Boz pays homage to the gritty, gutsy, scrappy, first place 2013 underdog Yankees:
Read More...Perhaps for the first time in their history, the Yankees now epitomize exactly the kind of team that always used to try to beat them: a group of inspired-by-adversity, too-old-or-too-young, one-last-chance players who band together to prove that baseball is a team game, not just an aggregation of talent and fat contracts.
Put a few all-star seasons, such as Cano’s 31 RBI, Kiroda’s 1.99 ERA and Rivera’s 16 ...
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1. Sleepy supports unauthorized rambling posted on September 19, 2012 at 11:34 PM # hit 0 | hit 0Oh, and he's set up to pitch the one game playoff. Yay.
Kimbrel has appeared in twenty games since then. In those twenty appearances, Kimbrel has pitched 20 1/3 innings, walked four guys, given up nine hits and two runs, both on home runs, and struck out 43 batters.
Seven of those appearances, every batter retired was retired by strikeout, including a 1 1/3 inning appearance with four Ks, but he struck out every batter he faced only three times.
(he walked a guy in the 1 1/3 inning appearance)
The Nationals announcers indicated that Kemp was 6 feet from the plate when the third out was made, and the umpire didn't even realize he had to make a call. Seems like another replay category.
So it was more like 6 inches?
I take it the Dodgers didn't appeal. And if they didn't, then the Nats didn't get a call.
I'm unclear what happened-was it a force play on Gonzalez? In that case the run shouldn't count even if Kemp had crossed the plate and was in the dugout. Kemp scoring before a tag was applied would only matter if a force was not in effect.
According to the box, it wasn't a force play. Gonzalez was on second with no one on first and he was tagged out by the third baseman.
An obvious and easy case for replay. Because, by definition, you're only worrying about it between innings. There should be absolutely zero delay in reviewing such plays.
They called it correctly in real time.
Mattingly pulls the Jedi Mind Trick.
Replay shows it wasn't close.
They overturn it anyway.
If you combined Medlen's 2nd half with Beachy's 1st half, you'd have a runaway winner.
Yes, that's a very lopsided trade.
As things currently stand, Dickey has to be the winner.
Right now he's first in IP, ERA, and just a single strikeout behind 1st place Kershaw (who is hurt). He's also got NL best 5 CGs (to Cueto's 2) and 3 shutouts (to Cueto's none).
Interview with Nats catcher Flores reports he overheard umps conferring on it say, "I thought the bases were loaded" which would mean Porter thought it was a force play not requiring him to make a call, therefore not paying much attention. Which, in fact, is what he actually did--not pay attention.
I wish the official scorer could assign errors to umpires.
Hold out for Addie Joss. I'm telling ya he's got crazy durability.
In 2008, C.C. Sabathia made 17 starts for the Brewers, throwing 130.2 innings with a 11-2 record and a 1.65 ERA. He finished 5th in the Cy Young voting.
Both those guys were big stars prior to their shortened seasons, which Medlen is not. I can't imagine he's going to do any better than those two did.
Rick Sutcliffe 1984
150 innings. And considered understates it, he was the unanimous winner.
Not exactly a great year. Gooden as a rookie was #2 -- very nice season. Sutter and Andujar (20-14, 260 IP) were next.
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