ESPN’s slant on the Yankees is historic and gets under the
skin of every Yankee fan out there. We all see the allegiance it’s people
have against the Yankees in their subtle way and has for years. It’s surprising that even the New York
based guys fall into the trap, but I guess when you get paid by the devil, you
do their dirty work too. Can I fault them? No, but I understand them and you
should too.
Big headline today in ESPN.com titled Pressure could pop Girardi out of NY. Yankee fans don't need to read that kind of headline, in fact, you don’t even need to read it, Ill tell you what it said. In a nutshell, it’s not about the pressure that
will bounce Joe Girardi out of New York, it’s whether or not the Yankees are going to be champs
in 2013, that will determine whether or not Girardi comes back as manager after his contract is up... something every Yankee fan already knows.
The Yankees are winners and for the longest time we have all
seen great seasons where everything works right and then there are years like
2012 where they grind it out with busted ankles and losing streaks and holes in
their bats. Sometimes the planets don’t align the Yankees way. And let’s be frank as to not think that this
problem is contained to ONLY the Yankees; sometimes that happens to every team
at one point or another. To isolate that
to just the New York Yankees is ridiculous.
Boston Red Sox anyone?
Joe Girardi said it best in Wally Matthews’ piece when he was asked about whether or not he feels pressure going into 2013 knowing it’s the last year of his 3 year deal: “No. The pressure, as you can see, I put on myself, because I expect us to win everyday, and as you know, I get alittle grouchy when we don’t, so that’s probably not going to change whether I have a contract or not.” He’s right, I mean, let’s face it, if Joe and the Yankees don’t win in 2013, Joe may not come back as manager and he may go home a millionaire anyway, but is it really "pressure?" Not exactly. Sure, you want to succeed and I actually give Girardi a lot of credit if you think about it. The Yankees were riddled with injury, riddled with re-shuffling the lineup and juggling the pitching…sometimes too much, but we all know the guy's got balls and that stems from his playing days. He’s a competitor and deserves more credit than he’s gotten.
Joe Girardi said it best in Wally Matthews’ piece when he was asked about whether or not he feels pressure going into 2013 knowing it’s the last year of his 3 year deal: “No. The pressure, as you can see, I put on myself, because I expect us to win everyday, and as you know, I get alittle grouchy when we don’t, so that’s probably not going to change whether I have a contract or not.” He’s right, I mean, let’s face it, if Joe and the Yankees don’t win in 2013, Joe may not come back as manager and he may go home a millionaire anyway, but is it really "pressure?" Not exactly. Sure, you want to succeed and I actually give Girardi a lot of credit if you think about it. The Yankees were riddled with injury, riddled with re-shuffling the lineup and juggling the pitching…sometimes too much, but we all know the guy's got balls and that stems from his playing days. He’s a competitor and deserves more credit than he’s gotten.
Look, my feeling is this; the only “pressure” every manager has is trying to win the
whole thing, that goes for Bruce Bochy and Jim Leyland. Look at Davey Johnson and the
Washington Nationals. Are you going to
tell me that not having Stephen Strasburg in the rotation didn’t matter in
their demise this playoff? Well, it did matter, because most likely that’s one
more win under their belt, maybe 2 if they have momentum after a Strasberg win. That didn't happen and they had an amazing season and lost worse than if they were actually going all the way. That's my opinion of course. That's pressure. Sure,
there’s no way of truly knowing ,but is Strasberg is available, I’m playing the
odds.
Sure, the same could be said about our K-4, Curtis Granderson, Nick Swisher, Robinson Cano and Alex Rodriguez. I play those odds and I put them in the lineup because they are big money guys that are true talents… They crapped the bed, but how do you not bet on them in big situations? The point is Joe Girardi did what he could with the lineup he had and benching all of them would have been stupid, so he benched who he could based on performance, it didn’t work but Joe Girardi isn’t swinging their bats for them, they are and they sucked at it.
Sure, the same could be said about our K-4, Curtis Granderson, Nick Swisher, Robinson Cano and Alex Rodriguez. I play those odds and I put them in the lineup because they are big money guys that are true talents… They crapped the bed, but how do you not bet on them in big situations? The point is Joe Girardi did what he could with the lineup he had and benching all of them would have been stupid, so he benched who he could based on performance, it didn’t work but Joe Girardi isn’t swinging their bats for them, they are and they sucked at it.
In the end, there’s pressure in New York, big pressure. I learned nothing
from Wally’s piece and neither will you, but I did appreciate hearing that Joe
Girardi wants to win and feels bad when he loses. We didn’t always see that passion on the
field in the playoffs this fall. Nick
Swisher was smiling alittle too much after his horrible performance and I didn’t
need to see Robinson Cano playing with his gum in the dugout. That kind of stuff in a pennant race sucks to
see if you’re a fan.
So now we officially close the book on 2012 and look toward
2013. A season that will hopefully have
a healthy CC Sabathia, Derek Jeter and I'm almost certain that there will be a 43 year old Mariano Rivera, there, who, I suspect has unfinished business and still wants to get out there for 1
more shot at a championship. Andy Pettitte? I would suspect he will come back and hey, the rest of the gang will be
there too, including Alex Rodriguez. Whether
you like it or not, our 3rd baseman isn’t leaving New York. I just
don’t see it. So, when the gang gets together next Spring, Girardi will be out
there ready to win, and I will be in the front row rooting him on, and feeling
the pressure to win, just like him, except he HAS to win. I get to walk away
and take a deep breath if they don’t.
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