SD Yankee Report

SD Yankee Report

PUNK BIEBER INVOLVED IN MINOR CAR CRASH

Justin Bieber Involved in Minor Car Crash: Report

(Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

(Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

By Shannon Carlin

Justin Bieber is back in the news for reckless driving, but this time, it’s not actually his fault.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, Bieber was in the back seat of a black Escalade that was reportedly hit yesterday (June 24) while pulling into a parking lot in Beverly Hills.

Related: Justin Bieber Avoids Felony Charge in Alleged Cellphone Theft

The minor crash reportedly happened when Bieber’s driver was speeding away from a paparazzo. According to eye witnesses, Bieber immediately jumped out of the car after the collision and got in another car at the scene.

“There was a non-injury traffic accident and no charges were filed,” a spokesperson for the Beverly Hills Police Department told the Hollywood Reporter.

Related: Miley Cyrus Thinks You Should Get Off Justin Bieber’s Case

The officer was also unable to confirm if Bieber was a passenger in the car, but told the news outlet, “we know there was a vehicle that was possibly connected to him” involved in the crash.

Bieber is due in court on July 7 to face DUI charges related to his arrest in Miami Beach earlier this year.

 

 

The Best Mark Wahlberg Impersonations — A Professional Opinion

The Best Mark Wahlberg Impersonations — A Professional Opinion

The Best Mark Wahlberg Impersonations — A Professional Opinion

What does Mark Wahlberg have in common with Jimmy Stewart, John Wayne, and Christopher Walken? Well, in addition to being fine actors, all are favorite subjects of impersonators. It’s easy to see why the star of the new Transformers movie — with his Boston accent, cocked head and piercing squint — is so fun to mimic.

We’ve rounded up the best-of-the-best Wahlberg impressions, and called on comedian Daniel Van Kirk (whose own sturdy Wahlberg-channelings can be seen on various YouTube videos and Doug Benson’s Doug Loves Movies podcast) to offer his expert judgment, via our Wahlberg-ized rating system:

(1) Max Payne-ful
(2) Some Pain, Some Gain!
(3) I Dirk Dig-It
(4) The Almost-Perfect Storm
(5) Invincible

Brewers call up Bianchi, say Gomez will be OK

Brewers call up Bianchi, say Gomez will be OK

AP – Sports

Brewers call up Bianchi, say Gomez will be OK

.

View gallery

Carlos Gomez of the Milwaukee Brewers is treated by a member of the training staff after colliding with …

MILWAUKEE (AP) — The Brewers promoted Jeff Bianchi from Triple-A Nashville on Sunday to fortify their bench after injuries to outfielder Carlos Gomez and shortstop Jean Segura.

Bianchi began the season in Milwaukee before being sent down last month. He was hitting .276 with three homers and 14 RBIs in the minors.

Gomez left Saturday’s 7-4 win over Colorado in the seventh with a neck strain after colliding with Ryan Braun in the outfield. Segura had left an inning earlier with leg cramps.

The Brewers were wrapping up a four-game series Sunday with the Rockies, which would also finish a stretch of 20 games without a day off. Both players were out of the starting lineup Sunday, though manager Ron Roenicke said they were available off the bench if needed.

Gomez said he was scared initially after the injury after feeling a tingling sensation throughout his body. He had a headache and sore neck, but passed a concussion test.

Gomez also hurt his head Friday night after sliding headfirst into second and glancing off second baseman Josh Rutledge’s leg.

”We have extra players, so we decided to have a day after I (got) hit twice in the head,” Gomez said Sunday. ”Everything is fine. The neck is OK.”

Reliever Alfredo Figaro was sent to Nashville to make room for Bianchi and give Milwaukee a five-man bench again.

Jason Kidd in talks to run Bucks’ basketball operations after failed power play with Nets

Jason Kidd in talks to run Bucks’ basketball operations after failed power play with Nets

NBA: Playoffs-Toronto Raptors at Brooklyn Nets
.

View photo

Apr 27, 2014; Brooklyn, NY, USA; Brooklyn Nets head coach Jason Kidd reacts against the Toronto Raptors during the second quarter in game four of the first round of the 2014 NBA Playoffs at Barclays Center. (Adam Hunger-USA TODAY Sports)
After a failed power play in Brooklyn, Nets coach Jason Kidd has entered into serious negotiations to become president of basketball operations for the Milwaukee Bucks, league sources told Yahoo Sports.

Kidd made a failed coup to Brooklyn’s Russian ownership to usurp the power of Nets general manager Billy King – and failed spectacularly. The Nets and Bucks are discussing compensation for Milwaukee hiring Kidd away, which will likely include second-round draft picks, sources told Yahoo Sports.

“The Russians are done with Kidd,” one high-ranking league source told Yahoo Sports on Saturday night.

Former Memphis Grizzlies coach Lionel Hollins – who had been considered as an early season replacement for a foundering Kidd – is a strong early candidate to be hired as coach should Kidd leave, sources said.

The New York Post first reported the failed power play and talks with Bucks.

Kidd is selling Bucks co-owner Marc Lasry on giving him a lucrative package to do what the Nets have refused: Give Kidd full control of basketball operations. For an NBA figure with such a damaged personal reputation – never mind no front-office experience – the possibility of Kidd being afforded this kind of power and responsibility is being met with downright mockery among NBA owners and executives.

View gallery

.

Jason Kidd helped guide the Nets into the second round of the playoffs. (Getty Images)

Jason Kidd helped guide the Nets into the second round of the playoffs. (Getty Images)

It is a humiliating turn of events for the coach and his agent, Jeff Schwartz, who had wielded incredible power and influence with Nets billionaire owner Mikhail Prokhorov. Nevertheless, Kidd understood he had an admirer on the hook with one of the Bucks’ new ownership partners, Lasry. Kidd has had a personal and financial partnership with Lasry, and now he’s leveraging that relationship into talks to run the Bucks franchise, sources said.

 

Kidd isn’t angling to immediately take over as president and coach, sources said, but is intrigued with the higher-paying, lower-workload life of an top executive, sources said.

For Milwaukee’s general manager John Hammond and coach Larry Drew, revelations of the franchise’s negotiations with Kidd weren’t known to them until the story broke on Saturday night, sources said.

Kidd’s thirst for more power and money began to escalate with Golden State’s and New York’s hirings of Steve Kerr and Derek Fisher, respectively, as coaches, league sources said. Kidd was livid they were paid contracts substantially higher than what the Nets paid Kidd as a rookie coach.

“That got him – especially Fisher,” one official told Yahoo Sports.

Kidd was hired for three years, $10.5 million, only to be livid over Kerr and Fisher getting four-year deals guaranteeing more than $4 million dollars per season. Lost on Kidd was this: His dicey history made him unappealing as a coach, except with the Nets.

Despite Kidd’s greatness as a Hall of Fame point guard, he had a long career of clashing with front-office executives and coaches, a domestic abuse charge and a DWI guilty plea that left him suspended for his first two games as an NBA head coach. Kidd had little leverage upon his hiring as coach, which is why the Nets refused to overpay him market value.

Within management, there was strong consideration given to firing Kidd near the end of December, league sources said. Some Nets officials wanted to bring Hollins into Brooklyn as head coach, but ultimately ownership decided to stay the course with Kidd, sources said. For Kidd’s part in the power play, there’s a sense of betrayal within ownership that’ll make his return beyond difficult, bordering on the impossible, sources said.

View gallery

.

Kidd had no coaching experience before the Nets hired him. (AP)

Kidd had no coaching experience before the Nets hired him. (AP)

After all, the Nets hired Kidd upon his retirement as a player and delivered him a star-studded roster with the steepest payroll in NBA history – $100 million, plus $90 million more in luxury tax. They had listened to Kidd plead with them to make Lawrence Frank the highest-paid assistant coach in the NBA, only to have Kidd inexplicably demand that Frank be demoted within weeks of the start of the season.

 

Management hated the idea, and believed Frank had done the job they’d hired him to do, but played along with the demotion like it was a unified decision. Only, it wasn’t – it was all Kidd, “all his insecurities and need to place blame,” one source said.

For a short time in November, Kidd had declared he would pay the balance of Frank’s six-year, $6 million-plus deal out of his own pocket – only to backtrack quickly, sources said. Ownership let Kidd have his way and demote Frank, and ultimately has been left to pay the balance of Frank’s contract.

For a time, the franchise’s faith was rewarded with a dramatic turnaround in January and February that pushed the Nets into the playoffs and ultimately to an Eastern Conference first-round victory over Toronto. Brooklyn lost to Miami in the conference semifinals, but ownership had been thrilled with Kidd’s progress as a young coach, sources said.

Management had met with Kidd often this offseason, working with him on roster changes that appealed to him in free agency and trades, league sources said. Throughout his history, Kidd has seldom had graceful exits – out of Dallas and Phoenix, out of New Jersey and Dallas again, and finally New York. There have often been hard feelings and acrimony necessitating a move, or the cause of him forcing his way out.

Before the Nets traded Kidd to Dallas in 2008, franchise officials believed he had faked a migraine headache and missed a game against the New York Knicks. Within the NBA community, there was little surprise about the apparent Shakespearean ending to Kidd’s brief, but tumultuous coaching tenure with the Nets.

The coup failed, and Kidd appears to be on his way once again

Carlos Beltran still struggling since returning to Yankees lineup after elbow injury

Carlos Beltran still struggling since returning to Yankees lineup after elbow injury

Beltran admitted that his elbow has periodically stiffened on him since he returned from the disabled list on June 5.

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Sunday, June 29, 2014, 12:45 AM
 

 
Carlos Beltran is 2-for-25 since hitting a walk-off home run against the Orioles last Friday that was thought to jump-start him at the plate.Mark Bonifacio/ New York Daily NewsCarlos Beltran is 2-for-25 since hitting a walk-off home run against the Orioles last Friday that was thought to jump-start him at the plate.

The game-winning home run Carlos Beltran belted last week certainly has not provided a jump-start to his sluggish first season in the Bronx.

Beltran continues to flail away while being relegated to DH duties after missing 21 games bridging May and June with a bone spur in his right elbow. He is mired in a 2-for-25 tailspin since his walk-off three-run bomb against Baltimore on June 20, including an 0-for-4 showing in Saturday’s 2-1 loss to the Red Sox.

“I don’t feel happy with my performance,” said Beltran, whose batting average is down to .209 for the season. “What can I say? I’m just coming to the ballpark every day trying to get that rhythm, and it’s just been difficult.”

Beltran admitted that his elbow has periodically stiffened on him since he returned from the disabled list on June 5.

“The elbow issue is there, we cannot erase that. But I still have to find a way to just go out and do my job, even with the situation that I have,” Beltran said. “I get my days when it’s good and I get some other days when it’s tight or sore, but it’s nothing that I cannot tolerate. . . . It’s just right now, things are not going well.”

GM Brian Cashman acknowledged he’s not sure when — if — Beltran, who signed a three-year, $45 million contract last winter, can return to the outfield.

“I can’t say that just yet,” Cashman said. “We’ll hopefully first and foremost have him hit big for us and then if he feels well enough, we’ll eventually start thinking about the outfield. But we’re not there yet.”

NOT ENOUGH TA-KNOCKS

The Yankee hitters let down ace Masahiro Tanaka again on Saturday night, managing just one run on five hits.

Over Tanaka’s last six starts, the Yankees have totaled just 13 runs. Saturday they were stifled by Jon Lester, who gave up just an unearned run in eight innings and had a no-hitter through five.

The Yanks’ best chance came in the sixth when they managed three straight hits. Brett Gardner singled to lead off the inning, but he was caught trying to steal second with Derek Jeter batting.

Jeter and Jacoby Ellsbury also followed with singles before Mark Teixeira popped up and Beltran struck out swinging.

“You’ve got to get big hits against a pitcher that good,” Teixeira said. “When he’s dominating, you’ve got to try to get that one big hit, and we just didn’t get it.”

CC YA SOON?

CC Sabathia (knee) threw 36 pitches in 2.1 innings in his first rehab start with Class-A Tampa on Saturday, allowing two runs on three hits and a walk while fanning two. His fastball reportedly hit between 87-89 mph. Sabathia told reporters in Tampa that he “couldn’t be happier with the way I felt physically out there.”

The Yankees haven’t said when Sabathia’s next rehab start will be, but Joe Girardi had said the lefty would make at least three minor-league appearances.

Another injured starter, Michael Pineda (shoulder), threw 25 pitches on flat ground from 60 feet in Tampa Saturday and reported no issues.

Beltran admitted that his elbow has periodically stiffened on him since he returned from the disabled list on June 5.

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Sunday, June 29, 2014, 12:45 AM
 

1
Share this URL
Carlos Beltran is 2-for-25 since hitting a walk-off home run against the Orioles last Friday that was thought to jump-start him at the plate.Mark Bonifacio/ New York Daily NewsCarlos Beltran is 2-for-25 since hitting a walk-off home run against the Orioles last Friday that was thought to jump-start him at the plate.

The game-winning home run Carlos Beltran belted last week certainly has not provided a jump-start to his sluggish first season in the Bronx.

Beltran continues to flail away while being relegated to DH duties after missing 21 games bridging May and June with a bone spur in his right elbow. He is mired in a 2-for-25 tailspin since his walk-off three-run bomb against Baltimore on June 20, including an 0-for-4 showing in Saturday’s 2-1 loss to the Red Sox.

“I don’t feel happy with my performance,” said Beltran, whose batting average is down to .209 for the season. “What can I say? I’m just coming to the ballpark every day trying to get that rhythm, and it’s just been difficult.”

Beltran admitted that his elbow has periodically stiffened on him since he returned from the disabled list on June 5.

“The elbow issue is there, we cannot erase that. But I still have to find a way to just go out and do my job, even with the situation that I have,” Beltran said. “I get my days when it’s good and I get some other days when it’s tight or sore, but it’s nothing that I cannot tolerate. . . . It’s just right now, things are not going well.”

GM Brian Cashman acknowledged he’s not sure when — if — Beltran, who signed a three-year, $45 million contract last winter, can return to the outfield.

“I can’t say that just yet,” Cashman said. “We’ll hopefully first and foremost have him hit big for us and then if he feels well enough, we’ll eventually start thinking about the outfield. But we’re not there yet.”

NOT ENOUGH TA-KNOCKS

The Yankee hitters let down ace Masahiro Tanaka again on Saturday night, managing just one run on five hits.

Over Tanaka’s last six starts, the Yankees have totaled just 13 runs. Saturday they were stifled by Jon Lester, who gave up just an unearned run in eight innings and had a no-hitter through five.

The Yanks’ best chance came in the sixth when they managed three straight hits. Brett Gardner singled to lead off the inning, but he was caught trying to steal second with Derek Jeter batting.

Jeter and Jacoby Ellsbury also followed with singles before Mark Teixeira popped up and Beltran struck out swinging.

“You’ve got to get big hits against a pitcher that good,” Teixeira said. “When he’s dominating, you’ve got to try to get that one big hit, and we just didn’t get it.”

CC YA SOON?

CC Sabathia (knee) threw 36 pitches in 2.1 innings in his first rehab start with Class-A Tampa on Saturday, allowing two runs on three hits and a walk while fanning two. His fastball reportedly hit between 87-89 mph. Sabathia told reporters in Tampa that he “couldn’t be happier with the way I felt physically out there.”

The Yankees haven’t said when Sabathia’s next rehab start will be, but Joe Girardi had said the lefty would make at least three minor-league appearances.

Another injured starter, Michael Pineda (shoulder), threw 25 pitches on flat ground from 60 feet in Tampa Saturday and reported no issues.

New York Yankees fall to Boston Red Sox

LINKEDINCOMMENTMORE

NEW YORK — One strike away from getting through the ninth inning with the game still tied, Masahiro Tanaka threw a 96-mph fastball, turned toward the Yankee Stadium short porch in right field, and doubled over at the knees.

A solo home run and the cruelest of losses.

It was a complete game for Tanaka, but it was a 2-1 win for the Red Sox, who stunned the Yankees and their ace starting pitcher. Mike Napoli’s solo home run with two outs in the ninth sealed the win, and made the Yankees pay for their wasted scoring opportunities earlier in the game.

Tanaka has now pitched three complete games this season, but this was certainly the first one in which he was the losing pitcher. His 2.10 ERA is still the lowest in the American League, making him an unquestioned bright spot in a Yankees rotation that has been pieced together since late April and early May when Ivan Nova, Michael Pineda and CC Sabathia went on the disabled list within three weeks of one another.

Pineda and Sabathia took small but significant steps forward on Saturday — Sabathia in a rehab game, Pineda playing catch — but general manager Brian Cashman said he is actively shopping for upgrades.

“I’m looking to make some additions if I can,” Cashman said. “I’d like to try and do things before those guys get back, if possible, but I’ve already been trying, so there’s a reason we haven’t done anything. It’s not because of a lack of phone calls, but we’ll see.”

Both of the Red Sox runs came on solo homers. David Ross hit one in the third inning for a short-lived lead. The Red Sox had runners at second and third with no outs in the fourth, but Tanaka got out of the jam with two strikeouts and a routine grounder. He pitched around a double in the fifth, had another double overturned on replay in the sixth, and retired 10 in a row before a ninth-inning single that was wiped out by a double play.

Even though the Yankees didn’t have a hit until the sixth, they tied the score in the third. An error, hit batter, sacrifice bunt and RBI groundout gave the Yankees an unearned run off Red Sox ace Jon Lester, who struck out six in eight innings, cutting his ERA to 2.92.

The Yankees seemed to get their first hit in the bottom of the fifth, but replay showed Yangervis Solarte was out on a close play at first base. Instead, the Yankees had to wait until Brett Gardner led off the sixth with a single up the middle. Two more singles immediately followed, but Gardner was caught stealing second, so the Yankees didn’t score.

They also didn’t score in the ninth when Jacoby Ellsbury seemed to steal second base and dash around the bases on a bad throw. His sprint was negated because Mark Teixeira had struck out looking.

Yankee clippings: Sabathia allowed two runs on three hits through 2.1 innings in a rehab start with Class-A Tampa. It was Sabathia’s first game since going on the disabled list May 11 with degenerative damage in his right knee. He told reporters in Florida that he “couldn’t be happier” with the way he felt. … Pineda made 25 throws from 60 feet and reported no problems. It was his first time playing catch since a setback with the sore muscle near his right shoulder, which has had him on the disabled list since May 6.

Bobby Womack (1944-2014)

A dramatic life, a distinct voice: remembering the soul legend and his incredible seven-decade career

<

Bobby Womack
Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
June 28, 2014 9:05 AM ET

Soul-music genius Bobby Womack had talent to burn — and he burned it. He was in the first rank of songwriters, penning classics such as “It’s All Over Now,” which became the Rolling Stones’ first Number One single in the UK. He was a top-notch guitarist, backing up everyone from Ray Charles to Aretha Franklin. And when he sang on his own records, he could compel you to get on your feet (“Looking for a Love”), reinvent standards as R&B anthems (“Fly Me to the Moon”) or express yearning like nobody else (“Across 110th Street”). Somehow, all that didn’t add up to superstardom: Womack kept sabotaging himself with bad record deals and cocaine abuse. “It seems that every once in a while I pop up from out of the water and then disappear again,” he complained to Rolling Stone in 1974. “Well, I’m tired of that shit.”

Trace Bobby Womack’s Incredible Seven-Decade Career, in Photos

Bobby Womack was born on March 4th, 1944 to Friendly Womack and Naomi Womack, and grew up in the Cleveland slums, so poor that the family would fish pig snouts out of the local supermarket’s trash. “The neighborhood was so ghetto that we didn’t bother the rats and they didn’t bother us,” he said. “They walked past and hollered, ‘How you doin’, man?'” He was the third of five sons: Bobby had to share a bed with his brothers, Friendly Jr., Curtis, Harry and Cecil.

As a child, despite being prohibited from touching his father’s guitar, Womack taught himself to play it. When he broke a string one day, he was young enough to think that he might be able to conceal the damage by fixing it with his shoelace. When his father came home from working at the steel mill and discovered what had happened, he prepared to beat Bobby — but then told him that if he could play well enough, he would let it slide. Womack remembered, “Even with one string short, I played classical music, soul, country and western and rock & roll. I played my ass off. Every lick I knew and then some I didn’t.”

The five brothers started performing gospel as the Womack Brothers, playing on the local religious circuit, standing on boxes so they could reach the microphones. Their big break came in 1956, when their father arranged for them to open for the Soul Stirrers. The group’s lead singer, Sam Cooke, became their mentor and helped them go on tour. “Sam was on that gospel highway so we got right on there after him,” Womack said. The sweet-throated Curtis was the group’s lead singer, but Bobby had some gravel in his baritone and the charisma to exhort crowds like a teenage preacher. They toured with the Staple Singers — and were still young enough that their parents let the Womack brothers sleep in the same bed as the Staple sisters.

In 1961, the Womack Brothers followed Sam Cooke’s lead and made the transition from gospel music to secular soul music. They renamed themselves the Valentinos and signed to Cooke’s SAR label. They had a 1962 R&B hit with a rewrite of a gospel song they had previously recorded: “Couldn’t Hear Nobody Pray” became “Lookin’ for a Love.” (A decade later, the J. Geils Band’s cover of “Lookin’ for a Love” would become their first top-40 single.) Two years later, Bobby and his sister-in-law Shirley Womack wrote “It’s All Over Now,” a defiant breakup song with a loose blues-country feel and a hot bass line.

“It’s All Over Now” was rising up the charts in 1964 when it got knocked out by a cover by a white band from England: the Rolling Stones. Womack was irate. He told Rolling Stone two decades later that his initial reaction was, “Tell them to get their own fucking song!” But he relented when the royalty checks started rolling in. “And the checks kept coming,” he remembered.

Womack said, “I came up in an era when you had to perform with people like Sam Cooke and Jackie Wilson and Otis Redding and Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell and James Brown — all on one bill. Whoever had the hottest record had to close the show, and it wasn’t easy getting your butt kicked every night.”

In December 1964, Sam Cooke was fatally shot at the Hacienda Motel in Los Angeles motel by the motel manager, Bertha Franklin. The circumstances were murky and controversial, but the shooting was ruled justifiable homicide. SAR Records shut down and the Valentinos broke up. Within days, Bobby Womack began a relationship with Cooke’s widow, Barbara Campbell (who was 10 years his senior); they got married just three months after Cooke’s funeral. Womack, who said he was trying to step up to take care of “Mrs. Cooke” and her children, found himself branded an opportunist and ostracized in the soul-music world.

Unable to get a record deal after a couple of solo singles flopped and Atlantic R&B honcho Jerry Wexler declared that he didn’t like his voice, Womack relocated to Memphis circa 1965 and worked at American Studios, where he played guitar on a host of classic recordings, including Aretha Franklin’s Lady Soul, the Box Tops’ “The Letter,” and Dusty Springfield’s Dusty in Memphis. He also spent a couple of years playing in Ray Charles’ band and forged an alliance with Wilson Pickett, who recorded multiple songs by Womack, including hits such as “I’m in Love,” “A Man and a Half,” and “I’m a Midnight Mover.” Having funneled so many compositions to Pickett, when Womack signed a record deal and released Fly Me to the Moon in 1968, he found himself covering other people’s songs, including a sultry version of the Mamas and the Papas’ “California Dreamin’.”

In 1970, Bobby’s marriage to Barbara ended abruptly when she found him in bed with her teenage daughter (his stepdaughter) Linda. As he told it, “I’m lying there kissing Linda and the light comes on — ‘You dirty fucking bastard. What are you doing with my daughter?’ It was Linda.” She shot him with a .32, grazing his temple; he ran out of the house and they soon got divorced. Linda later married Bobby’s younger brother Cecil; they formed the successful R&B duo Womack & Womack. “That was all really fucked up,” Bobby said.

Back in Los Angeles, Womack became part of the Laurel Canyon scene, hanging out with Keith Richards, Arthur Lee and Frank Zappa, and arguing onstage with John Lennon at a Donny Hathaway gig over which of them would get to play guitar. “I never will forget when Woody [Ron Wood] brought Keith Moon up to my place,” Womack told writer Harvey Kubernik. “Moon jumps on top of my couch and starts running all over it and the counter. He fell on the floor and started pouring water on himself. He was just crazy. But when I saw him play, I knew that was a place where he could be himself.”

Janis Joplin called Womack to the studio to work on her last album, Pearl, and recorded his song “Trust Me.” They became close; his car apparently inspired Joplin to write “Mercedes Benz.” Womack was with Joplin on the last night of her life; he says that she declined his offer of cocaine and told him to leave when her heroin dealer showed up.

Womack’s drug consumption in this period reached epic proportions, he told Rolling Stone in 1984. “I was really off into the drugs. Blowing as much coke as I could blow. And drinking. And smoking weed and taking pills. Doing that all day, staying up seven, eight days. Me and Sly [Stone] were running partners. He didn’t think about making music; he had a genuine partner. He said, ‘I don’t feel like I’m goofing off, because Bobby Womack’s doing it.'” Before everything went off the rails, they worked together on Sly and the Family Stone’s dark classic There’s a Riot Goin’ On; Womack helped Stone put it together and played guitar on much of the album.

Meanwhile, Womack made a string of classic R&B albums, including Communication, Understanding and the gorgeous 1972 blaxploitation movie soundtrack Across 110th Street. (The title track was just as evocative in 1997 when Quentin Tarantino recycled it in Jackie Brown.) He was a mainstay on the R&B charts, with semi-regular crossovers to the pop world. His hit singles in this era were generally slow, groovy, and regularly featured Womack talking: “That’s The Way I Feel About Cha” (“Everybody wants love, but everybody’s afraid of love,” he testified), “Woman’s Gotta Have It” (“Sometimes we have a tendency to forget what a woman needs,” he warned), and “Harry Hippie” (“Everybody claims that they want the best things out of life,” he declared). That song was a tribute to Bobby’s free-spirited younger brother Harry; tragically, its success became ashen in 1974 when Harry was fatally stabbed by his girlfriend.

Womack’s supple music in this era was sympathetic to women and lovelorn. He said, “Sly Stone once told me, ‘Bobby, you fall in and out of love faster than anyone I know.’ I live for love. I’ve always been tortured by love. I don’t mind the pain. I want to be the king of pain.

In 1976, Womack married Regina Banks; after they split up, she still worked as his manager (and, he said, they remarried in 2013). His career stalled as funk turned into disco; it didn’t help when he made a country album, BW Goes C&W. But he had a revival in the early Eighties with the single “If You Think You’re Lonely Now” and the acclaimed albums The Poet and The Poet II (which featured multiple duets with Patti LaBelle). At the end of the ’80s, he went into rehab for his cocaine addiction; his albums became more scattershot, and his career became notable for unusual collaborations (with the likes of Todd Rundgren, Van Morrison, and the Wu-Tang Clan). He also sang on the Rolling Stones’ album Dirty Work, with his vocals particularly prominent on the single “Harlem Shuffle.”

In 2009, Womack was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame by his old friend and collaborator Ron Wood, who described him as “a great inspiration to my band and all of the musicians that I know.” In his acceptance speech, Womack remembered playing guitar for Sam Cooke, cited Cooke’s civil rights anthem “A Change Is Gonna Come,” and astonished by how society had changed, addressed his dead friend: “Sam, we have our first black president.”

In recent years, Womack suffered from multiple health problems, including diabetes, Alzheimer’s and cancer. “I gotta get back on the road — I’m broke,” he told Rolling Stone from his hospital bed. The collaboration that revived his career one last time was working with Gorillaz — appearing on the 2010 song “Stylo” led to an album produced by Damon Albarn (Gorillaz and Blur singer) and Richard Russell (head of XL Recordings), The Bravest Man in the Universe. Womack proved to be in remarkably strong voice and the match of his soulful singing with skittering electronic rhythms and cut-up sounds was deeply satisfying; Rolling Stone named it the 36th-best album of the year. Another album, The Best Is Yet to Come, was scheduled for this year, and reportedly includes collaborations with Stevie Wonder, Rod Stewart, Snoop Dogg, Eric Clapton and Teena Marie.

Womack is survived by Regina Banks and four children, Gina, Bobby Truth, Cory and Jordan; he also had the tragedy of a stillborn child in the Sixties, an infant son, Truth, who died at four months of age in 1978, and a son, Vincent, who committed suicide in 1986, at age 21. He died just two weeks after playing the Bonnaroo festival in Tennessee.

“I’m so sorry to hear of the passing of Bobby Womack,” said soul singer Candi Staton. “We practically grew up together and traveled together with our gospel groups as young children. He had a style that nobody else could ever capture.”

“He was a true pioneer of soul and R&B, whose voice and songwriting touched millions,” the Rolling Stones said in a statement posted to their website. “On stage, his presence was formidable. His talents put him up there with the greats. We will remember him, first and foremost, as a friend.”

“Tanaka’s bad call costs Yankees a game?” Are you kidding me? ARE YOU KIDDING ME?

“Tanaka’s bad call costs Yankees a game?” Are you kidding me? ARE YOU KIDDING ME?

Today’s Gammonitic talking points are that Masahiro Tanaka’s decision to throw Mike Napoli a fastball is why the Yankees lost last night’s game. What a crock. What. A. Crock!

Seriously. Even amoung the modern standards of artistic crockiness, which surpass levels historically unparalleled by the crocking crockers of crockery, this is one supremely crock-intense crock. It’s Tanaka’s fault that we lost? Think about that. I’d say it was Tanaka’s fault that we were in it.

And Napoli’s comment, “What an idiot,” supposedly delivered upon returning to the Redsock dugout, should refer not to Tanaka, but Joe Girardi, who seems inclined to pitch Masahiro until his arm cracks, but who handles the other starters like a pair of Google glasses. Frankly, somebody ought to shave Mr. Mouthy Napoli before this series ends, as if to tell him we don’t appreciate lip-syncs – but that would upset the kindred sportsmanship of these two bodies of statesmen, as they quibble over third place in the buttery AL East. Last night’s game on Fox was like watching some re-enactment of a historical battle, where all the insurance agents put on uniforms and run across the village green, carrying fake weapons. And everybody gathered to watch has the same thought: What. A. Crock.

Let’s accept that John Lester is a fine pitcher, who always kills the Yankees, even as other teams in baseball tee off on him like homeless people at a buffet. But the Yankees’ anemia has become downright boring. A month ago, it was fun to see Yangervis Solarte stride up to bat. Now, it’s painful. A month ago, Carlos Beltan and Brian McCann were on the verge of breaking out. Now, the concept of having them for three and five years, respectively, makes me shudder. We gave up draft picks for these guys. We mortgaged the future. Good grief, this is how the Knicks became the Knicks.

Now Cashman, the wizard, says he’s going to rescue us. He’ll wave his wand, cast one of his magical spells and – poof – he’ll conjure up some downward spiraling former all-star – (thinking career peak of 2010) – at the cost of a few prospects from our farm system, which is already as thin as a coat of Windex. The Gammonites will hail it, as they love to do. Oh, the crockiness of it all. Damn that Tanaka! He cost us the game

YANKEES…IF

Sunday, June 29, 2014

IF

IF…McCann had hit a home run in the Yankee’s last at bat, and we went on the win the game I’d say his acquisition was worth it.  I would say he is now a Yankee.

IF….Joe Girardi had a brain and didn’t put all his chips, all the time, on Tanaka being perfect, I’d say he was a great manager.

IF….any of the Yankees were able to hit, I’d say we were going to be better than a .500 team.

IF…Cashman were not the worst GM in all of baseball, I’d say let’s bring up some rookies and start playing for the future, today.

IF….I had invested in Google instead of drinking and earning my money installing hot tubs, I wouldn’t be standing in my ratty yard wondering what I was going to do with all this junk.

IF….I had four wheels, I’d be a bus.

IF….I had a brain, I’d write a poem.

IF…. 

Imagining The Master’s win-warble when the GCL Yankees 1 play the GCL Yankees 2

Things to ponder on a hot weekend…

Saturday, the Yankees’ played with themselves. Their two Gulf Coast League teams battled for Yankee Gulf Coast League supremacy. The outcome: 1 topped 2, 7 to 3.

I can’t help but wish John Sterling had been calling the Yankee Yippee Yelp:

“Ballgame over. Yankees One win… Thuuuuuuuuugh… Yankees… One… win!”

When Disney stars grow up

  • annette funicello disney beach party split AP.jpg

Ever since Walt Disney cast Bobby Driscol to star in “The Song of the South” waaay back in 1946, the studio’s roster of juvenile talent has always had an unusual knack for getting into trouble. Whether it was bitter rivalries, nude photo scandals, drugs, homelessness–or just being a plain, big ol’ mess, the Disney kids have seen and done it all. Here are some of the big scandals that made Mickey Mouse blush:

  • 1. Bobby Driscol

    Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment

    A prolific child actor, Bobby Driscol was considered Disney’s “first child star” and headlined classics like “Treasure Island” and “Peter Pan.” He even received a Juvenile Oscar in 1950 for an “outstanding performance in feature films.” By the mid-’50s, Bobby had become addicted to drugs and his contract with Disney was terminated. In 1956, he was arrested on a felony narcotic charge. “I was 17 when I first experimented with the stuff,” Bobby explained to the LA Times. “In no time I was using whatever was available… mostly heroin, because I had the money to pay for it.” He was found dead at the age of 31 in an abandoned apartment building on New York’s Lower East Side in 1968. Bobby’s body wasn’t claimed for almost two years.

  • 2. Annette Funicello

    AP

    Annette Funicello was actually a good girl in a body born to be bad. Viewers across America instantly fell in love with the Italian-American tween, whose obvious onset of puberty troubled Walt Disney–and delighted countless teen-age boys. Well past the age of consent, Walt Disney insisted that Annette cover up her navel in 1963’s “Beach Party,” wearing what may be the most modest two-piece ever designed. By 1964’s “Muscle Beach Party,” Annette had thrown caution to the wind, her belly button finally liberated for the world to see.

  • 3. Johnny Crawford

    Hit Parade

    While Annette may have been forced to keep her not-so-naughty bits covered-up by Uncle Walt, another original Mouseketeer, Johnny Crawford, had no qualms about taking it ALL off in front of the cameras in the 1973 quasi-porn flick, “The Naked Ape.” Produced by Hugh Hefner and co-starring Victoria Principal, “The Naked Ape” is described by Turner Classic Movies as “the evolution of mankind, with a primary focus on sexuality… examined through various stories, sketches, and animated sequences.” Johnny also holds the dubious honor of being the first man to be appear 100 percent buck-naked in Playboy magazine.

  • 4. Monet Monico

    With a promising singing career and stints on “The Suite Life with Zach and Cody,” teenaged Monet Monico appeared to be living the Disney dream. But by her 21st birthday, Monet had become a homeless heroin addict. “You’re living in a park, bathing in a public bathroom,” Dr. Phil chided her during an appearance on his show. But Monet was unmoved. “All I care about is getting high.” Monet’s mother, who hadn’t seen her in six months, broke down in tears as she watched a videotape of her daughter smoking and shooting up heroin in the backseat of a car.

  • 5. Lindsay Lohan

    Reuters

    Once one of the brightest stars to ever come out of the Disney roster, Lindsay Lohan has spent much of the past decade in and out of jail, rehab, and bad movies. With at least six mug shots to her credit, and hoping to get her life back on track, the “Mean Girls” star has finally–desperately–reached out to Oprah Winfrey for help. But even Oprah has her limits. “You need to cut the bullsh-t, you really do,” Oprah told a drawn-looking Lindsay after she failed to cooperate with the documentary’s production crew. “Just cut the f–king bullsh-t.”

  • 6. Joe Jonas

    Reuters

    Taylor Swift has (allegedly) written at least three songs about Joe Jonas’ caddish behavior, but that’s the least worrisome of his misdeeds. He ratted– or moused– out fellow Disney stars Demi Lavato and Miley Cyrus for smoking marijuana with him when he was “17 or 18.” Joe made the pot-puffing declaration in an interview with New York magazine, where he also blamed the Disney marketing machine for insisting on perfection and purity. “We didn’t want to disappoint anyone—our parents, our fans, our employers—so we put incredible pressure on ourselves, the kind of pressure that no teenager should be under.”

  • 7. Demi Lovato

    Reuters

    One of Disney’s busiest stars, Demi Lovato starred in both “Camp Rock” and her own sitcom, “Sunny with a Chance,” and has sold over 8 million albums worldwide. Yet in 2010, she withdrew from her tour with the Jonas Brothers, citing “physical and emotional issues.” She later admitted to a host of problems, including bulimia, cutting, “self-medicating,” and “a nervous breakdown.” But Demi, who was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, has rebounded nicely. Since getting treatment, she landed a gig as a contributing editor of Seventeen and served as a judge on “X Factor.”

  • 8. Dylan Sprouse

    Dylan Sprouse, a self-described “laid-back” kind of guy, went from being best known as one half of the towheaded twin tweens on the wildly popular “Suite Life of Zack and Cody,” to nude selfie king overnight. But Dylan took the scandal in stride, tweeting fans, “Whoops, guess I’m not 14 and fat anymore.” Dylan, whose Twitter bio notes that he’s a “child actor who didn’t do meth” and a “n00d pic dealer,” quickly apologized for his overexposure back in December. “I messed up…but I’d be a fool not to own up to it.”

  • 9. Miley Cyrus

    For the past few years, we have seen Miley Cyrus pose topless for Terry Richardson, smoke salvia on videotape and shamelessly twerk on Robin Thicke. But back in 2008, when she was just 15 and at the height of her “Hanna Montana” fame, Miley told Barbara Walters that she would avoid the same troubles that had plagued fellow mousers Lindsay, Britney Spears and her sister, Jamie-Lynn. “I feel pretty confident that I won’t end up like that,” Miley declared. “I can go out there and be more a light to them and make them want to live the way that I long to live.” We see how that worked out for her.