Results tagged ‘ St. Louis Cardinals ’
The New York Bankees
I walked to my Dad’s room again last night, looking grim, and he looked around at me, pausing from scraping up an old floor tile.
“How are the Yankees doing?”
“Losing, of course,” I replied, as if the Yankees’ previous 26 World Championships never occurred. “I’m starting to hate them.”
“Yeah, everybody feels like that,” he told me. “The guys at work are pretty mad.”
Thus, we had the whole discussion that has been occupying my mind every time I watch a Yankees game these days. The Yankees, as it turns out, are so easy to hate! I’ve been watching every Yankees game of every season for about five years now and every year they seem to spend more and more money, trade away their young talent, and put out perpetually more disappointing seasons than the last. Last year, I stopped watching Yankees games at the end of August, when I was sure they wouldn’t make the playoffs. This year, I’ve stopped already.
I understand that it’s Brian Cashman’s obligation to “field a winning team” every year, but when does the point come when the Yankees organization realizes that, using the methods they’ve used for the past nine years, the Yankees aren’t winning? Hey, if Teixeira and Sabathia were on the market and I was a GM, I’d go after them, too. But trading Jose Tabata and Jeff Karstens for Xavier Nady? Trading Jeff Marquez for Nick Swisher? I mean, Nady’s a good player and Swisher is a great guy, I’d love to have him on my team, but how long will the Yankees have Nady and Swisher around? And I’m not just ranking on those two. There have been other cases, as well. How about trading Nady to a pennant-race team for prospects this July? How about at least trying to unload Matsui to AL team in need of a clutch DH? How about building from within? How about putting together a team that takes pitches, runs the bases, and feels like a team rather than a ego-boosting home for aging superstars. The Yankees dynasty of the late nineties was not built on power bats and huge names. Derek Jeter, Tino Martinez, Paul Oneil – Scott Brosius for christ’s sake! These are guys that played their hearts out and played the game the right way (passing over Oneil’s attitude, which, I would argue, is only an outward display of his desire to win). It wasn’t about Tino Martinez or Derek Jeter, it was about the Yankees.
I don’t know. Maybe I’m too much of an idealist. But I wouldn’t mind seeing the Yankees make some drastic moves to build up their farm system again and set the foundation for the future Yankees from within the organization. I’m not saying don’t pick up guys who hit home runs. I’m saying that the Yankees teams these past few years have not felt like a team. They’ve felt like a mix-and-match bunch of stars who aren’t pulling their weight, not to mention their rotation slots have been continually revolving doors. Not to mention, it feels wrong without Joe Torre, a man who NEVER should have been slapped in the face like that. That disgusted me more than anything.
I’m pretty sick of watching the Yankees lose.
But on the bright side, who’s in first place in the NL Central? THE ST. LOUIS CARDINALS, THAT’S WHO! WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
11/27/2008-01/07/2008
I was sick for a long time (turns out it was mono) and was in no mood to write in my blog — not to mention I had finals, too — so please excuse the absence. I hope you had fantastic holidays. Take away the mono and my holidays would have been great.
St. Louis Cardinals
We haven’t done much in the past month. I’m excited about the Khalil Greene deal because even if he hits .240, he’s likely to hit 20+ home runs and 70+ RBI. This is not to mention he is a fantastic defender at shortstop. Izturis is a very good defender, but nothing to be excited about with the bat. He’ll do well in Baltimore, I’m sure (and hope), but I’m much more excited to have Greene as the Cards’ starting shortstop.
The Cards have added Royce Ring in addition to Trevor Miller to solidify their ‘pen. Royce Ring is arguably solid (minus the last six or so appearances in the majors last season), but Trevor Miller is a great addition. The rotation is solid (at best, unfortunately) if everyone performs as well as they did last year. Todd Wellemeyer and Kyle Lohse need to prove that they didn’t just have freak excellent seasons and Joel Piniero needs to step it up. If Carp gets healthy and Wainwright stays so, we’re at least assured of two fantastic starters. Jaime Garcia looks ready to jump in if we need him as well. The problem is the closer’s spot. I’m all for giving Chris Perez another shot, but Jason Motte looked great in September. That dude can throw. I suppose we’ll see in Spring Training who gets a look. There’s even rumors that the Cards are checking out Chad Cordero. High-risk = possible high reward? I don’t know. We’ll see, maybe.
New York Yankees
What haven’t the Yankees done since I last posted. They picked up Burnett (which, if you read my last entry, I should be happy with), Sabathia, and now Teixeira. But keep your pants on, people: the Yankees are not just out to buy anyone that they can. They know what they need and they have the money to pursue those needs at the top-tier. Hal Steinbrenner said it best, when introducing Mark Teixeira as the newest Yankee. He stated that every year, the Yankees feel a responsibility to put out a championship-caliber team. Who doesn’t want that? Are you telling me the Pittsburgh Pirates don’t feel a responsibility to win games for their fans? If the Pirates had the pockets the Yankees did, wouldn’t they go after top-tier players as well? They sure aren’t expected to, but they would. The Yankees are expected to, and that’s what makes the Yankees even more suitable for acting on the free-agent market the way they do. I will never bash the Yankees for using the money the have to pursue a championship-caliber team. And as we saw last year with both the Yankees and the Tigers, a team with a huge payroll is not guaranteed success (see a team called the Tampa Bay Rays).
Anyways, I’m already getting excited for Spring Training. You?
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