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Teny Ymota Says: Roar Lion Roar & Other Early May Baseball Musings

Before an enthusiastic home crowd at Robertson Field at Satow Stadium, Columbia on Saturday May 2nd won its third elimination game in seven days, beating Penn, 4-2 to earn the Gehrig Division title in the Ivy League. Seven solid innings from George Thanopoulos, two spotless relief innings from Kevin Roy, and solo home runs by Jordan Serena, Logan Bowyer, and Dave Vandercook provided the margin of victory.

Rested Rolfe Division-winner Dartmouth comes into Robertson/Satow on Saturday afternoon May 9 for a best-of-three championship series to determine the Ivy League winner and the automatic NCAA tournament bid. Columbia is trying for its third consecutive title and third straight playoff victory over Dartmouth. If the Saturday doubleheader is split, a single winner-take-all game will be played on Sunday.

The Ivy League college season in the Northeast is regrettably short so to witness bonus baseball in May is a real treat. There used to be an old saying that Ivy League players are “half-baked potatoes – not good enough to eat but too good to throw away.”

The level of play has definitely improved in recent years, and recent graduates of both division-winning programs are working their way through the minor leagues - notably Columbia outfielder Dario Pizzano with the Mariners affiliate at Double A Jackson, MS, and Dartmouth's second-third baseman Joe Sclafani with the Astros organization also in Double A.

Of course, for most Ivy League athletes the championship games will be the high point of their careers which makes for intense competition. I dislike the ping of the aluminum bat as much as anybody, but don't let that irritation keep you away from the action.

I highly recommend a visit this weekend to picturesque Satow Stadium on the banks of the Hudson River, a little bit up the hill northwest of the corner of 218th Street and Broadway in northern Manhattan.

Meanwhile, Major League Baseball has entered its crucial second month. The biggest surprise so far has to be the Houston Astros, riding a 10-game winning streak with an 18-7 record. The long-dormant Astros are the only team above .500 in what was once considered a strong AL West division.

Houston’s early emergence is not totally shocking. They have a budding mound ace in Dallas Keuchel and the defending AL batting champion in pepperpot second baseman Jose Altuve who is playing like a future MVP. They also have a star-in-the-making in right fielder George Springer from the University of Connecticut.

How I love it when players from the Northeast make their mark in their majors!
Cold weather prevents talent in this area from playing as many games as their counterparts in Florida and Texas and California. But since baseball is a game of character and adversity, tough conditions harden the players. It could well be that agile and powerful George Springer is on his way to join another great product of this region, southern Jersey’s Mike Trout of the Angels.

What the Astros have to watch out for is a bad streak once their long winning streak eventually ends. The Mets won 11 in a row and have since lost 7 out of 10 but still hold on to first place in the NL East.

With so many games to play, position in the standings is less important than consistent play and winning as many series as you can. Which is why two game and four game series are annoying to many in baseball. It is very hard to win a four game series against one team but inter-league play every day has necessitated this crazy-quilt unsatisfying scheduling.

A record must have been set on Saturday May 2 when TWO games ended with base runners being hit by batted balls. The victimized teams were the Angels who lost a 5-4 game to the Giants when pinch runner Taylor Featherston was hit by the ball, and the Diamondbacks who lost 6-4 to the Dodgers when Jordan Pacheco was similarly struck heading to second base.

It was a tough weekend for Pacheco. In the top of the 13th inning in a scoreless Sunday game against the Dodgers, Pacheco was tagged out at home plate trying to score on a wild pitch. After a throw from catcher Yasmani Grandal, reliever J.P. Howell made a remarkable behind-the-back tag to nip Pacheco by an eyelash. Moments later, Grandal homered to give the Dodgers a dramatic walkoff win.

Nothing matches, though, what the Orioles went through this past week. Rioting in Baltimore after the death in police custody of 25-year-old African-American Freddie Gray forced the Orioles to postpone two of three home games with White Sox and to transfer its entire weekend series to Tampa Bay.

On Wednesday afternoon one game was played with the White Sox before an entirely empty stadium at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. It was a first in the long history of MLB – a game without fans. Kudos to Oriole catcher Caleb Joseph who mimicked signing autographs for invisible fans before the game.

Back in the Orioles glory years of the 1970s and early 1980s, another Oriole catcher Rick Dempsey entertained fans during rain delays by pantomiming Babe Ruth running the bases. It looks like the Birds have another appealing receiver on their roster.

And perhaps the Orioles as a team are beginning to catch fire. They won three out of the four games played in these unusual circumstances. They are heading to New York for a week – two inter-league games with the Mets followed by a four-game series with the red-hot Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Center fielder Adam Jones continues to sizzle with a batting average over .400 and sparkling play in center field.

T. S. Eliot famously said April is the cruelest month – I guess he didn’t like the coming of flowers and new blooms – but in baseball May is usually the most revealing month. We’ll see how the pennant races look by the end of the month. More than 60 per cent of the time, division leaders as June begins are in the playoffs come October.

That’s all for now. Always remember: Take it easy but take it.

YIBF (Yours In Baseball Forever), Teny Ymota (The Earl of New York, Your Man On The Aisle)  Read More 
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Will June Be A Boon or A Swoon?

Usually Memorial Day weekend is a good assessment of where the season is heading, the likely contenders and pretenders. Not this year. Except for teams who had no hope of pennant contention before the season began – the Marlins, the Cubs, the Astros, high among them – there are still many questions about who will be for real come September.

Will surprising Boston stay atop the AL East? Can the Pittsburgh Pirates finally have a winning season and even make the playoffs? Will the expensive California Angels (OK, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim) continue to sputter? Well, that’s why we watch the games.

My Orioles have not cracked the 10-above .500 mark yet. Their high so far in 2013 is eight above. The oblique injury to the Birds’ most reliable starter WEI-YIN CHEN has definitely hurt the pitching rotation. (Years ago no one heard of an oblique, now the injury to it is very common and I think it’s because players overdo their workout regimens.)

The Birds have rushed last year’s number one draft pick KEVIN GAUSMAN less than a year out of LSU to join the rotation. He is yet to win though his first home start against the tough Tigers lineup was very promising.

How unlike the Orioles of Their Glory Years 1960-1983 – a topic I discussed in late May at the annual Cooperstown Symposium on Baseball and American Culture. The great farm-developed pitchers of the 1970s like Mike Flanagan, Dennis Martinez, and Scott McGregor got their feet wet in middle relief before being thrown into the fire of starting.

That luxury is not available for an Oriole team that wants to compete again for a pennant after last year’s breakthrough season. So I wish Gausman the best as for the time being he joins the improving Chris Tillman, last year’s miraculous minor league discovery Miguel Gonzalez, Jason Hammel and the game but fading Freddy Garcia in the current rotation.
And here’s a wish that wunderkind Manny Machado and emerging slugger/.300 hitter Chris Davis keep up their good work.

“Did You Feel The Draft?”
Chicago Cubs area scout John Ceprini pointed out to me the other day that this year’s MLB Free Agent Amateur Draft occurred on the same day as the immensely important D-Day invasion of France on June 6, 1944.

One of the great clichés about baseball scouting is that it is a crapshoot. But an increasingly very expensive crap shoot. This is not football or basketball where the player is close to a finished product and the likelihood of failure is far less.

In the new collective bargaining agreement there is a strict salary cap on how much in bonuses can be given to players coming into the business. I have little doubt that some of the more conservative owners would like to see the salary cap come to the top of the scale too. That is unlikely but it still will be very interesting to see how much a free agent like the Yankees’ Robinson Cano will be lavished with if he enters the free agent market after this season.

"Roar Lion Roar!"
My Columbia Lions won the Ivy League championship last month, sweeping Dartmouth in a
doubleheader to win the automatic NCAA tournament bid. Over a thousand people gathered at Satow Stadium at Robertson Field (just north of the Baker Field football complex) to watch the Lions upset the favored Big Green. Usually a college baseball game draws in the mid-double digits with most of the crowd being family and friends of the players. So this was a special moment in the history of Columbia team sports.

On the night of my 50th college reunion, Columbia trailed New Mexico 5-0 in the 8th inning
and it looked like they would go two and out at the Fullerton,California sub-regional. I turned off in resignation my android that was tuned into the game on ESPN 3.

Lo and behold! When I got home I learned that the Lions had scored 5 in the 8th to tie and won it in the 13th. They did get eliminated the next night by Arizona State but for an Ivy League school to win just one game in a tourney with the Big Boys is quite an accomplishment.

Hail to all-sub regional All Stars Alex Black and Nick Ferraresi and coach Brett Boretti and associate head coach/pitching coach Pete Maki! First baseman/closer Black and right fielder Ferraresi just graduated and may their follow their pro dreams if they have the chance. Ditto junior-eligible Joey Falcone, the oldest player in Division I, just turned 27.
He served two tours in Iraq and one in Afghanistan and the son of former major league LHP Pete Falcone deserves to follow any dream of his choice.

One final Lion pride note - Dario Pizzano, 2012 Ivy League Player of Year, was just voted to Midwest League All-Star team. Dario, grandson of a former Red Sox batboy, is one of four Columbia men currently playing minor league baseball.

“Sleeper Film of the Season”
Mirra Bank’s “The Only Real Game” - about the efforts to build a baseball stadium and a baseball presence in Manipur, one of the poorest and most politically corrupt areas of the world in northeast India on the border with Burma. The last line of the film resonates with me every day: “Baseball is like breathing.”  Read More 
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