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Baseball Newsstand— All the News That's Fit to Link
Friday, July 04, 2008
“It’s definitely not one of the better [Yankee] teams of the last few years,” said one major league talent evaluator. “Too many things had to go right for them to stay even with the Red Sox, and that’s without knowing Tampa Bay was going to be this good.”
...But there’s no work-around for the slow, insidious decline in Derek Jeter’s performance, one which will eventually bring the Yankees to a brutal, crossroads decision.
At what point will the Bombers decide they can no longer afford to a light-hitting, heavy-strikeout presence in the No. 2 spot? Even more pressing is Jeter’s shrinking range and the need to someday move him out of shortstop.
One major league scout wondered out loud, “Who in that organization is going to be the one to make the move [to shift Jeter to another position]. Who has enough juice to do that?”
Thanks to hard-hitting Zeke Bella Abzug.
Repoz
Posted: July 04, 2008 at 09:23 AM | 2 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, NY Yankees
I had a friend that decided one day to only talk only hardcore gibberish and brignac (right after braddiac-nern, of course) was a word he used quite often. He ended up missorting himself on a United Parcel Service carousel and I never heard from him again. Gleep-gleep, old friend, and a hearty hurgnebble welcome to Reid Brignac!
To replace Bartlett the Rays recalled a pair of short stops from Durham including one of their top prospects, Reid Brignac. I’m expecting and hoping that Brignac will take over the starting duties while Bartlett is out with Zobrist being here as a backup plan. This will give the Rays a chance to see what a future left side of Brignac and Evan Longoria would look like at the Major League level. Brignac was hitting .265/.312/.431 with 7 HR and 38 RBI at Durham. His defense according to several scouting reports has improved tremendously in the past year to two years
It will also allow the Rays to showcase Brignac to other teams as he is one of the Rays most attractive trade pieces. Many wondered about the future of Brignac once the Rays acquired Bartlett and Brignac’s future became even more cloudy when the Rays drafted SS, Tim Beckham, with the 1st overall pick. I have wondered if the Rays would move Brignac to RF, but we won’tl see him play anything but the middle IF in this call up.
Repoz
Posted: July 04, 2008 at 09:04 AM | 2 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, Tampa Bay
Not since “Porky" Brockway’s dickchillian..."EEE-AWK-EEE" call out...have I heard such blather.
After Thursday’s embarrassing loss to the Red Sox, Johnny Damon called out his teammates. He admitted that the Yankees have been a disappointment this season and they are running out of time to turn their season around.
“We’re not playing up to our expectations. That’s never good,” Damon said after the Yankees emerged from the 30-minute team meeting that followed their 7-0 loss to Boston. “The Steinbrenners spent $200 million on us and we haven’t shown what we’re made of. I know this is one game and we have 75 games or so left, but we better do something soon. July 31 comes sooner than you know it, and I know a lot of guys here don’t want to go to another team or even be in that conversation. This is a team that’s built to win, to get to the playoffs and to win a championship. By July 31, we better be in a good spot.
“We’re damn lucky to put on these pinstripes. We definitely need to set a better example of what putting on these pinstripes means.”
“When you put the pinstripes on, there’s a lot of pride that goes with it,” Damon said when asked about the Yankees’ lineup, which went back to struggling a night after scoring 18 runs against the Texas Rangers. “There’s 55,000 fans out there. There are many media outlets that are going to talk about, ‘How come the Yankees aren’t scoring?’ It’s embarrassing.”
Repoz
Posted: July 04, 2008 at 07:56 AM | 16 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, NY Yankees
Barren von Mitterwald?...Never!
A pile of runs and a lack of defense — not your typical Twins team.
On a total level, it’s worth noting that, according to runs scored and runs allowed, the Twins’ record should be three games worse than it is. That doesn’t bode particularly well for the future because teams that over-perform relative to their run differentials tend to come back to earth. It’s partly because of the run differential that Baseball Prospectus gives the Twins just a 7.1% chance of making the postseason. For comparison’s sake, the third-place Tigers have a 15.3% chance, more than twice Minnesota’s odds.
On another level, the Twins’ seeminglyly aberrant performance in clutch situations is also worrisome. Consider: Minnesota leads the majors in batting average with runners on base and in batting average with the bases loaded. They also rank second the majors in batting average with runners in scoring position and two outs, and lead the majors in batting average with runners in scoring position by a full 27 points.
It’s the latter fact — that they’re hitting .313 with runners in scoring position — that raises eyebrows, especially considering that the Twins are batting .276 in all situations. Most often when you see such a huge disparity between those two figures, it’s a matter of luck. It’s not likely that the Twins’ extraordinary performance with runners in scoring position is going to continue.
Repoz
Posted: July 04, 2008 at 07:48 AM | 1 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, Minnesota
You know I am only teasing. I love you babies out there — always have.
Jose Reyes and Keith Hernandez had to be separated on the Mets charter plane Sunday night after a tense confrontation over Hernandez’s critical comments about the All-Star shortstop.
A team source described the situation aboard the plane as “very heated.” One player told The Post that he thought Reyes and the popular former Met - now an analyst for the club’s SNY TV network - were close to exchanging punches until others stepped in.
Reyes said yesterday he was angry at Hernandez after numerous friends and relatives told him Hernandez accused the Mets of “babying” Reyes during the broadcast of Sunday’s 3-1 win over the YankeesNew York Yankees at Shea Stadium.
“He got his point [across] and I got mine,” Reyes, when asked to describe the confrontation, told The Post before he drove in three runs in the Mets’ 11-1 victory over the Cardinals last night. “I’m not too happy with the way he’s been talking.”
According to one account, strongly denied by both Reyes and Hernandez, what set Reyes off during the flight was when Hernandez allegedly responded to Reyes’ concerns by saying: “I was just doing my job - you should do yours.”
Repoz
Posted: July 04, 2008 at 07:04 AM | 17 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, NY Mets, Announcers, Television
L.A. Times to cut 250 jobs...Plaschke, heed the warning of king of all floating heads, Watson Pritchard..."They’re coming for me now...and then they’ll come for you!”
Who is a ballplayer? Who is not? Who can continue to grow here? Who will not?
Blake DeWitt, he’s a ballplayer.
How do they find a bunch of other guys who play the game the right way like he does?
Some of their other youngsters have much more talent, but, having been coddled since double A, they might never become ballplayers here. It may be time to trade some of that flashy talent for somebody who understands the fundamentals. And, yes, once again, Matt Kemp’s name is being whispered through Dodgers offices.
Players such as Kemp and Andre Ethier and James Loney have been more highly touted than guys such as Casey Kotchman, Maicer Izturis and Erick Aybar.
But it is those Angels who have a better understanding of winning.
Before Thursday, the Dodgers had a better team batting average and on-base percentage than the Angels, while scoring only 10 fewer runs. Yet the Angels had won 11 more games.
Why? The Angels have a culture that believes in winning over statistics, winning over awards, winning over everything.
Repoz
Posted: July 04, 2008 at 06:34 AM | 7 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, LA Angels, LA Dodgers
Tests of syringes and other steroid paraphernalia that trainer Brian McNamee submitted to federal agents will test positive for Roger Clemens’ DNA, according to a brief filed in court by McNamee’s lawyers.
Will test positive, or have tested positive?
Andere Richtingen
Posted: July 04, 2008 at 01:56 AM | 9 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: Steroids
The Braves Show.com has learned the Atlanta Braves have sent struggling outfielder Jeff Francoeur to Double-A Mississippi. Richmond outfielder Jason Perry will be called up to the big leagues Friday.
Cubs manager Lou Piniella spoke to Carlos Marmol Thursday morning about his location after Marmol served up a game-tying three-run homer to Ray Durham Wednesday night. In Piniella’s eyes, Marmol had not lost any confidence.
“He was hitting his head after (Durham) hit the home run,” Piniella said. “So I think he’s OK.”
But Marmol went out Thursday and served up another three-run home run to Rich Aurilia to put the 8-3 loss out of reach. It was the fourth homer he has given up in his last 12 innings, and Piniella now is wondering if Marmol is tipping his pitches.
“It’s hard to give up home runs like he has been giving them up on a consistent basis, even if you tell the hitter what’s coming,” Piniella said. “Maybe he is. Maybe he’s doing something, so we’re going to look at the film [Friday] in St. Louis. It’s starting to be a little bit of a concern, to be quite honest.”
Piniella said he took Sean Gallagher out after five innings Thursday so he could be used in the bullpen, though he didn’t say Gallagher would replace Marmol as a set-up man.
NTNgod
Posted: July 04, 2008 at 01:19 AM | 8 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, Chi Cubs
But Buck said by phone Thursday that he was joking. The only broader point he meant seriously, Buck said, was baseball must follow through on efforts to speed up the game.
...Bayless, ESPN’s resident gasbag, said, ``If I’m Bud Selig, I don’t want him being my national voice of baseball.’’
‘’Good for him,’’ Buck said of Bayless’ remark.
But seriously . . . ‘’It was a total joke. If it didn’t come across as that, you fault the joke teller. Baseball has been my life [forever],’’ Buck said, as he recalled accompanying his father, legendary announcer Jack Buck, to games as a child.
Buck assured Thursday that he watches a lot of baseball not only because ‘’it’s my job to stay current,’’ but also because ‘’I enjoy it.’’ He said he jokingly mentioned The Bachelorette only ``because I had watched it with my wife the night before.’’
On Thursday, Buck called Selig, baseball executive Tim Brosnan, Fox Sports president Ed Goren and Fox Sports chairman David Hill to apologize. ‘’I said it was wrong and I’m sorry and it won’t happen again,’’ Buck said. ``I learned a valuable lesson. You have to be careful what you say and I was not careful.’’
Buck said Selig ‘’joked that he’ll tell my mom to spank me.’’
Woo-hoo...I hope that shows up on that whacky The Caning Mutiny site!
Repoz
Posted: July 04, 2008 at 01:01 AM | 22 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, Announcers, Television
Thursday, July 03, 2008
The Milwaukee Brewers are serious about trading for Indians left-hander C.C. Sabathia — more serious, perhaps, than any other club. The Brewers’ offer for Sabathia includes Class AA left fielder Matt LaPorta, according to sources with two other clubs that are interested in acquiring the pitcher.
Class AA shortstop Alcides Escobar also may be in the Brewers’ proposed deal, one of the sources says.
The Brewers likely would prefer to substitute a lesser player for Escobar, or perhaps would insist upon additional talent if the Indians demanded his inclusion. But if the Brewers indeed were willing to give up both LaPorta and Escobar, the Sabathia sweepstakes might be over before they started.
“I can not imagine anyone would top that,” the first source said. The second added, “That deal should get it done.”
NTNgod
Posted: July 03, 2008 at 11:16 PM | 21 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, Cleveland, Milwaukee, Rumors
Here’s an interesting development: Clubs that have spoken with the Mariners report they’re back-burning their attempts to deal Erik Bedard, for the moment at least, because they have more pressing priorities.
And what might those priorities be? Moving the likes of Richie Sexson, Jarrod Washburn, Miguel Batista and Adrian Beltre. That’s what. Not surprisingly, unloading Sexson heads that list—not that they’re getting anywhere.
Seattle is even expressing reluctance to deal Raul Ibanez—at this point, anyway. One club reports the Mariners would like to package Ibanez with someone like Washburn or Batista, in hopes of maximizing the return. Otherwise, they’re saying they would move their left fielder only “for a quality young outfielder” and another piece.
...
Another left-handed arm who looks as if he’ll be tough to pry loose is Pittsburgh’s Damaso Marte. The Pirates have been telling teams they project Marte to be a Type A free agent—so they would want the equivalent of a first-round pick and a sandwich pick to trade him. Our read of the market right now is this: They’re not likely to get it.
...
We heard from three different teams this week that the Reds have “zero” takers on Adam Dunn. Hard to believe Dunn wouldn’t be a fit for an AL team with a lineup deep enough that he wouldn’t have to be a middle-of-the-order presence.
NTNgod
Posted: July 03, 2008 at 11:15 PM | 6 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, Rumors
Seeking to fill what has become the team’s most glaring deficiency, the Orioles have engaged in talks with the Toronto Blue Jays regarding shortstop David Eckstein, according to industry sources.
Eckstein, 33, is hitting .273 with one home run and 18 RBIs in 198 at-bats. However, he has become expendable on a roster that includes infielders Marco Scutaro, John McDonald and Joe Inglett, who has seen his role increase with regular second baseman Aaron Hill injured.
Because of the glut of middle infielders, the Blue Jays’ asking price for Eckstein isn’t expected to be too high. The two-time All-Star and former World Series Most Valuable Player signed a one-year, $4.5 million deal with the Blue Jays and will be a free agent at the end of the season.
NTNgod
Posted: July 03, 2008 at 10:05 PM | 13 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, Baltimore, Toronto, Rumors
A day after playing a significant role in the Rays’ 7-6 Wednesday night win over the Red Sox, shortstop Jason Bartlett was placed on the 15-day disabled list with a right knee sprain on Thursday. To take Bartlett’s place, the Rays recalled shortstop Ben Zobrist and selected Reid Brignac from Triple-A Durham. To make room, right-hander Mitch Talbot was optioned to Durham.
Bartlett’s injury occurred when stealing third base in the Rays’ pivotal six-run seventh inning Wednesday night.
...
Bartlett is expected to be back after the All-Star break.
NTNgod
Posted: July 03, 2008 at 08:04 PM | 0 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, Tampa Bay
Prior to Thursday’s game against the St. Louis Cardinals, the Mets placed [Luis] Castillo on the 15-day disabled list with what they classified as a strained left hip flexor… To take his place on the roster, the Mets purchased the contract of infielder Argenis Reyes, 25, from Class AAA New Orleans.
Reyes batted .290 with 22 RBI in 79 games for the Zephyrs. He was signed by the Mets in the offseason after spending the first seven years of his professional career in the Cleveland Indians’ organization.
The Mets also recalled outfielder Chris Aquila from New Orleans and optioned righthander Carlos Muniz to the Zephyrs.
NTNgod
Posted: July 03, 2008 at 08:00 PM | 2 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, NY Mets
I thought there was a good chance they’d lose the Webb-started finale, but not like THIS…
The D-backs rallied for all six of their runs in the bottom of the ninth inning without recording an out to stun the Brewers, 6-5, at Chase Field on Thursday.
...
Mitch Stetter and Eric Gagne each worked a scoreless inning in relief of [Manny] Parra, but the rest of Milwaukee’s relief corps was not as effective. Reliever Guillermo Mota surrendered a pair of infield hits and a walk before exiting in favor of left-hander Brian Shouse, who surrendered a bases-clearing, three-run double to pinch-hitter Chad Tracy.
That prompted a call for Brewers closer Salomon Torres, who was 13-for-13 in save opportunities since Gagne went on the disabled list in mid-May. He surrendered three straight hits; a single to Justin Upton that made it 5-4, a double to Orlando Hudson that left runners at second and third and a single up the middle to Connor Jackson that drove home the tying and winning runs.
NTNgod
Posted: July 03, 2008 at 07:59 PM | 15 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, Arizona, Milwaukee, Game Recaps
Former major leaguer Karim Garcia, a first-year player here and the leading vote-getter in fan balloting for the Korean all-star game, is hailed by Giant fans with a song that repeats Gar-ci-a over and over again.
Also in the Giants’ dugout is former major leaguer Jerry Royster, who, as the Giants’ skipper, is the first American to manage a Korean team.
‘’I’m having a blast,’’ Royster said. ``I’m having an absolute blast.’’
Royster loves the enthusiasm and respect in the stands but is trying to get his team to play more aggressively, which is somewhat out of character in Korea.
‘The approach that the players have here is quite different than what we are used to in the United States. It’s not very aggressive baseball and they are very respectful of each other. That comes into play quite a bit on double plays. They don’t break up double plays. And when guys get hit (by a pitch) there is somewhat of an `I’m sorry’ kind of attitude for hitting you,’’ he said.
I think Ken Herman is a political writer, writing here mostly from a marketing perspective, but this is a pretty entertaining article.
Here is a related article that’s entirely about Royster.
The Korean league, now with eight teams playing 126-game schedules from March through August, was formed in 1982, long after baseball was brought to the nation by U.S. missionaries in the early 20th century. In 1994, pitcher Chan Ho Park became the first Korean to play in the U.S. major leagues.
On the field, the play is solid and entertaining, but nowhere near as intriguing as what goes on in the stands.
It’s four hours of wonderment for Tennyson, his sister Erica and her two American friends, who, like her, teach English here.
‘’I’m a big fan of the cheerleaders and the guy who actually leads cheers,’’ Tennyson said. ``That’s a great job. We need that back home.’’
‘’They all know every song, every dance move,’’ Erica Tennyson said as fans around her sang and danced.
Could this work back home?
‘’It would be amazing,’’ said Andrea Mullen, a Greenville, S.C. native. ``I would go to more games if this happened.’’
20 Minutes into the Sabermetric Future...with Max.
MS: Last year my brother came across the whole BABIP theory and explained it to me, but I was initially very skeptical because I just could not imagine all pitchers were essentially the same. As my season went on, I kept an eye on it, and he was right—pitchers really do not have control over the balls put in play, [that’s on] the defense and luck. I’m very numbers-oriented myself, so I kept digging into this wealth of information. Sure enough, the K/BB and HR/9 were really the driving numbers behind the success of pitching. It really made sense to me, but the pitcher inside couldn’t comprehend that, of everything involved, just three outcomes can determine one’s success.
ES: So part of you embraces the BABIP and three outcomes of controllable skill, but the other part struggles to comprehend it. How do you deal with that?
MS: Well, I’ve been challenging Alex over and over on different scenarios to see how they affect the three outcomes, and it never seems to fail. By digging deeper and deeper into the numbers, it really has allowed me to take away the fear of failure.
ES: How so?
MS: I’m going to have success, and I will have failure. So when failure comes, it really has allowed me to brush it off and say it was meant to happen, and the next 10 batters will never do that. Basically, it has allowed me to be even more aggressive and work ahead better.
Repoz
Posted: July 03, 2008 at 06:04 PM | 9 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, Sabermetrics
Meet Jeff Pasan…
...his boy Inoa
Oakland – low-revenue Oakland, immortalized in the book “Moneyball,” about winning with a scrimp-and-save payroll – signed a 16-year-old named Michel Inoa on Wednesday. Along with his $4.25 million bonus, Inoa got an Anglicized name, Michael, and a ticket to the Dominican Summer League, where he can add weight to his lithe 6-foot-7 frame, throw his 94-mph fastball, unleash his polished breaking ball and work on his changeup.....
The meeting convinced Oakland to shatter signing-bonus records for a Latino amateur not from Cuba. It’s been nearly a decade since the Yankees gave outfielder Wily Mo Peña a $2.44 million bonus and seven years since the Dodgers gave infielder Joel Guzman $2.25 million. The top bonuses each year since have vacillated between $1 million and $2 million.
Mike Webber
Posted: July 03, 2008 at 05:05 PM | 12 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: Amateur, Oakland, International
A beacon that radiates throughout Tampa Bay and across the entire states of New York and Massachusetts!
Not many expected that the Fourth of July series that begins today in the Bronx would pit New York and Boston in a Wild Card scrum. But that’s where we stand because there’s little doubt the Rays are for real.
Yes, their run differential of 59 should give them 48 wins, or four fewer than they have. But no one on their team is hitting above expectations except for Eric Hinske and maybe Evan Longoria, a rookie with a 135 OPS+ (which means he’s about 35 percent better than an average hitter). Longoria, though, was viewed as one of the top hitting prospects in baseball, so there’s a chance he’s just a quick study and will hit even better.
Carl Crawford, B.J. Upton and Carlos Pena are all good bets to produce much better in the second half. Even if they don’t, the Rays are likely to play at that .570 rate their net-runs total suggests, and that would give them 96 wins, which should win the East given the questionable health of David Ortiz and myriad of injury problems for the Yankees.
Their pitching, which everyone should have seen as being very good heading into the season, is the reason the Rays’ middling offense has been good enough. Remember, Scott Kazmir and Matt Garza, so skillfully acquired for badly overhyped problem child Delmon Young (who hasn’t yet hit and maybe never will), missed seven starts so far due to injury. They’re both healthy now.
Repoz
Posted: July 03, 2008 at 04:38 PM | 12 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, Boston, NY Yankees, Tampa Bay
Webb is as laid-back as a seventh-inning stretch in spring training. Failure, which is inevitable in baseball, does not threaten his confidence. His drive home from Chase Field takes about 25 minutes, and by the time he turns off his car, Webb has managed to put the game in his rear-view mirror—even after a loss. “There’s nothing you can do after a start to change the outcome of what you did,” he says. “So why sit there and sulk and pity yourself for five days? Forget about it, then just go work in the bullpen on what you need to work on.”
Roy Halladay, with his bat-breaking sinker, is similar to Webb in stuff and style, but the Blue Jays ace pores over videotape of opposing hitters, dissecting their swings. Webb rarely watches video, and he doesn’t study scouting reports. His preparation is in the maintenance of his pitches.
When Haren takes the mound tonight, Webb plants himself on a bench at the front of the dugout, next to lefthander Doug Davis, and they watch a ball game. It’s great work if you can get it.
Here’s a long article by the blogosphere darling Buster Olney, who spent a week hanging around the Dbacks’ clubhouse.
Webb is almost always happy to allow others to do the heavy mental lifting. One time this season, when Snyder called for a fastball, Webb stuck with his instincts and struck out the hitter on a changeup. Snyder was waiting in the dugout. “That makes hitters now 5-for-6 when you shake me off,” the catcher said. Mostly, if you see Webb shake off a sign, it’s because Snyder is telling him to shake it off to confuse the batter. Snyder is a natural-born extrovert; when asked how great it is to catch Webb, he responds, “You should ask him how great it is that he can throw to me.”
Okay, you swept us. And while I do question a few moves made by the Glorious Teets—such as not pinch hitting Casey for Tek in the ninth last night, when it is painfully apparent to all that the Captain has become the Craptain in any situation that requires him holding a bat—I’m man enough to say that you guys came out of this series looking spry and hungry. We just look like a team that desperately needs a steak and a triple shot of Papi.
But instead of just taking the high road, letting your performance on the field speak for itself and figuring a sweep of the defending World Champs would be message enough to send to the rest of the world at large, you had to go and do it.
You played “Sweet Caroline” after the final out of last night’s game.
That’s a play right out of Smug Upstart Wannabes 101--the mark of a team that’s so confused by its own success, it feels it has to take these opportunities to step on the 600 pound gorilla’s nuts when he’s down, because it’s not sure it’ll ever have another chance to do so. It was sophomoric--instantly recalling the “1918” chant that was popular ‘round Tampa Bay before our 2004 heroics--and frighteningly lame. But it doesn’t surprise me.
knucklehead7
Posted: July 03, 2008 at 04:04 PM | 77 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, Boston, Tampa Bay
Bernazardoz: Beyond 2008, Beyond 2010, Beyond Love, Beyond Death...I have seen the future and it doesn’t work!
But, because of “their vast wasteland of a farm system”, the acquisition of a player like Xavier Nady is “totally unlikely”, one NL scout told Gotham’s Rumor Mill.
“Fernando Martinez is a special player, but he hasn’t been healthy (for the last two seasons) and is really young still. If you’re going to deal a player like that for an All-Star, he’d better be a max-value player. Fernando isn’t quite there. Jon Niese and Mike Carp are having solid minor league careers, but you’d have to put them in a package together (or even with another prospect) to get Nady, and I don’t think the Mets really want to do that.
“Plus, a lot of us are enjoying the fact that they’re having such a inconsistent year. There’s a great deal of arrogance in that organization right now.”
I pressed this scout for a explanation, saying that Minaya doesn’t have that reputation around the league.
“You’re right, he doesn’t. It’s the other guy (Tony Bernazard). According to him, the Mets have a deep farm system with all kinds of talent that (we) don’t have the vision to see. I disagree.
“Let’s just say that there are players out there that like him a lot. Nobody else does.”
Repoz
Posted: July 03, 2008 at 03:56 PM | 11 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, NY Mets
Can’t be too bad in Hartford… They haven’t had the blues for more than 130 years.
A plaque to commemorate the site of one of the original eight National League baseball fields on the grounds of the Church of the Good Shepherd in Hartford is scheduled to be unveiled July 26 at noon.
...That land and a section of Grand Avenue Park in St. Louis, home of the Brown Stockings, are the only two of the original eight major league fields that have not been built upon.
villageidiom
Posted: July 03, 2008 at 03:10 PM | 2 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, History
It appears as though homefield advantage is not a persistent thing—the Phillies have not squandered homefield advantage and the Rays have not capitalized on it for any specific reason and there is no reason to expect that the Phillies will have a weaker homefield advantage next year than the Rays.
So what does cause homefield advantage and can teams learn to exploit it—or keep other teams from exploiting their own? For one thing, the correlation in between winning percentage and homefield advantage is strongly negative, -.190, and significant at the 97confidence level! That means that there is only a 3% chance of getting a value so far away from 0 by random chance. In other words, homefield advantage probably entails a disability on the road more than an advantage at home.
Meet me at the wrecking ball
Wrecking ball
Wear something pretty and pinstripe
Baseball fans have only a precious few remaining opportunities to visit one of America’s most historic ballparks before it is destroyed, as the New York Yankees are playing out the final season in the history of their 85-year-old ballpark.
With this in mind, the Brockton Rox have created a memento that they believe will entertain an especially fond reception by baseball fans in and around Boston. On Saturday, August 2 at Campanelli Stadium in Brockton, the first 1,000 fans through the gates will receive a Bobble Wrecking Ball, comprised of a replica of the old stadium in New York with a wrecking ball swinging above it.
“We have tremendously passionate baseball fans in this area, and they appreciate the history of the game,” said Rox GM Brian Voelkel. “They also have very clearly placed allegiances, and we are excited to create an original piece of memorabilia that embodies both of those ideas.”
Thanks to the legendary Art Martone.
Repoz
Posted: July 03, 2008 at 01:36 PM | 8 comment(s) | Bookmark
Related News: General, Special Topics, NY Yankees
Which reminds me...Doesn’t Nyls Nyman have a piece of Stromboli’s Circus on Carnaby Street? If not. He should.
So in the interest of equal time, here’s a
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