Ned Yost Should Be Indicted
With Dusty Baker in town with his old familiar dumbassery and excuse-making in tow, it’s easy to think he is the stupidest manager in the National League Central, and he very well may be. But Ned Yost is sure making it interesting, isn’t he? Yost’s handling of CC Sabathia in Sabathia’s nine starts since he came over to the Brewers is downright criminal. Clearly, Yost thinks Brewers fans are even dumber than he is, as on Tuesday, he actually expects the fans to believe that he would never abuse Sabathia. Liar.
I know Sabathia is a horse, and I know he has generally been healthy throughout the course of his career, but come on, Ned. Let’s admit what this is. You’re going to ride Sabathia as hard as you can and put him away wet. Hank Steinbrenner has to be cursing Yost’s name on a nightly basis, watching him throw the following:
97 pitches; Brewers beat Colorado 7-3 122 pitches; CG; Brewers beat Cincinnati 3-2 110 pitches; CG; Brewers beat San Francisco 9-1 106 pitches; CG; Brewers beat St. Louis 3-0 124 pitches; Brewers get FACED by the Cubs 6-4 109 pitches; Brewers beat Atlanta 4-2 103 pitches; CG; Brewers beat Washington 5-0 114 pitches; Brewers beat San Diego 7-1 130 pitches; Brewers beat Houston 9-3
I’ll let Yost himself tie his own noose:
But you have to understand the anatomy of what’s going on in the game. He’s averaging 13.7 pitches per inning, which is the seventh lowest in baseball.
Great. Sabathia is efficient. He should be. He’s an excellent pitcher. However, if Sabathia averages 13.7 pitches per inning, and your dumb ass trots him out there for nine innings half the time, that’s 123.3 pitches per game. That’s a lot, particularly in the needlessly long outings. I see four such outings in his nine starts:
110 pitches against a terrible Giants team with an eight-run lead.
103 pitches and a complete game against a terrible Nationals team with a five-run lead.
114 pitches against a terrible Padres team with a six-run lead.
130 pitches against a Carlos Lee-less Astros team with a seven-run lead going into the 9th.
I’m giving Butchie the benefit of the doubt for the two high-pitch-count starts against the Reds and the Cubs. The team needs wins, and Sabathia almost single-handedly kept the Brewers in both of those games.
What Yost doesn’t understand, though, is that the four games listed above are exactly the types of games you use to rest your big dog. I don’t care how bad your bullpen is. Your bullpen’s job is to hold big leads against shitty teams and save your starters when you get a chance. Then, the occasional 120+ pitch game isn’t such a big deal.
Instead, Brewers fans have to listen to this:
It’s a plan that I’m looking at and put into play so that it not only takes care of our starters and gets them deep into games but our bullpen, too.
So, your “plan” is to wear out your morbidly obese stud pitcher in the dog days of August in the interest of not wearing down your dogshit bullpen? You might want to rethink that, Neddie, as your other “stud” pitcher, Ben Sheets, has been less than stellar since the Sabathia acquisition. Ned’s “plan” is like using your Porsche to haul concrete so you can save mileage on your Toyota Yaris.
Think back (if you can stomach it) to Game 2 of the 2003 NLCS. I wasn’t quite infuriated when Dusty Baker sent Mark Prior to the hill with an 11-0 lead in the sixth inning. But you bet your ass I was screaming at my television when Prior trotted out to pitch the seventh with a 12-2 lead. And that was the NLCS, for God’s sake. But Dusty’s dumbassery fit right in with Yost’s “plan” (which was WHAT exactly?).
I’m not saying my plan is 100% right. But my plan is well thought-out and makes sense, and we’re trying it. I have to do what I think is best. I want to make darn sure this team has the best opportunity to win. I know everything there is to know in the equation.
If Butchie had a clue, he’d realize that it’s very likely that his team will make the playoffs (and even more likely that they’ll do it by the grace of the Wild Card; tee hee). While wins for the Brewers right now are important, they’re not do-or-die, even at this point in the season.
(Sabathia) is not a dope. He’s a real smart guy. He knows the ramifications of what it’s like to be abused. There’s no where that he’s been abused since he’s been here.
Right after Ned said this, he shook his fist at Sabathia and said, “You fell down some steps, you fat, worthless, lazy bastard!”
Thank God for you, Lou. In case I don’t say it enough, I- I love you.
If you enjoyed this post, please consider leaving a comment or subscribing to Hire Jim Essian to get future articles delivered to your feed reader.
Comments
Well, maybe CC’s morbid obesity causes a special shield of fat to surround his elbow and shoulder that somehow protects the ligaments in there. Or, it’s going to exploded by the end of the year.
However, if your not gonna have a chance of signing him again (especially with the Cy Young/MVP talk he’s getting now), why in the hell should you save him?
You save his fat ass in these games
110 pitches against a terrible Giants team with an eight-run lead.
103 pitches and a complete game against a terrible Nationals team with a five-run lead.
114 pitches against a terrible Padres team with a six-run lead.
130 pitches against a Carlos Lee-less Astros team with a seven-run lead going into the 9th.
Make it to the playoffs, then abuse the shit out of him. Yost is an idoit!
Yost knows that the Brewers have about as much chance of signing Sabathia as Paris Hilton has of entering a convent, so he doesn’t care if his arm falls off, as long as it falls off during the offseason. After all, why do you think they call it the offseason?
I think you have a typo in there. It says AW Baker is the “stupidest manager in the National League Central”. I’m pretty sure you meant “stupidest manager in the history of the National League”.
@Cubman in Satanic Fowl Land - That’s my point. Yost is pretending to care about CC’s future and his arm. If he cared at all about the guy, his usage pattern would be WAY different than it is.
I don’t get that HJE post title AT ALL. I think you left out some letters. It should be “Ned Yost Should Be INDICATED”. Right now it looks like gibberish. Use spell check next time, BK.
I actually thought it was “Ned Yost Should Be Inducted,” and wondered what sort of Hall would accept that idiot.
Ned Yost is aware that the amount of complete games your team throws is like the 303rd tiebreaker should the Brewers finish tied atop the Central or the Wild Card, right? RIGHT?!?
If it leads to Sabathia falling apart in the NLCS just like he did in last year’s ALCS, all I can say is that I heartily support this plan.
Sabathia has a reputation as a horse, but after his next outing he’ll already be at his third-highest innings total for his career, with a month-plus to go. And he’s easily on pace to throw the most pitches of his career - he’s at 2948 already, and if you assume he’s got seven starts left, that puts him at close to 3700 even with a fairly conservative per-game average. He also has three 120+ pitch outings since coming to Milwaukee - he had 11 in the entire rest of his career dating back to 2001, and 130 is a career high.
But really, what does it say about how terrible the Milwaukee bullpen is that Yost doesn’t trust them to protect a seven-run lead with three outs to play? Sabathia is the only good pitcher on that team right now with Sheets struggling, and Yost knows it.
Sabathia doesn’t care. Every great outing he has means more money in his pocket when he signs with the Yankees next year. I’m sure he considers each one of his pitches a financial investment.
Doddering Lou is a good manager but he is damn fortunate to have the luxury of a fairly consistent pen.
The Brewers are also not fortunate enough to have a loyal fanbase that will sit a watch a team that is not in contention.
We do.
So, while Ned Yost is abusing CC’s Largesse of pitches, he seem to be doing it out of fear rather than stupidity.




I love lamp.