, the Rangers’ offense did something in Game 2 they weren’t able to do in Game 1—tack on runs.

The Rangers tacked on a run in the fifth on an Ian Kinsler triple and then Mitch Moreland singled home Kinsler with two outs to make the score 7-1. I thought the Moreland hit was HUGE.

With Kinsler on third and nobody out, Joba Chamberlain struck out Murphy and Molina and you got the sense that if Chamberlain was able to get Moreland, there would have been a momentum shift. Moreland’s hit squashed that thought.

The Rangers’ bullpen, which imploded in Game 1, was able to get the job done in Game 2. They pitched 3.1 of one-hit baseball. Of course walking four guys is not going to help, but as shaky as they were, the fivesome of Clay Rapada, Alexi Ogando, Darren Oliver, Darren O’Day and Neftali Feliz were able to silence the Yankee bats.

Here are some other observations from Game 2:

Colby Lewis was very lucky in this game. The Yankees hit a lot of peas that were right at people.

His final line: 5.2 IP, 6 H, 2 R, 3 BB, 6 K. It could have been much worse. He did a good job of dancing through raindrops.

There is not a hitter on the planet who is locked in as Robinson Cano is right now. Even his outs are hit hard. His HR in the sixth was a tape measure job.

Ranger pitchers allowed seven walks and only had one one-two-three inning all night and somehow only gave up two runs to the best lineup in baseball. Baseball is a funny game sometimes.

Biggest AB of the night: Rapada vs. Thames in the top of the sixth. The Yankees had cut the lead to 7-2 on the Cano HR and had runners on first and second with two outs. It was getting to the “Here we go again” portion of the game for the Rangers.

Ron Washington pulled Lewis in favor of Rapada and Girardi countered by pinch hitting Thames for Brett Gardner. On a 3-2 count, Rapada threw a changeup that Thames was about two feet out in front of and struck out. That was a huge lift for the Rangers and their beleaguered bullpen.

The difference between Jorge Posada and other great hitting catchers? The other great hitting catchers knew how to catch. His catching ability has an all-time low this postseason.

Moreland will have a better career than Justin Smoak.

If Vladimir Guerrero doesn’t start hitting, the Yankees will continue to walk and pitch around Josh Hamilton.

Feliz was very shaky in the ninth and that was with a five-run lead. He better get it together because what he did on Saturday won’t fly in Yankee Stadium.

Despite everything that happened to the Rangers in the first two games, they have to feel very good about themselves going into Yankee Stadium for three games. Their mindset has to be just win one game. Get the series back to Arlington, hope to win a Game 6, and then have Cliff Lee go in Game 7.

Game 3 will be Monday night at 8 p.m. EST.


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ALCS Game 2: Texas Rangers Report Card After 7-2 Win Over Yankees

For the first time in franchise history, the Texas Rangers have won a home playoff game and ALCS game. Once again, the Rangers built a 5-0 lead and unlike last night, they held on.

A steal of home as part of a double steal for Texas got them going in the first and they never looked back. Just like in Game 1, the Yankees saw their starter struggle mightily. In the second inning, David Murphy hit his first career playoff home run and at the end, the Rangers won, 7-2.

They even up the series at one apiece, as the series shifts to the Bronx on Monday. Here’s a Texas Rangers Game 2 report card, breaking down every angle.

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ALCS Game 1: Rangers Reversal of Fortune

 By the end of the six innings, the New York Yankees were down 5-0 to the Texas Rangers.

 

Yankees ace CC Sabathia had to exit after the fourth; his shortest outing of the season.

 

On the other end, Rangers starter CJ Wilson was shutting down the deep New York line-up. Wilson gave up a homerun to Robbie Cano to start the seventh, but retired the next three and the held the Yankees to a 5-1 score.

 

Wilson had been terrific and more, but at the start of the eighth inning he gave up two hits, one an RBI to Derek Jeter and Skipper Ron Washington had seen enough.

 

Washington move seemed logical, actually very Joe Girardi-esque as he pulled Wilson and went to the Rangers bullpen. The first of four relievers that followed couldn’t get one out and by the bottom of the eighth the Yankees were up 6-5.

 

Kerry Wood and Mariano Rivera finished off the remaining six Rangers for the win.

 

Playing musical pitchers with the bullpen is very familiar to Yankees fans and it can be frustrating to watch when things just get worse.

 

Washington could have left Wilson in through the eighth inning, but it wasn’t a totally off-base call. Not starting Cliff Lee in Game One is what made no sense to me.

 

Washington made public statements regarding how tough a team the Yankees are and how hard the Rangers had were ready to play. Winning game one would have given the Rangers some legs to stand on, both athletically and mentally.

 

That is why starting Lee seemed so obvious, as coming at the Yankees swinging from the start would make an immediate impact.

 

Instead, the Rangers lost the game 6-5 and got a little reality check at the same time.

 

Playing all nine innings of a game is something Yankee players remind each other to do. That ‘never giving-up’ attitude has really taken a life of it’s own and why other teams haven’t incorporated this motto is beyond me.

 

It was an awesome win for the Yankees, who couldn’t have dreamed a more extraordinary way to open up the ALCS.

 

Game two starts at 4pm on Saturday, in the same place, with the same teams, but Yankees fans are hoping it will be the same results too.

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New York Yankees Come Back Against Texas Rangers, Bullpen in ALCS Game 1

Here is the good news for Texas Rangers’ fans: At least closer Neftali Feliz is fresh for today’s Game 2.

Feliz is fresh because Rangers’ manager Ron Washington handled his bullpen as poorly as any manager I can remember in the eighth inning of Game 1 of the ALCS. The New York Yankees beat up the Rangers’ bullpen to score five runs in the top of the eighth as they came back to beat Texas, 6-5.

 

The Rangers were cruising in this game, 5-1 going into the eighth inning thanks to a three-run HR by Josh Hamilton in the first, a two-run double by Michael Young in the fourth and some outstanding pitching by C.J. Wilson. Up until the eighth, Wilson had only made one mistake, leaving a fastball over the plate to Robinson Cano in the seventh that he promptly hit for a home run.

Wilson was at 99 pitches entering the eighth, so I didn’t have a problem with Washington sending him out there. Due to the results that followed, it will probably be forgotten how good Wilson was in this game.

Wilson threw a combination of four-seam fastballs, sliders, changeups, curveballs and two-seam fastballs that kept the Yankees off-kilter all game. He had Alex Rodriguez talking to himself and had the rest of the Yankees swinging at his pitches all night.

Brett Gardner led off the eighth inning with an infield single because he outran Wilson to the bag at first. I think everyone needs to pump the breaks on this play.

First off, Gardner slowed himself down by sliding into first. As Carl Lewis always said, if sliding into the finish line was faster, he would have done it every time. Second, it was the two walks that led to the Yankees’ comeback, not an infield single.

This game turned when Washington brought Darren Oliver into the game. Here is what I wrote in my ALCS preview:

“My biggest concern with the Rangers is their bullpen. It’s not outs 25, 26 and 27 I am so much concerned about, but it’s outs 18-24 I am concerned about.

I like Darren O’Day against Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez, but the Yankees have so many switch-hitters and lefties in their lineup that it comes down to whether Ron Washington wants a guy who throws sidearm and whose ball goes down and in to a lefty pitching to Mark Teixeira with a short porch in right field?

Let’s say O’Day does get through the seventh, and Jeter and A-Rod. Who is pitching that eighth inning? Darren Oliver against Robinson Cano, Jorge Posada and Curtis Granderson is the most likely matchup.

Does any Ranger fan feel comfortable in that spot? I wouldn’t. I have seen how that movie ends.”

As always, this movie ended very badly for the Rangers. How many teams can keep going to the well with Oliver before they realize this guy can’t pitch in a big spot? I just don’t get it.

Oliver walked Nick Swisher and Mark Teixeira to load the bases with nobody out. The score was 5-2 and at this point, Washington has to go to Feliz.

I am not a believer that anyone can close, or that closer-by-committee is a good idea. I have stated that many times. What I am a believer in is that a closer should be used in the critical spot in the game, not just the ninth inning.

In this game, the critical spot was in the eighth inning. Washington had to go to Feliz in that spot to try and get six outs. It was a must.

Instead, Washington went with O’Day, Clay Rapada of all people and then Derek Holland. Those decisions proved costly as the Rangers’ 5-1 lead turned into a 6-5 deficit.

I am really not sure if the Rangers can recover from this one. This was a brutal loss, along the lines of the losses Byung-Hyun Kim and the Arizona Diamondbacks suffered in Games 4 and 5 of the 2001 World Series.

The Diamondbacks recovered from that. I am not sure if the Rangers can.

Here are some other observations from Game 1 of the ALCS.

In October, the Yankees in classic fashion got contributions from ham n’ eggers. Dustin Moseley and Marcus Thames were those ham n’ eggers who made major contributions in Game 1. Francisco Cervelli, you’re up next.

This had the feeling of a 13-2 game, but it was only a four-run game. I think Joe Girardi felt the same way when he brought in Moseley in the sixth. I really believed he was conceding the game at that point.

John Smoltz must have said “reset” about 40 times in this game.

CC Sabathia was terrible. He couldn’t locate his slider and kept missing high and away with his fastball to righties.

I thought Jorge Posada was equally as bad in this game. His pitch selection throughout the game was horrendous. After Hamilton couldn’t catch up to two fastballs in the first, he helps him out by calling for a slider? Made no sense.

The difference between the Rangers and Yankees? No Yankee gets picked off at first in October like Ian Kinsler did in the bottom of the eighth. That was inexcusable.

Mariano Rivera is amazing. Even when teams think they have a rally going, they really don’t. Back to my point on the Gardner play. One hit doesn’t equal a rally.

Kudos to home plate umpire Gerry Davis in this game. I thought he was fantastic. He gave the low strike all game and didn’t give the inside corner to righties all game. Davis was very consistent.

He also got the call at home plate right in the first inning. Very good job by him.

Game 2 will be played today at 4:00 PM EST and will feature Phil Hughes against Colby Lewis.

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New York Yankees-Texas Rangers ALCS Game 1: Gardner Sparks Eighth-Inning Rally

All eyes were in Arlington Friday night as the Yankees and Rangers kicked off Game 1 of the American League Championship Series.

The Yankees, who had almost a week of rest, sent their ace in CC Sabathia to square off against the Rangers lefty C.J. Wilson in Game 1.

The game quickly started in favor of the Rangers as Sabathia’s control was off from the start of the first inning.

Elvis Andrus walked to lead off the game and Michael Young singled to set up first and third with no outs.

Josh Hamilton then hit a line drive home run to right to quickly put Texas up 3-0. The Rangers fans were on their feet and going crazy following the Hamilton home run.

Sabathia quickly continued to struggle in the first inning, loading the bases for Jorge Cantu with two outs. Sabathia threw a wild pitch that Jorge Posada could not get to and went to the backstop, but Posada got the ball to Sabathia and tagged out Nelson Cruz trying to score to end a very crazy and busy first inning.

Sabathia was able to get through the second and third innings, but ran into more trouble in the fourth inning.

Young doubled to center field, scoring Matt Treanor and Andrus to make the game 5-0 in favor of the Rangers.

Sabathia only lasted four innings, allowed six hits, five runs, walked four and struck out three. In the most simple of terms, Sabathia was terrible on Friday night. He had no command of the strike zone, walked too many batters and if anything was lucky he didn’t leave the game losing at 9-0.

Could this be Texas’ night? It sure looked that way early on, especially because Wilson was pitching very well.

Wilson had the Yankees scoreless for six innings until Robinson Cano hit a solo home run to right off Wilson that made it 5-1.

Brett Gardner led off the top of the eighth inning by hitting the ball to Cantu at first. Cantu went to flip the ball to Wilson to record the out, but Gardner slid head first into first base and beat Wilson’s foot and was now on first to lead off the eighth inning.

That gutsy play by Gardner would be the turning point of the game and the spark to an eighth inning Yankees rally.

Following Gardner’s infield single, Derek Jeter doubled to right field to score Gardner and now the score was 5-2.

Jeter would be the final batter Wilson would see as Ron Washington pulled his starter from the game. Wilson pitched seven innings, allowed six hits, two runs, walked two and struck out four.

Relieving Wilson was veteran left-hander Darren Oliver, who came in and walked Nick Swisher and Mark Teixeira to load the bases for Alex Rodriguez.

Washington pulled Oliver and put in Darren O’Day to face A-Rod. On the very first pitch, A-Rod smashed the ball down the left field line for a base hit that scored Jeter and Swisher and the score was now 5-4 with nobody out.

Washington then went to left-hander Clay Rapada to face Cano, and on his very first pitch, Cano singled to center to score Teixeira and now, the game was tied at 5-5.

Derek Holland replaced Rapada on the mound and Marcus Thames singled to left to score A-Rod and now the Yankees had taken the lead 6-5.

Can you believe that? After the Yankees looked all but dead through seven innings, they strike and strike hard and now have command of the game.

Holland was able to escape the rest of the eighth with no further damage, leaving it a one-run game.

In the bottom of the eighth, Kerry Wood came in and Ian Kinsler led off with a walk.

David Murphy was up trying to look for a rally, but Wood was able to pick off Kinsler trying to lead off first. With that one simple out, any magic Texas had in them seemed to vanish. Wood finished off the rest of the eighth with no problems.

In the bottom of the ninth, Mariano Rivera came in to nail down the save for the Yankees.

Pinch hitting for Cantu, Mitch Moreland singled up the middle to start the inning.

Andrus sacrificed Moreland to second, giving long-time Ranger Young a chance to be a hero.

After a long at-bat, Young struck out for the second out of the ninth inning.

Hamilton grounded out to third to end the game and gave the Yankees a 6-5 Game 1 victory.

Dustin Moseley, who came in to pitch the sixth and seventh innings, got the win for the Yankees. Pitching in relief of Sabathia, Moseley did a great job keeping the game at 5-0 and not allowing Texas to expand their lead.

O’Day took the loss for Texas. He was one of several Texas relievers who was terrible and blew a really good game pitched by Wilson.

For about 80 percent of this game, the Yankees looked like a beaten team in danger of falling behind 1-0.

But the Yankees never gave up. They showed tremendous heart and guts on the field and came alive in that eighth inning, almost hitting and scoring at will against the Rangers bullpen.

In a game the Rangers seemed like they were six outs away from enjoying an easy victory,ends up being a heart-wrenching defeat.

Game two will be on Saturday and will have Phil Hughes going for the Yankees to send it 2-0 back to the Bronx, while the Rangers will have Colby Lewis trying to split the series before heading to New York.

Game One was a huge victory for the Yankees that might end up dictating how this series ends up turning out.

Four down, seven to go until No. 28 for Yankees Universe.

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ALCS Game 1: A Comeback For Yankees, a Collapse For Rangers

In the 1999 movie Unbreakable, the character played by Samuel L. Jackson explained that the incredible fragility of his bone structure, the reason he was derisively known as Mr. Glass, was directly tied to the fact that Bruce Willis’ character was seemingly invincible.

Mr. Glass reasoned that if there’s someone in the world who represents the extreme on one end, then the universe must have a person somewhere who represents the opposite end of the spectrum.

It made Jackson and Willis natural foes, and their relationship served as the crux of one of the last decent movies M. Night Shyamalan made before people started exiting theaters saying things like, “Hey, how long do you think M. Night has been hiding his brain injury?”

I bring this up because if you caught the camera shot of Nolan Ryan after the Yankees rallied to go ahead of the Rangers on Friday night—rotten scowl, arms folded, chin melded to his chest—you know that I was 1,500 miles away with the exact opposite expression.

If you’ve been caught off-guard by this resourceful, tenacious side of the Yankees, you’re not alone. This was a championship-caliber win, the type of victory I never thought this team had in them as recently as 10 days ago.

CC Sabathia gets knocked out of the game after four innings, you expect to lose. Your offense goes silent for six straight innings to begin the game, you figure you have no shot. Fall down five runs, on the road, in a playoff game, you should probably pack it in. And yet, the Yankees will wake up on Saturday morning with a 1-0 lead in the best-of-seven ALCS.

It couldn’t have been done without the following people:

Dustin Moseley: The casual Yankee fan sitting next to you at the bar had no idea who Moseley was when he entered the game. Even you may have only known the right-hander as the guy who is (slightly) better than Chad Gaudin. But Moseley’s two scoreless innings turned out to be huge for a Yankee team that trailed 5-0 by the time Sabathia was pulled from the game. Moseley was credited with his first postseason victory. It was much deserved.

Brett Gardner: He’s gritty, he’s gutty, and now he has his signature moment as a Yankee. Gardner’s hustle infield single leading off the eighth inning — including poorly thought-out headfirst slide! — seemed harmless at the time, but it became the spark that ignited the Yankees’ winning rally. Bonus points are in order for Gardy giving Craig Sager the “You don’t expect me to take you seriously?” look throughout his postgame interview.

Derek Jeter: I wrote on Wednesday that I thought that Jeter would rise to the occasion in the ALCS; his usual October brilliance melding with a final opportunity to gain leverage in upcoming contract negotiations. So far, so good for Jeter, who doubled twice in Game 1. His first two-bagger drove in Gardner, sending New York’s classic rally into overdrive.

Alex Rodriguez: A-Rod was having a night to forget until the top of the eighth (0-for-3, error), when his bases-loaded double quieted the Arlington crowd and drew the Yankees within one run. It was type of hit that Rodriguez regularly delivered during the 2009 postseason, and it proved No. 13’s flair for the dramatic remains intact.

Ron Washington: I don’t want to be too hard on Washington, who was betrayed by his bullpen and probably would be a great dude to listen to old jazz records with. But his decision not to turn to Neftali Feliz as the game unraveled in the eighth was ripe for first-, second- and third-guessing. Having a lefty come in to face Marcus Thames in a tie game wasn’t the wisest move, either.

Ian Kinsler: Can’t get picked off there, bro. Just can’t happen. This is the playoffs, meat.

President George W. Bush: In fairness, Dubya wasn’t really to blame for the Rangers’ mess, but his attendance at the game did lead to the tweet of the night by ESPN the Magazine senior writer @jorgearangure: “I bet George W Bush authorized a sign that read “Mission Accomplished” after the 7th inning.” Ouch.

Mariano Rivera: You can gauge how big a win is by how Mo reacts after getting the final out. In this case, it was both a passionate fist pump and shout. That’s a 9/10 on the Mo Scale. Allowing the leadoff single to pinch-hitter Mitch Moreland led to some tense moments, but Rivera got it done like he has so many times before. Beating Michael Young and Josh Hamilton to end it was no easy feat, the G.O.A.T. just made it look that way.

Stray thoughts:

  • It seemed like glorified mop-up duty at the time, but at least Joba Chamberlain can finally say he has a place in the 2010 postseason. Pretty amazing that he’s went from future of the franchise to playoff fringe guy in little over a year. Will this reality serve as a wake up call that makes him work harder to improve himself in the off-season? Or are we watching the start of a descent into oblivion? Vegas has even odds.
  • Derek Jeter Contract Watch: Four years, $52 million (up one year, $7 million since beginning of ALCS).
  • Must admit I was pretty disappointed by Sabathia’s performance. There was an undeniable Chien-Ming-Wang-in-’07-ALDS stench to the whole proceedings. Clearly the layoff affected him, but he seemed genuinely rattled at times as well. The big man needs to be better. A lot better.
  • Funny how the “Yankees suck!” chants in Arlington died down by the late innings. Weird how that works.
  • Will be interesting to see how Rangers bounce back from a truly wretched defeat. A weaker team (see: Twins, Minnesota) would lay down and die after a loss like that. We’ll find out how Washington’s bunch reacts on Saturday.
  • Phil Hughes’ career numbers in Arlington: 15 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 4 BB, 13 K, 1 no-hitter ruined by a douchechill hamstring. I’m just sayin’ …
  • Important River & Sunset program note: I will be live blogging Game 2 of the ALCS right here on Saturday at 4 p.m. ET. Join me won’t you?

Dan Hanzus writes the Yankees blog River & Sunset and can be reached at dhanzus@gmail.com. Follow Dan on Twitter @danhanzus.

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ALCS Game 1: New York Yankees Storm Back, Clobber Texas Rangers Bullpen

As the top of the eighth inning began, I was brainstorming for this article. I even wrote a title, and was looking forward to chronicling C.J. Wilson’s magnificent start for the Texas Rangers and harping on how woeful CC Sabathia was for the New York Yankees.

Considering they held a 5-1 lead, I assumed Texas was on their way to their first playoff win at home. Assuming is a dangerous thing. And, too much confidence fueled bad case of Karma. My foolish presumption began to backfire.

For two-plus hours of the American League Championship Series’ Game 1, plenty of good came Texas’s way. Wilson was brilliant, picking his spots, mixing his pitches, and keeping the powerful Yankees lineup off-balance. Even when he did get into jams, his fearless mindset—built up under the tutelage of fellow lefty Cliff Lee—helped him escape without any harm done.

Before he stepped to the mound to make his first ALCS start and second postseason appearance, his nerves were calmed by Sabathia’s dreadful pitching and a big blast off Josh Hamilton’s bat.

Sabathia, a 21-game winner this season, was a complete mess. His pitches had no life. He wasn’t deceptive. His changeups, sliders, and curveballs weren’t close enough to even tempt the Rangers, and his fastballs were served on a tee for their big hitters.

Hamilton qualifies as one of those power threats, and his eyes widened as an 0-2 heater left the big lefty’s hand. Thrown high in the zone and placed right down the pipe, the MVP candidate stroked the offering just over the fence in right-field for a three-run homer. Forty thousand-plus fans rose as one.

Texas, a team that had only mustered two runs in their previous 60 postseason innings against Yankee pitching, eclipsed that mark with one almighty swing.

They continued to work Sabathia hard, as the Cy Young contender threw 36 first inning pitches and more balls than strikes. Six of the first seven Rangers reached, but the three runs were all they could muster, as Nelson Cruz ended his team’s bases-loaded, two-out threat in being rightfully called out at home plate trying to score on a ball that evaded catcher Jorge Posada.

Though it was a very close play, that gamble to go for home with Sabathia laboring and on the ropes ultimately came back to bite Texas. Considering what transpired over the next few innings for Texas, who knew it would?

The contrast between Wilson and Sabathia was glaring. Wilson sent the first nine Yankees down in order. He was so composed, so fearless. In comparison, everything was a battle for Sabathia. His pitch count ballooned, equivalent to his heft atop the mound, but though base-runners continued to reach for Texas, runs weren’t pushed across.

Their lead was 3-0 in the third, but the Rangers could have held a five or six run advantage. Would have, could have, should have. Missed opportunities is part of the game, and boy oh boy did it come back to bite the home team in the end.

Wilson could do nothing about the missed chances. All he could do was pitch–do his part. And he continued to pitch brilliantly, and as a result, Texas’s bats finally broke through. Two runs were scored in the bottom of the fourth, in what would be Sabathia’s final inning, as career-long Ranger Michael Young crushed a two-out double deep to center field, scoring Matt Treanor and Elvis Andrus.

Wilson now had a five run lead to work with, and he took advantage. While the Yankees bullpen cooled the Rangers bats following Sabathia’s early exit, Wilson continued to baffle, making the top and heart of New York’s order look far from intimidating. Wilson was indeed the intimidator, but then trouble came his way in the form of Robinson Cano, the Yankees second baseman and MVP candidate who has delivered all season long.

With nine outs to go, New York needed to show some sign of life, and Cano successfully performed CPR, wrapping a flat fastball around the right field pole. New York was on the board.

Wilson regained composure and sent down the next three Yankees in order. Seven superb innings in the books, and his Rangers six outs away from taking a 1-0 series lead into Game 2, and then potentially a 2-0 series lead into Cliff Lee’s start and Yankees Stadium in Game 3.

A lot was riding on these next two innings. There is a reason why winners of the first game more often than not go on to win the series. And if Texas could get six outs without allowing more than four runs the ALCS would be considerably in their favor.

But that would not take place. Wilson came out for the eighth and his pitch count was manageable. But smooth sailing soon turned rough, as Brett Gardner unnecessarily slid into first solely for the “What a gritty, all-out effort by Gardner!” praise he proceeded to receive. The dirtying of the jersey when a simple lunge would have sufficed resulted in a single.

Then, possessing great speed, he zoomed around the bases to score on Derek Jeter’s ensuing liner in the gap. Wilson left to a resounding applause, and acknowledged the crowd. The lead was still Texas’s, and his outing deserved such an ovation, but his would be the last time cheers would engulf the stadium.

The usually solid veteran Darren Oliver entered and stunk. He walked the only two batters he faced, loading the bases with nobody out, a situation another Darren, Darren O’Day, had to deal with. He didn’t handle it well, either. One pitch thrown to Alex Rodriguez, one single roped past Young at third and into left-field, scoring two runs.

Young’s shortstop instincts came into play, as he didn’t have the wherewithal to get in front of the grounder, instead trying to pick it like a middle-infielder would. It was a tough play, considering how hard it was hit, but it was a play the likes of Adrian Beltre, the retiring Mike Lowell, and Scott Rolen would have made.

Suddenly, New York was down just one. And then, after Clay Rapada relieved O’Day, they weren’t. Cano ripped Rapada’s first pitch up the middle, scoring Teixeira and tying the game. Rapada exited to a chorus of boos, but his replacement was no better.

After Derrick Holland fired in a 2-2 fastball to Marcus Thames he turned and watched it helplessly drop into left. The deficit had already been erased, now the tie was no more. The Yankees held the lead. Silence fell over the Ballpark in Arlington.

If the Yankees could comeback, so could Texas, right? They had their chance against Kerry Wood in the bottom of the eighth, but that opportunity was thrown out of the window when Ian Kinsler, who led off with a single, was picked off first. It was just Wood’s second pickoff in the past five years.

Another chance formulated in the ninth, as a runner reached second with one out against the great Mariano Rivera. But Rivera, who entered with the most postseason appearances in history (91), most saves (41), and ERA (0.42), worked his magic, retiring Young and Hamilton to end the wild affair.

The 6-5 defeat was gut-wrenching for Texas. They had a win in their grasp, then, as sport tends to do, it slipped away in the blink of an eye. Sleep will be hard to come by, but luckily the Rangers won’t have much time to think about the collapse. Game 2 is 3:30 Texas time tomorrow.

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