Tuesday, October 26, 2010

“5 years later, Uribe, Rowand back in World Series - Chicago Tribune” plus 2 more

“5 years later, Uribe, Rowand back in World Series - Chicago Tribune” plus 2 more


5 years later, Uribe, Rowand back in World Series - Chicago Tribune

Posted: 25 Oct 2010 07:46 PM PDT

White Sox fans, has it really been exactly five years since your World Series trophy was hoisted on the Minute Maid Park mound?

Three members of that special 2005 team — manager Ozzie Guillen, center fielder Aaron Rowand and infielder Juan Uribe — will reunite this week in San Francisco as the Giants open the World Series against the Rangers.

Some of the scenes of the Giants' run to their second Series appearance in nine years are similar to the Sox's drive to their first world championship in 88 years that made them eternal heroes in the minds of many Sox fans.

For one of the few times, Guillen will take a back seat. He will provide his insight on Fox's pregame and postgame shows as well as late-inning analysis.

One veteran scout believes Guillen performed his best managing during the Sox's World Series run. Less than 24 hours after employing eight relievers to pull out Game 3, Guillen stuck with Freddy Garcia for seven shutout innings before lifting him in favor of pinch-hitter Willie Harris, who has the distinction of batting 1.000 in a World Series by hitting a leadoff single in the eighth inning in his only Series at-bat.

Guillen played the percentages by having Scott Podsednik lay down a sacrifice bunt, and Harris eventually scored on Jermaine Dye's 1,000-hop single through the middle of the infield.

Guillen pulled out all the stops throughout the series. From a strategic standpoint, he's well-known for a double-switch in Game 3 that set up Geoff Blum's game-winning home run in the 14th. But he also employed Mark Buehrle, who threw 100 pitches two days earlier and had his left elbow buried in a large tray of ice the next day, to get the final out with the tying and winning runs on base.

Like Buehrle, Rowand also wasn't at 100 percent thanks to his fearless play that Sox fans adored, and there were reports that he underwent an MRI on his sore wrist before Game 3.

With San Francisco, Rowand has moved to a secondary role in the playoffs. But his accurate throw from center field nailed Carlos Ruiz in the fifth inning to stunt a Phillies rally and enable the Giants to pull out a 6-5 win in Game 4 of the National League Championship Series.

Uribe seized the hearts of Giants fans with his game-winning home run in Saturday's NLCS clinching game. As much as he frustrated Sox fans with his wild swings, Uribe provided them with many heroic moments.

In Game 2 of the '05 Series, he led off with seventh with a double that set up Paul Konerko's grand slam. And he put the finishing touches on the World Series title by sprinting toward the left-field seats to snag Chris Burke's foul pop and had the awareness to sprint back to the infield to prevent Jason Lane from advancing to third.

His quick-charging play near the mound to retire Orlando Palmeiro for the final out of the Series was supposed to be the springboard of a steady career that otherwise has been mercurial.

But at least he gave Sox fans a title to treasure for the rest of their lives.

mgonzales@tribune.com

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MLB's Changing of the Guard: Why This World Series Is Good for Baseball - Bleacherreport.com

Posted: 24 Oct 2010 12:38 PM PDT

ARLINGTON, TX - OCTOBER 22: Elvis Andrus #1 of the Texas Rangers celebrates with fans after defeating the New York Yankees 6-1 in Game Six of the ALCS to advance to the World Series during the 2010 MLB Playoffs at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington on October 22, 2010 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Stephen Dunn/Getty Images)Ranger's SS Elvis Andrus Celebrates With Fans After a Series Clinching Game 6 Win.
Stephen Dunn/Getty Images

Almost seven months, 2,430 regular season games, an entire postseason completed and it all almost ended exactly where we were a year ago. Almost.

With this past weekend's games resulting in the conclusion of both the ALCS and NLCS series, baseball fans worldwide were almost faced with a Yankees versus Phillies rematch for the World Series. It also would have marked the third straight season the Phils reached baseball's most coveted destination. We almost watched as the Yankees competed for their 27th World Series title. Almost.

We almost ended the season following those ever so familiar faces of postseason heroes, who have made a living crushing the competition when the season mattered the most. The likes of Derek Jeter, Cole Hamels, Ryan Howard, Alex Rodriguez...the list goes on and on. Almost.

Instead this year baseball fans will be tuning in to a series so new, for once, they really do not know what to expect. Sure the ratings certainly won't be as high. How could they be? The Yankees and Phillies are located in two of America's largest sports markets with fanbases of unmeasurable quantities.

Sure it would have been exciting to see CC Sabathia take on a Phillies lineup chock-full of talent, again. Sure it would be exciting to see if Cole Hamels and the rest of the Phillies All-Star rotation could hold off the Yankees erasing last season's shortcomings. Sure it would be exciting to see if A-Rod, Jeter, Posada and company could do it again.

Who Will Win This Year's World Series?

However, what is more exciting is the unknown this year's Series most certainly presents.

With the stage set and the world of baseball tuned in, we turn the focus not to the ever so recognizable faces of the New York and Philadelphia ball clubs, but to the faces of baseballs new generation.

With a sport already widely considered "boring" or "too slow" it surely does not help when the same faces pop up every fall. In a sports world where the call for youth and personality has never been stronger, isn't it time baseball got with the program?

Look at hockey with the emergence of Alex Ovechkin, Sidney Crosby and Steven Stamkos in recent years. Basketball? Try Kevin Durant, Tyreke Evans and even LeBron James. Even football with the likes of Chris Johnson, DeSean Jackson and company has seen a shift to focusing on the players of the "new school."

Finally we have not only a series featuring a Giants club who has not reached a World Series since 2002, where they infamously choked away a 5-0 lead in Game 6 eventually leading to a championship for the Angels, but a series featuring a Ranger's club who has previously never won a single playoff series.

That, ladies and gentleman, is excitement.

Along with the change of teams and scenery comes that calling for the new "era" of baseball. Replace CC Sabathia and Cole Hamels with two-time Cy Young winner Tim Lincecum and the Rangers young ace C.J. Wilson. Derek Jeter for Elvis Andrus, A-Rod for Pablo "Kung-Fu Panda" Sandoval, Posada for Buster Posey. What are you left with? A Series full of under-25 players starving for their first taste of postseason glory.

One thing is for sure, for the first time in a while, nothing is for sure. Baseball finally got the facelift that has been needed for years. A changing of the guard that not only shook up this season, but will have implications on many seasons to come.

Don't let the ratings fool you, this World Series will be the best one played in recent memory. And to think we almost had a repeat season. Almost.

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