Readers of a certain age will recognize the kicker to the left as Lou "The Toe" Groza, the last original Cleveland Brown.
A left tackle, at 6-3, 240 pounds, Groza was only a little smaller than Aaron Judge's troublesome digit. But he was most famous for being the team's placekicker until he was 44 years old, setting league records for most points scored, and longest field goals.
Which brings us to our own Toe.
Last night's loss to a floundering Mets team (Is there any other kind?) can hardly be attributed to the lack of a toe alone.
All the usual devils were there: a down night for another woefully inconsistent starter, appalling play in the field, and—most disturbing of all—a strange flatness and lack of urgency in such a big game. Truly, this is not only one of the most disappointing Yankees teams of the past 60 years, but also one of the most unlikable.
Worst of all was the hitting—perhaps understandable against a veteran great like Justin Verlander; inexplicable against the Mets' ragged bullpen corps, right down to old friend Adam "They don't call him zero for nothing" Ottavino.
Your New York Yankees are now batting .230, sinking slowly toward the 1968 Yanks' (non-pitcher) mark of .224. Incredibly, this Yankees team is now below that of the 1968 team in (non-pitcher) on-base percentage, .302 to .303.
There are many reasons for this, of course, all of which start with "Brian Cashman." But one thing it's far past time for the Yankees to resolve is the Case of the Missing Toe.This is, again, not to cast any aspersions on Aaron Judge's gameness. I am sure he is dutifully following every recommendation by the Yankees' crack(ed) medical staff.
To which I have to say...C'mon!
I will not bore you with more stories about how The Mick, or The Great DiMaggio limped back on the field with suppurating wounds and hit game-winning home runs...although they kinda sorta did.
In 1963, a year when he was Judge's age of 31, Mantle was off to a great start when he broke his left foot trying to climb a seven-foot-high, wire fence in Baltimore's dreary old Memorial Stadium, on June 5th. (Idiotic fences are a long MLB tradition.)
He reportedly cried with frustration, knowing that it would ruin his season. And sure enough, The Mick did not get back into it until 61 games later, on August 4th...when he literally hobbled to the plate, and pinch-hit a three-run, line-drive, game-tying home run against the Orioles in the Bronx, a blow that also left him in tears.
Reportedly, Mantle "wasn't sure how he made it around the bases." The game was later won in the 12th by Yogi, part of the Yankees' catching tandem that year with MVP Elston Howard. (Not quite Higgy and Trevino.)
But I digress.
What do I know from toes? I will leave such medical expertise to The Warbler (sadly un-heard-from of late). For all I know, the toe is a mangled mess, gangrenous and painful just to gaze upon.
Sure, I have the sneaking feeling that everyone of those linemen trying to block or protect Groza's kick, above—and probably The Toe himself—had two or three such toes simply taped together. But that's not the point.
It's time to resolve this, so that this Yankees team is no longer caught in a toe jam (sorry). Tape it, cushion it, and get Judge back out there, at least as a DH—or cut call the whole thing off. Really.
If he's not going to play, end the suspense. Send him in, now, for whatever dire surgery he needs and let him start resting up for 2024. Finally call up the long-suffering Florial.
But of course, this won't get done. Like the subjects of some magical realist writer from South America, the main purpose of Brian Cashman is never TO get things done. In that sense, Aaron Judge must be his favorite player: always providing him with a ready-made excuse, always on "a timeline to return."
Hoss - it takes anywhere from a month or two for the foot/toe/body to recalibrate after someone starts using custom orthotics designed to resolve the type of injury that Judge sustained. If it works it’s a FAR better solution than having the surgery required to repair the toe. I know this from personal experience (and NO I didn’t injure my toe by running into the outfield wall at Dodger stadium) but I decided against the surgery and went with the orthotics and it worked.
ReplyDeleteIt appears to me that Judge is on this timeline and should hopefully be back within a couple more weeks at the most.
The pain from a torn toe can be agonizing and frustrating as hell based on normal motion which includes constant pivoting and pushing off your feet.
I sympathize with Judge’s situation but it appears that’s he’s being smart about it.
Time (and sometimes orthotics) heals broken feet.
Wish we could stuff the entire damn team into a stinky orthotics-lined shoe.
Year of the Toe!
Unwavering Mediocrity!
Call my name and I appear.
ReplyDeleteI know only what the Squat Twins, meaning Jack and Didley, have told me about toes. I don't know what to do with the Great Aaron Judge's toe. I too sometimes long for an earlier time when you'd rub some spit and dirt on it and go back to playing. (And then contract the clap for the third time later that night at The Copacabana.)
I will be at the game tonight on the first base side down the line. I will be sporting number 42 on my authentic jersey. I will pour a little out for those of you who are not there.
The horror. The horror.
Thanks, guys! Always great to hear from you both. Onward and toeward.
ReplyDeleteAmen, Hoss!
ReplyDeleteThey're going about it all wrong with Aaron Judge. There are only two choices: (1) have surgery (2) wait, do physical therapy until the pain becomes tolerable, and then play. (And then a possible third choice would be to have the surgery if the conservative treatment fails and he finds that he just can't play with the injury, which would end his season.)
So they opted for the second choice. But instead of just having Judge DH and run base to base, they're basically prepping him like he's going to be the full time right fielder. Knowing the jack asses who run things here, they might even have Judge playing centerfield when Bader is not available. He's running all over the outfield, doing all kinds of defensive drills. WHY? It's just the way this franchise is run. Stupid, crazy, ridiculous half ass backwards nonsense.
They'll be very fortunate if Judge can play at 80 to 90% effectiveness with this problem. So if they want to nurse him through this until surgery over the winter, then the only real way to go is to DH him, running base to base. Absolutely no base stealing, basically just jog from base to base, don't even think about scoring from first base on a double.
53-48. 1966 Yanks: 47-54. Only six games ahead again.
ReplyDeleteHammer, I think it's time you changed your name to "The Hammer Toe of God."
"Bader not available"??? Perish the thought!
ReplyDeleteThe Yankee's lead orthopedist is well-known by most. His name is Dr. Scholl.
ReplyDeleteWarbler, are you a nurse or PA?