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Spring training Game 20: Yanks at Jays

Peter Abraham
March
20

YANKEES
Damon LF
Cabrera CF
Cano 2B
Matsui DH
Duncan RF
Betemit 1B
Ransom SS
Molina C
Green 3B

Pitching
Kennedy
Chamberlain
Fansworth

Notes: Chien-Ming Wang (tomorrow) and Andy Pettitte (Saturday) will pitch in minor-league games rather than face divisional opponents so close to the regular season. Darrell Rasner will start against Tampa Bay tomorrow with Kei Igawa slated for Toronto.

This entry was posted on Thursday, March 20th, 2008 at 9:40 am by Peter Abraham.
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13 Responses to “Spring training Game 20: Yanks at Jays”

  1. Mark Alan

    IPK, Joba, and Krazy Kyle.

    Three very different methods of hurling.

  2. 108 stitches

    Sooner or later Wilson Betemit needs to show that he deserves to be on the 25-man roster.
    This month has been lackluster at best.

  3. Bronx Liaison

    Good point Stitches.. He has been totally underwhelming. But then again, he has been his whole MLB career. He has a world of untapped talent at the plate – wonder if it will ever be tapped.

  4. Patrick

    If they are going to have CMY and Pettitte pitch in minor league games, because of divisional opponents, then why didn’t they do the same with Pettitte against the Red Sox?

  5. Neil

    Cody Ransom might get the job as back-up IF, over Ensberg. He’s been in the lineup for 2 straight days.

  6. Rishi

    From Buster Olney this morning:

    As the Red Sox threatened a boycott of Wednesday’s game, they worked for team unity, as Jackie MacMullan writes.

    The sentiment behind what was essentially a three-hour boycott was admirable, but the players handled the situation very clumsily; it was their union that negotiated the stipends for the players and did not support the coaches, just as it has for years, and if the players weren’t aware of that, that’s their fault. But it was the fans who bought tickets to the game in Ft. Myers on Thursday who ultimately suffered, and were forced to sit around without information, while waiting to see if a resolution could be reached.

    Given that it was the responsibility of the Red Sox players to understand the situation before it became a crisis, a more magnanimous gesture would have been for some of the Boston players to offer up their stipends to the coaches, given that some of them are paid somewhere between $60,000 and $100,000 a day, rather than victimizing the fans. Or the Red Sox players could’ve quietly informed the Players Association and Major League Baseball that once in Japan, they intended to insist that the coaches’ situation be addressed. The nuclear option of sitting out games only needed to be implied, because there was zero chance that the Red Sox would’ve forfeited these games; there was zero chance that Major League Baseball would’ve let that happen.

    Instead, the Red Sox walked out on a crowd that had paid in good faith to see a baseball game. “At the end of the day, it is the fans that took the hit,” said a major league executive with another team, in disgust.

    To repeat: The sentiment behind the gesture is admirable. The relationship between the Red Sox players and their coaching staff is as close as any player-staff relationship in the sport. It was a money matter that had nothing to do with greed on the part of the players. But their action was rash and not particularly thought out or executed well.

  7. Patrick (#1)

    My name counterpart,

    Probably because the Blue jays and Rays are the first two teams the Yanks face in the regular season so they don’t want to give them a free look at our pitchers.

    Red sox game was last week and we don’t play them again until 4/11 so theres more time between games.

  8. crawdaddie

    Pete,
    I heard the minor league games got rained out, how about this game?

  9. OldYanksFan

    Cano batting third. Heaven for some of our less educated fans.

  10. Brian from PA

    crawdaddie: I checked the weather for Dunedin, just says windy and cloudy all day nothing about rain.

  11. crawdaddie

    Thanks for the weather update.

  12. playballnyy

    Neil,

    I think ransom won’t hold up with more at bats, he’s performed mediocre or less wherever he’s been for 6-7 seasons. On the other hand not any worse than Betemit, I don’t care to see him on the roster either. Better offense from woodward and ensberg but not better defense from either one at third. I think yanks will go with who they know – Betemit, unfortunately. Maybe they see Betemit as more versatile defensively.

  13. Steve

    Um, Ransom is considerably worse that Betemit. Neither is great, but Ransom is for sure worse.

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About the authors
Chad JenningsChad Jennings joined the The Journal News in October 2009, having spent the better part of seven years covering baseball in Scranton, PA. He is a graduate of the University of Missouri and an award-winning beat reporter and features writer. E-mail me at cjennings@lohud.com
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Sam BordenSam Borden is an award-winning journalist who joined The Journal News and LoHud.com in January 2008. He covered the Yankees for the New York Daily News from 2004-06, and has also worked as a columnist for the Florida Times-Union in Jacksonville. E-mail me at sborden@lohud.com
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