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Rivera, Posada and Jeter - 3 of the 4
Photo by
Julie Jacobson - AP
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Andy
Pettite - the fourth
Photo-Scott Audette - Reuters |
Although I had planned a very
different article for today, I
had read this morning that Mariano Rivera, Jorge Posada, Derek Jeter
and Andy
Pettite were the sole remaining vestiges of those Yankees teams of the
1996-2000 era, that team that won 4 out of 5 World Series. That
prompted
my curiosity about what those teams had that was so special. So I
did a
little checking.
What
they really had a lot of was continuity, in the starting rosters for
most years
and in the bullpen for other years. The real run to me, and the
greatest
team, wasn't really that 1996-1997 team; it was that 1998-2000 team
that won
three straight.
Going
back to 1994, the strike year, when the entire season and World Series
was
cancelled, the Yankees were very good. They were leading the AL
East in
1994 under Bucky Showalter and finished the season at 70-43. That
team
had Mike Stanley catching, Don Mattingly at first base and Pat Kelly at
second. Wade Boggs played third and the shortstop was Mike
Gallego.
Luis Polonia manned one of the OF positions, but Bernie Williams and
Paul
O'Neill did play the other two spots.
In
1995, Tony Fernandez replaced Gallego at short and Gerald Williams
replaced
Polonia. Otherwise, that team was much the same but lost the ALDS
to Seattle.
Interestingly enough, Andy Pettite pitched 175 innings and went
12-9 that
year. David Cone went 9-2 that year in 99 innings. Mariano
Rivera
was a starter and went 5-3 in 67 innings. Bernie Williams and
Paul
O'Neill were the nucleus of that team and many of the teams to follow,
both
batting over .300 and leading the team in rbi's.
In
1996, Joe Torre's first year, the biggest changes besides Torre were a
young
fella named Derek Jeter as shortstop and a fiery first baseman named
Tino
Martinez. Jeter batted .314 in his rookie year and Tino knocked
in
117. Bernie was magnificent and O'Neill was solid. Pettite
won 21
games. Joe Girardi , the Yanks current manager, had taken over
the
catcher's position.
In
1997, that team lost Wade Boggs And Mariano Duncan. They were
replaced by
Luis Sojo and a journeyman named Charlie
Hayes. Tim Raines spelled Gerald Williams in the outfield.
David
Wells took a pitching spot. The Yanks went down to Cleveland in the
Division Series.
In
'98, Posada replaced Girardi and hit 17 home runs in just 358 at
bats.
Chuck Knoblauch took over at second base and scored 117 runs.
Another
nice player, Chad Curtis, took over for Raines in left field.
Orlando
Hernandez, El Duque, was 12-4. The pitching staff was great, with
David
Cone going 20-7, Wells went 18-4, Pettite was 16-11 and another Hideki
named
Irabu went 13-9. The Yanks swept the Padres in the World Series.
In
'99, it was the same guys coming at the league again. Clemens
replaced
Wells. The relief corps was remarkably stable since 1997, when
Rivera
took over from John Wetteland as the closer and Mike Stanton, Jason
Grimsley,
Graeme Lloyd, Jeff Nelson, and Ramiro Mendoza were the stalwarts at
middle
relief. The Yanks again swept a World Series, this time against
the
Braves.
In
2000, here they came again. Ricky Ledee played some for Curtis
and David
Justice joined the gang. Pettite and Clemens went 19-9 and 13-8
and both
pitched over 200 innings. Cone began a decline though. And
El Duque
was just mediocre. A lot of people pitched a lot of innings,
Ramiro
Mendoza, Dwight Gooden.. ..but the Yanks still managed to win the
Subway Series
in 5 games against the Mets.
2001 wasn’t quite the same though, nor
were the results. Knoblauch moved to left
field while a fella
named Alfonso Soriano played second. David
Justice played a role. Cone was missed
though, and Hideki Irabu was replaced by Ted Lilly. That
team eventually lost to the Arizona
Diamondbacks behind Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling and Luis Gonzalez.
And, sadly, if anyone lost that
World Series, it
had to be Mariano Rivera who took the loss in Game 7.
The Yanks haven’t been the same since
that game really. In 2002, Tino Martinez
was replaced by Jason
Giambi, who, in retrospect, never really made the grade. And,
nearly as significant, Scott Brosius, a big-time
Series performer and clutch player at third base, was replaced by Robin
Ventura. Paul O’Neill retired, a kind of
death knell to that era in my mind.
The Bombers have never really
recovered. They did make strong bids in
2003 and 2004
but never really had that magic of the late Nineties. The
Marlins took them out in six games in the
2003 Series, and, in a paralyzing series of games in 2004, the Red Sox
came
back to whip the Yanks in seven after Mariano Rivera blew the save in
Game 4.
After 2003, of course, the Yanks were
vastly different. The pitchers in 2004
were Vasquez, Lieber,
Mussina, Kevin Brown, El Duque and Esteban Loaiza. Arod
and Matsui had strengthened the team but
they seemed lost at both the right-side infield spots, with Tony Clark
at first
base in 2004, Miguel Cairo at second.
There is hope though, Yankees fans. There has been increasing continuity in this
team since 2006. The infield and
outfield have been stable, although first base has been a huge problem.
Although Robinson Cano
eventually took over at
the keystone bag, first base continues to be a wasteland, much as left
field
had been earlier. Pitching too has seen
a remarkable lack of continuity, with a fill-in approach, but now there
are
Hughes and Kennedy.
Yes, 2008 has promise. The holdovers
from the great Yankees
teams of the past, though, will have to perform. That
means Jeter, Posada, Rivera, Pettite. Abreu
and Damon have been in place for some time now, as has Matsui. And, of course, Arod. LaTroy
Hawkins strengthens the bullpen. Chamberlain
strengthens any rotation he wishes
to join.
Watch out for these 2008 Yankees.
