MLB 2009 Part 3

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Martha - PM me if you need anything. I know the Phillies inside and out, and can summarize anything he needs to know as a quick pointer thing.

When the series comes up, if the Phils are in it, I can tell you who will be pitching the two games he'll be in town for as well as a couple of basic things about the lineup that are easy money in conversation. Also, if you don't PM me, Charlie Manuel is the manager and is frequently questioned for things like pulling Pedro Martinez after seven shutout innings with only 87 pitches.
 
Wow. Rivera just destroyed the Angels' top of the lineup.
 
Nice to see the Angels save all their fail for the Yankees.

No, I'm not bitter.
 
Utley needs to turn a couple double plays. Then all will be right with the world.
 
I always hated Bobby Abreu. If someone on Anaheim had to fuck up, I'm glad it's him.
 
Yeah, that was too bad. You can't be walkin Matt Stairs like that. I know he hit a homer off you last year, Broxton, but come on...it's Matt Stairs. Go after him.
 
The crowd watching the game on TV was going so nuts I missed Caray's call, but upon further review he did not disappoint. He said, "Here's the throw to the plate. It's not in time!"

There was no throw to the plate.
 
So Joe Girardi, um well, wow.

this isn't new... he's been doing this all season. the team has just been good enough to counter his idiocy.

need we remember his failure to double switch against the mets in the june sunday night game that resulted in mariano rivera having to either bat or be pinch hit for...

the absolute idiocy of that particular move was lost in the extreme futility of the mets actually walking mo and letting the yankees off the hook... but let us not forget how dumb girardi really is.
 
I don't think Girardi realizes that when you take a guy out of the game, you can't put him back in.
 
he still thinks it's beer league.

and speaking of beer league...
Jim Leyritz, nicknamed "The King" during his glory days with the Yankees, hardly looked like pinstriped royalty in the hours leading up to ALCS Game 2 last night.

Tino Martinez, his former teammate, was scheduled to throw out the ceremonial first pitch, as David Cone did before Friday's Game 1. If not for Leyritz, who smacked one of the most memorable home runs in Yankees history, neither would have a 1996 World Series ring like the one Leyritz wore on his left hand yesterday.

But Leyritz can't get into Yankee Stadium without a ticket now as he awaits his January trial for DUI manslaughter. As the teams took batting practice yesterday, he was seated at a folding table in front of Stan's Sports World under the elevated tracks on River Avenue.

On his left was Mickey Rivers, the other half of the two-man autograph show, and business was pretty good. It needs to be for Leyritz, who made nearly $11 million during his 10-year baseball career but now is struggling to support his three boys and pay significant legal fees.

Leyritz posed for $5 snapshots and charged $25 for a signed photo of his 1996 Game 4 home run against the Braves and up to $40 for an autographed baseball with a personalized message.

Two men - one wearing a No. 42 jersey and the other a No. 2 - eagerly slapped down a wad of bills for the glossy photo of Leyritz watching the flight of his three-run home run off the Braves' Mark Wohlers. The Yankees trailed two games to one in the Series and were down 6-0 after five innings in Game 4, but Leyritz's eighth-inning homer tied the score at 6 in a game the Yankees won in 10 innings, 8-6.

"This was the start of the dynasty," the man said, slamming his hand down on the table. "Right here."

Leyritz smiled, then posed with a couple of kids, letting them hold his World Series ring for the photo. A passing police officer reached out to shake his hand, saying, "Hang in there." Another in an FDNY sweatshirt added, "Be strong." Many did a double-take, surprised that it was actually him.

"I think a lot of people are hesitant because of the situation," Leyritz said. "But I need to pay for the roof over my kids' heads. It's gone on for two years. I haven't been able to work. I haven't been able to do anything. I have custody of my three kids, and I have to provide a house and a home for them. Whatever I can do to make money, that's what I'm doing."

Leyritz went from Yankees legend to shunned outcast in December 2007, when prosecutors in Broward County, Fla., say he ran a red light, allegedly under the influence of alcohol, and crashed into the car of Fredia Veitch, a 30-year-old mother of two, killing her.

Leyritz says he believes recent developments in the case are working in his favor. "There's a lot of things that are happening that slowly picks the case apart," he said.

The fans who stopped by to see Leyritz didn't seem to care either way. He remains frozen in their memories for that World Series homer. There was no mention of his serious legal problems - Leyritz faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted of the charges - other than to wish him luck.

Cardboard signs taped to the steel subway posts advertised that Leyritz was scheduled to appear from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Afterward, he was headed inside the Stadium to watch the game - as a fan.
 
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Somehow I think that a pitcher who wants to doctor the ball would choose a method far less obvious than spitting directly on the ball in the open, but the video is hilarious nonetheless.
 
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