Hope Springs Anew…We Hope

Derek Jeter: Rookie

This has been one of those old-fashioned New York City winters, the bleeding kind that Paul Simon wrote about in “The Boxer,” which seem to have departed with the 1970s. Those were winters before el Niño and la Niña, when weather forecasters and climatologists didn’t pay much attention to them or seem to know about the periodic warming and cooling of the vast Pacific; when word was we were heading into another Ice Age just in time for the next Arab Oil Embargo and new heating-oil rationing.  Into this world, Derek Jeter was born.

In Right Off the Bat, co-writer Martin and I talk about his very first baseball game in 1996, when the coltish Jeter—amid Yankee long-beards Big Daddy (not from Cat on a Hot Tin Roof), Wade Boggs, Tim Raines, Jimmy Key, and David Cone—was the spark plug that ignited the team, ultimately to their first World Series title since 1978. Nineteen-ninety-six could not have been a more improbable season. In 1995, Jeter had a late cup of coffee with the team he would eventually captain. That season was “capped” by one of the most discouraging postseason losses by any club, ever, to the Seattle Mariners. The Mariners were the team poised to take over the 1990s and the millennium: Junior Griffey. Randy Johnson. Jay Buhner (a former Yankee!). Tino Martinez. Edgar Martinez. Oy. Oh yes, almost forgot: there was another young powerhouse shortstop with the M’s named Alex Rodriguez. Immortal time moves on. Alex Rodriguez, rival on field and in print, is now Derek Jeter’s teammate, and has been for a while. Both have morphed into the grizzled veterans they had shoved aside and out of jobs (Luis Sojo and Tony Fernandez, respectively) in their salad days.

Jeter is at a particularly interesting crossroads.  He was involved in a messy (for the most part not his doing) public contract dispute that helped fuel the hot-stove league, now ending with winter (we hope) and the opening (we know) of the Citrus and Cactus Leagues. DJ’s November wedding never happened. He had a mediocre season that was only magnified in the Yankees ’10 postseason loss to the Texas Rangers. At times, you could almost hear him wheezing on the field, diving for balls he would have caught before, with only a face full of dirt and stains on the uniform to show for his efforts. Jeter always plays hard, just not as well or up to his standard. It had been a long, hot, and difficult summer.

George Steinbrenner, Jeter Fan, the Ultimate Not Often Happy Warrior, didn’t make it thro the summer. He died the July day Martin and I worked out our book contract (on perhaps the only wet one of the season) with Paul Dry. Sons of George, Hal and Hank Steinbrenner, have taken over the Bronx Bombers, possibly the most valuable sports organization in the world. No more George—who spearheaded a group that bought the team the year before DJ was born in those frozen, low-octane-gasoline-shortage 1970s. Hank’s first words in spring training 2011? More or less verbatim: “I saw players that are no longer hungry but were busy building mansions last season.” Jeter had erected a Florida house of thirty-thousand square feet and counting.

The season about to dawn ought to be as unpredictable as ever, with, to mix a metaphor or two, a constellation of new stars eager to shine. We’ll talk more about this new season and much else in future blogs (which will be briefer—apparently, I had to get way too much off my chest today). We’d love to know what you think.

Bye-bye winter. Hello spring!

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Shut me up, fellas.

Chin up, old man!

Every cricket World Cup, a number of Associate Member (a.k.a. second tier) cricket teams (a.k.a. “minnows”) get to swim with the big fish. This time around, Canada, The Netherlands, Kenya, and Ireland will be duking it out with Australia, India, South Africa, Pakistan, New Zealand, the West Indies, Bangladesh, and . . . England.

Why the ellipsis before England? Because, in spite of hosting the competition twice and inventing the damn game, England have never won the quadrennial shindig. And, given that England almost lost to The Netherlands in the opening game of the 2011 World Cup, it’s a good bet they won’t this time. Which makes one wonder whether the team is quite as big a fish as it might claim to be. Nobody’s quite sure why this state of affairs should obtain: England aren’t that bad, they won the World T20 Cup in 2010, and usually make it through to the quarter- or semi-final stage of the 50-over World Cup before going down in flames.

It’s my bet that, apart from an exhausting cricketing schedule that has seen some members of the team on the road for the vast majority of the last four months, the hunger for it isn’t there. Test cricket is as popular in England as the shorter forms, and I fancy that, in their heart of hearts, these cricketers just think it’s a more worthy form of the game. They won’t tell you that, of course, and I could be very wrong. One way they could prove it, however, is by winning the competition. Shut me up, fellas.

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What Is a Powerplay?

Wake me up when it gets exciting.

In the last decade or so, the one-day, 50-over form of the game of cricket has been under assault. Too many longueurs, complain critics and administrators, who look at the thirty overs between the first and the last ten and wonder how they can make them more exciting. The answer has been the Powerplay. In the current iteration, there are three of them. The first occurs in the first ten overs of the innings. During that time, the fielding team must keep all but two of its players within a circle of thirty yards around the bat. This is meant to encourage the batsmen to hit over the top of, or through, the infield, and supply the crowd with more to entertain them. The second Powerplay, lasting five overs, is at the fielding captain’s behest. During that time, the fielding team can only have three fielders outside the circle. The third Powerplay, also five overs, is the responsibility of the batting team, and all but three fielders must be within the circle.

If you’re confused, I don’t blame you. So are the captains and batsmen on the field, who often fail to take advantage of the Powerplay. In a recent world cup game, Zimbabwe left the final Powerplay until their last two (and worst) batsmen were at the crease, while England were denied a wicket against The Netherlands when it was discovered that they hadn’t had the requisite number of fielders in the circle. And all the rigging for excitement still hasn’t sorted out the perceived “problem” with the middle overs, where batsmen will knock the ball around the field taking one or two runs here and there, and not generally playing the “big shots.”

One reason the one-day game might feel tired is that there are so many of them that the players are heartily sick of them. Meaningless series and pointless competitions between mismatched teams have meant that it doesn’t much matter if you miss one game because another one will come along in a minute. When I was growing up, One-Day Internationals (ODIs) were relatively few and far between, and therefore relished. Bowlers could also bowl bouncers and the batting team wasn’t automatically awarded with an extra run if the bowler delivered the ball behind the batsman (a leg-side wide in cricketing teams). In other words, the games were rare, the bowlers could attack the batsmen, and it wasn’t all wham-bam-thank-you-ma’am.

By the time you read this article, the 50-over structure may have changed again. It may even have gone extinct—changed into two innings of 20 and 25 overs each, or reduced to 40 overs: anything to manufacture some excitement. My solution is simply to play fewer of ’em. Sometimes in sport, you’ve got to leave them wanting more.

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The Games Have Begun!

So, the 2011 cricket World Cup is underway, and already Australia and India have thrashed their oppositions, and are looking set fair to do very well. Competition minnows, Kenya and Canada, were sadly thrashed, and look out of their depth. But, true to form, the English cricket team managed to screw up their game against The Netherlands—a somewhat bigger minnow—to the point that they almost lost it. England has never won the World Cup, and judging by this performance, it’s unlikely to do it this time around.

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The World One-Day International Cricket Cup Tournament Has Begun

Every four years, the cricket world’s top teams gather to compete in the 50-over form of the game of cricket. Be sure to check in over these next seven weeks as we cover the games, the stories, and try to explain what a Powerplay is!

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