"It's not a sprint, it's a marathon" - a few thousand athletes
I can't stand using cliches. I've heard a million of them, they're all trite and yet, I admit they are true in a lot of cases.
In baseball, the aforementioned one rings true every season.
April might be the most useless month of the baseball season. Everything is new, it's cold in most cities, pitching dominates all of the games and, I'm sorry, but the games, while they do count in the standings, really don't mean diddly-poo. Does anybody really believe otherwise?
Now that it is August, the pennant races are heating up and the non-waiver trade deadline has come and gone, the games are starting to matter. So, I found it a perfect time to take a step back and look at the landscape, if only to see where everybody stood.
In the National League, the Mets, Brewers and D'backs lead the divisions. The wild card race is tighter than a frogs butt is water tight.
In the American League, the Red Sox, Tigers and Angels sit atop their respective divisions. Cleveland, Minnesota and Seattle are chomping at the heels of everybody, along with the...Yankees?
Wait.
Are these the same New York Yankees that detractors left for dead several times already this season? The same Yankees that in April and May they were calling for Joe Torre's head? Even when they re-signed Roger Clemens, it was "too little, too late"? Didn't I see an ESPN poll that asked people at the All-Star Break if the Yankees were too far out of it to make the playoffs, and it was an overwhelming, "yes"? Those Yankees?
Yep.
Don't look back now, but the Yankees are on fire. En Fuego. They are beating the **** out of everybody now. Winning games by the scores of, like, 21-3, 16-3, 14-2, etc, etc, oy vey! I know football season is near, but a two touchdown victory over the Devil Rays? A Field goal and TD over the White Sox? A-Rod is about to hit number 500, everybody is hitting the ball out of the park, the pitching has been phenomenal. Those **** Yankees.
And it is certainly no surprise to me that they are making a run now. And there is really only one reason why, in my mind. And this is it:
They always do.
I get a big kick out of everyone that buries the Yanks every year and come August and September, there they are, either in first place or **** close. C'mon people, it's been a decade plus of this stuff. Did any of you think otherwise?
Now, I am not a Yankee fan. I am one of the people that like to see change. I am a big fan of parity in baseball. I like the fact that the Brewers are still very much in the thick of it all. Same goes for the Mariners, Indians, Padres, Phillies and Cubs. It makes things more exciting, root for the underdog, because who the **** knows when they'll get back?
So, it is easy for me to root against the likes of the Red Sox, Braves and of course, the Yankees, because they are always there in the end. And I am beginning to believe it has less to do with money and more to do with pure heart and experience. Naw, that'd be a lie. Money talks. But, still.
You don't have success at the Major League level as a franchise without saavy, smarts, money, talent and experience. Some teams are trying to get there, like the Dodgers, Tigers and Mets. Some don't have much at all. And then there are those that major in it, like the Yankees.
Love 'em or hate 'em, the Yankees are here for the rest of the summer.
Love it or hate it, baseball is better because of it.