We might have to start calling them the cardiac kids!
After a big, ninth-inning comeback to beat the Nationals on Friday night, we got a sequel on Saturday afternoon. Starter Cam Schlittler didn’t pitch well while managing an extraordinary start, and seven-plus innings of maddening offense gave way to a trio of eighth-inning home runs. The Yankees have a win streak going, taking today’s game 4-2 over the Nationals.
Cam Schlittler is making me think about Roy Halladay a lot. I’ve told this story before here, but Halladay was the standard of baseball excellence in my home growing up; my dad would hand 10-year-old me a pocket Blue Jay schedule and have me mark off the home games that Doc was most likely to be starting, and those games became the priority options for family trips to Toronto. The day Roy was traded was a small celebration in our house, because he sure as hell wasn’t getting anything out of the late-2000s Blue Jays. At least the Phillies gave him a real shot.
But the thing that always stuck out to me about Halladay, specifically his time in Toronto where he was the best or second best pitcher in the AL depending on what Johan Santana had done lately, was that he didn’t often dominate lineups the way his counterpart in Minnesota would. Halladay ground you down, taking advantage of his formidable conditioning and his manager’s reluctance to go to anyone in the bullpen to throw 130 cutters and sinkers and shatter your bat and watch you jog 75 feet to your right on a basic groundout to second. And he would do that for eight innings every five days — sometimes more, as no less a juggernaut than the 2009 Yankees learned.
Indeed, even on days where Halladay wasn’t the best pitcher available, he seemed better than anyone at finding some way to make it work. When he was losing, and boy he was losing a lot with those teams, it seemed there was nobody on the planet more dead-set at not being the reason why we lose today.
Cam certainly did not dominate today — the first pitch he threw was deposited in the right field seats by James Wood, and a batter later another ball was launched by Curtis Mead to put the Yankees down 2-0. Dreams of that disastrous Detroit date were dancing in our heads, but while Schlittler wasn’t at his best, he was able to figure it out. His 6:4 K:BB ratio is shocking for a player of his calibre. He needed a huge double play to get out of a tricky second, and walked the bases loaded in the fourth before getting a soft fly out to end the inning.
He was not the best pitcher going on this full Saturday slate of games, but he was able to ground down the bats of the Nationals for 6.2 innings. He was dead-set at not being the reason why we lose today, and for a couple of hours on a warm Saturday afternoon, Cam Schlittler made me feel like I was 10 again.
Unfortunately for most of the game the Yankee offense was also revisiting the mid-2000s Blue Jays standard operating procedure. PJ Poulin and Miles Mikolas — yes, him — held them scoreless through the sixth inning. But hey, if you watched last night’s win, you know you just need to find a way to screw into Washington’s bullpen.
Introducing screwworm Ryan McMahon:
Yes, Washington’s relief corps is chopped, but it does feel like the Yankees have been squeezing their bats a little too tight for a while now. McMahon’s homer, like Jazz’s last night, kinda seemed to remind everyone that they can hit.
Ben Rice was walked, reaching base all four times today, and with a chance at the lead, in came Trent Grisham:
And, broadly speaking, there went Trent Grisham.
Even the old man got in on the fun. Paul Goldschmidt looked pretty bad today after snapping that long hitless streak on Friday, but unc changed all that around as we moved into the (relative) tack-on portion of the game:
There’s a reason why we play nine innings, folks.
Given the lead, Fernando Cruz and David Bednar worked an inning apiece, with Bednar allowing a single to Wood — he’s pretty good folks — but nothing else in locking up another come from behind win. Both relievers have put in excellent work over the past two days, with the duo combining for 4.2 innings of one-hit ball.
We’ve got one more game to go before the break, and the Yankees would sure rinse off a lot of the stink around them this past month by completing the sweep tomorrow. Will Warren is tapped for the start, with a 1:35pm Eastern first pitch. The Nats have not announced a starter of their own yet, though Cade Cavalli’s suspension is supposed to be over, so he is a candidate to get the ball for Washington.