Fat Pussy Toad Update
Hideki Irabu is still trying to pitch, it seems.
Former New York Yankees pitcher Hideki Irabu was introduced as the newest member of the Kochi Fighting Dogs on Monday, saying his ultimate goal is a return to Japan’s top professional league.
“As long as I’m playing, I’ll aim for Japan’s top league,” the 40-year-old right-hander said at a media conference. “I have high expectations for myself.” Shoulda stayed in Japan's top league to begin with, guy.Labels: besuboru, hideki irabu, yankee history
posted by Mr. Faded Glory @ 8:47 PM
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Cool Little Pregame Story
There was just a little neat pre-game moment on the field, as the center field scoreboard showed Joe Girardi and Paul O'Neill talking behind the batting cage. Underneath, the video folks added text that read "317 combined homers."
Never passing up an opportunity, Reggie Jackson wandered into the shot and pointed to the screen. Mr. October's suggestion was soon acknowledged, and Girardi laughed as the screen now read, "880 combined homers."Labels: joe girardi, paul o'neill, reggie, yankee history, yankee stadium
posted by Mr. Faded Glory @ 4:25 PM
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Wednesday, September 24, 2008 |
September, 1993: A Retrospective
Last night, something happened that hasn't happened since September of 1993: the Yankees were eliminated from post-season contention (there was no post-season in 1994, and the Yankees finished in first place, so there was no elimination).
To get some perspective of how long ago that was, and to take a look back, here are some stats, events, people and culture from that time.
Popular Music: The most popular songs of Sept. 1993 were "Can't Help Falling in Love" by UB40 and "Dreamlover" by Mariah Carey.
Television Debuts: The X-Files, Saved by the Bell: The New Class, Lois and Clark: the Adventures of Superman, seaQuest DSV, The Late Show with David Letterman, Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers, Ricki Lake, Late Night with Conan O'Brien, Frasier, Rocko's Modern Life, NYPD Blue, Boy Meets World
Cheers aired its series finale on NBC.
Movies: Schindler's List (Best picture), The Fugitive, What's Eating Gilbert Grape, What's Love Got to Do With It?, The Firm, The Nightmare Before Christmas, Jurassic Park, Groundhog Day, Mrs. Douubtfire, Sleepless in Seattle, Indecent Proposal, Free Willy, Tombstone, Wayne's World 2, Demolition Man.
Kevin Smith begins filming Clerks.
August 14, 1993: Reggie Jackson Day. Yankees oficially retire #44.
Reggie Jackson elected to Hall of Fame, chooses to wear Yankees cap.Yankees Manager: Buck Showalter. New Yankees in 1993: Greg Cadaret, Paul O'Neill, Spike Owen, Jim Abbott, Jimmy Key, Wade Boggs. Trading deadline deals: July 30, 1993: Jon Habyan was traded as part of a 3-team trade by the New York Yankees to the Kansas City Royals. The Chicago Cubs sent Paul Assenmacher to the New York Yankees. The Kansas City Royals sent Karl Rhodes to the Chicago Cubs. August 31, 1993: Lee Smith was traded by the St. Louis Cardinals to the New York Yankees for Rich Batchelor. Most Games by Position, 1993C Mike Stanley (122) 1B Don Mattingly (130) 2B Pat Kelly (125) 3B Wade Boggs (134) SS Spike Owen (96) LF Dion James (91) CF Bernie Williams (139) RF Paul O'Neill (103) DH Danny Tartabull (88) SP Jim Abbott SP Scott Kamieniecki SP Jimmy Key SP Melido Perez SP Bob Wickman RP Paul Assenmacher RP Paul Gibson RP John Habyan RP Steve Howe RP Rich Monteleone RP Bobby Munoz CL Steve Farr 1993 New York Yankees Uniform Numbers#2 Mike Gallego #12 Wade Boggs #13 Jim Leyritz #14 Pat Kelly #17 Spike Owen #18 Randy Velarde #19 Dion James #20 Mike Stanley #21 Paul O'Neill #22 Jimmy Key #23 Don Mattingly #24 Kevin Maas #25 Jim Abbott #26 Steve Farr #27 Bob Wickman #28 Scott Kamieniecki #29 Mike Humphreys #31 Hensley Meulens #31 Frank Tanana #33 Melido Perez #34 Andy Cook #34 Sterling Hitchcock #34 Sam Militello #35 Paul Gibson #35 Andy Stankiewicz #36 Gerald Williams #38 Matt Nokes #39 Mike Witt #42 John Habyan #42 Domingo Jean #43 Paul Assenmacher #43 Jeff Johnson #45 Danny Tartabull #47 Dave Silvestri #47 Lee Smith #51 Bernie Williams #53 Neal Heaton #53 Mark Hutton #54 Bobby Munoz #55 Rich Monteleone #57 Steve Howe 1993 New York Yankees SalariesDanny Tartabull $5,050,000.00 Jimmy Key $4,900,000.00 Paul O'Neill $3,833,333.00 Don Mattingly $3,820,000.00 Wade Boggs $2,950,000.00 Steve Howe $2,500,000.00 Matt Nokes $2,500,000.00 Melido Perez $2,450,000.00 Jim Abbott $2,350,000.00 Spike Owen $2,250,000.00 Mike Witt $2,166,667.00 Mike Gallego $1,575,000.00 Steve Farr $1,500,000.00 Randy Velarde $1,050,000.00 Mike Stanley $675,000.00 John Habyan $600,000.00 Kevin Maas $255,000.00 Neal Heaton $250,000.00 Rich Monteleone $250,000.00 Pat Kelly $160,000.00 Jim Leyritz $152,000.00 Scott Kamieniecki $150,000.00 Bernie Williams $150,000.00 Andy Stankiewicz $138,000.00 Jeff Johnson $125,000.00 Sam Militello $118,000.00 Bob Wickman $116,000.00 Mike Humphreys $112,000.00 Sterling Hitchcock $109,000.00 Gerald Williams $109,000.00 Dave Silvestri $10,900.00 Television Announcers:WPIX:Phil Rizzuto, Tom Seaver, Bobby Murcer MSG:Dewayne Staats, Tony Kubek, Al Trautwig Radio Announcers: WABC:John Sterling, Michael Kay I hope you all feel old now. (Information compiled from Baseball Almanac, Baseball Reference, and various other sources.)Labels: yankee history
posted by Mr. Faded Glory @ 9:16 AM
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Monday, September 22, 2008 |
ESPN Got It Right
I'm usually the first to bash ESPN, but I have to hand it to them - they got the coverage of the final game at Yankee Stadium right. Of course you had to put up with Miller, Morgan and Gammons, but even Gammo can, from time to time, recognize history and put his biases aside.
The star of the evening were the many "lasts," and ESPN covered each one properly.
- The entire pregame ceremony was broadcast.
- The roll call was shown in three windows - one on the action, one on the bleachers, and one on the player whose name was being chanted. I'd never seen it presented this way on TV before, and I think it showed the proper respect. Of everyone, Johnny Damon certainly seemed to play to the crowd most of all, with his Elvis-style slide/point.
- Yogi and Whitey were in the booth for a while, and an inning ended while Whitey was telling a story. Rather than cut him off, Miller allowed Ford to keep talking and finish the story before cutting to a commercial. That was classy. Plus, how cool was it to have both Whitey and Yogi there together?
- Michael Kay - of whom I am no great fan - was in the booth to represent the Yankee broadcasters, who obviously lost the right to call the last game in the big ballpark in the Bronx. Rather than just having him as a guest, he was the play-by-play man for the half-inning. That was a classy move to let him call at least part of the last game.
- Cameras were constantly finding former players walking through the stands... Cone, Wells, Martinez... it gave a good sense of what it would be like to be a fan in those seats.
- Pre-recorded moments, such as those with Reggie out in the black seats, were spot-on and didn't distract from the game as it progressed.
- When Mariano Rivera was summoned for the ninth inning - as everyone knew he would be, regardless of the score - ESPN had a cameraperson in the bullpen, following him out to the mound. No cut to commercial here - we saw Rivera make his last trip through the gates to the mound. Some people criticized FOX for cutting away during this moment at the All-Star game... personally, I understood the FOX move, but this was different because it was truly the last time that man would make that walk.
- Jon Miller and Joe Morgan said very little during the bottom of the ninth, and let the stadium and game speak for itself.
- ESPN stayed with the entire post-game, including the players' lap around the field.
I give ESPN a lot of shit most of the time, but really their coverage was very professional and classy, two adjectives I do not often see associated with that network. Now if only they would Yankee-hating Jim Caple already, I'd be a happy camper. Labels: espn, jim caple, yankee history, yankee stadium, yankees on tv
posted by Mr. Faded Glory @ 3:39 PM
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Thursday, November 29, 2007 |
Reality Check History Lesson
Who was the lowest regarded prospect of the following:
A. Phil Hughes B. Joba Chamberlain C. Sam Marsonek D. Domingo Jean E. Ian Kennedy F. Brandon Claussen G. Johan Santana H. Ted Lilly I. Ryan Bradley J. Jake Westbrook K. Tyler Clippard L. Ed Yarnall
If you guessed "G," you were correct. Santana was left unprotected in the Rule V draft by the Houston Astros, and then was selected by the Minnesota Twins. The Astros didn't think highly enough of Santana's future to place him on their 40 man roster, and lost him for nothing. Two (and deserving of at least one more) Cy Young awards later, Santana has proven the scouts and pundits wrong.
So where are Yarnall, Bradley and Jean these days? Clippard is now so low on the Yankees radar that they'd happily throw him in on almost any deal at this point. Claussen is now in the Nationals system after frustrating Reds fans and not pitching in 2007. Westbrook has had one good year (2004) and been a mediocre pitcher in every other. Theodore Roosevelt Lilly has had the most success of any of the "highly regarded" prospects traded by the Yankees, and has put together a pretty decent career as an above average major league pitcher (although 2007 is the only year since he left the Yankees he has posted an ERA under 4.00). I believe Sam Marsonek picked up my dry cleaning last week.
What's the point here? Yankees fans tend to overvalue their own prospects and young players, thinking every single one of them is going to be the next Whitey Ford or Roger Clemens. Kennedy, Hughes and Chamberlain are good prospects and appear to be able to compete on the major league level and hopefully all three will have good careers ahead of them. There are, however, no guarantees.
Remember that when the thought of sacrificing one of three prospects to obtain the best pitcher in baseball in the prime years of his career becomes a possibility.
Or maybe you're still hoarding that Hensley Meulens rookie card, convinced he could still be the next Mickey Mantle.Labels: bam bam meulens, ian kennedy, joba chamberlain, johan santana, phil phranchise, prospects, trade rumors, yankee history
posted by Mr. Faded Glory @ 4:01 PM
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Thursday, September 13, 2007 |
Also, He Was Mean to Bernie Williams
What a great guy.
Former major leaguer Mel Hall indicted on child sex charges September 13, 2007
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) -- Former major league outfielder Mel Hall was indicted Wednesday on charges that he sexually assaulted two girls -- ages 12 and 14 -- who played on elite basketball teams he coached in the 1990s.
The 46-year-old Hall could face life in prison if convicted, said Tarrant County Assistant District Attorney Kim D'Avignon.
Hall was indicted on three counts of aggravated sexual assault of a child, two counts of sexual assault of a child and two counts of indecency/fondling.
Hall's attorney, Bob Hultkrantz, didn't immediately return a call seeking comment Thursday.
A woman came forward in May, saying Hall assaulted her in 1999 at his apartment when she went to baby-sit his child, according to records filed in the case. She said Hall raped her again a week later after picking her up for basketball practice. Another woman said Hall assaulted her when she was 12 at her home and at his apartment.
Hall's 13-year major league career ended in 1996. He played for the Chicago Cubs, Cleveland Indians, New York Yankees and San Francisco Giants.
Hall has been free on $55,000 bail since his June arrest. Also after having read about men who got off incredibly easy after taking sexual advantage of the impressionable and helpless, it's pretty comfoting to see that Hall could get life in prison. I'll never forget being there for that game winning walk-off homer against Boston on Memorial Day years ago, but really who cares at this point? If the guy is found guilty, throw the book at him.Labels: criminal athletes, mel hall, yankee history
posted by Mr. Faded Glory @ 4:37 PM
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Wednesday, August 15, 2007 |
A Personal Farewell to a Childhood Hero
I know some of you might not have heard a lot of his broadcasts, but I grew up on him. Every night, Scooter and Bill White (or Murcer, or Seaver, etc) would be on my TV and I'd go to sleep to the hum of the tiny B&W set. I remember that it was late and I should go to sleep whenever Scooter was "halfway across the bridge" (ie the 7th inning).
When I went to Cooperstown with my brother and mom, I couldn't have been older than 5th grade. My brother picked typical souvenirs (current Yankee shirt, cooperstown hat) and I remember I got a shirt that said "Cooperstown has a Big Train, an Iron Horse and a Yankee Clipper.. but where's the Scooter?" It didn't even bother me to have to explain to my typically ignorant classmates who exactly most of those were (it may be hard to believe, but I could be a snarky kid).
When I was in 6th grade or so, I waited at the players entrance at Yankee Stadium. I didn't get or look for a player's autograph like nearly everyone else clamored for, but I yelled to Rizzuto, and over he came and signed my ball.
To this day on my wall I have a signed Rizzuto ball and 8x10. What a truly classy, wonderful guy.
So, so long Phil. Today there will be plenty of stories full of your on field exploits, championships, MVP, years in the booth, etc., but for me I'll just miss the nice old man who finally made the Hall, and was kind enough to stop and talk to a young boy that he once helped put to bed every night.Labels: phil rizzuto, yankee history
posted by Mr. Faded Glory @ 8:03 AM
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The Return of the Siren
That familiar sound after a Yankee hits a home run in Yankee Stadium has returned.
It was like clockwork years ago. Home run, siren, Westminster chimes. But somewhere around 2003, it disappeared.
I'm not sure when exactly it happened, but I noticed the siren had returned yesterday. In any event, it's a recent change as it wasn't present last week against Pittsburgh.
Sure it's a minor thing, but I always enjoyed it. It's also far less tacky than some stupid giant flashing apple popping up out of a top hat.Labels: yankee history, yankee stadium
posted by Mr. Faded Glory @ 10:23 AM
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Blasts From the Past, Chapter 1
Periodically throughout the season (and hopefully beyond) I'm planning on taking a look back at the history of the most fabled franchise via videos not often seen by most people.
What better way to kick it off than with this 8mm "home movie" filmed during Game 6 of the 1958 World Series between the Yankees and Braves, by a fan who was lucky enough to get a ticket and a press pass. The quality is pretty good considering the era (no sound, of course) and the access level is fantastic. Of course, these days the guy would probably have been arrested, his camera confiscated, and Bud Selig would be suing him for copyright infrigement.
Labels: videos, yankee history
posted by Mr. Faded Glory @ 6:22 PM
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$20 Says He Could Still Outhit Doug Mientkiewicz
Andy Pettitte threw a simulated game in Tampa today, and had an unusal defense behind him. Throw Cano at 2B and I would honestly be surprised if this infield wouldn't be better than the current one.
Posada caught Pettitte. The infield was A-Rod, Jeter, minor-league second baseman Kevin Russo and a slightly older, slick-fielding first baseman named Donald Arthur Mattingly.
Mattingly made a play on Phillips in the final inning. In the same inning, Jeter fielded a ball and threw short, forcing Mattingly to make a scoop.
So, Derek, did you do that on purpose?
“Nah,” said Jeter, who was grinning ear-to-ear. Labels: andy pettitte, don mattingly, yankee history
posted by Mr. Faded Glory @ 12:56 PM
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