Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Why People Hate The New York Yankees

"It's just disheartening. It's spring training. I just don't understand. I told all my players to play hard, but when you do something like that you take your chances that you will get someone hurt."

That's what new, New York Yankees manager Joe Girardi said four days ago after a play at the plate where Tampa Bay second baseman Elliot Johnson plowed into Yankees' catcher Francisco Cervelli in the 9th inning (starters no longer in the game), breaking Cervelli's wrist and sidelining him 8-10 weeks in the process. If you've never heard of Johnson or Cervelli before, there's good reason. Combined, they have zero at-bats in the bigs. Johnson just turned 24 and Cervelli just turned 22. Neither were expected to make the team's opening day rosters.

Don Zimmer immediately responded to Girardi's comments, saying they sounded un-Girardi-like.

"You block the plate. If I slide into him and break a leg, nothing is said. Instead of breaking my leg, I bowl him over and it's not the right play? Well, to me it is the right play, spring training, or no spring training. Play the game the right way. To me, our kid played it the way he thought it was right, and I think it was right," Zim said.

And Zimmer is right, especially considering what the Rays are trying to do- have their first winning season in franchise history. You don't accomplish that by letting Girardi's message of "play hard some of the time, just don't get hurt" be your organizational mantra. The Rays don't have New York's history, talent, or budget, so they're going to have to play hard to win. Johnson is trying to make a good impression on his organization by being gritty. Not dirty, gritty. There's a difference. And for that matter, Cervelli was trying to be gritty too, by blocking the plate. Obviously Johnson wasn't trying to break Cervelli's wrist, but that's what happens sometimes when a catcher blocks the plate.

Nevertheless Girardi said there wasn't any bad blood between the two AL East clubs. But it now appears he may come in a close second to former Governor Eliot Spitzer for the title of Biggest Hypocrite in New York.

This was the scene Wednesday in the second inning (mind you, less than 10 outs from the first pitch, starters still playing). Despite being warned before the game, Yankee hurler Heath Phillips (not a candidate for the rotation) drilled Rays' top prospect Evan Longoria with a pitch (the projected opening day third baseman). Phillips was ejected and both dugouts were warned again, but apparently Shelley Duncan (and Girardi, perhaps) didn't get the message, because Duncan went spikes-up into Rays' infielder Akinori Iwamura (another starter). Duncan was ejected, then tackled by Jonny Gomes who came racing in from right field and both benches emptied.

Duncan hinted he was going to do something meat-headed or dirty (not gritty) right after the collision at home a few days ago.

"They showed what is acceptable to them and how they're going to play the game, so we're going to go out there to match their intensity, or even exceed it," he told reporters after Cervelli-gate.


What his quote basically says is, "we're going to exceed their intensity by playing dirty."


A gritty player doesn't need to tell everyone how hard he's going to play, because he just goes out and does it. But that's not what Duncan did because he's a non-starter, goon. He's 6'6'', 225 pounds, 28 years old, and has 74 career at-bats in the majors. If he gets hurt it doesn't matter. So he either took it upon himself to avenge a guy whose name he probably didn't know a month ago, or he was sent in to do his manager's dirty work.

The biggest problem I have here is the fact that Duncan, Girardi, or both, specifically targeted Tampa's starters- Iwamura and Longoria. It wasn't Jorge Posada who got plowed into four days ago. It was a guy who was going to be in high-A ball. That's playing dirty and trying to injure half of Tampa's starting infield.


Collisions at the plate are part of the game. They happen. Nobody scripts them out ahead of time. And in most cases, nobody involved in one does so with malicious intent. A runner wants to score, a catcher wants to tag him out. But throwing at people and going in spikes-high...those actions are just the opposite. They're premeditated, malicious, and dirty.

Thankfully, nobody got hurt during today's exchanges and no punches were thrown. But it will be interesting to see if the Yankees continue to be as petty as they've been so far when these teams hook up in the regular season, April 4 in the Bronx. It was also be interesting to see if Tampa decides to retaliate a little higher up the totem pole...i.e. against one of the Yankees' starters, not Shelley Duncan.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Giradi should be fined. A lot. As much as is needed to make an impression with the yankees. 10,000? probably not going to do it. maybe 100,000 might make them wake up a little.

Unknown said...

If Joe Backup 2B plows into John Backup C in three weeks in a double-A game and breaks his wrist, nobody thinks anything of it.

F Joe Girardi. How many opportunities is the Rays guy going to get to play in front of the big-league manager. Might as well prove that he knows how to play the game right when he gets a chance.

And the C for the Yankees had no issue with the play last week. He (correctly) came out and said that he was blocking the plate, and the Rays' runner did what he had to do.

In all likelihood, the Yankees are going to need every W possible to get into the playoffs ahead of the Tigers and Indians (for the WC) and the Red Sox (for the Div). So Girardi went and pissed off a team that they play 19 games against. And those W's won't likely many as much to the rays as they will to the Yanks. So when Johnny Gomes makes an overly aggressive slide into Jeter on a DP in May, and breaks Jeter's ankle, Girardi will have to face the fact that he started this mess, and now he's out a HoF SS for two months.

Eric said...

I pretty much agree that the play at the plate was not a dirty play, and that Shelley Duncan is retarded, but I'm going to have to disagree with you on one point: this has absolutely nothing to do with why people hate the Yankees. People hate the Yankees because they win, a lot, and have a lot of money to spend. It has nothing to do with dirty play. Dirty play has never been attributed to the Yankees, in fact Joe Torre was often criticized for being to laid back in this regard. Check out the HBP leaderboard for the last few years and see how many times Jeter, ARod, and Giambi show up. Think about how many times the Red Sox plunked Jeter and ARod and how many times Manny or Ortiz have been hit in comparison.

Also if this entire scenario happened between the Padres and Diamondbacks last week or the Indians and Royals would it have been a story? I doubt it, it would've gotten 60 seconds at the end of Sportscenter and then been completely forgotten the next day and you probably wouldn't even have bothered to write a post about it on your blog . I'm not saying that the Yankees do everything perfect and are the shining beacon of how a baseball team should be run, but sometimes I can't help but think that a pretty high percentage of the negative things written about the team are based on a predisposed bias and not on the gravity of the particular event. Of course I'm pretty biased in the other direction so who really knows.