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Disappointing, exhilarating,
maddening……these are the first
words that come to mind this beautiful Saturday morning as I
contemplate the
action thus far in these 2010 MLB playoffs.
There are at least three
disappointments to me at this
juncture, the failures of the Twins to take even one game from the
Yanks , the
fold perpetrated last night by the SF Giants against the Atlanta Braves
and the
very similar choking done by the Cincinnati Reds against the Phillies.
For sheer exhilaration, there
was Tim Lincecum’s pitching gem
of a complete game pulled off against the Braves in the first game of
that Braves-Giants
series. I also felt very much the same
watching
the Giants’ Matt Cain blank those same Braves over 7 innings or so. And then there’s Josh Hamilton of the Rangers
who only does something great every single time. (Okay, he was the star
of my
fantasy team).
It was the umpires that were
responsible for my
maddening. But
the umpires continue to blow calls, easy
calls, game-altering calls, that your sister could have made correctly. (Okay, sisters, no mail please)..
Let’s take it from the top again. The single most disappointing team thus far
has been the Minnesota Twins. What a
sorry bunch. I’m sorry.
When they see the Yankees on the field, they
just go into choke mode. They had
Sabathia on the ropes and they let him go. Then
they did absolutely nothing against the
old man with the mad stare,
Andy Friggin’ Pettite.
Yeah, I know, the Reds did some
fancy folding
themselves. (The Rays were just
outplayed totally, a result I was completely happy with).
But I expected the Reds to fold.
Didn’t everyone? There
was real hope for the Twins, especially
after their early good fortunes against the big guy Sabathia.
In the history of baseball, was
there ever a worse location
for a pitch? I’m referring to the ball
left on a tee for Yanks first baseman Mark Teixeira late in that first
game,
the pitch that made it 6-4 after the Twins had been up 3-0. And did they have to pitch so boldly to
Granderson or Berkman? And then there
were the pitching decisions made overall by the Twinkies, who are doing
everything possible to justify that name.
Francisco Liriano pitched
valiantly for those Twins in that
first game and was up 3-zip going into the 6th.
The idiots in the dugout left him in way too
long. They waited until it all unraveled,
despite the Yanks killing him softly, with hit after hit after hit. When they finally brought in the relief in
the person of Jose Mijares, they managed to snuff the rally but, by
then, it
was too late. The Yanks had taken the
lead.
Then the Twins gave us
Yankee-haters hope once again by
staging a 2-out rally that featured another Cuddyer big bang enveloped
by bases
on balls, a strange way to score, I thought at the time, but the Twins
would
surely have better luck in their spanking new stadium than they ever
had in
that old dome.
But the Twins inserted still
another pitcher into the mix,
one Jesse Crain, who failed colossally. He
managed to get Jeter out in the 7th on a hard line drive to
center
but he then gave up another hit to Swisher. His pitches had
nothing. And the pitch that had the most
“nothingness”
was that ball up and in the middle of the plate for Teixeira.
The Twins had Yanks reliever
Kerry Wood in a lot of trouble
in the eighth inning, managing to get the tying and winning runs on 2nd
and 3rd but then Girardi called in a guy named Mariano, you
may have
heard of him, last name of Rivera? He
promptly ended things….again.
It seems as if it’s always the
same guys, Posada and
Pettite, Rivera and Jeter. The Twins see
these guys and fold. Posada didn’t do
too much in the victory yesterday but then he didn’t need to. In that first game he was pretty clutch. Pettite just scared the bejeezus out of them,
possibly with that ridiculous stare. And
of course Rivera just shuts them down. Jeter? Well,
there’s still Game
3.
Okay, that’s enough about
disappointing, I think. I have to focus on
the finer things in life,
such as, for example, Tim Lincecum. A
little slip of a guy, that’s Lincecum. A bit of a flake, the Prince
Valiant
hair, the laid-back attitude, they all seem to contribute to the aura
of the
man, if that’s what you could call it.
The man just knows how to throw
the baseball. Every ounce of his body gets
behind every
pitch to the plate. So he can overpower
with his fastball when needed or he can just flick his wrist, take
something
off and watch the batter flail. Lincecum
did it all in that first game and he did it for 9 innings.
How about some more on
exhilaration? The Rangers have been
awesome in all
phases. For pitching, there were Cliff
Lee and C.J. Wilson and Neftali Feliz For
hitting, there were, well, just about
everybody, Vladimir Guerrero and Michael Young, Ian Kinsler and Nelson
Cruz and
Bengie Molina. Hell, even Jeff Francoeur
joined the festivities. Oh yeah, and
there was Josh Hamilton.
Hamilton just does it all. Five tools? Is
that all? It seems like more.
He’s the best hitter in both leagues, both
for average and for power. He’s a fast
runner. He stole a base in Game 1 and
made two great catches in Game 2, both to his left and right, and went
sliding
on his belly, broken ribs be damned.
Hamilton hasn’t shown off that
throwing arm yet. And he hasn’t hit any
tape measures yet. But there’s always Game
3 for that.
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