Category: MLB (Page 354 of 448)

Would Yankees have collapsed if replay existed in 1996?

As baseball continues to mull over whether or not to incorporate instant replay, YAHOO! Sports rewinds 10 plays in sports history and asks the question: What if replay had existed?

By Hooky or Crooky (10.09.1996)

Scenario: At a kid-friendly Yankee Stadium, a 12-year-old boy named Jeffrey Maier reaches playing over the right-field wall to snare an all-but-certain catch by Orioles outfielder Tony Tarasco. Instead, umpire Rich Garcia rules it a home run for Derek Jeter, and the Yankees proceed to take Game 1 of the ACLS 5-4. They eventually win the series, and the first of four titles under manager Joe Torre.

Replay ruling: Overturned!

Rendered Result: After receiving word of the reversal, Yankee Stadium erupts in near-riot, the stands are cleared and the game is completed — with the O’s winning — in front of no live audience. Out for blood, or possibly corned beef, 56,495 fans storm the Carnegie Deli and destroy the Replay Nerve Center. Buoyed by their quick start, the Orioles knock out the Yankees in six games, with David Wells winning twice. The Orioles fall to the Braves in the World Series, but smell blood in the water of the AL East. Unimpressed and kind of frightened by the New York scene, Wells ignores the free-agent overtures by the Yankees, re-signs with Baltimore, dons No. 3 — for Baltimore native Babe Ruth, his favorite player — and pitches a perfect game against New York in 1997. The Yankees miss the playoffs that season, fire Torre, dismantle the roster and lose 116 games in ’98 with a payroll of $9 million. Whatever happened to the kid who caught Jeter’s ground-rule double? A pretty good athlete in his own right, Maier played ball for Wesleyan University in Connecticut. Not good enough to reach the pros, Maier instead quickly worked his way through scouting and administration and, in a shocking move, was named general manager of the Yankees in 2008 at the age of 24.

Wow. So according to YAHOO!, replay could have sent the Yankees’ franchise into disarray for years. Somewhere Red Sox fans throw up thinking of what could have been.

Rangers make Shea Stadium their own personal slip n’ slide

During a recent rainout in a scheduled interleague game with the Mets, several members of the Texas Rangers decided to make the tarp at Shea Stadium into a slip n’ slide.

This is just one example of how close guys can be on a baseball team. When you play 162 games, there’s going to be fights and arguments along the way. But there’s just something about a couple of million dollar athletes sliding around on a tarp that’s pretty cool.

Whitlock: Milton Bradley Underappreciated

Jason Whitlock of the Kansas City Star notes that nobody should blame Rangers’ outfielder Milton Bradley if he feels underappreciated for being a side story to teammate Josh Hamilton’s amazing turnaround from a drug addiction.

Batting No. 4, right behind Hamilton, Bradley (.333) is swinging the fourth-hottest bat in the majors. He has every right to feel partly responsible for the MVP numbers Hamilton is posting.

Bradley also has a right to feel ignored. He’s enjoying the best season of his career, and no one seems to take notice or care. Rangers teammates Hamilton, Ian Kinsler and Michael Young are all outperforming Bradley in All-Star fan voting.

Nope. When it comes to Milton Bradley, all people want to talk about are his temper tantrums and Hamilton’s sobriety.

Lefebvre did both within earshot of Bradley. You can understand why Bradley was offended, without condoning his reaction. Like every athlete, Bradley has an ego that wants to be fed. It’s not happening in Texas this season. He’s a sidebar to Hamilton, a situation Bradley has grudgingly accepted.

“If it was taken that Milton Bradley needs to clean up his life off the field, then I regret making the analogy,” Lefebvre said. “I have no business making judgments about Milton Bradley as a father, as a husband or as a friend. What I was trying to convey is that it’s really sad that he carries himself on the field in a way that prevents people from appreciating his talent.”

Whitlock knows more than anybody that the media is going to run a good story into the ground and right now, the story in the baseball world is Josh Hamilton. Bradley is probably underappreciated, but he can’t try to run up four flights of stairs in efforts to confront a television announcer and not have the media and blogging world rag on him. I like to believe fans are fair, however, and that eventually Bradley would get noticed for his solid season. But he can’t continue to wind up in the headlines for temper tantrums.

Oh that crazy Milton Bradley

Rangers’ outfielder Milton Bradley didn’t take kindly to what Royals’ television announcer Ryan Lefebvre had to say about him during Texas’s 11-5 victory over Kansas City Wednesday night. So Bradley decided to pay Lefebvre a visit in the press box, that is, before Rangers’ manger Jon Daniels stopped him in the stairway and brought him back to the clubhouse.

“I came in to watch my at-bat on the video and all of a sudden I heard my name,” Bradley said Thursday. “It was a spiel like five minutes out of the blue about me. I didn’t think anything he was saying was anything positive.

“I never met him and I heard him talking about me on TV. I was upset and was going to introduce myself. … All I wanted to do was introduce myself and tell him the stuff you’re talking about is uncalled for.”

Bradley has a history of losing his temper.

He slammed a plastic bottle at the feet of a fan in the right-field seats at Dodger Stadium in 2004 after someone threw it on the field. With San Diego in the pennant chase last September, he tore the ACL in his right knee when he was spun to the ground by Padres manager Bud Black, who was trying to keep him from an umpire.

Bradley knows the perception of him by outsiders may not be good because of past incidents.

“I’ve done some things that have been construed as violent or temperamental,” Bradley said. “But I’ve never physically harmed anyone. You can talk to any teammates I’ve had and the most they’ll tell you about me is I’m moody. I love to laugh and have fun, but when I’m out on the field it’s strictly business. It’s my life. I take a lot or pride in what I do.”

It must be hard being a professional athlete and constantly under the microscope. A lot of people would get pissed off to hear themselves trashed by someone they didn’t even know. That said, Bradley is a professional athlete and hard as it may be, he’s got to let things like this roll off his back. He shows more character by not reacting the way he did, then trying to force the issue. I sympathize with him in a way, but unfortunately being ripped by the media is part of the job.

Welcome to the 21st century – TSN to roll out a daily digit to boost online readership

For decades, The Sporting News (the weekly magazine, not the website) used to be the pillar of sports information, from news and insights, to scores and stats. But TSN has slowly realized that what they provide weekly in a magazine is already available daily on hundreds of sports sites on the web.

That’s why TSN has decided to go with Sporting News Today, which is a digit daily (an e-mail basically) complete with news, scores, stats and more.

The new business model is a mix as well: the digital daily will be free while the magazine, which will be reintroduced in September with an emphasis on analysis and commentary, remains $3.99 an issue. The magazine circulation is about 700,000.

As the NYT explains, it’s a kind of “back to the future” move: take what the magazine was once known for—being the weekly sports Bible—and try to make it that kind of relevant in 2008 by providing a full morning briefing for “serious sports fans.” In today’s instant news world, can that work? Not in lieu of immediate gratification but as a way of providing a coherent picture the reader doesn’t have to piece together on his or her own, it just might.

This is a logical and smart business move. Obviously nobody wants to wait a week for information that they can get on a daily basis. So by sending a daily e-mail and making it free, TSN will get people to view their content instead going to ESPN.com or any other website to get their sports information. (Or at least, that’s what the idea is in theory.)

At least at the start, it’s a wise move for TSN to make this digit daily free. People have a short attention span as it is. If you want to charge for something that people can already get free elsewhere, their attention span gets even shorter.

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