NYKnSTILL! wrote:-= original quote snipped =-
who said 162 games and really Georgy is wearing out what told you that his .344 batting avg or the fact he is batting .345 w/ a .404 OBP in his last 10 games, yeh Georgy is worn out

sorry Cmaff but you can tell Georgy wanted to catch today and you could tell Cano and Jetes were wishing he was throwing those balls to 2B
If you look at Jorge's career, he tends to cool off as the season wears on because of the toll catching all those games takes on him. He needs as many days off as we can give him to keep him fresh. For someone who was calling for Torre's head because he overuses pitchers, you sure seem eager to overwork the catcher.
Moose only has this personal catcher because he's been doing well with Nieves behind the plate and doesn't want to tamper with a good thing, but it's not like he CAN'T pitch to Posada; they've worked together for the last 6 years to good results. Let him ride Nieves until he gets shelled once or twice and you'll see Posada back behind the plate for Moose. Considering that the last series we played in Colorado was the highest scoring series in history (unless something happened in the last 5 years I'm not aware of), I think we could afford to take Damon's bat out of the lineup and give him another day off to rest his calves.
Beyond that, I don't really understand what you have against a guy that has proven he can produce and play at a high level with an array of pitches that will keep him in the game for a few more years easily. With Moose, you usually know what you're getting. Every pitcher hits his rough spots, but it's nice to have a known commodity on this staff instead of a Karstens, a Rasner, a DeSalvo, a Chacon, etc. etc. Moose will give you a low 4, high 3 ERA every year, about 15-17 wins, and has the mentality to succeed in New York. If there's an option to take that spot that you can think of that will provide that kind of production, consistency, will enable us to win now and doesn't involve waiting on a rookie pitcher to acclimate to major league hitters, I'd like to hear it, but the grass really isn't always greener on the other side.