Day: October 5, 2006

NLDS: NY Mets 4, LA Dodgers 1 (Mets lead series 2-0)

It was a tough day for NL West teams.

First, Jeff Weaver blanks the Padres earlier Thursday evening and then shortly after the Dodgers fell victim to Tom Glavine (1-0) and the hell bent New York Mets.

Glavine had a great array of pitches working for him all night and was solid in going six innings and only giving up four hits and no runs. The Mets didn’t smack the ball around, but did get timely hitting from fielder choice ground balls and sacrifice flies when they needed it most. In fact, New York’s first run came on a Jose Reyes chopper to shortstop Rafael Furcal, who bobbled the ball enough to throw away a chance at an out at home plate, but did recover to get Reyes out at first. Reyes knocked in another run in the sixth on a single to center, which scored Jose Valentin and 90-year-old Julio Franco.

Los Angles just never got going and if they can’t scrounge out a win on Saturday, they will be going – home for the rest of the postseason. Hong Chih Kuo (0-1) had a decent slider that was working, but the Mets’ batters kept battling him (such as Reyes in the third when the Mets got their first run) and eventually chased Kuo. The Dodgers got their only run off a Wilson Betemit home run to center. Jeff Kent went 2 for 4, but J.D. Drew really struggled at the plate and finished 0-4.

The series shifts to Los Angles for Game 3 on Saturday and that contest will give the Mets a chance to sweep the series and set up a NLCS match up with either St. Louis or San Diego.

The Mets will face the Dodgers’ Greg Maddux (0-0) and will counter with Steve Trachsel (0-0).

NLDS: St. Louis 2, San Diego 0 (St. Louis leads series 2-0)

The Padres couldn’t score a run on Jeff Weaver. Jeff Weaver, he of the 5.76 ERA this season and the lifetime record of 86-101, the one who was waived by the Angels earlier this year…San Diego couldn’t score a run off of him. Hell, they could barely hit him. Weaver gave up two hits, both singles, over five innings.

St. Louis limped into the playoffs thanks to a last-minute collapse by Houston. They looked worn down and exhausted, while San Diego won 10 of their last 13 games to take the division. Of course, none of that technically matters now, but you’d think some of their momentum would carry over. Instead, this is like “Freaky Friday” on a grand scale. San Diego chooses to pitch to Albert Pujols with Preston Wilson on second, and of course Pujols belts a ball to left field and scores Wilson. San Diego then had Pujols in a rundown, but Pujols reached second safely after no one came over to receive the throw from first base. Pujols would later score, and that’s all they’d need. Two runs. That’s all they’d need.

San Diego now has to go into the belly of the whale and face the most rabid fans west of the Tappan Zee Bridge. The only thing the Padres have in their favor now is that they are a better road team than a home team, and boy, did they prove that this week. One run in two games. I wonder what the Phillies would have done in that situation…

Game 3, Saturday: Chris Young (11-5, 3.46) vs. Jeff Suppan (12-7, 4.12)

ALDS: Detroit 4, NY Yankees 3 (Series tied 1-1)

The fairy tale is back on.

Curtis Granderson tripled to deep left in the top of the seventh inning to knock in Marcus Thames (3 for 4, two runs scored and an RBI) to break a 3-3 tie and give Detroit a 4-3 lead. The lead was all the Tigers needed as their bullpen shut the door on the Yankees in the final three innings to escape New York with a 1-1 series tie after losing Game 1 Tuesday night.

21-year-old rookie flamethrower Joel Zumaya pitched 1.2 innings and struck out three out of the five batters he faced (and that included Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez) to set the table for closer Todd Jones in the ninth. After Jones gave up a leadoff single to Hideki Matsui, Jones retired the final three batters – including getting Johnny Damon to fly out to short center to end the game.

Earlier in the contest, Damon hit a blast that wrapped around the right field foul pole for a three-run homer. It would be the only runs the powerful Yankee lineup would put on the board, however. In fact, they only managed two hits throughout the rest of the game after Damon’s homerun.

Mike Mussina (0-1) pitched seven innings, gave up eight hits and all four of the runs scored by the Tigers. Jamie Walker (1-0) got the victory by getting Robinson Cano to ground into an inning-ending double play in the bottom of the sixth. Walker relieved starter Justin Verlander (0-0), who kept Detroit in the ballgame before coming out in the middle of the fifth inning.

The series now shifts to Detroit on Friday, where the Tigers were 46-35 at Comerica Park in the regular season. The Yankees will throw Randy Johnson (0-0) against the Tigers’ Kenny Rogers (0-0).

D-Wade has MRI on injured hand

The results of an MRI on Dwyane Wade’s sore right hand came back negative, which means there is nothing structurally wrong with it. But there’s no clear course of action other to rehab and hope that the pain goes away. If it were his off hand, it’s probably an injury he’d be able to deal with during the season, but it’s his shooting hand, and this soreness could really affect his game.

Wade said he would consider taking time away from the team, a prospect that could prove daunting, with starting point guard Jason Williams already set to miss the start of the season following offseason knee surgery.

“Right now we’re going to do the therapy and give it enough time,” he said, “and if it doesn’t calm down in enough time, then shut it down for a little while.”

Fantasy impact: This news makes it tough to take Wade over Kobe Bryant, and if the injury lingers, Gilbert Arenas and Steve Nash start to creep into the conversation. Let’s hope the hand reacts well to rehab and he’s able to start the season normally. It would be a shame if the league was without one of its brightest young stars for the start of the season.

Here! Here! For Auburn’s Tuberville…

Auburn’s Tommy Tuberville has been the Tigers head coach for eight years now – and he’d like to officially announce that he’s had it with the NCAA “playoff” format.

In a recent ESPN.com article, Tuberville voiced his opinions about the current BCS format and more specifically, how it hurts SEC teams trying to get to a national title.

“I’ve about had it with this playoff deal,” Tuberville said after a lengthy, emotional argument for a playoff. “We all understand in our conference how tough it is. In our conference, that’s about the only chance we’d have to make it.”

“The problem we have is you have 120 universities that are I-A and probably 25 would say they have a legitimate chance each year,” he said. “And you have presidents that for some reason look at it more as for the money than having a national championship on the field. They keep coming up with lame excuses about academics. Football players miss fewer classes than anybody.”

“Presidents take the money and go spend it, but they don’t worry about the business of making it better,” Tuberville said. “They keep coming up with excuses, yet we’re playing [the national championship game] Jan. 8. It’s hypocritical.”

Amen.

I love college football, but I’ve been telling everybody within earshot for years that the NCAA will never hold the power that the NFL has without a playoff format. Teams like USC and Nebraska (albeit not lately for the Cornhuskers) have been beating tiny schools and boasting powerful rankings for years. While other programs like Auburn and LSU beat each other up and virtually have no chance at a National Championship. As Tuberville noted, 120 (119 to be accurate) schools participate in the college football season every year. But you can eliminate about 110 of them from having a realistic shot at being ranked #1 or #2 right off the bat.

The last quote I took from Tuberville up above is the one that should hold the most water. The NFL, NBA, MLB and NHL are each run like a business. You have your entertainment, you market it and you sell it to the public. You also take those profits and you work on making it better. The NC-Two-A gets it’s entertainment from players who are playing purely for the love of the game or for a chance to reach the next level. It’s a cheaper cost to run things and the big wigs of the NCAA have no interest in making it better for the general public or for the students/coaches. Sure, they still have to pay for coaches, fields, equipment, etc. But they also receive money from boosters and sponsors (how much does Nike shell out to but its swoosh on those hideous Oregon uniforms?) – so don’t tell me they need all of these bowl sponsors (and more specifically their money) just to support the programs.

Tuberville is right – it’s about the players. So, give these student athletes what should matter most:

1) A great education to prepare them for life after sports.

2) An opportunity to showcase what they can do in case they are good enough for the next level.

3) And three – give these athletes something bigger than the Fritos-Pampers Instate.com Bowl at the end of season – due to the fact they had to go through Auburn, LSU, Florida, Tennessee, Michigan, Ohio State and Georgia just to get there, while their competition is ranked #1 and had to face Little School U, Blind Mary’s School of the Deaf and Central High School.