Monday, February 24, 2014

Brett Gardner and the Yankees are a Perfect Fit

Hustle has been an on-going theme for me since the beginning of the off-season. I’ve centered much of my discussion around Robinson Cano and his lack of hustle and why the Yankees needed to go another direction. The off-season brought a lot of new faces to the Yankees organization and most of those players epitomize the word hustle but none more than the man whose contract they’ve recently extended; Brett Gardner.

Gardner will never be the most talented baseball player, he will never be the biggest baseball player and he will probably never be the best player on his team. But you will never see anyone give more effort than Gardner. Yankees fans have nicknamed his “GGBG” or Gritty, Gutsy Brett Gardner for the amount of effort he displays.

Gardner will never hit 20 homeruns in a season or drive in 80 runs but the Yankees will never ask him to do that. What they need from Gardner is exactly what he gives them: Greasy, fast speed. They need him to steal bases, beat out infield grounders to first and track down baseballs in the outfield. They need him to bunt for hits, move runners over and score runs. They’re not interested in balls flying over the right field fence.

Gardner was given a 5’10” body and 185 pounds to work with, hardly a baseball player’s physique. The average height and weight of a MLB player is between 6’1” and 6’2” between 205 and 210 pounds. What he wasn’t gifted with in size though, he makes up for in speed. The guy can flat out run fast. In 2011 he led the league in stolen bases with 49 and the year before that he had 47. Those numbers have dipped the last couple of years which include an injury-plagued 2012 season where he swiped only two bags and 2013 he “only” had 24 stolen bases. While 2013 was a down year in stolen bases he led the league in triples with 10. And that says a lot for a guy who plays his home games in Yankee Stadium, a notoriously small ballpark.

Gardner embodies everything the Yankees used to be known for. When they won four championships in five years between 1996 and 2000 they were all a bunch of hard-nosed ballplayers that put it on the line on a daily basis. It’s been a long time since the Yankees have had a team built around guys in their prime like that. This year is a return to that for the Yanks. They’ve added a tough-guy catcher Brian McCann, an outfielder who never takes a play off in Jacoby Ellsbury, a young pitcher who is known to crave big-game situations in Japanese sensation Masahiro Tanaka and now re-upping Gardner for another four years. It shows you something when they are willing to let their best player go in return for a group of high-character, hard-working guys.

Maybe the Yankees are saying they’re sick of the “white-collar professional” stigma that has plagued them over the past decade and they're realizing winning takes more than just professionalism. The Yankees are looking for guys that will fit both mindsets. Guys who give you everything they have while still carrying themselves “the Yankee way.” And Brett Gardner is the guy that embodies both those beliefs.

Besides Jeter, Gardner is the only home-grown everyday player. With Jeter’s impending retirement the Yankees are in need of a new leader. While Gardner will probably never be captain he can certainly be that leader. He needs to do it the same way Jeter did and it comes from one word: hustle. He needs to lead by example and show every guy on the team there is no reason to not give it your all.

The Yankees are only one year away from a complete changing of the guards as the last piece of the 90’s dynasty will be gone. But the Yankees are giving Gardner a chance to be the face of the new guard and maybe a new dynasty.

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Mariners McClendon Prepares for Defeat

“…he just wouldn’t make that choice to run hard all the time. The reasons aren’t going to make sense. He might say his legs didn’t feel good, or he was playing every day and needed to save his energy. To me there was no acceptable answer.”
-Kevin Long


"I understand I get it. I was a major league player. There are times when you hit balls and you're frustrated as hell and you don't give it 100 percent. As long as you don't dog it down the line, what's the difference between 65 and 85 percent? Just run down the line. Sometimes that stuff is blown out of proportion.”
-Lloyd McClendon


Kevin Long, Yankees hitting coach, opened his mouth about Robinson Cano’s lack of hustle during his tenure with the Yankees. Cano’s new manager Lloyd McClendon of the Mariners fired back regarding Long’s comments. While the media is more focused on the argument between these two coaches, there is an underlying story that Mariners fans and Little League coaches across the nation should fear.


When a person starts playing baseball one of the first lessons they learn is hustle. That no matter the situation; whether you ground the ball to second base or hit a double in the gap, you need to run as hard as you can. Now I’ve never played a single MLB game in my life, not to mention 162 games in one season so I can’t attest to how tired a player might be on game 150. But as Long said, I don’t think there is an acceptable answer to not hustling.


McClendon on the other hand has now admitted that a lack of hustle is OK in his book, as long as the player is “frustrated as hell.” Mariners fans should heed warning right now because of that one comment. This man is leading the Seattle Mariners franchise and his first real public comments say that he is OK with players not hustling. But then he goes on to say, “What’s the difference between 65 and 85 percent?” The real answer to that question is that you should never know. No player should ever try at 65% or 85%.


I’m a Yankees fan so I am biased but I truly believe Yankees, Red Sox and Cardinals fans are the most intelligent fan-bases in baseball. Yankees fans have noticed that Cano doesn’t give it his all and while the initial sting of losing our second baseman hurt; we’ve realized in the long-run it’s better for the team. The Yankees lost a great ballplayer in Cano but they picked up a lot of guys who are known to play hard and hustle on every play. 


McClendon also mentions that he played baseball so he understands the frustrations. But take into account that he batted .244, with 294 career hits. And now he admits to not hustling on some of those at-bats. Maybe if he tried harder he could have been a better player. Maybe if he hustled in his career 100% of the time people would remember him in a positive light. David Eckstein wasn’t a great baseball player but I remember him for one thing—giving the game everything he had. In his career Eckstein batted .280 with 1,414 hits. He gave baseball everything and in 2006 baseball gave back to him when he won the World Series MVP.


McClendon might believe that not hustling to first base is blown out of proportion but the truth is that fans notice these things. He needs to realize that, at the end of the day, when a player of his doesn’t hustle it’s the fans, who pay to watch that player, who will be “frustrated as hell” when their team loses.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

What Derek Jeter Means to me

There’s a famous saying that goes, “All good things must come to an end.” I don’t know who said and frankly it’s not very important. Although I’d grown up a Yankees fan I don’t remember anything before the 1995 season. My memories of that year was going to my first Yankees game and the Yankees losing to the Mariners in the ALDS. The following year the Yankees won their first World Series of my lifetime anchored by rookie shortstop Derek Jeter.

Although Jeter was never my favorite Yankee I now realize he means more to me than any Yankee I’ve ever rooted for. Today Jeter announced he was going to retire at the end of the season and I got very emotional. I wasn’t just emotional that I’d be losing Jeter but I realized I was losing a part of my childhood. I think I always felt that as long as Jeter played a part of the 10-year-old boy that watched him as a rookie still existed.

Jeter symbolizes the beginning of what I remember as a Yankees fan. Along with Mariano Rivera, Jorge Posada, Bernie Williams and Andy Pettitte, Jeter represented a core of home grown Yankees that I cheered for day-in and day-out for six to seven months each year. From 1996 to 2000 I was one of the luckiest baseball fans in the world. I saw my team win four championships in five years. It was a magical time that I hoped would never end. I grew up knowing nothing except championships and I expected it every year.

Slowly those five players started to leave the Yankees. Pettitte was first, followed by Bernie then Posada. I was lucky enough to see Pettitte return to the Yankees twice, once from the Astros and once from retirement. But as the number of these core Yankees dwindled a part of me was always OK with it because we at least still had Jeter. No matter what Jeter wasn’t going anywhere. After Posada’s retirement Pettitte, Rivera and Jeter were the only remaining stalwarts of a dynasty that had long ago diminished.

Yankees fans knew Rivera’s and Pettitte’s days were numbered and in 2013 both players retired for good. Although Pettitte was my favorite Yankee at the time I was OK with it, I believed it was their time, and once again we still had Jeter. Everything was going to be OK because we still had Jeter. I believed Jeter’s competitive nature would drive him to play another three or four years, at minimum. And I was happy with that.

Then today I received a notification on my phone saying Jeter would be retiring at the end of the season. I likened the sentiment to something my dad said to me and my mom the day our family dog had died, “We all knew this day was coming but it doesn’t make it any easier when it does.” It’s true, we did know this day had to come at some point. But no one knew it would be today. No one knew it would be this soon.

In reality though, it’s not too soon. Just because Jeter plays as hard as he did when he was 21, he’s not. He’s 39, soon to be 40. It makes me realize that part of my childhood is coming to an end. It’s an era that went by too quickly. As long as I had Jeter, I could hold onto that 10-year-old Yankee fan inside me that knew nothing about loss, who cheered his heart out for the Yankees.

Derek Jeter is retiring from baseball and the New York Yankees. It’s a sad day for me. I’ll miss Jeter and the Yankees that I grew up loving. But baseball will continue. The Yankees will field a team in 2015 without Jeter helming shortstop. Derek Jeter was a good thing for the Yankees and for me. It will be tough to see him go but all good things must come to an end.

Winning your Fantasy Baseball League

I’m not an expert on winning Fantasy Baseball. This article should probably be called “Coming in 3rd Place in your Fantasy Baseball league” since two of the last three years I’ve finished as the second runner-up (And that’s not including 4 out of 5 years in 3rd place in Fantasy Football also). But last year I finally prevailed as the baseball league champ and now I feel that I’m at least semi-qualified to write an article on winning in fantasy baseball.
In almost every fantasy sport you have to nail your first round pick, in baseball it isn’t as important as you think. Last year I selected Matt Kemp as my first pick (third overall pick of the draft). It wasn’t a terrible pick; he was only 1 year removed from a second place MVP season. But then he missed more than half my season. He sat on my DL for more games than he played. His contributions while on the field were very good, though. That being said, you can make up from a bad first-round draft pick.
I drafted a very strong pitching staff that included Kris Medlen, Gio Gonzalez, Max Scherzer, CJ Wilson and James Shields. I expected Wilson to be my ace but before the season started I knew I was weak at first base and needed to add another bat so I traded Wilson for Edwin Encarnacion. His 36 homeruns and 104 RBI made up for losing Wilson’s 17 wins and 188 k’s. The trade worked out well for both sides. As the season started moving I made a trade that centered on Clay Buccholz and Gonzalez. I thought it was a steal for me but after one start Buccholz ended up on the DL for almost the rest of the season. I thought losing Buccholz would be a killer but Scherzer’s monster year negated that loss. Also an early season pick-up of Ervin Santana kept my pitching staff strong.
Besides Scherzer, my rotation consisted mostly of number-2 type starting pitchers. But in fantasy baseball that’s all that you need. Keep it simple with your rotation; it isn’t necessary to have all number-1 guys. Everyone will be going after those guys, start with the solid number-2 pitchers and collect as many as possible before anyone else has a chance to grab them.
Then there’s your bullpen. Last year my league included holds which was almost a free category for me because I grabbed a bunch of great middle relievers. But at the same time my hand was forced into doing so because I drafted closers too late. For the majority of the season those two categories were a wash for me. I was fortunate that some of my middle relievers slid and excelled in closer roles (I’m looking at you Kenley Jansen). Combining my now middle relief and closer columns my saves and holds soared giving me a 2-0 lead almost every week before anyone ever took the field. If you’re fortunate to have holds as a category make sure you grab top-notch middle relief pitchers. Not only will you get holds but at some point during the year those guys will be called on to close games too.
Offense requires several things: good timing, watching trends and a great deal of luck. My offense the last month of the season was completely abysmal. In the championship week I led 7-6 on Thursday. After Sunday rolled around I still led 7-6 on the same exact categories. Why? Because I couldn’t hit, luckily for me neither could my opponent’s team. If he had hit one homerun from Thursday to Sunday, I would have lost. I rolled a hot team from April through August but my bats went quiet in September. I had a first round playoff bye and then played two teams whose offense went dry the same time mine did. That’s the luck I’m talking about.
Good timing involves keeping an eye on available players. Last year a manager couldn’t hold Hanley Ramirez because he needed the extra DL spot so he dropped him. It paid off for me because I grabbed him immediately. Always watch who becomes available. It’s a lot of work but good timing comes from constantly being aware. If you’re up early be the first person in your league to monitor the free agent board. It only takes minutes and if someone drops a player you know is bound to turn around a bad start or come back strong from injury then pick him up. The risk is almost always worth the reward.
Trend watching is also a huge key for offense. Yahoo has a great option that helps you see players that are being picked up and dropped. And a “who’s hot” list for each position in the field. These options let you see where your players are ranked. If you find a mediocre player like Vernon Wells is lighting it up grab him! He’ll stay hot for a week or two and then then will taper off but you will have grabbed a huge boost from him for two weeks. Baseball players are very streaky; when someone is hot you better get his bat in your lineup.
The one category that you can’t afford to miss out on is offensive sleepers. Last year I drafted two sleeper picks that paid dividends for me, Matt Carpenter and Kyle Seager, and later picked up Josh Donaldson during the season. Seager drifted off the last month of the year but he helped carry me the entire season. Carpenter led the league in runs, hits and doubles. Above everyone, I’d say he was my MVP. Because of him I was always able to keep pace in average, runs and extra-base hits. It’s difficult to find good sleepers but if you think you got one or two give them a chance to come through for you, don’t drop them too quickly.
There are many theories to winning fantasy sports championships. Everyone you talk to will give different keys and strategies. I’ve found that these strategies helped me a great deal last year and maybe they’ll give you a chance at bringing home a championship trophy. But then again there’s a good chance they’ll get you a third-place finish too.

Friday, February 7, 2014

Exit Sandman, Enter Houdini

Arguably, the best set-up man in baseball the last few seasons has been the Yankees David Robertson who has been as close to automatic as it gets for three outs in the eighth inning during that span. This year, for the first time, he won’t be the Yankees set-up man due to the retirement of Mariano Rivera. Many skeptics feel Robertson won’t be able to handle the job but they’re all wrong.

In 1996 the Yankees won the World Series and all season were anchored by two players in their bullpen, Rivera and John Wetteland. Rivera pitched the seventh and eighth innings and Wetteland finished the games off in the ninth. After Wetteland signed with the Texas Rangers that offseason, the Yankees pegged Rivera to close games which he did for the next 17 years. There will never be another Rivera, he defined the position for all future closers but the Yankees don’t need another Rivera, all they need is a Robertson.

Robertson’s nickname is “Houdini.” The night he earned that nickname explains everything you need to know about the guy. In the 11th inning of game 2 of the ALDS in 2009 he was summoned to pitch with no outs and two runners on base. After a single that loaded the bases Robertson promptly retired the next three hitters to end the frame. He pitched in five games in that postseason and didn’t allow a single run helping the Yankees win the title. He hasn’t looked back since.

The following year Robertson struck-out 71 batters in only 61-1/3 innings and finished the year with a 3.82 ERA. While those numbers were very good, they were only a glimpse of what was to come. In 2011 Robertson had a season for the ages. In only 66-2/3 innings he struck out 100 batters, good enough for a 13.5 K/9 average. While that in and of itself is tremendous Robertson also had a 1.08 ERA, giving up only eight runs all year. He was selected to the all-star team and finished 11th in Cy Young voting and 22nd in MVP voting.

While the next two seasons weren’t as good as the 2011 season Robertson still threw up filthy numbers posting a 2.67 ERA and a 2.04 ERA in 2012 and 2013, respectively. He’s averaged 10+K/9 every year of his career. While baseball is a numbers game and Robertson has put up some truly incredible numbers that’s not why he will succeed as a closer. Robertson's success comes from his attitude and something that no other closer in baseball can say, he learned from the best ever.

Since 2008 Robertson has had the opportunity to learn from Rivera and pick his brain. Besides learning pitching, though, Robertson had the chance to learn attitude. Rivera has been “cool as a cucumber” since stepping into the closer role. Robertson has earned the nickname “Houdini” for the same reason. He has the proverbial “ice water in his veins.” The pressure doesn’t get to him. You see it in his mannerisms, all he wants to do is what Rivera did, pitch. And he knows how to pitch.

Robertson said when asked about closing, “It’s the same deal—throwing the eighth or the ninth inning—you still have to get three outs.” He’s not putting any pressure on himself, he’s just going to go out and do what he always does, get outs.

Rivera jokingly asked Robertson, “You scared?” He told him no because he’s not scared. Houdini doesn’t get scared, Houdini gets outs.

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Often Free Agents Cause more Harm than Good

One year ago today, I made a life changing move, I left a place I worked for nine years in order to move six hours South in search for a better life. I had already interviewed and secured a job and had to find a place to live but in the meantime I moved in with my older brother and his roommate for five months until finding my own place to live. In only a matter of days my life, on my own accord, had changed dramatically.

Every year many athletes get a chance to do the same thing I did and choose a new path for their lives, granted their paths make them multi-millionaires and mine made me a multi-thousandaire, but I digress. Oftentimes these decisions make a ton of sense and work out extremely well for the athlete but many other times they don’t.

This past year in several sports we saw big-name free agents switch teams and in some cases it has already worked out, in other cases we just have to wait and see. Ray Allen, formerly of the Boston Celtics, took less money to join the Miami Heat juggernaut led by LeBron James. In his first year with the team the Heat won their second straight title and Allen’s second career title and he was vital in their game six win over the San Antonio Spurs.

We’ve seen Wes Welker, formerly of the New England Patriots (sorry Massachusetts that you’ve lost so many great players recently), join forces with Peyton Manning in Denver. The switch worked out well in that Manning and Welker led the greatest offensive attack in NFL history although they ultimately lost the Super Bowl to the Seattle Seahawks.

We are only months removed from Robinson Cano, former Yankees second-baseman; bolting the Bronx for wetter pastures out West in Seattle. We don’t know how that free agent signing will turn out but in the meantime Cano is making $240 million over the course of the next 10 years. Whether or not the Mariners win a championship anytime soon it has definitely worked out for Cano.

In 2009 the Yankees signed AJ Burnett to a five-year contract worth $82.5 million. That deal, although Burnett pitched only three of those seasons, arguably worked out well for both sides. In his first year with the Yankees Burnett pitched well earning a 13-9 record but it wasn’t until game two of the World Series that year that Burnett really shined. He pitched seven innings, striking out nine while allowing only one run in a Yankees win. If they had lost the game, the Yankees would have been down two games to none in the series. It may have been his only defining moment as a Yankee but what better time to have one? His Yankee career turned bad quickly after 2009. He went 21 and 26 over his next two seasons before being traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates where he shined.

One free agent signing many Redskins fans wish they could forget was bringing in Albert Haynesworth. In February of 2009 the Skins signed the defensive tackle to a seven-year, $100 million contract. From the beginning of the contract Haynesworth caused problems by speaking out against the team’s defensive scheme and showing up to training camp in poor physical condition. In his two years with the club he played in only 20 games, recording only six-and-a-half sacks. He was suspended by the team in December of 2010 and would never play another snap for the Redskins.

The Chicago Bulls agreed to a four-year $60 million contract with Ben Wallace in 2006. In fairness to the Bulls Wallace was coming off four consecutive all-star seasons in Detroit. Wallace only averaged 5.9 points per game as a Bull but did pull down 9.9 rebounds and 1.9 blocks per games. While those numbers weren’t terrible they look better than they actually were because of a good first year and a bad second year. The Bulls quickly realized Wallace’s declining talent and worked out a deal to trade him to Cleveland for the remainder of his contract.

While there are numerous stories of failure and mild success after a free agent signing there are far fewer that produce great accomplishment. LeBron James, after signing with the Heat, has led them to three consecutive NBA Finals appearances and two consecutive Finals Championships. Paul O’Neill signed with the Yankees in 1993 and helped lead them to four World Championships. In 2006 the Saints agreed to sign Drew Brees which instantly made them a contender and in 2009 they Saints won their first Super Bowl title.

While occasionally big name free agent signings help turn franchises around far too often they don’t. Teams take huge risks signing free agent players as many times once a player gets paid they won’t try as hard or their best days are behind them. I guess Robert Burns said it best in his poem To a Mouse, “The best laid plans of mice and men often go awry.” In this case it should read: The best laid plans of owners and athletes all too often go awry.