| It's become increasingly clear that baseball has three choices for the 
future of interleague play: Start rotating interleague opponents, keep just 
those "rivalry" games or forget the whole thing.
    On the one hand, last weekend's matchups of Mets-Yankees, White 
Sox-Cubs, Indians-Reds, etc., etc., brought us a June 10 baseball-fest with 
the third-highest single-day attendance total in baseball history.
    But on the other hand, the first round of interleague play also brought 
us 25 crowds under 20,000. The Yankees drew a total of 67,929 for three games 
in Montreal. The Red Sox drew a total of 43,836 for three games in Florida. 
Even those two designated rivals, the Expos and Blue Jays, never attracted a 
single crowd over 30,239 in Toronto.
    Those are numbers that say just one thing: It's time for a change. But 
the commish, Bud Selig, is adamant that he has no intention of ever scrapping 
the interleague experiment completely.
    "I reject that totally and completely," Selig said. "If you really look 
at the interleague attendance, you can see that interleague play still works 
beautifully. Attendance is up 16 percent over last year. And we've had some 
great series. I was just a spectator in Chicago last Saturday. And the 
excitement there was incredible. So it's not even about attendance. It's 
about what it does for baseball."
    The original intention of the schedule makers was to begin a rotation of 
interleague opponents next year, while retaining at least one "rivalry 
series" per team. But with realignment still a jumble, Selig now concedes 
it's possible that rotation system might have to remain on the drawing board, 
at least temporarily.
    "I hope we can do it next year," he said. "But at this point, I'm not 100 
percent sure."
As a two-time All Star and (more importantly) the first pitcher on the 
block right now, Phillies right-hander Andy Ashby has attracted far more 
interest than his 2-7 record would ordinarily dictate.
"There's nothing wrong with this guy," said one scout in attendance at 
Ashby's start in Baltimore last weekend. "Put him on a new team, get his 
delivery straightened out, and this guy will pitch well and he'll win."
    Among the clubs most interested: Toronto (for Roy Halladay?), Atlanta 
(Bruce Chen?), Cincinnati (Dmitri Young?), White Sox (Bobby Howry?), Red Sox 
(for two young pitchers), Yankees (Ricky Ledee?) and Indians (may be too 
banged up to have enough to trade).
One of the many misconceptions in the Sammy Sosa soap opera is that Sosa 
will wind up as a Yankee because of the tight relationship between George 
Steinbrenner and one of Sosa's agents, Tom Reich. But Reich has long been 
conscious of the Yankees' championship chemistry and actually steered Mo 
Vaughn away from the Yankees during his free-agent tour two winters ago 
because of his respect for Tino Martinez. So Steinbrenner's friendship with 
Reich won't necessarily mean anything in this case, either. "When the deal 
goes down," Reich says, "Sammy will make up his own mind."
Another thing to keep in mind: The Yankees haven't made a deal at the trade 
deadline since 1997.
One potential dark horse in the Sosa field: Arizona.
The Reds deny it, but there are increasing indications Jack McKeon is in 
trouble if they don't turn it around fast.
Pete Rose wound up being a no-show at the Phillies' 1980 World Series 
reunion this weekend. But as close as 10 days beforehand, Rose was still 
telling people he wanted to attend the events surrounding the reunion -- and 
hoped to sit in a luxury box for the event itself. Then, as word of that got 
out, there was a mysterious change of plans. Draw your own conclusions.
It's always fascinating to try to read the mind of Orioles owner Peter 
Angelos. But figure this out: Angelos has been telling people he'd rather 
lose Mike Mussina to free agency and get nothing for him than trade him. Huh?
One AL executive says he can't see the Red Sox trading for Sosa. "I don't 
know if it's worth messing with the chemistry that team has going," he says.
 
"And I don't know if Sammy is what Boston needs. They need pitching more than 
a bat. But if they do go get a bat, to me Juan Gonzalez is a better fit for 
them than Sammy. He hits in Fenway, and he's played in the American League."
Despite rampant speculation, there still has been no indication the 
Phillies are ready to trade Curt Schilling.
Can't we all just admit the White Sox are for real and go from there? Five 
of their last 10 series have been against the Yankees (three series) and 
Indians (two series). And the other five were at Toronto, at Seattle, at 
Houston, at Cincinnati and home against the Cubs. And their record in that 
stretch through Friday was 21-8. Case closed.
Useless information dept. No American League team has played more games against National League teams 
than the Yankees, for obvious reasons. But of their 258 games against teams 
from that other league (201 postseason, 57 regular season), only once have 
they lost one by a bigger margin than their 12-2 loss to the Mets last 
weekend. That was Game 1 of the '96 World Series (a.k.a., the Andruw Jones 
Coming Out Party): Braves 12, Yankees 1.
It used to be a blockbuster event when the Indians got swept in any series 
at home. But it's now happened twice this year -- to the White Sox this week, 
and to the Yankees in May. That's as many times as the Indians were swept at home 
in a series of three games or more in the four previous seasons combined. Those 
two previous sweeps: by the Red Sox in May of '99 and by the Yankees in June 
of '96.
When the White Sox dropped the Indians four games back on Tuesday, it was 
the first time they'd been that many games out of first place since May 28, 
1994. And when they lost the next night, it marked their first day at five 
games out or more since the invention of the AL Central in '94. On the other 
side, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer's Jim Caple, who is also a columnist for ESPN.com, reports that the Twins had 
been that far out for 852 days through Friday.
Who says those AL pitchers can't hit? Not one AL team had its pitching 
staff go 0 for interleague play. Best-hitting staff so far: Anaheim (2 for 6, 
3 RBIs, only one whiff). Worst: Indians (1 for 14, 11 whiffs, with the only 
hit by a relief pitcher -- Justin Speier).
Offensive insanity isn't what it used to be. Friday marked the third day 
since June 5 in which no team scored 10 runs or more. We'd gone 48 straight 
days in which at least one team had done it before then. On the other hand, 
before Friday, we were up to 214 games this year in which at least one team 
had scored in double figures. There were only 201 games like that all season 
in 1992.
It's a funny game. The White Sox hit five home runs Sunday and lost. Then 
they gave up five home runs Monday and won. With the help of the Sultan of 
Swat Stats, SABR'S David Vincent, we've determined that they're the first 
team ever to achieve that bizarre daily double on back-to-back days.
 
Vincent also checks in with the news that that Yankees-Mets subway 
doubleheader will actually mark the fifth time two teams have played each 
other in two different ballparks on the same day. The others: The 1899 
Brooklyn Superbas and New York Giants met in each other's parks on Sept. 4, 
1899 (with Brooklyn sweeping). The Superbas and Giants met again on Sept. 7, 
1903 and split. And in Federal League action, the Brooklyn Tip-Tops and 
Newark Peppers split a couple of ferry doubleheaders on May 31 and Sept. 6.
Last Sunday in Denver, the Rockies gave up 18 hits and still beat the 
Rangers. But nothing new there. Stats Inc.'s David Pinto reports that this is 
the 11th time in the Rockies' crooked-number-filled history that they've 
given up 18 hits or more in a win. The next-closest team in that department 
is the Indians, with six. And only one other National League team even has 
done it more than twice -- the Cubs (with four).
It isn't every day you see Pedro Martinez walk in a run. When he walked 
Jorge Posada with the bases loaded to force in the only run he allowed 
Wednesday at Yankees Stadium, it was the first time he'd brought in a run 
with a bases-loaded walk or hit batter since Sept. 9, 1998 (Tino Martinez) 
and only the ninth time in his career.
What a Difference a Year Makes Dept.: The Astros' bullpen through 65 games 
this year: 189 innings pitched, 9-16, seven saves, 12 blown saves. The Astros' 
bullpen through 65 games last year:  Only 141 1/3 innings pitched, 8-6, 19 
saves, just three blown saves.
Love those Tigers. They've had two games rained out after they'd begun -- 
and they were leading those two by a combined score of 8-0. But they've had 
five games delayed by rain before they started -- and in those five, they're 
0-5 and have been outscored, 52-17.
On the other hand, does any team play to the level of its opposition more 
than the Tigers? They've won six series all year. Five are against the 
Yankees, Red Sox, Indians, Mariners and Cardinals.
Jayson Stark is a senior writer at ESPN.com. Rumblings and Grumblings will appear each Saturday.
 |  | 
 
 ALSO SEE
 Jayson Stark archive
 Stark: Week in Review
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 |