New York Post

‘Absolute’ nonsense

-

Assertions of Yanks/Mets voices keep missing mark

P ERHAPS because it’s late in the season but it’s getting tougher to listen to some of this stuff. Even the orange juice is finding it hard to keep its concentrat­ion.

Monday, 64 Yankees, top of the ninth, two out, two on, two strikes to Toronto’s Colby Rasmus. “[Rafael] Soriano does not wilt in these situations,” Michael Kay firmly asserts to his YES audience. Whew, what a relief, huh, Yankees fans?

Kay often speaks in absolutes that don’t compute. “This series is over!” he jubilantly declared after the Yankees’ comeback win in Game 1 of the 2010 ALCS. Texas won it in six.

So, after declaring that “Soriano doesn’t wilt in these situations,” Rasmus clobbered the next pitch for a homer.

Then Kay followed that with, “A rare blown save for Soriano.”

Rare? Mmmm, no. For what such stats are worth, it was his third, this year. Last season, he blew three in just five opportunit­ies. He blew three of 12 one season with Atlanta, four of six the season before. He lately has been good, but blown saves, for him, are not rare.

Next night, MetsPhilli­es on SNY; Ryan Howard batting against Chris Young. “Howard has struggled vs. Young,” says Gary Cohen, “just twofor13 in his career.”

Come on! If such a sample were significan­t — was even worth mentioning — why was Howard batting cleanup. How many times did Young walk Howard? How many linedrive outs?

Three pitches later, Howard hit a grand slam. That made him threefor14 against Young, thus, while still “struggling,” he was struggling a bit less.

Still, for pure Yankee pride and joy (Pride and Joy are the official dish and laundry detergents of the New York Yankees) there’s Ol’ Unreliable. Sunday, John Sterling got his/our week off to a strong start when he applied his signature, onesizefit­sall call to a Nick Swisher home run, ending with “Gone!”

In fact, though, Swisher had hit a onehopper against the wall in right.

Monday, Sterling stayed hot, reporting that, “A lot of home runs in Yankee Stadium go to the short porch.” Who knew? Think it’s like that in other ballparks?

But Tuesday, he reported something I’d never before heard from a baseball broadcaste­r: “Jeter grounds it foul behind home plate.”

Derek Jeter hit a grounder behind him? I suppose that’s possible but I’d come to think of grounders as being hit somewhere in front of the batter. Perhaps Jeter was facing the backstop when he swung.

Whatever, couldn’t wait to get home to see the tape of Jeter hitting a grounder behind him.

What a disappoint­ment! Jeter only fouled it back; tipped it into the dirt.

Ahh, Sterling. But what can ya do? It’s like the airline stewardess who asked the passenger if he’d like breakfast. “What are the selections?” he asked. “Yes or no,” she said.

The local radio wind continues to swirl, shift, then swirl some more. This week’s surprise, a second oneyear extension of WCBS’s Yankee rights — through next season — adds likelihood to a major move into the New York market of the new CBS Sports Radio Network.

By this time next year, there could be an AM or FM station here dedicated (owned or rented) to CBS Sports’ national programmin­g, while CBS prepares a longterm deal for that station to carry the Yankees. Sources claim CBS is shopping for an N.Y. station.

At the same time, the Mets will be in position to benefit from a bidding war between incumbent WFAN (also owned by CBS Radio) and ESPNNY, which Saturday shifts exclusivel­y to 98.7 FM. (Spanish ESPN DeportesNY begins on 1050, Sept. 7.)

Then there are possibilit­ies that could create shared programmin­g between WFAN and CBS Sports Radio and cable’s CBS Sports TV Network, essentiall­y creating an allday rival to both ESPN’s radio and TV. Regardless, this latest extension of WCBS’s Yankees rights indicates how eager CBS Radio is to keep them from ESPN.

And Clear Channel Radio, which recently purchased WORAM, claims interest in local sports rights.

The only thing almost certain is that about this time next year will begin open season on Yankees and Met rights, and big changes likely will follow.

 ??  ?? OFF BASE: Michael Kay and Gary Cohen (inset) often hurt their broadcasts by talking in absolutes and overestima­ting the value of statistics.
YES; N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg (inset)
OFF BASE: Michael Kay and Gary Cohen (inset) often hurt their broadcasts by talking in absolutes and overestima­ting the value of statistics. YES; N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg (inset)
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States