Either that or the 7 gold gloves that Omar Vizquel was winning in the AL between 1995 and 2001.Originally Posted by love_that_reefer
Either that or the 7 gold gloves that Omar Vizquel was winning in the AL between 1995 and 2001.Originally Posted by love_that_reefer
Yep that too but we all know that Arod was the better SS.
No. No chance in hell. Omar was the best glove man at SS in the last decade hands down.Originally Posted by love_that_reefer
Excuse me, I meant to say we all know Arod was better than Jeter and not Vizquel. Vizquel was far and away better and one of the best alltime. Omar is still doing a helluva job for the Giants.
Moving either Jeter or Rodriguez to the outfield would be a waste of a Hall of Fame infielder if a center fielder is easier to acquire than a third baseman in the offseason. It would be foolish to make the move this season, as the team has no contingency plan in place to replace either man in the infield. With Eric Duncan's struggles in AA, there appears to be no internal solution either.
Best case: Keep both where they are and hunt down a legit center fielder. No, there isn't a good one available, so the Yankees may have to settle.
they could have had one in his late 20's named Beltran, but they wanted a 40 year old pitcher instead
It's George, what did you expect?
"Players can't get better over time." -GiantsFanatic
joek is a moron. Why do people even respond to him? Especially on any matter relating to the Yankees.
Yankees didn't NEED a centerfielder. They wanted one. The Bombers NEEDED Starting pitching and that is what they went out and got. Just like life, sometimes you have to put needs before wants.Originally Posted by Providence A's
Jaret Wright aside, the moves they made were solid. Johnson and Pavano weregreat last year. They haven't paid off as expected yet, but we need to give them a chance.Originally Posted by Saber
Randy Johnson was the only pitcher with a clear history of dominance, and I don't fault that move. Carl Pavano, on the other hand, has never struck out a lot of batters, and really only had two healthy years in front of a good defense in a pitcher's park. His peripherals in 2004 weren't that much different from 2003, although luck and defense made his ERA decrease a run. Carl Pavano is an average pitcher paid like a very good one. I'm not turning on the these players at all, since I thought Pavano and Wright were bad ideas from the start.
Fools rush in where wise men fear to thread.