[新聞] A-Rod, role players come through for …
Ben Reiter > Inside Baseball
A-Rod, role players come through for Yankees in Game 2
NEW YORK -- Two Tuesdays ago, on the afternoon before these playoffs began,
television cameramen and reporters massed around Alex Rodriguez's locker in
the Yankees clubhouse, as they usually do, waiting for him to come in from a
workout and dispense a few of his typically banal morsels. Relief pitcher
Phil Coke didn't even seem to notice. First, Coke's locker has been two away
from A-Rod's for a full season now, and he's used to the media crush. Second,
Coke's attention was on this day diverted by a gift that had shown up on his
chair that morning, as these things tend to do when you're a member of the
Yankees: a brand new media player, from whom he did not know. "It's cool,"
Coke said. "It plays music, it plays movies, it stores photos." Someone
pointed out that they lend out the machines in first class of some airlines.
"I wouldn't know," Coke said. "I've never been on a plane like that."
The Yankees' payroll this season is approximately $206.8 million, nearly $68
million higher than that of any other club, but even the Yankees have
players, like Coke (salary: $403,000), who don't make nearly enough to fly
first class, or to build the biggest house in Tampa, or to spend their
off-days in South Beach with Hollywood ingénues. Ten players on the Yankees'
25-man ALCS roster earn than $2 million a year, and seven earn less than
$500,000. On a brisk, rainy and seemingly endless Saturday night in the
Bronx, those players were the ones who ultimately won Game 2 of the Yankees'
ALCS against the Angels after five hours and 10 minutes of play, and who sent
them west with a commanding 2-0 series lead.
As 1 a.m. approached in the Bronx, after twelve hard-fought if sloppy innings
-- the teams combined to make five errors -- both the Yankees and the Angels
had whittled their rosters down to their last splinters, and the game
remained tied at three. The Yankees had just two position players lingering
on their bench, in Jerry Hairston and Francisco Cervelli, and one pitcher
sitting alone in their bullpen, Chad Gaudin. So it was left to David
Robertson (salary: $407,000), a seventeenth round pick in 2006, to shut the
Angels down, and he did. Robinson Cano allowed Erick Aybar's leadoff grounder
to skip under his glove (it was Cano's second error, proving that we should
never expect great things from men who wear ski masks in playoff games), but
Robertson eventually worked out of the jam, inducing a groundout to second
from Vladimir Guerrero with men on second and third.
Then it was the Yankees' turn to bat, and manager Joe Girardi called upon
Hairston (salary: $2 million) to pinch-hit for backup outfielder Freddy
Guzman (salary: $400K). Angels pitcher Ervin Santana, an All-Star last year
but a long reliever in these playoffs, threw him three straight sliders, and
he hit the third on a line drive to center. Then it was time for backup
outfielder Brett Gardner (salary: $414K) to sacrifice Hairston to second,
which he did with aplomb. Then, after an intentional walk to Cano, Melky
Cabrera (salary: $1.4 million) hit a hard grounder to second baseman Maicer
Izturis, and Izturis -- beware, men in ski masks! -- threw the ball past
shortstop Erick Aybar, and Hairston, running aggressively, crossed the plate
with the winning run, giving the victory to Robertson.
In the end, both the Yankees and the Angels were down to nothing, and the
Yankees' nothing was better than the Angels' nothing. Of course, the Yankees
wouldn't have lasted as long as they did in this game, which might prove to
be the most memorable of this postseason, filled as it was with mini-drama
after mini-drama, without their highly-compensated stars. They wouldn't have
reached the 13th if not for free-agent prize A.J. Burnett (salary: $16.5
million), who was brilliant through four innings -- he threw first-pitch
strikes to 12 of the first 14 batters he saw and allowed just one hit before
the top of the fifth -- but then seemed to completely lose his control in the
fifth, allowing a double, a single, a hit batsman, a walk, and a wild pitch.
Still, even in that nearly disastrous frame, Burnett limited the Angels to
only two runs, and he somehow lasted into the seventh.
And the Yankees certainly would not have reached the 13th without Alex
Rodriguez, the most handsomely paid of them all (salary: $33 million). The
Angels had manufactured a run, as they are wont to do, against reliever
Alfredo Aceves in the top of the 12th, and manager Mike Scioscia inserted
closer Brian Fuentes with a 3-2 lead. On Fuentes' third pitch, a 90
mile-an-hour fastball, Rodriguez took an inside-out uppercut swing and sent
the ball soaring the other way. It landed just over the right field wall,
giving Rodriguez an RBI for the sixth straight postseason game and making him
just the third player ever, according to the website baseball-reference.com,
to hit a game-tying home run in extra innings of a postseason game. "When Al
hit that game-tying home run," Hairston said later, "We knew something
special was happening."
No one is really sure what has happened to Rodriguez, who once upon a time
struggled in the postseason. "I know you guys are probably looking for
something profound," he said to reporters after the game. "I'm just in a good
place. I'm seeing the ball and I'm hitting it." Later he said, "I think [it
goes] back to spring training. It was a rough one this spring. I thought
making things simple was the best thing for me ... the fact that I'm out
there playing baseball is a miracle."
There might be some truth to that -- to the idea that Rodriguez, after
suffering through a spring in which he sustained a potentially catastrophic
hip injury and was revealed to be a user of performance enhancing drugs, has
now experienced far worse situations than a key playoff at-bat, and that the
latter now seems easy to him. "I'm not a psychiatrist or psychologist or
whatever," said general manager Brian Cashman the other day, "But he looks so
relaxed. I know he's enjoying himself. I know he feels good about himself."
So this, now, is the situation with which the Angels are faced: an Alex
Rodriguez playing at his absolute peak, even though it's October; a Yankees
team that seems incapable of losing, even if it takes the last men on their
roster to close things out; and a continuing inability by Angels fielders, it
seems, to avoid making crucial errors in crucial situations. "I'm encouraged
by what I saw on the field," Angels manager Mike Scioscia said after this
crushing loss. "We saw a lot of good things there." A lot of good things,
yes. But once again, not quite enough of them.
--
信A-Rod者得永生
--
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