Results tagged ‘ Andy Pettitte ’
MERRY TEX-MAS!!
Oh my god, what an offseason. I mean, wow. We’ve got Mark Teixeira!

Just amazing. The Yankees of old are back and wiser. Sure, we thought we were all set with Carl Pavano and Jaret Wright, but this is CC Sabathia, AJ Burnett, and Mark Teixeira (and almost surely another pitcher) we’re talking about! They have real track records. Well, Burnett not so much, but we seem to be convinced he’s healthy. Back to Teixeira. It’s an 8 year contract worth up to $180 million with a no-trade clause (something that he surely required after being traded out of both Texas and Atlanta). What a strange offseason it was for Teixeira. He started out asking for 10 years and a destination by Christmas. 10 years was not going to happen, and it started out with the Nationals, Orioles, and Angels in the running for him. Then the Red Sox jumped in, and were very close to a deal, then suddenly “not a factor”. Then the Angels drew out. Just yesterday, the Nationals seemed to be the frontrunners. Then the Yanks swooped in and grabbed him, culminating his offseason, and he got his wish, same as many many Yankee fans.
I’m now looking forward to a roster that looks something like this:
ROTATION



or
or
or
in the 4-5 spots.
BULLPEN






LINEUP
LF 
SS 
1B 
3B 
RF 
C 
DH 
2B 
CF
or
or someone better…
BENCH



Something like that… Of course, A-Rod could hit third and Tex cleanup, but yeah. You get my point. One move has made our roster MUCH MUCH deeper. If we don’t make the playoffs now, I’m gonna be pissed…. But we shouldn’t have to worry about that, I think. It would seem that we’re going all out for Number 27 in ’09. We have now signed 2 of the 4 super free agents (Sabathia, K-Rod, Tex, Manny). We could still make it 3, even though now I don’t think it’s a requirement to sign Manny. It’d be a nice bonus, but it’s not vital. We do have another pitcher coming, though.

The Angels are reportedly out of the Manny race, leaving the Dodgers and Yankees as his only serious pursuers at this point. Without much competition, if the Yankees sign Manny and another pitcher, it could go down as the best offseason in history and give us a Murderer’s Row and, in the words of Vanessa, a Murderer’s Row-tation.
In the first two games in Yankee Stadium, exhibition contests versus the Cubs, bleacher seats will be sold at 25 cents, same as Opening Day 1923. Sadly, I will not be able to join in these festivities, but I would snatch up a couple of those tickets if I were you.
Thank you and goodnight.
Yesssssssssssss… Stuff’s Actually Happening!

The big man has decided, and Brian Cashman and Derek Jeter have convinced him. Carsten Charles Sabathia is a New York Yankee!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! This is an outstanding move, and while it took an extra year on the contract, he’s a good enough pitcher it should all be worth it, wouldn’t you say?

Next, the Yankees are on the verge of pulling off a trade that would put Gold Glover Mike Cameron in center field. They would send Melky Cabrera to the Brewers (yes, I know the picture of him is with the Padres). Last year Cameron had an average Mike Cameron year, just with lower totals of everything. He hit .243, a low average for even him, but he hit 25 homers, drove in 70, and stole 17 bases. And, of course, played great defense. What do you think this trade would do for the Yankees? Personally, I like it.

Next, the Yankees have extended their offer to 5 years to accomodate AJ Burnett, who has two other options that are really pursuing him, the Braves and Red Sox. He could well make a decision before the week is done. Imagine Burnett and CC in the Yanks’ rotation, along with Wang and the two men I will be mentioning next.

Manager Joe Girardi met with Ben Sheets Tuesday. He said he’s liking the idea of Sheets in pinstripes. He said that he believes Sheets is healthy, and our offer to him is near. Now imagine that.

We are apparently the only team besides the Phillies seriously pursuing Derek Lowe. His price probably went up with Carsten’s contract, but we are the New York Yankees, and we can pay!
Stuff besides Yankees news did happen, though.

The Mets went out and got a big fish themselves, Francisco Rodriguez. This gives them an absolutely excellent closer. The record setting fireballer closes one of the Mets’ few holes, part of their attempts to no longer be known, in the recent words of Cole Hamels, as “choke artists”.

The Mets also went out and traded for JJ Putz, the Mariners’ former closer, in a three-team, 12-player deal that also gave the Mets Jeremy Reed and Sean Green, sent Franklin Gutierrez to the Mariners, who also got Aaron Heilman, Endy Chavez, and four minor leaguers–Mike Carp, Maikel Cleto, Jason Vargas, and Ezekiel Carrera. The Indians got the short end of the deal in my opinion, receiving Joe Smith and Luis Valbuena. I’m not sure how Putz will react to being moved to setup man by the trade, but at least he’ll be on a contender.

Mark Teixeira is still generating a buzz, none of which includes the Yankees. However, he did get an offer from the Washington Nationals, who I believe will continue to be awful with or without him. Either way, he got an 8 year $160 million offer to consider with his reported 7 year $150 million offer from the Orioles. I still don’t get why the Yankees are not pursuing him at least a little bit. Also in the running for Tex’s services are the Angels and Red Sox.
Here’s a shocker. Jake Peavy may remain a Padre after all. The Cubs have reportedly drawn out of the running for him, leaving only the Angels, who may not even propose a package. I think he’ll be put back on the market at midseason ’09, but I personally think his talks are done for the offseason.

Brian Cashman has flown down to Texas (he’s a very busy man!) to meet with Andy Pettitte to talk about his future with the Yanks. I have no prediction as to how this will go, but I certainly hope Andy decides to come back to the Yanks before our rotation is full.






You all know what happened here, so I close with a quote from Jim Thome on Greg Maddux:
“He doesn’t seem dominating, then you look up at the scoreboard and you’ve got one hit and it’s the eighth inning.”
Thanks for an entertaining and illustrious 23 years, Greg!
Nathan, Mauer, Morneau and Co. Come To Town
So, we have quite the matchup, the legendary
Sidney Ponson and the immortal Nick Blackburn. Ponson has a
10-2 career record versus los Twins. I don’t know a whole lot
about Blackburn. Just like I associate Ponson with being a
knight and drunk driving rather than pitching, I think of
black forest ham rather than Nick Blackburn usually. Anyway,
food-pitcher associations aside, my fellow blogger, el hombre
de Nueva York, the KidFromNewYork, or
yankeesquad.mlblogs.com, made a very valid point about the
Yankees this year. That the offense can be subpar at times,
but we can still win. He said look at the A’s, look at the
Twins, look at the ’69 Mets! And that really struck a chord
with me, because he was right. The Yankees are supposed to be
this huge offensive powerhouse with subpar pitching, but just
look at the rotation by pure stuff and ability. Joba
Chamberlain has some of the best pure stuff in the major
leagues, and Sidney Ponson, this year and in 2003, showed the
world he could really pitch, when his being arrested,
attitude, or control didn’t get in the way. Andy Pettitte
falls under this category as well, even though admittedly not
as much. In the bullpen, we still have LaTroy Hawkins, who
has done badly this season, but remember, we’re just looking
at stuff. We have Kyle Farnsworth, who hits 97 on the radar
gun regularly. We have Jose Veras, Edwar Ramirez, and David
Robertson. Plus of course Mo. Coming off the DL someday will
be Phil Hughes and Chien-Ming Wang. And that’s just stuff
wise. Falling under control and craftiness, we have Mike
Mussina headlining and Darrell Rasner, Dan Giese, and
Pettitte also going on that shelf. And we have that man who
has been forgotten in the minor leagues and on the DL, Ian
Kennedy, also going in the control and craftiness category.
That is a really great pitching staff, talent-wise. So if
they pitch to their full abilities, the Yankees won’t need to
live up to their powerhouse offensive team reputation. Just
look at the men from Minnesota who are coming to
town.
What A Weird Game!
So the Yanks stranded 21 runners, including a perfect two each inning for the first six innings. A potential basestealer fell down in the middle of the basepath, and had he stolen it, he would have scored the tying run, and therefore the tying run that scored would have been the winning run. Richie Sexson drew a walk. Wilson Betemit got a clutch hit. Mariano Rivera and Huston Street gave up runs. And the winning run scored on a hit by pitch from Lenny DiNardo to Jose Molina, who took one for the team after dodging a first pitch potential beanball. Quite the game of oddities. My dad, also a huge Yanks fan, finally said that maybe the Yanks could make a run to the playoffs, something that I had been saying all along. In other baseball news, the Red Sox lost to the Angels again. Bwahahahahahahahahahahaha. Here are the sights from yesterday’s game:



Remember to tune in, Yanks fans, today as two 10 game winners, Andy Pettitte and Justin Duchscherer, face off in the Bronx.
Very nice.
5-0 over the division leaders. Not bad. I saw good pitching from Pettitte when we needed it (again!), and Ramirez had that perfect ninth. Melky had a strange day, the hat trick and a home run. Jeter had two RBIs, and yeah. No standout offensive performances, just working together as a team, the way the last Yankees dynasty worked, it all just added up. If only we could play that way every day…
Sights from a very smooth win:



Note: Rich Harden was acquired by the Cubs for Chad Gaudin and Matt Murton, mainly. Move, Yankees move! All the pitchers are getting taken off the market!
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