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Yanks Score 11th Straight Home Opener With WIN!

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Yanks Score 11th Straight Home Opener With WIN! 

Chien-Ming Wang hurled seven solid innings, and Melky Cabrera homered as New York edged Toronto, 3-2, in the 84th and final home opener at the current Yankee Stadium.

“The House That Ruth Built,” which opened in 1923 and was renovated from 1974-75, will be replaced by a $1.3 billion state-of-the-art ballpark, which will also be called Yankee Stadium, in 2009.

The game also featured the debut of new Yankees manager Joe Girardi, marking the first time that the Bronx Bombers took the field without Joe Torre at the helm since 1995.

After four World Series titles and 12 straight years of reaching the playoffs, the Yankees decided to offer Torre an incentive-laden contract, which he quickly turned down. So, the Yankees handed the managerial reins over to one of Torre’s former bench coaches, Girardi, who earned Manager of the Year honors in his one year as skipper of the Florida Marlins in 2006.

Wang (1-0) allowed just six hits and two runs for the Yankees, who have won 11 straight home-openers, a big league record. Alex Rodriguez finished 2-for-3 with an RBI and scored the game-winning run, while Bobby Abreu was 2-for-4 with a run scored.

Star closer Mariano Rivera capped Girardi’s first win in the Bronx with a perfect ninth to earn the save. Rivera then gave his new manager the ball after recording the third out.

“It was an outstanding game,” Girardi said. “Melky played great and so did Jason (Giambi). This means a lot.”

Shannon Stewart and Marco Scutaro drove in a run apiece for the Blue Jays, who are coming off an 83-79 season. Toronto ace Roy Halladay (0-1) pitched well, surrendering three runs on seven hits in seven innings en route to the hard- luck loss.

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Oh No .. Not You Guys! Bronx Bombers Using Steroids?

roger clemens & andy pettitte Roger Clemens & Andy Pettitte Dugg’ed Out As Using Steroids.

Oh No .. Not You Guys! Bronx Bombers Using Steroids?

The Yankees’ most recent championship teams, heralded by fans and sports writers as some of the most dominant squads in baseball history, were fueled by steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs, according to the explosive, long-anticipated report released Thursday by former Sen.George Mitchell.

The Mitchell Report identifies Roger Clemens and Andy Pettitte, two of the biggest pitchers in Bomber history, as steroid cheats, but Joe Torre’s aces weren’t the only Yankee players alleged to have used the juice: Mike Stanton, Chuck Knoblauch, David Justice, Kevin Brown, Jason Giambi and Gary Sheffield are also among the recent Yankees named in the report.

The 400-plus page report, the culmination of a 21-month investigation initiated by commissioner Bud Selig in March of 2006, includes MVPs, All-Stars and some of the biggest names in the game, including Barry Bonds, Mark McGwire, Jose Canseco and Miguel Tejada, as well as a large number of scrubs and journeymen.

SOURCE: nydailynews.com

 

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New role, same pinstripes for Girardi

girardi_joe1012.jpg New role, same pinstripes for Girardi

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Ticking off the days of winter, Joe Girardi pictures the concrete corridor leading from the Yankees’ clubhouse to the diamond in the Bronx, allowing himself a slight grin.

He has traveled that way countless times before in uniform, both as a player and as a coach, but the next trip will come in April as a manager. No wonder Girardi reflects on what the Yankees have completed since his hiring date and can’t seem to wait for spring.

“I just think the anticipation of walking through that clubhouse door, down the tunnel and onto the field — I remember what it was like as a player,” Girardi said. “I think it’s going to be equally magnificent as a manager.”

In a relatively short period of time, Girardi has made his contrast to former manager Joe Torre felt, not only by taking part in internal discussions with the club but also by heading to the Dominican Republic on a scouting excursion, wanting to remind the club’s Latin talents that someone in New York is waiting for them.

Girardi’s latest reminder was merely seen in his presence at the Winter Meetings, a venue that Torre has long avoided.

But on Tuesday, there was Girardi, surrounded by two dozen reporters, waxing poetic about the Red Sox-Yankees rivalry, the non-stop offseason chatter of baseball and his thankfulness that he didn’t have to carry a notepad and pen around the Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center.

A new era is under way with the Yankees, and not just at the managerial post.

Senior vice president Hank Steinbrenner has embraced his role at the head of the organization with zest, and with word that the Yankees may keep their young prospects after all instead of going after Twins ace Johan Santana, Girardi said he is prepared to head into a Spring Training in which 60 percent of his rotation could very well be under the age of 25.

Sure, Santana would rank in the top five — or the top one, depending on whom you ask — of Major League pitchers. But if the Yankees convene for camp on Feb. 14 and the two-time American League Cy Young Award winner isn’t in pinstripes, Girardi insists he won’t fret.

“I don’t really worry about that,” Girardi said. “You look at what you’ve got now. You go up in the room that we’re in, and you see the board — you know what we have and what you don’t have. You focus on what you have.

“You’ve got to concentrate with the players that are in the room. That’s what I feel. I think about the talented young players that we have and the youth movement the Yankees are making. That’s real important.”

Instead of shuffling off right-handers Phil Hughes and Ian Kennedy to Minnesota late Monday evening, the Yankees again relented and, according to reports, have exited as an active party in the Twins’ shopping of Santana — a stance that could be permanent, or just a temporary retreat.

Along with Joba Chamberlain, the phenom setup man-turned-prospective starter, Girardi is faced with a situation somewhat resembling his first managerial job in 2006, when he guided an inexperienced Marlins club to 78 victories and an improbable run at the National League Wild Card on his way to winning the NL Manager of the Year Award.

Andy Pettitte’s return to join Mike Mussina in the rotation helps matters somewhat, which is why Girardi said he pushed to make the 35-year-old left-hander feel more than welcome, gently recruiting his former batterymate and joining a chorus of Yankees interest.

“I think it gives you a guy that you can pencil in for 32 starts,” Girardi said. “You know that [Pettitte] can handle the workload, that he’s used to the workload, from a physical standpoint as well as a mental standpoint. That’s good to know.”

Yet this fact remains: Unless something drastic changes in Nashville or in the weeks that follow, the Yankees are going young. But they’ll also be expecting results.

“We’re going to have some guys on the staff that are somewhat inexperienced,” Girardi said. “This is not going to be a five-man rotation consisting of guys that have five, six, seven years under their belt. We’re going to have some young guys.

“Obviously, we feel very strongly about our young players. The organization and Brian have worked very hard the last few years trying to rebuild the system. We’re starting to see some of the fruits of the system. You just hope it’s a continual flow.”

In that, Girardi thinks back to his first season in New York, 1996, when he was the hard-nosed catcher guiding Torre’s club to the first World Series title of what would prove to be a dynasty. When that club broke camp, it pinned its hopes on rookie shortstop Derek Jeter, as well as developing youth in Pettitte and future Hall of Fame closer Mariano Rivera.

Girardi isn’t afraid to draw the parallel, knowing full well what the expectations are around the Bronx anyway. After all, there is a reason Girardi, leading a franchise with 26 World Series titles, chose uniform No. 27.

“You never know how things are going to play out,” Girardi said. “We’ll find out in eight months.”

SOURCE: MLB.com

 

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A New Boss in the Bronx

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A new boss in the Bronx

As the parties convene to commemorate the historic document — Alex Rodriguez’s record-breaking contract with the New York Yankees — expect more sanctimony than celebration. This signing will be interpreted like an armistice.

Erstwhile über agent Scott Boras has already been cast as the capitulator, a peculiar role for someone whose client now has a contract worth as much as $300 million. The victor remains less well known: Hank Steinbrenner, the once reluctant heir. Whatever else Rodriguez’s contract portends — whether prescient, profligate or just plain unfair — Steinbrenner’s signature also signifies dynastic change. The new boss has arrived.

It was a job he never much wanted. But a little more than a month into this new reign (he shares power with his kid brother Hal, who tends less visibly to the business side), Hank Steinbrenner has distinguished himself as a worthy, if welcome successor to his father. He is quotable, sure, but also very much in charge.

Just last month, in the wake of Joe Torre’s departure, the sporting press was rife with predictions that the House of Steinbrenner was in for a great fall. It was thought that the beloved and much-admired manager would take with him the aura of stability and success that made the Yankees so attractive. The free agents would flee, it was said. There would be Yankee turmoil reminiscent of the Eighties, when Hank briefly served as an advisor without portfolio before leaving — chastened, disillusioned, and without question, relieved.

But none of those predictions have come to pass. The Yankees hired a much-desired manager for less than half the price of Torre. Jorge Posada will return to the fold for top dollar, as will Mariano Rivera. Still, in relation to those October forecasts, the biggest surprise of all is A-Rod.

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