Tag: Mariano Rivera

MLB Playoffs 2010: Ranking the Top Five Performances

If the Wild Card system in Major League Baseball had any remaining detractors entering this season’s Division Series round of postseason play—and it did—the pair of excellent series (San Francisco-Atlanta and Texas-Tampa Bay) may have wooed them all.

Even aside from Roy Halladay’s historic October debut, there were great performances by batters and pitchers alike all around the playoff circuit. Cliff Lee, Mariano Rivera and Andy Pettitte solidified their sterling playoff reputations, while Buster Posey, Tim Lincecum and Curtis Granderson began building their own October legacies.

The Rangers may be the best story entering the 2010 Championship Series round, having won their first-ever postseason series. But there are plenty of individual superstars who will vie for the bright spotlight of postseason glory. Through the first round, these five men have made the best cases.

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ALCS 2010: Yankees Looking Sharp as They Head Into Next Round

For the second year in a row, the New York Yankees swept aside the Minnesota Twins in the first round of the playoffs and are once again headed back to the ALCS.

Many questions surrounded the Yankees as they entered the postseason for only the 14th time in 15 years, but it is safe to say now that the Bombers are a legitimate threat.

Being the Wild Card team, everybody wondered if they could win without home field advantage? Well, they can, and did, overcoming two leads by the Twins and rallied behind starters CC Sabathia and Andy Pettitte to win the first two games of the series at Target Field. Or much simply put: they came, they saw, they conquered.

Phil Hughes making his first postseason start in game 3 was the next big question, would he be able to bounce back from a rather ugly 2009 postseason campaign where he gave up six runs in just six innings pitched? He too, answered the call and fired seven strong innings, allowing only four hits and no runs, and thus completing the sweep and moving the Yankees one step closer to their goal at the beginning of every season.

The Yankees made it clear to everybody that they are for real once again this October and any questions of their starting pitching have been answered after several strong pitching performances.

Realistically they could have the best starting rotation in the playoffs right now, that is if they continue with their three man rotation, which they most certainly should.

 

CC Sabathia, surprisingly, had the worst start between the three starters, allowing four runs on five hits through six innings.

Not enough can be said about how Andy Pettitte, at age 38, came out and shut down the Twins offense in game two, giving up just two runs on five hits over seven solid innings, earning his unprecedented 19th postseason victory in his career.

You already know about Phil Hughes and how he dominated in the clinching game three, so the Yankees top three starters are looking pretty scary and are certainly the best in the American League right now.

If you combine the rotation with the always dangerous offense, along with the best relief pitcher in the history of the game who only gets better in October, Mariano Rivera, and added rest before the ALCS, the Bronx Bombers are looking sharp as they continue their quest for title number 28.

 

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ALDS 2010: Ranking The Performances

The Yankees again proved to be the most playoff-efficient team of all.  They bullied Minnesota right out of their own home early on and then finished them off in the Bronx.  An all-around dominant performance from the Yankees shows that they will be tough to beat once again in these playoffs.  There may be only one team that could challenge them this season.  Can I get a…”RE-MATCH?!”

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2010 MLB Playoffs: New York Yankees’ Mariano Rivera at Home in Postseason

Every year we hear the same whispers:

“How much longer can Mo last?”

Because it’s such an infrequent occurrence, anytime he blows a save, the doubters surface with their proclamations of Mariano’s imminent demise.

At a point in his life where most of his peers are playing golf, or delving into post-playing-career business ventures, the inimitable Mariano Rivera is continuing to add luster to his likely first-ballot Hall of Fame credentials.

It’s difficult to not lapse into fits of hyperbole when discussing the exploits of the humble man from Panama simply known as Mo. To speak of him is reminiscent of the accolades bestowed upon “the most interesting man in the world.”

He executes his craft with surgical precision, yet with such simplicity, and with a grace befitting a nobleman. It occasionally appears as if what he does is easy. To be clear, it is anything but.

His failings are so rare, especially upon the grand stage of baseball’s postseason, that we can remember them perfectly, likely even more so than his abundant successes. They stand out so dramatically from the bulk of his performances that they have seared themselves into our collective memory. Mariano Rivera’s dominance feels so commonplace that we barely bat an eye as he repeatedly shatters both bats and dreams.

With yet another entry into his vast collection of MLB playoff appearances, we are reminded what a blessing it has been to watch this man ply his trade over the last 16 baseball seasons. Even the most devout Yankee-hater finds difficulty disparaging the highly-respected Mariano Rivera or his accomplishments.

After laboring through a September in which he more than doubled his total of blown saves through the first five months of the season, the doubts began to resurface whether the Yankees could count on the stalwart at the back end of their bullpen to perform in October.

His performances during September, while not terrible, certainly didn’t approach the dominance he had displayed from April through August. In that stretch, he pitched in 49 games, logging 47.2 innings, and was 27 of 29 in save opportunities, while striking out 38 and only allowing 27 hits and 9 walks. His sparkling 1.13 ERA, .163 batting average against, and opponents’ OPS of .442 were among the very best marks of his career.

When his September ERA jumped to 4.76, with a .273 batting average against and .713 OPS, while blowing three of his eight save opportunities, theories that age had suddenly caught up to Mariano seemed to proliferate.

His opposition could only hope. 

Mariano Rivera served to thrust the proverbial dagger into the hearts of his Minnesota rivals, mercilessly ending each game with his own brand of shutdown pitching. Overall in the ALDS, he pitched 3.1 innings, allowing no runs and only two base-runners on two singles—one of which was actually an out, when umpires missed Greg Golson’s shoestring catch on Delmon Young’s sinking liner.

 

Although he only struck out one hitter, his dominance was such that Young was the only hitter to even make solid contact against him. The rest were the usual flares and harmless grounders that hitters routinely muster against the greatest closer that baseball has ever seen.

In the bottom of the eighth inning of Game 1 at Target Field, Mo entered with men on second and third and two outs, as the Yankees clung to a two-run lead. But after he retired Denard Span on a weak ground-out to Derek Jeter, the bottom of the ninth inning seemed like merely a formality.

He had extinguished the Twins’ dreams of a comeback in the eighth, and by the time they faced him in the ninth, the game felt like it was already over. Such is the futility most teams feel when tasked with mounting a comeback against him, especially in the playoffs.

Game 2 was more of the same, as Mariano entered the ninth, this time with a three-run lead. After Joe Mauer led off with an opposite field single, the Twins may have briefly entertained notions of a comeback, but those were quickly quashed as Mo induced a tailor-made double-play grounder to the next hitter.

He then retired Jim Thome on a soft fly-out to shallow left, strangely reminiscent of the soft fly that Thome ended the previous night’s game with.

As Game 3 entered the ninth inning, the Yankees possessed a seemingly insurmountable 6-1 lead at home this time at Yankee Stadium. Usually, Joe Girardi would prefer not to use Mo in such a situation, however after Kerry Wood tried to make a mess of the eighth inning, offering the Twins a minuscule glimmer of hope, the Yankees were unwilling to leave anything to chance.

 

With the chance to sweep, knowing that the Yankees would have several days to let their pitchers recover, Girardi wasn’t worried about burning out his veteran closer. Rivera entered in the top of the ninth, and quickly dismissed slugger Jim Thome on a strikeout looking, precisely locating cutters to retire the powerful designated hitter for the third time in three games.

The next two batters each flew out harmlessly to end the game, as well as baseball season in Minnesota, until it begins anew next spring.

Aside from the slightly tense eighth inning during Game 1, there was very little drama at the conclusion of any of the games. That was due partly to the Yankee leads of two, three, and five runs respectively, but additionally, the notion of Mariano Rivera looming in the bullpen serves as a psychological weapon that serves to weaken the resolve of even the best teams.

It essentially shortens the games, forcing teams to press more in the innings immediately preceding Mo’s ninth inning domain. If not leading a game by then, your only option is to come back from a deficit against a pitcher who, in his postseason career, is 41-of-47 save opportunities with a 0.72 ERA and only 84 hits allowed in 136.2 innings.

In other words, the odds are slim.

Interestingly, the conclusion of the 2010 World Series will see Mariano Rivera become a free agent, along with his teammate of 16 seasons with the New York Yankees, shortstop Derek Jeter. Of course, no one thinks realistically that either of them will play anywhere but the Bronx in 2011 and beyond, but it remains to be seen how long Mariano Rivera desires to pitch.

 

On November 29 the ageless Mariano will celebrate his 41st birthday. In this “post-steroid era” we now find ourselves in, we have seen players once again declining and retiring in their late-30’s, unlike their pharmaceutical-enhanced brethren from just a few years ago who were able to bypass the natural rigors of time trough chemistry.

Mo though, continues to defy the odds, and is clearly still near the top of his game at his relatively advanced age.

Clearly, Mariano has nothing left to prove, as he is widely revered as the greatest closer the game has ever seen, even if he doesn’t yet own the all-time saves record. I don’t know how much being the all-time saves leader would mean to Mo, but one has to think that a competitor of his caliber would at least be intrigued by the possibility of being alone atop the list of greatest closers in baseball history.

As it sits currently, Mariano Rivera is second to only Trevor Hoffman on the all-time saves leader board, and only 42 behind Hoffman. With Hoffman still pitching, it may be difficult to catch him, but with Trevor’s significant struggles in Milwaukee this season, his similarly impressive career may be coming to a close.

With a gap of 42 saves separating them, Mo could conceivably catch and pass Hoffman within two years. It’s certainly not unrealistic to envision the impeccably conditioned Mo pitching another two seasons in pinstripes.

 

Once the day comes when the Yankee manager no longer has Mariano Rivera to call upon out in the bullpen, the Yankees will certainly feel the effects of his absence as they try to fill the void left by the departure of one of the consistently reliable pitchers baseball has ever known. Finding a suitable replacement will be difficult, if not downright impossible to achieve. Even the best candidate will likely pale in comparison to the peerless Sandman.

For the moment though, the Yankees don’t have to be concerned with such unpleasant thoughts. They only have to focus on preparing for their second consecutive American League Championship Series, resting assured that Mo is still here, and in just the position he prefers himself to be in—pitching under the bright lights of October playoff baseball. Enter Sandman indeed.

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MLB Playoffs 2010: The New York Yankees Are the Team To Beat Again

Entering the MLB postseason, analysts and other fans of the sports seemed to be skeptical of the New York Yankees chances to repeat their World Championship run from last year. Much of this skepticism centered around the lack of quality pitching following CC Sabathia in the rotation.

However, in the Yankees sweep of the Minnesota Twins Sabathia’s win ended up being the weakest performance, as Andy Pettitte and Phil Hughes pulled strung together very strong performance in their respective wins.

From the bullpen, Kerry Wood okay in Game 1, dominated in Game 2, and then struggled in Game 3; he gave up the bullpen’s only earned run in the series in Game 3. Mariano Rivera didn’t give up a run in his three relief performances in which he captured 2 saves, continuing his postseason dominance.

Overall, in the Minnesota series the Yankees pitching staff seemingly silenced any doubt that was circulating.The Yankee’s offense was never really a cause for concern, but it is good to note that they didn’t disappoint, adding run support from a slew of different players in their lineup.

However, just playing well isn’t the only reason that the Yankees might now be the favorite, other teams have been struggling.

Tampa Bay couldn’t hit Wilson and Lee in the first two games in which both Shields and Price struggled, and then in Game 3 they rebounded in a win in the late innings. Texas looked strong until Game 3, where the bullpen was unable to hold the lead and the offense didn’t have the same success at the plate.

The Phillies got one of the best pitching performances in postseason history in Game 1, and with 4 runs in support won easily. In Game 2, Philadelphia won in a sloppy comeback after Oswalt had trouble early. The Reds probably should have won Game 2, but beat themselves with errors, they didn’t look very good in either game.

Tim Lincecum showed why they call him The Freak in Game 1, as they battled their way to a 1-0 win. In Game 2, they were able to open a lead early, but then blew it later in the game and finally lost in extra innings after Ankiel’s home run.

Overall, no team besides the Yankees have shown the consistent, high quality of play on both sides of the ball that the New York Yankees have this postseason, which is why they are once again the team to beat.

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Mariano Rivera: How Long Can He Keep Dominating the Opposition

Mariano Rivera is a 16-year Major League veteran, and at 40 years old he is still dominating hitters in their 20s, but the question is how long can this continue.

Take a look at Rivera’s career, and it’s easy to tell this is a future Hall of Famer on the mound. What he has been able to do while seemingly only throwing one pitch has been incredible. Rivera has a career ERA of 2.23 which accompanies his 559 career saves. 

Rivera has been the rare player who seemingly has gotten better the more he has aged. Take the last three seasons for instance in which he competed at the advanced ages of 38, 39, and 40 years old. In those seasons, he pitched to a 1.40, 1.76, and 1.80 ERA respectively.

Those seasons rank among the best he has pitched in his entire big league career. The reason why is simple: He does not rely on velocity in order to get hitters out. Rivera specializes in making hitters get themselves out because of the movement on his trademark cutter. 

The pitch has such late movement that a hitter knows what is coming but is still helpless in trying to hit against him. Rivera has been especially unhittable in postseason play where he has cemented his Hall of Fame resume.

Rivera has pitched in 90 postseason games, recording 41 saves in 135.2 innings while pitching to a 0.73 ERA. That’s right, Rivera’s postseason ERA is more than two times better than his ERA in the regular season. Against tougher competition, Rivera raises his game to the next level which makes him one of if not the most indispensable Yankees.

However, this season is the last on Rivera’s contract, and the question the Yankees must ask themselves is how long Rivera can keep pitching on the level he has his entire career. There are two comparable players for a pitcher such as Rivera, and they are Greg Maddux and Trevor Hoffman.

Maddux like Rivera did not rely on velocity and instead relied on precision and movement on his pitches. Rivera has pinpoint accuracy and can place the ball anywhere he wants within the zone. If Rivera continues to place the ball wherever he wants without losing movement on his fastball then he can pitch as long as he desires.

The lack in velocity has not seemed to effect him this season as he still broke the same amount of bats he has throughout his career. However, Hoffman is a case where the aging process has obviously taken its toll. 

His fastball has lost so much velocity that there is minimal difference between the fastball and change-up rendering his pitching ineffective. Rivera is a proud man, and he would not want to go out a shade of his former self. 

The decision is all his. As long as Rivera wants to pitch and has his trademark cutter, he will continue his assault at the saves record in a Yankee uniform before delivering his Hall of Fame introduction speech in Cooperstown.

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2010 ALDS Game 2: Andy Pettitte Leads New York Yankees Passed Minnesota Twins

The Yankees gave the ball to veteran lefty Andy Pettitte in Game 2 of the ALDS. On the mound for The Twins, was former Yankee Carl Pavano. The Twins needed Pavano to come through for them but the Yankee offense was too much for Pavano.

Pettitte went seven innings giving up five hits while allowing just two runs, and just one walk. Pettitte delivered as he always does, earning his 19th victory during the postseason, which is the most all time. 

The Twins got on Pettitte in the second inning when rookie Danny Valencia hit a sacrifice fly to score Delmon Young, giving the Twins a 1-0 lead. The Yankees responded in the fourth inning off an Alex Rodriguez sacrifice fly, scoring Curtis Granderson. The Bombers got one more in the fifth from an unlikely Lance Berkman. Berkman belted an opposite-field home run, giving the Yanks a 2-1 lead.

Pettitte continued to pitch well, and allowed his only other run in the sixth inning on an Orlando Hudson home run. The Twins tied the game at two, but it was only a matter of time before the Yankee lineup came alive. After a controversial pitch that was called a ball, Lance Berkman hit an RBI double, scoring Jorge Posada. Derek Jeter then singled in Berkman, extending the Yankee lead to 4-2.

Pettitte pitched a scoreless seventh, which would be his last inning of work. Kerry Wood entered the game in the eighth inning, resembling the Kerry Wood from his early days with the Chicago Cubs. Wood pitched a scoreless eighth, setting it up for Mariano Rivera.

The Yankees tacked on one more run in the ninth inning off a Curtis Granderson single. Granderson continued his hot hitting going 3-for-4 with an RBI. Mariano Rivera relieved Wood and gave up one hit in the ninth inning, but got out of it without allowing a run. Mo earned the save giving the Yankees a 2-0 lead in the series. 

The Yankees head back home, where 18-game winner Phil Hughes will go head to head with Brian Duensing.

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New York Yankees Got It Right In Aiming for Wild Card To Face Twins

Two games into both American League Division Series match-ups and it seems that the Yankees made the right decision by winning the Wild Card.

The New York media continuously jumped on the Yankees regarding their play over the past two months. In reality, yes, they were playing horribly, but they were also not playing with a sense of urgency. The Yankees had already put the Boston Red Sox away, or at least it was the feeling at the time, and they played poorly because of it.

Joe Girardi knew his team was veteran laden, a nice word for being old, and this allowed him to rest some of his regulars before the grind of the postseason began. As a result, the Bronx Bombers went a combined 30-31 to end the season, yet still managed 96 wins.

The prolonged slump scared some in the media and fan base, who thought the Yankees would not be able to flip the switch once the calendar turned to October. However, the way they played down the stretch showed they had a plan.

The Yankees did not want to face the Texas Rangers in the first round of the playoffs. The Yankees split eight games with them this season, including a three game sweep in Texas, where they were thoroughly outplayed in every facet of the game.

They had every reason to fear playing them. The Rangers feature a rotation with two lefties, including one the Yankees are extremely familiar with, having faced him in the World Series last season. The Yankees Achilles heel this season has been facing lefties, and going against Cliff Lee and C.J. Wilson, was not something they wanted to do.

 

Girardi’s pitching staff also has to be thankful that they do not have to go up against the juggernaut that is the Rangers offense. They can beat you with the long ball and small ball, without showing mercy for any of their opponents. 

Once the Yankees clinched the Wild Card, they did not have to worry much about the Rangers. Instead, they became the Tampa Bay Rays problems, and problems are exactly what the Rays have has so far against the Rangers.

The Rangers clubbed around Rays ace pitcher, David Price, to win game one, and then tallied another six runs off “Big Game James” in game two. The Rays are now in a desperate situation against the Rangers, facing elimination, with Matt Garza on the hill to save their season.

The Yankees, however, received an adequate pitching performance from C.C. Sabathia last night, in addition to some clutch hitting from Mark Teixiera and Curtis Granderson, to get the victory. Tonight, the Yankees sent Andy Pettitte, their old war horse and the most successful pitcher in playoff history, to the mound in hopes of taking a commanding series lead.

Clutch pitching from Pettitte, clutch hitting from the veteran Yankee lineup, and the brilliance of Mariano Rivera closing out the game for a second consecutive night, gave the Yankees complete control in the series. 

As the Rays contemplate the end of their season, the Yankees are one win away from advancing to the ALCS, knowing they made the right decision.

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2010 MLB Playoffs: 10 Bold Predictions for the Divisional Series

The 2010 MLB Playoffs are finally here.  Time for heroes to be made and remembered forever.  

These four series in Round 1 will be very telling and will help shape the remainder of the playoffs.  Many have been anticipating this playoff season for some time.

For some, it is seen as revenge, while others just try to come in and make a name for themselves.

The playoffs only come once a year but have a lasting impact from season-to-season.  

This playoff season will be no different. 

Here are 10 Bold Predictions for Round 1 of the MLB Playoffs.  

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MLB Playoff Predictions 2010: The Reds Crash the Postseason Party

The Cincinnati Reds have been a dark-horse pick by a lot of fans for a few years and the team put it all together in 2010. Dusty Baker is now taking his third National League team into the playoffs.

Will this be the year he gets that ring?

The Reds offense, led by slugger Joey Votto and lead-off hitter Brandon Phillips, gets to face the toughest staff in the postseason in the Philadelphia Phillies.

If momentum is the next day’s starting pitcher then I love the Phillies’ momentum when they can throw out Roy Halladay, Cole Hamels and Roy Oswalt.

The Reds are also a great story in that they were in the NL Central where the St. Louis Cardinals were prohibitive favorites. At the start of the season, I thought that there would be no way the Cards would not make the playoffs. Tony LaRussa dealt with a myriad of injuries and at the end of the season. They looked more like an old team than a title contender.

The Atlanta Braves are also a very nice story. They led the NL East over the Phillies for a good portion of the season until the Phils finally overtook them in September. Bobby Cox is back in the postseason in his final year as the Braves manager.

The collapse of the San Diego Padres was a real surprise in the last quarter of the MLB season. A team with a limited payroll that actually picked up some bats for their meek offense in July simply fell apart down the stretch. They did survive a 10-game losing streak with the lead but that skid allowed the San Francisco Giants to make up a lot of ground. 

The Giants and the Padres look like the same team: loaded with pitching but lacking in offense. Will the Giants get enough offense to get past the Braves in the NLDS?

It looks like the Braves and Phillies will meet in the NLCS. In 1993, the Phillies shocked the Braves in the NLCS so will the tables be turned 17 years later?

Why not? Look for the Braves to go on a magical run.

The American League was supposed to be dominated by the Yankees and Red Sox again. That has not been the case as Boston suffered through a horrible season of injuries. At a critical time of the season, the Yankees have big questions about their pitching.

CC Sabathia looks like a Cy Young winner but after that the Yankees might be in trouble. I am not going to worry about Mariano Rivera so if the Yankees do have late leads, they still have the hammer to close out the games.

The thing is, will they have late leads? The Twins are going to go without Justin Morneau but they have been without him since early July and they still played the best baseball in the fourth quarter of the season.

Morneau has been out with a concussion for three months. It really makes me fret for the NFL players who sit out a week after they suffer the same injury. I applaud the Twins and Morneau for putting safety first and the story worked out as the Twins are back in the playoffs.

But they have never beat the Yankees in the playoffs.

The Texas Rangers are back in the postseason for the first time since 1999. This is a franchise that has never won a playoff series and they get matched up with the Tampa Bay Rays. It is all about timing and Josh Hamilton’s injury could not have been at a worse time. This is a fun Ranger team that has a chance to make some noise and they have their best player returning from a rib injury.

No one ever said that life was fair.

Still, I like the Rangers to get past the Rays as Tampa Bay has no home-field advantage to speak of. They had to give away 20,000 tickets to “sell out” their moribund stadium after they clinched a playoff berth. Their catwalk also cost them a game this season and the rules have been modified to account for that quirk of Tropicana Field.

Now, the Yankees also have always beaten the Rangers in the playoffs but this is not the same Rangers team. I think that they will find a way to get past the Yankees as long as they don’t trail late in the game.

Josh Hamilton was the AL MVP but he won’t win it due to his late-season injury. I do expect him to have a huge impact in what will be a magical run by the Rangers.

I am a real sentimental guy and that makes it tough for me to go against Atlanta. I look for the Braves to finish off their magical season with a World Series win over the Texas Rangers.

 

Let’s now take one final look at the issue of parity in the MLB. 16 out of the 30 teams were at .500 or better. That is a very good sign of the health of the game. The Reds and Giants returning to the playoffs is also a good sign as well as the Padres staying in the race until the last day of the season.

The run of the Tampa Bay Rays is sadly coming to an end after this postseason. I do realize they have prospects aplenty in their farm system but losing the likes of Carl Crawford and Carlos Pena will have them in a temporary decline. Joe Maddon is a great manager and I hope he can keep this thing rolling in Tampa Bay.

The best farm system in baseball belongs to the Kansas City Royals. That means that the Royals might have a window opening soon to be relevant again. As a Cleveland fan, I do enjoy those windows and understand that we have to suffer through seasons like 2010 to get to those windows.

As a baseball fan, I sure wish that the windows for small market teams could stay open longer.

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