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Nyjer
Morgan certainly came to play in Milwaukee....
Photo
by Jonathan Daniel- Getty Images
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.while the Cards just have gamers all
around, including Matt Holliday(above)
Photo-Jamie Squire - Getty Images
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Ok, so let’s see, where are we?
The Yanks lost. Arod
is the goat, of course. New York’s
favorite goat, that’s Arod. No sense in
whining about it, Yankee fans, you’ve got him for six more years. Sure, it seems like a lot of money, but look
at the bright side.
Ummm, Arod can play his position
somewhat, he probably still
has the potential to hit 30-40 home runs, he still can command
attention in
that Number 4 spot, at least when he’s healthy. He’s
taken care of most of his physical problems and
he really wasn’t in
a groove yet by the time the playoffs rolled around.
I hate feeling sorry for Arod. But really, he wasn’t the only Yankee not
doing much at the plate. Teixeira and
Swisher weren’t exactly awe-inspiring. Jeter
still can hit that ball, almost well enough to
put the Yanks in
front down the stretch in that final game.
What the heck, Texas probably would
have beaten them anyway.
I just watched a re-run of the final
Brewers-D-Backs game. Maybe if the Yankees
had somebody like Nyjer
Morgan, they’d be a lot scarier. I felt
the Yanks would lose when they didn’t send Arod home when they had the
chance,
then they had the bases loaded again and didn’t do anything with the
opportunity.
The Yanks have no speed, none at all. Yeah, I know they have Brett Gardner and
Jeter and Granderson but Jeter isn’t really a burner.
He’s just a smart runner. Grandy
can still turn on the burners too but
he’s not as scary as, well, Jose Reyes for example.
Besides, hitting in the ninth spot in the
order, Gardner’s often not right in the heart of things, y’know? There’re guys who can set the table, and
Gardner is one of those, but it’s just a little harder from the nine
spot.
I know Jeter is after all Jeter but,
really, does he have to
bat leadoff more often than not? Jeter
can still steal a base but the pitcher and catcher don’t get all hot
and
bothered when Jeter’s on first base. But
a lack of speed is not why they lost. I
keep asking myself how that game turns out if the 3rd-base
coach
sends Arod home. And I’m not even a
Yankee fan.
I’d feel more comfortable with another
speedy
outfielder. Swisher’s a good outfielder,
well, maybe a fair outfielder, and he gets some big hits during the
season but
not so many during the post-season. He’s
not a threat on the bases at all. Since
the Yanks are locked in with no speed in their infield for quite some
time, I’d
think that situation would demand that all the outfielders have some
speed.
I love Swisher, and who’s to say he
won’t become a good
post-season hitter, but Nick would probably fit better on some other
team, a
team that already has some speed. That
middle of the Yanks lineup is ponderous when you think about it,
Teixeira,
Arod, Cano, Swisher……there are no extra bases in the Yanks future.
But I still wish they had sent Arod. He sure was ready to go.
There are those moments in every game
when it’s either won
or lost. You can play like you mean it,
go for the win with everything you’ve got, or you can sit back, play it
safe,
and hope that still one more batter will come through for you. That second option really doesn’t work as
often as you might think, not in a big game when the opponent’s
pitching ain’t
too shabby.
Oh well, the Yanks are dead. Arod probably would have been out anyway. Right?
The Brewers won their series with the
D-Backs with speed and
it was a lot of fun. The Brew Crew had a
speed-burner on first base and another one at the plate, one Nyjer
Morgan. The burner on first stole second
as the
catcher, Henry Blanco of Mets fame, came up throwing before he actually
had the
ball in his glove. He only muffed the
play because the guy on first was fast. See
what I mean?
With that burner now in scoring
position, all Nyjer Morgan
had to do was hit a ground ball through the middle to bring home the
winning
run and give the Brewers their first playoff-series win since, well, a
long
long time ago.
The best storyline for me is that
Cardinals team, if only
because I’ve been watching them since spring training.
Just before Game 1, I told my cousin Joey, a
Phillies fan, to watch out for the Cards. They
had too many players who could come up in big
spots and deliver.
Deliver they did and now the Cards get to face those Brewers.
While I’d been somewhat
prophetic , the Cards won because of
Chris Carpenter. What a great pitchers
duel it was, the Cards ace against the Phillies ace for all the marbles. And it wasn’t just a match of aces. It was a matchup of good friends.
You knew you were going to see a great
pitchers duel and that’s what you got. You
not only got the results but the anticipation as
well.
I think the Cards will be too much for
the Brewers. The Brewers have Braun and
Fielder (and
Morgan) but the Cards have Pujols and Berkman and Holliday. They also have these no-name guys who just
kill you in big spots, Friese and Theriot, Schumacher and Furcal.
The Brewers have better pitching
overall but so did the
Phillies. It didn’t seem to matter in
the end. Those guys who just battle the
whole game through, who pick each other up, those guys are mostly on
the
Cardinals.
So it’ll be Cards-Brewers in the NLCS
and Rangers-Tigers in
the ALCS. I’ve seen them all play and
there’s great managers all around too, La Russa (I still hate him) and
Leyland
and Washington, but when push comes to shove, those Cardinals are
playing to
win.