Friday, October 11, 2024

I'll take the Bengals.

 


Since it seems to be all the rage, I'll deliver myself of a few thoughts on our postseason adventure so far, what we've done and what we could do.

1—I'll have Detroit, please. I know, I know. The Tigers have already mauled us three times in this century come October, while the Cleveland Indians have really given us no trouble since...1954. Well, there was that awful loss in the 1997 ALDS. But as a certain Yankees third sacker might say, they got lucky. 

Statistically, this year the Bengals and the Guardians of Traffic look almost identical. But in truth, Those Who Keep Us Safe on the Road have a slightly better lineup—Detroit barely has any full-time starters—and a great bullpen. 

Fortunately, the Tribe Traffic Cones were able to force the Tigers to a fifth game, so that they will have to use their one, terrifying starter, Tarik Skubal. We want Skubal to demonstrate his greatness here. We want him to go all Jack Morris, ten shutout innings on their Cone asses, in a one-run nail-biter. We don't want him ready to go again until Game 3 or 4 of the ALCS.

2—Aaron Boone did all right. For the first time since 2003 against Boston, I'm ready to give the man his props. Somehow, he has been able to transform Clay Holmes into a useful set-up man again, and there were no egregious mistakes. Let's hope this lasts.

3—One thing I wish Boone would consider...I get the advantage of going righty-lefty-righty. But not when the lefty has to be Austin Wells, a .229-slumping rookie. Why, why, why not bat Judge and Stanton back-to-back and belly-to-belly when we have Stanton back and in form for what will no doubt be another 30 seconds? (I'm expecting reports of his next injury any moment now.)

Or...even Judge-Soto-Stanton, if they're so eager to stick to that righty-lefty-right thang. Huh? "I look at things that never were, and ask, 'why not'?"

4—Someone was getting on Joe Torre. Stop it. No, Joe Torre was generally not a good field manager. But no, Joe Torre was not simply "lucky."

We forget: Joe took over the team after the horrendous firing of Buck Showalter. Joe took over the Yankees when Old King George was at the nadir of his madness, making the Bronx so toxic that leading free agents didn't want to come here, even for more money; the Mets were running the town, and the Yanks kept slipping lower and lower.

Joe changed all that. He was the one Yankees manager who proved able to handle George for any length of time, and he was a great manager when it came to the press and the clubhouse, which in New York baseball is at least two-thirds of the job.

Joe saved us. Without him, the Yankees probably would have continued melting down, and George likely sells the team to James Dolan, famous rock-'n'-roll front man, which he almost did anyway in 1998. Yes, it can always be worse.


5—We must not look past the ALCS. As they have demonstrated all season, these New York Yankees could drop a playoff series to anyone, even the White Sox or the PCH A's. But if they should make the World Series...

The Mets, I fear, would kill us. Though their one weak spot—the pen—might do them in. In any event, a Subway Series would probably kill me. The Dodgers and the Padres both seem to have more weaknesses—though an entire World Series of the hired commentariat telling us how much better Shohei Ohtani is than Babe Ruth would be nauseating. Don't think they'd do that? I would bet on it (get it?).

6—Props where props are due. This Yankees team still looks like it can't hit to save its life. But at least everybody now seems to be alert. They are playing outstanding ball in the field—Jon Berti, what a play!—taking the extra base when possible—incredible, Mr. Stanton—and usually pitching with their heads as well as their arms. 

Even the hitting has been better than it sometimes looks. Last night, Volpe and Gleyber were scorching balls right at guys, and Judge seems to have emerged at last. All this is good. Will it last? Consult the Oracle at Delphi, or at least the Magic 8-Ball.

7—It's harder than it looks. I was amazed, last night, noticing the difference between the slowest and fastest of Lucas Ercegs's pitches, which seemed to be about 82-100. And he's not even one of the best closers in the game. And the Yanks were hitting him!

Playoff ball, an even more extreme version of regular-season-baseball, with the starters always pulled early and countless relievers coming in to throw any number of pitches, is, I fear, killing the game. It's as if you substituted for the quarterback on every series of downs in football. But it sure must make it hard to hit.

Two remaining questions on Erceg: why couldn't Cashman get him instead of Lou Trevino-Trivino? And does KC have the greatest names, or what? Cole Ragans? Michael Wacha? Seth Lugo, Angel Zerpa! Vinnie Pasquantino—wasn't he a character on Welcome Back, Kotter

Ah, they were a plucky little team that deserved better. But fuck 'em, they're dead. Their fans can turn back to their fabulous football team, and its rock-star groupie. 

I'll leave this list at "7" for obvious reasons. But a World Series by Mickmas? Wouldn't that be nice? We can always dream...







9 comments:

JM said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
JM said...

Hoss, you know I love you, but Torre was lucky.

He inherited a great team that had great success.

Because of that success, the media were not exactly very tough to handle. Besides, what manager had ever been lousy with the media? Billy Martin?

Similarly, the success of the team took a lot of King George pressure off the manager. And thankfully, there were other people in the organization who could talk the big guy out of getting rid of Jeter or Mariano or whoever.

But as a baseball manager—not a media manager or an owner manager—he was always as good as the team he was given. Initially, that was fine. The team was great. But after a six-year run, it started to age, key personnel got replaced and, under the careful curation of Cashman and the Boss, it just slid down from its former heights.

Torre didn’t make those more flawed teams any better, imo, yet he wanted a raise. In other words, reward me when we’re really successful like I had a lot to do with it, but also reward me when we’re not so successful because I had nothing to do with it.

Great player, without a doubt. Notable politician, sure. But also the luckiest manager since Casey.

Of course, we’ll never convince each other of our respective stands. Which is fine. It’s not at all important in the scheme of things.

You can chalk up my Torre opinion to the same obstinate contrariness as my Stanton opinion. I can be a pain that way.

13bit said...

Here is the sound of one hand clapping for Boone. He built too great a legacy for me to forgive him after one game or even a season BUT, since we'll probably have Boone for the next 15 years, he'll have plenty of time to finally earn his merit badge the bucolic Hamlet of Yank.

TheWinWarblist said...

Boone can snort my taint.

TheWinWarblist said...

"Vinnie Pasquantino—wasn't he a character on Welcome Back, Kotter?" I snorted my diet coke all over my desk!

13bit said...

We just need to surrender and let the gods do their work. I'm just a spectator. I'm just sitting on the dock of the bay wasting time. I was going to repurpose and rewrite the lyrics to "How High the Moon" and call it "How High Is Boone," but I lost my motivation and think I'm going to just watch the world go by.

AboveAverage said...

I think I’ll just enjoy a beer and surrender some other time

TheWinWarblist said...

It's Mets Dodgers.

AboveAverage said...

Yes it IS