"28 in 2010" is the newfound battle cry of the resurgent Yankee dynasty.
However, "27 since 2007" might be a more meaningful one this week.
Just 28 months ago, on a Wednesday evening at the team's Legends Field training complex in Tampa, George Steinbrenner gathered his two sons, team president Randy Levine, Brian Cashman, and several others around him for a salary discussion requested by a leading member of the Yankee team that had won 10 AL East titles and four World Series in 12 years.
Coming off a $19.2 million, three-year contract ...
Newsday ran down a list of Nick Johnson ’s injuries that he’s incurred over his career. I’m not going to copy that list word for word exactly, but they should get all the credit for this post.
I just think they way they laid it out was poor and the information is just wrong in one instance (they said he was injured in his second game of the season in 2009 after he had already played in 111 games?), so I thought I’d clean it up for you.
2000 – Strained muscle ...
According to Joel Sherman of the NY Post, in an effort to salvage even a little bit of the $46 million they invested in him, the Yankees will use Kei Igawa strictly as a left-handed reliever in spring training and could even use him in that spot once the season starts, even if he’s in the minor leagues.
The Yankees have to do something with Igawa. After paying a $26 million posting fee, the Yankees signed him to a five-year, $20 million contract and so far they’ve only gotten 71.2 bad ...
As most of you know by now, the Yankees moved into a brand new stadium last season. The old Yankee Stadium is being torn down to make way for a large park that is expected to include baseball fields, a track, tennis courts, and more. Only one gate remains from the original 1923 Yankee Stadium. That gate is Gate 2. Yankee Stadium is currently being torn down and Gate 2 is expected to go with it.
See what you can do to save it!
See the touching video and more ...
The game of baseball has been around since the 1800s but in the 1980s, a new way to play America’s favorite game was invented. 1985 saw the release of the Nintendo Entertainment System, an 8-bit way for kids to have fun. Many games were released for the gaming console, the most famous probably being Super Mario Brothers.
After the NES there was the Sega Genesis, the Super Nintendo, the Playstation, the Nintendo 64, Playstation 2, Game Cube, and Xbox…and the list goes on and on and on.
With these new gaming ...
As Mark Teixeira grabbed the last out of the 2009 regular season, I screamed and applauded vigorously. As a lifelong Yankee fan, I have been spoiled by five championships and seven pennants in my lifetime. I got up early the next morning to buy my overpriced championship merchendise and I thought to myself "now what?" That was an easy question: "Gear up for a repeat!"
Months later, I am impressed and delighted by the moves the Yankees have pulled off. Brian Cashman spent money carefully and intelligently. Sure he didn't get Roy ...
Welcome to the 11th edition of "Daily Random Sports Thoughts!"
For those not familiar, I pick a team, player, or any other topic in sports that I have five random thoughts about. I'm trying to get an article on here every day.
Today's lucky random sports topic is—Johnny Damon.
1) Congrats on finally signing with a team! It's a shame you didn't come back to the Yankees, with that great "lefty-pull" park, but congrats on becoming the newest Tiger!
2) But seriously, you were thinking about the Tigers even after you left the Red Sox? ...
Glen Bheck was so happy that he couldn't believe it.
At the end of play on Sept. 5, 1966, the New York Yankees were eliminated from the pennant race. It was the earliest this wonderful event had occurred since 1925.
Sixth-Place Yankees
I suffered so much. Oh, how much I suffered. I started watching baseball in the early 1950s, and almost invariably, the New York Yankees won, or at least were in, the World Series.
Finally, after winning five consecutive pennants, but only two World Championships, the Yankees finished sixth ...
Did the New York Yankees' reluctance to give Johnny Damon two years deal reflect something about their love for free agent to be Carl Crawford? According to Jon Heyman, the answer is yes.
One reason the Yankees were reluctant to go for a two-year deal for Johnny Damon might have had little to do with Damon and been a greater reflection of what they think of Carl Crawford. The Yankees love him. Crawford is almost sure to be too rich for the low-revenue Rays and the Yankees jump to the head ...
This is a great video that really shows off the Old Yankee Stadium in a dramatic way. It’s really moving and it makes you realize what’s at stake—the Old Stadium is coming down and they’re not planning on saving any of it.
I hate to go all cause-head on you, but you should watch this video and give a moment of your time to the Save the Yankee Gate 2 cause. It’s a group trying to preserve a small part of the stadium that still exists from when they first built ...