Friday, May 2, 2008

Yanks Sounding Like A Beaten Bunch

From Bob Klapisch:
More and more, the Yankees’ season is taking on the colorless hue of an 85-win finish, not good enough for October, not bad enough to be catastrophic. The players are either too young or too old, hardly anyone in their prime. Senior management won’t dare use the taboo “R” word, not as it tries to keep 4 million fans pouring through the turnstiles, but the veterans will privately tell you otherwise: for all the hype of a monster year, the Bombers are already on a long, flat road to nowhere.
“You can just see, everyone here is trying to figure out what the [heck] is going on,” is what one of the clubhouse elders was saying. The words weren’t meant as criticism, just an observation about a franchise that’s suddenly lost its compass.

Another veteran said, “Without [Hughes and Kennedy] pitching the way we expected, you’re talking about .500, tops.”
“You look at everyone hurt, and now you wonder,” is what one Yankee was asking before the game.
At least the manager and GM sounded a bit more confident:
“This is something every team goes through if they want to make it to the promised land,” said Cashman.

We haven’t seen such mediocrity in the Bronx since the early 90s, but don’t expect the Yankees to admit they’ll be a better team next year. Girardi said, “I’m a firm believer that everything is fixable. You just have to find a way to fix it.”
Well the part about not seeing "such mediocrity in the Bronx since the early 90's" isn't true. Last April they were 9-14, even with A-Rod's amazing April.

These quotes from unnamed veterans bother me. If I was Hank Steinbrenner, I'd be fuming as I read this article (which he probably was). And if I was Derek Jeter, I'd act like the captain of this team and make some sort of statement, privately to the team, and publicly to the media, that this team has not, and will not give up. Will it lead to victories? Who knows. But showing a bit of confidence is never a bad thing.

2 Comments:

Anonymous said...

What did we expect? The good news is that this will lead to the end of the Cashman era and as far as I am concerned that can't happen soon enough. It's obvious that we are rudderless at the top.

Greg Cohen said...

That's only good news if you don't like Cashman, which you obviously don't. I don't think he's as bad a GM as some people like to make him out to be.