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Am I The Only One Who Loves The New Yankee Stadium?

Jason and I took in the Tigers/Yankees game from the upper level seats of the New Yankee Stadium today. It’s was a great game, and it was a pitcher’s duel, which is not something that the New York fans have seen much of over the course of the year. However, I was kinda pissed.

For those who don’t know, I am a big fan of the Colorado Rockies, in addition to the Yankees. Some gentlemen on the subway today felt it necessary to point out that I was wearing a Rockies hat to a Yankee game. Why do I like this seemingly random team?

Dante Bichette, Andres Galaraga, and Vinny Castilla. Ladies and gentlemen, this team hit bombs back in the day. They routinely won games with football scores at their home park. At the time, I didn’t really get what the big deal about Coors Field was. I know that balls fly out of their at a pace that is truly irrational, but I never got why everyone tried to fight it so much. They acted as if this park where teams that couldn’t hit put up double digits was an afront to the history of the game. I just thought it was awesome.

Really, let’s think about this logically. There have been pitcher’s and hitter’s parks throughout the history of baseball. It’s naturally what happens when you don’t set parameters for standardized stadiums. If every stadium is going to be shaped differently, have different dimensions and different sized walls, how you going to complain when one plays different then another? It’s the reason why old Tiger Stadium was a band box, why PETCO is where fly balls go to die, and why everyone in Texas is slugging 36,000. We should either celebrated those differences, or make all MLB stadiums the same.

So, what’s with the uproar over all the homeruns in the New Yankee Stadium? It actually strategically benefits the team. The Yanks have a bunch of guys with power, and this only makes them all the more dangerous. Tex, A-Rod and Swisher can all hit routine pop-ups that fly out of the stadium now! Also, It’s not like the Yankees are going to have the problem of attracting free agent pitchers. They have Burnett, Sabathia, Joba, and Hughes under control for the forseeable future. It also doesn’t hurt when you can overpay anyone that you really want.

So, when the Alex Rodriguez’s lazy fly ball landed in the first row of the seats today, I got up and cheered along with everyone in the stadium. When Marcus Thames hit his homerun that barely got into the left field seats, I still smiled. I love the New Yankee Stadium just the way it is.

PGA

Watson on the Brink of Immortality

Golf has needed Tom Watson before. It was the 1993 Ryder Cup and the 43 year old Watson was called upon to captain the team. At first, he was unsure about the whole thing. After all, he was only 43 and didn’t think his playing days were finished yet. He also knew how much of an honor it was.

 The US was charged with defending the cup for the first time since Watson’s buddy, Jack Nicklaus, captained the team in 1983. The cup of national dominance had sat oversees since 1985. After the U.S reclaimed it in 1991, Watson knew that he couldn’t head the team that gave it right back to the Europeans. And he didn’t. Watson’s club put together a thrilling 15-13 victory to retain the cup. Watson was needed and he delivered.

 Now, some 16 years after Watson was forced to take a hard look at his competitive golf longevity, golf needs him again. But this time his playing, not coaching, is the main focus. A one over, 71 at Turnberry on Saturday leaves Watson in sole possession of the lead going into the final round. With the two best players in the world (Tiger and Phil)not playing on the weekend, the British had a chance to be one of the more forgettable ones.

 Watson has made it unforgettable. It almost doesn’t matter what the 59 year old does tomorrow. The golf world will be riding shotgun all the way. And 99.9% of it will be rooting for him.

 How could you not at this point? Besides being on the verge of unprecedented history, Watson is still as likable as any athlete today. His face is as warm as the summer sun. His demeanor as calming as the waves that border Turnberry .

 Here’s a guy who is one of the greatest players in the sport’s history (Golf Digest ranked him 10th in 2000) and he still is as humble as a young kid who’s playing in his first tournament. He admitted to assuming he would be nervous. He answered the press’ questions with both thought and insight. He is showing people that golf can be great theater, even with it’s best player throwing up a dud and missing the cut.

 I could write about Matthew Goggin and Ross Fisher, both of whom sit one back of Watson. I could write about Westward, Goosen, or Cink. All on whom are well within striking distance of a man who hasn’t won a major since 1983.

 But that’s not the story. It’s not even close.

 The reality is that all of those players are just foils in the plan. They are the villains to Watson’s hero.

 In any other week, Fischer’s story would be great. The Englishman is awaiting the birth of his first child. His wife is due any day now and he has repeatedly that he will leave the Open if she goes into labor. Great story. Not at great as Watson.

 Stewart Cink would also be a guy to pull for. He joined the tour in 1997, has come close in a few majors, but never could seal the deal. He sits three shots off the pace. Major number one for Cink would be a nice story. Not as nice as Watson.

 No matter what any of these “other players” do tomorrow, it won’t matter. They won’t be the 2009 British Open champion. They will be the guy who came between Watson and the greatest golf story ever.

 To say Tom Watson is destined for greatness tomorrow almost seams like an understatement. Everything is working right now in Watson’s favor. Even his putting stroke, a historical bugaboo for Watson, is working. It’s nothing short of magical.

Something like this is above traditional analysis.

 His ninth major would take him to another level in golf lore. We often see athletes go from good to great. We don’t often see them go from great to legendary.

 With a win tomorrow, Tom Watson will become one of the legends of the game.

 Tee time for Watson: 9:20am

PGA

Separated at Birth?…Miguel Angel Jimenez of the PGA Tour and Burt Lahr

Bert Lahr Miquel Angel Jimenez sits seven shots back of Tom Watson at the British

PGA

Watson, My Good Sir!

The story is nothing short of fantastic. In fact, WCWP favorite Ian O’Connor came out and said it on The Seth Everett Show on 1050 ESPN radio on Friday night. If Tom Watson wins the British Open, it is the greatest story in golf history. Forget Jack at the ‘86 Masters. Forget Tiger coming out of nowhere to win his first Masters in 1997, beating out the established Tom Kite by 12 strokes. Throw all of that in the garbage. A 59 year old all time great winning a Major championship would be a story incomparable to any other golf has ever seen. I, for one, don’t think the debate would be all that close either.

Yesterday, we mused if Watson would be able to compete in tougher weather conditions. For a while, it looked as if the answer was no. After a birdie at 1 that put a smile of everyones face, Watson preceded to bogey five out of his next six holes. He was showing the kind of game that everyone assumed would come on day one.

But then the magic returned, almost as if it had never left. Watson’s bogey on 7 would be his final of the day. He birdied nine and away he went. A birdie on two of his final three holes, including a phenomenal putt on 18, put him on top.

Color me impressed. I have sent in my Tom Watson believer papers. His play after a rough front nine wasn’t just remarkable, it was inspiring. Watson could have accepted his fate. He could have laid down and succumbed to the low expectations that inevitably follow senior plays around. But he didn’t do it. He didn’t fold. Watson knew that Thursday wasn’t a one-and-done deal and that he could compete in this tournament. He believed in his game and in the process made a believer out of the golf world.

It is a fact that Watson was benefited by the fact that no one had a particularly good round. But I don’t buy that he was paying any attention to the leader board. This was not the reason his play picked up in the back nine. If the course was left defenseless on Thursday, it found that defense yesterday. All you had do was look at the pantlegs to see how the wind was whipping. Although the early part of the day was sunny, rain made an appearance in the mid afternoon. And as the weather got worse, Watson got better. He was presented with his first challenge and strangled it.

With Tiger Woods gone and Phil Mickleson at home, Watson now becomes the peoples champ. Find me a person who isn’t rooting for Tom Watson and I’ll show you a person who doesn’t like golf too much. Rooting for Watson may be the easiest thing to do in sports right now. He is single handedly making what could have been a dud of a tournament into a potentially legendary one.

What’s truly ironic about this is that ABC needed Watson this weekend. After a presumed missed cut, Watson was supposed to help out with the ABC TV coverage. Now ABC needs Watson for a different reason. They need him to play as well in the next two days as he has in the previous. With Tiger Woods on his way back to his Orlando home after missing a cut, the only story that appeals to the mass audience is the Watson revival. If Watson gives it up today, it may be a bad Sunday in the ratings department.

I mean, does Steve Marino excite you? Does Mark Calcavecchia? How about Ross Fischer or Miquel “Bert Lahr” Angel Jimenez? I love golf and I cringe at the thought of waking up on Sunday to watch Calcavecchia vs Marino.

This tournament needs Tom Watson. It’s the difference between forgettable and legendary.

Sidenote: If you want a player to watch out for besides Tom Watson, keep an eye on Vijay Singh. Singh sits in fourth place, two shots off the pace.

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