NLCS Game 4: Cardinals one win from World Series return after 8-3 dismantling of Giants

18 Oct
2012

Score and situation: The St. Louis Cardinals took command of the NLCS and put themselves one win away from a World Series return with an overpowering 8-3 victory over the San Francisco Giants on Thursday night.

Leading lads: Adam Wainwright bounced back from his awful Game 5 outing against the Washington Nationals with a real gem. The Cardinals right-hander tossed seven strong innings with the only damage coming on Hunter Pence's monster second-inning home run. He also struck out five and earned his first postseason win as a starter.

The offensive attack for St. Louis was balanced and relentless. Game 3 hero Matt Carpenter was in the middle of most of it, reaching three times and scoring twice. Matt Holliday drove in a pair of runs with singles in the first and fifth. Jon Jay also delivered a two-run double off left-handed reliever Jose Mijares to blow the game open.

Head hangers: This was not the return to the rotation Bruce Bochy envisioned for Tim Lincecum. It was far from the worst we've seen from Lincecum this season, but it was even further from the workhorse Lincecum we saw in the 2010 postseason. In fact, the 4 2/3-inning outing was the shortest of his six career postseason starts, while the four earned runs and three walks equaled his previous highs. The only upside for San Francisco is that Lincecum's outing was short enough that he should be available out of the bullpen in Games 6 and 7 should they be necessary.

[Related: Jason Motte ready for his close-up]

Key play: The botched play at the plate in the fifth inning was chaotic and seemed to be the dagger for San Francisco. Center fielder Angel Pagan did a nice job keeping Matt Holliday's frozen rope single in front of him and started the process of what should have been an out at home. Unfortunately, Brandon Crawford's relay throw was in the grass and catcher Hector Sanchez went for the tag before securing the ball, allowing it to trickle away. Carpenter was dead to rights if the play was executed, but as it was he touched home and Holliday moved into scoring position himself setting up another Cardinal run.

Interesting stat: Busch Stadium has not treated Tim Lincecum well lately. Over his last 13 2/3 pitched in downtown St. Louis, he's allowed 11 earned runs.

What they'll be talking about: Was the decision to move Tim Lincecum back into the rotation worth it for Bruce Bochy? Some will say he didn't have much of a choice based on postseason performances from Madison Bumgarner and Barry Zito, while others will bring up how well Lincecum had performed in relief role this postseason. There should be a third camp pointing out that it probably doesn't matter at this point against a locked in Cardinals offense.

[Related: In case of emergency, Cardinals use Carpenter — Matt Carpenter]

Bochy's decision to go with Hector Sanchez behind the plate over Buster Posey will also get some ink and airtime. Along with the botched play defensively, Sanchez went 0 for 4 with three strikeouts.

What's next: The Cardinals will look to punch their ticket to the World Series, while the Giants will try to extend their season and get back at AT&T in Friday's Game 5. Left-hander Barry Zito will be given the task of saving the season for Bochy's squad. Mike Matheny will turn to All-Star Lance Lynn. First pitch is scheduled for 8:07 ET.

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Report: A-Rod flirts with female fans during loss in Game 1 of ALCS

16 Oct
2012
by David Brown in Fantasy Baseball, General

Alex Rodriguez has lately been off his game at the plate and everybody watching the New York Yankees knows it. He's been dropped in the batting order and even replaced in the lineup as he struggles to find his hitting stroke.

Meanwhile, his other skills remains sharp.

In a story that seems too ridiculous to be true, except that it's A-Rod, the New York Post quotes unnamed witnesses at Game 1 of the ALCS saying Rodriguez openly flirted with two female fans sitting near the Yankees dugout after he was taken out for a pinch hitter in the eighth inning. He even had a bat boy toss the women a ball with instructions to write their phone numbers on it — which they did. This is the same game in which Derek Jeter broke his ankle.

[Related: Alex Rodriguez becomes $29 million pinch hitter]

Oy-Rod. The Mighty Centaur truly has fallen.

Take it away, Post:


"Alex was holding a pen and wrote a note on a ball which was thrown at the women by a ball boy,'' the witness explained.

"The girls, who had already caught two balls, seemed bemused at first and tried to hand the ball to another fan, but other fans noticed the note on it and yelled at them to read it.

"The note asked them to write their phone numbers on the ball and throw it back,'' the witness said.

"One of the girls, with darker blond hair, wrote . . . on the ball and threw it back at A-Rod, who gave her a big smile."

"They exchanged a few glances after that,'' as A-Rod took a powder while a pinch-hitter took his place at the plate.

Unreal. But real. Once Jeter became injured, the Post continues, the flirting stopped. Even A-Rod has his limits. The timing of the flirting is somewhat important. The Post seems to say that it began before the Yankees' incredible rally in the ninth, before Raul Ibañez hit his most recent tying home run. If that's accurate, it's especially lousy on Rodriguez's part to be engaging in that kind of activity as the team is trailing.

It might be colorful and amusing behavior during the season, but with his team fighting for its playoff existence ... OK, let's not go overboard. There wasn't much Rodriguez could do to help once he was lifted from the game. But he had seemed to be handling his demotions well, being a "team player" by accepting the decisions of manager Joe Girardi and rooting on his teammates, blah, blah, blah. In spite of his massive salary, Rodriguez had become something of a sympathetic character for his struggles (unless you just irrationally hate the Yankees, or him, and a lot of you do).

This ought to change the dynamic. Perhaps an A-Rod apologist such as myself should excuse him for ... grieving ... over his personal batting plight by trying to compensate with fresh female companionship. No?

[Y! Sports Fan Shop: Buy New York Yankees playoffs merchandise]

If I'm Joe Girardi (poor Joe Girardi), I might expunge A-Rod from the lineup once and for all over this. Not as punishment. It's just, this has to be the final-final-final straw for 2012, doesn't it? His head isn't in the game, it's in the stands with the cute fans.

The best worst part of the Post story is the end, when it gives fans a dating update for Rodriguez (who reportedly has been seeing pro wrestler Torrie Wilson — only the Post spells her first name "T-O-R-R-E," as in Joe Torre) and Jeter. Now, why Jeter's love life is relevant in a story about A-Rod's flirting, only the Post can tell us. (But it is worth noting he is dating a model named Hannah Davis. We now return you to TMZ.)

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In an otherwise magnificent game, Peyton Manning’s tackle attempt was hysterical

15 Oct
2012

Look, we know that quarterbacks are made of fine china and tissue paper and they're not supposed to tackle anything tougher than a plate of grilled chicken. But even by the absurdly low standards we set for them, Peyton Manning's performance above in trying to bring down San Diego's Quentin Jammer is just ... well, it ain't pretty, we'll tell you that.

Midway through the second quarter, Manning had just thrown an interception and Jammer was rolling right down the sideline when Manning found himself in one of those oh crap what do I do now situations. And, like almost all of us would do when faced with a speeding cornerback bearing down on us, Manning just went fetal. Jammer's biggest concern in regards to Manning was possibly stubbing his toe on Peyton's shoulder pad.

This was, of course, the smart play; we're still not sure that Manning's neck isn't going to explode at some point this season. And in the grand scheme of things, it had exactly zero impact: Manning brought his Broncos back from a 24-point deficit to win 35-24. The comeback was Manning's 47th fourth-quarter/overtime game-winning drive, tying Dan Marino for most all time, and the 24-point comeback also tied a record for the largest by a road team in NFL history.

So yeah, the attempted tackle was ugly, but excusable in the context of the whole package ... like a Miss America winner whose talent is projectile vomiting.

-Follow Jay Busbee on Twitter at @jaybusbee.-

Tags: , , magnificent game, , paper, , , Quentin Jammer, sideline, tissue
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‘Orioles Magic’ finally goes poof

13 Oct
2012
by David Brown in Fantasy Baseball, General

The moment Friday night when CC Sabathia turned the wrong way on a short grounder by Robert Andino, giving himself no outlet and allowing the Baltimore Orioles to load the bases in the eighth inning, it felt like the Birds were cooking up some trademark Orioles Magic.

The O's finally had scored against Sabathia, and trailed the New York Yankees by two runs in Game 5 of the ALDS. The tying run was in scoring position and Nate McLouth, the embodiment of Orioles Magic, was standing at the plate. At no other point all night did the Orioles seem to be brewing anything. Even earlier, in the sixth, when McLouth appeared to nick the right-field foul pole with a deep drive, the umpires returned from the replay viewing room and upheld the original foul call. That's not Orioles Magic! That's just a dubious call that went the Yankees way. Bah.

But this business in the eighth, after producing two base runners through seven innings, this was something.

And then Sabathia got strike one over the plate to McLouth. And then McLouth spoiled strike two. The best McLouth could do was take a ball in the dirt. He struck out on the next pitch, the nastiest of sliders. Two outs. It was up to J.J. Hardy, and Sabathia was up to the task, getting him to hit a weak grounder to short.

The Orioles mounted no challenge in the ninth. The eighth was the last gasp. Orioles Magic had disappeared for good in 2012.

It sounds trite and empty to say it now, but the Orioles had a great season. Their first playoff appearance since 1997. The first time they had been any good at all since '97. A proud franchise, fallen on hard times recently, with something to finally cheer again. An offense built around a few young stars like Adam Jones and Matt Wieters, but also relying on retreads, supposed has-beens and a couple of never-weres. Guys like Mark Reynolds and Chris Davis. Lew Ford and McLouth. Ryan Flaherty. Steve Pearce (a couple of times). Losing Nick Markakis. Never really having Brian Roberts.

Starting pitchers who were surprisingly effective and relievers who were pretty much the best in the league collectively. Wei-Yin Chen. Joe Saunders. Steve Johnson? Miguel Gonzalez?! Darren O'Every Day. Jim Johnson, the Janitor who cleaned it all up. All of the extra-inning wins. All of the one-run wins. Manager Buck Showalter doing the best job of his career keeping it all together. New GM Dan Duquette didn't built it himself but if he wasn't so nearly flawless with every trade, signing and claim, they don't win 93 games. Not with an even run differential.

Theirs was the best story in the majors all season, other than that of the Oakland Athletics, who also got snuffed out in the ALDS. The fairytale would have been Orioles-A's in the ALCS, with a Cinderella guaranteed for the World Series. The Yankees and Tigers are worthy, sure. Just a little less magical.

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Tags: baltimore orioles, , , eighth, , , Nate McLouth, Orioles Magic, , , ,
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Alex Rodriguez benched for ALDS Game 5

12 Oct
2012

Cue those "A-Benched!" headlines again because Alex Rodriguez is not in the New York Yankees starting lineup for Friday's ALDS Game 5 against the Baltimore Orioles.

Are you happy now, Donald Trump?

A-Rod will be replaced by Eric Chavez at third and he won't be the designated hitter because Game 3 hero Raul Ibanez is starting in that spot. Robinson Cano bats from the No. 3 spot, one night after Mark Teixeira displaced A-Rod from that position.

Joe Girardi told reporters that A-Rod is not injured and that the benching was strictly performance based. Orioles starter Jason Hammel is a righty and A-Rod has not performed well against righthanders all season.

"As I've talked about a little bit, it has been a struggle against the right-handers," Girardi told reporters. "(Chavez) has been a guy that we've played against a lot of right-handers and has been pretty successful, so it's a tough decision — there's no doubt about it, because of what he's meant to our club. But I just thought with the struggles that he's had, I'm going to go with Chavy. He said he's ready to help when he needs to help, and let's win today."

That means the $300 million man's only option to impact the game is through a pinch hit opportunity against a lefthander, even though Rodriguez was the one getting pinch hit for each of the last two contests. He's performed poorly the first four games of the series, going 2 for 16 with nine strikeouts and no extra base hits. His only spot in the highlights have come when he high-fived Raul Ibanez after the 40-year-old saved the Yankees in the ninth inning of Game 3 with a home run after pinch hitting for A-Rod.Still, to bench your $29 million player for the biggest game in your team's season? When he's still owed $114 million over the next five seasons? That's not just a small move of strategy by any means and would seem to indicate that the Yankees feel comfortable moving fullspeed ahead into the era of A-Rod just eating up dollars on the bench.

Then again, A-Rod could eat dollars at the plate while giving the Yankees a better chance to lose, so maybe it's not a hard decision at all.

"You can't think about that now," Girardi said of future ramifications. "You've got to think about winning a game. This is not June. This is October."

A-Rod actually owns some very impressive career numbers against Hammel, going 8-f0r-24 with four homers and four walks in 29 plate appearances. But his inability to get a solid swing on righthanded pitching these days would appear to make his previous success against Hammel a moot point.

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Tags: , baltimore orioles, , , , , Joe Girardi, , , Pinch, , Raul Ibanez
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Red contacts! Bryce Harper eyes different look

10 Oct
2012
by David Brown in Fantasy Baseball, General

Is Bryce Harper the newest cast member in those "Twilight" movies? Nope, he's still a ballplayer. He just has red eyes now. Harper came into Game 3 of the NLDS with one hit and six strikeouts in 10 at-bats. No, he hasn't been overanxious at the plate! Why do you ask? But he probably wanted to change something up in order to get going for the rest of the series.

Naturally, the 19-year-old phenom inserted red contact lenses Wednesday to cover up his naturally baby blue eyes.

These kids in Major League Baseball today, with their scary makeup, funny haircuts and red devil eyes! Would that nice boy Tim Tebow ever wear red devil eyes? No, he would not.

Well, he actually might, if it helped him see. Harper's lenses, as MLB Network reporter Sam Ryan and others pointed out, are tinted red in order to have a sunglasses-like effect. Nationals Park was awash in sunlight for the 1:07 p.m. ET first pitch, so it was as good of a time as any for Harper to go red. He's not only going for a Marilyn Manson shock effect here, people!

Harper started Game 3 by going 0 for 3, but he made solid contact and hit a deep fly in his first at-bat. He flied out in his second at-bat, too. Popped out for his third. Not ideal outcomes, but better than whiffing.

He's not the first pro athlete, or even baseball player, to wear tinted contacts. But he's Bryce Harper and Bryce Harper with red eyes makes for a compelling picture. As does this:

Josh Hamilton, Brandon Inge and Bronson Arroyo have tried the red-eye look, too. That's an impish grin on Inge, there.

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A-Rod’s struggles at plate hurting Yankees in ALDS (Yahoo! Sports)

09 Oct
2012

New York Yankees' Alex Rodriguez walks onto the field before Game 2 of the American League division baseball series against the Baltimore Orioles, Monday, Oct. 8, 2012, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

NEW YORK (AP) -- For all of his home runs, All-Star accolades and huge salaries, Alex Rodriguez finds himself in a most familiar spot this season.


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Greg Maddux’s tricky slide showed Ichiro the way back in ’93 (Video)

09 Oct
2012
by David Brown in Fantasy Baseball, General

Many who watched Ichiro make like Keanu Reeves in "The Matrix" with his "breakdancing" slide Monday night in Game 2 of the ALDS probably got a sense of déjà vu. TBS broadcaster John Smoltz was among them. But their mind wasn't playing tricks. They really had seen it before.

Nearly 20 years ago, Smoltz's teammate, pitcher Greg Maddux of the Atlanta Braves performed a similar dodge against the Pittsburgh Pirates. And Bucs catcher Don Slaught made the same mistake Orioles catcher Matt Wieters did: Rather than waiting at home for the runner to come to him, he chased Maddux all around home plate but didn't tag him until after he had scored.

In the Associated Press story published the following day, Pirates pitcher Bob Walk said he thought he was watching something out of the Stanley Cup playoffs:

"It looked like hockey. He's on a breakaway and he's trying to fake out the goaltender."

The date: May 5, 1993. The place: Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pa. It was the spring after Sid Bream's infamous slide in the NLCS narrowly eluded Mike LaValliere, sending the Braves back to the World Series and turning away the Pirates, who were only beginning the most frustrating period in modern team history. Stars such as Barry Bonds, Bobby Bonilla and Doug Drabek had left and the Bucs were on their way to the first of 20 straight sub-.500 seasons. Maddux and the Braves were actually struggling to stay at .500 themselves, but they'd figure it out, and head back to the playoffs/win the Cy Young anyway.

But they'd irritate the Pirates at least one more time.

With one out in the third inning of a scoreless game, Maddux reached on a single against Bob Walk and went to second on a grounder by Otis Nixon. Jeff Blauser followed with a line-drive single to center, and Maddux got a good jump before rounding third. Outfielder Andy Van Slyke came up throwing and fired to Slaught on the fly — but his throw was to the first-base side of home, putting Slaught in position of having to reach and dive to tag Maddux.

"I had nowhere to go. I wasn't ready to run him over and I wasn't ready to slide," Maddux said.

So he improvised, jumping over the tag attempt and making a U-turn before standing his ground momentarily. Then, like Deion Sanders returning a punt, Maddux juked to his right to avoid another lunge by "Sluggo" Slaught, who fell briefly to all fours. Seeing his chance, Maddux dived for the plate and slapped the upper-right-hand corner with the fingers on his left hand — on the arm closest to Slaught, who had gotten up to make one more fruitless lunge.

Maddux said he thought about playing it cool after his initial jump, but quickly determined a ruse wouldn't work.

"At first I thought, 'I'll just walk away and everyone will think I got the plate.' But Slaught knew, so I tried to [fake] him out."

Umpire Jeff Kellogg signaled safe, and Maddux can be seen exclaiming something like "Fun, yeah!" Slaught and Walk (who was standing over the plate, almost like an umpire, as this went down) pleaded, but they had been toasted by a base-running master. The Braves led 1-0, but they didn't score again and fell 4-1 to the Bucs.

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Tags: , Bob Walk, , Bucs catcher Don Slaught, , Greg Maddux, , Ichiro, John Smoltz, , , ,
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Ichiro’s ‘breakdance’ slide scores Yankees first run in ALDS Game 2 (Video)

08 Oct
2012
by David Brown in Fantasy Baseball, General

Those are some fly moves, Reachiro.

Ichiro Suzuki apparently felt like breakdancing on Monday night, and he showed off the most agile of moves to elude the tag of Matt Wieters at home plate. Ichiro's athleticism and creativity helped give the New York Yankees a 1-0 lead in the first inning of Game 2 of the ALDS.

Though New York would go on to lose the game 3-2 to the Baltimore Orioles, Ichiro's play still proved to be a memorable one. With two outs and Suzuki on first base, Robinson Cano lined a double into the right-field corner. Third-base coach Rob Thomson waved Ichiro around third but the relay — coming from outfielder Chris Davis, to infielder Robert Andino, to Wieters — was executed quickly. Ichiro would have been out by 20 feet had he given up.

But he did not give up.

"It's not something you can practice," Ichiro [told reporters] through a translator. "It's instinct, how you feel at that time. It's not always the speed that gets you in there." [...]

"Look at the size of me and the size of the catcher. I'd probably have to have some kind of weapon."

What's really impressive about the play is that Ichiro had the presence of mind to tag the plate with his right arm instead of the left. Had he gone with his left — which was actually closer to the plate — it likely would have collided with Wieters' mitt for the out.

[Yankees Derek Jeter and Nick Swisher angry with Maryland State troopers]

Instead, Ichiro pulled off the last in a series of sweet Matrix-type moves to get his team on the board. It was a lot like 1993, when a young Greg Maddux pulled off a similar set of moves to score a run against the Pittsburgh Pirates. (Watch that incredible slide here.)

Anyone else feel like breakdancing?

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Why does NASCAR need restrictor plates at superspeedways, anyway?

08 Oct
2012

Sunday featured another Talladega Big One, and just like clockwork, another round of columns questioning this kind of racing, and following that, a round of emails questioning why NASCAR doesn't take the restrictor plates off its cars and let 'em run wild at Talladega and Daytona.

Simple answer is this:

That's Bobby Allison at Talladega in the 1987 Winston 500, and but for a few bolts in a catch fence, that could be a video you'd be watching about how that old-timey racing sport called NASCAR ended once and for all. Allison's car got airborne and very well could have leaped the fence and taken out an entire swath of fans. It was at that point that NASCAR decided that 200+ mph speeds were just too much for these speedways to handle, and so began installing restrictor plates in cars to slow them down.

For those not familiar: The restrictor plate is a metal plate with holes in it designed to slow the airflow into the engine thereby reducing horsepower and speed. Depending on track conditions, NASCAR can mandate larger or smaller holes, but unrestricted airflow into engines at these superspeedways hasn't happened in decades. Restrictor plates aren't necessary at NASCAR's other tracks; either the tracks are too small or the banking not as severe to allow drivers to get up to the phenomenal speeds they do at Daytona and Talladega. The concern is primarily for the crowd's safety; drivers are well-protected and have already survived wrecks that would have been unthinkably catastrophic even a few years ago. (Of course, too much power at a track unable to handle it was a contributor to the death of IndyCar driver Dan Wheldon last year, though safety and equipment issues are different matters there than in NASCAR.)

Of course, the very concept of a "restrictor plate" seems to run counter to the idea of racing itself: speed without restriction. And for that reason, many fans loathe the idea of the plate. Turn 'em loose, right?

Also of note: the perpetual law of unintended consequences that constantly bedevils NASCAR. Cutting the top speed of the fastest cars brings those cars back toward the mean, which leads to the gargantuan pack racing that so many fans love. (The superspeedways even used the "return" of pack racing in promotions recently.) The problem is, when you've got 35 cars all packed into one space, and one at the front goes wrong, well ... we saw Sunday what happens then.

Complicating the pro-plate stance was a race that happened three years ago at Talladega, when Brad Keselowski clipped Carl Edwards in juuuust the right way to send Edwards airborne:

Everybody walked (or staggered) away from that one OK, right? (Although seven fans did get injured.) You can't prove a negative; you can't say that restrictor plates have kept cars on the ground all this time, particularly when circumstances clearly still exist that allow the cars to launch into the air.

But bottom line: Cutting the power to engines is the best way to keep the cars' speed down, and keeping speed down is the best way to keep the cars on the track and not in the stands. For that reason, the restrictor plate is here to stay. NASCAR would rather have a lot of angry live fans than a few he-sure-did-love-'Dega late ones.

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