Showing posts with label 1996 Yankees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1996 Yankees. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Curveballs for Jobu 4/5/2011

Curveballs for Jobu is Offbasepercentage's daily trip around the ballparks.

Today's honorary bat boy is Terry Shumpert.





Yankees 4, Twins 3. Maybe this Jorge Posada-to-DH thing is going to work out. Posada homered again - his third in four games - and Alex Rodriguez also hit a two-run home run in the Yanks' third win in four games. Rookie Ivan Nova, who won the No. 4 spot in the rotation, allowed three runs in six effective innings. Meanwhile, No. 1 and No. 2 hitters Brett Gardner and Derek Jeter have not been notified that the 2011 season has begun (0-for-7 Monday, 4-for-25 in four games).

Pirates 4, Cardinals 3. Pittsburgh: 3-1.

Rangers 4, Mariners 2. Nelson Cruz is enjoying himself so far. The right fielder hit his fourth home run in four Texas games, becoming the fourth player in history to accomplish that feat. The defending AL champs are 4-0,

4!

the best start for the franchise since a 7-0 start in 1996, which culminated in a 3-1 loss to the eventual world champion Yankees in the division series (great excuse to mention the '96 Yankees).

Braves 2, Brewers 1. Someone named Brandon Beachy struck out seven and allowed a run and four hits in six innings for the 3-1 Braves, while the Ueckers got Rickie Weeks' third home run in four games, but nothing else.


Other games, but down here...

Cubs 4, Arizona 1
Baltimore 5, Detroit 1

Friday, October 15, 2010

ALCS Preview: My Nightmare Scenario

The Yankees head to Texas tonight for game one of the ALCS against the Rangers and I can't get excited about it. I've been a member of the Rebel Alliance against the Evil Empire of the Yankees for some time and the Rangers just displaced my Halos from atop the AL West. I would have preferred any other two teams to be in the ALCS but I suppose this should remove any bias I have against either of these two teams. I tried to get Derwood to write this since he's the resident Yankees fan but he's busy writing a romantic sitcom called Yours and Miners for ABC. On to the preview!

Lineup
Surprise, surprise. The Yankees, with their quarter-billion dollar infield, led the American League in WAR (32.7), wOBA (.346) and OBP (.350). Robbie Cano put together an MVP caliber season finishing in the top ten in WAR (6.4) and wOBA (.389) and they had five players hit 24 or more home runs. Derek Jeter didn't provide much help posting a .270/.340/.370 over the regular season. But of course, this is the playoffs now and Jeter is the clutchiest clutch who has ever clutched.

The Rangers finished in the middle of the pack in WAR (25.3), fifth in wOBA and fourth in OBP (.338). Josh Hamilton led the way with his MVP season finishing first in WAR (8.0) and wOBA (.447) even though he missed the final month of the season. His health is still a question mark and if he can't hit, the Rangers can't win. Nelson Cruz and Ian Kinsler were red hot in the Division Series and need to stay that way for the Rangers to have a chance.

Advantage: Yankees

Pitching
The Yankees have some question marks after CC Sabathia. The round mound of the, um, mound (should have thought that one out first) pitched a 3.18/3.54/3.78 (ERA/FIP/xFIP) line for a 5.1 WAR and will garner some CY Young attention due to his shiny 21-7 record. Phil Hughes will get the game two start followed by Andy Pettitte in game three. Neither starter posted a WAR over 2.5. The bullpen was up and down this year but Kerry Wood and Joba Chamberlain have strikeout the side potential. Somebody told me their closer is pretty good but I'm too lazy to look it up.

Cliff Lee led the AL in WAR (7.0) and FIP (2.58) but had to pitch the fifth game of the DS and won't be available until game three. That leaves C.J. Wilson and Colby Lewis to start the first two games. Both pitchers were pleasant surprises and part of the reason the Rangers won the West. They also put up identical 4.4 WARs. The Rangers bullpen is deep and good. Darren Oliver and Darren O'Day (both former Angels *sigh*) have been outstanding and they'll also have lefty starter Derek Holland available for relief. Neftali Feliz finished with a higher WAR (1.8) than Mariano Rivera (1.7). That's basically a wash and, of course, Rivera is better than Feliz but it does mean that Feliz has been pretty damn good.

Advantage: Can't believe I'm typing this, Rangers.

Prediction
This has already gone about 200 words longer than I expected so I'm not going to get into Ron Washington's bullpen management or Joe Girardi's receding hairline. With Cliff Lee only making one start, the Rangers are in big trouble of getting out-slugged. I think Wilson or Lewis might steal one though. Yankees in 6.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

In Appreciation of Jimmy Key

I started thinking about the 1996 World Series team again tonight. I do that about 700 times a week. I started with Jim Leyritz and Andy Pettitte, then moved on to John Wetteland and Bernie Williams and Mariano. I even popped in the DVDs of game four of the Series and watched Graeme Lloyd's heroics against Atlanta and Mariano Duncan's hit in game three of the Division Series against Texas before I even got around to remembering one of the forgotten heroes that year: Jimmy Key.



The left-hander had one of his worst regular seasons in '96, but the post-season was a different story. He allowed four earned runs in six innings in a game two we had no chance of winning because Greg Maddux was his usual ridiculous/nerdy self (8 IP, 6 H, 0 R). But Key was the winning pitcher in game six, the greatest night of my life, and he also pitched eight fantastic innings and was the winner in a very important game three of the ALCS against Baltimore, or what I like to call The Todd Zeile Game.

Overall, Key's four-year career in the Bronx was quite good. He would've been the winning pitcher in the clinching game four of the 1994 World Series against Montreal, but that series never happened. In 1993 he had a 3.00 ERA and a 1.10 WHIP for a Yankees team that hung around until the final two weeks in the East race with eventual two-time world champion Toronto.

Most importantly, he made us forget about Scott Kamieniecki.

Anyway, with all the 1996 reminiscing, and the re-realization (not a word) that Key was one of the main cogs in the Yanks resurgence in the mid-1990s as a playoff mainstay, I decided to spend 45 minutes at baseball reference and look at the southpaw's career numbers. I came up with one irrefutable fact: he was no Dave Lapoint.

Key actually saved 10 games for Toronto as a 23-year old rookie for Toronto in 1984 before moving to the rotation for good in '85. From that East-winning Bluejays season until '94, he put together some fantastic seasons:

* In 1987, one of the biggest offensive seasons of the post-mound lowering era, Key led the AL in ERA (2.76), WHIP (1.05) and ERA+ (164).

* He had a three-year stretch from 1988-1991 where he walked 123 batters in 711 1/3 innings pitched, which is close to a walk every six innings.

* In the 1992 World Series win against Atlanta, Key gave the Jays a 3-1 series lead with a 7 2/3 IP, 5 H, 1 ER, 6 K, 0 BB line in game four, then won the clinching game six with 1 1/3 innings of one-unearned run ball.

* During the '96 run, earned the nickname "Jimmy Lock and Key" from my mother. This was the same woman that coined the nickname "Roberto Kelly Terrible and Without Plate Discipline".

Key's career statistics - 186-117, 3.51 ERA, 1.22 WHIP, 122 ERA+, 45.7 WAR in 15 seasons - are very good. For me, and millions of other Yankees fans, we'll remember the lefty as a guy who just shut the hell up and pitched. Sometimes it went well, sometimes it went Jeff Weaver. But it almost never went Dave Lapoint.