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Friday, 30 April 2010
Mauer Signs 10-Year Deal: Star Catcher Signs Decade-Long Pact To Stay in New Jersey; Agent Confirms His Client Staying Put
Topic: Front Page

FEBRUARY 13 - Just hours after the 2010 NYLISL Draft ended, the New Jersey Bandits officially locked up catcher Joe Mauer by signing him to the longest contract in league history. Mauer has put his signature on a 10-year deal that includes club options which will ensure he will finish his career in the Garden State.

"The rumors are true," Bandits Owner/GM Chris Forster said at a makeshift press conference in the same room where the draft was held earlier that day. "Joe Mauer will always have a home in New Jersey."

Word of Mauer's deal, which was first reported on the popular baseball blog Productive Outs and Crackerjack, was hotly debated when it was first leaked. However, Mauer's agent Ron Shapiro confirmed the deal directly to the site's author days before Forster confirmed the signing.

The 10-year deal is the longest in NYLISL history, even longer than the 9-year deal signed by fellow Bandit Evan Longoria in 2009. The contract also comes with a full no-trade clause, at the insistence of club management.

In the end, Mauer said that money was never a stumbling block.

"There were only two things I cared about - playing for a winner and long-term security," Mauer said. "No team has been more successful then my Bandits, but I told Mr. Forster that I wouldn't sign a contract for anything shorter than 10 years."

Now that Mauer's 10-year contract is official, Forster said that his franchise is ready to defend its seventh league title. He has no plans to deviate from the blueprint that has brought New Jersey so much success - outrageous dice magic that has been known to reduce rival managers into a quivering heap of tears and frustration.

"How many times will I roll a 1-4 with Joe Mauer this season? As many times as I feel like it!" Forster quipped.


Posted by nylistratleague at 11:26 AM EDT
Updated: Friday, 30 April 2010 11:28 AM EDT
Monday, 22 December 2008
Extreme Makeover, Part 3: Sensing Opportunity, St. Jack's Swaps Out Seven Players to Make Determined Run at a Playoff Spot
Topic: Front Page

NOVEMBER 19 - There was a crisis of faith in Forest Hills at the end of October.

The St. Jack’s Crusaders had just dropped five of nine games in stunning fashion to the New Jersey Bandits, a franchise that had just gutted itself after realizing the string of five straight league championships was coming to an end in 2008. The Crusaders’ record was now 31-30 and their lead for the final playoff spot had been shaved down to a half-game.

Owner/GM Jack Flynn made the proclamation then and there – after 61 games of playing over their heads, it was time for some changes.

A flurry of activity followed – four trades in two weeks ended with seven new players joining what Flynn hopes will be a rejuvenated St. Jack’s squad. Four new starting pitchers were imported, three of whom will take regular turns in what will become a five-man rotation over the season’s final 23 games.

Rich Hill and Kevin Correia were the first new arrivals, rescued from the Gramercy Riffs’ minor-league affiliate along with catcher Brian Schneider in exchange for Victor Martinez. Hill had spent the entire season with the Turnbull ACs and Correia had just recently reported there after the parent club acquired him from New Jersey a month before.

Both will get regular starts down the stretch with the Crusaders, reeling from Roy Oswalt’s injury and desperate for pitching help. Hill will be especially important – 10 of the Crusaders’ final 23 games are against the Massapequa Hitmen and the Floral Park Flesheaters. The Hitmen and the Flesheaters are universally acknowledged as the two best teams in the league, but both are susceptible to left-handed pitching.

Martinez has spent several years with the Crusaders and has the highest batting average among qualified players in franchise history (a .312 average in 150 career games). However, with the emergence of Geovany Soto and Dioner Navarro – who split catching duties in 2009 – along with Soto’s highly anticipated debut with the team looming after Game 65, Martinez finally became expendable.

Any sadness that Crusader fans were feeling about the loss of fan favorite Martinez were quickly alleviated when news of a second deal with Gramercy came across the wire – franchise icon Curt Schilling was coming back to town, in a deal that sent Scott Rolen to Gramercy.

Schilling is unlikely to make a start between now and the end of the season, but Flynn jumped at the opportunity to bring back the man who owns virtually every single franchise pitching record. Getting Rolen’s contract off the books – he’s signed through 2009 despite having three men ahead of him on the depth chart – was an added bonus. The Riffs will use Rolen primarily as a defensive replacement for the rest of the season.

Last Saturday, Flynn worked the phones to pull off two more deals before the trading deadline. The first trading partner was the Flesheaters, who parted with Ted Lilly and Brad Hawpe in exchange for Adan Dunn, Chien Ming Wang and Mike Mussina.

Lilly adds a second left-hander to the mix and sets up a potential post-season rotation that would include him, Oswalt and Hill. Hawpe will play right field for the rest of 2008 and has the inside track on the DH job for next season.

Dunn will add even more power to an already dangerous Flesheaters lineup and could see time at first base or one of the corner outfield positions in 2009. Mussina may find himself at the back end of Floral Park’s rotation next year; the only surefire candidate to start for the Flesheaters is Josh Beckett.

Less than an hour after that deal was complete, St. Jack’s addressed its offensive issues at third base for the second time this season, acquiring Mike Lowell from the West Side Stories and shipping away Adrian Beltre and Dan Uggla.

Lowell will bat fifth behind Hawpe in the new-look Crusaders lineup, at least until Soto joins the team beginning in Game 66. Beltre and Lowell profile similarly for 2009 – both are right-handed glovemen who can platoon against lefties.

Uggla brings a lot of power from a middle-infield position, although Stories Owner/GM Ed Price will be reluctant to start him next to real-life keystone mate Hanley Ramirez. No NYLISL team has had success with two 4s starting in the middle infield – could this be a prelude to a trade for Ramirez?


Posted by nylistratleague at 12:02 PM EST
Wednesday, 19 November 2008
Bandits Cashing In Chips: New Jersey Overhauls Roster with Three Trades; Hitmen, Flesheaters, Riffs Emerge as Contenders
Topic: Front Page
SEPTEMBER 30 - The New Jersey Bandits already own a lion's share of the NYLISL records but GM Yoda set an unprecedented record by trading 21 players in three separate blockbuster trades in one night. The Bandits had not made a trade since before the winter draft back in early 2007 but knew something needed to be done. The Bandits were contenders in several trades during he season but always seemed to be the odd man out when it came to trade talks with the other teams in the league. Chris Forster, team owner, called an emergency meeting after a devastating 3-11 road trip and decided that it was time to throw in the towel and focus on 2009.
 
The first trade took over two weeks to finalize but the Bandits were able to add Jose Reyes from the Hitmen in exchange for Aaron Harang, Manny Corpas, Freddy Sanchez, Jhonny Peralta and the supplemental pick in next year's draft. Jason Boland gets an arm for the playoff run in Harang, adds a competent arm to the pen in Corpas, and fills out his bench with Sanchez with Peralta backing up Jeter next season. The trade also gives the Bandits some much needed breathing room on a team that went into the night facing the possibility of returning 35 players.
 
With the Reyes trade out of the way, Yoda turned to the Flesheaters who had previously expressed interest in several of the Bandits journeyman. The trade talks went on for over an hour and when the dust settled, Matt Holliday, Stephen Drew, Dennys Reyes, and Chad Billingsley were added to the team for Jason Bay, Russell Martin, Gary Sheffield, Justin Upton, Huston Street, and Yovanni Gallardo. Holliday was the key to the trade for the Bandits but have had their eyes on Stephen Drew for some time and Chad Billingsley will compete for the 4th spot in next years rotation.
 
Tim Walsh had asked to be included in any trade talks for Vlad Guererro so he received the next phone call. In one of the more open trade dialogues in team history, the Riffs and Bandits quickly got down to business and landed Ryan Doumit and Adam Wainwright for Vlad, Kevin Correia, Billy Wagner, and Bob Howry. Doumit was highly regarded and would likely start on most teams next year but will be delegated to backup catcher behind Joe Mauer. Wainwright has the been penned in to the starting rotation depending on what is available in next year's draft.

Posted by nylistratleague at 4:16 PM EST
Thursday, 9 October 2008
Disaster Strikes Bandits: New Jersey Drops 11 of 14; Team Considering Trade Options as Playoff Possibilities Cause For Concern
Topic: Front Page
SEPTEMBER 15 - Could Chris Forster's luck finally be running out?

The New Jersey Bandits Owner/GM is certainly asking himself that question today, after a 3-11 stretch over the weekend that saw his team drop 5.5 games out of first place. For only the second time in the franchise's nine-year history, the Bandits are suddenly in danger of not making the playoffs.

Forster has been confounding NYLISL followers for years, riding waves of almost inhuman luck to five straight league championships. But the bill may finally be coming due on years of unparallelled success. Sources say that Forster is considering the possibility of setting the wheels in motion for a rebuilding plan to immediately place his franchise back into contention in 2009.

The problems began on Saturday morning, when the Bandits were swept by the Gramercy Riffs in a five-game series. New Jersey's offense was non-existent, at one point going 29 innings without scoring a run. The shocking sweep briefly vaulted Tim Walsh's Riffs into first place, but several hours later Gramercy lost two of three games to the West Side Stories to settle into a first-place tie with the Massapequa Hitmen.

The Bandits got healthy somewhat by taking 2 of 3 from West Side later that day, but the doors really came off on Sunday against the Floral Park Flesheaters.

Yes, you read that right - Floral Park Owner/GM Jason Varvaro has finally emerged from a completely incommunicado four-month period to win 5 out of 6 games against a defeated Bandits squad. Varvaro was licking his wounds after a 4-7 start to the season that was apparently so distressing he took the entire summer off from league business to get his mind back together.

The early results were positive, as the Flesheaters are suddenly back over .500 and only 67 games away from completing their schedule. Forster was irate afterwards, especially after a game where Varvaro rolled on the batter's card 36 times in 50 plate appearances.


Posted by nylistratleague at 10:52 AM EDT
Monday, 15 September 2008
Baumbach Shakes It Up: Wellwood Honcho Breaks Up Vaunted Bullpen to Address Other Team Flaws; Ten New Players Added
Topic: Front Page
SEPTEMBER 4 - Unhappy with his team's performance over the first half of the season, Wellwood Ave GM Jim Baumbach has overhauled his team through four trades totaling 22 players and one draft pick coming and going.

In the first deal, Baumbach dealt Ryan Howard, Aaron Rowand, Aramis Ramirez and Johan Santana to the Lakers in exchange for Ichiro Suzuki, Kevin Youkilis, Ken Griffey Jr. and Ben Sheets. Baumbach was sick of a lineup that was riddled with all-of-nothing hitters, which is why he was interested in Ichiro and Youkilis, especially.

In the second deal, Baumbach swapped Triple-A starter Brad Penny for Sean Marshall with the Stories.

In the third deal, Baumbach sent John Smoltz, Jonathan Papelbon and Marshall to Massapequa for James Shields, Jon Rauch and Salomon Torres. Baumbach realizes he gave up two big names, but he felt comfortable doing so for several reasons - With Joba Chamberlain's amazing card set to be eligible in 13 games, he felt he could afford hurting his pen to help his rotation. He also felt replacing Smoltz with Shields was a move that benefits his team both this year and next.

Finally, in a deal with Gramercy, Wellwood acquired Chipper Jones, Jason Schmidt and Francisco Rodriguez in exchange for J.J. Putz, Chone Figgins and a tenth round pick. Baumbach felt his lineup needed one more smasher, and identified Jones as the answer. Giving up Putz is tough, but he feels his bullpen has enough depth to handle it. And it also helped that Putz is going to awful next year and Figgins, a free agent at 30 years old, is in line for a multi-year deal.

The Scribes are 26-26 with 32 games remaining, more than enough to make a playoff push in a season dominated by parity. But he feels his deals also put him in position to contend for years to come, especially with a rotation next year that could consist of four of these five: Shields, Sheets, Roy Halladay, John Lackey and Chamberlain.


Posted by nylistratleague at 1:00 PM EDT
Updated: Monday, 15 September 2008 1:01 PM EDT
Thursday, 4 September 2008
Seeing Some Separation: Massapequa Uses Five-Game Winning Streak To Take Over First Place; St. Jack's Re-Acquires Pujols
Topic: Front Page

JUNE 8 - It took over four months to finally happen, but the NYLISL standings are finally starting to flesh out. With most teams muddling around the .500 mark before today's action, two long streaks put the Massapequa Hitmen and the Oswego Lakers on opposite ends of the table.

The Hitmen reeled off five straight wins to take over first place on Sunday, but came back to earth after two straight losses to the St. Jack's Crusaders at the conclusion of their day. Nevertheless, Masspequa sits atop the standings at 11-6 and for yet another season, the rumors of the Hitmen's demise continue to be greatly exaggerated.

For the Lakers, meanwhile, the good vibes from a surprising 12-10 start were swept away by a 10-game losing streak that brought Owner/GM Sean O'Leary to the brink of insanity. A blockbuster four-player trade with the Crusaders may be just what Oswego needs to jump-start the engines, however; they finally broke the duck with a thrilling 3-2 victory in 14 innings over St. Jack's in the final game of the afternoon.

The Lakers added a legitimate top of the rotation starter in Justin Verlander, packaging Albert Pujols and Chien Ming Wang to secure the services of the ace right-hander. Oswego also received Miguel Cabrera in the deal, so the potent Laker offense should be able to offset the loss of the dominating Pujols.

For St. Jack's, the deal culminated what had become a four-year quest to right one of the biggest wrongs in franchise history. Owner/GM Jack Flynn rashly traded Pujols away in a fit of pique at the 2004 All Star celebration, a decision he has regretted for years. His return means that the Crusaders' offense becomes more dangerous, but it will be at the expense of a legitimate starting rotation.

In other action, both Wellwood and Gramercy continued their winning ways, while Floral Park's 3-0 start was wiped out by a disastrous 1-7 afternoon. Flesheaters' GM Jason Varvaro was dumbstruck by his team's performance, the nadir of which was being the victim of a four-hit shutout by the Crusaders' Carlos Zambrano. Flynn added that, due to the two trades made in the last eight days, Nick Swisher and Chris Duncan were being made available on the trade market. St. Jack's is seeking pitching and/or a third baseman.


Posted by nylistratleague at 2:46 PM EDT
Updated: Thursday, 4 September 2008 2:51 PM EDT
Monday, 4 February 2008
Sixth Time Is the Charm: New Jersey Does it Again; Wins Championship in Seven Games to Extend NYLISL's Greatest Dynasty
Topic: Front Page
JANUARY 20 - The NBA had the Celtics. The NHL had the Canadiens. The Chinese had the Ming. And today, the NYLISL has a dynasty that rivals any in known history - the New Jersey Bandits.
 
It was already 1:00 pm the next day before fans of the Bandits began arriving home from the championship celebration that was held at the Fudd Dome the night before. Bandits fans were more enthusiastic than usual this year, as their team clinched their sixth Marillac Cup championship in eight years with a 4-3 series victory over the Massapequa Hitmen.
 
The first game set the stage for the entire series – a 9-8 rollercoaster ride that ended with the unlikeliest of heroes delivering the final blow. Roger Clemens successfully put down a sacrifice bunt to win the game, causing Hitmen Owner/GM Jason Boland to spontaneously combust at the injustice of it all. He was later heard ranting about the rule proposal that had been shot down weeks before at the 2007 Winter Meetings, where he unsuccessfully argued against a rule that would prohibit pitchers from pinch-hitting.
 
The Hitmen jumped ahead in the top of the first, only to have the Bandits tie it at 1-1 in the bottom of the frame. Both pitchers settled down until the 7th inning, when the Hitmen scored twice and once again jumped in front. The Bandits cut the lead in half in the bottom of the inning, but a solo shot in the eighth gave Massapequa a 4-2 lead.
 
True to form, the Bandits worked their magic against the heart of the Hitmen bullpen and rallied to tie it up in the bottom of the 9th. The Hitmen managed to tack on the go-aheadd run in the 10th, only to have the Bandits tie it again in the bottom of the inning. Fast forward to the 13th inning, where Huston Street was seen making his first ever playoff appearance. The Bandit faithful could only watch in disbelief as the Hitmen brought three runs in on three straight doubles. But they were not home free, as Massapequa had completely depleted their bullpen. The only pitcher left to take the mound for the Hitmen was Tim Wakefield.
 
This was bad news for the Hitmen, as Wakefield has one of the slowest deliveries in the league and the Bandits had successfully tested Pudge Rodriguez's arm all day. New Jersey took advantage and won the game in stunning fashion, scoring four runs in the bottom of the 13th inning. Overall, the Bandits stole nine bases and were not caught stealing once, a statistic that would be considered utterly incredible if you had never met Chris Forster.
 
Signs of fatigue were everywhere as the second game started just 12 hours later. Roger Clemens and Ben Sheets pitched great games and the Hitmen rallied in the 9th, but Billy Wagner shut the door and the Bandits won 6-3 to take a 2-0 series lead. With talk of a sweep everywhere, Jake Peavy and the Hitmen were determined to prove that they were not just another Bandits victim.
 
Instead, the first victim was Carlos Guillen, who left the game in the top of the first inning after colliding with Jim Thome at first base on a routine grounder. The Bandits protested, claiming that Thome blocked the bag, but the decision went the home team's way. The Bandits later lost red-hot Jason Bay on a pitch that got away from Jake Peavy. New Jersey couldn't muster up a run with two of their biggest weapons out of the lineup and the Hitmen cruised to an easy 6-0 victory.
 
With the possibility of a sweep no longer hanging over their heads, the Hitmen started off Game 4 the same way they finished Game 3 – hitting the ball hard. They crushed Aaron Harang for 7 runs on 10 hits in just the first four innings. The Bandits refused to die, however, and clawed their way back into the game with multi-hit games from Freddy Sanchez, Garrett Atkins, Joe Mauer and Paul Konerko. The Hitmen were suddenly in trouble, with the heart of the Bandits bullpen available and most of their big sluggers already replaced by defensive backups. But little Jamey Carroll proved his might when he took Mariano Rivera deep in the bottom of the ninth inning to win the game and tie the series.
 
Game 5 was a repeat of the previous game. The Hitmen rocked Jeremy Bonderman for 6 runs in the first 4 innings. The Bandits then chipped away and managed to tie the game at 6 in the 6th inning. The game remained deadlocked until Torii Hunter hit a 2 run walk-off blast off of Billy Wagner in the bottom of the 11th. For the first time in almost five years, the Bandits were going home trailing in a championship series.
 
Roger Clemens won the first game with his bat and the second game with his arm. (No truth to the rumor that there had been a steroid needle in that arm the night before.) It was no surprise when the Marillac Cup Championship Series MVP declared before the game that the Bandits would not lose this game and that we were destined to play a Game 7. He delivered on his promise, driving in the eventual winning run and combining with Nathan and Street to allow just one run on four hits. A tearful Clemens announced after the game that he had pitched his last game as a Bandit and he was officially retiring after the series. He then threw a bat at Hitmen backup catcher Mike Piazza and left the podium, never to be seen again.
 
Fans streaming into the stadium before Game 7 reported that stores across New Jersey had run out of Roger Clemens jerseys, as both the casual and the die-hard fan scooped them up before the game. The Bandits set the tone in the first inning with a pair of two-run blasts by Vlad Guerrero and Jason Bay. New Jersey's pitchers paid tribute to Clemens by matching his performance the night before and allowed only five Hitmen to reach base. The Bandits took a 6-run lead in the 6th inning when Vernon Wells stole 2nd and 3rd before advanced home on a bad throw by catcher Mike Napoli (sound familiar, Tim?). The Hitmen added a run in the 8th, but Joe Nathan proved to be too much for the struggling Hitmen bats. The Bandits walked away with an 8-3 win, a six pack of championships and the eternal damnation of the league's sorest loser, Jack Flynn.
 
Afterwards, there was also a somber undercurrent to the celebration, as most of the fans are beginning to accept their fate and admit that this amazing run is most likely over. They said goodbye to fan favorites Clemens and Marlon Anderson (both retiring). Saying goodbye to some of the other players who may not be back next year, such as Wells, Bay, Guillen, Carlos Delgado and Luis Castillo, also helped to extend the party late into the next morning.
 
Bandits owner Chris Forster even climbed into the stands to thank and greet the loyal fans of his team. No one was seriously injured. When asked if 2008 would be a rebuilding year, he replied, "Absolutely not. Rebuilding implies that we are not playing for next year. We have every intention to make this team a playoff contender, but we will need to do it with a lot of new faces. Expect us to be very aggressive before and after the draft this year, as we have a lot of big shoes to fill."

Posted by nylistratleague at 11:45 AM EST
Wednesday, 23 January 2008
M Train Keeps On Rollin': Massapequa Sweeps West Side; Hottest Team in League Faces New Jersey in Championship Series
Topic: Front Page
JANUARY 12 - It has been the most incredible run in the eight-year history of the NYLISL. Left for dead in July, the Massapequa Hitmen will be playing for its second NYLISL championship in January.
 
The Hitmen swept the best-of-seven series from the West Side Stories today, by scores of 7-4, 5-4 (10 innings), 8-7 and 8-1. They will advance to meet the New Jersey Bandits in the Marillac Cup Finals, the final step in completing one of the most improbable runs the game has ever seen.
 
Massapequa hit rock-bottom at the All-Star Celebration six months ago in Lindenhurst, finishing the night with a 12-19 record and mired in sixth place. Despite then trading starter Jered Weaver and doing very little to improve their team otherwise, the Hitmen have gone on an inexplicable tear, finishing the season with a 39-14 run before sweeping the upstart Stories right out of the playoffs.
 
Game 1 set the tone for the series, as the Hitmen jumped out to a 7-0 lead after scoring five second-inning runs off Anibal Sanchez, three on a David Wright homer. The Stories rallied briefly, but ultimately lost 7-4. Stories catcher Brian McCann tweaked his oblique on a first-inning strikeout, and with backup Gerald Laird still nursing a sore groin from an injury suffered in Game 76 of the regular season, Eric Byrnes finished out the game at catcher.
 
In the next game, the Stories got the early jump and scored three runs off Jeff Francis in the first inning. The Hitmen tied the game in the bottom of the fifth to make it 4-4. The Stories threatened in the sixth, seventh and tenth inning, but failed to score the go-ahead run. Fernando Rodney got out of a first-and-third, one-out jam in the bottom of the ninth, but in the bottom of the tenth pinch hitter Torii Hunter started the final rally by singling off lefty Matt Thornton. Hunter went to second on a Barry Bonds groundout. Joel Zumaya came in to face Wright, who smacked an RBI single to win the game 5-4. The Stories had been 7-2 in extra-innings in the regular season, but that magic was nowhere to be found during the series.
 
In Game 3, the Hitmen mustered up three runs in six innings against Stories ace Francisco Liriano, wiping out a 2-0 deficit that came from Brian McCann's two-run homer in the first. McCann added a three-run shot in the sixth to give the Stories a 7-3 lead, but the Hitmen rallied again, scoring three runs in the eighth off Joaquin Benoit and Zumaya. In the top of the ninth, Derek Jeter drew a one-out walk and Alou homered off Zumaya, who blew three of his six regular season save chances after being acquired from the Flesheaters. Cla Meredith worked a 1-2-3 ninth for the save in an 8-7 victory. The Hitmen pounded C.C. Sabathia in Game 4, scoring five runs in the third inning (four on Alou's grand slam) and coasted to an 8-1 victory that allowed them to pop the champagne and prepare for the five-time league champions.
 
The Stories managed just 31 hits in the four games and saw their relievers allow eight runs in 13 innings (a 5.44 ERA). The starters weren't any better, going 0-2 with a 7.94 ERA. Alou went 4-for-10 with three homers - including a grand slam - and eight RBI during the series. Wright was 4-for-12 with five RBI.
 
It wouldn't be the NYLISL if there weren't some sort of shenanigans involving the Hitmen, as Massapequa originally named three just starters to its 25-man roster to start the series. A new rule adopted during the 2007 Winter Meetings mandated that only starters with a (*) in their endurance rating were allowed to pitch on two days' rest during a playoff series. Co-Commissioner Jack Flynn reminded the playoff participants about this rule shortly before the playoffs began, but shockingly enough the memo somehow went unnnoticed by Hitmen Owner/GM Jason Boland.
 
Since only Jake Peavy was eligible to pitch on short rest, this posed the obvious problem of deciding who should've started Games 5 and 6 for Massapequa had the series gone that far. The crisis was averted before Game 4 when Boland, with the blessing of both Flynn and Stories Owner/GM Ed Price, was allowed to make an emergency roster move to add a fourth starter.

Posted by nylistratleague at 11:36 AM EST
Monday, 14 January 2008
No Christmas Miracles: Furious Comeback Falls Short; Dejected Demons Drop Two and are Virtually Eliminated from Playoffs
Topic: Front Page
DECEMBER 26 - The playoff picture is almost entirely in focus today, after the Floral Park Flesheaters exploded for 29 runs in two games and won the final two games of a three-game series with the St. Jack's Demons.
 
The losses leave St. Jack's on the verge of elimination and the Flesheaters needing to win at least seven of their last eight games just to force a one-game playoff with the Massapequa Hitmen. The West Side Stories are officially in the playoffs and will be the #2 or #3 seed in January, an incredible accomplishment for a team in only its second year of existence.
 
The first and the third game of this short series were blowouts. Carlos Zambrano pitched a complete game for the Demons in the opener, which used the strength of a six-run first inning to cruise to a 9-2 win. It was the fourth straight win for St. Jack's, which neded to sweep the series and win a makeup game against the Gramercy Riffs to force a one-game playoff with the Stories.
 
The bottom fell out in Game 2, as the Flesheaters chased Rich Harden from the home mound after just 1.1 innings. By that point the score was 5-0 and it would only get worse from there. Carlos Villanueva and Takashi Saito couldn't stop the bleeding and the Flesheaters took a 13-3 lead into the bottom of the seventh.
 
It was there that the Demons made a valiant last stand. They scored four runs in the seventh and one in the eighth, trying desperately to claw their way back into this one. Hector Carrasco, was entrusted with the final two innings, but he could not stop the Flesheaters' attack, which pounded out 21 hits on the day and took a 16-8 lead into the bottom of the ninth.
 
With the game seemingly salted away, Floral Park Owner/GM Jason Varvaro left Scot Shields in to finish things off, even though he was tired at that point. Two straight singles off Shields's card, at spots where a rested pitcher would've gotten the first two outs on the inning, forced Varvaro to change his strategy.
 
The Demons faithful begged their team for more and got it when a walk to Josh Bard made the score 16-9 and loaded the bases with no one out. The eternally infuriating Grady Sizemore followed with yet another 2-7 in what has been a lost season for him, striking out right between a WALK and a SINGLE**. Manny Ramirez, fresh off a 3 for 40 slump, then hit a shocking grand slam to make the score 16-13 and to keep the Demons' flickering hopes alive.
 
Nick Johnson, who went 0 for 10 in the three game series, made the second out, but Frank Thomas kept the game alive with a double. The Demons bench was depleted, so Marco Scutaro was forced to bat against Dennys Reyes, the third pitcher of the inning for the Flesheaters. Scutaro rolled a 4-5 on Reyes's card - HR 1-3, Flyball-(B) 4-20.
 
Demons Owner/GM Jack Flynn tossed the 20-sided die high into the air and let it bounce along the floor of Marillac Cafeteria, leaving his fate in the hands of the Strat gods. The die smashed around, came to a stop near a table and spun around, further prolonging the agony. When the die finally stopped, it showed the unlucky number 13. Just one side away was the number 1, robbing the Demons of another shocking home run and the chance to continue what might've turned out to be the all-time great comebacks in league history.
 
Once that game finally ended, the Stories had clinched their playoff berth and St. Jack's found itself in what was basically an elimination game. The 11-game winner Roy Oswalt took the ball and tried to put the franchise on his back one more time in 2007. Again it was not to be. The Flesheaters scored six runs in the first, three of them unearned thanks to a Sizemore three-base error, and Oswalt could only get through 3 innings before departing. There were no more comebacks left in the Demons and they started emptying the bench in the seventh inning, on the way to a disheartening 12-4 loss.
 
St. Jack's is still alive, although Massapequa could clinch the third and final playoff spot by simply winning one of its final three games against the Flesheaters next week. The Demons need the Flesheaters to sweep that series from the Hitmen and then lose at least two of their five remaining games with the Riffs.
 
This would trigger a scenario where three disputed games would have to be replayed - two between the Hitmen and the New Jersey Bandits and one between the Demons and the Riffs. A Demons win there, coupled with two Hitmen losses, would leave both teams at 48-36 and force a one-game playoff. Even if the Hitmen win one game and eliminate both the Demons and the Flesheaters in one fell swoop, those games may need to be replayed for playoff and draft seeding purposes.
 
Floral Park is barely breathing as well, needing to sweep the Hitmen just to keep their season alive. Doing so would put the Flesheaters at 44-35 and in need of at least four more wins against the Riffs to force even the possibility of a one-game playoff with the Hitmen. Even if Floral Park wins out, they'd only finish at 49-35 - the Hitmen would only need to split the final two disputed games against the Bandits to force the one-game playoff and could eliminate the Flesheaters outright by winning both games.
 
In the meantime, big changes are coming for the Demons. A rumored Curt Schilling for John Maine deal with the Riffs is all but done, with the teams expecting to make it official sometime next month. At least two teams have already inquired about Saito, who set a St. Jack's club record for saves this season with 16. The minor-league franchise is moving from Pearl River to Wilmington, NC, where cellular phone titan Brian Mackle will run the franchise.

Posted by nylistratleague at 11:34 AM EST
Updated: Friday, 15 February 2008 11:38 AM EST
Friday, 21 December 2007
Coming Down to the Wire: With Bandits Now Assured of a Playoff Berth, Three Teams Play Musical Chairs for the Last Two Spots
Topic: Front Page
NOVEMBER 26 - With just over a month to go in the 2007 season, we are being treated to one of the greatest playoff races in NYLISL history. With the defending champion New Jersey Bandits having clinched a spot in the postseason, the three teams trailing them are scrambling for the final two spots.
 
Someone is going to be left out of the postseason party - be it the Massapequa Hitmen, the West Side Stories or the St. Jack's Demons. It may take 50 wins to secure a spot in the playoffs, although that mark has only been reached seven times in the league's first seven seasons.
 
The Demons have the toughest road to the playoffs, after a 4-4 stretch directly following their audacious nine-player deadline deal with the Floral Park Flesheaters. The failure to take more than two wins away from four games with the Gramercy Riffs and the Oswego Lakers put them in a very difficult positon down the stretch. With 11 games to go in their season, all are against established teams - including four with the Floral Park Flesheaters and three with the Wellwood Scribes of Lindenhurst.
 
St. Jack's will need to take four of their remaining five games from the West Stories to keep themselves on the playoff map. If they can do that and also go 4-2 against the Stories and Flesheaters, both teams would finish with 49-35 records. The Demons would grab the playoff spot, however, because of the head-to-head advantage.
 
If the Demons falter against the Stories or can't take of business in the other games, then the West Siders would find themselves in either second or third place on the league table. It would be quite a coup for Owner/GM EdPrice's franchise to make the playoffs in only their second season in existence. The Hitmen's remaining games are with the Scribes and the Flesheaters. Massapequa will probably need only to tread water and play .500 ball to put themselves in position to chase their second league championship.

Posted by nylistratleague at 11:33 AM EST
Wednesday, 7 November 2007
Trade Deadline Frenzy : Floral Park Flips Eight Players in Three Separate Deals; 17 Players Switch Teams Before Deadline
Topic: Front Page
OCTOBER 28 - It’s been a wild week in the NYLISL, with three big trades involving a total of 17 players that will have a big impact on the 2007 pennant race.

The Floral Park Flesheaters were in the middle of all three deals, radically remaking their roster and putting themselves in a position to challenge for a playoff berth in 2008. Floral Park swapped nearly 25 percent of its roster in a five-day span and although the first two deals were clearly made with an eye for 2008, the third trade was made just in case the fifth-place Flesheaters make a last-minute playoff run.

The first of those trades was struck on October 21. Floral Park, sitting on a 30-29 record and staring at the very real possibility of missing the playoffs, decided to set its sights on 2008. At the same time, West Side Stories Owner/GM Ed Price was coming to the conclusion that an unreliable bullpen which had already blown 14 saves to date was putting his franchise in danger of missing the playoffs as well.

Both sides talked and Price was able to wrangle Joel Zumaya from the Flesheaters in exchange for Bobby Jenks. The Stories also received a fourth-round draft pick in 2008. Floral Park gets a top-flight reliever for 2008 in Jenks, but surrendered a lot to do so. The draft pick in particular seems a high price to play, but with Zumaya ineligible for 2008 and Jenks expected to be among the elite relievers in the NYLISL, it was a fair price to pay.

Although Dennys Reyes (9/22) or Rafael Betancourt (4/23) might’ve been better options in 2007 for the Stories, Zumaya (23/20) certainly has a higher upside for the future. He replaced David Aardsma on the 25-man roster. Unfortunately for the Stories, Zumaya’s arrival did not immediately stem the Stories’ bullpen woes. In a five-game series against the Flesheaters immediately following the deal, Zumaya was lit up in two appearances and even blew a save.

As Floral Park was consummating its deal with the West Siders, Owner/GM Jason Varvaro was in extended negotiations with St. Jack’s over what was turning into a blockbuster deal. The Demons, staring down the barrel of its first NYLISL rebuilding season in 2008, were willing to make a big splash in order to make a furious run at the 2007 championship.

The initial list of players Owner/GM Jack Flynn requested was breathtaking – Manny Ramirez and Mike Mussina (both recently acquired from the Wellwood Scribes of Lindenhurst when they threw in the towel last month), as well as Esteban German and Frank Thomas. A match seemed extremely unlikely, until Flynn told Varvaro he would be willing to include Miguel Cabrera in any deal.

Varvaro later said that the only player that could get him to part with Ramirez was the 24-year-old slugging third baseman from Venezuela. With a key part of the deal in place, negotiations began to take shape. After four days of haggling, both sides agreed on a deal that would include the four players on Flynn’s initial wish list, as well as budding superstar Delmon Young, in exchange for Cabrera, Placido Polanco, Mark Teixeira and Pat Burrell.

For the Demons, adding a #1 starter as well as three significant offensive weapons was worth mortgaging the future for. Mussina will anchor the rotation down the stretch and will allow the Demons to employ a three-man rotation if they make it to the playoffs. Ramirez will bat cleanup in Cabrera’s spot and, along with German, significantly strengthens the Demons’ pop-gun attack against lefties. German, meanwhile, will replace Orlando Hudson at second base. Thomas will platoon with Chris Duncan at the DH slot and adds huge right-handed power to a lineup that was lacking in such.

The Demons may have the most talent in the NYLISL now, but it was achieved at a tremendous price. If St. Jack’s doesn’t make the playoffs in 2007, they will regret the deleterious effect this trade will have on its 2008 prospects. The Flesheaters not only add Cabrera, but also add a .340-hitting 2B who went an entire season without an error in Polanco. Teixeira will likely platoon with David Ortiz at first and Pat Burrell will challenge Matt Holliday with time in left field. Floral Park now has six star players at four positions (1B, 3B, LF and DH), so you can bet that Varvaro will be soliciting offers to fill other needs in the offseason.

Just when it seemed that the trading was over, Varvaro made one last deal just in case the Flesheaters had a little life left in 2007. With their trade deadline looming, the Flesheaters added Luke Scott, Brandon League, Chris Sampson and Ian Kinsler from the Gramercy Riffs in exchange for Cole Hamels and Adam Wainwright.

Scott will add another big bat to the Flesheaters’ offense and both League and Sampson can make great contributions to the bullpen, but none of them will be eligible for a playoff roster if Floral Park somehow makes it there. None are appreciably useful for 2008, although Scott could conceivably make the team as a backup outfielder in 2008.

It was a no-lose deal for the Riffs, although one could debate the wisdom of trading a budding star in Kinsler as part of a deal to import two more starting pitchers, an area where Gramercy already has a lot of options. However, Hamels will be ready to step into the Riffs’ rotation next season and should be one of the better left-handed starters in the NYLISL. Wainwright started slowly but was terrific after June 1 in MLB – he’s a guy more likely to make an impact in 2009.

The only two teams left with trading privileges still intact are the Demons and the Riffs. Will there be one final deal before the clock strikes 12 on both teams? Sources say that Demons scouts have been at The Big Coney for each of the Riffs’ last two series and are preparing a dossier for Flynn’s consideration.


Posted by nylistratleague at 9:19 PM EST
Updated: Friday, 15 February 2008 11:31 AM EST
Crawford Hits For Cycle: Stories Win Eight of Last Ten Games; Playoff Picture Turns Into Four-Team Race for Three Spots
Topic: Front Page

OCTOBER 12 - Carl Crawford has recently been the subject of trade rumors, but his performance today will make West Side Stories Owner/GM Ed Price think long and hard about parting ways with the speedy outfielder. Crawford hit for the first cycle in Stories' history, paving the way for a 15-7 demolition of the Floral Park Flesheaters in the first game of their seven-game series.

The Stories wound up taking six of seven from the Flesheaters, including a four-game sweep at Cannibal Memorial Stadium, to improve their record to 32-23. The West Siders mashed their way to 49 runs in the seven games and Crawford was nearly impossible to get out, going 12-for-27 (.444) with eight runs scored and three triples. That puts him in the league lead for triples with 10 in 55 games this season, one more than St. Jack's shortstop Omar Vizquel.

Crawford has been highly sought after in recent days, with the Wellwood Scribes of Lindenhurst trying especially hard to pry him loose from the Stories. However, after his magical performance this series, it seems unthinkable that West Side could go ahead and trade him to fortify the franchise's first-ever playoff run. Stranger things have happened, however, and this expansion draft pick could find his way heading east before the trade deadline.

In the final game of the series, the Stories lost starter Josh Johnson in the second inning and found themselves down 4-0 to Floral Park ace Johan Santana. But they came back to batter Santana for 16 hits in 8 2/3 innings and won the game 8-5. An MRI on Johnson was negative and he will likely make his next start.

Two games earlier, an Alex Rodriguez error helped the Stories score three seventh-inning runs off Joel Zumaya, resulting in a 7-5 win. Anibal Sanchez won twice in the series, allowing three earned runs in 12 2/3 innings.

One day later, the Stories took two out of three games from the New Jersey Bandits to move into a tie for the third and final playoff spot. The highlight of the series was a 12-11, 10 inning thriller that saw six lead changes and a game-winning single from emergency right fielder Gerald Laird.

Bandits Owner/GM Chris Forster was unusually downcast afterwards, telling reporters that the second game of the series would go down as one of the most memorable games in NYLISL history. He noted the many lead changes, runners stranded, missed rolls and three blown saves from a team with arguably the best bullpen in the league.

The mood in the Bandits clubhouse before the game was not good either. The Bandits felt they were supposed to win the first game of the series, with their ace Roger Clemens on the mound. Everything was going according to plan until pitching coach John Franco pulled Clemens in the seventh for the Bandits' closer Joe Nathan.
Manager Tom Seaver and Franco were seen exchanging words after the call was made and sources suggest that Seaver wanted Mariano Rivera instead of Nathan. The manager might've made a different move, and Nathan proceeded to blow his sixth lead in seven appearances, leaving everyone in the dugout scratching their heads. It has to be asked - has Nathan lost his stuff?
When Franco went to the phone to start the bottom of the fifth in Game 2, Seaver appeared to snatch the phone from Franco's hand and Rivera was called into the game despite not having warmed up. He gave up hits to the next three batters, including a three-run home run to Mark Teahen that almost left the stadium. Nathan, now delegated to middle relief, cleaned up Rivera's mess and went a full inning without giving up a run. When Bob Howry blew yet another lead in the seventh, Franco and Seaver actually exchanged blows in the dugout. Second sacker Howie Kendrick sprained his hand trying to break up the scuffle and is listed as day to day.
Franco was escorted down the tunnel and had left the building before the game even finished. Bandit's GM Yoda confirmed after the game that Franco had resigned from the team. When asked for a comment, Seaver refused to go any further than "Good Riddance."
The Bandits have not decided whether they will replace Franco before the end of the season and have given full Tom Seaver full discretion over the team until a decision is made. John Franco, for the first time in his life, could not be reached for comment.

Posted by nylistratleague at 9:07 PM EST
Updated: Friday, 15 February 2008 11:41 AM EST
Sunday, 21 October 2007
Jumpin' Josh-osaphat!! Beckett Back in Bethpage as Baumbach Brings Back Hurler in Seven-Man Deal: Floral Park Gets Mussina
Topic: Front Page

SEPTEMBER 7 - The Wellwood Avenue Scribes of Lindenhurst continued to overhaul the look of their roster Friday night, with a seven-player deal that landed impressive young righthanders Josh Beckett and John Lackey and a star centerfielder in Andruw Jones.

The Scribes sent Mike Mussina, Jim Edmonds and Michael Young to the Floral Park Flesheaters, and also received shortstop Khalil Greene. The deal, reached late Friday night just before the doors to Marillac Cafeteria were locked, marked the second Wellwood-Floral Park trade this season. In July, the Scribes sent Joel Zumaya, Beckett and Eric Chavez to Floral Park for J.J. Putz and Mike Lowell.
 
Wellwood Owner/GM Jim Baumbach insisted this should not be perceived as a dump, insisting his team has as good a chance to succeed in 2007 as they did before the trade, while also better positioning them for the future. "Yes, we lose Mussina, who gave us a great presence at the top of the rotation," Baumbach said, "but we really feel the players we got back in return will offset his loss this year."

Lackey is a step down from Mussina, but Baumbach thinks the upgrade of Jones over Edmonds, both offensively and defensively, will more than offset the Mussina-Lackey difference. The addition of Beckett, expected to be a top-of-the-rotation starter in 2008, made the trade a no-brainer, he said.

Scribes Make Two More Deals: The mid-season makeover continues for the Wellwood Scribes of Lindenhurst, who acquired Orlando Cabrera from the Gramercy Riffs on September 30 in exchange for Troy Glaus and Kerry Wood.

Cabrera (31/40) will split time at shortstop with Adam Everett for the rest of the season and will challenge for the starting job in 2008. Glaus (51/39) will add another bat to Riffs' lineup and has the inside track on the third base job next season. Wood is ineligible this year and didn't pitch enough MLB innings to be on a 2008 roster either, but Gramercy might be willing to take a chance on the one-time phenom as the franchise goes through its growing pains.

Just one day later, Wellwood parted ways with mercurial slugger Manny Ramirez, shipping him to Floral Park for first baseman Ryan Howard. Although perhaps an official concession by the Scribes that the 2007 season was lost, this deal has the potential to be a win-win for both teams. Ramirez is the superior hitter for this season, but his down year in MLB means that Howard will be the better player next season.

Howard (44/53) with play first base for the rest of the season and, with Travis Hafner's struggles likely having a deleterious effect on his card next year, will likely be the starter in 2008. He'll play first the rest of the way, while Hideki Matsui (32/57) getting the bulk of time in left after the trade deadline. Ramirez (63/59), meanwhile, steps into the DH spot for the Flesheaters and creates a devastating middle of the lineup for Floral Park. Manny will likely bat third, followed by David Ortiz and Matt Holliday.


Posted by nylistratleague at 6:41 PM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 26 December 2007 3:05 PM EST
Wednesday, 12 September 2007
Massapequa Massacres: With Their Season On Line, Hitmen Rip Off 23 Wins in 31 Games to Get Back Into NYLISL Playoff Picture
Topic: Front Page
AUGUST 9 - Less than a month ago, their record stood at 12-19 and the Massapequa Hitmen were in deep trouble. Mired in sixth place in the NYLISL, Owner/GM Jason Boland was on the brink of wholesale changes, a concession that the 2007 edition of this proud franchise simply could not compete with the big boys.

Today, after winning five out of six games against the West Side Stories, the Hitmen are 35-27 and very much alive in the playoff picture, just one game out of first place. It took an inexplicable 18-3 run in late July and early August to put Massapequa right back into the thick of things.

It started quietly enough - the Hitmen took four of five games from the Wellwood Scribes on July 17. Four days later, Massapequa went 4-1 again, this time against the expansion Gramercy Riffs. Suddenly, the Hitmen were just one game under .500 and, despite a public insistence that he was looking more at 2008, Boland's team were beginning to look very dangerous. A four-game sweep of the Oswego Lakers was then followed by a five-game shellacking of St. Jack's Demons on August 3 that left the Hitmen at 28-22 and Demons Owner/GM Jack Flynn reaching for the Xanax.

Jim Thome was the biggest contributor during the Demons series, setting an NYLISL record with six home runs in the first two games of the series. Incredibly, all six homeruns were hit on Thome's card - three straight rolls of 1-7 (HR 1-14, DO 15-20) in the first game and three straight rolls of 1-6 (HOMERUN) in the second game.

On August 5, the Hitmen won their first two games against the New Jersey Bandits and moved a half-game out of first place. Finally, however, the laws of probability briefly began to tilt away from the Hitmen and New Jersey took the final four games of the series. Still, the Hitmen bounced back nicely by hammering the Stories in five out of six games and moved right back into the playoff picture, something that was seemingly out of question after a 1-5 evening at the 2007 All-Star game classic in mid-July.

Demons Trade Schmidt After Acquiring Weaver: In an effort to pare down the number of starters on the 40-man roster, St. Jack's Demons traded Jason Schmidt to the Gramercy Riffs today in exchange for outfielder Jason Repko. Schmidt (33/24) will step into the Riffs' rotation as the #4 starter. He is signed for an additional two years, through 2009, but will not have an NYLISL card next season because of an arm injury. Repko (40/37) is a pending free agent and will not be eligible to play until the Demons reach the trade deadline. He will certainly be released in the off-season

The trade comes on the heels of an earlier deal with the Massapequa Hitmen that brought Jered Weaver and Trever Miller to the Demons in exchange for Mark Buerhle and Rafael Soriano. Weaver (24/9) will replace franchise icon Curt Schilling in the rotation and Miller (27/18) adds some flexibility to the St.Jack's bullpen. Buerhle (23/38) should fit nicely in the 2008 Hitmen rotation, behind Jake Peavy and Ben Sheets. Soriano (30/13), despite problems with the home run ball (10 HRs in 51 IP), will likely be the set-up man for Trevor Hoffman next season.


Posted by nylistratleague at 9:24 PM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 12 September 2007 9:26 PM EDT
Thursday, 9 August 2007
Putz Traded in 5-Man Deal: Wellwood Strikes First and Steals Top Closer From Floral Park in first NYLISL Trade of 2007 Season
Topic: Front Page
JULY 10 - Three years ago, at an NYLISL All-Star Game Extravaganza in West Babylon, current Demons Owner/GM Jack Flynn had seen enough. His slugging first baseman was scuffling and, in a fit of pique after a game-ending out, was promptly traded to a league rival after the first seductive offer he was made. To this day, Flynn has regretted the deal - which sent Albert Pujols to the Mop-Ups franchise in exchange for three players.

As Winston Churchill once said, "those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it."

The Wellwood Scribes of Lindenhurst cashed in on a similar fit of exasperation tonight, acquiring closer JJ Putz from the Floral Park Flesheaters in a five-player deal that left heads shaking and established the Scribes as a legitimate playoff contender. In exchange, Floral Park brought back Joel Zumaya and Josh Beckett, a risky move that will hurt now but will hopefully pay dividends in 2008 and beyond. Eric Chavez (Floral Park) and Mike Lowell (Wellwood) rounded out the deal.

Floral Park Owner/GM Jason Varvaro had come to the end of his rope with Putz, who had already blown a number of saves on the young season and was not pitching up to his potential. The final straw came earlier in the week when Putz could not lock down a game against the suddenly not-so-hapless Oswego Lakers. With his patience completely worn away, Varvaro quietly made Putz available. Before the other league contenders could react, Baumbach had struck an extremely favorable deal.

Putz (14/13) will provide a complement to the magnificent Jonathan Papelbon (9/2), setting up the most devastating 1-2 punch in the league. When both are fully rested, they have to potential to make any game a five-inning contest. Teams that fail to score on the Scribes early will pay the price for it later.

The deal became even more favorable for Wellwood when Floral Park agreed to take back Chavez in exchange for Lowell, in a swap good-field, no-hit third basemen. Lowell (30/43) will be a free agent after this season, although Baumbach will consider re-signing him in the offseason if the length of the deal is right. Chavez (34/42) has the advantage of being left-handed, but the distinct disadvantage of being signed through 2010 with a club option for 2011.

Floral Park will have to pray that Beckett (34/27) continues his 2007 form and becomes an ace for years to come. In Zumaya (23/20), the Flesheaters have a solid replacement for Putz, but he is nowhere near as dominant as the departed closer and is an injury risk for the future.


Posted by nylistratleague at 12:42 PM EDT
Updated: Thursday, 9 August 2007 12:44 PM EDT
Wednesday, 11 July 2007
A Shake-Up on The Lake: Oswego Demotes Three and Revamps Lineup In Attempt to Overcome Rough Start to First Season
Topic: Front Page
Everyone knew it was going to be a year of growth and development for the Oswego Lakers, as the first-year franchise under the control of rookie Owner/GM Sean O'Leary was sure to experience some serious growing pains. But after a 1-12 start that saw the Lakers post a collective .290 on-base percentage, O'Leary decided it was time for some new bats in the lineup.

The Lakers recalled Chris Burke, Emil Brown and Jay Payton from AAA-UC Santa Barbara on May 17 and each new player will have an expanded role in the Lakers' attack. Burke will step into a platoon role with Adam Kennedy at 2B and provides decent defense at the corner outfield positions (3e3 in LF and RF). Brown is expected to step into the starting LF role against righties and bat high in the order. Payton is not expected to start, but is a 2e8 at all three outfield positions and can provide depth and defense for a team short on both.

Jose Lopez, Damion Easley and Sean Casey were all sent to the minors to make room for the new arrivals. That trio was a combined 3 for 36 (.083 BA) with just 1 RBI in the Lakers' first 13 games. Only Casey was playing regularly, but his demotion leads the way for Kevin Youkilis to take most of the at-bats at 1B.

Although O'Leary will be hoping for some extra offense from his new-look lineup, pitching remains an area of concern. The Lakers have a 6.75 team ERA and no real way forward, as the options at AAA are even less appetizing then those with the parent club. Among the starters, only Chris Young has been effective, and he's still 0-2 with a 3.86 ERA. The bullpen will likely see increased reliance on Mike MacDougal (26/11) and Darren Oliver (20/26), although Jonathan Broxton (34/15) will be called upon to get a tough righty here and there.


Posted by nylistratleague at 4:07 PM EDT
Updated: Friday, 13 July 2007 3:29 PM EDT
Monday, 14 May 2007
Goddamn Derek Jeter!! Asshole Breaks Up Zambrano's No Hitter in 9th; Officially Considered Biggest Jerkoff in NYLISL
Topic: Front Page
On any other day, the games would’ve been rained out.

 

The rainstorm that slammed the Northeast on April 15 certainly was enough to stop most teams in their tracks, but not the Massapequa Hitmen. Imagine the surprise owner/GM Jack Flynn must’ve felt when he got the phone call from Hitmen head honcho Jason Boland on Sunday morning, wondering why St. Jack’s Demons players hadn’t taken the field for batting practice and instead seemed ready for a rainout. “But JB, we’re getting hit with a Nor’easter today!”

“I thought it was just a little rain,” Boland told a shocked Flynn.

With the Hitmen on the field and waiting to play ball, the Demons had no choice but to suit up and take the field. By the end of the day, Boland had to have wished he had just stayed in bed. The Demons swept the three-game series on the strength on terrific pitching performances from Curt Schilling, Roy Oswalt and Carlos Zambrano to start the season 3-0. Zambrano took a no-hitter into the ninth before it was finally broken up by Derek Jeter, who was showered with boos and debris by Demons fans as he rounded the bases after a heartbreaking solo home run.

Jeter stood in against Zambrano with one out and the bases empty in the ninth. 25 of the 27 previous batters had been retired without a hit, and Zambrano had only scattered two walks to that point. A roll of 4-9 yielded a HR 1-7, flyball-B 8 -20. Boland picked up his 20-sided die, which had just missed a ballpark single with pinch-hitter Jose Reyes the batter before, and shockingly rolled a 2. The no-hitter was gone, the shutout was gone and Jeter had further cemented his place as the most hated figure in baseball among the Demons faithful.

“Of all the guys who had to do it, it had to be Jeter. I’ve always hated that prick too!” Flynn admitted after the game.

Zambrano gave up another hit, but retired the final two batters for the complete game victory in what turned out to be a 9-1 win. He was helped out early and often by his fielders – Omar Vizquel’s fielding rating of 1 saved at least three hits alone, as Boland rolled a 2 on three straight groundball SS(X) chances during the course of the game. Perhaps the scariest moment came with two outs in the seventh, when a roll of 5-11 yielded a flyball LF(X). The ball floated toward Pat Burrell (a 4e4 in LF) and it seemed the no-hitter couldn’t possibly survive. But Boland rolled a 20, Burrell made the play and the drama continued until Jeter’s at-bat.

In the earlier games, Curt Schilling opened the season with a complete game five-hitter in a 7-2 Demons win. Schilling, who holds virtually every major pitching record in franchise history, was a little wild in walking four and plunking two others. However, three hits from Nick Johnson and a home run from Grady Sizemore helped out. In Game 2, Roy Oswalt pitched into the ninth before tiring and Takashi Saito was called on to get the final out of a 6-4 win. Scott Rolen had two homers to pace the Demons attack.


Posted by nylistratleague at 4:10 PM EDT
Updated: Friday, 13 July 2007 3:32 PM EDT
Sunday, 15 April 2007
New Jersey Clubs Liriano: Bandits Romp in Opener, Wind Up Splitting Six With West Side Stories as Season Gets Underway
Topic: Front Page

The New Jersey Bandits started the 2007 NYLISL season with some fireworks, pounding West Side Stories ace Francisco Liriano for eight runs on 11 hits in a 16-3 Opening Day victory. Morgan Ensberg homered twice and drove in five runs to support Roger Clemens.

 

The next five games of the series included a pair of thrillers. The Stories won Game 2 by scoring three runs off Bandits relief ace Mariano Rivera in the eighth inning to tie the game. The added two more off Billy Wagner with three straight pinch hits in the bottom of the 10th to re-tie the contest and notched the winning run in the 11th on a Jermaine Dye single.

 
The Stories took the next two contests to improve their winning streak to three games, but saw it come to a halt with a Bandits comeback in Game 5. With Stories closer Mike Gonzalez needing a day off, the Bandits scored twice off his replacement in the bottom of the ninth inning, winning 3-2 on Luis Castillo's squeeze bunt.
 
Matt Cain and Bob Howry combined on a six-hit suthout in Game 6 to salvage the series for New Jersey, as each team went 2-1 in its home park. More NYLISL action is expected next weekend, as teams appear to be shaking off the two-month slumber that the league fell into after the February 3 draft.

Posted by nylistratleague at 3:36 PM EDT
Updated: Friday, 13 July 2007 3:35 PM EDT
Thursday, 1 February 2007
And One For The Thumb! Bandits Win Their Fifth NYLISL Championship, Outlasting Scribes in Thrilling Seven-Game Series
Topic: Front Page
In the early 1980s, fans of the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers grew fond of the phrase "One for the Thumb." It became a rallying cry for the team's rabid fan base, celebrating the Steelers' four Super Bowl wins and reminding opposing fans that they expected the next one to be right around the corner. It was a phrase that found new life throughout the state of New Jersey in 2006.
From the beaches of the Jersey Shore to the industrial plants of Elizabeth, from the crack houses of Camden all the way to the brand-new complex in Fair Lawn - Bandit fans throughout the Garden State looked down their noses at fans of other NYLISL teams as they looked down at their (barely opposable) thumbs in anticipation.
On January 3, less than a calendar year since the Bandits won their fourth NYLISL championship and revitalized that famous phrase from the banks of Pennsylvania's famous Three Rivers, the waiting came to an end. The Steelers waited nearly 25 years to put one on the thumb - the Bandits waited less than 365 days.
Eight innings of one-run ball from the league's best bullpen was enough to hold off the upstart Wellwood Scribes of Lindenhurst, as the Bandits won Game 7 by a score of 5-1 to clinch the series and a fourth straight league championship. League MVP Derrek Lee was a destructive force throughout the series, a one-man wrecking crew that proved to be too much for the valiant Scribes to handle.
The teams split the first four games of the series before the Bandits, on the strength of a Jason Bay grand slam, took control with an 8-2 win in Game 5. This set the stage for a memorable Game 6, filled with dramatic moments climaxing in one of the all-time great redemption scenes in NYLISL playoff history.
The Scribes were down 4-2 in the bottom of the sixth but took the lead on a shocking three-run homer by Geoff Jenkins off of the great Mariano Rivera. A rare Omar Vizquel miscue at short lead to Jenkins's heroics - a three-run homer that needed a roll of 1-4 to leave the park. A ball that should've settled harmlessly in the glove of right fielder Vladimir Guerrero instead carried out of the park when Scribes owner Jim Baumbach rolled a 1.
The lead was short-lived, however - Lee smashed a three-run homer off his card the very next inning to put the Bandits back in control. The lead held until the ninth inning, with Joe Nathan on the mound trying to close out yet another New Jersey championship.
With two outs and a man on, Michael Young rolled a 3-7, setting up a SI* 1-11 split that the Scribes had to have to survive. Baumbach rolled an 11, setting the stage for beleaguered slugger Travis Hafner. The man they call "Pronk" hit just .236 this season and had earned Baumbach's ire for the lack of production. However, he managed 19 homers in 288 regular season at-bats, a reminder that one mistake pitch could change everything.
Just 2 for 24 in the series to that point, Hafner strode to the plate amid the catcalls of derision from the Bandits faithful. Even Forster, so often a beacon of class, chuckled, "c'mon, A-Rod," as Hafner knocked the dirt from his spikes and focused on Nathan.
He would pay for his insolence.
Baumbach rolled a 1-5 and Hafner unleashed a mighty swing at a Nathan changeup, driving the ball deep into the stinking Jersey air and directly into the hands of longtime Scribes fan Sean O'Leary, who laughed with delight at the astounding turn of events. The score was 8-7, Hafner was the hero and Destiny's Darlings (after an eventful but ultimately fruitless ninth inning for New Jersey) were on their way to Game 7.
It was there that the clock struck 12 on Wellwood's Cinderella story. Brett Myers pitched just one inning for New Jersey before giving way to the vaunted bullpen and a two-run homer in the fourth gave New Jersey the only lead it would need. The Scribes cut the lead in half in the fifth and chased Rivera from the mound after just one-third of an inning in the sixth, but Neal Cotts struck out two straight batters and Wellwood's best chance at taking control of the game had been frittered away.
New Jersey added three more runs in the next two innings off of Al Reyes and Aaron Heilman and went into the ninth with a depleted bullpen - Forster only had Tom Gordon or Huston Street left to choose from. He chose Gordon and the Scribes went down meekly, with Tony Clark striking out to end the series and send the Bandits faithful into their yearly paroxysms of joy.
Ever gracious in defeat, Baumbach released this statement through personal PR flack Howard Rubenstein after the series: "While I am greatly disappointed by the final result of the World Series that was played earlier today, I would like to express the pride I feel toward my team for the strong fight they put forth against a very worthy opponent. Chris Forster's ball club was made up of the finest talent around the league, and it is an honor that we took him to the seven-game limit. I congratulate Chris and manager Yoda on a well played series. "And to all the Scribes fans out there, I thank you for your amazing support. I understand your disappointment, but rest assured, we are already hard at work building our 2007 team."
Immediately after the statement was released speculation ran rampant, as curious fans wondered if it was prelude to a deal for megastar Alex Rodriguez, who is rumored to be on the trading block. St. Jack's owner Jack Flynn was tight-lipped, saying only that he would "explore every option available for building a championship-caliber ball club."
But for Chris Forster and the New Jersey Bandits, the beat simply rolls on. Four straight titles have created a legacy on Tony Soprano's turf and it is a proud one. With the 2007 free agent draft just over a month away, there will be no rest for the wicked. Bandit fans are already wondering ... 

"Eyyy, when will we get our Six-Pack?"


Posted by nylistratleague at 11:46 AM EST
Updated: Friday, 13 July 2007 3:35 PM EDT
Tuesday, 1 January 2002
Jumpin' Josh-osaphat!! Beckett Back in Bethpage as Baumbach Brings Back Hurler in Seven-Man Deal: Floral Park Gets Mussina
Topic: Front Page
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Posted by nylistratleague at 1:00 AM EST

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