Tag: Phil Hughes

Yankees Notes: Jeter, Burnett, Teixeira, Aceves, Melancon

The Yankees offense didn’t show up yesterday as they lost 2-1 to the Boston Red Sox thus splitting the four-game weekend series. Phil Hughes was on the mound and struggled through the first two innings before settling down and giving a strong performance.

Here are some notes:

  • Hughes needed 57 pitches to get through two innings and then settled down as he just needed another 57 more to get through the next four innings.
  • Derek Jeter picked up his 2,876th hit of his career yesterday to tie former NY Giant Mel Ott. With his next hit he’ll have the most hits any New York player has during his time in the Big Apple.
  • A.J. Burnett had his last start skipped because of back spasms, but said he felt fine after throwing before tonight’s start.
  • Mark Teixeira will miss at least one game against the Texas Rangers as he attends the birth of his child.
  • Alfredo Aceves will begin a rehab stint in Triple-A Scranton tonight. He’s been out since May with a back injury that keeps flaring up every time he gets close. So cross your fingers that he doesn’t have another setback.
  • Mark Melancon, the once promising relief prospect that was sent to Houston in the Lance Berkman deal, has been called up to the big leagues.

The Yankees certainly had their chances to make a come back against the Red Sox yesterday. Teixeira homered to lead-off the eighth inning and then the Yankees put two runners in scoring position, but Daniel Bard and Jonathan Papelbon escaped the inning unscathed. Then in the ninth Jeter walked and stole second, but Papelbon struck out the side to end the game.

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State of the New York Yankees: August 5, 2010

Speaking in present terms, yesterday afternoon’s game in the Bronx may have been one of the biggest games for the Yankees this season.

If you haven’t heard yet, Alex Rodriguez finally hit his 600th career home run, snapping his 0-17 hitless streak after 12 straight games without a home run.  He also became the youngest player ever to join the 600 club (35 years and eight days old).  It is fair for one to call it quite an accomplishment.

Other Yankees also ended some hitless streaks, but these have flown under the radar due to the immense attention paid to Alex’s hitless streak and chase of 600.

Brett Gardner snapped his 0-11 slump, Curtis Granderson broke his 0-10 skid, and, of all people, Robinson Cano broke his 0-13 slide.  The question is, did the Alex Rodriguez chase have an impact on his teammates?  These three Yankees were hitless during his chase, and they all got hits yesterday after Alex got his home run.  

Based on that information, it is fair for one to say that the 600 saga had a negative impact on his teammates.  The monkey was not only lifted off of Alex’s back, but off of his teammates’ backs as well.

But, more importantly, the Yankees themselves ended their three-game losing streak, and reclaimed first place in the American League East.  They are tied with the Tampa Bay Rays for the division lead after Tampa Bay suffered a 2-1 loss to the Minnesota Twins, a game that took 13 innings to play.

The Yankees also picked up a game on the Boston Red Sox, after the Red Sox fell to Cleveland, 9-1.  

With an off day today, the Yankees will get their rest and welcome the rival Red Sox to the Bronx on Friday for a four-game set.

This is a crucial series for both teams, but the Yankees are in an incredible position to do severe damage to their arch rivals.  The Red Sox are clinging for their lives, and this is a pivotal series, perhaps the most important series of the year thus far for Boston.

Regardless of the outcome of the series, the Yankees have ensured themselves that they will remain on top of the Red Sox in the standings with the big win yesterday.

And the Yankees are primed to do such damage to Boston.  With Mark Teixeira swinging a hot bat, and with the pressure of 600 off of Alex Rodriguez, look for the big guys to have a big say this series.

It has been awhile since these two teams have matched up, but this series will have a little something extra.  The Yankees have a golden opportunity to shove the Red Sox closer to their fall off the cliff that is the 2010 season.

 

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New York Yankees Needed 600, Not Just A-Rod

The second place New York Yankees were on the brink of getting swept by the Toronto Blue Jays.  This would have been the second series loss in a row for the reigning champs and the timing could not be worse for a slump to begin.

 

Yankees fans were worried, because Alex Rodriguez’s struggles at the plate were affecting the whole team.

A-Rod was struggling to hit a milestone 600th home run, which puts him on an elite list and the youngest of the seven players on it.

Now the Yankee Universe can finally breathed, because this afternoon in the first inning A-rod hit his 600th career home-run at the age of 35. The team won and avoided the sweep, beating the Blue Jays 5-1.  Phil Hughes got the win and Mariano Rivera dominated in the ninth inning.

 

Things are looking up in the Bronx, but the Yankees now are looking up in the standings at the Tampa Bay Rays. It is just a one game lead, but the Rays keep winning.

 

The problem is that what may seem like not a big deal today, could be an issue a week from now.  Just imagine if the Yankees were the team to miss the playoffs?

 

It makes me sick to think about, but why I am is because I felt that Joe Girardi gave the Rays the series win last weekend. It was as if the Yankees were having a exhibition game, trying their new players out for practice.

 

New Yankee Lance Berkman was acquired to fill the designated hitter position that was Nick Johnson, which should have been Hideki Matsui’s job in the first place.

 

So when I saw Berkman playing first-base, I thought it was ludicrous.  If anything (god-forbid) happened to Mark Teixeira wouldn’t Nick Swisher be the better option?  I fully understand that Tex needs a day off, but against the Rays?

The series was on the line and so taking Brett Gardner and A-Rod out made the Yankees look arrogant.

 

Next up is the Boston Red Sox, who are coming for a four-game visit. Any series against the Red Sox, injured or not, is always tough for both ballclubs.  The Red Sox need the wins to stay in the playoff discussion, but so do the Yankees.

 

If the Yankees lose three of four games, within the division it will be a bigger problem them it might seem. It would cut the Yankees lead to just 3.5 over Boston and opens up a three game race again.

 

Not to mention the wild-card is just as easy to lose, as the Red Sox have a much harder schedule then the Yankees do down the stretch. When teams who aren’t in contention are playing teams that are, the former always seems to screw things up by winning.

 

The basic point here is that the Yankees are guaranteed nothing yet, except that A-rod’s 600th home-run is in the past and the team tends to follow A-rod’s lead at the plate.

Whatever the answer is regarding changing Phil Hughes innings limit is; Hughes is pitching dynamite again and it would be a shame to have to pull him from the rotation.

 

I like what I see out of the bullpen, other than Mo. Kerry Wood will be a great presence for Joba Chamberlain and Boone Logan, because David Robertson cannot be the only reliable middle-reliever.

 

So what needs to go on from here on out is….WIN, WIN AND KEEP ON WINNING!

 

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New York Yankees Pitcher Kerry Wood Can Be Valuable Again

Saturday, July 31 at 4:30 pm marked the official end of MLB’s trade deadline—well, technically at least.

New York Yankees GM Brian Cashman was hard at work trying to fix the mess the organization has made of Joba Chamberlain.

It is no secret that the Yankees don’t know what else to do with Joba Chamberlain, but looking at his historically short career the answer is pretty evident.

Back in 2007, Joba was Cashman’s prize pupil. The problem was no one wanted to take the time to teach the 24-year-old because of one infamous bug game.

Then in 2008, Joba had the weight of an entire city on his shoulders. Failure didn’t seem to be an option and whenever things looked bleak for Joba, he got yanked from the mound.

Fast-forward to 2010. Joba lost the coveted fifth spot in the Yankees rotation to Phil Hughes.

Joba didn’t deserve it; Hughes pitched better and he continues to exceed expectations. Hughes went to the All-Star game and that must have taken a toll on Joba’s confidence level.

Skipper Joe Girardi’s solution is pretty simple. “We want him to pitch at the level he’s capable of pitching at. Until we get Joba right, I might look at matchups a little more.” (NY Daily News)

The Yankees bullpen needed help and Cashman’s answer was Cleveland Indians pitcher Kerry Wood. He claims it had nothing to do with Joba and every thing to do with Chan Ho Park, who was designated for assignment.

This has everything to do with Joba, but in one sense Wood is a veteran who once dazzled the city of Chicago with his fastball. Wood was Chicago’s pride after striking out 20 batters in his sixth career start.

Wood’s career didn’t pan out like it should have, as he saw the DL 14 times in his 13 seasons, his latest just days before he landed in New York.

Wood has 62 saves over the last three seasons, with 165 strikeouts, while appearing in 146 games out of the bullpen.

For now, Wood is a walking liability, but with an upside that might be worth the risk. Wood’s experience could be just what the doctor ordered for changing Joba back into the phenomenon everyone witnessed in 2007.

Wood has been in Joba’s shoes, as he has yo-yoed from starter to reliever like musical chairs.

The other hope for Wood is to help down the stretch out of the bullpen in getting to Mariano Rivera. The fact is, Wood is an upgrade from Chan-Ho Park.

So, Cashman covered his ass there. Maybe the Yankees secretly banned Wood from the DL list. Who really cares, because this could work.

It also leaves many questions unanswered. For example, could Brian Cashman have killed two birds with one stone?

My bet is yes and Cashman will be deemed a genius because the concept is just shy of being too good to be true.

 

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New York Yankees vs.Tampa Bay Rays: Battle of the Young Guns

 

 

Friday night, the New York Yankees are at Tropicana Field to face the Tampa Bay Rays, and it will be a true battle of the young guns on the mound.

 

 

Since pitching and defense will dictate the outcomes of all three games, the match-ups on the mound will set the tone. Let’s look at the Friday night’s pitchers.

 

 

Ironically, both the Rays and the Yankees have their “young guns” squaring off. Both players are 24 years old, both stand at 6’5 feet, and both are right-handed pitchers.

 

 

 

Tampa Bay Rays: Wade Davis (8-9)

 

 

 

Davis didn’t look very good this season, after losing all five of his starts in the month of June. Davis’ June numbers included an ERA of 6.0, and batters were hitting just shy of .270 against him.

 

 

 

Since the start of July, Davis has looked like a different pitcher. He has gone unbeaten. Over his last three starts, he has posted an ERA of 2.11. For the month of July, Davis has pitched 25 innings, faced 110 batters and allowed nine earned runs, six walks and 12 strikeouts. Eleven of those 12 strikeouts were in his last three starts and a monthly ERA of 3.12. That is pretty impressive stuff.

 

 

 

Davis is suddenly throwing with a lot more confidence. Davis is not afraid to throw hard because he is locating the ball much better.

 

 

 

Davis faces a potent Yankees lineup who have seen him before. This works in the Yankees favor because Davis is not new, and they have hit him successfully.

 

 

 

Davis needs to be careful with Cano, Gardner, Granderson, Thames, A-Rod, and Jeter because all have multiple hits in the few at-bats they have had against him.

 

 

 

New York Yankees: Phil Hughes (12-3)

 

 

 

Unlike Davis, Phil Hughes started out the season on fire. Hughes was an 2010 All-Star and his name was frequent in Cy Young discussions.

 

 

 

He was the Yankees most reliable pitcher through the month of May. As they say, all good things must come to an end, or in Hughes’ case, back down to baseball-reality.

 

 

 

Hughes got a lot of help via the Yankees hitters, who seemed to always score a lot of runs when he is on the mound. This masked a few mediocre starts and redefined them as great. It was not that Hughes didn’t look solid, he completely did, but his struggles started earlier than the numbers or newspaper headlines might read.

 

 

 

Hughes has been slowly declining, as his ERA is rising.

His OBA has consistently dropped in each start since the end of May. July has been ugly for the youngster. In 23 innings, Hughes has faced 90 batters, and allowed 15 earned runs, issued five walks, all with an ERA of 5.79. He has struck out 15, but in his last two starts, he only has five in total.

 

 

 

Hughes cannot seem to locate his fastball, and his curveball has turned flat. There has been no marked improvement, but he wins games because luckily, the team scores runs.

 

 

 

Hughes does have the advantage of not having to face the Rays’ BJ Upton who crushes his pitches, as Upton is on the DL. Look for Carl Crawford and Carlos Pena to stir up some hits as they have has success against Hughes whether he is hot or not.

 

 

 

Prediction:

 

 

 

Davis has found what Hughes has lost, so I expect both teams bats to dictate in this matchup. Looking ahead, Hughes has the brighter future. But, for this game, I have to go with the Rays. 

 

 

Score: Rays beat the Yankees 9-5.

 

 

Hughes and Davis: No decision.

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New York Yankees Pitching Situation Solved

The New York Yankees finished the weekend taking three of four games from the Kansas City Royals.

The Yankees continue to lead the majors, and the AL East, with a 62-35 record.

The Tampa Bay Rays are just three games behind, which leaves little room for error. The ailing Boston Red Sox trail by eight and better not make the gap any bigger.

This scenario dictates nothing except that the Yankees are playing very good baseball right now.

Still, the Yankees recently lost pitcher Andy Pettitte for four to six weeks. Along with a struggling group of middle relievers, this is not an October-ready team.

Without Pettitte, losing out on pitcher Cliff Lee, due to being given the run around by the Seattle Mariners, stings even more.

Leave all the talk swarming around Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Dan Haren coming to the Yankees. That too is now over, with Haren going to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim because the Yankees said no when Joba Chamberlain became part of the deal.

That is the second time the Yankees name was in the mix to spark a bidding war amongst suitors.

So, what remain are Houston Astros Roy Oswalt and Chicago Cubs Ted Lilly. They are the only two creditable starters left before the July 31 trade deadline.

Oswalt has made it clear he wants to play for the St. Louis Cardinals. Also, teams will hesitate with Oswalt’s salary in 2010 having more than $5 million left, plus $16 million for next year, and he refuses to let go his $16 million option for 2012. I’m pretty sure most teams will pass and positive the Yankees already did.

Next up is Cubs and former Yankee pitcher Ted Lilly, who is in the final year of his contract and is owed around $5 million. That has a lot more appeal, but still Lilly’s value is hindered playing on the crappy Cubs. It would seem Lilly is better off staying in the NL, as his career stats indicate better success. Lilly is not the answer for the Yankees; we don’t need another Vazquez mess coming from the NL.

This doesn’t leave much, making this team far seem from perfect.

The idea behind obtaining a starter works because it takes pressure off CC Sabathia, AJ Burnett, and Javier Vazquez, until Pettitte gets back.

Also, according to skipper Joe Girardi and GM Brian Cashman, Phil Hughes’s 170 +/- innings limit is mandatory, so he is bullpen bound no matter what. This idea is fine with me, but if Pettitte is still on DL when the time comes it could be an issue.

My suggestion would be to grab Astros pitcher Brett Myers, who is an innings eater and has had success in the bullpen as well. Myers is cheaper, with $3.1 million for 2010, and his numbers are comparable to Oswalt’s this season. Myers has a 2-0 record, with a 1.88 ERA and 19 strikeouts in his four July starts.

With series coming up against the Rays and Red Sox, the reigning champs cannot still believe that Sergio Mitre is going to be the answer. Girardi cannot seem to let go of the fact the Mitre sucks, just like 2009.

The only way to consider Mitre as the choice until Pettitte is active again, is if they have a pitcher like Myers who can go in the fourth or fifth inning and pitch a couple of innings.

This could work out perfectly and something has to be, or else Chan-ho Park and Joba Chamberlain will continue to lose games in the eighth inning.

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New York Yankees at MLB Trade Deadline: Killing Two Birds with One Stone

Earlier this week, I took a look at one of the primary concerns for the Yankees as they head into the dog days of summer, the suddenly fragile state of the starting rotation. In the subsequent games since my article, we have been treated to a well-diversified display of the myriad issues facing the Yankees starting pitching.

In the week of games since the Tampa Bay series, the rotation has had its share of ups and downs, which is certainly not an uncommon occurrence for any rotation. The timing of this recent run, though, helps to magnify the uneasy feelings regarding the starters.

With exactly one week left before the July 31 trading deadline, Yankee brass must decide if they are comfortable sticking with the current configuration: Sabathia, Burnett, Mitre in place of Pettitte, Vazquez, and Hughes.

Mitre showed yesterday, via his batting practice session that he tossed to the Kansas City offense, that he may be better suited for the bullpen than a starting role. Granted, he just returned from over a month on the disabled list, so being thrust into a start as a replacement for the thus-far stellar Andy Pettitte is not as simple as us fans would like it to be.

Phil Hughes, in his last start against the Angels, continued on his downward trending path that he has embarked upon since mid-June. Showing little command of most of his pitches, Hughes walked three and was pounded for nine hits, including two home runs, as he allowed six runs in five innings, en route to his third loss of the season.

Just today, Hughes again trudged through five and third innings, allowing two more home runs, but left the game in line for the win.

Javy Vazquez showed further signs of personal improvement against the Angels, only to regress in effectiveness as the start wore on, eventually allowing five runs on nine hits over only five innings. Fortunate to pitch on a day that the Yankee offense provided ample run support, he was able to pick up the win, but it didn’t mask the inconsistency of his outing.

As of yesterday, Andy Pettitte was already reporting that his groin strain is improving quickly and that he doesn’t expect to be sidelined for the previously estimated four to five weeks. Of course, players are often difficult to gauge when trying to predict injury recovery times, as they are usually eager to return to action as soon possible and may not always consider the long-term consequences of rushing back from injury.

The team will likely employ the cautious approach with the 38-year-old veteran and it should be noted that he has yet to throw from a mound, so although he may be feeling better, he hasn’t truly tested the injury to know whether it may be ready to withstand the rigors of game action.

It has been widely reported that the Yankees have been in contact with various teams regarding a variety of starters who may be available via trade over the next week. The Andy Pettitte injury seemed to heighten the possibility of the Yankees exploring starting pitching options in the trade market.

Even if Pettitte won’t be out as long-term as the team doctors initially postulated, a trade for a starter could serve to bolster the Yankees pitching staff in multiple areas.

As the baseball world is well aware, the Yankees intend to limit the wear on Phil Hughes’s young arm by closely monitoring his innings as the season progresses. Hughes is now entering uncharted territory as a major league pitcher as he is now at 106 innings, 14 more than his 2009 total, which includes his postseason outings.

Although it has never been explicitly stated by the team, it is widely believed that the Yankees intend to limit Hughes to the 150-160 inning range.

Considering the fact that Hughes may only have 40-50 more innings before he reaches his intended cap for this season, some creative thinking might become necessary to achieve that predetermined goal.

At this point, the Yankees may try to tinker with his routine and skip a start or two, but just as recently as last year, the team faced trouble when applying the same strategy to Joba Chamberlain. Many in the game view that as the reasoning behind Joba’s unraveling down the stretch, and the team may be reluctant to revisit the same plan with Hughes.

This is where the trade deadline options come into play. In light of the Pettitte injury, the Yankees were already exploring their potential trade options, whether in the form of Oswalt, Haren, Lilly, Sheets, or a few others. Any of these veteran hurlers could have possibly helped cover for Pettitte as he makes his way back from his groin injury.

Now, though, even if Andy returns sooner than expected, the addition of a veteran starting pitcher could help to address two of the team’s most obvious needs with one personnel transaction.

With the continuing struggles of Joba Chamberlain, and his inability to confidently stake claim to the eighth inning setup role, there is clearly a glaring void in the ranks of the team’s late bullpen arms as well as in the starting rotation.

Considering the absence of Alfredo Aceves, the slow return to 2009 form of David Robertson, and the fact that Damaso Marte is most suitable for a left-handed specialist role, there is not a clear in-house favorite to assume ownership of the critical primary setup job.

If the Yankees were inclined to enter the fray of the pre-deadline trading market, a move for a veteran starter could help cover for the injured Pettitte in the short-term, while allowing Phil Hughes to also make a few more starts.

Once Andy Pettitte returns from his stint on the disabled list, having another veteran arm could then allow Phil Hughes to return to the eighth inning role, allowing him to get closer to his proposed inning limit while still continuing to pitch out of the bullpen.

Phil Hughes thrived in the setup role last season, one of the keys to the 2009 Yankee Championship run in the eyes of many observers. Returning him to the familiar role for the remainder of the 2010 season could serve to once again solidify the bridge to Mariano that has been sorely lacking thus far.

It would also give the Yankees an easier way to maintain Hughes’s innings limit without venturing into the awkward territory of attempting to skip his starts or truncate his outings, a la the bizarre Joba Rules experiment of late last year.

I can’t imagine anyone in the Bronx or the Yankees’ Tampa complex feeling comfortable heading down the stretch relying on the current bullpen configuration to help successfully defend the World Series title. I don’t want to lay it all on Joba, but his wild, pendulum-like swings from dominance to utter ineffectiveness clearly are not the answer for now.

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New York Yankees: Halos Spell Trouble In The Bronx

Andy Pettitte thinks he can be back on the mound in three weeks.

After watching the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim slaughter the New York Yankees, any encouragement that the team could manage without the Southpaw went right out the window.

Phil Hughes went into the game with a 3-0 career record against the Halos. That was short and sweet after Hughes gave up nine hits, six runs and two home runs over five innings.

It was the icing on the cake on this streak of bad luck the Yankees have had since the start of the second half of the season.

Hughes started the season on fire, but he has been declining over the last month. His velocity is still around the mid to low 90’s, but he continually lacks command of his fastball and in turn not getting strikes.

So, Hughes relied on his cutter again, which has never been completely in control. If the pitch doesn’t cut down, it becomes ineffective and easy to hit. This became a fact with the final score reading 10-2.

The Yankees had a shot to win the game with their bats, but Angels rookie Sean O’Sullivan had a different plan after being called up earlier in the day from Triple-A. He replaced ex-Ray Scott Kazmir, who just went on the DL.

O’Sullivan faced 22 Yankee batters, throwing a total of 85 pitches, over six innings. He struck out four, walked three and allowed the only two runs to score in the first inning.

Nick Swisher smacked a homer in the bottom of the first inning.

Swisher, along with Robinson Cano and Brett Gardner, has been one of the most solid Yankees in 2010. Honestly, without Swisher’s bat the Yankees would not be in first place right now.

That was No. 17 on the season for Swisher, his ninth in the Bronx, which is one more then last season’s total.

Now the Angels are looking to sweep this mini-series. The Halos’ odds are in their favor with Joel Pineiro on the mound. Pineiro has been fabulous this season, and he faces the Yankees’ Javier Vazquez.

Vazquez has been pitching great as of late, but the Yankees have to hit. Even if they get a couple of runs, the Yankee bullpen stinks for the most part.

I wish Joe Girardi would let Joba go two or three innings for a couple of games. Joba did start last year, has four pitches and was dominant in the first three innings in last year’s games.

The team needs to give their pitchers some run support to relieve the pressure, but in this match-up, the bats have to be hot.

My other suggestion would be trying Joba out as the Yankees long reliever. Maybe he could be the Phil Hughes of 2010 and be the vital change needed.

It would be giving Joba responsibility again, but for about four to five games. If the Yankees owe anyone a few chances, Joba’s name would be at the top of the list. He deserves to see if it could work.

See, when the opposing team is the Halos, who have the most successful record against the Yankees since 2001, the Yankee bats cannot afford to go dead.

Might as well pretend your in heaven or hell….whichever works.

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Phil Hughes Gets Batted Around, New York Yankees Pitching Staff in Disarray

The Yankees have been able to count on two things all year: having Mariano Rivera for the ninth inning, and quality starting pitching.

Well, it would appear that they are without the quality starting pitching now, so the bridge to Mariano just got a whole lot longer.

Phil Hughes picked up right where he left off at the All Star Game, in his first start of the second half Hughes allowed six earned runs on nine hits and three walks, over five innings.

His overall ERA has exploded to 3.99, and his ERA over his last 10 outings now stands at a pathetic 5.23. Think about this, at the beginning of those 10 starts, his ERA was just 2.72.

His untimely struggles come with Andy Pettitte on the shelf for at least three weeks and with Sergio Mitre being Pettitte’s replacement.  The Yankees must also deal with the sturggles of along  A.J. Burnett, and as always, the bullpen’s season-long woes.

The pitching situation for the Yankees has to rectify itself quickly or we may soon see the Rays and/or Red Sox overtake the Yankees for the top spot in the AL East, and push them out of playoff contention.

Who would have ever thought that in mid July, Javy Vazquez would be the second-best starting pitcher going for the Yankees?

 

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New York Yankees Are to Blame for Joba Chamberlain’s Performance

New York Yankees fans first fell in love with Joba Chamberlain in Game Two of the 2007 ALDS, also known as the infamous “bug” game.

Joba was everything and more that night. It was the spirit in his young eyes that does not come around that often.

Yankees Universe went totally crazy for this kid that night, even making losing the game bearable. Joba was the future, an authentic, talented, home-grown player that Yankee fans had been waiting for since 1996.

New York City saw Joba as the long and overdue messiah of our most coveted sports franchise. Finally, fans could be proud again.

Joba became a hero before learning how to be an MLB pitcher. Mind you, Joba hails from a small town in Nebraska, so imagine adjusting to New York. He was thrown into playing under baseball’s biggest spotlight, facing the hard-ass NYC media and the expectations of the Yankees fan-base.

Even though, Joba came-up alongside his rookie buddy Phil Hughes, it was all about Joba. Hughes did not seem to mind being in Joba’s shadow. In turn, Hughes was deemed as the less-talented, so he went out and earned the team’s trust. Which has concluded to be Hughes greatest asset.

Joba had the pressure on his shoulders and the Yankees cut him no break. Joba was going to be a starter, as the Yankees went bananas by treating him like a baby.

All the attention caused a media spectacle, evaluating Joba’s every move. The problem was that Joba’s mistakes were not excused as a rookie with growing pains. The prematurely crowned star’s errors were marked as failures, which was not fair and stunted his growth.

In 2009, the Yankees pushed Joba into the starting position but never let him stay in the game long enough to work his way out of tough situations. It made no sense after watching Joba succeed in the height of competition. This kid had a fist pump that rivaled New York Mets closer K-rod act.

Most MLB closers, other than the great Mariano Rivera who’s humble spirit is rarefied air, get-off on the pressure of the game on the line. K-rod to Braxton to Papelbaum all have that same manner that Joba first had.

Now, the media, fans, and Yankees have tossed Joba in the bullpen after ruining his faith. Joba might not even admit to it, but it is the reason why he is struggling now and Phil Hughes is not.

It was just as obvious that Hughes had the mind-set of a starter, but the Yankees’ determination to mold Joba into what was advantageous for them is what off-set his promise.

Joba has a powerful arm, as he features four pitches: a fastball-slide in the high 90’s, a hard-breaking slider, a change-up that he has not been using as much and a change-up off-speed pitch.

A closer typically needs a hard fastball and a specialty pitch. Joba has forgotten how to command his slider because he worked on an off-speed pitch for left-handed hitters.

It never worked as Joba got rocked as a starter, while Phil Hughes kicked-butt in the bullpen. Joba ended 2009 with a 4.75 ERA and loaded the bases with his high walk-rate. Whenever he struggled, Joe Girardi pulled him. The rationale behind doing that is still a mystery to me.

Currently, Joba is struggling as Rivera’s set-up guy in the eighth inning. I suppose it is difficult for him not to get on the mound that much, while watching Hughes become an All-Star and to see that he was voted most overrated player by an ESPN Magazine poll.

This kid has the goods to be great, I have witnessed it several times in person. The Yankees seem to feel no guilt. Yankee fans have the guts to boo him as he jogs out from the bullpen, and the media has turned on him as well.

What is the right thing to do?

An old saying comes to mind, “If you have nothing nice to say, do not say anything at all.”

Joba Chamberlain deserves to falter, while still hearing cheers by fans in the Bronx and if that is to hard for the “haters” then repeat the quote above.

The Yankees planned to put this kid on a pedestal, and handed him on a silver platter to the arctic NY media by exploiting “The Joba Rules.”

Personally, I like Joba and always have stood by the conclusion that he will fill the shoes of Rivera remarkably well. I mean Sergio Mitre is treated more like a Yankee than Joba, but he is the teacher’s pet.

Look, the point is it is our turn to get this right. Yankee Universe needs to be sensitive to Joba and make him feel necessary again. Just try and remember the kid we saw on the mound the day of the “bug” game.

 

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