St. John's, NL
A few clouds
A few clouds  3°C
Feels like -2°C
(view forecast)

  
 Friday November 20, 2009 
Messages to our troops
Tely News Alerts
HOME
SUBSCRIBE
COMMENTS
SPECIAL SECTIONS
ARCHIVES
ONLINE STORE
CONTACT US
ABOUT US
TELEGRAM TEAM
Click to view today's Smart Edition
SPORTS EXTRA
Scores & Stats:
NFL
MLB
NBA
NHL
WNBA
AHL
College Football
MLS
AFL
College Basketball - M | W
Golf
NASCAR
CFL
Games & Matchups »
Live Odds »

Sport.ca

NEWS SECTIONS
News
Sports
Local Sports
National News
Business
Lifestyles
Arts & Entertainment
Columns
Editorial
Letters to the Editor
Births
Obituaries
Stocks and Mutual Funds
Special Sections
Today's Headlines
Regional Headlines
Celebrity Daily
Interactive Horoscopes
RSS

Pick-em_Football_tile

Yuletide 2009

H1N1 Virus - The Canadian Press

H1N1 pandemic coverage

Offshore helicopter inquiry

Cougar Flight 491 Tragedy

Twitter

Facebook

2009 road to the Grey Cup

PHOTO & SLIDESHOW GALLERIES
2009 Remembrance Day Cereomy
2009 Remembrance Day Cereomy
October 2009 Reader Photo Slideshow
October 2009 Reader Photo Slideshow
Olympic Torch
Olympic Torch
The 2009 Cuffer Prize Winners
The 2009 Cuffer Prize Winners

Cuffer Prize rules 2009

TOP 10 ARTICLES
Most Viewed  |  Most Discussed

BLOGS

Heidi Wicks blog

Steve Bartlett Sidetracked

Meeker on Media

Kenn Oliver sports blog

CLASSIFIEDS / JOB ADS
Telegram Classifieds
Merkado.ca Classifieds
Workopolis
brouze.com

TELY POLL
Do you agree with the provincial government turfing the idea of St. John’s setting up a toll booth on the new Team Gushue Highway?
 
Yes
No
Undecided

| view past polls

Today's Front Cover

CONTESTS

COMMUNITY LINKS
TV Listings
Airport Info
Flight Tracker
Movie Listings
Road Conditions & Traffic Cameras
The 2009 Junior Achievement Stock Market Challenge
Tely 10 Road Race
Tely Jr. Golf Tour
Mile One Centre
Access St. John's
Interactive Lottery Guide
Daily Sudoku
Metrobus Public Transit
MUN Seahawks
MLS Real Estate
Rotary Read-A-Long
Creative Book Publishing

CIRCULATION
Subscribe to The Telegram
SmartEdition - what is SmartEdition?
Be A Telegram Carrier

CanWest Spelling Bee

Raise a Reader

Fantasy Cup Hockey Challenge

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
Jobs at the Telegram

SPORTS   Sports RSS Feed
Last updated at 8:32 AM on 04/11/09  

Yankee Stadium
Yankee Stadium "is the kind of stage that I deserve," says Martinez, who will face Andy Pettitte in Game 6 of the World Series tonight. - Photo by The Associated Press
Pedro ready to take the stage before a hostile audience print this article
BASEBALL/WORLD SERIES

NEW YORK
JIM LITKE
The Associated Press

A city seethes in anticipation. Outside Yankee Stadium, workmen wielding power washers crisscross the walkways on a crisp autumn afternoon, dutifully cleaning each and every groove between thousands of concrete squares. Inside, groundskeepers wielding rakes push pebbles back and forth, smoothing the dirt around home plate. Everyone in town, it seems, wants the place to look perfect for the return of Pedro Martinez.

"This is the kind of stage that I deserve," Martinez said, "and in a stadium like this, the most legendary of all places."

It will be nothing short of a miracle if the Yankees' new baseball palace remains anchored to its moorings when Martinez walks out to the mound tonight in a Phillies uniform for Game 6 of the World Series. The last time the level of psychokinetic energy in New York pushed the needle this far off the meter, the "Ghostbusters" were called in to save the city.

Pedro ain't afraid of no ghosts, either, even though he brings a history to the Bronx like almost no other.

When Martinez last showed his face here - in the interview room after losing Game 2, despite a strong effort - he was wearing a striped jacket that looked like it had been stolen from the set of "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat." Yet it was while wearing the red socks of hated rival Boston a half-dozen years ago that Martinez was rendered a villain in these parts forever.

In Game 3 of the American League Championship Series, he was at the centre of a tit-for-tat, purpose-pitch skirmish that erupted into a bench-clearing brawl. Don Zimmer, then a 72-year-old bulldog of a bench coach with the Yankees, rushed from the Yankees dugout straight for Martinez, who threw him to the ground.

New York didn't have to wait long for revenge.

In the eighth inning of Game 7, Red Sox manager Grady Little left a tiring Martinez in to clean up the jam he'd gotten himself into. Bad idea: four straight hits erased Boston's 5-2 advantage, leading to a dramatic extra-inning, series-ending victory for the Yankees.

But Martinez's lowest moment in New York was still almost a year off. The following September, after yet another tough loss, the defiant right-hander who once famously growled, "Wake up the Bambino, I'll drill him in the ass," was disconsolate and said he never wanted to face New York again.

"What can I say?" Martinez said then. "I tip my hat and call the Yankees my daddy."

He's been reminded of that comment on every visit since. Taunts of "Who's your daddy?" echoed again across the Bronx throughout Game 2, supplemented by gestures that can't be described here. Martinez left the field smiling but later that night practically begged Yankee fans to tone down the abuse, if not for his sake, then at least for the kids within earshot. It was not an act.

Say what you will about the once-flamboyant character; at 38, both his personality and competitive nature have been leavened by a nearly two-year absence from the game, when Martinez wondered whether his arm was shot and his career over. Philadelphia took a flyer on him, wondering how much magic Martinez could still conjure up. He has learned to be grateful for every opportunity.

"Two months back I was sitting at home not doing anything, none of you were thinking of me whatsoever," Martinez said. "None of you were asking me questions, and today I am here, probably pitching one of the biggest games ever in the World Series, two great teams with a whole bunch of legendary players that are going to be.

"I know when you mention Derek Jeter, you mention Alex Rodriguez, (Mark) Teixeira. I see those guys as probably the future of the game, the next Babe Ruth and Hank Aaron."

Back in the day, Martinez rarely bothered to learn the names of the hitters he faced; he simply blew them away. Today, he studies each hitter and every one of their tendencies, probing for the tiniest of edges. His fastball rarely tops 90 mph on the radar gun, so he relies more on a vintage circle change-up, an array of curves and cutters, varying his speeds and location.

The kid who broke into the big leagues at "154 (pounds) soaking wet with a good arm" is now the consummate craftsman, getting by on nothing more than guts and guile. There is something almost poetic about the biggest game of the season resting on his slim shoulders one final time, and in New York, no less.

On the ride back up from the interview room to the press box at Yankee Stadium, the elevator operator asked: What can you say about Martinez that hasn't been said?

The answer is only what Martinez said about himself.

"Everybody that grows up in the Dominican (Republic) and didn't have a rich life is a survivor. That's what we call it in the Dominican, survival.

"And in baseball I am a survivor. I'm someone that wasn't meant to be. And here I am," he said, finally, "on one big stage."

Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke@ap.org

04/11/09  



© 2009

More about  CP news for print and  online publishing.

Comments:
This Conversation is Moderated. What is moderation?
- there are currently no comments for this story -

Comments Closed


 
Recent sports:




Past sports :

November 2009 October 2009 September 2009 August 2009 July 2009 June 2009
May 2009 April 2009 March 2009 February 2009 January 2009 December 2008
November 2008 October 2008 September 2008 August 2008 July 2008 June 2008
May 2008 April 2008 March 2008 February 2008 January 2008 December 2007
November 2007 October 2007 September 2007 August 2007 July 2007 June 2007
May 2007 April 2007 March 2007 February 2007

 






Weblocal - Search. Find. Share.

Are you searching for a product, a service or a local company?

Search

The Telegram   Video-on-Demand
Royal Couple tree planting
Royal Couple tree planting
O'Keefe on win
O'Keefe on win
Ellsworth on election defeat
Ellsworth on election defeat
view all | submit video
TNM



Join our Newsletter
Email:




NIE Program

Canadian Living Recipe of the day
Recipe of the day
Squash and Spinach Lasagna
Squash and Spinach Lasagna
More >>






The Telegram
A division of Transcontinental Media Inc.
Village Shopping Centre, 430 Topsail Road
P.O. Box 5970 - St. John's, NL - A1E 4N1
Contents of this website are copyright © The Telegram
e-mail us at telegram@thetelegram.com


Click here to view our privacy policy.

A Transcontinental Media, Local Solutions Group site

This site is part of the Transcontinental Media Network


Daily Newspapers:
Nova Scotia: Amherst Daily News; Cape Breton Post; The News (New Glasgow); Truro Daily News.
Prince Edward Island: Journal Pioneer (Summerside); The Guardian (Charlottetown).
Newfoundland & Labrador:The Telegram (St. John’s); The Western Star (Corner Brook).
Saskatchewan: Moose Jaw Times-Herald; Prince Albert Herald.
Weeklies and Specialty Publications:
Nova Scotia: The Advance; The Hants Journal; The Kings County Register; Kentville Advertiser; The Annapolis County Spectator; The Yarmouth County Vanguard; The Digby County Courier; The Shelburne County Coast Guard; The Citizen; Nova Scotia Business Journal; Burnside News; Farm Focus; Springhill Record; Bedford Sackville Weekly News; Dartmouth Cole Harbour Weekly News; Halifax West Clayton Park Weekly News; Halifax News Net; The Atlantic Construction & Transportation Journal
New Brunswick: Sackville Tribune Post; ENBusiness.
Newfoundland & Labrador:The Charter; The Southern Gazette; The Compass; The Labradorian; The Aurora; The Beacon; The Pilot; The Packet; The Gulf News; The Coaster; The Georgian; The Nor’wester; The Advertiser; The Northern Pen.
Saskatchewan:Southwest Booster; SaskNewsNow; Coronach Triangle News; Grenfell Sun/Broadview Express; Oxbow Herald; Radville/Deep South Star.
Consumer Magazines:
Canadian Living; Elle Canada; Homemakers; More; Good Times; Canadian Gardening; Canadian Home & Country; Style at Home; Western Living; Ottawa at Home; Vancouver Magazine; TV Guide; The Hockey NewsMochasofaOccasions MagazineGolf Ontario StyleGolf EastGroup Travel Planner.
Services:
Weblocal; Merkado