Monday, July 10, 2023

Alas, poor Boone!

 It's always alarming when New York coaches and managers start to behave weirdly at postgame pressers—usually a sign that they're ready to crack.

Who can forget that Giants coach who talked himself out of his job in the space of about ten minutes? Or the various Jets coaches, too numerous to mention, who seemed on the verge of commitment. That poor Rangers boob who whined, "We just had a bad week in the playoffs!"

Across town, Buck Showalter has turned into Mumbles McGee, his cap pulled down so low over his face that he looks as if he's in the witness protection program.

After yesterday's dreary, first-half finale, it was Ma Boone's turn to tumble into a vortex of meaningless verbiage. Trying to deny that he was anything but joyful to be managing your New York Yankees—remember, expressing doubts or fears on Brian Cashman's team risks a fate like the farmers in that Billy Mummy episode of The Twilight Zone, buried in the cornfield—Boone riffed at weird and dreadful length on what still gives him hope.


Sounding like Teddy Roosevelt—or perhaps Spartacus—Boone repeatedly gassed on about how great it was to be "in the arena" with this team, which generally shows about as much grit and character as overcooked asparagus.




Stranger still, Boonie started gabbling about the "craft" of his team, utilizing a word famously abused by actors and others in the show business.

Look, I got nothin' against show people, there's no people like 'em, like no people I know. But c'mon.

The bit about "craft" was applied in particular to one Gleyber Torres, who Boone has previously praised for his easy, relaxed style of playing—after The Gleyber's whiff on a routine throw from the outfield cost us a game against Boston.

Mr. Torres now seems so relaxed that one might be forgiven for thinking that he has lapsed into a fugue state. Yet Boone seems willing to look past anything. 

Yesterday, he shrugged off Gleyber's disastrous booting of a double-play ball by basically saying that errors happen, and that he didn't think Torres was making a lot of errors, and so what?

In fact, when it comes to physical errors alone, Torres now leads all AL second-sackers with 9 (He has one more at short, just to reassure us that that position was always beyond him.).

That 9 not only leads the league, but already represents 2 more than the 7 Gleyber had in ALL of 2022. It would be nice to think that our manager was aware of such things.

I know, I know: This is the dawning of the Age of Analyticous, and mental errors don't matter, and fielding doesn't matter, which is why Billy Beane has all those rings. Gleyber has a WAR of 1.4 this year—and never you mind that the two former Yankees farmhands who could have replaced him, Thairo Estrada and Ezequiel Duran, sacrificed for a bag of money and Joey Gallo, have WARs of 2.2 and 1.8, respectively.

The fact is that, even by the Yankees' advanced scientific approach of "Swing Like a Drunken Goat" at the plate, Gleyber has quietly been doing precious little for weeks now. Like a wayward toddler, he has simply wandered off.

In his last 20 games before the All-Star break, Torres hit exactly one (1) home run, and drove in all of 6 runs—and all of those ribbies came in a total of 3 games. He's walked 7 times, and struck out 17, and his OPS has drooped from .770 to .739.  

True, these figures are not yet close to Gleyber's horrendous August, 2022, when by some statistical frameworks he was the very worst player in the majors, hitting .180 with a .464 OPS (and a 24 OPS+), hitting 2 homers, driving in 5 runs, walking only 3 times and striking out 33.

But hey, there's still half-a-season to go!

It's past time, I think, that Boone gave up on behaving as if this were the Royal Shakespeare Company, and tried another approach.

I keep thinking about Gil Hodges' famous walk out to left field, to remove Cleon Jones from the second game of a long, terrible doubleheader loss by the Metsies to the Astros, in 1969. 

Jones was hitting .346 at the time, and the Mets were already the feel-good story  of baseball, but Hodges wanted to send a message about effort.  And surely, that game—one in which the Mets were already trailing, 8-0, in the third, after losing the opener, 16-3—was one that must have taxed everyone's ability to hang in and pay attention more than any game that Torres has ever been involved in as a Yankee.

I know, I know. Pulling anything similar today would probably get a manager hauled up before a court in The Hague. But there has got to be some way to motivate a problem like The Gleyber. Allegedly, that's the manager's job, not to prattle on about craft in the arena.






 

31 comments:

Celerino Sanchez said...

Sean Casey hired as new batting coach and I predict future MGR

AboveAverage said...

Sean Casey did not attend Transylvania University - so between you and me that's already a plus.

Voted the friendliest player in baseball and nicknamed "The Mayor", Casey seems to be a grounded, personable and intelligent guy that hopefully will click with the players.

He's also another local - NY/NJ. etc.

CS might be correct in their prediction.

I just wanna know what his opinions and philosophy is on modern Anal-licktics of Exit Velos, Launch Angles, Hitting Strikes Hard, etc.

Solid choice.

BTR999 said...

Casey with the bat.

AboveAverage said...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNyrLMjw-xw

Doug K. said...

Hoss - Really well written post. Both entertaining and informative.

AboveAverage said...

Yes indeed - excellent post - and I remember (vaguely) that play with Gil Hodges. I think Tommy Agee might have taken a tiny step closer to right field when Hodges was walking out.

ranger_lp said...

History revisited on the Hodges/Jones incident...

https://nypost.com/2019/02/23/1969-mets-hero-cleon-jones-clears-up-50-year-old-gil-hodges-mystery/

BTR999 said...

Thanks Hoss!

Just have to share this nugget from today’s Newsday:

“When I watch their players take BP it’s like they step in and say “Let me hit as many fly balls as I can and hope several of them land over the fence” said one rival AL scout..”rhats not a hitting philosophy, that’s a softball philosophy”

See - their “philosophy” is reviled, even by their peers. I hope Casey can make some headway with this bunch. Lawson was an ineffective coach (putting it mildly), but he did hav3 a coaching background. Casey had success as a good MLB hitter, but has no coaching experience, instead serving as a commentator for the MLB Network. This gives me pause as you learn sycophancy as a media shill, not how to motivate and instruct. Also, The fact that he is a buddy of boone’s is troubling, very troubling. We need an independent, innovative voice, not someone who will bray like a jackass at his boss’s every utterance. Still he’s here, so let’s give him a chance and understand that meaningful change doesn’t happen overnight.

Rufus T. Firefly said...

Hoss,

Billy Martin pulling Reggie. Billy *must* have been drunk, because Reggie could have killed him with one punch.

And to paraphrase Chevy Chase in Caddyshack: (to Ca$hole and Bonehead) The cornfield. Yeah the cornfield would be good for you.

As for Casey, maybe it is a sign the ANALidioticassholes have finally been given their proper reassignment to mommy's basement. (Mommy Ca$hole, that is). Why else hire a (gasp, I have the vapors!) career .300 hitter to (gulp) help guys hit?!?

Rufus T. Firefly said...

Also, wasn't Casey rumored for a couple of years to be the guy the Yankees were going to get to be their next first baseman?

AboveAverage said...

B2R - I am hopeful that the new guy makes a difference (even after factoring in your perspicacious BooneBuddy observations).

His genuine upbeat energy might also take some of that SOUR downbeat ambience out of the clubhouse.

Lance the Scowl

Turn that frown

Upside down

Eat more fiber

Play like a tiger

Uhm…..

time for loonch





HoraceClarke66 said...

Thanks, Doug and 999. And yeah, I saw Cleon's later take on it, ranger. I just don't believe it. Jones was a good ballplayer and an interesting guy, who later got royally screwed over (for screwing!) by the Mets. But I think his version 50 years later was just to hide his embarrassment.

HoraceClarke66 said...

And yeah, Rufus, that was quite a game, the meltdown in Boston!

I think Billy was mistaking Reggie's inability to track down almost anything that year for dogging it. :) And Billy was losing it even faster than normal that summer, because his daughter was being held in a Colombian jail for drug trafficking, and he kept getting these blackmail notes from the jailers.

As usual, the people who hired Billy used him, but failed to get him the help he needed...

HoraceClarke66 said...

...That day, in 1977, was almost the day the whole Yankees "dynasty" of the 1970s melted down.

When he went back to the locker room, Reggie was planning to confront Billy again. And Bucky Dent was getting ready to jump the team, frustrated at being pulled yet again for a pinch-hitter.

Billy, meanwhile, had crazily taken out Mike Torrez for Sparky Lyle, who got to pitch 2 2/3 innings with the score already 7-4, Boston—part of the overwork that probably ended Sparky's effectiveness after that season.

Fortunately a cooler head prevailed. Fran Healy ducked into the clubhouse, and told Bucky, "You stay!" and Reggie, "You go!" Team saved, two rings saved.

HoraceClarke66 said...

Very interesting, 999, that even other teams think that the Yanks' approach is messed up.

AboveAverage said...

HC - and that's exactly why I remain hopeful that Casey might make an impact.

Modestly Optimistic

The Hammer of God said...

There was some speculation on yesterday's thread about Dillon Lawson being a Transylvanian vampire. Would that it were as simple as Lawson sucking blood out of Gleyber Torres neck at night.

BTW there are those who question whether vampires are real, in this day and age. Oh, they're real all right. (Please allow me to adapt my impression of Peter Cushing's Dr. Van Helsing.) For example, you have your Anapholes female mosquito, which is nothing more than a tiny version of Dracula's bride. Get bit by her, and you've just contributed to the creation of zillions of new tiny vampires. Your only consolation is that at least you got drained by a female. Imagine being Gleyber Torres and having to explain to the Yankee team physician that Dillon Lawson is "sucking me dry at night". And the doctor goes "I didn't know Dillon is gay."

No, my friends, I am afraid that Gleyber Torres troubles are not a figment of Aaron Boone's imagination. Only 9 errors on the season that were tallied as errors. (But I could have sworn that I saw Torres, on a single play, make three errors this year. He was only credited with one, however.) Add up all of the errors that were not errors, and what is the total? A hell of lot more than 9, that is for sure.

There was a movie called "Life Force", that is a cult classic, I believe. One of those "so bad, it's good" movies, with space vampires sucking your life force out and turning you into a zombie vampire. (There is a naked hottie, too, one you have to see to believe.) I can only wish that it was all so simple as Dillon Lawson sucking the life force out of Torres.

AboveAverage said...

LifeForce is almost so good it’s great.

But it’s not.

But it is a guilty pleasure (I recommend the Director’s Cut) that harkens directly back to one of Kevin’s guilty pleasures, Scream and Scream Again.

Vampires everywhere- even in the Yankees clubhouse.

(The Naked Hammer Hottie is Mathilda May)






The Archangel said...

Don't despair folks, the Yankees have kept their traditions intact.

The 3d. round pick from JC has already had his TJ surgery and the 6th rd. pick missed time this year with an arm injury.

the 4th rd. pick was a 2d.
We didn't have a 2d or 5th because of the Rodon signing.

JM said...

Sean Casey will fix everything.

He was a .300 hitter! Everyone will listen to and respect him and regain the form of their prime playing years. And the young guys and never-was's will marvel at his wisdom.

Cashman's Nerd Army will completely leave him alone and Boone will stop sitting the hot hand or making disastrous pinch hitting decisions.

Yeah, we're still gonna suck.

On a lighter note, an article in the Athletic (now batting for the New York Times Sports Department, RIP) says that Hal would have to look at firing Boone if the Yankees don't make the postseason--maybe even if they do but are eliminated quickly.

But Cashman? A lifer.

Hazel Motes said...

Sean Casey will be carrying several dozen vials of his patented Magic Time Machine Elixir that will transport the bodies of Stanton, LeMahieu, Donaldson, and Rizzo back to the year 2015.

He will also carry some vials of his Magic Popeye Pinstripe Spinach Elixir, which will turn three-time major league failures like Cordero, Bauers, and McKinney into productive major leaguers rather than recycled failures--just because they don the Yankee uniform!

Joe of AZ said...

Not to be conspiratorial but I would swear the yankees are being run by anti-yankee brass because there is not ONE INCH of this organization that is being run well...we should have been a red flag that Hal had to have a private meeting with judge about player personnel before he signed...but here we are

AboveAverage said...

one more Vampire comment and then I bury it

I'm beginning to think that Kevin may be a Vampire because we almost always only see him at night

Lawson - a day walker - I get it - but not every Vampire is a Hybrid

That's it - thanks for your time

BTR999 said...

The real conspiracy here is that Ownership is concerned only with profits, not winning.

13bit said...

test

Kevin said...

HC, what about the story regarding Billy Martin's daughter and drug smuggling????!!! And Fran Healy essentially saving the Yankees ' season? I had thought I'd read every book regarding '77. I think I've mentioned that I grew up in Miami, so reading the tabloids was something that I wouldn't have even thought about. So when and where did these stories break? It does explain Billy's craziness......


AA, oops! Now I have to find a new spot for my coffin! I'm getting too predictable😱 I saw "Life Force" at the theater back in the Day. I wasn't crazy about it,but it's been on my mind lately. I'm going to order the raunchy cut, needless to say.

Kevin said...

AA, I must have seen a heavily edited version of LF, I don't remember very much nudity, hell after reading the reviews on Amazon I wonder what I was up to in the theatre😈

DickAllen said...

What a joke - The Intern tries some slight of hand, thereby deflecting the heat HE should be taking for assembling this shite team. As if Casey is going to make this collection of stooges perform better.

Fuck you Cashman. You are a corporate hack.

And fuck you Steinbrenner. You are a useless trust fund baby who hates baseball.

Thank you both for fucking up these beautiful pinstripes.

HoraceClarke66 said...

Kevin, that stuff comes from a number of different books:

"Becoming Mr. October," one of Reggie's many memoirs; Golenbock's "The Bronx Zoo," with Sparky; his book "George" on Steinbrenner; and "Number 1" with Billy and "Wild, High, and Tight," which is about him. Roger Kahn's "October Men" about the 1978 season. And particularly David Falkner's "The Last Yankee: The Turbulent Life of Billy Martin."

The Archangel said...

Ditto to what DickAllen said!

The Archangel said...

P.S., my very first suit was pinstriped.
Yeah, I did it on purpose.