Milwaukee Sentinel, June 19, 1913:
As the indirect result of being hit in the head by a pitched ball during a game years ago, Earl Davenport, who played with Pittsburg in the National League in 1892, Wednesday was sentenced to serve three years in San Quentin prison for passing fictitious checks.
Before he was sentenced, Davenport told Judge Willis that he had been irresponsible ever since he was “beaned” during a baseball game. He asked the court to arrange for an operation on his skull.
He ...
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1. Matt Chico's Bail Bonds (Dan Lee) posted on July 12, 2012 at 05:23 AM # hit 0 | hit 0C: Doug Allison
1B: Ron Fairly
2B: Howie Kendrick
3B: Bill Coughlin
SS: Al Glossop
LF: Tom Hafey
CF: Johnny Wyrostek
RF: Walt French
SP: Lee Meadows
SP: Mario Soto
SP: George Zettlein
SP: Jack Harshman
SP: Tom Gorzelanny
RP: Mike Munoz
Cool Name: Scipio Spinks
Prospect Flameouts: Ryan Anderson, Brad Eldred
Also, it makes the stupid "don't call it a break" commercials just that much more irritating. Not only is it a break, it is a break of unprecedented length. That commercial almost makes me retroactively angry at MLB for making it, and I don't like being angry at MLB.
The link also lists many other events celebrating their anniversary or "day-versary" today. My personal favorite was a random game 25 years ago today happened to be the final career game for two longtime veteran (and All-Star) infielders, as well as the debut game for a third longtime (and one-time All-Star) infielder. Care to guess who any of that trio might be based on that utterly minimal info? Click on the link above and scroll down to 1987 to see who they are.
With Donnie Hill sort of lurking in the fringes of my brain.
All-Star game draws strong ratings
Record-low ratings for All-Star Game
The current Washington Times was founded in the early '80s by that old devil Sun Myung Moon.
Wholeheartedly agree...I was just thinking the same thing about that stupid commercial as I was getting my coffee. However, to alleviate problem #1, I found milb.tv works great for my baseball jones!
The Jays signed Encarnacion to a 3 year extension at $9 million a year.
Adam Dunn: 134 K's
Verlander, Hernandez, Strasburg: 128 K's
my money's on the Big Donkey
and, BTW, it's kind of amazing that Strasburg is a co-leader in all of MLB considering his usage pattern
Splittin' the baby!
Game of the day (last year): Also none.
So, as a bonus feature (today and tomorrow), here are some good All-Star Games in years past. Today, it's the top 5 ASGs since 1969:
5. 1998 - AL 13, NL 8. The game was in Coors Field, and it acted like it. The NL went up 2-0 in the third; the AL scored 4 in the fourth, and the teams traded single runs in the next two half-innings to make it 5-3. The NL retook the lead on a 3-run homer by Barry Bonds in the bottom of the fifth, but the AL scored three of their own in the sixth to go ahead 8-6. They stretched that lead to 10-6 going into the bottom of the eighth, but the NL mounted one last rally, scoring twice and having the tying runs on base with nobody out. They had a runner get thrown out at home on a single, and then a double play ball to extinguish the threat, and the AL drove several superfluous nails into the coffin with a three-run ninth.
4. 1987 - NL 2, AL 0 (13). Sure, why wouldn't a then-record-setting year for homers have an All-Star game be scoreless through 12 innings? The game obviously didn't feature a huge number of rallies, but it did have a few. Of particular note was the ninth inning. In the top half, Tim Raines singled with one out, then stole second and took third on an error; Juan Samuel and Jeffrey Leonard combined to leave him there. In the bottom, the AL drew a pair of walks to put the winning run in scoring position, but Harold Reynolds hit into a double play. The game broke in the thirteenth when Ozzie Virgil and Hubie Brooks singled, and Raines tripled them both home with two outs.
3. 2002 - AL 7, NL 7 (11). (Gasp!) I know, it's the tie game (although, as it turns out, it's not the only All-Star tie). But lost in the tie and the resultant countingness of the subsequent games is the fact that while the game was going on, it was bananas. The NL took a 4-0 lead early, highlighted by a Barry Bonds homer; the AL closed within 4-2, but the NL padded its lead by a run in the fifth on a double by Damian Miller. (Yes, Damian Miller, All-Star. And yes, Eric Chavez has never made an All-Star team.) That changed quickly in the seventh. The AL started out with a manufactured run - Johnny Damon singled, stole second, and came the rest of the way around on a pair of outs. After a walk to Randy Winn, Byung-Hyun Kim came in to pitch, and, well... steal/single/single/double and the AL was ahead 6-5. In the bottom of the seventh, the NL stormed back with a single by Mike Lowell, another double by Miller, and a go-ahead two-run single by Lance Berkman, but the AL retied the game in the seventh on a single by All-Star Robert Fick (!!) and a triple by Omar Vizquel.
And then, of course, no further runs scored. I do think this is a fine baseball game, but I also enjoy the fact that its line in my Excel spreadsheet includes the check function (confirming that the total WPA for the game is +/-.500, within rounding margins) showing ERROR.
2. 1970 - NL 5, AL 4 (12). Palmer and McDowell kept the NL scoreless through 6; Seaver and Jim Merritt shut out the AL through 5. The AL broke through in the top of the sixth when Yaz singled in Ray Fosse, then loaded the bases in the seventh, adding a second run on a Fosse sac fly. The NL also loaded the bases in the seventh, with nobody out; Willie McCovey then hit into a double play, which brought in their first run but went some distance toward keeping them from scoring any others. Brooks Robinson hit a 2-run triple in the top of the eighth to stretch the AL's lead to 4-1.
Dick Dietz led off the bottom of the ninth with a home run; Bud Harrelson followed that with a single, and Joe Morgan matched him one out later. Willie McCovey singled Harrelson home and Morgan to third, and Roberto Clemente tied the game with a sac fly. Then came the extras, in which Claude Osteen shut out the AL for three innings despite giving up doubles in the eleventh and twelfth. Mel Stottlemyre was perfect in the tenth for the AL, and Clyde Wright matched him in the eleventh. But after recording the first two outs in the twelfth, Wright gave up three consecutive singles to Pete Rose, Billy Grabarkewitz, and Jim Hickman. The third of those hits brought Rose home with the winning run, and incidentally, did irreparable damage to Ray Fosse's career.
1. 2008 - AL 4, NL 3 (15). This game cannot be recapped. It can only be linked.
Edit: It should, however, be noted that the 2008 All-Star game is the highest-scoring game in my database, which now includes almost 4000 games. That's pretty awesome.
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