Meanwhile, back in the Detroit Tigers camp …

22 Oct
2012

Though they've been on baseball's back burner for four days now, the Detroit Tigers aren't kicking back at home, challenging each other to Xbox tournaments and throwing the frisbee around.

Nor are they complaining about what will end up being a six-day layoff by the time they kick off Wednesday's Game 1 of the World Series in either St. Louis or San Francisco.

"When you sweep the New York Yankees, I don't give a (hoot) if we wait three weeks to the World Series," manager Jim Leyland told USA Today.

Still, there are wrinkles to iron out and talent to keep fresh, so the Tigers held a scrimmage on Sunday and plan to hold another on Monday before learning just how far west they'll have to travel for their first Fall Classic game since 2006. (One wonders how many jokes Justin Verlander will endure on that tarmac for putting up a poor start in the All-Star game that gave the National League team homefield advantage in the World Series.)

The main news out of Sunday's scrimmage was struggling closer Jose Valverde pitching the bottom of the first inning, giving up two hits, a walk and a run in his simulated appearance. But it's hard to even turn that into a headline given the way the Tigers approached this warmup, which included minor league players from the team's instructional league squad.

Miguel Cabrera acted like he had just collected the winning single in Game 7 of the World Series when he managed a hit off the Big Potato and the two joked once he reached first base.

From the Detroit Free Press:

"I would not say they're real fired up," Leyland said (about the scrimmaging). "I can't tell a lie. I doubt very much that they're all pumped up for it.

"But I think they're taking it the right way and going about it the right way. I'm not too excited about it myself to be honest with you."

It's hard to blame a team for struggling in that type of low-key exercise when they've just come off two straight weeks of packed stadiums and pressure-filled moments. If anything, they'd probably be better off practicing for all the questions they're going to get about the layoff once they hit Tuesday's media day sessions.

With the Cardinals and Giants going the distance, the Tigers are now in almost the exact same situation as they were in 2006 when the Cardinals and Mets went seven games in the NLCS. But no matter what they say or how they scrimmage, the fact is that how they'll answer those questions begins and ends with the performance of Verlander's right arm on Wednesday night.

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Boston trades for manager John Farrell, Toronto gets utilityman Mike Aviles in return

21 Oct
2012

Manager trade! According to several reports, the Boston Red Sox have worked out a deal that will steal John Farrell away from the Toronto Blue Jays and make him their next manager with a multi-year deal.

In return, the Jays will receive Mike Aviles as compensation for releasing Farrell from the upcoming last year of his contract. The 31-year-old utilityman played 136 games for the Red Sox last season, posting a .663 OPS.

Additionally, MLB.com reports Blue Jays first baseman Adam Lind will also join Farrell in Boston as part of the transaction.

[Jeff Passan: Chris Carpenter authors comeback story for Cardinals]

The news of the unconventional swap — the first for a major league player in the bigs since the Tampa Bay Devil Rays pried Lou Piniella from the Seattle Mariners in exchange for Randy Winn in 2002* — broke late Saturday night. But Farrell leading the Red Sox has long been the subject of speculation and rumor.

*Ozzie Guillen was "traded" to the Miami Marlins by the Chicago White Sox last season, though for a minor-league prospect.

Farrell served as Boston's pitching coach between 2007 and 2010. He would've been the logical choice to replace Terry Francona after the sudden collapse of 2011, but had already managed the Jays for a season then and the Jays weren't eager to let him jump to a division rival after just one season. The Red Sox ended up hiring Bobby Valentine and, well, we all know how that worked out. A 69-93 record in 2012 and a last place finish in the AL East.

Toronto wasn't much better at 73-89 last season, a record that leaves Farrell's two-year mark with the Blue Jays at 154-170. But as Gordon Edes of ESPN Boston writes, Red Sox GM Ben Cherington finally has his man after ownership's experiment with Bobby Valentine crashed and burned in just the first season. Indeed, this is the way it should have been all along with Boston's front office getting the guy they wanted. A skipper who can work hand in hand to develop an organizational philosophy and system that will lift the team to success: Terry Francona and Theo Epstein, Part Deux.

Farrell has a big mess ahead of him to clean up while Toronto GM Alex Anthopoulos will have to find a replacement to run his organization from the dugout. Ian Denomme of Yahoo's Eh Game speculates that candidates will include Sandy Alomar Jr., Jays bench coach Don Wakamatsu and Jays first base coach Torey Luvollo.

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Bruce Bochy jokes with Yadier Molina: ‘Don’t call that pitch any more’ (Video)

19 Oct
2012

With his big ol' Country Bear Jamboree voice, San Francisco Giants manager Bruce Bochy wields an underrated sense of humor and delivery from time to time. One of them was on Friday night when Fox Sports television cameras picked up one of his funny exchanges during a 5-0 NLCS Game 5 win over the St. Louis Cardinals.

With his third baseman Pablo Sandoval grimacing in pain after fouling a Lance Lynn curve ball off his foot in the first inning, Bochy took a break from checking on his player to turn to Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina. What he delivered was a simple instruction that got an amused look from the home plate umpire. 

"Don't call that pitch any more."

Ah yes, catcher humor. To that point, Molina had called for Lynn's curveball on three of the four pitches that Kung Fu Panda had faced. And while you think Yadi might possess enough stubbornness to call a curveball once Bochy had returned to the dugout, he ended up calling for two straight fastballs to retire the hobbled Sandoval on a strikeout.

While Sandoval looked to be favoring the foot afterward, he hit a home run to lead off the top of the eighth inning to finalize the 5-0 final score. Bochy said afterward the Sandoval is fine and expects to play in Sunday's Game 6.

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NLCS Game 5: Barry Zito sends series back to San Francisco with 5-0 Giants win

19 Oct
2012

Score and situation: These San Francisco Giants don't go quietly. Facing the possibility of elimination in NLCS Game 5, the Giants put together a 5-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals Friday night at Busch Stadium. The win narrows the Cardinals' series lead to 3-2 and sends the series back to San Francisco for Sunday's Game 6.

Leading lads: It took six years and $99 million, but the Giants finally have an outstanding highlight to show for the Barry Zito experience. The oft-maligned and richly-compensated lefthander threw 115 pitches over 7 2/3 shutout innings against the powerful Cardinals lineup to extend the Giants season at least one more game. Not only did Zito strike out six batters while allowing six hits and walking only one, but he also contributed offensively with a two-out bunt in the fourth that tacked on an extra run.

San Francisco scored all but one of its runs in the fourth, taking advantage of a Lance Lynn throwing error that allowed Marco Scutaro to score and created an opportunity for the Giants to add Brandon Crawford's two RBI single and Zito's RBI bunt.

Head hangers: Lynn gave up four runs over 3 2/3 innings though none were technically earned as a result of his throwing error. He also gave up four runs over the same time frame in the Cardinals' Game 1 victory, though obviously got a lot more run support. His lineup couldn't put anything together against Zito with Matt Holliday (0 for 4, three Ks) suffering the worst night at the plate.

Key play: Lynn's throwing error was big and put the Giants in the driver's seat for the rest of the night. But just as important was the double play that Zito got from Lynn with the bases loaded to end the second inning. The play allowed Zito to escape the frame after he had put runners on second and third to start the inning and set the tone for his highlight night.

Interesting stat: According to ESPN Stats and Info, Lynn is the first pitcher to notch a bases loaded GIDP since the Cubs' Rick Sutcliffe did it against the Giants in the 1989 NLCS.

What they'll be talking about: The Giants fell behind by two games in the NLDS against the Cincinnati Reds and won three straight elimination games to advance. Can they pull off the same thing in the NLCS? They'll head back to AT&T Park for the final two games and arguably hold the advantage in the pitching matchups for Games 6 and 7. They'll have to win at home, though, where they're only 1-3 this postseason.

What's next: The series heads back to San Francisco for Game 6 at 7:37 ET on Sunday night. The scheduled pitching matchup is the same as it was in Game 2 — Chris Carpenter against Ryan Vogelsong. You'd normally give the Cards the edge in that faceoff, but Vogelsong was almost as good in Game 2 as Zito was in Game 5.

As has always been the case in this post-Bonds era in San Francisco, the pitching will have to carry them.

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Concession Speech: 2012 Los Angeles Dodgers

19 Oct
2012

With the regular season over, teams are facing an offseason filled with golf rounds and hot-stove strategy.

But we're not going to let them get off that easy. No sir. No way. In an attempt to bring some closure between franchise and follower, we're giving a blogger from each team the opportunity to give a concession speech for this year's squad. Before we get to the Yankees, we're circling back to southern California so the Sons of Steve Garvey can have their say on an altogether-not-lost season from the Los Angeles Dodgers.

My fellow Dodger fans:

It is with heavy heart that we, the Sons of Steve Garvey, formally concede our team's candidacy for 2012 World Series champion. This season was quite a roller coaster, with plenty of insane highs and ridiculous lows involved.

But what started out with some shocking surprises (Magic Johnson is buying the Dodgers?!) and some extremely positive momentum (best record in baseball through June 19) suddenly gave way to a quick downward spiral (a plague of injuries, most notably to franchise foundation Matt Kemp), and not even the late presence of a potent "final five" (Hanley Ramirez, Joe Blanton, Shane Victorino, Adrian Gonzalez, and Josh Beckett) could abate a dirge through the second half of the run (an impotent offense through most of August and September dropped us from the division lead to 11 games back), which finally culminated with a "what the heck just happened there?" surprise (winning eight of our last 10 games of the season).

Come to think of it, the Dodgers' 2012 plotline almost directly follows the story arc of the re-imagined Battlestar Galactica series (and I still can't get over the Kara-Thrace-suddenly-disappears-in-a-poof-of-smoke thing, but that's another story altogether).

But let's focus on the good. And the season definitely started out well, beginning with the long-overdue eviction of the scourge that was the Frank and Jamie McCourt circus. Even in a city founded on vanity, the McCourts' penchant for using the Dodgers organization (and real estate) as a capital source to fund their excessive wealth, personal privilege, and deplorable behavior had turned most of Dodger fans away from the organization in protest (even boycotting the Stadium, dropping 2011 attendance levels below 3 million for the first time this century). Despite a handful of playoff appearances and executing the early stages of a Dodger Stadium renovation plan, the McCourts had worn out their welcome, to the point that they were driven out with torches and pitchforks.

In their wake came a new ownership team that was almost too good to believe. Magic Johnson, Lakers royalty, as the public face. Stan Kasten, proven baseball guru, as the insider. Guggenheim Partners, with $2.15 billion to spend, as the moneymen. Peter Guber, former Hollywood executive, as the slicked-back hair guy. They committed to upgrading the stadium, improving the fan experience (starting by dropping parking fees from $15 to $10), and investing in the team on the field. Los Angeles fans couldn't believe it. Finally, we had a new campaign management team with the proven chops to win the race.

Nor could we believe the results of the product on the field. Powered by a torrid start by Matt Kemp (batting over .400, with a 1.305 OPS through May 8) and Clayton Kershaw (4-1 with a 1.90 ERA through May 19), the Dodgers took off like a rocket, almost as if a heavy weight had been removed from their collective shoulders. It was frakkin' unbelievable.

And despite the organization's lack of investment in the campaign team during the offseason, everyday players stepped up and over-performed in the early days. Catcher AJ Ellis, batting eighth, had a .464 OBP through mid-May. Chris Capuano opened up the season a remarkable 8-2. Jerry Hairston Jr. batted .373 through the end of May, giving some power at third base. Andre Ethier, always streaky, was heading on a positive trajectory. And when retreads like Juan Rivera and DFAd-by-the-Angels Bobby Abreu managed to not fully embarrass the team, it seemed like this just might be an incredible season. The Dodgers opened up a seven-game lead on the NL West and were rolling. What could possibly go wrong?

By mid-June, we found out. The wheels not only fell off the wagon, they drove into a sewer and were spit out into a chasm filled with molten lava and the used syringes of 2012 Giants players. It didn't help that, at a time when our own candidate was plummeting in the polls, our opponent could seemingly do no wrong. Not even a drug scandal (and the ensuing coverup) could reverse that trend. Though we came in to this campaign as dark-horse candidates, our meteoric rise to the top revised our hopes and expectations. When some of that (lower-case "m") magic evaporated, it was a loss much harder to bear, having once been at the top.

Kemp's recurrent hamstring and knee injuries (two DL stints) were the first blows in a combination of punches that the team just couldn't absorb. Hairston went down, but he gave way to Luis Cruz, the Dodgers' best story of the season, who overcame 12 years of stints in the minors to shine as an everyday player, batting .297 with a 106 OPS+ not to mention outstanding glove work at third. Second baseman Mark Ellis was not only taken out on a defensive play, he almost lost his whole leg as a result.

The Dodgers treaded water through June, July, and most of August, with the offense (and fans) somnambulating through many of those games. Still, the Dodgers' postseason chances were surprisingly still within reach. They just needed some revitalization; an injection of money into the campaign, one might say.

New ownership came through in spades, demonstrating a willingness to spend money and take on contracts, but also to invest in a team that had been undernourished for years. Former All-Star Hanley Ramirez was picked up from the Marlins in late July, with the Dodgers hoping that a change of scenery away from a watery Art Deco-designed grave might spark his bat. Dodger thorns Shane Victorino and Joe Blanton came over from the Phillies. And finally, the Red Sox unloaded Adrian Gonzalez, Carl Crawford, Josh Beckett and Nick Punto, giving the Dodgers an immediate upgrade at first base after suffering through years of James Loney (a nice, albeit punchless, guy).

These moves clearly upgraded the Dodgers on paper, and doubtless set a solid foundation for future seasons (certainly in the case of Crawford, who spent the 2012 season recovering from injury). But the 2012 result was mixed at best. Ramirez finished his Dodger stint with a 112 OPS+ and had a litany of defensive miscues—and that was the most positive result of the mid-season pickups. Gonzalez homered in his first at-bat as a Dodger, but took the rest of the season to re-find his swing. Victorino brought none of his vitality, ending the season with the lowest OPS+ of his career. And Blanton went 2-4 over 10 starts with a 5 ERA.

But it was maladies to the Dodgers stalwarts, and not a flawed campaign strategy, which really did us in. When Kemp ran into the Coors Field wall in center at full speed on August 28, injuring the labrum on his shoulder in a vicious hit, the Dodgers' chances were torn as well. Kemp was never the same the rest of the season, and had surgery two days after our final game. Chad Billingsley won his last six starts and was on a roll before injuring his elbow; Bills is still awaiting a verdict to see if Tommy John surgery, which would knock him out for all of 2013, is required. Kershaw was the only full-season Dodgers workhorse in 2012, as he ended up 14-9, as well as his second straight season with the NL's best ERA (2.53).

And thus, the Dodgers' season, full of ups and downs, finally evaporated, extinguished for good in the 161st game of the season.

It is difficult to give a concession speech after such a tumultuous season, one which repeatedly toyed with our emotions and tested our faith and sanity. But at least the future holds a lot of potential, both in the marquee players we've got on the roster, the youth of the core (Kershaw, Kemp, and Ethier), and the willingness of Dodgers ownership to spend money and swing for the fences. (Heck, they had me at "reduced parking fees.") Maybe our campaign managers were planning for the win in 2013, all along?

There is no doubt better days are to come in 2013.

So say we all.

Follow the Sons of Steve Garvey on Twitter and read their work here

Coming Monday: New York Yankees

Previous Concession Speeches: Washington Nationals, Baltimore Orioles, Oakland A's, Cincinnati Reds, Los Angeles Angels,Texas Rangers, Atlanta Braves, Chicago White Sox, Tampa Bay Rays, Milwaukee Brewers, Philadelphia Phillies, Arizona Diamondbacks, Pittsburgh Pirates,Cleveland Indians, Boston Red Sox, Minnesota Twins, San Diego Padres, New York Mets, Miami Marlins, Chicago Cubs, Toronto Blue Jays, Colorado Rockies, Kansas City Royals, Houston Astros

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Max Scherzer parties with custom mismatched goggles for his mismatched eyes

19 Oct
2012

It hasn't been hard to spot Detroit Tigers pitcher Max Scherzer in the middle of all the team's champagne celebrations this month. The right-hander, who has heterochromia iridum (two different colored eyes), was recently gifted with a pair of mismatched goggles by his girlfriend Erica May.  Scherzer attracted attention after wearing them for the ALDS party over Oakland and then donned them again when the Tigers clinched a berth in the World Series on Thursday night.

If someone started mass producing these for sale, it's safe to say they'd move a few in Motown. Scherzer was sterling in the 8-1 clinching victory over the New York Yankees in Game 4 of the ALCS, striking out 10 and allowing only one run over 5 2/3 innings. This will be the first World Series for the 28-year-old and it could come against a team Scherzer is pretty familiar with if the St. Louis Cardinals can close out their win in the NLCS. Scherzer grew up in the St. Louis area and played college ball at Mizzou.

Scherzer's eyes have inspired a lookalike bobblehead doll, a parody Twitter account and a spot on the list of famous people with heterochromia.  His two-toned peers include Mila Kunis, Jane Seymour and Dan Akroyd, though Scherzer's case is so pronounced that he stands out from almost every one on that list.

He's probably the only one with a custom pair of champagne goggles, too.

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Yankees can’t overreact to a third straight season without a World Series

19 Oct
2012

The New York Yankees won the 2009 World Series, reached the ALCS three times and won a total of 390 regular-season games since missing the postseason in 2008.

By most any other team's measure, that sentence would be deemed a rousing success and one of the best runs in franchise history. But when it comes to the Yankees, the main question will always be why any other qualifiers past that first comma were necessary. The line between boom and bust in the Bronx is perhaps not a fair one, but it has always been clear. Nothing less than a World Series title can provide a satisfactory to a year in the life of the Yankees and so the 2012 season — which ended in a humbling ALCS sweep to the Detroit Tigers on Thursday — will be labeled a disappointment by those in pinstripes.

[Related: A-Rod says he won't waive no-trade clause]

Or will it be? While the late George Steinbrenner would've been breathing fire before the Yankees team plane ever came to Detroit for Games 3 and 4, manager Joe Girardi said his post-elimination remarks to his team were not of the tongue-lashing variety. 

"There is only one team that's going to be happy when the year ends," Girardi told reporters when they asked what he said to his team after the 8-1 loss in Game 4. "They did a lot of good things and they overcame a lot of good things this year.  We know we fell short.  We understand that.

"But how do we get better?  I mean, that's my message. How do we all, including myself, how do we all get better next year so we don't have this feeling?"

It's hard to imagine the Boss putting the offseason's challenge in such touchy-feely, self-help workshop terms, isn't it? Heck, it's hard to imagine anyone saying something like that if the possibility still existed that Steinbrenner was lurking around a corner.

For those of you missing the reassuring everything-will-be-better bite of George, here's the good news: While the one son the Steinbrenner family still lets out in public probably won't come close to barking out any demands over the next week — not when there's a game of luxury tax threshold limbo to play — George Streinbrenner's rigid expectations still live on in the impatient suggestions and outsized dreams from New York's media and fans. They'll be present as they call for Alex Rodriguez's contract to be traded to a discount-minded team at the winter meetings (a long shot), Curtis Granderson to be shopped one year before free agency (a decent chance) and Nick Swisher instructed to seek Jayson Werth-type money elsewhere (the best bet out there).

[Related: Tigers wait for full applause after sweeping Yanks | Photos]

Meanwhile, they'll want the team to pursue Robinson Cano for a long-term contract extension to lock him up past 2013 and make him a franchise cornerstone. So long as the MVP-caliber second baseman agrees that his days of 3 for 40 postseasons are behind him, of course. They'll want to look for more pitching to put behind CC Sabathia, a search that would have been made much easier had Michael Pineda not shredded his shoulder or if any of the team's top crop of minor-league pitchers had made a decent-sized jump in 2012. Finally, they'll welcome Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter back from injury, answering two questions that have rarely needed mind over the past 15 or so seasons.

There's admittedly a game plan in those suggestions, but strip away all the hyperbole and knee-jerk reactions and Girardi is right in how he approaches this. Going forward, the team's main challenge will again be to reconcile the success of another 95-win regular season with another postseason flameout. Just what is the right amount of reaction to a bad October week at the plate that would have been forgotten with the next three-game winning streak had it happened during the regular season?

Whether or not there's an exact prescription is the riddle and curse of the expanded  postseason, a random crapshoot whose odds never mattered to those four title teams of the early Core Four years but have lately turned these Yankees into the next edition of the Atlanta Braves dynasty that had severe trouble closing.

New York GM Brian Cashman shouldn't overreact to this outcome, nor will he. But just as if this run had ended with a World Series ring, he should be aiming toward a younger and more flexible future instead of the roster's current march to AARP-eligibility. And no matter what the outcry is over these next few days, Cashman can't lose sight of this paradoxical truth: The only way the Yankees can truly disappoint is if they stop putting themselves in the position to be disappointing each postseason.

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A-Rod says he won’t waive no-trade clause

18 Oct
2012

It might be great fun to spin the wheel of possible trade destinations for Alex Rodriguez, but the embattled New York Yankees star says our party is already over.

Speaking to reporters after the Yankees were swept out of the postseason on Thursday night, A-Rod says he will not waive the no-trade clause in his contract this offseason and wants to remain in pinstripes for the foreseeable future. The 37-year-old still has five years and $114 million left on the 10-year, $275 million deal he signed after opting out in 2007.

"I will be back. I have a lot to prove," Rodriguez told reporters (via MLB.com's Bryan Hoch) after New York's 8-1 loss to the Detroit Tigers. "I've never thought about going to another team. My focus is on staying here. Let's make that very, very clear."

Right now, the only thing that's clear is that A-Rod appears to either be a glutton for punishment or own an insatiable need for attention. Or maybe both. He was booed constantly at Yankee Stadium during a postseason that saw him go 3 for 25 at the plate while losing three starts to Eric Chavez, who didn't bother to collect a single hit. On top of it all, the New York tabs stuck him in the middle of a ridiculous and, frankly, unfair flirting controversy involving an Australian swimsuit model who was sitting near the Yankees dugout.

[Related: Tigers must wait for full applause after sweeping Yankees | Photos]

If there ever were a time for A-Rod to hit an escape hatch and watch his skills diminish in a less critical atmosphere, this hot stove season would seem to be it.  Speculation over possible landing spots, including Miami and Chicago's South Side, started (and denied!) even before the Yankees were eliminated in Game 4 and perhaps the raw emotions after such a collapse would have put the Steinbrenner Bros. in a money-eating mood this winter.

Perhaps A-Rod will change his mind in the weeks and months ahead or perhaps he won't. At the very least you have to give him credit for maintaining a level head through the extreme soap opera of the past week and not giving into the emotion of the moment.

But if he really wants to stay in New York, the place he professes to love so much, he'll have to find out what's wrong with that swing.

Otherwise, it's going to be a long five seasons for everyone involved.

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Touchdown! Phil Coke celebrates AL pennant by spiking glove before start of Tigers party

18 Oct
2012

Was Phil Coke celebrating a World Series berth for the Detroit Tigers or a touchdown for the neighboring Lions? It was a little hard to tell on Thursday night as the left-handed reliever channeled his inner Ted Lilly by spiking his glove to celebrate the final out of the Tigers' 8-1 victory over the New York Yankees. Though it wasn't quite Magglio Ordonez hitting a grand slam to start the pennant-winning party back in 2006, Coke's celebration has already taken a special spot within the hearts of Tigers fans.

Coke's perfect inning of relief in Game 4 garbage time against his former team capped off an ALCS that saw him appear in all four games and become the rotation's answer to lineup surprise Delmon Young. Coke has been perfect this postseason, pitching 13 1/3 scoreless innings, striking out 11 and allowing only four hits. Expect plenty of Coke vs. Jose Valverde questions of Jim Leyland before the World Series starts next Wednesday, though the debate shouldn't even be a close one.

At any rate, every Tiger fan can proudly call themselves a, uh, Coke head as he leads the bullpen into the Fall Classic. And in case any of you were wondering what happened after his glove hit the ground ...

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ALCS Game 4: Tigers sweep Yankees, head to World Series after 8-1 win

18 Oct
2012

Score and situation:  No broom curses here. The Detroit Tigers did not delay the inevitable, putting away the punchless New York Yankees with an 8-1 victory in Game 4 of the ALCS on Thursday. The win sends the Tigers to their first World Series since 2006 — which they also entered via sweep — while mercifully sending the Yankees home for the winter. It's the first time the Yankees have been swept in the postseason since Kansas City beat them in the 1980 ALCS.

Leading lads: Miguel Cabrera and Jhonny Peralta each hit two-run homers off CC Sabathia in the bottom of the fourth inning to break the game open and make Detroit's coronation as American League champs an extended one. Peralta would later add a solo shot in the eighth inning to cap off the scoring in a series that saw the Tigers outscore the Yankees 19-6 over the four contests. Delmon Young went 2 for 4 with a RBI and was named ALCS MVP.

[Related: Phil Coke celebrates AL pennant by spiking glove]

On the mound, Max Scherzer continued the unbelievable run of Detroit starters this October, losing a no-hitter on the first batter of the sixth inning and pitching 5 2/3 innings of one-run ball while striking out 10. In 61 2/3 innings of postseason work, Tigers starting pitchers have a 1.02 ERA and 66 strikeouts. They allowed only two runs to the Yankees all series. (Take away Jose Valverde's implosion in Game 1 and that's all they would have scored.)

Head hangers: CC Sabathia may have saved the Yankees against the Orioles in the ALDS, but he wasn't worth the wait in this series. The big lefty lasted only 3 2/3 innings, giving up five earned runs, two homers and 11 hits. New York's entire lineup was also blameworthy with Robinson Cano posting an 0 for 4 to cap a 3 for 40 postseason that has seen him collect as many hits as St. Louis pitcher Chris Carpenter.

Key play: Peralta's two-run homer in the fourth inning came after Cabrera did the same and erased any doubt that Game 4 ticket holders would get a chance to party.

Interesting stat: According to whowins.com, this is only the fifth best-of-seven postseason series in which one of the teams never held a lead. The Yankees join the 2004 St. Louis Cardinals (WS Boston), 1989 San Francisco Giants (WS, Oakland), 1966 Los Angeles Dodgers (WS, Baltimore) and 1963 Yankees (WS, Los Angeles) to never enjoy an advantage.

[Also: Mystery A-Rod woman identified]

What they'll be talking about: The national media is obviously going to focus on the fall of the Yankees and what offseason changes may or may not be coming. It'd be a shame, though, to not credit the Tigers rotation for how they've been pitching this month. It was their efforts that stopped Oakland, halted New York's well-paid sluggers and are sending the franchise to its 11th World Series appearance. There will be plenty of question about how the Tigers will handle closer Jose Valverde in the next matchup, but the reliability of the starters make his volatility a little easier to stomach.

What's next: The Detroit Tigers will head home to watch the NLCS and find out whether or not they'll be reporting to St. Louis or San Francisco for Game 1 of the World Series next Wednesday. The Yankees, meanwhile, will return back to the Big Apple for plenty of discussion (and suggestions) of how they can fix things going forward.

Make sure all your bases are covered this postseason ...
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