Month: July 2017

AL East Rivalry News and Notes

The Yankees and Red Sox have a storied rivalry involving players. Bucky Dent, Aaron Boone, Babe Ruth. These are some of the names that make these games tense. But before the 2017 mid season series, both teams suffered setbacks. Yankees starting pitcher Michael Pineda is most likely out for the season with a partially torn UCL. There have been rumors that the Yankees would deal Pineda at the Trade Deadline, for he is in his last year of his contract. Now, the Yankees are stuck with an injured arm. Pineda is seeking a second opinion, but it looks grim for the tall righty. On the Boston side of the things, the Sox management parted with possibly the worst contract in team history, Pablo Sandoval. The former San Francisco hero signed a five year, $95 million dollar deal with the Red Sox after winning a World Series with the Giants in 2016. Sandoval played just 161 games over his first three years of the contract. The Red Sox owe him more than $50 million dollards over the last two years of his deal.

Quick Review: All-Star Week

The 2017 All-Star week was fun with festivities, but the game itself was on the slow side. It was a game of pitching dominance, allowing one run on both sides in the ninth. The only home run for National League was Yadier Molina and the American League was Robinson Cano’s game winning blast in the tenth inning. Craig Kimbrel collected the win, Andrew Miller the save, and Wade Davis the loss. Cano was named the All-Star Game MVP for going 1 for 2 with said home run.

The night before was the energetic Home Run Derby. The defending champ Giancarlo Stanton lost in the first round to the eighth seed Gary Sanchez. Mike Moustakas lost to Miguel Sano, Cody Bellinger won over Charlie Blackmon, and Aaron Judge came up from behind a 22 home run mark set by opponent Justin Bour. In the semifinals, Judge won against another rookie sensation, Cody Bellinger. Gary Sanchez fell to Sano. Sano did end up losing to Aaron Judge, who is your 2017 Home Run Derby champion.

Aaron Judge News & Notes

Yankees’ right fielder Aaron Judge has had a monster season this year. In back to back games, Judge both tied and broke Joltin’ Joe DiMaggio’s record of home runs for a rookie. Joe previously had 29 home runs in 1936 rookie campaign. He played in 138 games. On the other hand, Aaron Judge was able to collect 30 home runs in 82 games of the current 2017 season. According to ESPN.com, Judge is on track to hit 57 home runs by the end of the season.

The Training Dilemma: Inside the Intense Training and Surgeries That Kills Our Players

It is the 21st century. Everybody desires to be the best at something. They need to be the biggest, the strongest, and the fastest. They need to be consistent, young, and energetic. These traits have transitioned not only from the real world, but the baseball kingdom. Take a look at Noah Syndergaard. He claimed to gain 17 pounds of muscle in the offseason so he could throw harder. As if 100 miles per hour wasn’t enough, he had to push himself to the next level. Now, he is currently on the disabled list with an ailing bicep and lat. Also note, the other four Mets’ starters have also had stints on the DL.

Giancarlo Stanton. Another human monster. Weighing in at over 230 pounds, he is the biggest position player in the MLB besides the Yankees’ Aaron Judge. Stanton has never played a full season since 2014, which was cut short when he took a pitch to the face. He has spent time on the shelf due to hand and wrist problems.

Players these days are getting hurt due to over working themselves. Back in the day, hurting yourself in baseball was never heard of. If you did end up hurting yourself, you played through it. Take Mickey Mantle for instance. Mantle dealt with injuries every season of his 18 year career. Despite dealing with constant pains, he was able to put together a great career, perhaps the greatest career for a switch hitter. He was also smoking and drinking at the same time, wrecking his body even more. If Mickey could play through it, why can’t today’s players work through injuries? The answer is simple: medical advances.

Ever since Tommy John underwent ground breaking surgery, the medical world has been rapidly progressing. Now, there are treatments for every thing. Draining fluids of joints, removing damaged ligaments, even taking out ribs to relieve pressure. It is no secret that some players abuse these procedures to increase draft stock. Some players in high school undergo Tommy John surgery to get it out of the way. What some of these people don’t seem to know is that these surgeries don’t leave you with a fresh ligament or elbow. In fact, they could weaken the body. The process for TJ surgery is to remove the damaged ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) in the arm and replace it with a less used UCL from the wrist or other joint. As mentioned before, it might seem the human specimen has a fresh UCL, but they do indeed have a ligament performing a role it wasn’t created for.

When you put the over training factor into this mix, things get a whole lot worse. As shown in the Giancarlo Stanton/Noah Syndergaard point, players are training harder than ever. But now with these players having mix and match tendons and ligaments, the bodies can’t handle these. You can’t expect a wrist ligament to withstand the same pressure a elbow UCL has.It’s just bound for disaster. The reason why players are getting hurt so easily is now clearly exhibited. You just cannot have the players waking up at six in the morning to do workouts when they have the ligaments where there not supposed to be. If Major League Baseball wants to protect their players, they should put workout caps and surgery bans to limit injury. Besides, what’s a little decrease in velocity and home runs compared to people living their lives in pain and in casts?