It’s another Tuesday,
it’s
raining, there’s nothing particularly that needs doing so I’ll just
vedge(sp)
and take the hour or so it will take me to whine.
First of all, the
Monday Night
Football game was horrid…totally unwatchable. Why
can’t anybody figure out in advance that
Arizona is just barely a
professional team at all? To match them
up with any team is risky. What team
wouldn’t have beaten the Cardinals last night? Detroit
plays harder. Buffalo
definitely plays harder, and smarter too. The
Rams, now that they have a real live
quarterback, would dance rings
around that sorry bunch from Arizona.
Of course, the Giants
won. That makes me happy since I thought
it would
take their best effort to knock off even the likes of Jacksonville. It’s really a tribute to them from the
coaches to all the remaining healthy players that they were able to
come from
behind to take the lead and then hold it against a Jaguar team that was
still
trying to show some fight. The Jets won
too on Thanksgiving but they were once again nothing to write home
about.
The Knicks have been
doing better
than expected and the Nets started really slow but are showing signs of
life. All of the above is promising
better times for New York fans this winter, and maybe even into the
March
Madness of college basketball. And by
that time, spring training will have started. Life
is good if you’re into sports and not so
much into shopping and
Cyber Monday crapola, the teetering economy or global warming.
Another melodrama that
will keep
the NY area humming until the wee hours of February is the Derek Jeter
negotiation. I’m enjoying it immensely
so far. The one question, it seems to
me, that no one is asking is how the Players Union and the MLB
Commissioner’s
office feel about rewarding a player for his marketing value. There is the power of precedent to be
considered. Why shouldn’t every player
want to add value to their contracts? Wouldn’t
the Commissioner want the Yanks to
take a hard line on this
icon talk?
All this is great stuff
for a Mets
fan. There couldn’t be a wider division
between the parties. And, while it’s
hard to envision Jeter playing for any other team, the Yankees have
essentially
told Jeter to get other offers. But
other teams will be skittish about being a pawn in that game. So any offers will come late, only after they
are convinced Jeter may really consider a uniform without stripes. How great would it be for some team that
would be willing to pay Jeter a premium for his market value? A Detroit
or a
Boston (just to drive the Yanks crazy) might enjoy getting some
attention and
more fannies in their seats for just a few million dollars premium per
year. Then the question will really be
how much the Yankees want Jeter and how much Jeter wants the Yankees.
The team is clearly in
the driver’s
seat. The Yankees can function quite
nicely without Jeter. While they’d take
a lot of heat in the first Jeter-less year, especially when he’d get
his 3000th
hit for say, Kansas City. Heh-heh,. They’d
look better and better as Jeter would get older and older.
It’d be virtually impossible for Jeter to
score his hundred runs per year for any other team but the Yankees, who
have
continually surrounded him with hitters in their own right.
Juan Uribe, about five
years
younger than Jeter and the San Francisco Giants postseason wunderkind,
just
signed a 3-year contract with the Dodgers for 21 million.
Based on that figure, I’d say Jeter’s worth
about 10 to 11 million per year. The
Yankees offered him 15 mill for 3 years, a figure already that included
market
value. I’d understand totally if the
Yankees felt that Jeter was holding them up. They
would be entitled to be thinking Jeter
should accept a pay cut from
his last contract, his 10-year 189 million deal. The
Yankees should stick to their guns, and
if they do, things should get really interesting. And
what if they withdraw their 15 million offer? Then
what?
Meanwhile, the Mets
have done
almost nothing. Today I heard that their
pretty fine left-handed specialist in the bullpen, Pedro Feliciano,
turned down
arbitration, which would seem to indicate that the market is good. It would also seem the Mets want to keep
their better players, definitely a good sign for us Mets fans. The Mets need pitching though and I’m not
crazy about the free agent starters. I
wouldn’t mind seeing them shop Jason Bay and/or Carlos Beltran for a
couple of
pitchers. And I’d rather see them get
young guns with limitless potential than see them go for broke with a
veteran
commanding a high salary.
A second baseman
wouldn’t hurt
either. But there are plenty of second
basemen. It’s just not that critical a
position. I was happy to see Florida’s
slugging Dan Uggla go elsewhere. His
fielding has always been atrocious and the Mets fans wouldn’t be
tolerant of
that. Uggla will be fine in Atlanta
though, and Atlanta may be ready next year to challenge the Phillies
seriously
for the Division Championship. Whatever
the Mets do next year, it’s difficult to think they’ll overtake either
of the
top two contenders.
The Knicks play the
Nets tonight
and it should be a barn-burner. Although
the Knicks are the better team, they’ll be without their starting
center Ronnie
Turiaf, a factor that should hurt them a lot being that the Nets Lopez
will be
firing from all directions. But the
Knicks have found an unlikely answer to their 2 guard spot in Landry
Fields,
who doesn’t really score so often as he does all the other things. He shoots well though when he does shoot, he
rebounds and assists, goes for loose balls and, well, you get the idea.
The Nets need two more
players to
compete. Newark anyone?
|