Some Quick Thoughts On Day 1 Of The Playoffs
by Jeff Sullivan on Oct 7, 2010 1:04 AM PDT
in Seattle Mariners Game Recaps
When we're dealing with a day as busy as this one, other work obligations keep me from being able to pay much attention to LL. I figured I would drop by when I found a little window of time to leave a few notes.
- This might sound kind of silly and meaningless, but the thing that stood out to me the most about Roy Halladay's no-hitter is that I think everyone could feel it by the third or fourth inning. It was in the top of the fourth that the TBS broadcasters started talking about Halladay's perfect game in Florida, and as early as it was, I got it. It made sense to me. Halladay was pitching that well. Every single pitch he threw had the perfect movement and the perfect spot, and it's like he took luck right out of the equation. There wasn't enough luck in the world to give Cincinnati a base hit.
I mean, they didn't even come close. In Felix Hernandez's Fenway one-hitter, he only allowed the one hit, but there were near misses. There were great plays behind him (some by Jose Lopez!). They say that every no-hitter needs at least one guy in the field to be a hero. The only guy in the field who had to be a hero for Roy Halladay was Roy Halladay. The box score reads 12 groundballs, three fly balls, three pop-ups, and one line drive.
As much as we all love Cliff Lee - and for good reason - Roy Halladay is the perfect pitcher. He isn't literally perfect, as he has allowed baserunners before, but he is everything anyone could ever ask for. He's flawless. He even manages to be the rare likable superstar on account of his professionalism and humility. We're a nation of haters, and no one can hate Roy Halladay. It doesn't work. Your brain won't let you.
Kudos to Roy on throwing arguably the greatest game in playoff baseball history.
The Reds had the NL's highest team OPS.
- Coming into the playoffs, the popular sentiment was that the Phillies were going to steamroll their way to a world championship by riding their top three starters. In response, a number of articles were written about how, while the Reds might be an underdog in the NLDS, they aren't without their strengths. Well sure, the Reds have their strengths. They made the playoffs. But let's be real. What are the chances they could win three of five games when all five games are started by Roy Halladay, Roy Oswalt, or Cole Hamels?
I don't like to bring this up when Game 1 - and especially that Game 1 - is already in the books, but what the Phillies have put together just has the feel of being unbeatable in a short series. It obviously isn't literally unbeatable, but no opponent is going to face happy odds. They might be one shutdown closer away from being the best-built playoff team in at least recent history, and Brad Lidge is no slouch.
- Today I learned that the Phillies have some of the best fans, and some of the worst.
- Rays/Rangers: 3:06
Phillies/Reds: 2:34
Twins/Yankees: 3:47
Fuck you, Yankees.
- I have this annoying habit where, when I feel like I've come up with a good soundbite, I'll want to repeat it over and over until I'm sure that as many people have heard me as possible. And my annoying soundbite du jour is that the Rangers didn't trade for Cliff Lee to start in the regular season; the Rangers traded for Cliff Lee to start in the playoffs, and today they got exactly what they traded for.
That was the Cliff Lee we all fell in love with. That was the Cliff Lee that took six seconds between pitches and put everything exactly where he wanted. He had some struggles early on, and he allowed a handful of line drives, but it was clear when he got into a groove, and when the Rangers scored their fourth run, you knew it was over. When Cliff Lee is going, there are no sustained rallies. There can only be isolated singles and solo home runs, forgotten as quickly as they occurred. I'm happy for Cliff, and even if he's pitching for the Yankees six months from now, at the moment he's still a guy for whom I wish all the success in the world. He's Roy Halladay's left-handed American League equivalent, and, boy, wouldn't that be something in the Series?
- A good number of Twins fans booed Alex Rodriguez when he came up to bat. Now, I get it. I understand why people all over the country want to boo Alex Rodriguez. He's eminently booable. It is remarkably easy for anybody to find something about him they dislike. But then, just the other day I was reading the Wikipedia entry for 'Minnesota nice', and booing Alex Rodriguez doesn't seem to fit the stereotype at all. Booing Alex Rodriguez is mean-spirited, and direct, and somewhat confrontational. Booing Alex Rodriguez is not courteous, and it is not mild-mannered. Booing Alex Rodriguez makes the fans in Minnesota seem a lot like the fans everywhere else.
Mind you, this is not a criticism of the fans. People are free to boo whoever they want, and I'm not one to judge. Rather, this is just an observation that either the people in Minnesota aren't as nice as they're made out to be, or Alex Rodriguez is sufficiently evil to transcend the social norm.
- Mariano Rivera has gone nearly 41 years without ever knowing the sound of a baseball hitting the sweet spot.
That final play by Ruiz was nice.
No one who played catcher for the M’s this year would have made it. Well maybe Quiroz.
Jack Swan - October 7, 2010
The bat being out there in front of the plate scared the heck out of me.
Then when I saw him throw from his knees I thought “NOOOOOO”, but it all worked out.
Thingray - October 7, 2010
I loved the shot from the first base concourse
As Halladay starts his windup every fan is standing, screaming, waving random bits of cloth. The ball gets hit and damp squibs its way off the bat on the ground, and the whole crowd sits down and you can almost hear the collective OH SHIT THIS IS A HARD PLAY PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE DON’T SCREW IT UP OH MY GOD THAT THROW LOOKS HIGH PLEASE GOD DON’T LET THAT BALL GET UP THERE TOO HIGH HOLY SHIT WE’VE MADE IT TO THE BOTTOM OF THE NINTH AND I HOPE THIS DOESN’T RUIN THE NO HITTER OH MY GOD NOOOOO and then it’s caught and the crowd goes wild again. It’s gut-wrenching and awesome all at once.
pdb - October 7, 2010
You pretty much have my internal monologue during that play down pat.
JAH - October 7, 2010
I had just finished explaining to my wife how rare post-season no hitters were about eight seconds before that last pitch
so all I could think was “well, this just proves my point and what a shitty way to lose a no hitter”.
pdb - October 7, 2010
All the teams I wanted to win ended up losing.
This is going to be one of those years.
ScottBrowne - October 7, 2010
in a few days you can go outside and do something else.
Paul AB - October 7, 2010
I wanted Philadelphia because of RH and I wanted Texas because of Cliff.
So I was happy. I
ignacio - October 7, 2010
I want anybody but Texas because fuck Texas
So :(
Aly Edge - October 7, 2010
I prefer Seattle, Texas ..........Oakland. in that order.
bamfor - October 7, 2010
I'm going to go with Alex Rodriguez is just so god damn evil.
Patrick Stites - October 7, 2010
I agree
New England Fan - October 7, 2010
Alex Rodriguez could make the Pope grab his dick and yell derisively
lemonverbena - October 7, 2010
Someone please make a predictory GIF
And yes, I made up a word.
HititHere - October 7, 2010
They should have closed the Iris so the Goa'uld System Lords couldn't through with a legion of Jaffa and wipe out the upperdecks.
joof - October 7, 2010
Hmm.
Roy Halliday IS rather unearthly ….
msb - October 7, 2010
Thank you for .Gifing Young Gilbert Gottfried.
abender20 - October 7, 2010
Whoa...
Decatur - October 7, 2010
Ichiro circa 2009 would say your last bullet post is incorrect!
http://tinyurl.com/lvtov7
Feels good to actually post something a Mariner did well for once. And as usual, great write up for the day, Jeff.
dkulich - October 7, 2010
09 was a good year to be a Mariner fan
and by good I mean it was better than cancer.
Bearskin Rugburn - October 7, 2010
Unlike 10
which was like cancer, ALS and syphilis all rolled up with a nice dusting of Ebola on top.
ToddK - October 7, 2010
Yet like the phoenix, we will rise again.
bmxnw - October 7, 2010
Apparently there was a tv station interviewing some Phillies fans who were leaving in the 8th to avoid traffic.
and then there were those who stayed put
msb - October 7, 2010
Oh wow... it might just be the cold effecting me...
But that so looks like her right arm is being vaporized and there’s two bloody ends at the wrist and the elbow…
The Typical Idiot Fan - October 7, 2010
Thank you for this!
Big Jared - October 7, 2010
Oh, and ...
someone wonders what Bissinger thinks
msb - October 7, 2010
Why would anyone wonder that?
Paul AB - October 7, 2010
It is good to keep an eye on the insane?
msb - October 7, 2010
Ah, yes.
He said, backing away slowly.
Paul AB - October 7, 2010
"Fuck You, Yankees"
A-freakin’-men.
Could someone explain how TV ratings work? When we say that the Yankees game got a 7.0 rating, is that an average for the entire game? The number in inning 1? Inning 5? Inning 9?
Because I refuse to believe that baseball fans have the stamina to sit through an entire Yankees game. It’s why I refuse to watch more than an inning of any Yankee/Red Sox games – they are UNWATCHABLE.
Yes, part of it has to do with the fact that pitchers aren’t real keen on attacking the Yankee lineup, and this nibbling leads to longer ABs.
But if you are MLB, don’t you want people to enjoy watching your marquee franchise?
tait644 - October 7, 2010
The longer the games go, the more commercials they can show
seattlebruin - October 7, 2010
That's logistics!
Thanks, MLB, for reliably giving me one commercial per playoff year that makes me want to set things on fire.
pdb - October 7, 2010
Oh Good GOD in heaven.
Haven’t seen that one yet. Holy SHIT.
Patrick42 - October 7, 2010
There are good things about being unemployed during playoff season and there are bad ones
the bad is that commercial. it’s on all. the. god. damn. time.
pdb - October 8, 2010
Wrong, try again...
This isn’t football with TV timeouts. Commercials are shown in-between innings and during pitching changes, right? So I don’t think length-of-inning (or game) is a factor.
In fact, I’d argue that a short game is better for TV ratings because they can then spend more time in the pre & post-game shows, where they can do a TON of commercials – right?
Ah, crap – I just realized I forgot about the in-game ads on green-screens behind the batters and at the margins of the TV during at-bats. That messes up the whole equation, damn!
NWade - October 7, 2010
A slow game allows them to pimp more TBS and TNT shows though.
Sec 108 - October 7, 2010
I have Yankee fan friends who can't sit through an entire Yankee game
They Tivo it, and fast forward through 75% of the game, including the entire half of the game where the Yankees aren’t batting.
HititHere - October 7, 2010
They repeat this process with every single Yankee game of the season, mind you.
HititHere - October 7, 2010
If I committed to watching 162 games in a season I'd probably do a generous amount of fast-forwarding myself
pdb - October 7, 2010
If I committed to watching 162 Yankee games in a season I would drink Draino until I couldn't feel feelings anymore
HititHere - October 7, 2010
You'd feel burning for a while but then you wouldn't feel anything.
JY - October 7, 2010
Really? They have so many good players
CC is great, as well as Pettitte, and Rivera. Posada is one of my favorite baseball players, I like watching A Rod hit and Granderson is near impossible to rot against. Fuck the Yankees and everything, but I’d muh sooner watch 162 Yankees games than almost any other team.
Bearskin Rugburn - October 7, 2010
They are almost mechanical in their efficiency and for that alone they're fun to watch from time to time
pdb - October 7, 2010
But they don't feature Eric Byrnes or anyone even remotely Byrnesesque
HititHere - October 7, 2010
Thus "mechanical in their efficiency" and "from time to time"
I honestly think I would get bored watching the Yankees 162 times a year, because they don’t really have anybody that blows me away – they have great players, but I like some crazy in my sports.
pdb - October 7, 2010
Even Swisher has stopped Swishing.
msb - October 7, 2010
A good game is a good game regardless of how long it is. There are so many people in New York, and most of them, I imagine, don't care about such things as long as their team wins
I recall the 2000 Mariners playing some long games against the A’s, and they were fun to watch,
Poochie - October 9, 2010
Fuck you Yankees, yes
but to be fair the other games were 1) a no hitter and near perfect game and 2) started by Cliff Lee and David Price. I’m pretty shocked the Rays/Rangers game went three hours to be quite honest, are they pushing the inning breaks a bit longer for the playoffs? It was 2:04 or something like that in the regular season. Worth timing.
Bearskin Rugburn - October 7, 2010
They always push inning breaks longer during the playoffs I think
and here’s a somewhat related piece from Morgan Ensberg about those breaks.
pdb - October 7, 2010
I remember that piece.
eye opening
Bearskin Rugburn - October 7, 2010
Doc Halladay's No Hitter might have the Kirk Gibson Home Run effect for the Phil's
Oh, and I know that Mariano knows full well what a ball hitting the sweet spot on a bat sounds like courtesy of Ichiro.
bmxnw - October 7, 2010
If anyone has a chance to beat Philly, its SF
Their staff is just as scary.
miracle_max - October 7, 2010
I believe they were saying Boo-urns.
zeeehjee - October 7, 2010
Arod and Rivera
It’s Arod. I believe him to be a homunculus of the spirit, an Agent Smith of the baseball Matrix manifested to balance out all that is good in the sport; surely someone has remarked that he reminds them of Anakin Skywalker – looks like him, works for the evil empire, traitor, stiff acting…
In my video game baseball career since 2000, Arod’s gotten it in the earhole every time I’ve pitched to him. Wouldn’t it have been delicious if he hadn’t one his ring last year and the Rangers could’ve knocked him out this year?
As for Rivera, perhaps not the sweet spot, but he did give up the game-winning hit to Luis Gonzalas in the bottom of the ninth of game 7 in 2001. That was pretty effing sweet.
Azimeir - October 7, 2010 via mobile
*won
Azimeir - October 7, 2010 via mobile
*Gonzalez
and, FYI, mentions of imaginary baseball teams of any stripe (fantasy, video game, whatever) are generally not cool.
pdb - October 7, 2010
Thank you
These types of replies say, “Welcome. Here’s a matter about you seem unfamiliar.”
Azimeir - October 7, 2010 via mobile
*about which
Azimeir - October 7, 2010 via mobile
I was really happy when A-Rod was clutch through out the playoffs and carried the Yankees to a world series.
joof - October 7, 2010
I'm glad you have had at least a ten year video game baseball career
seattlebruin - October 7, 2010
No Thank You
These types of replies kick off flame wars, ward off new readers and posters, and generally flush civilized discourse down the toilet.
Azimeir - October 7, 2010 via mobile
What he is trying to say is that posting about your video games is a no no
Poochie - October 9, 2010
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