How Worried Should the Yankees Be About CC?

With division and wild card rival Tampa Bay coming into town for a 3 game set, the Yankees were in dire need of a dominate performance from their $182 million dollar staff ace. New York entered play on Friday just 2.5 games behind Baltimore in the chase for the 2nd Wild Card and with the newly re-acquired Alfonso Soriano en tow, the deficit was looking a little more manageable. Unfortunately for New York CC Sabathia may no longer be the ace he once was. Heck, right now he isn’t even the ace of his own staff. That designation belongs to Hiroki Kuroda and his shiny 2.51 ERA.

After Friday night’s shellacking , CC Sabathia now has an ERA of 4.65. That mark stands as the highest of his career. It’s worse than the 4.38 ERA he posted as a rookie in 2001 when hitters were pummeling pitchers into submission night after night. And his ERA isn’t the only problem. The big lug is allowing more hits and homers than at any point in his career and more disturbingly, his fastball velocity is sitting 2 mph below his career norm.

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Saturday game notes: One-zip edition

Four 1-0 games in one day?!? There was one other day this year with two such games. Last June 13 had three, as did 2010-09-11, 2009-07-01, 2004-09-19 and 2004-06-08. There were six in three days starting 2005-08-12. But if I’m not mistaken, the last day with four 1-0 games was 2001-09-02. (You’ll have to poke around to find which one of those was most memorable.)

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Friday game notes: Rays ramble into first

Only the early precincts were tallied when Game Notes put the issue to bed.

Rays 10, @Yankees 6 — Rain ruined the rampaging Rays’ second head-to-head crack at 1st place on Thursday, but the indirect route proved just as rewarding. A 6-run eruption off CC Sabathia, plus Boston’s meek loss in Charm City, left them alone at the top for the first time since last June, riding the long crest of a 20-3 wave (2.33 ERA).

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If you go deep only once, make it count

Caleb Gindl‘s heroics for Milwaukee in Sunday’s 13-inning 1-0 win over Miami inspired this post. For those who may not be aware, Gindl’s homer was the deciding run in the hometown Brewers walk-off win. It was also the first home run of Gindl’s career.

Gindl is a rookie this season and I have no idea how many home runs he may hit in his career. But, if he never hits another one he will join the group of players featured in this post. They are all retired players with two things in common: they hit exactly one home run in their careers; and it was a walk-off shot.

After the jump, a look at those players who had just one long fly, but made it count big time.

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COG 1948 Round Results: Vote for Trammell; Break for Travel

In a competitive round of voting, with holdovers from previous rounds receiving almost all the support, Alan Trammell edged out John Smoltz, Bobby Grich, Lou Whitaker and others to become the 25th player inducted into the High Heat Stats Circle of Greats.  The COG voting will be on a two-week hiatus as your host drifts out of fair territory but will be back in play mid-August to start the 1947 round.  More on Alan Trammell, and on the latest voting results, after the jump. Continue reading

Tuesday game notes mish-mash

Not enough time for a full set. Some Monday notes are included at the end.

@Red Sox 6, Rays 2 — Even with Jon Lester scuffling, the matchup with Roberto Hernandez seemed a good chance to snap the Rays’ win streak. In truth, Hernandez was OK — he’s delivered a steady stream of “half-decent” starts all year — but Boston went up 2-1 in the 3rd on a double-steal led by Shane Victorino. (Note the huge lead afforded to the Hawaiian by the shift on Papi.) Lester gave homers to Wil Myers and Evan Longoria, but he left with a 3-2 lead, and the Sox opened it up with 3 two-out runs off Kyle Farnsworth, who looks to be nearing the end of a long career. Junichi Tazawa got 4 outs (3 Ks), inheriting the tying run on 2nd in the 7th.

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Monday game notes

I apologize to anyone whom I *may* have disappointed with these abbreviated notes.

Rays 3, @Red Sox 0 — A two-hitter for his first career shutout gave the opener of this four-game first-place showdown to the streaking Rays and Matt Moore, who’ve both won six in a row. James Loney drove in the first two runs, with Ben Zobrist (3 hits) in the middle of both rallies. Moore had gone 8 innings just twice before and was averaging 5-2/3 IP this year, but he mowed through 29 Boston batters on 109 pitches, and won the race to 14 wins by an hour or so. He walked just one, a far cry from his 9-inning average of 4.6.

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