Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Padres Trade Chase Headley To Yankees

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Padres Trade Chase Headley To Yankees

    http://espn.go.com/blog/new-york/yan...-yankees-debut

    NEW YORK -- Chase Headley's day began in a hotel room in Chicago and ended in a shower of orange liquid on the grass of Yankee Stadium in the Bronx.

    In between, he said goodbye to old teammates, said hello to new ones -- including another one named Chase -- bade farewell to a longtime partner (his beard) and had his first four encounters with the Yankee Stadium faithful, the last of which ended in triumph as he drove in the winning run in Tuesday night's 2-1, 14-inning victory over the Texas Rangers.

    "He's had a whirlwind day," said Joe Girardi, master of understatement.

    The fact it was Headley who finally ended the nearly five-hour marathon that devoured 17 pitchers and saw more than 400 pitches thrown just lent a final bizarre footnote to what has already been a bizarre two games between these former bitter postseason rivals, and we're only halfway through the series.

    Headley's hit completed a Circle of Chases, which began when Chase Whitley threw the first pitch of the game at 7:09 p.m., and ended when Headley hit the last pitch just as the clock struck midnight.

    In fact, the two had had a comical meeting earlier in the evening when Whitley, seeing an unfamiliar face in the dugout, went over and said, "Hi, I'm Chase."

    Headley responded, "Hey, I'm Chase, too. That should be an easy one to remember."

    Now, Chase Headley's first day as a Yankee will be a tough one to forget.

    For Yankees fans who were a bit dubious about the deal that sent Yangervis Solarte, the sensation of spring training, to San Diego in exchange for Headley, the sensation of 2012, the game's ending may have given a little reassurance that maybe the Yankees knew what they were doing here.

    But Headley, for one, never had any doubt.

    "Hopefully I can get back to being the type of player that I know I am," he said. "That may not be 30 and 115 [his HR and RBI numbers for the Padres in 2012], but I know I'm a good player and I know that I'm better than I've played this year. I look forward to being that player again."

    The Yankees could certainly use that player, and as soon as possible.

    Tuesday night, they were certainly glad to settle for the player Headley is now, a switch-hitting spray hitter who uses the whole field and gives you, as GM Brian Cashman said, "a professional at-bat."

    That he did in the 14th inning, batting left-handed against righty Nick Tepesch, a starter pressed into relief duty as the Rangers' ninth pitcher of the night. He took a 1-1 sinker the other way, dunking it into left-center to score Brian Roberts from third base to bring a merciful end to a game that looked for a long time as if it would never end, and for a shorter time as if it would, only with another crushing Yankees loss.

    Headley, who had arrived in the Yankees dugout at 7:40 after a flight from Chicago, where the Padres were playing the Cubs, had already had three chances to win over the Yankee faithful, coming in as a pinch-hitter in the eighth inning for Zelous Wheeler, whose days as a starting third baseman also ended at that point.

    Headley received a surprising ovation on his first at-bat from a crowd that has become desperate for any sort of help. But the cheers soon turned to groans when he struck out. He grounded out in the 11th, and worst of all, bounced out to second to end a 12th inning in which the Yankees loaded the bases with one out and failed to score.

    So by the time he came up in the 14th, with Roberts at third and Francisco Cervelli at first, the pressure was on.

    "There’s a lot of nerves there," Headley said. "But I kinda stepped out of the box and I thought to myself, ‘Why not?’ Why wouldn’t this day go this way?"

    Why not, indeed.

    Headley had already wowed the crowd with a leaping catch of a liner by Rougned Odor to end the 10th inning. But as much as the Yankees need help with infield defense, they need hitting more. And for more than four hours all they had managed was six hits off seven Rangers pitchers, including a starter (Nick Martinez) who came into the game with a 1-6 record and 5.10 ERA. And with Yu Darvish looming as tomorrow's starter, a loss Tuesday night would have made the prospect of being swept at home by the team with the worst record in the American League a very real, and revolting, possibility.

    "It’s unbelievable," Headley said of his hit, one of just two timely Yankee hits all night. "But sometimes these things happen, man. You’ve got to want to be up in that spot. "It was a long day, but a great way to finish."

    And for the Yankees, not a bad way to start, either.

  • #2
    Low risk, good trade for Yankees. Doesn't look like they gave up much to get him. He isn't having the greatest of seasons, but he is a good veteran.
    Favorite baseball players include: Mike Schmidt, Steve Carlton, Kirby Puckett, Pete Rose, Tyler Colvin Mark Appel
    Favorite football players include: Peyton Manning, John Elway, Daunte Culpepper, Mike Alstott, Blake Bortles, and Dri Archer
    Collecting: 2012 Topps Mini 1987 topps... non-certified autos (in person or through the mail), autographed cards with bible verses

    Comment

    Working...
    X