Tagged: Reds
11/5 MLB Tonight – World Series Wrap-up
Just as the ’96 Championship launched a Yankee Dynasty, it’s a good time to speculate if yesterday’s win will start a new Dynasty run.
We won’t know for a few years, but looking at the Club there are good arguments for each side.
With a new core of talent including Teixeira, C.C., Burnett, and the Captain Jeter, you can argue that this crop is going to stay on top. Unlike the group brought in after the 2000 Championship, this group got the job done with no delay.
You can also argue that this Club just clicked at the right time, laving a lot of issues to work out this offseason.
With all the things they have going for them, they also have a lot of problems on the horizon.
Will they resign key free agents heading towards the twilight of their careers? Johnny Damon and World Series MVP Hideki Matsui brought the World Series home, but can you maintain a dynasty with your heart instead of your head?
There is a 37-year old Andy Pettitte and a senior Jorge Posada, who still has to play the most demanding position on the field.
Rivera is a year older, and then there is the question of Joba’s role next season.
It’s safe to say that the Yankees have the money to bring in the high priced talent, but with an 8-year drought because of chasing the wrong players, will they have what it takes to bring in the right type of guy.
This year they got it right.
Being at the new ballpark, the atmosphere in the postseason was different from past years.
The feeling at the ballpark is just not the same. I can’t say if it’s all the empty seats, or that it’s quieter; it doesn’t have a pulse like the old Stadium.
Al Leiter made a good point, and said, “It hasn’t found its identity yet.” With one season down, and a championship won, we’ll see if there is a new identity in the Bronx. Just as it’s unfair to compare teams of different vintage, it is unfair to compare Stadiums form different eras.
A day after the season it’s a little ridiculous to start making predictions, but here’s what I think. I didn’t have a voice on the show tonight, so I’m going to let it out here.
Look for the Giants to have a big 2010, get some offense and make the playoffs. I always like to pick a Cinderella team, but I’m not going to make the same mistake by picking the Reds. I’d love to be able to say with conviction…The Padres will turn it around in 2010. – Matt Vasgersian
10/29 MLB Tonight – World Series Parallel
In 1975 I watched the entire T.V. broadcast of Game 2 of the World Series, and it’s striking to see the parallels in the ways games are covered then and today.
For those who don’t remember that was the classic between the Red Sox and the Reds, and in Game 2 there was a rain delay.
NBC did a great job with that broadcast because of the access they provided, especially during that rain delay.
During that delay, you had Joe Garagiola, who was dressed in a Sherlock Holmes outfit, talking to Ned Martin, the play-by-play man for the Red Sox.
This was before the Internet and MLB TV, when you couldn’t just watch any game from a Desert Island.
There was nothing fancy about it, just a great conversation where the two discussed some of the things a fan watching the Red Sox for the first time would be interested in.
You also had some inside access that today would almost be impossible. During the rain delay, instead of texting or tweeting, the players sat down for interviews. In a 2-1 game in the 7th, there was Johnny Bench and Sparky Anderson in the dugout casually talking to Marty Brennaman with the tension of the game still hanging in the air.
With rain constantly in the forecast this postseason, don’t look for Charlie Manuel or Derek Jeter to sit and chat in the dugout with me to give you some honest feedback on the pulse of the game.
Those were the good old days of broadcasting, where you got a real sense of what was going on at the game and inside the game, straight from the players themselves.
But the similarities are in the way T.V. networks use every asset they have to their potential.
In this respect, Fox has done such a great job with the playoffs. Today, it’s much tougher to get that kind of access, but they have used every resource under the sun to bring the viewer as close to the game as possible. They use replays and super slo-mo shots at just the right moment; the technology enhances the game instead of taking away from it. Joe Buck and Tim McCarver are also terrific together in the booth.
Looking at these two broadcasts side to side, you can really how far we’ve come as an industry of broadcasting baseball. Our technology and skill has exploded, but the access back then was golden during such an innocent time.
Another parallel that ties that ’75 series to our current fall classic is the inordinate celebrity shots. Back then you had the same type of star power sitting in the front row, inspiring the players on the field, just like Kate Hudson is doing for A-Rod and the Yankees.
There is no doubt in my mind that Henry Kissinger is an early version of Kate Hudson. Henry’s a viable partner to co-star in romantic comedies, with Matthew McConaughey and Owen Wilson. Had the planets been aligned a tiny bit differently, he could have been a hit teamed up with Dean Martin or Jerry Lewis in classic romantic comedies.
Tune in to MLB Tonight before Game 3. I’ll go into a deeper analysis on this idea.
– Matt Vasgersian