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Author: Neil Keefe

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Giants-Jaguars Week 1 Thoughts: The Giants Will Never Change

Change the general manager, change the head coach, change the coordinators, change the majority of the roster, but it doesn’t matter, the New York Football Giants will never change.

Eli Manning

Change the general manager, change the head coach, change the coordinators, change the majority of the roster, but it doesn’t matter, the New York Football Giants will never change. They will always be the same team.

You never would have known if it was Tom Coughlin or Ben McAdoo or Pat Shurmur on the sideline on Sunday in the first game of the 2018 season because the performance from the Giants over the last several seasons, spanning all three coaches, has been the same. Even if it’s unfair to group Shurmur into the disappointing losses suffered during the tenures of the other two after just one game, it was such a Giants-esque loss that I can’t help but include him.

The second play of the season was a 31-yard pass against the Giants defense and the first play of the season for the offense was a tripping penalty on Ereck Flowers at the Giants’ 14. And they were at their own 14 because Cody Latimer decided to run the ball out of the end zone, gaining only the 14 and costing the Giants 11 yards of field position on their season-opening drive. After the Flowers trip, the Giants were backed up to their own 7. They then ran a play for no gain before Eli Manning connected with Evan Engram for 34 yards. But that play was negated by a flag. Who was the flag on? Do you even have to ask? Flowers, of course. This time for holding. Now facing a second-and-20 from their own 4 against the best defense in the league, it was no surprise the possession would result in a punt. Thankfully, three plays later, Blake Bortles would turn into Blake Bortles and throw an interception.

The second Giants possession took the Giants 59 yards from their own 37 to the Jaguars’ 4, where it would stall out in typical Giants fashion. Facing a third-and-Goal from the 8, the Giants decided to run an end-around to Odell Beckham Jr. The play, which actually made me laugh out loud, shockingly resulted in a loss of one yard. Aldrick Rosas converted the 27-yard field goal to tie the game.

From there, the Jaguars kicked another field goal to gup 6-3 and the Giants punted for a second time, leading to a Jaguars touchdown to put the Giants behind 13-3. The Giants got the ball back with 2:42 in the half and a chance for my favorite thing in football: the double score with a possession before the half and the first possession of the second half. The Giants once again got the ball to the red zone and couldn’t get it in the end zone against the vaunted Jaguars defense, and they trailed 13-6 at half.

On the first play of the second half, the Giants called timeout after not being able to get the play off in time. It was the most Giants thing of all time. Even more than the two penalties in the first three plays of their season. How could they come out of halftime and not have the first play of the half decided upon? That’s not rhetorical. I’m asking because I need to know. Using a timeout on the first play of the half is irresponsible. But don’t worry, I’m sure they won’t need that timeout later in the game.

A third Rosas field goal to open the half cut the deficit to 4, but I started to think how Rosas was now 3-for-3 and if the game were to come down to a field-goal attempt, the odds would be against him at that point. You can only trust Rosas for so long. The Giants defense got the Jaguars to punt again and thanks to an unnecessary roughness penalty and a bad punt, the Giants would start with the ball on Jaguars’ 46, trailing 13-9. The Giants had a chance to take the lead against possibly the best team in the AFC and all of football.

On third-and-7 from the Jaguars’ 43, the Giants did what the Giants always do in situations like these: they threw the ball five yards. The Engram reception left the Giants two yards short of a first down at the Jaguars’ 38. Shurmur knew what every Giants fan knows and that is that letting Rosas try a 55-yarder isn’t the best idea, considering it’s almost a certainty the Jaguars would then have the ball at midfield. So being stuck in no-man’s land, Shurmur decided to go for it on fourth down, which to me was the right call. The actual play that ran? Not so much the right call. Manning handed it off to Saquon Barkley and he was only able to gain one of the two yards. Turnover on downs.

It felt like a huge opportunity had slipped away and the Giants had gone from the chance to take the lead, or at worst make it a one-point game, to potentially being down two possessions again if the Jaguars scored a touchdown. The Giants’ defense, which came to play (something they didn’t do at all in 2017), allowed only 15 yards and the Jaguars punted again. One first down and three incomplete passes later, and the Giants punted it right back. Then the Jaguars punted, then the Giants punted, then the Jaguars punted. The game had become a defensive standoff, something I expected from the Jaguars, not the Giants. With 11:24 left in the game, the Jaguars defense basically put the game away when Manning threw a pick-6 into the hands of Myles Jack. 20-9, Jaguars.

The play was deflating. I went from thinking for the fourth straight possession that the Giants might take the lead and win a game I didn’t expect them to win to realizing I was a fool for ever having that thought. But two plays later, Barkley made me regret being so against drafting him with the second overall pick as he broke through with a 68-yard touchdown run.

It’s been so long since the Giants had a good running back. Actually, it’s been so long since the Giants have had an average running back that I forgot what it was like to have someone who can run like that and also catch balls out of the backfield and force the defense to not focus on Beckham. The touchdown made up for Barkley’s inability to get the two yards on the drive that ended with a turnover on downs earlier in the game. Naturally, the Giants’ two-point attempt failed and instead of the game being a three-point game, it was a five-point game at 20-15 with 10:39 remaining.

Another punt from the Jaguars, followed by a punt from the Giants and another punt from the Jaguars gave the Giants the ball at their own 19. The Giants were able to drive the ball 45 yards, but on fourth-and-6 from the Jaguars’ 36, they turned it over on downs for the second time in the second half.

With Leonard Fournette out of the game, the Giants were able to stop T.J. Yeldon and get the ball back with 54 seconds left and no timeouts. (No timeouts because remember the first play in the second half?) But having no timeouts or all their timeouts wouldn’t matter. Recently-signed Kaelin Clay was set to receive the punt, but he muffed it, allowing the Jaguars to recover and take a knee to run out the clock. Why was Clay out there? Why wasn’t the best hands on the team and possibly the league in Beckham not out there? There’s no reason. If you wanted Clay to just catch it and not return, Beckham would have made more sense. And if you wanted a return, Beckham still would have more sense. There’s nothing in a football game in which Kaelin Clay would make more sense than Odell Beckham Jr.

From start to finish it was the exact type of Giants game I have gotten used to watching in my life. Between allowing third-and-longs to convert, to taking two offensive line penalties in the first three plays of the season, to turning the ball over on downs twice, to not being able to convert once in the red zone, to throwing a pick-6, to failing to convert a two-point conversion, to wasting a timeout on the first play of a half, to muffing the punt with a chance to win the game, the game have everything a Giants can could expect. If I were to explain to someone what it’s like to watch the Giants every week of every season, I couldn’t have put together a more accurate depiction of the team if I tried.

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New-Look Giants Have Me Optimistic

The New York Football Giants are coming off a three-win season, have a new general manager, a new head coach, a new offensive line and a pass rush-less defense, but I still think they are a playoff team.

Pat Shurmur and Eli Manning

I enter every Giants season the same way: thinking they will win the Super Bowl. I realize it’s not a smart approach to set my expectations for the season at a championship, considering I root for a franchise that despite its four Super Bowl wins in the last 31 years has given its fan base a lot of regular-season disappointment. It’s also not the best idea to think an ownership group that interviewed Ben McAdoo and then named him head coach after speaking with him and then let him bench Eli Manning for Geno Smith has now put the team in proper hands moving forward. But the same way I’m dumb enough to bet on the Giants nearly every week, I’m dumb enough to think they can win the Super Bowl this season.

I’m not the only one though. The Giants think they can too. If they didn’t, they wouldn’t have stuck with Manning for the foreseeable future and would have used the second overall pick in the draft on a quarterback. It’s quite possible that Giants ownership, the front office, the coaching staff, the players and myself are all dumb, but I like to think we’re not.

Two years ago, the Giants were an 11-win team that should have won their only playoff game. Who knows where the franchise is right now if Odell Beckham Jr. and Sterling Shepard come down with what should have been early-touchdown catches in that awful wild-card game. The disaster that was the 2017 season likely doesn’t happen and Ben McAdoo is likely still the head coach and Jerry Reese is like still the general manager. Instead, the team is coming off a three-win season in which the both McAdoo and Reese were fired midseason, only after destroying Manning’s consecutive start streak for no reason.

I realize success is fleeting in the NFL, but I have a hard time believing the Giants could be an 11-win team in 2016 and the only team to beat the Cowboys in that regular season, which they did twice, and then become a three-win team overnight. Maybe the eight wins by a touchdown or less in 2016 were a sign that the team just had some breaks go their way in a way they never did near the end of Tom Coughlin era, but winning one-possession games is the way to win in the NFL.

It’s felt like two years since I watched any Giants football that has mattered. Last season was over in Week 3 when they lost to the eventual champion Eagles on a last-second field goal to fall to 0-3. Two weeks later, they were still winless, and a month after that, they were 1-8. It was the most miserable Giants season of my life and for many Giants fans lives, all culminating with the decision to bench Manning for no reason. But looking back, had McAdoo and Reese not decided to bench Manning and handle it the way they did, maybe the Giants win a few games down the stretch and they are both still in their old jobs for the 2018 season. It’s possible that the two idiots needed to make the worst decision in the history of the Giants to avoid Giants fans going through another season with them in charge.

Now it’s Pat Gettleman and Pat Shurmur and I don’t know what to expect. Everything about the way the Giants have planned for this season makes you think they are a playoff team. Factor in the potential Super Bowl hangover of the Eagles, the illogical roster decisions of the Cowboys and the unknown with the Redskins and it’s very easy to see how the Giants could return to the playoffs in 2018, and quite possibly as the NFC East winner. The only thing standing in their way is their schedule.

Normally, when you finish last in your division, you have a path to the playoffs paved for you the following season. Not for the 2018 Giants though. The first seven weeks of the Giants’ season are as hard as any ever with games against the Jaguars, Cowboys, Texans, Saints, Panthers, Eagles and Falcons. Throw in what is always a challenging division game against the Redskins in Week 8 and it’s an absolute gauntlet for the Giants until their bye week. I know it’s not about who you play in the NFL, but when you play them, but as of now, the Giants are going to have to be at least 3-4 in those first seven and 4-4 after Week 8 to have a chance at returning to the postseason. And they are going to have to start hot with a new head coach, a new offensive line and a defense that doesn’t have one true pass rusher on it. The more I write, the more I’m talking myself out of the previous paragraph and the Giants being a playoff team.

But for now, I’m optimistic. That’s right, I’m optimistic about not only the New York Football Giants, which is as ridiculous as it gets, but I’m optimistic about a Giants team that has a new head coach, a new offensive line and pass rush-less defense coming off a three-win season. I don’t know how long this optimism will last (probably until the first delay of game by the offense, or draw play on third-and-19 or holding penalty by the offensive line or first down allowed by the defense on third-and-21), but I think it will last longer than it did a year ago. It better.

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NFL Week 1 Picks

The first week of football is special and the anxiousness at 1:00 on the first Sunday of the season is indescribable. Keeping up with the games, parlays, teasers and fantasy teams all at once, while drinking and eating thousands of bad calories for nearly 11 straight hours is magical.

Odell Beckham Jr. and Eli Manning

I have seasonal depression. The fact that it’s cold at night now and the temperatures fluctuate drastically from day to day and I have to actually check the weather to see what I should be wearing saddens me. I hate that summer is over. I hate it. But like every year at this time, I’m happy that football is back.

The first week of football is special and the anxiousness at 1:00 on the first Sunday of the season is indescribable. Keeping up with the games, parlays, teasers and fantasy teams all at once, while drinking and eating thousands of bad calories for nearly 11 straight hours 17 times a year is magical.

Week 1 is my favorite week to pick and wager on because your decision making is based on your own knowledge and feel for how the season will play out. Week 2, on the other hand, is a reaction and a lot of times an overreaction to what happened in Week 1. If I could, I would sit out Week 2. Unfortunately, that’s not an option. But we have a whole slate of games before we get to the eventual disaster that awaits next week. For now, it’s the best week of the season: Week 1.

(Home team in caps)

Atlanta +3 over PHILADELPHIA
I’m still not over the Falcons’ Super Bowl loss. Dan Quinn should have been fired after the Falcons’ Super Bowl collapse and loss two years ago the same way his former head coach Pete Carroll should have been fired for his goal-line decision two years before that. If you’re the owner of the Falcons, you simply can’t trust Quinn after the way he mismanaged the clock and stopped running the ball altogether in that game. The Falcons will never have that kind of lead in the Super Bowl ever again and if you can’t trust coach to take it home with a 25-point lead in the third quarter, how can you ever trust him in any other game?

I realize saying all of this makes it seems like me picking the Falcons is a typo but it’s not. I would like to think that the Falcons learned from the worst collapse of all time and learned from their absurd red-zone play calling in the playoffs against the Eagles eight months ago, which eliminated his team from the postseason. This has to be the Falcons coaching staff’s last chance to figure it out as the Falcons’ window of opportunity is closing fast.

As for the Eagles, I have only ever rooted for them once in my life and that was in the Super Bowl. Barring the same matchup in a future Super Bowl, I will never root for them again. I can see the Eagles having a disappointing season following a championship because it just makes too much sense for them not to. But at the same time I want Nick Foles to succeed to cause the greatest quarterback controversy in history and tear the team and its fan base apart.

CLEVELAND +5.5 over Pittsburgh
No, this isn’t a Hard Knocks pick. Because if I learned anything from Hard Knocks it’s that Hue Jackson should no longer be the Browns head coach. I have no idea how any player can listen to or respect a coach who has gone 1-31 over the last two seasons. And while he wasn’t exactly given the best rosters to work with, he’s still the head coach of both a 1-15 and 0-16 team, and it will be very easy for his players to tune him out if this season doesn’t start well. But Jackson is likely still the head coach because it’s hard to sell any well-respect coaching candidate on taking the Browns job right now. Anyone with success who is in the mix for a head coaching job isn’t about to take the Cleveland job and ruin their career. So for now, Jackson gets to keep his job and gets to wear jeans when he lets players know they are being released.

This pick isn’t about that much-improved Browns. It’s more about the overrated Steelers. I understand the Steelers, like the Cowboys, enjoy an inflated line because of their national following, but the Steelers aren’t good. I don’t even think they are a playoff team this season. This season is the end for Mike Tomlin in Pittsburgh and it starts in Week 1 with a poor showing in Cleveland.

NEW YORK GIANTS +3 over
The Giants first-half schedule is possibly the hardest schedule ever created in the history of the NFL. It’s hard to say the Giants should beat a true Super Bowl contender in Week 1, but they kind of have to if they want to avoid losing their season before it even begins with their schedule.

I don’t know how the offensive line is going to hold up against the Jaguars defense or how the Giants defense is going to handle Leonard Fournette or what to expect from Pat Shurmur as head coach, but it all better work out.

Tennessee +1 over MIAMI
The Titans were a playoff team last year and the Dolphins were one the year before and might have been again last season if not for having to play Jay Cutler.. Yet, this game feels like an absolute borefest.

BALTIMORE -7.5 over Buffalo
Nathan Peterman is starting for the Bills. That doesn’t seem like a great idea given his performance last season.

Houston +6.5 at NEW ENGLAND
The Texans nearly, and should have, pulled off the upset on the road against the Patriots last season. This pick is more about me not wanting the Patriots to win and win big than it is that I actually think the Texans will win or cover.

MINNESOTA -6.5 over San Francisco
I watched the NFC Championship Game with Brittni in a bar across from the Staples Center before Rangers-Kings. After the Vikings’ opening-drive touchdown I was so mad I hadn’t put even more money on the Vikings than I had. But as the game went on and I watched Brittni’s mood decline, I was happy I only gave back all the money Stefon Diggs had won me the week before and a little more.

The Vikings were a final four team with Case Keenum as their quarterback and without Dalvin Cook for nearly the entire season. I’m not the biggest Kirk Cousins fans, but he’s certainly better than Keenum and Cook is back from his ACL injury, and the Vikings defense will be as good as it has been now for the last three seasons.

NEW ORLEANS -10 over Tampa Bay
I like to do a weekly seven-point teaser during the season aside from the usual straight bets just to make things interesting. This week’s teaser is a five-team teaser (3.5-to-1 odds):

NYG +10
MIN +0.5
HOU +13.5
BAL -0.5
GB -0.5

The teaser was originally a six-team teaser with NO -3, but after looking back at their home games last year, I remember too many times needing them to score late to cover for me (especially in their win over the Jets) that I decided to remove them. I still think they will win big against the Bucs and I still think they are once again a playoff team this season, but the Superdome Saints can’t be trusted the way they could a few years ago, and I don’t want them destroying that teaser.

Cincinnati +1 over INDIANAPOLIS
I had to look up to see if Marvin Lewis is still the head coach in Cincinnati, and he is. This is his 15th season as head coach of the Bengals and he has as many career playoff wins as me. How is that not an issue for Bengals ownership? Why are NFL owners so soft when it comes to changing the person responsible for running their multi-billion-dollar business?

KANSAS CITY +3 over Los Angeles
I originally wrote KANSAS CITY +3 over San Diego and several times this week I tried to look up the Chargers schedule by searching for San Diego. It’s like after the New Year when you continue to write the previous year except that only last a few days or maybe a week. The Chargers have now played a full season in Los Angeles and my brain still thinks they play in San Diego. I’m starting to realize why they don’t have a fan base.

CAROLINA -3 over Dallas
The Cowboys are going to be bad. Very, very, very, very bad. And it makes me giddy just thinking about how bad they are going to be. Jason Witten retired, they released Dez Bryant and Dan Bailey, they’re without their best offensive lineman, their quarterback can’t throw the ball more than seven yards and their No. 1 receiver is Cole Beasley. I wish you could see the smile on my face while typing this paragraph.

WASHINGTON +1 over Arizona
I have never been an Alex Smith fan, but he’s not bad. He takes care of the ball, makes good decisions for the most part and is reliable. He’s basically the opposite of Sam Bradford.

DENVER -3 over Seattle
It’s too bad the Seahawks have gradually regressed since Pete Carroll made the worst call in sports history on the goal line in the Super Bowl. (Yes, that’s the second Pete Carroll Super Bowl disaster reference in these picks. I will never pass up a chance to reference that decision.) The Seahawks were a Marshawn Lynch one-yard run away from winning back-to-back Super Bowls. Instead they lost the Super Bowl, thanks to their coach, lost in the divisional round the next season, lost in the first round the season after that and missed the playoffs last season. Now, the Seahawks look like they will have their worst team in a decade. That’s too bad.

GREEN BAY -7.5 over Chicago
This has trap game written all over it. Between being a division game in primetime and having a touchdown-plus spread to being the last thing I will potentially need to hit to win my five-team teaser, I’m petrified of this game. But I know if I pick the Bears to cover and they go down 7-0 two minutes into the game in an eventual blowout, I will be way more angry at myself than if they’re somehow able to keep it close and cover.

New York Jets +7 over DETROIT
I wanted the Giants to draft Sam Darnold. It’s not that I think Eli Manning is done or that it’s time to move on. It’s that the Giants should have drafted under the premise that they won’t be drafting second overall again for a long, long time, and when there is a possible generational talent available like Darnold, you take him, groom him and then turn the team over to him. But since the front office decided Manning still has a few years left, it would have only caused a weekly shitstorm every time the Giants lost with fans calling for Darnold to start. I think once it was decided Manning could still play, the organization wasn’t about to create their own media relations circus. I hate the Jets, but I’m rooting for Darnold.

Los Angeles Rams -7 over OAKLAND
Raiders fans are nostalgic for the return of John Gruden, but I don’t think that will last long. Following Gruden forcing Khalil Mack out of Oakland in his prime, Gruden approval rating leash got very short even if he does have a decade-long deal to run the Raiders. The moment Gruden’s hiring was announced I felt it would eventually turn into a disaster and the process started before he even coached a game.

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Aaron Boone Should Now Be Managing for His Job

The Yankees are done in the division and now their lead on the first wild-card spot has dwindled to 2.5 games in what was supposed to be a championship season. Aaron Boone should be on the hot seat for the rest of the season.

Aaron Boone

I will be at the Stadium on Wednesday, Oct. 3 for the AL Wild-Card Game. Well, that’s if the Yankees don’t play themselves out of the first wild-card spot and then have to go to either Seattle or Oakland for the one-game playoff. Well, that’s if the Yankees don’t play themselves out of the wild-card game altogether and miss the playoffs completely. Because right now, that’s where this thing is headed.

You couldn’t have dreamed up a worse weekend in Boston. Blowing an early 4-0 lead and mismanaging to a loss on Thursday. Getting one-hit by Rick Porcello, the worst Cy Young winner in history, on Friday. Getting shut down by former Yankee disappointment Nathan Eovaldi, whose career has survived countless starts of four innings and 100-plus pitches, on Saturday. Blowing a three-run lead in the ninth inning and losing in extra innings on Sunday. Letting Steve Pearce, a former Yankee who did nothing in pinstripes, become David Ortiz, and letting former Yankee joke Eduardo Nunez double and steal like the player Brian Cashman envisioned he would one day become, which he never became.

Early on Thursday, it looked like the Yankees might make this weekend and this pennant race interesting, but those positive thoughts didn’t even last four full innings. Now, the division is officially over. So if you still think the Yankee are coming back in the AL East and avoiding the AL Wild-Card Game for the third time in four years, stop kidding yourself and wasting your time. Even if the Yankees swept the remaining six games against the Red Sox this season, that still wouldn’t erase their current deficit in the standings, and the Yankees will be lucky if they win one of those six games. The division is over. O-V-E-R. No matter what the actual standings say, you can put whatever letter you want next to the Red Sox in the standings to denote that they have clinched the division and you can change the Yankees’ division elimination number to zero.

This was supposed to be a championship season. At worst, a return to the postseason without having to be put through another one-game playoff just to reach the ALDS. If the Yankees were to lose in the ALDS or ALCS, so be it. That’s the crapshoot that is MLB’s postseason format. But coming off a season in which they had two chances to win one game to advance to the World Series and then added Giancarlo Stanton, Gleyber Torres, Miguel Andujar in place of Jacoby Ellsbury, Starlin Castro and Chase Headley, this season was supposed to build on last. This season they were supposed to get that fourth ALCS win and possibly four more after that.

Maybe they still will. Maybe they will beat the Mariners or A’s in the AL Wild-Card Game and then beat the Red Sox in the ALDS even with Games 1 and 2 in Boston and without Luis Severino for either of those two games. Then maybe they will overcome the Astros in the ALCS or knock the Indians out of the playoffs for a second straight year. It’s all possible and it all could still happen. But by going back to the wild-card game, their path to where they want to be, to where Yankees fans thought they would be, is a whole lot more difficult.

It didn’t have to be this way. This disastrous weekend at Fenway could have still happened, and while it would still hurt, it would hurt a whole lot less if the Yankees had “taken care of business” (what Aaron Boone always like to say) against the weak teams in the league, and there are a lot of them, but they didn’t.

The Yankees are 21-20 against the Orioles, Rays, Mets, Rangers, Nationals, Tigers and Marlins, none of which are postseason teams. The Orioles are on pace to lose 113 games, the Mets 95, the Rangers 92, the Tigers 94 and the Marlins 96. Had the Yankees beaten up on the bad teams the way good teams are supposed to, they could have handled a bad weekend in Boston and still been in play for the division. (It turns out games in April are just as important as games in August and September.) But because of their poor play against the league’s worst, the Yankees went to Boston with no margin for error, and left Boston winless, riding a five-game losing streak, their chances at winning the division destroyed and their grip on the first wild-card spot having dwindled to 2.5 games.

The Yankees are in trouble. Big trouble. The starting pitching, offense, defense, non-elite middle relief and closer have all gone into a slump at the same time. The manager has been in a slump all season, aside from the five weeks when the team was seemingly hitting five home runs a game when anyone could have managed the Yankees to wins. The only thing to not be slumping right now is the team’s elite middle relief pitching and that’s because they haven’t really been used. And I wouldn’t be surprised if they join the team-wide slump upon actually appearing in games because if there’s one thing anyone should know about Aroldis Chapman and Dellin Betances is that they are ineffective following long layoffs and we saw it with Chapman on Sunday.

Teams are going to slump though. That’s baseball and that’s what happens in a 162-game season. It’s unfortunate that the Yankees endured a team-wide slump in the most important series since last year’s ALCS. But there should never be a reason for the manager to slump or not be on his game.

Boone’s in-game decisions have been atrocious, his bullpen management has been a disaster, his lineups have rarely made sense (Luke Voit over Greg Bird being his latest example of genius) and his need to have Shane Robinson starting five of the last nine games was the icing on the cake in a pennant race that is now over. Boone has been in over his head as a manager this season, which is what you expect from a rookie manager with no coaching experience at any level. That’s why you don’t hand over a championship-ready team to a blank resume because of a postseason home run he hit 15 years ago and because he and his family are baseball lifers and because he’s calm and will communicate well with his players. In close games, when his decisions have mattered, he’s been awful because he’s never had to make those decisions before and because he’s never been involved in those decisions before. Thursday’s game wasn’t anything new from him, it was just magnified because of the opponent and the importance of the series. Anyone who has watched this team all season wasn’t surprised by his decisions in the series opener. It was just another loss that could be pinned on him. Unfortunately, this season, there have been too many of those.

Now the Yankees head to Chicago to play the 41-70 White Sox, another bad team in a year with so many bad teams. From there, they will play the 49-64 Rangers, then the 45-64 Mets, then the 56-56 Rays (who are 5-1 in their last six games against the Yankees), then the 51-60 Blue Jays, then the 46-67 Marlins, then the 34-78 Orioles, then the White Sox again and then the 47-65 Tigers. The Yankees won’t face a possible postseason team until Sept. 3 when they go to the West Coast to play the A’s and Mariners. Will they finally “take care of business” with 27 straight games against teams without a chance of reaching the postseason? Through the first 110 games of the season, there’s been nothing to suggest they will.

The remaining 52 games aren’t about trying to catch the Red Sox. That’s not happening. They’re about trying to win the first wild card and play the one-game playoff at home.

I’ll be at the Stadium on Wednesday, Oct. 3 for the AL Wild-Card Game for the the third one-game playoff in four years. If I’m not there because the game isn’t being played there, or if the Yankees don’t win that game, Boone should be fired. It doesn’t matter that it’s one game and that anything can happen in one baseball game. That’s no excuse, rather it’s the reason why winning the division was so important and why Boone should have done everything he could to do so. It will mean that one year of this championship window was wasted. Another one can’t be.

***

My book The Next Yankees Era: My Transition from the Core Four to the Baby Bombers is now available as an ebook!

The book details my life as a Yankees fan, growing up watching Derek Jeter, Mariano Rivera, Andy Pettitte, Jorge Posada and Bernie Williams through my childhood and early adulthood and the shift to now watching Gary Sanchez, Luis Severino, Aaron Judge, Greg Bird and others become the latest generation of Yankees baseball. It’s a journey through the 2017 postseason with flashbacks to games and moments from the Brian Cashman era.

Click here to purchase the book through Amazon as an ebook. You can read it on any Apple device by downloading the free Kindle app.

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Yankees Need a Miracle to Catch Red Sox

The Yankees trail by four in the loss column and if they don’t make up ground this weekend, it’s back to the wild-card game.

This October will be 14 years since the Yankees and Red Sox last met in the postseason. It looks like that drought won’t reach 15 years as the rivals are headed for a best-of-5 matchup in the ALDS if the AL East runner-up can win the AL Wild-Card Game. The problem is that as of now the Yankees are the team headed for the one-game playoff.

The Yankees are in trouble. Their poor play against the league’s worst team has them trailing the Red Sox by four games in the loss column (the only number that matters) entering a four-game series in Boston this weekend. They have 10 games left against the Red Sox, so they technically control their own destiny, but it’s going to take a lot of winning in August and September.

It’s been a while since I have done an email exchange with longtime “friend” Michael Hurley of CBS Boston for a Yankees-Red sox series. But with the two meeting for a big series this weekend I thought now was as good of a time as any to bother him.

Keefe: Michael, it’s been a long time. A very long time. So long I can’t even remember the last time we did one of these. All I know is the last time we did one of these and the many times before that, none of them came in August with a meaningful series between the two teams. Usually by now, one of the two has run away with the division, and it’s just another boring Yankees-Red Sox weekend. But not this time. Not this August. This August we have a four-game series with the division actually on the line.

The Yankees head to Boston trailing the Red Sox by four games in the loss column, and they head there without Aaron Judge and Gary Sanchez and with Didi Gregorius batting third and Aaron Hicks batting fourth and the idiot that is Aaron Boone waiting to put together illogical lineups and make ridiculous in-game decisions. They also might be without J.A. Happ, who they traded for specifically because of his success against the Red Sox, but he contracted hand, foot and mouth disease, which I thought was something that was last present when the Mayflower landed at Plymouth Rock. The Red Sox will be without Chris Sale and possibly without Xander Boegarts, Brian Johnson will open the series for them, and former Yankee and Yankees fan whipping boy Nathan Eovaldi will see his old team.

Some of the rivalry’s biggest names will be missing this weekend, but unfortunately, both Mookie Betts and J.D. Martinez will be playing. The duo has become what I thought Judge and Giancarlo Stanton could be (and Sanchez too, but Boone has refrained from ever stacking the three together, opting to divide them up with the big bats of Gregorius and Hicks). I believe when both teams are 100 percent healthy that the Yankees are the better team top to bottom and I think we will see that if Betts and Martinez ever come back to earth.

They might not hit back-to-back, but the two seem to be this Red Sox team’s version of David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez. Maybe even better?

Hurley: It has been a long time. Maybe we’re being forgetful but it does feel like there hasn’t been this much intrigue on the Red Sox and Yankees in August for a long time. Don’t check the records on that.

Betts and Martinez are statistically like Ortiz and Ramirez, sure. But they’re also not at all like Ortiz and Ramirez. That era is over, and I know that if you’re like me, it’s tough to adjust. I prefer the early-2000s game much better than whatever is going on now. And for as great as Betts is and as great as Martinez has been — and even, say, how good Mike Trout is on a regular basis — there’s just something to be missed about having massive power hitters filling slots 3-7 in a lineup every night. Steroid Era for life.

I mean, you’ve told a million stories in your life, but the one you’ve probably shared the most was how you sat in Fenway for Game 5 (?) of the ALCS, whizzing down your leg as you watched the little asterisk on the Sox’ lineup board make its way back around to Ortiz and Ramirez. For as good as Betts and Martinez are, I don’t think you’ll ever feel that way about them, right?

It does kind of feel like we’re all getting robbed a little bit by this four-game series. A month ago this looked like it’d be a showdown of two teams tied for first place. Maybe some leftover feelings from Tyler Austin’s insane overreaction to spiking someone would surface. But instead the Red Sox lead by 5.5, Chris Sale was put on the DL even though this series was upcoming, Aaron Judge broke his wrist, Xander Bogaerts probably won’t play, and as you said, there will be Brian Johnson be and Nathan Eovaldi starts. Kind of a thud of a four-game series.

It kind of feels like the only way this series can bring some excitement will be if the Yankees can pull a 2006 and rip off a jumbo series sweep. But we all know that was a once-in-a-lifetime event. The Red Sox and Yankees are destined to split every series and every season series for the rest of our lives.

Keefe: Ah, the 2006 five-game sweep. What a glorious weekend that was. Now all I can think about is how the Yankees didn’t win the World Series that season against the weakest playoff field of all time. Instead they lost to the Tigers in four games, despite having this lineup:

Johnny Damon, CF
Derek Jeter, SS
Bobby Abreu, RF
Gary Sheffield, 1B
Jason Giambi, DH
Alex Rodriguez, 3B
Hideki Matsui, LF
Jorge Posada, C
Robinson Cano, 2B

The team was so stacked they had to play Sheffield at FIRST BASE, A-Rod was batting SIXTH and Robinson Cano batted NINTH despite hitting .342 in the regular season. I guess pitching matters in the postseason, and you can’t expect a 42-year-old Randy Johnson and Jared Wright to win playoff games for you. Good job by Brian Cashman not addressing that need that season.

But you’re right about the lineups. Those 2003-2005 Yankees and Red Sox lineups ridiculous. We now know why they were so ridiculous, and unfortunately, that era of baseball is gone because performance-enhancing drugs are bad! So bad in fact that if you’re suspended for using them you can’t play in the postseason, but if you’re suspended for domestic violence, you’re cleared for October! Major League Baseball is great.

Another great decision of Major League Baseball’s is your favorite topic: the wild-card game. Most likely, the Yankees are headed to that game for the third time in four seasons. The previous two times (2015 and 2017), they would have advanced to the ALDS in the old format, but instead played nine playoff innings one time and catapulted to the ALCS the other time. This time will be the biggest atrocity of them all.

The Yankees are on pace to win 104 games, and will then play the Mariners or A’s in ONE GAME to determine if they advance to the ALDS. They will burn Luis Severino in that game in order to advance and then face the Red Sox in a five-game series in which their best starting pitcher will only pitch once.

But hey, “Win your division!” is what everyone says.

Hurley: You’re probably the only person on earth who feels similarly about the one-game playoff as I do. (Except for when the Yankees benefited as the second wild card that one time. I know you enjoyed that. Briefly.)

At this point I’ve basically given up the fight. People just don’t care about what’s fair or reasonable, and there will always be the reply of “JUST WIN YER DIVIZION!” even when one division has a pair of 100-game winners and another division *cough AL Central* is straight butt. Just pure buttock. The Twins are in second place in the AL Central. They’re 11 games under .500. The Rays are two games over .500 and yet are 19.5 games out of first place in the East. BUT JUST WIN YOUR DIVISION AND STOP YOUR WHINING!

The Indians can win the AL Central if they start their relievers and pick their positions out of a hat every inning.

What I’ve come to terms with is the fact that baseball has always been a little unfair. Back when only one team “won” the AL and made the World Series, that likely wasted the efforts of a great 104-win team or two, without even giving them a chance. Before the wild card was introduced in ’94, some good teams were probably left out of the postseason field. Fine. Whatever.

Doesn’t change the fact that MLB using ONE GAME — nine innings — to determine anything of substance is insane. Maybe I’ve done this with you before, but in case I haven’t, here’s the percentage of the regular season accounted for in the first round of each league’s playoffs:

NFL (1 game; 16-game regular season): 6.25%

NBA/NBA (4-7 games; 82-game regular season: Between 4.88% and 8.54%

MLB (1 game; 162-game regular season): 0.6%

Zero-point-six percent! Makes sense.

Anyways, that’s only part of the idiocy this year. Because this year, as every year, the winner of the wild-card game will play the best team in the league. Let’s assume the current standings hold, and let’s assume that the Yankees beat the Mariners. The Yankees will then have to face the Red Sox in a five-game ALDS. The Indians (sixth-best record in the AL) will get the Astros (6.5 games worse than the Red Sox) in the ALDS.

Why on God’s green earth would you want the teams with the two best records to face each other in a five-game ALDS? Why, Neil? Why?

It was idiotic before when divisional opponents couldn’t meet in the ALDS. It’s idiotic now that there’s nothing to prevent the two best teams from playing each other in the ALDS.

Why are there only idiots in charge of these things? Why? Why? Why? 

I’m mad now.

Keefe: I wish I knew the answer. But we’re talking about a league in which half of its teams have the pitchers hit and the other half do. It doesn’t matter that some pitchers haven’t had to hit since they were in high school and some even longer than that. What other professional sport asks its players to do something they aren’t a professional at? Major League hitters have a hard enough time hitting Major League pitching, but pitchers are supposed to be able to?

I know one pitcher who Major League hitters, most importantly, the Yankees, don’t have a problem hitting: David Price.

In April, Price lasted one inning, allowing four earned runs on three hits and two walks against the Yankees. During the May series, I jokingly tweeted that the Red Sox would announce Price wouldn’t make his scheduled start against the Yankees because he was too scared to face them. Sure enough, he was scratched from his start due to a video game-related injury. In July, he faced them again, allowing eight earned runs on nine hits, including five home runs, in 3 1/3 innings.

I’m waiting for the announcement that Price has a mysterious injury or an excuse to arise so he can miss his start on Sunday night. Maybe he will hurt his hand playing video games again. Maybe he will text Alex Cora from his couch and say he is stuck in an elevator. Maybe he will hold a thermometer up to the light in the trainer’s room before the game or make himself throw up so it seems like he has the flu. I have a hard time believing he will actually take the mound on Sunday Night Baseball, especially if the game means what it ccould potentially mean.

The Red Sox gave Price $217 million not knowing if he could handle Boston or win in the postseason, and he hasn’t been able to do either. I wouldn’t say his tenure has gone as bad as Carl Crawford’s, but it’s right there. Price just needs to blog about how the Boston media is mean to him.

With his poor performance, his elbow seemingly on the brink of tearing over the last two seasons, and $127 million owed to him from 2019-2022, I feel like Price is basically going to have to stay healthy and be Curt Schilling in the 2001 postseason to change his image.

Hurley: Wow, sounds like somebody in this conversation has weasled his way out of a junior hockey game or two with a little tomfoolery. Not surprising.

I’m actually in the middle of writing now why Price has a lot to prove on Sunday night. Not that I think he will actually prove it, or that one start can really “prove” anything grand, but he at least has the opportunity to do something somewhat positive against the Yankees. It definitely has all the makings of a potential disaster. Can you imagine if the Yankees take the first three games and the Red Sox put all their eggs into David Price’s basket to prevent the division lead from dropping to 1.5 games? That would qualify as must-see TV.

But one thing you overlooked in all of that (credit to you for not overlooking the video game injury) is that Price has got to be furiously refreshing his weather app all week long here in Boston. The weather on Saturday looks dicey. I don’t know how much it’s going to rain, but it is supposed to rain. And with a 4 p.m. scheduled start time, the teams lose three hours they otherwise could have waited to start the game. And we know that the Yankees will refuse to start any game after, I don’t know, 8 o’clock, or they’ll have to start boycotting ESPN or whatever it is they do when they lose out on some sleep and rest. (Very nice homage to Adrian Gonzalez by the Yankees this year, I will give them that.) So Price may be sitting inside his 8-billion-dollar condo right now doing some sort of rain dance, hoping against hope that Saturday’s game gets rained out and he can get pushed back a day. After the last Sunday night outing against the Yankees, I can’t imagine he wants anything to do with that game.

I actually wouldn’t mind that happening, just to see the Yankees react to having to potentially play another double-header this season. You’ve just got to feel terrible for those guys, you know? Poor babies.

On Price, one last thought: This might qualify as a crazy HOT TAKE or whatever, but I don’t consider it out of the realm of possibility at all that Price still opts out of his contract at the end of this season, knowing he won’t get nearly the $127 million left on his current deal. The guy just seems M-I-S-E-R-A-B-L-E here, and I don’t ever see it getting better. I just don’t. He signed this deal with the idea of opting out like Sabathia or A-Rod and somehow making even more money. Last offseason’s dry market obviously changed that, as did Price’s “unique” elbow situation, as has his 3.77 ERA in Boston, as have his outbursts at the media, etc. etc. etc. If he becomes a free agent this winter at age 33, he’ll be lucky to find a two-year deal that will pay him $30 million total. But he’s already made $144 million, and aside from owning a random Batmobile, he seems like a gym shorts and T-shirt kind of guy.

What I’m saying is, David Price, future Atlanta Brave. Book it now. (Please.)

Keefe: That’s actually a very reasonable and intelligent theory. I’m surprised it came from you. I could easily see him being a Brave and pitching to a 2.50 ERA in the NL East.

So with the Red Sox sitting at 75-34 with the best record in baseball, what are people in Boston mad about? Here, the Yankees might be 68-38 with the second-best record in baseball and would be winning any other division other than the AL East, but because they are trailing the Red Sox and moving closer and closer to the wild-card game it feels like they are a .500 team.

Injuries have prevented the Yankees from having their entire lineup for even a single month of the season, and that coupled with Boone’s lineup decisions and in-game management, has given Yankees fans enough reason to complain. But no storyline has drawn more attention than Sonny Gray.

On Wednesday, Gray made Yankees history by becoming the first Yankee ever to allow five or more earned runs in less than four innings for the sixth time in a season. The Yankees are now 10–11 when Gray stars and 58-27 when he doesn’t. He has single-handedly put the Yankees in their current hole in the division.

The Red Sox don’t have a Sonny Gray, but there must be something Red Sox fans are complaining about. This is a fan base that was upset after the team’s 2005 ALDS loss despite what happened the year before.

Hurley: I actually laughed out loud when I heard that Sonny Gray became the first person to do that six times in a season “since earned runs began being kept as a statistic.” What a brutal low blow that was by whoever worded that. 

In Boston, people aren’t “mad,” per se. It’s kind of weird. When I was growing up, everyone in Boston was sharply negative and critical toward the team. Rightly so; they always blew it or were terrible. But since they’ve won their titles, that sort of nasty side of the fan base has really dissipated. It’s sad. Going to Fenway now feels like going to Disney Land. Everything is just so wonderful!

The most negative things you can find these days are basically A) David Price and B) nobody gives a rat’s patoot about the regular season anymore. Even with Price, there are large swaths of fans who fight back against any negative coverage of him, because … I don’t know? The guy has given no effort to even pretend to care about anyone else, but … I don’t know. But sure, I think a lot of Red Sox fans in a perfect world would like to see Price give up 8 runs in 1 inning but still have the Red Sox win the game. That surprisingly doesn’t happen too often.

The regular season thing is legitimate, and this year it’s bolstered by the fact that so many baseball teams FREAKING STINK. The Red Sox are 51-11 against the Orioles, Rays, Blue Jays, Royals, Angels, Marlins, Rangers and Nationals. The average record of those bum-ass teams is 46-62. That gets a big old whoopity-do from the fan base. And I don’t really blame them. 

The Red Sox won 93 games in 2016, won the division, and got swept by Cleveland. The Red Sox won 93 games last year, winning back to back AL East titles for the first time ever, then lost to Houston in four games. Granted, those were obviously two powerhouses that they ran into, but the point is that nobody’s getting overly thrilled about regular-season success right now.

It’s kind of funny because the Red Sox are on pace to win 111 games. The most they’ve ever won in a season is 105. They haven’t won 100 or more games in a season since 1946. 1946! Here they, potentially becoming one of like six or seven teams to ever win 110-plus games, and everyone here is just kind of like, ” …. cool. The bullpen still STINKS before Kimbrel. Good luck in October.”

In that sense, I kind of respect the way people are looking at it. Maybe it’s the glut of championships in the city combined with the Red Sox’ postseason flops in recent years that just has everybody waiting for a series victory before really getting excited about this team.

Keefe: CC Sabathia has a podcast and he has his teammates as guests on it and a lot of times they talk about potentially winning the World Series. Recently, Boone was a guest on it and he talked about being annoyed that the Red Sox keep winning, but not being worried because the Yankees need to take care of their own business, which they haven’t. Sabathia has said he isn’t worried about the Yankees’ division deficit because the Yankees play the Red Sox 10 more times. This happy-go-lucky sentiment has been echoed through the Yankees fan base by fools.

Let’s go to my favorite math game. The Red Sox gave played .688 baseball for 109 games. Let’s say they play one game over .500 for the rest of the season  and go 27-26. They would finish at 102-60. The Yankees would have to go 34-22 just to tie them, which isn’t crazy, but it’s crazy to think the Red Sox will suddenly become a .509 team.

If that doesn’t wake up Yankees fans, who think everything Boone and Brian Cashman does is right, then maybe this will.

The Yankees and Red Sox have 10 games remaining. Seven of those 10 are in Boston. Going off CC’s plan of beating Boston to erase the deficit, the Yankees would have to go 7-3 in those 10 games to even the loss column and then win three other games without losing one. If the Yankees don’t win the division, but do win the wild-card game, they would see the Red Sox again in a five-game series with Games 1 and 2 in Boston, and also Game 5, is necessary. So if the Yankees don’t win the division, and an ALDS between the two goes five games, 10 of the 15 games between the two will be played in Boston.

A four-game difference in the loss column right now might not seem like a lot to some overly-positive Yankees fans, who can’t do simple math, but it’s a big deal. Even if the Yankees were to split the series this weekend and leave Boston still four games back, well that’s four more games off the schedule with the Red Sox not losing any ground. Unless he Red Sox give us a 2006 or 2011 collapse, the Yankees are going to have to win at least three games this weekend. It’s going to take a miracle for that to happen.

Hurley: Do you ever sleep? With that level of panic and worry, I’m guessing no. I picture you in front of a corkboard, the ashes of a Camel hanging off your lower lip, your 37th cup of coffee getting cold on the desk, as you connect strings to all the different potential timelines that might develop and then doing the accompanying math. It’s kind of funny. Not that you’re wrong. But it is funny.

I guess through the course of this conversation we’ve been reminded that despite our great many differences (for example, you are a dirtbag and I am a kind fellow; I am exceptional at Wiffle Ball (Editor’s Note: I made one bad pitch to him out of thousands in my career) and you are dreadful; and so on and so forth) we really have similar baseball philosophies. Namely we understand that those who value games in August and September more than games in April and May are crazy and wrong.

I do think the 2011 Red Sox collapse does leave open the door for the Yankees. Plus, who knows if Sale’s injury actually becomes an issue? And if, say, Kimbrel blows out his shoulder, the Sox are in trouble. If Bogaerts is out for a long stretch then the infield from second to third becomes Kinsler, Holt, and Nunez. Yeesh.

So it’s maybe not exactly as dire as you portray it, BUT you definitely kind of need to see three Yankees wins this week in order to feel any level of good about it. Let’s just hope for your sanity that you knew enough not to book a trip to Boston for some of these games. We all know how that turns out. It’s usually hilarious for me, but I feel like there’s probably only so much you can take before you just collapse into a puddle on a Fenway concourse, never to be heard from again.

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