Dan On Sports
Good morning, all! TGIF! Big time college sports is out of control with millions being doled out to “student-athletes,” players switching schools yearly and coaches seemingly doing the same. Does a bipartisan bill in the Congress tame this schizophrenic environment? I break it down in the video/audio commentary. You be the Judge The Yankees are in big trouble, if Aaron Judge is out for any period. The bruise near his right shoulder, or is it his rib cage, seems to be getting bigger with each passing report. The fact is, the Yankees have not been specific about the injury that has sidelined their captain since Tuesday, but it doesn’t sound good. Without Judge, who was in a slump for the last three weeks of May, the mediocre Yankees offense is nearly impotent. They just lost two-of-three at home to Cleveland, scoring a total of 10 runs. The reality is, even with Judge in the lineup - obviously we now know he was playing hurt - the offense was stagnant. Without Judge, even though Ben Rice and others have their moments, the Yankees offense is lacking consistent firepower. Their starting pitching might be the best in the American League, but without a more balanced offense, they are going to lose more one-run games than win them. The next few weeks could be very interesting. Not the same The Yankees will host the Red Sox in a three-game series, starting tonight. The media is already building this up, once again, as “the greatest rivalry in sports.” It is all manufactured hype. The Red Sox are in last place and the Yankees are battling for first. Come talk to me, when these two teams are fighting for the ultimate prize. When you see a jammed Yankee Stadium tonight - and most New Yorkers will be watching the Knicks and San Antonio in Game 2 of the NBA Finals - remember it never used to be that way. Before Thurman Munson became the Yankees catcher and Carlton Fisk the Red Sox backstop in the early 1970s, Yankees-Red Sox was not even a big draw at their respective ballparks. Case in point. 60 years ago this past Wednesday, the Yankees lambasted the Red Sox at Fenway Park, 15-5. The big story was the fact 27,000 fans attended the game. The media could not believe such a “big” crowd was in attendance to watch a Friday night game. After all, many times, when the Yankees and Red Sox met, crowds were lucky to surpass 15,000 for a game at either Yankee Stadium or Fenway Park. There was no rivalry back then. The Babe Ruth-to-the-Yankees story was not a big deal. It was the Yankees and Red Sox, two American League teams from cities 217 miles apart, just playing a three-game series. The rivalry was yet to be born, even though these clubs did play some important games. But the truth be told, it was rare when both the Yankees and Red Sox were in a tight pennant race together. Times change, but remember it wasn’t always this way. I know. I lived it. Yankees-Red Sox was no big deal. And if it wasn’t for social media and the hype that goes with everything in this day-and-age, this series would be no big deal too. The last place Red Sox are fighting to survive in the mediocre American League, while the Yankees are attempting to save the bottom from dropping out of their offense. Enjoy the games this weekend, but remember Yankees-Red Sox isn’t always what they tell you it is. Loving the book I live and die by the website retrosheet.org [https://www.retrosheet.org/#]. Just about every box score and play-by-play description of every game that has been played in MLB is on the website. Now there is a book out about the origin of Retrosheet, entitled How Retrosheet Saved Baseball History. It’s just 10 bucks, if you download it to your Kindle. And if you are a baseball numbers nerd like I can be at times, you’ll thank me later, especially since the book, believe it or not, is more than the numbers that tell the story about the game. That is going to do it for today’s newsletter. Thank you for subscribing and have a fantastic Friday! DAN This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.danonsports.com/subscribe [https://www.danonsports.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]
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