Saturday, May 29, 2010

You know, with such unfortunate events transpiring around the globe, such as the Gulf oil leak and the deaths of Gary Coleman and Dennis Hopper, it is nice to get a nice deep breath of fresh air. Today's breath of fresh air came courtesy of the greatest baseball team in existence.

The odds were not looking good early on. The Indians have admittedly, yet not surprisingly, been struggling quite a bit this season. They were on the road for a 4-game series. At Yankee Stadium. Against the Yankees, obviously. The Yankees have by far the highest payroll in baseball and one of the best records in the league to boot. The Indians are far behind in both areas.

To add insult to injury (or whatever), the starting pitcher was the Yankees was none other than CC Sabathia, the former Indians ace that, after a half-season layover with Milwaukee, cashed in his excellent years in Cleveland with a ridiculous contract in New York. So, as it stood, the entire Indians' roster makes $60 million a year, while their former teammate, who they were facing, makes about $25 million a year by himself.

Anyway, matters got worse. Already trailing in the 3rd inning, Cleveland's young starting pitcher, David Huff, was struck in the left side of the head by a line drive off the bat of none other than Alex Rodriguez, whose salary of $33 million a year dwarfs even Sabathia's. Huff went straight to the ground, where he lay motionless for several minutes, before being taken off the field on a stretcher, then straight to the hospital.

Well, if you've read this far, surely you can expect what happened next, warranting this entry. Yep, the Yankees scored a couple of runs as a result of Huff's misfortune, then added 6 more runs the next inning and took control of the game...

But, even though the Yankees' lead held at 10-4 in the 6th inning, it was nothing that 9 consecutive runs couldn't overcome. And just as David Huff came out OK after a negative CT scan at the hospital, so did the Indians and their 13-11 victory.

And for just one day in just one ballpark, all was right with the world.

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