Plunking aside, Joba Chamberlain gets last laugh
This was Joba’s Revenge.
And sticking out his tongue at Derek Jeter was just part of the show.
There are no Joba Rules anymore.
The revenge was not hitting Jeter with a pitch in the 10th inning — he said he felt terrible about that — but coming in and getting a huge strikeout in the ninth inning on Martin Prado and letting loose with a gyrating fist pump, that was vintage Joba Chamberlain.
Then he got through the 10th, even after hitting Jeter on the left arm and immediately apologizing to his former teammate.
Chamberlain got four huge outs in the Tigers’ 4-3, 12-inning win over the Yankees Tuesday night at Yankee Stadium.
As for sticking out his tongue, Joba had promised he was going to do that and he kept his word.
“I’ve seen the [Jeter] head nod every day for seven years and I always said if I faced him, I was going to stick out my tongue,’’ Chamberlain said. “I said, ‘All right, let me try it.’ ”
Chamberlain was distraught after he hit Jeter, but he admitted life can be more fun as a Tiger.
“I can show my emotions more now,’’ Chamberlain said. “I’d be lying if I didn’t say I did. They look at it totally different here. This is who I am as a person and I wear my heart on my sleeve through and through.’’
That’s Joba, the full show.
Yankees manager Joe Girardi said he had no issues with Joba being Joba.
“He did his job,’’ Girardi said. As for the antics, Girardi said, “It’s just his personality. He’s going to show some emotion, that’s just who he is. I don’t have a problem with players showing emotion, I don’t.’’
Earlier, Joba said he felt terrible about hitting Jeter.
“I never felt worse in my life,’’ Chamberlain said. “It was awful. I’ve known Derek a long time and he means a lot to me. With two outs, that was the last thing I wanted to do.
“You played with him and you played against him, he’s one of the greatest players to ever play this game and more so a greater person,’’ Chamberlain said of his deep respect for Jeter. “That means more to me than anything, his numbers speak for themself — but just the way he treated me. I just had a big conversation with him before the game, too, so like I said, it sucks.’’
Jeter immediately acknowledged the apology and told Joba, “No problem.”
You take it all with Joba, the good, the bad and the ugly, including that beard.
Jeter never came out to meet with the media after the game, but Mark Teixeira said it best, noting, “You take Joba and all his quirks, but he was a good teammate when he was here and I’m happy for him.’’
Chamberlain received a chorus of boos as he entered the game.
“That didn’t bother me at all,’’ Chamberlain said. “I gave them everything I got for seven years, some were good, some were bad, but I left it on the field every time.’’
Yes he did, and sure he made his mistakes, but the Yankee fans could have risen above the anger. The boos were loud from the crowd of 40,078.
“You don’t have to like me,’’ Joba said, “but respect the fact I did go out there. You have the right to boo. But I was so grateful for the seven years and the support that I got here. At the end of the day, it’s just a game. Some days are better than others.’’
“Joba has been tremendous,’’ Tigers general manager Dave Dombrowski said.
“He really has been the anchor of our bullpen the whole year long. He’s gotten so many big outs. He’s a gamer, he’s fun to be around.’’
Especially when he sticks out his tongue.
This was Joba’s Revenge.
And sticking out his tongue at Derek Jeter was just part of the show.
There are no Joba Rules anymore.
The revenge was not hitting Jeter with a pitch in the 10th inning — he said he felt terrible about that — but coming in and getting a huge strikeout in the ninth inning on Martin Prado and letting loose with a gyrating fist pump, that was vintage Joba Chamberlain.
Then he got through the 10th, even after hitting Jeter on the left arm and immediately apologizing to his former teammate.
Chamberlain got four huge outs in the Tigers’ 4-3, 12-inning win over the Yankees Tuesday night at Yankee Stadium.
As for sticking out his tongue, Joba had promised he was going to do that and he kept his word.
“I’ve seen the [Jeter] head nod every day for seven years and I always said if I faced him, I was going to stick out my tongue,’’ Chamberlain said. “I said, ‘All right, let me try it.’ ”
Chamberlain was distraught after he hit Jeter, but he admitted life can be more fun as a Tiger.
“I can show my emotions more now,’’ Chamberlain said. “I’d be lying if I didn’t say I did. They look at it totally different here. This is who I am as a person and I wear my heart on my sleeve through and through.’’
And sometimes he sticks out his tongue on the mound.<iframe src='http://mlb.mlb.com/shared/video/embed/embed.html?content_id=35108925&width=1280&height=724&property=mlb' width='1280' height='724' frameborder='0'>Your browser does not support iframes.</iframe>
That’s Joba, the full show.
Yankees manager Joe Girardi said he had no issues with Joba being Joba.
“He did his job,’’ Girardi said. As for the antics, Girardi said, “It’s just his personality. He’s going to show some emotion, that’s just who he is. I don’t have a problem with players showing emotion, I don’t.’’
Earlier, Joba said he felt terrible about hitting Jeter.
“I never felt worse in my life,’’ Chamberlain said. “It was awful. I’ve known Derek a long time and he means a lot to me. With two outs, that was the last thing I wanted to do.
“You played with him and you played against him, he’s one of the greatest players to ever play this game and more so a greater person,’’ Chamberlain said of his deep respect for Jeter. “That means more to me than anything, his numbers speak for themself — but just the way he treated me. I just had a big conversation with him before the game, too, so like I said, it sucks.’’
Jeter immediately acknowledged the apology and told Joba, “No problem.”
You take it all with Joba, the good, the bad and the ugly, including that beard.
Jeter never came out to meet with the media after the game, but Mark Teixeira said it best, noting, “You take Joba and all his quirks, but he was a good teammate when he was here and I’m happy for him.’’
Chamberlain received a chorus of boos as he entered the game.
“That didn’t bother me at all,’’ Chamberlain said. “I gave them everything I got for seven years, some were good, some were bad, but I left it on the field every time.’’
Yes he did, and sure he made his mistakes, but the Yankee fans could have risen above the anger. The boos were loud from the crowd of 40,078.
“You don’t have to like me,’’ Joba said, “but respect the fact I did go out there. You have the right to boo. But I was so grateful for the seven years and the support that I got here. At the end of the day, it’s just a game. Some days are better than others.’’
“Joba has been tremendous,’’ Tigers general manager Dave Dombrowski said.
“He really has been the anchor of our bullpen the whole year long. He’s gotten so many big outs. He’s a gamer, he’s fun to be around.’’
Especially when he sticks out his tongue.
Cal Spence 8 hours ago
If you over priced babies can;t take the booing, quit. These players deserve worse than boos, especially when they throw games like the A;s and White Sox did today. The US should be probing the MLB and not the NHL for game fixing. At least the NHL does not make it look so obvious. Pete Rose was not and is not the only one betting on baseball. Now are they smart enough to blame their wives, when caught, Like Wayne Gretzky did. All sports fix games. Where there is money business, there is funny business! Guaranteed. Just ask that NBA reff who decided not to squeal when he was caught!
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Manny Ramirez 17 hours ago
I'm tired of so-called Yankee fans booing our ex-players who won World Series with us. Phil Hughes, Joba Chamberlain, Robinson Cano, AJ Burnett...they all won a ring as Yankees, they should never be booed at the Stadium. Fans are too brainwashed by the media that focuses on the faults of others and less about their accomplishments.
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2004YANKS-BestCHOKEever 18 hours ago
I love the beard. It's so refreshing and looks so much better than the stupid yankit look. Joba rules!
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Manny Ramirez 17 hours ago
@2004YANKS-BestCHOKEever Yeah, we all figured you to be a "beard man". You probably also like a nice hairy rear caboose too and a handful of hairy nuts. Yeah, we know what you like. Now we know what 2004 Chokes on! LOL
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David 7 hours ago
@Manny Ramirez @2004YANKS-BestCHOKEever LOL. OOOOOOGAAAAHHHH!!
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Luis Debee Fonseca 19 hours ago
First of all, Jeters is the equivalent of class in baseball, NO ONE in Detroit will have the career that Jeters had, Cabrera is the only one that comes close. Joba even with all his antics did not mean to hit him and he apologized to Jeters, so it wasn't revenge. Let's not make this a big deal.
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Nate Michaels 22 hours ago
Why do teams feel like they can hit Jeter without fear of retribution or being thrown out. Its amazing how many times he has been hit by pitch in his career.
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Andy Greco 22 hours ago
I grew tired of Joba's antics when he wore pinstripes and I am just as tired of his childish behavior as a Tiger. Detroit fans will tire of him quickly when he starts giving up homers in situations where it really matters. Can we send him a trampoline so his season can end now?
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Morgan 23 hours ago
Can we let Girardi and Cashman grow a beard next?... Please?
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Hugo S LaVia 23 hours ago
As long as he didn't have to confront any of those devastating midges!!!
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NJ Conservative 1 day ago
Love to see Yankee$ fans crying
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Matt D 1 day ago
Last laugh? Is he retiring after this game? Has he had several spectacular seasons to show it was not a good idea to let him go? Did he at least pitch well to knock the Yankees out of the playoffs or playoffs contention? What a dumb article headline!
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Steve Iversen 1 day ago
@Matt D I think they meant "last laugh", for that particular game and match-up.
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Jackie C. 1 day ago
Another stupid question from the Post.
What did he ever do for the NY Yankees organization, the Fan Base, or the City of New York that he should be cheered and fondly remembered?
The idiot Girardi does it again!
He manages to pull a defeat out of the jaws of victory.
Could he not see it was time to take out Kuroda in that 7th inning after giving up a couple of hits and clinging to a one run lead after surrendering a home run the previous inning?
Why in the world wouldn't you bring in your best and most dominant reliever Betances at that point, needing but 1 out to preserve the lead (and most likely the game)?
You can see his thinking - as moronic as it may be. He wanted to get through the 7th to save Betances for the 8th and Robertson for the 9th.
The moron wants to save his bullpen. In so doing, he costs the team another extraordinarily costly victory not only in the standings, but particularly in the effect this has on the team's psyche and confidence.
Not to mention that by trying to 'save' the bullpen, the imbecile ends up spending it by extending the game an extra 3 innings!!!
EVERY time this team starts going on a good roll, the imbecile screws it up.
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1Frank CasinoLikeReply
Charley House 3 hours ago
@Jackie C. I agree. Girardi should have took him out and put Betances in, after Tigers got a guy on. Everybody says Kurodo is good till 95 pitches, but he was at 85 he gave up that rbi. Take him out at 82 in the 7th, the pen could do the rest. It cost the team, and Kuroda a victory after a well pitched game.
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