Alex Rodriguez couldn’t stop smiling.
He was holding the World Series Commissioner’s Trophy in his hands after the Yankees’ Game 6 clincher Wednesday night. He rubbed it, he kissed it, he practically caressed it. There were real, honest tears in his eyes and nothing phony about his feelings for his teammates, from Derek Jeter to Jerry Hairston Jr.
A gajillionaire who has moved through dozens of relationships had found a lasting bond. His season, one that had started as badly as possible with an admission of steroid use that clouds his standing as a future Hall of Famer, had ended with him earning respect along with a championship.
“There have been a lot of ups and downs,” Rodriguez said. “Overall, nothing you can do can compare to winning a championship with 25 guys buying into one thing — winning.”
After Wednesday’s victory, Mark Teixeira, CC Sabathia, A.J. Burnett, Nick Swisher and others who, like Rodriguez, were first-time champions on the big stage celebrated with passion, first on the Yankee Stadium field and then in the clubhouse. Jeter, like Mariano Rivera and Jorge Posada, now a five-time World Series champ, was as wide-eyed as kids like Joba Chamberlain and Brett Gardner.
“I forgot how it felt,” he said.
It’s easy to see how. There were 31 playoff games this fall, beginning with one that is counted in the regular season, the Tigers-Twins game to decide a division championship, and I covered 18 of them. I saw six of eight games where a team was eliminated, including ones in St. Louis, Boston and Denver on consecutive days, but the unadulterated joy of the Yankee celebration caught me off guard.
It’s easy to see Team Steinbrenner as so many dollar signs. But that $201.5 million payroll is comprised of real people and it was ballplayers, not agents, money managers and highly-paid nannies who ran through the playoffs 11-4. I won’t forget being there when the Yankees won their 27th title.
Among other lasting memories of the fall:
It seems forever ago, but the Rockies’ Carlos Gonzalez, 23 and already twice traded, used a four-game playoff run to establish himself as one of the game’s potential stars.
He showed true five-tool skills for the Rockies, going 10-for-17 with two doubles, one homer and two stolen bases while playing a great center field.
It was a bad postseason for umpires, as most have been in recent years.
The worst call of all was by Tim McClelland, a crew chief, somehow missing a double play when the Yankees’ Robinson Cano and Jorge Posada were tagged as they tried to avoid occupying third base at the same time in an ALCS game. Replay later would allow umpires to turn correctly what appeared to be a Rodriguez double into a homer in Game 3 of the World Series.
Replay should be a hot topic at next week’s general managers meeting in Chicago.
The Yankees won three of four games in which manager Joe Girardi used his starter on three days’ rest, the exception being A.J. Burnett in Game 5 of the World Series. But was it a good idea. Sabathia, Burnett and Andy Pettitte had a 2.00 ERA in 72 innings in 10 fully rested starts in the postseason and a 5.24 ERA in 22 1/3 innings on short rest.
Cole Hamels, a World Series MVP for the Phillies in the 2008, rubbed teammates and fans wrong when he said he “can’t wait for it to end” after a Game 2 loss in the World Series.
But nobody needs more damage control than Tigers slugger Miguel Cabrera, whose arrest for drunkenness (and his 0-for-11 against the White Sox) was the storyline when the Tigers dropped four of their last five games to miss the playoffs. Never mind he had a homer and a double in the 12-inning loss to the Twins in Game 163.
Joe Mauer showed greatness by going 2-for-1 in the same at-bat in Game 2 of the first-round loss to the Yankees. The AL MVP front-runner lost a double when umpire Phil Cuzzi wrongly called the ball foul but two pitches later delivered a single off Damaso Marte. The guy’s a freak.
Cliff Lee, what a guy. The Phillies ace not only went 4-0 with a 1.56 ERA in his five playoff starts but was 3-for-11 at the plate and even picked up a stolen base as a pinch runner. Maybe he should represent himself in negotiations on a contract extension, which could get him a monster contract.
Johnny Damon stole two bases on one play and in the process helped the Yankees turn the World Series with a ninth-inning rally against Brad Lidge in Game 4. Damon’s first-to-third run with only a pause at second base should be enough to cause all teams extra work next spring, if not to consider abandoning the frequently played shifts altogether.
It isn’t going to hurt the 36-year-old left fielder-DH in his impending free agency, ether.
Including the Detroit game, Twins closer Joe Nathan was pounded for seven hits in 3 2/3 innings. He was tired at the end of a long season but it makes you wonder what Minnesota can expect in the two guaranteed years left on his contract, which also includes a club option for 2012.
NL MVP Albert Pujols, his team swept out of the first round in three games, left Busch Stadium without talking to reporters. He later said he hoped to spend his entire career in St. Louis but his body language spoke volumes in a somber clubhouse.
The Cardinals are in a tough spot with him. Financially, they can’t afford the extension he deserves, and in every way except money, they can’t afford to let him leave.
Down to their last strike, nobody on base and down two runs, the Angels somehow beat Red Sox closer Jonathan Papelbon for a Division Series clincher. With an in-house replacement available in Daniel Bard, Papelbon doesn’t seem long for Boston.
Manny Ramirez, such a force for the Dodgers last year, had one home run in 32 postseason at-bats this time around. Ramirez is returning for a third season but only because it’s him, not the team, holding the $20 million option for 2010. Joe Torre’s team looked great in the first round and overmatched in the NLCS, just like last year.
Mariano Rivera was there through everything. Closers on the other seven playoff teams were 9-for-15 in save situations; Rivera was 5-for-5, running his career playoff save total to 39, including 11 in the World Series.
At 39, Rivera worked in 10 of the Yankees’ 11 victories (and 12 games overall). He threw 39 pitches in Game 2 of the Series — the most for him in any game since 2005 — and then 41 in Wednesday’s clincher. His 16-inning postseason workload equaled his biggest ever.
His contract is up after next season but he said, “I think I’m going to stay for another five years.”
Who would want a ride like this to end?
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