Author Archive

New York Yankees vs. Detroit Tigers: ALCS Game 3 Live Scores and Analysis

Game 3 of the American League Championship series is underway from Detroit’s Comerica Park.

Justin Verlander tries to give the Tigers a 3-0 lead over Phil Hughes and the New York Yankees.

All the action right here.

SCORE UPDATE

FINAL: Tigers 2 – 1 Yankees

Hughes injured in the 4th

W: Verlander

L: Hughes

S: Coke

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Detroit Tigers vs. New York Yankees: ALCS Game 1 Live Scores and Analysis

Game 1 of the 2012 American League Championship Series is underway from Yankee Stadium in New York.

SCORE UPDATE:

Bottom 12th: Yankees 4-6 Tigers

Jeter Injured in the 12th

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Tigers vs. Athletics: How Pat Neshek’s Courage Shows Us Baseball’s Just a Game

We use the words “courage” and “hero” much too often in sports to describe some of the amazing things we see from day to day that defy our expectations.

While for some, it’s the iconic image of Willis Reed limping onto the Madison Square Garden court in Game 7 of the 1970 NBA Finals or Emmitt Smith’s running all over the New York Giants with a busted shoulder New Year’s weekend to give the Dallas Cowboys the 1993 NFC East crown, Pat Neshek‘s seventh-inning relief appearance Saturday should join that list.

Tuesday, in the middle of Oakland’s season-ending series against the Texas Rangers, Neshek left the team to be with his wife as they celebrated the birth of their son Gehrig John.

Wednesday, the day the Athletics clinched the AL West division by beating the Rangers, their little boy passes for unknown reasons 23 hours after birth.

The celebration that Oakland and Neshek deserved in coming back from 13.5 games back to win their division had turned tragic. As Neshek had earned the highest high on the field, he had been dealt the lowest low off it.

Parents are not supposed to outlive their children. Not at birth. Not at 20. Not ever. For Pat and his wife Stephanee, that nightmare had just become very real.

Oakland management tried to do the right thing and excuse Neshek from the postseason. While we all take our sports and professions very seriously, in the end baseball is just a game and a full ton of real life had just hit.

Stephanee not only said no to Oakland’s offer, she pleaded with them to include the grieving pitcher on their roster.

They did. Saturday, in a tense Game 1 that Oakland was still in, down 3-1, Neshek started warming up to back up stater Jarrod Parker in the bottom of the seventh.

After Parker allowed a base runner, manager Bob Melvin called for his right-hander.

Oakland put a patch with the baby’s initials on their jersey for the series and will wear it for as long as the playoffs take them. It was obvious that Neshek and all at Comerica Park were caught up with a run of emotions.

Neshek did his job and retired the two batters he faced and then looked skyward to the little boy he barely had time to know.

The Nesheks wanted to be with their baseball family in their hour of need and Stephanee was there in the crowd and watched and healed as much as one can heal so quickly after that kind of tragedy.

Pat Neshek just did his job on Saturday night—nothing really fancy or exciting about his stint, just an average relief appearance in a baseball game. But for his family, it was so much more than that. It was a time to take that small first step forward.

While the Tigers won the game, Neshek stole the show. His grief will go on long beyond his career and our public view, but for one night, we all had the chance to help him share it.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Roy Oswalt: Boston Red Sox’s Missed Signing a Blessing in Disguise

The 2012 Boston Red Sox season is not going to come down to whether Roy Oswalt is going to pitch half a season or not.

The flaws that this team has—for whatever playoff run they may make—are harder to fix than by just picking up an expensive pitcher for twenty starts in a league he is not familiar with.

While the Texas Rangers made a good deal today in signing the 34-year-old veteran for $5 million guaranteed, the Rangers are also in much better shape to win their third American League pennant than Boston is to make the playoffs.

Yes, the Red Sox rotation would be better off with Oswalt than without, and if beleaguered starter Daisuke Matsusaka can return to the rotation sooner than later, then perhaps Daniel Bard could have been sent back to close and shore up an improving bullpen.

Injuries, however, have taken their toll again with this club, and the best thing the Red Sox can do is just to wait them out and finally get a true sense on where this team is overall.

Oswalt is a Southern guy. Born in Mississippi, the bulk of his career was spent with the Astros. While he put up magnificent numbers after being traded to the Phillies in 2010, he stumbled last season watching his ERA go up nearly a run from a 2.76 combined with Houston and Philadelphia to a 3.69 with Philly.

While the Baltimore Orioles will probably not hang on to their lead in the AL East, the Red Sox just do not have the horses to make a deep run in October with or without Oswalt.

Their starting pitching has indeed improved from an awful April as Felix Doubront continues to surprise out of the fourth spot in the rotation, but Clay Buchholz seems to be having a “Jekyll and Hyde” season going, and there is little protection for the rotation as a whole if any of the five starters get hurt.

Add in all the outfield injuries—did you really think to yourself in March that Adrian Gonzalez would actually be a decent right fielder?—and where would be the incentive for Oswalt to come to Boston?

On the off chance August rolls around and the Sox actually find themselves within a handful of games for a wild card, then taking a chance on a short-term player rental makes sense.

Considering that there will be players traded away this year, on the other hand, makes the notion of signing Roy Oswalt a rather silly one. 

There is always next year.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Copyright © 1996-2010 Kuzul. All rights reserved.
iDream theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress