May 14, 2025

40 thoughts on “Yankees.com: Oswaldo Cabrera taken off in ambulance after scary leg injury at home plate

  1. It was obviously a nasty injury, but the way they treated it, you almost thought he might end up paralyzed.
    Terrible that it happened, and I feel for him, but thank God it’s only an ankle injury.

    1. I don’t know about confirmed – but as I wrote yesterday, that was my best guess when I rewound the video (advantage of being back in New York for a few weeks), and then they did say it was his ankle in the post-game show.

  2. Strange how other people playing a baseball game can affect your mood. But since it’s true, I’m glad Fried will be pitching on my birthday 😉

    1. I think that is the early classification. I can only imagine the amount of hardware he’s going to need in there. I won’t watch the video, but described as “gruesome” and “graphic” is enough for this non-MD to make a diagnosis.

    2. But I did rewatch it, and there’s nothing gruesome there.
      It was the behavior of the people around him that made the injury so hair-raising.

  3. It might never happen, of course, but IF Stanton were to return, what the fuck do you even do with the lineup?!

    Right now, there is a LF/CF/DH/1B rotation. You have five guys for those four spots. Presuming a week’s worth of games (seven games), that’s 28 games needing to be accounted for.

    Right now, it’s basically the following out of 7:

    6 games for Belli
    6 games for Goldy
    6 games for Rice
    5 games for Grisham
    5 games for Dominguez

    Now you add Stanton in there, what the fuck is it THEN?

    Let’s say you get 2 Rice at-bats a week at catcher, and send Escarra down when Stanton returns (you could even send down Reyes and keep Escarra as a third catcher).

    So you’d be:

    5 games for Stanton
    5 games for Belli
    5 games for Goldy
    5 games for Rice (including 2 at catcher)
    5 games for Grisham
    5 games for Dominguez

    Hmmm…I guess that actually works.

  4. Okay, here ya go. Out of seven games, a rotation that gets them all five starts a week.

    1 Stanton DH Dominguez LF Bellinger CF Goldschmidt 1B
    2 Stanton DH Bellinger LF Grisham CF Rice 1B
    3 Stanton DH Dominguez LF Grisham CF Goldschmidt 1B Rice C
    4 Stanton DH Bellinger LF Grisham CF Goldschmidt 1B Rice C
    5 Stanton DH Dominguez LF Grisham CF Rice 1B
    6 Rice DH Dominguez LF Bellinger CF Goldschmidt 1B
    7 Judge DH Dominguez LF Bellinger RF Grisham CF Goldschmidt 1B

    I’m sure they’d like to DH Judge more than once a week, so maybe Stanton only plays four games a week? Or perhaps, by this point, Grisham has fallen off enough that you’re fine starting Dominguez over him.

  5. In a historic, sweeping decision, baseball commissioner Rob Manfred on Tuesday removed Pete Rose, “Shoeless” Joe Jackson and other deceased players from Major League Baseball’s permanently ineligible list.

    The all-time hit king and Jackson — both longtime baseball pariahs stained by gambling, seen by MLB as the game’s mortal sin — are now presumably eligible for election into the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York.

    Manfred ruled that MLB’s punishment of banned individuals ends upon their deaths.

    https://www.espn.com.au/mlb/story/_/id/45115659/pete-rose-shoeless-joe-jackson-players-reinstated-mlb

    1. Pete Rose AS A PLAYER should absolutely be voted in before the steroids cheaters.
      Joe Jackson may well not have been guilty of anything he understood at all.
      If you want to take that route, start with the conscious, intentional, actually direct cheating in Houston. Jackson and Rose should EASILY be eligible before THOSE guys.

    1. Yep. Which is why I’m fine with saying their ban was only for their lifetime. Just don’t elect them to the Hall of Fame before A-Rod, Bonds, Clemens, etc.

  6. The legacy of late capitalism is the total corruption of society by unchecked avarice, executed by power brokers who see no downside to turning every aspect of American life into a casino – not dissimilar to the figurative (or literal) gambling houses where they “made” their own fortune.

    Baseball is small potatoes.

  7. T Grisham (L) CF
    A Judge (R) RF
    C Bellinger (L) LF
    P Goldschmidt (R) 1B
    A Wells (L) C
    A Volpe (R) SS
    J Domínguez (S) DH
    O Peraza (R) 3B
    J Vivas (L) 2B

    1. The plan was always to activate LeMahieu tonight, then start him tomorrow, but I am legit surprised they’re sticking with that plan.

  8. The only reason Rose will be eligible is to appease Trump. I would’ve been fine, though I wouldn’t have e agreed with the decision, if Manfred had done it last year.

  9. Sorry (not sorry) for the repeat:

    Pete Rose AS A PLAYER should absolutely be voted in before the steroids cheaters.
    Joe Jackson may well not have been guilty of anything he understood at all.
    If you want to take that route, start with the conscious, intentional, actually direct cheating in Houston. Jackson and Rose should EASILY be eligible before THOSE guys.

    1. And as someone else already started the old argument yet again…

      The steroids guys should be excluded forever, simply because we don’t know what their real abilities were – maybe they really were that good (a statistically ridiculous, but possible posit), but well never know… and that we never will know is absolutely their own doing. And again, the rules quote is nuts. There’s no rule against decapitating an opposing player during the game, or against putting sleeping pills in their water before the game, so… that’s not cheating?
      Was there an official rule against the camera in center field being used in the Giants-Dodgers “shot heard around the world game”? No? So that’s not cheating, it’s okay?
      Seems a prima facia ludicrous kind of argumention to me.

Leave a Reply