Monday, September 27, 2010

Closers Blow It But the Yankees Still Win


The Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees meet up for an interesting extra inning matchup. In a game where both closers receive blown saves but the Red Sox fall short 4-3.

It looked to be a great night for the Red Sox as they came into the game with a chance to go for the sweep. The Red Sox came out in the third inning with an early one run lead with a Victor Martinez RBI to right field which allowed Bill Hall to run home.

Red Sox starting pitcher Daisuke Matsuzaka came out with one of his best outcomes of the season. He pitched 8.0 innings giving up four hits, seven strike outs, one walk and a two run homer to Alex Rodriguez in the seventh inning. To give the Yankees a 2-1 lead.

While the Yankees give Phil Hughes the start in a game in which he was going to be skipped. Hughes had a decent game with 6.0 innings pitched, three hits, four walks and one earned run.

The Red Sox forced the Yankees to bring out there closer Mariano Rivera to come in the eighth inning for a quick out, but the ninth wasn’t a normal outing for Rivera as he allowed four key walks. Two walks to Kalish and Two walks for Hall, both of which would lead to two runs scored to give the Sox a one run lead going in to the bottom of the ninth and his fifth blown save.

With a one run lead the Red Sox bring out Jonathan Papelbon to come in and get the save and give Matsuzaka his 10th win of the season but he would blow it for his eighth blown save. He would give up a run to Eduardo Nunez on a Robinson Cano RBI.
With the game being tied 3 all going in to the bottom of the tenth inning, Sox bring Hideki Okajima who would give up a bases loaded walk-off walk to Marcus Thames which would lead to a Juan Miranda run for a 4-3 victory.

Winning pitcher for the Yankees is Logan (2-0) and Okajima (4-4) would receive the L.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Remembering Nine Years Later


I feel today is a day to take a break from sports talk and talk about the importance of today. Take time to remember and honor those who lost their lives in the 9/11 attacks that happened 9 years ago today. As many we remember where we were on that day, I will never forget. I was seating in my high school freshman English class on the front row, I was supposed to reading the book To Kill a Mocking Bird but I had dozed off when my teacher gets off the phone and runs to put the television on and screams the World Trade Center has been hit by a plane. I can remember being confused about what was happening and scared of what this would bring for our future as a country. I can remember being glued to the television and seeing the rest of the horrible acts that happened throughout the rest of the day including the attacks on the pentagon and the bravery of flight 93. To this day I still think about it daily as we see our troops fighting the war against terrorism and how it has affected our country and still does daily.

I remember how as a country we joined together and united for the common good of our country, that we wasn’t republicans or democrats but that we was Americans. This was an important scene to show our enemy that no matter what they do to us we will remain strong and join together. An important image I can remember is when former President George W. Bush went to visit ground zero and spoke with the volunteers that were helping find survivors it was an important image for our country. He spoke through a bull horn so everyone could hear this image will always stick with me as well as this one line he said.

“I can hear you! I can hear you! The rest of the world hears you! And the people—and the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon!”

All important events were put on hold including sports in fear of another attack to our citizens but we found out that sports are important to hold us together. An important day to our country was on Sept. 18, 2001 one week after the attacks on America, the New York Yankees took the field against the Chicago White Sox. The people was excited to be getting back to normal why the players had no idea why they was about to take the field.

“When we started playing, I didn’t see the sense of it.” New York Yankee Bernie Williams said. “We were playing games and resuming our season, and it seemed ridiculous to me”

“It started making sense when I saw the faces of people who lost loved ones, people who needed something to take them away for a few minutes and see something else,” he added. “We helped bring some sense of normalcy to the whole thing.”

The people of this country needed something to be excited about even if it is sports, it gives us something to look forward to and it was something to heal the city of New York. When the Yankees took the field that night they wasn’t representing the team the was representing the city and they didn’t wear their traditional NY hat they had on NYPD and NYFD hats in honor of the men and women who gave their lives to help and those who was still working to find survivors at ground zero. I recall watching this game not thinking the Yankees are killing the Red Sox in the division, I was thinking of the pride this meant for the city of New York to rise about this day but not forget about what happened to show that you can blow up one of our building but you cannot kill our spirit. We as Americans needed a distraction that sports were able to give us. We used sports to not only help us think about something other than the loss of our countrymen but as a way of honoring the people who died and saying that they did not die in vain.

The acts of 9/11 will always be a sad day in American history that we will feel the effects of this day for years to come but as we will never forget the images of that day. I’ll close with a quote from President Bush.

“Time is passing. Yet, for the United States of America, there will be no forgetting September the 11th. We will remember every rescuer who died in honor. We will remember every family that lives in grief. We will remember the fire and ash, the last calls, the funerals of the children.”

We will never forget!

Friday, September 10, 2010

Bad Day for Brady Turns Into Payday



Most people would think they were having a really bad when it started with a car accident. But for Tom Brady it seems like nothing bad can happen, as He started his day yesterday with a minor car accident. At around 6:30 AM on Thursday morning Brady was leaving his home in an Audi S8, which happened to be a loaner, when he was smashed in to by a 21 year old driver which a pretty poor driving record. Brady would walk away from this with no major injuries and managed to keep a low profile while doing it.

Unlike most people who have been in a car accident most people would lay around most of the day or go to the emergency room and get checked out, not Brady. He continued his day as usual as he arrived at practice a little late but made the team meeting and went through the normal practice routine with full pads as scheduled for the day. According to his teammates it was as if nothing had ever happened Brady completed his passes as normal and everything went as scheduled.

As if Tom Brady wasn’t enough of a superman at this point for making it through a car accident unharmed and showing up to practice. It was reported that Friday morning Brady will receive a four-year deal worth $72 million with $48.5 million guaranteed money. This contract makes Brady the highest paid yearly player, this will probably last until Peyton Manning signs his new deal.

This is not a bad way to end a day that started so awful, if getting in a car accident makes me $72 million sign me up. Brady and the New England Patriots will open there season on Sunday at 1PM eastern time against the Bengals.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

2010 NFL Projections


I have taken the last couple of days to put together my 2010 NFL projections grant it I’m in no way or form an NFL expert but I thought I’d throw my two-cents in the bucket. First off I will say I didn’t use any of the pre-season games to come up with this mainly because I feel that pre-season is a joke. I used last season’s results and how much the teams have changed since that point in their off-season activities. Let’s take a look at this at the end of the regular season and see how I did; now here are the teams broken down by conference. I may come back later this week if I have time to explain why I feel which teams will do what.

AFC EAST
New York Jets 12-4
New England Patriots 9-7
Miami Dolphins 9-7
Buffalo Bills 3-13

AFC NORTH
Baltimore Ravens 11-5
Cincinnati Bengals 10-6
Pittsburg Steelers 9-7
Cleveland Browns 2-14

AFC SOUTH
Indianapolis Colts 12-4
Houston Texans 10-6
Tennessee Titans 8-8
Jacksonville Jaguars 6-10

AFC WEST
San Diego Chargers 11-5
Kansas City Chiefs 8-8
Denver Broncos 6-10
Oakland Raiders 5-11

NFC EAST
Dallas Cowboys 10-6
New York Giants 9-7
Philadelphia Eagles 8-8
Washington Redskins 7-9

NFC NORTH
Green Bay Packers 11-5
Minnesota Vikings 10-6
Chicago Bears 7-9
Detroit Lions 2-14

NFC SOUTH
New Orleans Saints 12-4
Atlanta Falcons 7-9
Carolina Panthers 6-10
Tampa Bay Buccaneers 2-14

NFC WEST
San Francisco 49ers 10-6
Seattle Seahawks 9-7
Arizona Cardinals 7-9
St. Louis Rams 2-14