Yeah, they’re
worried…bigtime. CC getting beat, Arod slumping, Teixeira
showing nothing at all and Jeter striking out 3 times yesterday. But,
even after watching Burnett throw a gem last night, they still don’t
trust him to throw another. Life is good for a Mets fan and
Yankee-hater.
I
love seeing Yankees fans torture themselves. Is there anything better
than watching them agonize? Unfortunately, they survived Game 2. The
joy I had anticipated of witnessing their total unraveling as they went
down 2-zip to Pedro can’t happen now. I’ll have to live with them still
thinking their Bronx Bombers have a chance against the World Champion
Phillies. They’ll be a little less frantic now. Too bad.
What a
melodrama! First it was CC this and CC that and how the big guy was
unhittable. Nine innings later, it was their anxiety over A.J. Burnett,
how inconsistent he’s been, how big his contract was. It went something
like this, “He got the big money to win in the post-season. He’d better
show that he’s the pitcher the Yanks thought they were getting when
they plunked down the 82 million.”
Those crazed fans were
actually starting to turn back the clock, to turn back to the times
when Joba was dominant out there, before Cashman and Girardi started
playing with his innings. Joba would save them, Joba would show that
fight and determination he displayed in his early outings, Joba would
mow down the Phillies and take his rightful place amongst all those
great Yankee arms of yesteryear.
Imagine if they had lost again
and Arod’s 3 strikeouts had been staring them in the face. Not to
mention Teixeira’s lackluster performance so far. And let’s not even
talk about middle-relief! Do you want to give them a heart attack?
They’ve totally dumped on Hughes and Joba as a middle reliever. They
are now actually thinking that Damaso Marte will somehow save them.
But
A.J. really was magnificent last night. Too bad! Looking at the bright
side though, their agony will be more prolonged this way. If they had
been 2-zip down, Yankee fans may have just given up early and waited
for the sweep. Now they can feel they’re still in it.
They can
look forward to their hero Pettitte somehow regaining his old
late-Nineties form. And, even though their hero-worship of CC seems
done (there was talk of giving Sabathia his 4 days rest), they can
still hope for a reincarnation from the big man and a less masterful
performance from Yankee-killer Cliff Lee.
But, to be honest,
it’s hard for me to root against some of these Yankees. This team
reminds me of those Nineties Yankees of Tino and Paul O’Neill, Bernie
Williams and Scottie Brosius, all hustlers, all team guys, and yes,
even Derek Jeter and Jorge Posada too. And of course Mariano, who saved
their butts last night with his six-out save. And Girardi, who managed
a perfect game last night but had been Posada’s backup then.
How
can you root against Mark Teixeira? I still recall his winning that
infamous Mets-Yanks Castillo-drop game. Yes, Luis lost the game but
Teixeira won it too, by running out that apparent routine fly ball, all
the way from first to home so that when Castillo picked the ball up,
there was no chance to get Teixeira. And just last week he covered
second base because that’s what he was supposed to do.
How can
you root against Godzilla? So tough in the clutch, seemingly always,
and once again last night. Or Swisher, who’s been castigated far and
wide in Yankee-Land for his recent troubles at the plate. Or Johnny
Damon, who may be playing his last World Series in New York, but so
ably led the Red Sox over the Yanks in that fateful 2004 ALCS.
So
it’s not the individuals a Yankee-hater hates. It’s just the fact that
the Yankees have all these great players at all. But, even with all the
furious buying activity over the years, they’ve not been past an ALCS
since 2004, watching other teams take the AL crown, the Tigers or the
Red Sox or even the Tampa Bay Rays.
So I wouldn’t be heartbroken
if the Yanks won this Series because they have a great team. Great
teams should win the World Series. And they should have to beat another
great team to be able to call themselves champions.
And the
Phillies are a great team. As fearsome as the Yanks lineup is, the
Phillies can match them overall, both in the lineup, on the field, on
the mound and in the bullpen. Before last night, the Phillies seemed to
think the Series would be a walk-over, a 5-game affair as per Jimmy
Rollins, their mercurially-mouthed shortstop.
We can all look
forward to Game 3 now as each game seems to have its own little
storyline. Game 1 will be memorable for CC and Lee, for Game 2 it will
be Burnett emerging as a bigtime playoffs and Series pitcher besting
crafty old Pedro Martinez, who was gallant for a full six and even went
out there for a 7th.
Yeah, the story has been pitching so far
but you know that with the sheer numbers of hitters on both these
worthy Series opponents, the bats won’t be so silent much longer. Game
3 goes deeper into those pitching rotations, pitting what has this year
been a very hittable Hamel against another old Nineties Yankee in Andy
Pettitte.
The younger fellow, Burnett, outpitched his older
counterpart last night and I suspect that that scenario will repeat
itself tomorrow night. But then it’ll be CC-Lee II and one wonders
whether the replay will yield quite different results. And how things
will go from there.
That’s all you could want in a Series
really. This is the Series I wanted and it’s playing out as I had
imagined. Pay attention, baseball fans, because you may not be seeing a
Series like this again for quite some time.
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