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Big Ben is smiling now
.....................................but Kurt could have the last laugh
Photo
by Doug Benc-Getty
Photo
by Doug Benc-Getty |
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Okay, let’s pretend the Division
Championship games were
yesterday. Last week didn’t happen. Now I feel better. Now
I’ll be able to withstand the stupidity
of this media week preceding the Super Duper Bowl, the game played for
all the
marbles in front of mostly inebriated and debauching corporate suits.
What a comedown from 1969, the last REAL Championship
Game.
It pitted the champions of two
very different and competing Leagues against each other, the Jets and
the
American Football League against the Colts of the National Football
League.
After the leagues merged, things
just haven’t been the same; the stakes are much lower.
Imagine for a moment in baseball if
the World Baseball
Classic Champions were to face off against the World Series winners in
one game
for all the marbles! That’s tantamount
to what had been happening from 1967 to 1969. The
Jets win against the “unbeatable” Colts forced a
merger and, to my
mind, a cheapening of the game.
Not that this Super Bowl won’t be a good game; it pits
two
very different and very talented teams against each other, the Rooneys
vs.
Bidwill, defense vs. offense.
In some
ways, it mirrors that famous 1969 matchup.
But
the two-week layoff and Media Week just leaves
me cold.
In outright rebellion then, for
now, I’ll
switch to hot stove mode. I promise to get back to this game on
Thursday or
Friday.
Thank God for Arod.
He’s apparently been de-pantsed by Torre a bit in
his new book, and,
while I don’t particularly like Arod, at least it’s something fresh and
new, or
rekindled anyway, in this death week, the second of two.
A-Fraud?
Oh, I get
it.
Torre may not be crazy about Cashman
anymore?
What a friggin’ surprise.
Now let’s move on.
The Yanks are in the process of
re-signing Pettite to an
incentive-laden one-year contract, one that will earn him anywhere
between
about 6 and 10 million. Now that’s
smart. I love these one-year deals that
are actually fair to both parties.
They say that Joba will still be a starter, no matter how
many starters the Yankees proceed to sign.
Somehow,
I doubt that that’s really entirely true,
and yet, with Burnet
and Sabathia and now Pettite added to Wang coming off an injury, it
must be
nice to have some insurance.
As well as Joba did last year as a
starter, he didn’t really
knock my socks off, as he did as that
eighth inning guy preserving the game for Mariano Rivera.
I’m hoping he becomes that eighth-inning guy
again, if only because we’ll get to see him more often, maybe almost
every day. With the Yanks new-found
pitching and with a
rejuvenated lineup, there should be a lot of leads to preserve after
seven
innings.
The Mets haven’t done much, to the consternation of many
Mets fans.
Sign Manny?
Nah, I still don’t think so.
There
are some very nice lesser lights out there
though, some that offer value without having to assume a heck of a lot
of
risk.
Take Bobby Abreu, for
example.
He’d be great at Shea, or Citi,
whatever.
He hits every year like Manny
but isn’t nearly the showman and can be had for less.
The Mets could use another hitter for
sure, someone to step
in when Murphy doesn’t hit, or Delgado should be in the midst of one of
his
extended slumps. The Mets have more than
their share of streaky hitters; almost nobody hits consistently. And, with Church and Murphy/Evans in right
and left, another outfielder NOT named Chavez or Alou would be a boon
to the
offense.
Okay, you don’t like Abreu?
How about Adam
Dunn?
There
are
some very interesting possibilities still out there, such as Jacque
Jones, Brad
Wilkerson and how would you like Nomar Garciaparra?
He’d be great if just to get Mia Hamm into
the stadium!
Then there’s the wasteland at second
base. I’m not going to advocate Orlando
Hudson, who
never seems to really come of age, but Orlando Cabrera can sub at short
or
second and is an excellent ballplayer, certainly an upgrade over Luis
Castillo.
The above is not intended in any way to disparage that
other
Reyes that less often than not manned the keystone bag; I speak of
Argenis
Reyes, or course, who, even when he wasn’t hitting, at least made
contact,
moved the runners over, or did something else to help win the game.
Actually, the Mets don’t really HAVE
to do anything. They lost the pennant
because they had no
relief pitching. They got the two best
relief pitchers available in Francisco Rodriguez and J.J. Putz and
there’s
really no other great ones out there. I
have confidence in the Murphy/Evans platoon and think Ryan Church was
the cat’s
meow until he got hurt.
People mention the catcher too as a weakness.
I
don’t think so.
Schneider
will be fine.
He was acquired for his
defense after
all.
And, who knows, Ramon Castro might
even get healthy two days in a row.
And
this is the National League we’re talking about; we don’t have to beat
the
likes of the Yankees, Red Sox or Angels.
Besides, pitching wins World Series. Look at that Arizona Diamondbacks team back
in 2001. That duo of Randy Johnson and
Curt Schilling were just too much. It
didn’t matter what hitters the opponents put up there.
They say defense wins Super Bowls.
But
it may not be true this year.
This year’s
game may go as that 1969 classic
did, the one in which the gunslinger Namath eschewed the pass for Matt
Snell
and a punishing running game.
And the
Colts in desperation replaced old Earl Morrall with an even older
gunslinger of
their own, a guy named Johnny Unitas, but it was to no avail.
I can see it in my mind’s eye, Warner
either ineffective or
hurt, but the replacement gunslinger in this case would be a younger
one from
USC named Matt Leinart.
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