Friday, February 26, 2010

Clips from the Yankee Championship run

The following are stories that I wrote for Metro New York newspaper during the Yankees run to their first World Series since 2000:

This is Game Six:

It was two years and three days ago, across the street at the Stadium Club inside Old Yankee Stadium that Joe Girardi went from 1996 World Series hero, broadcaster and bench coach to the pressurized position of being a Yankee manager. He was handed his jersey by management with the number 27 as in the next World Championship for the Yankees.

The Yankees waited nine years and nine days for to reach that point again. They waited through playoff disappointment, free agent mistakes and injuries until last night when they became World Champions with a 7-3 victory over the Phillies.

“You can call us anything you want,” general manager Brian Cashman said. “You’re also going to have to call us World Champions.”

“This is what the Steinbrenner family has strived for year after year after year and has tried to deliver to the city of the New York,” Girardi said. “George Steinbrenner and his family are champions. To be able to deliver this to the Boss, the stadium that he created and the atmosphere he has created around here is very gratifying for all of us.”

Going nine years without a title is nothing compared to other organizations in the area. The Giants went 17 years without winning, the Mets have two in 47 years, the Rangers have one in 69 years and the Knicks are headed for a 37th straight season without a title, but things are different with the Yankees, who have the game’s highest payroll and expectations, which means World Series titles and not division titles.

“It feels better than I remember it,” captain Derek Jeter said. “It’s been a long time.”

For eight seasons, the Yankees won a lot of regular-season games but twice lost the World Series, suffered an epic collapse when they were just one win away from the Fall Classic, four first-round exits and missing the playoffs in Girardi’s first season.

They finally got it done last night – the day after New York re-elected its mayor. After spending six months winning 103 regular-season game another month winning 11 more, the Yankees are champions and the seventh time under principal owner George Steinbrenner, who was not at the Stadium but watched at home on television.

“This one was big for him and more emotional than the others probably,” Hank Steinbrenner said.

They did it behind the efforts of two of their older players – one who added his fifth ring and another who finally won that elusive title after being a superstar in his native Japan.

Pitching on three days rest for the seventh time in the postseason, Andy Pettitte survived 5 2/3 innings and pitched his third clinching game of the playoffs. He extended his own postseason record with his 18th victory as he allowed three runs and four hits and overcame five walks.

“It makes it sweet because you don’t know when you’re going to get a chance to go back,” Pettitte said. “I realize I’m 37 years old. I realize I’m getting older. I realize I’m towards the end of my career and that makes it sweet.

“The first one is always sweet because you live your whole life and you say you want to win the championship and you’re able to do it that first time. This one is sweet because so many years passed and you don’t know if you’re ever going to be able to do it again. It’s very gratifying to be able to do this.”

Hideki Matsui also was playing on three days rest as knee issues kept him as a full-time designated hitter and a pinch hitter when the Yankees played in Philadelphia. He returned from the idle time and went 3-for-4, tying Bobby Richardson’s World Series record with six RBI. He accepted the MVP honors after a .615 (8-for-13) performance in his second Fall Classic.

“My first and foremost goal when I joined the Yankees was to win the world championship,” Matsui said through his interpreter. “Certainly it’s been a long road and a very difficult journey. I’m just happy that after all these years we were able to win and reach the goal that I had come here for.”

It was a fitting conclusion to a consistent season for Matsui, who was coming off surgery to both knees. During the regular-season, Matsui hit lefties and righties well and it resulted in a .274, 28 home run and 90 RBI performance.

“I don’t know if you can imagine it, but once it’s happened, you figure he’s capable,” assistant general manager Jean Afterman said. “That’s what he does. He is a professional run producer.”

Finally, Mariano Rivera closed it out even if was a non-save situation. He recorded the final five outs and clinched the title when Shane Victorino grounded out to second base.

The Yankees reiterated that winning 11 games is not easy and winning these certainly was not a breeze. They needed the ability to out-last two pesky opponents in the Angels and Twins and then some big hits against the Phillies.

“Those are great players,” Mark Teixeira said. “We beat the world champions. We beat an incredible team over there. They deserved the championship they got last year, and we deserve this one.”


Nobody provided that for the Yankees more than Matsui, who finally celebrated the championship he longed for when he signed here in 2002 following a standout career with the Yomiuri Giants. A three-time MVP in the Japanese Central League, Matsui hit a two-run home run in the second inning off Pedro Martinez, a bases-loaded two-run single in the fourth off Martinez and a two-run double in the fifth off J.A. Happ.

“He is not only a great player his whole life, he’s got great character,” Yankees president Randy Levine said. “To do what he did is beyond belief. Nobody can picture somebody having such an unbelievable night, but it doesn’t surprise us because he always comes up big in the moment.”

Pettitte also helped himself by silencing Yankee-killer Chase Utley. Utley was 0-for-3 with a walk after homering twice Monday and hitting three off C.C. Sabathia. The biggest out was getting Utley to hit into an inning-ending double play in the first.

Utley struck out in the fourth and walked ahead of Ryan Howard’s two-run home run that made it 7-3 in the sixth. Pettitte was gone two batters later after allowing Raul Ibanez’s double and he exited to a standing ovation of fans chanting his name as he jogged towards the dugout.

After Joba Chamberlain pitched a scoreless inning, lefthander Damaso Marte struck out Utley to end the seventh and Howard to open the eighth. Rivera then entered for the final time this season and secured the championship that had seemed absent for an eternity in the Yankees world of high expectations.

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linked stories -

World Series Game 5

World Series Game 4

World Series Game 2

World Series Game 1

ALCS GAME 6

ALCS GAME 3 -

ALCS GAME 2


ALCS GAME 1

Interview with Brian Cashman (ran before the playoffs)

Monday, February 1, 2010

Pro Basketball Features/Game Stories

Ray Allen discusses game-winning shot in 1996 Big East Tournament

On the eve of the Big East Tournament, Ray Allen sits in the visiting locker room at Madison Square Garden. It is the same space 11 years ago that Allen and his University of Connecticut teammates celebrated one of the most memorable endings in the history of the tournament.

Knicks outlast Pistons in triple overtime


The pendulum of emotions at Madison Square Garden can be described with a bunch of "D" words.

There were deafening cheers, groans of disappointment and some discouraging moments. In the end there was drama, which led to wild cheers and a thrilling 151-145 triple-overtime victory.

Knicks hire Walsh, win third straight

Isiah Thomas believes the New York Knicks have become a team. When he meets with new team president Donnie Walsh, he might have to answer why it took 79 games.

Jamal Crawford led six players in double figures with 18 points as the Knicks held on for a 109-107 victory over the Charlotte Bobcats in front Walsh on Wednesday.

Curry re-appears in rare Knick win

There was an Eddy Curry sighting, and the New York Knicks found something else that had been reported missing - a victory.

A night after going scoreless in 13 minutes, Curry had 23 points and nine rebounds as the Knicks snapped a five-game losing streak with a 94-86 victory over the New Jersey Nets Saturday night at Madison Square Garden.