Friday, December 9, 2011

We've Got Some Good Moves and Some Bad Moves

Albert Pujols and C.J. Wilson will both take flight from St. Louis and Texas, repectively, to the LA Angels. So, after several years of being in talks to acquire pretty much every big free agent that came along, the Angels finally landed a couple of big fish. Pujols is a good move. He spells bad news for any American League team that wants to get past the Angels in the playoffs (particularly the Yankees, whose pitchers seem partial to giving up homers). Wilson may turn out to be a bad move. True, he is a good, solid regular season pitcher. But last season he became the only player in history to lose an all-star game, a divisional series game, a league championship series game, and a World Series game all in the same year. (Granted, not all those rounds of playoffs have been around for long. However, it still shows that he had one bad year for clutch games.)

Baseball has added an additional wild card team in each league this year: Good move. The wild cards will fight it out amongst themselves every year with a one-game playoff. As long as the time gap between the regular season and the divisional series doesn't expand (don't give us more than two or three days off, please), this seems like a great idea. There will be as much competition between teams trying to get the wild card (home field advantage is still up for grabs), and the excitement of teams playing in a do-or-die game is guaranteed for each season.

Also, the Astros will move to the American League in 2013. Bad move. True, it will even out the leagues so that each has 15 teams. But it also forces baseball to have at least one interleague series a week - probably two, actually. One of the charms of baseball is its clear distinction between and separation of its leagues. National League: Great pitching, bad batting, no DH. American League: Great hitting, bad pitching, a DH. These are over-simplifications, of course, but that's the basic idea. The only way this system would work is if the highly concentrated interleague games played now are simply spread out over the whole season. Highly doubt that will happen. Meanwhile, an increase of interleague play would blur the line between the leagues, and take away from the importance of home field advantage in the World Series. (Thus damaging the integrity of the All-Star Game.)

Hydra
6-4-3 double play... Ballgame over! Yankees win! Theeeeeee Yankees win!

Monday, December 5, 2011

Random Monday Brainwaves

Tim Tebow just keeps winning. While everyone has been busy beating him black and blue over his less-than-stellar numbers, he has quietly compiled a season QB rating of 80.5. That's only half bad considering for his first two starts his coach supplied him with game plans seemingly designed to fail, and also considering his wide receivers drop passes left and right. He just needs more time to get assimilated. Anyone who has a hobby that requires one to keep a distracting checklist in one's head knows that it takes practice, practice, practice, practice, and practice to get to the point where even a little change in one's approach becomes second nature. Given a few more weeks, Tebow will have gotten to the point where he can do some of the alterations to his mechanics without thinking about them too hard. That will allow him to focus less on his mechanics and more on completing his passes.

Then there's Ndamukong Suh. Analysts have started to build him into even more of an NFL bad-boy since his incident on Thanksgiving. Granted, hitting a guy's head into the turf repeatedly and kicking (or stomping, depending on whom you ask) his arm on the way by is dirty. He should have been suspended, and he was. But. He has been painted as a dirty player almost since Day 1 of his career. Now people are even claiming that he has been a problem since high school. (Terry Bradshaw on FOX, to give an example.) Not so. While we don't know what he was like in high school, he was not a dirty player at Nebraska. He had something like nine personal foul penalties in his last two years as a Husker, but the vast majority of them were cheap calls. Yes, we're Husker fans and therefore biased. But even the national TV commentators said that some of the calls were not deserved. Additionally, Suh has never hurt anyone in the NFL. Maybe his by-the-neck throwdowns are a bit extreme for tackles. However, he hasn't put anyone in the hospital. Considering his strength, he could easily have done so if that was what he wanted.

Finally, the Packers just inched closer to winning the Super Bowl again this year. They took out a desperate New York Giants team in New York yesterday, barely escaping overtime with a last-second field goal. Granted, it's the Giants. They're 0-4 in the second half of this season, taking their annual swan dive. (One of us is heart-broken. The other is cold-hearted and doesn't care.) But the Packers proved that they can rise to a challenge. However, they need to work on their defense a little more if they expect to go back-to-back. Giving up over thirty points to anyone, much less the Giants, is a problem. Also, they might have to lose a game in the regular season in order to win it all. It takes a very, very special team to go 19-0. The Patriots were that team a few years ago, but they happened to 1) run into the only team that had even a shot at beating them, and 2) drop an interception that would essentially have won the game. The Packers aren't the caliber of team that the Patriots were, so they will likely not go undefeated all the way. The only question is when their first loss will come: The regular season or the post season?

Hydra
6-4-3 double play... Ballgame over! Yankees win! Theeeeeee Yankees win!

Friday, August 5, 2011

The Gang of Six

Talk about a monkey wrench. Based on their treatment of Phil Hughes so far, the Yankees probably planned on sending Ivan Nova back down to the minors regardless of how he performed. The six-man rotation used last time around might have been some schedule finagling designed to make sure A.J. Burnett didn't face the Red Sox in Fenway this weekend. After completing his duty, Nova would then be sent back down to the minors until the rosters expanded in September. However, the decision might not be so easy.

Here's the way the Yankee rotation would look if GM Brian Cashman and manager Jo Girardi could make decisions based purely on performance: CC Sabathia, Bartolo Colon, Freddy Garcia, Nova, and Burnett, in that order. Hughes had a great start his last outing, but that hardly makes up for the many times he's been plastered this season. In fact, Nova has far out-performed him this year. Unfortunately, the Yankees have to put Hughes in the rotation.

If Hughes gets sent to the bullpen again, there's no going back. It's time for him to make the move from a mediocre starting pitcher to a genuine major leaguer. He's old enough, and he's been around long enough, to finally take that last step and establish himself. If the Yankees send him to the bullpen, that's it. A stint in the bullpen would erase the little progress he has made in the rotation. If they send him down to the minors, his development as a pitcher would be put on hold. Hughes is good enough to get minor leaguers out, and he might not be able to learn much from pitching in the minors. It's only in the major leagues that he'll be able to hone his pitching skills.

Which brings us to the dilemma. The Yankees can't send Nova down, and they can't demote him to the bullpen. Because he's been so good, rewarding him with anything less than a spot in the rotation is just wrong. At the same time, the Yankees can't really do anything except keep Hughes in the rotation. There's only solution left: a six-man rotation. Critics say that Sabathia couldn't handle all those extra off days. Even if that were true, there's no reason why the Yankees can't give Garcia or Colon an extra day off once in a while. Neither is as young as he used to be, and Colon is pretty injury prone. It's not a perfect solution, but it's the best one out there.

To end on a positive note, the Yankees could have more to worry about. People complain about their high payroll, but at least they have the money to support their spending - unlike another entity we could name.

Hydra
6-4-3 double play... Ballgame over! Yankees win! Theeeeeee Yankees win!