The Demise Of A Myth
For as much as I consider myself a stathead, I still have a few irrational beliefs from which I just haven't been able to escape, no matter the numerical evidence. Whenever he comes to the plate, I think Vlad's going to hit a home run. Back in the day, I used to think Jay Buhner was an automatic strikeout (and somehow I still loved him). I always think JJ Putz is one bad outing away from completely falling apart. I think Trevor Hoffman is automatic. Even though they're decidedly untrue, these are a few of the things that I once believed or continue to believe with all my heart.
Until today, Yankee Stadium was the scene of another one. Until today, I always believed in the "ghosts," especially come playoff time. I felt like no lead was ever safe in the Bronx, and that somehow, some way, the Yankees would feed off of all the energy in the building and give the fans a night they'd never forget. In short, I was terrified of the place. I was convinced that there was no more intimidating environment in the league, and that to escape with a win was nothing short of a mentally-exhausting minor miracle.
But now, you know what? To hell with the ghosts. Since 2002, the Yankees are 20-25 in the playoffs, and only 11-12 at home. You can point to Aaron Boone and Pedro Martinez all you want, but what about Paul Byrd? Josh Beckett? Derek Lowe? Where were the ghosts when the Yankees had their backs against the wall and managed all of five hits against the Marlins in 2003? Where were the ghosts when the Red Sox silenced the entire stadium by the second inning in 2004? Where were the ghosts tonight, when Byrd got the win and Joe freaking Borowski recorded the final out? Did Byung-Hyun Kim use them all up?
I think the moment that did it for me was this: in the bottom of the sixth, the Yankees were down 6-2, but they'd already put one ball over the fence and put another two runners on the corners with one out for beloved local hero Derek Jeter. The fans were up, the stadium was rocking, and Rafael Perez was facing a situation he'd never seen before in his life. If ever there was a time for the "ghosts" to show up and rip this series right out of Cleveland's hands, it was this one. The table was set; all Jeter had to do was knock a base hit and you felt like everything the Indians had worked for would come crashing down in a hurry.
Jeter bounced into a 4-6-3 double play to end the inning.
The Yankees would draw a little closer with a pair of solo home runs, but there weren't any sustained rallies, and certainly nothing approximating the level of tension and excitement as Jeter walked to the plate. The setting was perfect, ready to become the stuff of legends, yet the last guy anyone expected to fail failed in the worst possible way.
I guess it's kind of ironic that, at least as far as I'm concerned, Derek Jeter killed the Yankee Stadium mystique. There just isn't that powerful sense of dread and foreboding that there used to be anymore. Why should there be? The Yankees haven't celebrated a series win on their own field in four years. That doesn't seem like a long time for those of us who haven't celebrated anything anywhere in longer, but all my life I've been conditioned to expect more from The Stadium, and lately it's been the hosts walking off the field wondering where things went south.
When I was a kid, every so often I'd have nightmares about Predator. File the Yankee Stadium ghosts away as another fear that I don't think I'll ever have again as long as I live.
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Before the playoffs even began, I was talking
It never even crossed my mind that the Yankees would get past Cleveland or that Chicago would get past Arizona. Now granted, the latter is probably because of bias and the fact that the Cubs just weren't that good anyways, but the former is kinda sad.
The Yankees are already going to lose Torre. A-Rod, Rivera,Posada, and Abreu are all free agents to be. The old guard in New York looks to be over.
by Goose on Oct 8, 2007 11:58 PM PDT 0 recs
It is kind of sad
The core of the team possibly leaving does make me a little sad inside, even though I'm not a Yankee fan.
by I'm NOT Corco on
Oct 9, 2007 12:12 AM PDT
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I know what you mean
by pdb on
Oct 9, 2007 7:56 AM PDT
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I admit
by Gomez on
Oct 9, 2007 3:22 PM PDT
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This happened to me too, somewhere along the line
But of course that means when the Mariners pull one out in dramatic fashion, or next year when they squeak into the playoffs to the shock of everyone and pull off an upset or two, it wasn't because they had heart or wanted it more or called on the ghost of Edgar Martinez. It was because they got lucky, a ball bounced through the infield, or a line drive found a glove instead of the base of the wall. I think this is the cost of that world view--you can decide that the Yankees can't call on fabled ghosts, but then your team can't call on them either.
by stoatboy on Oct 9, 2007 12:08 AM PDT 0 recs
The ghosts will be back
by I'm NOT Corco on Oct 9, 2007 12:09 AM PDT 0 recs
Another myth I believe in...
by Patrick517 on Oct 9, 2007 12:41 AM PDT 0 recs
Well duh,
The yankees are always gonna have that powerful mystique for two reasons: they will always have the highest payroll and the media will always lick their nuts.
by hcoguy on
Oct 9, 2007 5:50 AM PDT
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I had this exact conversation
by pdb on Oct 9, 2007 7:01 AM PDT 0 recs
Young pitching
by toonprivate on Oct 9, 2007 7:25 AM PDT 0 recs
I think they have some real good young arms.
by Jeff on
Oct 9, 2007 8:06 AM PDT
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That's what I was afraid of
by toonprivate on
Oct 9, 2007 8:31 AM PDT
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I had nightmares about predator as a kid
by chrisisasavage on
Oct 9, 2007 9:51 AM PDT
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Predator didnt get me much
Ive never been scared of horror movies save Critters and The Lost Boys. Both freaked me out somewhere between 3-7 years old.
by Slica on
Oct 9, 2007 10:08 AM PDT
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Poltergeist gets me
by pdb on
Oct 9, 2007 10:11 AM PDT
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Porky's scared the hell out of me!
by Thingray on
Oct 9, 2007 4:59 PM PDT
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You tallywhacker!
by PositivePaul on
Oct 9, 2007 8:54 PM PDT
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There was an x-files episode
It was the same sort of fear I think, something small that I could never guard against. The damn thing could open windows! I never watched that episode again, intentionally avoiding reruns.
by Matthew on
Oct 9, 2007 10:27 AM PDT
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you should probably
by jtopps on
Oct 10, 2007 12:22 PM PDT
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Predator never got to me either.
by Patrick517 on
Oct 9, 2007 11:09 AM PDT
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Growing up the only thing to give me nightmares
by Robert on
Oct 9, 2007 11:38 AM PDT
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Yea
Oh yea I also was terrified of escalators after watch another episode where a kid had his shoelaces get stuck and he lost half his legs when they got dragged under.
Apparently William Shatner scared the fuck out of Mini-Robert.
by Robert on
Oct 9, 2007 12:00 PM PDT
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I forgot all about that show
28 Days Later had a freaky feel to me. Not because of the movie, but because of the situation I put myself in:
Watched it in the attic. Lights completely out, 2am. With HEADPHONES ON blasting the volume...and in front of the comp (bootleg) with a huge area behind me. My attic is creepy and the stairs look like something of the underground railroad...and they kept creaking despite my headphones being on. Still wasnt THAT scary...actually kinda fun.
Movies just dont scare me anymore. Plus I dont waste my time watching crappy horror movies anymore. Only the ones with a buzz.
Im curious about the new vampire movie coming out...30 days or something?
by Slica on
Oct 9, 2007 12:15 PM PDT
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Speaking of horror movies
by Robert on
Oct 9, 2007 12:22 PM PDT
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Im trying to figure out
I watched Leprechaun 4 the other day for the first time since it came out...when a Leprechaun gets hit with an enlarge ray thing, than admires his penis size, you know you need to change the channel.
by Slica on
Oct 9, 2007 12:31 PM PDT
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Ugh Ichi the killer
by bluemax on
Oct 9, 2007 4:27 PM PDT
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I saw The Birds
by PetRock on
Oct 9, 2007 12:55 PM PDT
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The end
by ThundaPC on Oct 9, 2007 9:04 AM PDT 0 recs
Just wait until the Devil Rays...
by Faux on Oct 9, 2007 9:06 AM PDT 0 recs
Interesting.
Perhaps Seattle would take Matsui for one of their bullpen guys? If the Soriano trade was any indication, Bavasi can be fleeced.
Stupidly, though, they think they can get rid of a corner outfielder to us, because we don't have enough of those.
by Faux on Oct 9, 2007 9:25 AM PDT 0 recs
Hey, I'd take Matsui over Guillen.
by Double06 on
Oct 9, 2007 12:26 PM PDT
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Exeunt Ghosts
The ghosts moved out when they heard their hallowed grounds are being replaced. My hunch is, they returned to Boston.
by Thoan on Oct 9, 2007 11:08 AM PDT 0 recs
Giid news for A-Rod.
by eponymous coward on Oct 9, 2007 11:11 AM PDT 0 recs
A Yankee haiku
Here's Damon's throw to the plate . . .
Bounce bounce bounce bounce bounce
by ajdaddy on Oct 10, 2007 11:05 AM PDT 0 recs
Another
Bricks don't appreciate him
"Screw you guys. I'm gone!"
by Gomez on
Oct 10, 2007 12:39 PM PDT
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Oooh -- Haiku...
Hundreds of Millions
Money can't buy everything
Go invest in Bonds
by PositivePaul on
Oct 10, 2007 1:04 PM PDT
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Hooray!
Can't control his cut fastball
Least of our problems
by Gomez on
Oct 10, 2007 7:13 PM PDT
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