Last September, the Tampa Bay Rays decided to give Gary
Sanchez a free pass with an intentional walk.
First base was open and there was a runner on third. Sanchez opted not to play and swung at the
first ball outside, lifting a fly to center that scored the runner. At the time, the Yankees were only up by 2 in
the 8th inning. It was an
unneeded insurance run, but with the announcement that Major League Baseball
has revised the Intentional Walk, that play can never happen again.
MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, in a statement that won’t win many friends at
the MLB Players Association, said there won’t be any meaningful rule changes for
the 2017 season “due to a lack of cooperation from the MLBPA”. Nevertheless, it has been reported that MLB
will be eliminating the four outside pitches to force an intentional walk. Managers will now be able to signal for the
intentional walks from the dugout with no pitches thrown.
It’s not a substantial rule change but it will eliminate
plays like the one Sanchez collected a sac fly RBI. I always get the image of Vladimir
Guerrero. The dude could hit anything
inside or outside of the strike zone.
The bat has literally been taken from the intentional “walkee” and he’ll
now get a polite signal to advance. They
should at least make it interesting and mandate that the signal for an
intentional walk is a raised middle finger.
It was amazing that Richard Bleier stayed on the 40-man
roster as long as he did. He finally
became a DFA victim when the Yankees announced the signing of slugger Chris
Carter. Still, I was surprised when it
was announced that Bleier has been traded to the Baltimore Orioles. It wasn’t really about the return as “cash or
player to be named later” essentially equates to two cans of Mountain Dew. The bigger surprise was the inter-division
transaction with a noted rival which does not happen very often. Bleier was never going to be a key part of
the team but he is capable of getting a single out in a tight situation. I wish him the best in Baltimore. Say hi to Buck for me.
So, Alex Rodriguez has officially announced his
retirement. I always thought that he’d
try to give it one more shot to reach the 700 home run milestone. But he has proved me wrong by saying that he
has no desire to play again. I am glad
that Alex is no longer an active Yankee but the work he is doing with the team
is very good. The younger players
obviously respect Alex and he is an excellent communicator. He made an exorbitant amount of money as a
player, but his post-playing career should be similarly lucrative. Happy Retirement, Alex!
I still can’t stand Randy Levine…