The Curse of Jim Leyritz is as legit a curse as there has ever been.
Every October the 96 WS comes back to haunt me, this week I've thought about it a lot and it's been constantly running in my head. When I recall the games, I remember exactly how I felt and what I was doing at that time. I remember as a 7th grader after the game 4 debacle, all my friends were rooting for the Yankees and so did my nagging Yankee fan English teacher, and I was so confident because we had Smoltz going. What misery.
The more I reflect, the more I'm convinced that we are indeed cursed. I'm not so sure that it wasn't rigged, the Yanks and Torree losing his brother was too good of a story and after we drubbed them in the first 2 games, I think Bud made sure the umpires had a large influence in the decesion based on what transpired the next few nights. And MLB execs were smart enough to realize that if the Yanks didn't win that series, George would have blown it up and the dynasty as we know it would not have happened, cost MLB millions of dollars over the organization with the best historical sentiment.
I'm still really bitter. Without blowing that WS, the Yanks dynasty does not happen and our FO would not have tried to reshape the team for the upcoming year and we enjoy much greater success in the playoffs going forward. After that slider, the Braves would never ever be the same again, almost as if all of us....fans, players, coaches were looking behind our backs wondering what if? What next? No matter what some freak thing is going to happen and it always does.
And it's been 20 years since 95, think about that 20 freakin years since our moment of glory.
I want to get back to the brand of baseball in the early and mid 90s. I've been watching YouTube videos all week and what excitement. Those teams were good and passionate and had fight. Don't get me wrong, the late 90s and early 00s were fun as well, playoff success or lack thereof withstanding, but they were veteran centered teams that were more businesslike. Those teams from 91-96 will always be dear to my heart.
Maddux, Glavine, Smoltz, Chipper, Bobby, Ryan, Avery, Javy deserved more than one. And to think, despite all the games and all the battles, guys like Andruw and Millwood and Furcal amongst many other have NONE.
And it absolutely bugs the living piss out of me that most think Maddux and Glavine were chokers. They weren't great towards the tail end of their run here, but in the 90s those guys performed upto par and were great.
One of the great falls of the organization during that timeframe is we needed to expend more resources on the bullpen and that was a great resource. I've always said the Yanks had Mo and we didn't, and that was the ultimate trump card but the Yanks also had guys like Nelson, Stanton, Llyod, Mendoza, Wetteland while we had a bunch of no name reclamation projects that worked for the most part during the season but failed when put under the microscope of the postseason with advanced scouting. One thing overlooked about 96 was the injury of Boubon, which would have helped alleviate relying on Wohlers so much. Yes, Neagle shoulders some of the blame for not going deeper, but with a competent bullpen that's not an issue. But we never did find a viable replacement for Pedro and Bobby had to rely on Bielecki and Clontz, and I don't blame him if he didn't have the utmost confidence in them. Who? It sickens me to this day.
While Neagle was great in a braves uniform, his acquisition was redundant. I often wonder what if we would have focused and acquired someone like say Jeff Shaw or Robb Nen or Roberto Hernandez.Even with the concerns with a struggling Avery we really didn't need Neagle especially with the off days with a short series. We should have and could have rode the big 3 during their prime. And the Neagle acquisition and extension was a precursor to made head scratching moves (Justice and Grissom to the Klesko trade) that later would transpire because of budgetary restraints.