Tag: The Lineup

Derek Jeter Gets New Walk-Up Music Ideas from ‘Late Night with Jimmy Fallon’

Late-night television talk shows made headlines in the world of baseball Thursday night.

First, Mark Cuban, appearing on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, had some choice words and opinions about Alex Rodriguez and Bud Selig.

Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter was also the subject of a much-talked about late-night moment, but as usual, it was for something much less controversial than the world of Alex Rodriguez.

Appearing on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, the host, joined by The Roots, took it upon himself to introduce Jeter to new walk-up music for use during his Yankee Stadium at-bats.

The entire bit was hilarious, well done and clearly enjoyed by Jeter.

Each of the three potential future Jeter walk-up sounds was, well, unique.

The first two, performed by an overly excited Fallon, nearly brought Jeter to tears of laughter.

Fallon began the festivities by asking Jeter to walk from behind the curtain to a home plate set up on the stage, simulating his walk to the plate from the on-deck circle at Yankee Stadium. Then the real fun began.

While it’s unlikely Jeter would use either the over-the-top fan-favorite rendition or the heavy-rock, loud and brash rendition, he did seem to really, really enjoy The Roots’ third and final try at a new song.

In part one of the Jeter interview, Fallon and the future Hall of Fame shortstop spoke about a Jeter charity event and party that Fallon was invited to attend years back. Among the highlights of that conversation: Fallon’s embarrassing first time meeting Michael Jordan, golf talk from two non-golfers and where a group of celebrities and athletes finally found a lost Fallon at the Hard Rock hotel.

This wasn’t Jeter’s first foray into late-night comedy. As the interviewer and interviewee noted during Thursday night’s interview, the Yankees shortstop hosted Saturday Night Live 12 years ago. Although Jeter has always been measured and calm when dealing with the media, he’s actually thought of as a really funny and outgoing guy around his teammates and friends.

In a world of sports coverage where every quote is dissected for meaning, Jeter rarely provides anything to spark the flames in New York.

Yet when given a forum, like Thursday night with Fallon, he delivered a fun and interesting pair of segments.

Moving forward, don’t expect many more late-night television appearances from Jeter or to start hearing Fallon’s vocal cords introduce him to the Bronx crowd when he returns from the disabled list, but The Roots’ work would actually be really fun to hear in Yankee Stadium.

Jeter has suggested he may transition into ownership when his career ends, but if Thursday night showed anything about his post-career potential, Fallon shouldn’t have to look far for a co-host on his talk show.

In a baseball world of controversy and harping on performance-enhancing drug issues, coverage of the sport can use some levity.

If A-Rod’s return to the Bronx is throwing you into a tizzy, re-watch Jeter’s face when Fallon’s vocal cords begin to crack. It’s worth the click!

 

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Yasiel Puig’s Acrobatic Catches Are the Latest Additions to His Amazing Season

Yasiel Puig continues to take the baseball world by storm—this time with an acrobatic, bobbling foul catch against the wall at Wrigley Field.  

Puig was pulled from the same game in the eighth inning after making another diving catch. Puig told trainers he was fine, but he was later diagnosed with a left thumb contusion

Add these catches to Puig’s list of jaw-dropping highlights since joining the Dodgers, including this cannon throw from right field to third and this walk-off home run.

Hat tip to The Big Lead on the find and Mike Petriello for the GIFs.

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J.B Shuck Video: Watch Angels OF Rob Jose Bautista of HR with Unreal Catch

Los Angeles Angels outfielder J.B. Shuck made sure to leave no doubt about what was the most sensational play on Friday’s slate of MLB games—and perhaps the 2013 season as a whole.

In the fourth inning of Friday night’s game against the Toronto Blue Jays, Angels pitcher Tommy Hanson served up a meatball to Jose Bautista, who obliged by smacking the ball deep to left field. Backing up to get under the booming fly ball, Shuck gathered his balance, planted on two feet and leapt up and over the left-field wall at Angel Stadium.

After landing hard in the seats—notice the half-interested effort in bracing Shuck’s fall by the fans, though at least one tries to lend a helping hand—the lefty fires the ball back into the infield to confirm the catch. He seemed noticeably shaken up by the play, but stayed in the contest.

As Blue Jays manager John Gibbons came out to get an explanation of the play, it gave the Angels fans and players an opportunity to stand and applaud Shuck. Gibbons was questioning the legality of Shuck going into the stands to catch the ball. MLB Network’s official Twitter feed even got into the act by promoting the play’s need for an explanation as to whether it counted.

Spoiler: It counted, as it should have. Shuck did not go into the stands to catch the ball, as in actively leaping over the fence and then catching the ball. He jumped while still in play and his momentum carried him over and into the stands—a big difference in the rulebook. 

Not all was lost for Toronto on the play, however. Maicer Izturis was able to advance to second base, and later scored the Blue Jays’ second run of the game.

But the night belongs to Shuck. As seems to always be the case when astounding catches are made, Shuck came to the dish in the bottom half of the fourth. He singled and later scored a run as part of a three-run inning to give Los Angeles a lead.

The 26-year-old Shuck has had a solid season in his first big-league campaign, batting .293 with one home run and 24 RBI. 

 

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Astros’ Jonathan Villar Pulls off Straight Steal of Home to Shock Orioles

With staff ace/trade candidate Bud Norris scratched from his scheduled start, the Houston Astros were aiming to score early and often on Tuesday night.

Rookie shortstop Jonathan Villar obliged in the top of the third inning with a straight steal of home against Wei-Yin Chen and the Baltimore Orioles.

Villar coyly took a walking lead, getting about five feet from third base, then 10 and 15. Chen had his back turned the whole time (oh, the challenges of being left-handed).

Villar paused for another second or two, then sprinted toward the plate. The throw to catcher Matt Wieters was neither accurate nor nearly in time.

The Astros’ official Twitter account reminds us that speedy second baseman Jose Altuve recently accomplished the same feat:

Just like that, a 22-year-old whom nobody wanted to watch—not even Chen or Wieters—now has the eyes of baseball world watching his impressive highlight.

Expect more of these athletic acts from Villar in 2013 and beyond. Prior to being promoted last week, he had stolen 31 bases and totaled eight triples in 91 games at Triple-A.

It’s been more of the same so far at baseball’s highest level. Villar’s latest theft is his fifth in eight contests for the Astros, and he added another highlight in the sixth inning of Tuesday’s contest with an outstanding diving catch in the field.

Villar is already atop Houston’s depth chart now that the organization has released veteran infielder Ronny Cedeno, so he’ll have ample opportunities to flaunt his skills with the bat, glove and wheels.

Now, we have at least one legitimate reason to follow the least competitive team in MLB down the stretch.

 

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Braves’ Andrelton Simmons Shows Off Series of Impressive Bat, Ball Tricks

Atlanta Braves shortstop Andrelton Simmons has more than just a good glove on him.

As if his walk-off triple on Monday night wasn’t enough, new video surfaced of Simmons pulling off his best Tiger Woods impression, juggling a baseball with his bat instead.

The video doesn’t start off too well, as reliever Luis Avilan and third baseman Chris Johnson attempt to perform the stunt unsuccessfully. In fact, both should keep their day jobs.

Utility infielder Paul Janish comes up next and does rather well, but ultimately loses control.

I will give Janish credit because he wasn’t hitting the ball with short strokes, instead putting a little more lift on it, which makes it harder to control.

Then, Simmons stepped up and really impressed.

Notice how Simmons keeps the bat close to his body, maintaining perfect balance. That allows him to have more control over where the ball goes off the bat.

Now, compare that to Woods’ video with Nike:

The major differences between the two are Woods went between his legs and behind his back, while Simmons played a little hacky sack with the baseball.

Of course, both ended the exhibition nicely by hitting their respective ball after bouncing it one last time off the club or bat.

It would be interesting to see how far each ball flew, however. 

There’s no real way to tell, but it’s a fair guess to assume Tiger’s went farther.

With 162 games in a season, sometimes players have to find new ways to entertain themselves.

Who knows what other feats they pull off away from the cameras?

Maybe next time we’ll see a video catching a player doing a trick shot where he hits a baseball into a garbage can 250 feet away.

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2014 MLB All-Star Game Logo Announced by Minnesota Twins

The Minnesota Twins are hosting Major League Baseball’s All-Star festivities in 2014. One of the first orders of business following the New York Mets finishing their tenure as All-Star host was to reveal the new logo for next year’s event.

MLB passed along the design on Twitter:

As a part of the announcement via MLB.com, Twins owner and CEO Jim Pohlad said the logo moved the organization one step closer to realizing a dream:

The Twins are honored to host the 2014 All-Star Game events. Even before opening Target Field in 2010, we dreamed of hosting this incredible event. With this logo unveiling, we’re one step closer to making this dream a reality.”

Next season’s Midsummer Classic will mark the third one in Minnesota, but the first since 1985. The city also hosted the spotlight event in 1965.   

The logo represents Minneapolis by fitting Target Field into the city’s landscape. It also incorporates the team’s colors, the Twins’ logo and the league’s logo, bringing everything together to make it clear which team is hosting the event.

Although the All-Star Game has taken place in the city before, it will be a first for Target Field, which opened in 2010. The spacious ballpark provides a perfect backdrop with the skyline, and that was incorporated into the logo as well.

Of course, revealing the design is just the first step in the process. Getting the city ready for the rush of baseball fans who come to witness the game’s biggest stars take part in the Home Run Derby and the All-Star Game is just getting underway.

That said, the logo gets the Twins organization off to a good start as it starts looking toward July 15, 2014. It’s a nice mix between the team aspects and the league-wide event without getting overly complicated. Baseball is a traditional game, after all.

Now, the organizers have 50 weeks to sort out everything else.

 

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David Ortiz Ejection Video: Watch Red Sox Star Throw Tantrum vs. Orioles

Boston Red Sox star David Ortiz was ejected from Saturday night’s road game against the Baltimore Orioles after smashing the bullpen phone in the visiting dugout.

Ortiz walked twice but was hitless in his two other plate appearances, including the final one where he struck out swinging in the top of the seventh inning. The veteran argued balls and strikes throughout, and once he had the dugout tantrum, home plate umpire Tim Timmons tossed him.

After the game, Ortiz offered some insight into what made him so angry (via Providence Journal reporter Brian MacPherson):

Getting kicked out of the game only made Ortiz even more upset, as he walked to the top of the dugout shouting at Timmons for the bad calls he apparently made.

An unfortunate byproduct of the situation was that Ortiz nearly hit his teammate, Dustin Pedroia, with the bat shards that flew as a result of his anger, per Jenny Dell of NESN:

It would be one thing for Ortiz to get this upset in the friendly confines of Fenway Park, but the fact that this took place in another team’s stadium is sure to draw the ire of those interested in the Orioles.

Here’s the remnants of the dugout phone (courtesy of ESPN’s Gordon Edes):

MASN’s Steve Melewski criticized Ortiz for being selfish and deflecting the success of his Red Sox team—who was leading 7-2 at the time—onto himself:

This type of frustration happens all the time in baseball, particularly when a prolific hitter such as Ortiz was having as bad of a night as he did. Combine that with the unfavorable calls, and it is an environment where players can snap.

Ortiz’s actions certainly won’t go unnoticed in commissioner Bud Selig’s office, so Ortiz may be facing a fine or a suspension.

Or maybe even a bill from Oriole Park at Camden Yards to repair that broken phone.

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Los Angeles Dodgers’ Zack Greinke Speaks on Ryan Braun’s Biogenesis Suspension

The hits just keep on coming for Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Ryan Braun in the wake of his 65-game suspension for involvement with a Miami Biogenesis clinic. Many of Braun’s current teammates have been questioned by the media, but it is a former teammate in Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Zack Greinke who is now making headlines.

According to Dylan Hernandez of the Los Angeles Times, Greinke is extremely disappointed by the entire situation. Greinke was Braun’s teammate in 2011 and part of 2012, and he was one of many who believed him when he said he was innocent of performance-enhancing drug allegations.

The main thing is, yeah, he lied to us. He forced us to lie for him, threw people under the bus in order to help himself out and didn’t care, blamed others for his mistakes and it’s just a lot of things you don’t expect from people.

Greinke could have been referencing Dino Laurenzi Jr., who took a drug-testing sample from Braun back in late 2011. The result of that test set the wheels in motion for Braun’s current suspension, as he was originally suspended for 50 games.

Braun got the suspension overturned due to a protocol breach in the handling of his sample, but he took the opportunity to bash Laurenzi publicly even though he had gotten away with something very serious.

According to Hernandez, Greinke said that Braun put up a very convincing front: 

Oh, yeah, 100% believed him. Everything was so convincing. He had people to blame. He seemed like a really good guy. He was a good teammate at the time. You don’t know the guys that he was pinning it on. I’m not positive, but I think everyone 100% believed him at the time. Especially the next year, he looked just as good as the year before. His numbers his whole career, Hall of Fame numbers. How could you not believe him? He was so convincing.

While Braun’s history with performance-enhancing drugs calls into question the elite numbers he has put up over the course of his career, Greinke believes that the perception of Braun as a person is even more important.

Not even talking about the player. It’s just the person. Just the fact that he was willing to use anyone that got in his path. The closer you were to him, the more he would use you. It’s just disappointing that a human being could be like that.

Greinke believes Braun owes a lot of people an apology, saying, “The fact that even to this day he hasn’t had a real apology is really upsetting to me. I thought about it a bunch. He still hasn’t really apologized.”

Greinke‘s sentiments are likely shared by many of the players and fans who believed Braun over the past year.

 

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Edwin Encarnacion Clubs Two Homers in Same Inning in Toronto Blue Jays’ 12-6 Win

Edwin Encarnacion showed just how much power he has when he blasted a pair of home runs in the seventh inning against the Houston Astros on Friday.

Encarnacion became just the eighth player to hit two home runs in one inning in the past decade, as he helped lift the Toronto Blue Jays to a 12-6 comeback win. He was the first player to do so for the Blue Jays in 20 years.

Encarnacion led off the seventh for the Blue Jays, and he took Houston reliever Paul Clemens deep on a home run to left field. Adam Lind would then also blast a home run, giving the Blue Jays back-to-back home runs to tie the game at six.

The Blue Jays were just getting started.

Toronto would go on to score two more runs on two hits, two walks and a hit batter before Encarnacion came back to the plate with the bases loaded and two outs.

Encarnacion now faced Hector Ambriz, who was the third pitcher of the inning for the Astros. Ambriz had already retired Jose Bautista and was looking to close the door and leave the score at 8-6, but Encarnacion had other plans.

After working the count full, Encarnacion took the sixth pitch of the at-bat on a ride, ripping a hard line drive over the fence for a grand slam.

Encarnacion became the first player this year to smack two home runs in the same inning, hitting his 27th and 28th home runs of the season. He finished 3-for-4 on the day with five RBI and a walk.

The Blue Jays would go on to win the game 12-6, thanks in large part to Encarnacion‘s incredible day. The team is 47-55 this year, and is in last place in the AL East, sitting 13.5 games behind the Boston Red Sox for first place.

Encarnacion‘s big inning was the highlight of the day, and Blue Jays fans got their money’s worth at this game.

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Matt Kemp Believes Ryan Braun Should Be Stripped of 2011 MVP Award

Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Matt Kemp doesn’t want any revisionist historians giving him the 2011 NL MVP award, won by now-disgraced Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Ryan Braun

He just doesn’t think Braun deserves to have it, either. Asked by reporters before Tuesday night’s game against the Toronto Blue Jays, Kemp acknowledged that he feels Braun should be stripped of the award.

“I mean, yeah, I do,” Kemp said (per the Associated Press, via ESPN). “I feel like it should be, but that’s not for me to decide, you know?”

The Milwaukee slugger was suspended for the remainder of the 2013 season by Major League Baseball Monday for his part in the Biogenesis performance-enhancing drugs scandal. Braun released a statement acknowledging his mistakes, per an ESPN report:

As I have acknowledged in the past, I am not perfect. I realize now that I have made some mistakes. I am willing to accept the consequences of those actions. This situation has taken a toll on me and my entire family, and it … has been a distraction to my teammates and the Brewers organization.

Braun’s suspension culminates MLB‘s two-year chase of Braun.

Kemp finished second behind Braun in the 2011 vote, finishing with 332 points and 10 first-place votes. The 28-year-old center fielder batted .324 with 39 home runs, 126 RBI and 40 steals, finishing just 15 batting average points away from winning the Triple Crown.

Braun hit .332 with 33 home runs, 111 RBI and 33 steals, winning the vote in large part thanks to Milwaukee’s team accomplishments. The Brewers finished 96-66 and atop the NL Central by six games, while Los Angeles missed the playoffs. Braun received 20 first-place votes and 388 points.

The Brewers slugger first came under fire after testing positive in October 2011 for elevated testosterone levels. Braun was initially suspended by the commissioner’s office 50 games for the first-time PED offense, but later had that conviction overturned by an arbitrator on a technicality.

But even with Braun exposed as a cheater, Kemp has no plans seeking retribution by going after that 2011 trophy, according to the Los Angeles Times’ Dylan Hernandez:

“Honestly, it doesn’t have anything to do with me,” Kemp said. “I was in a race to win the MVP, I got second. It is what it is. The voters had an opinion about who they wanted to pick as the MVP. That’s who they picked, that’s who they felt was the MVP. You have to respect them for that. The other stuff, it is what it is, man. For me, all I’m worried about is getting healthy and getting back on the field and helping my team win.”

And it’s probably a good thing Kemp doesn’t have his heart set on that recognition. Jack O’Connell, secretary-treasurer of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (the entity that decides the award), told the AP no change would be made.

“The decision was already made. He won it,” O’Connell said.

Braun has not released any subsequent statements on the matter. There is no word on whether the Brewers outfielder plans on turning in his MVP award (Barry Bonds, Alex Rodriguez and others who have been implicated in PED scandals have not given up their awards in the past)—or whether the BWAA would accept the act of contrition.

 

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