Give your father what he really wants this Father’s Day.
Author: Ben Cohen
Another Reason for Yankees’ Woes
Many have offered explanations for the plight of the 2005 Yankees. Here’s another one: the Yankees are failing because of the hiring of three starting pitchers, whose stats were inflated because of their time in the National League.
Bonds Walks Again
Barry Bonds is more juiced than a freshly squeezed glass of Tropicana.
Another Season Down the Drains
Call me Ernie Banks. Call me the 1918-2003 Red Sox. Call me the pre-2004 Phil Mickelson, for I am cursed.
Terrell Owens may have issued the knockout punch for the Eagles last week against the Ravens, but he should be penalized for a low blow against Ray Lewis–one that occurred during the following week.
The Boston Red Sox may have a two game advantage, and they have beaten the Yankees. They think the so-called Curse is broken. They’re wrong. Because of their shaky fundamental play, it’s only beginning to come into play.
Loose Moose Convinces Me
Why I know that the Yankees will win the AL pennant. (written 2 weeks ago, forgot to post)
Thoughts of a Anxious Teenager
The Ramblings, Sports Guy style.
Jeter’s Still the Man
Derek Jeter has been one of the only reasons the Yankees have been winning lately–and he’s the reason they’ll keep winning in the playoffs.
Over the past few months, and in the last weeks especially, the Boston Red Sox have challenged the New York Yankees for the AL Division title that the Yankees have held since 1998. And in an atmosphere where every game is crucial, one Yankee, like so many times before, has proven to be a leader–a player who has put the team on his back and led them to victory when they needed it most: Derek Jeter.
It’s About Damn Time
Written by a Yankees fan, why the Yankees deserve to lose to the Red Sox this year.
I am a New York Yankees fan. Diehard, at that. Yet, for some reason, the intense Division race going on between the Yankees and the Boston Red Sox doesn’t faze me. I’m not obsessing about it.