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Volume 17 August/September
2004 - Scoreboard Theme -
Email:
TheHighlander
Voyage to the Bottom
Email: Dan McCourt
Website: Take Him
Downtown
Another huge crowd at
Yankee Stadium was
"treated" to a strange sight, something
never witnessed there before, on a Tuesday
night a few weeks ago, but it was not a
joyful apparition. While nine New York
batters went down meekly on just 36
pitches to ex-Yank Jake Westbrook through
three, 21 Indians batters had already
fashioned a 9-0 lead on totally
ineffective Yankee starter Javier Vazquez
and Tanyon Sturtze in relief.
Fans felt a sigh of relief
when Sturtze retired the visitors in order
in the fourth after three consecutive
three-run frames, but the Indians were
just taking a breather. Cleveland added
six runs in both the fifth and the ninth,
and set records in shutting out the
Yankees 22-0 on 22 hits and nine walks.
One day before teams would be able to
expand their rosters, Joe Torre used lefty
C.J. Nitkowski and new bullpenner Esteban
Loaiza after Vazquez and Sturtze to stitch
together nine ineffective innings. With
all the threes and sixes plastered over
the board (and zeroes for the Yankees),
the singleton the Tribe plated off
Nitkowski in the sixth had the effect of
ruining a fine pattern.
On the visiting side, with
no pressure early Westbrook was golden.
The five K's (just one swinging) he
notched matched the number of Yankee hits
off him through seven. He and home plate
ump C.B. Bucknor were on the same page all
night as Jake garnered a very high 26
called strikes while coaxing the Yanks to
swing and miss just two times.
Offensively, Travis Hafner
tripled with the sacks filled in the first
to start the ball rolling and knocked in
four on the night. Coco Crisp, Jody Gerut,
and Victor Martinez homered, though the
last two plated six in the ninth after the
score was already 16-0. Omar Vizguel went
6-for-7 with four rbi's and three runs
scored, and had a chance to tie the major
league record 7-for-7 until he popped to
Lofton in right in the ninth.
The Yankee offense
consisted of Gary Sheffield and Hideki
Matsui doubles, and singles from Miguel
Cairo, Alex Rodriguez, and John Olerud.
Ironically, the Bombers bunched two each
in two different frames, but the only real
scoring chance was lost when Matsui was
caught off second when Westbrook bobbled
Posada's comebacker for the only official
error of the game.
And therein lies a tale as
well. It is hard to imagine that with what
he showed Vazquez could have done any
better this evening, but Miguel Cairo made
a pivotal and unfortunate early decision
that affected the outcome. Cairo opted to
wheel and try for Omar Vizguel at second
with one down in the first on Lawton's
hard grounder into the hole. When the
throw short-hopped Jeter as Vizguel
barreled in, the fielder's choice (the
official ruling) had the doubly bad effect
of costing the Yanks and Javy an out, and
placing one more guy on base when Haffner
came up after Martinez walked.
When the realization that
no comeback was coming settled in, many
drifted toward the exits, but some stuck
around, realizing the historical
significance of the evening.
And things continued from there. It is not
certain that Bernie Williams could have
caught up with Belliard's hard double to
dead center on Vazquez's first pitch of
the second. Calling Bernie's pursuit a
"bad break" would be charitable; he simply
did not look ready. Lofton's failure to
reach Vizguel's two-run double in the
third was a bad break, however, a slow and
indecisive one, as was his failure to make
a throw on Crisp's single the batter
before. But perhaps most emblematic of the
night's frustrations was Nitkowski's brain
lock on Haffner's roller up the first base
line in the six-run fifth. C.J. probably
could have gotten Travis out; he certainly
could have prevented the ball from rolling
back fair. He did neither, watching the
home plate ump as Haffner reached safely
and Olerud prevented Vizguel from scoring.
But only temporarily, as the rattled
Nitkowski proceed to walk in a run and
allowed a two-run single before getting
the third out.
But this one really
belongs on the pitchers, and on what they
did with their arms, not their gloves.
Both Vazquez and Nitkowski threw 41
pitches, with the starter getting four
outs on that, and C.J. five. Sturtze
allowed seven runs on 61 tosses through
three innings, while Loaiza actually
righted things a bit by blanking Cleveland
in both the seventh and eighth. But it
took 10 batters for Esteban to negotiate
that, and what he experienced in the ninth
is the same problems he has had with teams
when he has started. When they saw him a
second time, they lit him up, extending
him to 74 pitches through his three, and
stroking two three-run bombs in the
ninth.
On July 24, 1999 (six days
after David Cone's Perfect Game), the
Yanks manhandled Cleveland's Mark Langston
and three relievers on a Saturday
afternoon in Yankee Stadium, as Hideki
Irabu went seven in a 21-1 Yankee win. The
home team accumulated 21 hits to compile
that score, and the Indians used 22 this
night to plate 22. But aside from the one
run the losers scored five years ago,
there was another difference. Westbrook
threw 98 pitches to go seven this 2004
night; Irabu an even 100 to go the same
distance in 1999. Similar numbers there.
But when all was said and done, the
Yankees threw 141 pitches to the Indians'
186 in 1999 (with Ed Yarnall struggling
through two scoreless frames). On this
August 31 (less than a month ago),
Westbrook combined with Jimmy Guthrie to
throw 124. The four Yankee hurlers
out-counted them by a hefty 93 pitches. In
short, from a Yankee fan perspective, the
game was just as ugly as the score.
An almost full house
greeted the Yanks back from their road
trip, and they were excited and happy on a
gorgeous night in the Bronx after days of
hot and steamy weather. Once things went
south early, they pleaded with the Yanks
to turn it around for a time, before going
into heavy "Boo"ing mode. But this too did
not last. When the realization that no
comeback was coming settled in, many
drifted toward the exits, but some stuck
around, realizing the historical
significance of the evening. I had read
recently that the 15-0 White Sox shutout
of the Bombers in 1950, matching one by
the same franchise against the Highlanders
45 years earlier, was the worst Yankee
shutout score ever. So as two friends
drifted past during a 16-0 seventh inning,
I advised them that if the Yanks did not
score they would be present at the
Bombers' worst-ever shutout; they
immediately wheeled and returned to their
seats. Undeniably, there was a palpable
sense of that history among the fans that
stayed to the end.
And history is what they
got. Ninety years ago that day, the actor
Richard Basehart was born. Among other
credits, Basehart starred in the hokie TV
adventure series Voyage to the Bottom of
the Sea almost 40 years ago. Facing sea
serpents, extraterrestrials, and human
malefactors, Basehart as the Admiral would
turn to David Hedison playing the Captain
each week and invariably say, "Take her,
down, Captain."
He could have delivered
that same line to Manager Joe Torre and
Captain Derek Jeter on August 31.
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