By Larry Brown | March 14, 2008 - Posted in Baseball

First it was Yankees’ catcher Francisco Cervelli getting his wrist broken when Elliot Johnson of the Rays slammed into him at home plate. As a response, Joe Girardi said the Rays were playing too hard and that running over a catcher isn’t something you should be doing in Spring Training. By nature, that’s horrible logic; how can you tell guys trying to impress someone by playing hard not to hustle? Would Girardi prefer to have wusses on his team that are afraid of playing hard and trying to win, even if it is Spring Training? I don’t think so; I think he’s just speaking out of bitterness because his player was on the injured side of things.

Next, the Yanks dosed Evan Longoria of the Rays when they played again, and then an inning later Shelley Duncan slid into second base with his cleats up. He clearly spiked Akinori Iwamura intentionally, which was completely uncalled for. I’d call it nothing more than a bush-league response to what Johnson did. The benches emptied, though it wasn’t clear exactly what ensued. Then the Yankees couldn’t possibly top off the embarrassment they’d already created for themselves by complaining about another team playing hard. Or wait, could they?

Of course they did. They went out and let Billy Crystal take an AB in a game against the Pirates Thursday. Nothing like a slap in the face to the hundred of players in their organization and thousands more in professional baseball fighting for a spot on the 40-man roster, just praying to get an at-bat. I can easily tell you this, and have it confirmed by most ballplayers, that there almost isn’t anything more sacred in baseball than at-bats. For young guys trying to make it, they might only get 10 shots with a team. The difference between being a major leaguer and minor leaguer could depend on how they do in their few ABs. And when Billy Crystal strikes out just for kicks against Paul Maholm, that’s one less AB to go around to a kid trying to make the 40-man, or play an extra year in pro ball, or get placed in a higher class in the minor leagues. The Yankees are embarrassing themselves, and they’re embarrassing baseball. It’s truly despicable what they’re doing, and I’ll reserve no sympathy for them in the upcoming season.

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    This entry was posted on Friday, March 14th, 2008 and is filed under Baseball. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

    4 Comments

    1. March 14, 2008 @ 7:30 am


      My favourite unwritten rule is: unwritten rules suck.

      Posted by SpinMax
    2. March 14, 2008 @ 11:48 am


      Are you really surprised? They have an image problem with their WS drought and being usurped as the team with a huge following that everyone loves or loves to hate. They are just waving their arms yelling “look at me! look at me!”

      Quite sad, really.

      Posted by Jimmy Chowda
    3. March 14, 2008 @ 2:15 pm


      You hit the nail on the head Larry. I feel like its also a slap in the face to the Pirates. Give us a real player to face.

      Posted by Alan
    4. March 14, 2008 @ 3:32 pm


      What a pathetic group of underachievers!!!

      Posted by Gene

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