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Enter Sandman

14
Vote

by Austinamoroso

This article originally appeared on The Fung Wah Sports Connection

Let's take a trip down memory lane.

It's April 15. The Yankees just lost to Oakland on a Marco Scutaro walk-off three-run homerun that dropped the Yanks' record below .500 at 5-6.

The loss wasn't all that alarming, despite Scutaro's pension for keeping the ball in the park. It was just a loss, in April, one of many to come over the course of the season.

But what was alarming, at least to some, what had Yankees critics salivating and Yankees fans cringing, was that the homerun came off of the best closer in the game. At least the guy who used to be.

Wait. Used to be?

The Scutaro job was Rivera's first blow-up of the season, but his next time out, five days later, he gave up two runs on two-thirds of an inning against the Red Sox, in another loss, as his ERA soared to 8.44. It made it two blown saves and two losses in a row for him, just 15 games into the season, and it was surely an omen that this was the beginning of the end for the guy that you never expect to fail.

Rivera turned 37 last November, and the slender 6'2, 185 lb. one-pitch wonder wasn't going to be able to extend his career, the critics said, the way Trevor Hoffman has, or Dennis Eckersley did.

But what those critics forgot was that this isn't just some other great closer doomed to succumb to the inevitabilities of aging.

No, this is Mariano Rivera, Mo-Ra, the single most dominant pitcher in the game and the most important piece to the success of the Yankees over the last 12 years. The guy with a record 34 postseason saves and a 0.80 playoff ERA.

And while it's his postseason performance that has separated him from his peers, Rivera has been just as consistently dominant in the regular season.

Since he became a reliever in 1996, Rivera has compiled 428 saves and a 2.07 ERA. Those numbers make him a hall of famer and one of the best. But what he does in the playoffs makes him the greatest of all time.

"I wanted to go inside," Rivera said after the A's loss. "It was in and over the plate."

It was more of the same from Rivera as he scrutinized exactly what went wrong; it was pretty much the same thing he's said after just about every blown game of his career. But for some reason this one was a clear sign, for the critics, that Mariano had lost his muster.

So now, three months later, where are those critics?

Since the Scutaro blow-up, and the debacle five days later against Boston, Rivera hasn't blown a save all season. He's converted 15 straight while posting a 2.36 ERA, numbers you're used to, and expect, to see him put up.

Wednesday night's game was just that, exactly what you expect, as Joe Torre, who has been insistent all season on only using Rivera for one inning, brought him in with two on and one out in the eighth to save a struggling bullpen.

Ground out, strikeout, fly out, fly out, ground out. Game over. Yankees win.

Torre doesn't have the luxury of holding Rivera back for just one inning, not now, when every game counts for the Yankees. That win made it five in a row and 11 of 14 overall for the team, cutting the A.L. East deficit to seven games and the Wild Card to six.

With more than two months still left in the season, there's more than enough time to get back into it. And with 'ol reliable #42 in the back of the pen, anything can happen, and it's sure to be a memorable finish to the season.

To read more about your favorite New York and Boston sports teams, visit us at The Fung Wah Sports Connection where new content is added every day.

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SalmanpourVarsity
863 days ago
Score -1+-
I love the title man, cuz its my nick name XD.
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RomiezzoLegend
862 days ago
Score 2+-
You also left something out. THE, not one of, THE best cutter in baseball.
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RomiezzoLegend
862 days ago
Score 1+-
IMO, he is the best closer ever. First of all, he was on the Yankees, probably the team with the most amount of runs since '96. When the Pads won, it was usually by a margin of 3 runs or less (that's why I'm thinking that Hoffman has more saves). When the Yanks win, most of the time, they don't have to bring Mariano in. He's the best postseason closer ever, with the stats you gave above, and he's just that damn good.
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Ron Sen, MDRed-Shirting
862 days ago
Score 2+-
I was sitting down in the RF grandstand a couple of years ago watching him warm up...had a good angle almost directly behind him. A machine. Pop...pop...pop...inside corner with the fastball, outside corner with the cutter. He came in with a 3-0 lead and I knew the game was over.
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RomiezzoLegend
862 days ago
Score 1+-
The thing with Mariano is that every single blown save that he has, it has to be the top story of ESPN News..whether it was in the '90s or this season. That's either another reason why he's that good, or broadcasters just wanna suck even more. I think I'm going with the "another reason why he's that good" theory..
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Brendan.CanneyDiv-I Stud
861 days ago
Score 0+-
Mariano Rivera wills always take second fiddle to Trevor Hoffman in my opinion when talking about the greatest closer of all time.
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AustinamorosoWaterboy
861 days ago
Score 0+-
You have any support to back up that claim, Brendan? There's one number you could use, that's it, and that's career saves. But Hoffman has two or three years on Rivera, so that too, could change. Yes, Hoffman hasn't had the post-season opportunities like Rivera has, but you don't know how Hoffman would do under that kind of pressure. We know how Rivera stacks up against the best on the biggest stage. And Hoffman's also pitched in the NL West, as compared to the AL East, for his entire career.
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JoshkrossDraft Pick
861 days ago
Score 1+-
His backup is that he said "his opinion."
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Brendan.CanneyDiv-I Stud
861 days ago
Score 1+-
Actually, I do have some statistics to back that up. Trevor Hoffman has converted 89.5 percent of his lifetime save opportunities, struck out 9.8 hitters per nine innings in his career and held opposing hitters to a .207 batting average and .264 on-base percentage.Mariano Rivera's figures: 87.9 percent, 8.0 strikeouts per 9 IP, .214 average, .270 on-base Both players have basically the same number of blown saves in their careers, 58 for Hoffman and 57 for Rivera. One big difference though Hoffman has had 70 more opportunities. Good luck with that sandman.
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Brendan.CanneyDiv-I Stud
861 days ago
Score 1+-
And Trevor Hoffman is still kicking this season in which in 29 SV OPP he has closed the door 27 times. He is also sporting a 1.80 ERA while "Sandman" is at 3.18 ERA. Only if "The Hoff" had gotten the opportunity to pitch in more postseasons.
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AustinamorosoWaterboy
861 days ago
Score 1+-
"We know how Rivera stacks up against the best on the biggest stage." Just in case you missed that line in my post, Brendan. In 12 games and 13 innings, Hoffman is 1-2 with 4 saves and a 3.46 ERA in the postseason. While Rivera, in 73 games and 112.2 innings, is 8-1 with 34 saves and a 0.80 ERA in the postseason. But you're probably right, Brendan. Given enough "opportunity" in the playoffs, I'm sure "The Hoff" would put up similar numbers. Riiiiight. And since the All-Star game was brought up, let's take a look at the 2006 game. Hoffman, with a 2-1 lead in the ninth, simply just didn't have the stuff, or the demeanor, to get one last out and end the game. Nope. He gave up two runs on three straight hits to blow the save and lose the lead. Then what happened? Oh yeah, Mo-Ra comes in and retires the side in order. I know it's only an exhibition game, despite that it now "counts", but that game was a microcosm of what these two closers are. Hoffman is a great closer, a first-ballot hall-of-famer. But he's not Mariano Rivera.
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Brendan.CanneyDiv-I Stud
861 days ago
Score 0+-
The post season isn't something that you can use to compare and contrast these guys because one has over 100 innings while the other has 13. Atleast we can agree on one thing though, Mariano Rivera isn't Trevor Hoffman. As for the All-Star game, it didn't matter to either of them because they both missed out on the World Series. Not that the home field for the AL mattered anyway, the Cardinals won it all.
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Pfiore03Waterboy
861 days ago
Score 1+-
I still think Rivera is #1 to me. I've seen him pitch more with the Yanks on TV as well as Hoffman. Rivera as a fastball still about 92 to 94 which isn't bad but the cutter is effective but at times can be ineffective which makes that fastball look really bad. One of the best postseason closers in baseball history. I started bashing him yes because of the bad start and yes if he does have a bad outing I can mention that he still has one pitch (the fastball).
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
861 days ago
Score 0+-
Manipulating the save stat(cheapness of same tied to conversion rate, etc.)is what a "compiler" does to get attention. A so-called save has many characterisics. It's easy to rack up if your team wants to use it as a marketing vehicle, to manipulate an award, and constructs its bullpen with that in mind. Hoffman has had post season and all-star opportunities, but hasn't done that well on the big stage. Regular season "opportunities" given to him aren't "opportunities" given to others. Finally, "all time" means "all time" which includes regular and post season. Look how many HR Hoffman and Eckersley have given up for one thing--they would never have succeeded in that role in the situations Rivera has faced.
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Brendan.CanneyDiv-I Stud
861 days ago
Score 0+-
Who cares about the All-Star game? Talk about meaningless, and you can't say that Hoffman wouldn't be able to perform like Rivera in whatever "situations" you're talking about because he never was given that "opportunity".
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Anonymous Fanatic #2
155 days ago
Score 0+-
Brendan Brendan. Both are great closer. Hall of Fame starter-turned-closer Dennis Eckersley calls Rivera "the best ever, no doubt", while the only closer with more saves than Rivera,Trevor Hoffman, , says he "will go down as the best reliever in the game in history". Buster Olney says, "No other player can instill calm in his team's fans as reliably as Mariano Rivera, the game's dominant closer and arguably the best relief pitcher of all time." So maybe they are wrong. You know better, who care about those all-star players, you are better you got more saves, you got more rings and maybe a damn good hitter.
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