|
|
|
|
Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Thursday, July 02, 2009
Joe Posnanski risks getting banned from the K by coming out against the noble start of Gil “The Ultimate Warrior” Meche
Matt Tolbert then worked Meche for an eight-pitch at-bat which led to a walk. Meche was now up to 113 pitches with two of the best lefty hitters in the American League — Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau — coming up. Well, yes, that was a disaster, but at least now Meche would get taken out of the game and …
No. Meche stayed in to face Joe Mauer. It leads to one of the great questions of philosophy: At what point does idiotic become criminal? Jamie Quirk, who was color commentator on television, talked about how Meche wanted to stay out there. Well OF COURSE Meche wanted to stay out there, but that’s why you have a MANAGER, someone who MANAGES to walk out to the mound and say, “Great effort Gil, but you know, I had to be insane to let you pitch the sixth inning in the first place, I have to get you out of here now.”
|
Support BBTF
Thanks to Tuque for his generous support.
Bookmarks
You must be logged in to view your Bookmarks.
Hot Topics
Newsblog: Himrich’s Top Ten Target Field Foods (7 - 1:47am, May 26)Last: Infinite Yost (Voxter)Newsblog: OT: NBA Monthly Thread, May 2012 (1832 - 1:32am, May 26)Last:  baudibNewsblog: Boston.com: Curt Schilling’s 38 Studios lays off all staff (119 - 1:28am, May 26)Last:  Swedish ChefNewsblog: HP: Baseball is leaving the human factor behind (56 - 1:15am, May 26)Last: The Keith Law Blog Blah Blah (battlekow)Newsblog: T.R. Sullivan: Of Frank Robinson, Milt Pappas and Jim Palmer (8 - 12:40am, May 26)Last: The Gurus DO NOT BourbonSamuraiNewsblog: Wilmoth: Nate McLouth Designated For Assignment (12 - 12:25am, May 26)Last: TriponHall of Merit: Most Meritorious Player: 1973 Discussion (15 - 12:13am, May 26)Last: DanGNewsblog: Bud Selig -- No need for more MLB replay for now - ESPN (86 - 11:59pm, May 25)Last: cardsfanboyNewsblog: The Hall of Very Good: Former Cards Slugger Critical of "LaRussa's Regime" (4 - 11:26pm, May 25)Last: cardsfanboyNewsblog: CSN to host ‘Phillies at the Beach’ on Memorial Day (18 - 11:25pm, May 25)Last: Fielder's the first baseman, Felder is the fielderHall of Merit: Most Meritorious Player: 1972 Ballot (28 - 11:25pm, May 25)Last: lieiamSox Therapy: A Winning Ballclub? (20 - 11:24pm, May 25)Last: DanNewsblog: Matschulat: Did I Miss The "Paul Konerko Is So Overrated OMG" Bandwagon? (27 - 11:16pm, May 25)Last: baudibNewsblog: TBO: Nerdy Rays head north (17 - 10:07pm, May 25)Last: PreservedFishNewsblog: Dodgers want to host NHL's Winter Classic (22 - 9:38pm, May 25)Last: Cris E
|
|
Reader Comments and Retorts
Go to end of page
Statements posted here are those of our readers and do not represent the BaseballThinkFactory. Names are provided by the poster and are not verified. We ask that posters follow our submission policy. Please report any inappropriate comments.
1. SteveF Posted: July 02, 2009 at 07:39 PM (#3240693)They understand it on an intellectual level (most managers are pretty smart people), but I think deep down in their gut they really don't buy it.
Awesome.
So do the Royals have the nads to ban Poz?
He's twice won the Best Sports Columnist in America from the ASPE, he won the Casey Award in 2007 for The Soul of Baseball, and he seems to have the cover story for SI on every other issue.
To the Royals, Rany is basically a glorified blogger. Unless they're suicidal, they're not going to go after Joe Posnanski.
Well, he kind of is just a glorified blogger.
Which is why they feel comfortable banning him, but would never consider going after Posnanski.
So they don't ahve the nads then? Because there is nothing Rany said that Poz also didn't just write with the added bonus that Poz's writing carries much more weight because of his reputation.
Ban Whitlock? Sure. No one likes him anyway. But kicking Posnanski out of the press box (which, again, isn't going to happen) would be stupid in a way that even the Royals can't comprehend.
My main memory of Quirk is repeatedly yelling "you suck" at him after he homered against the Yankees in the late '80s, drawing a reprimand from my father.
Hmm, and now ####### B-R tells me Quirk never homered against the Yankees. So who the #### was I yelling at? And why must the truth ruin a good story? I guess I have no memories of Jamie Quirk.
John Wathan? Larry Owen? Mike Macfarlane?
For almost twenty years, I was convinced that the first game I saw at Yankee stadium was a victory over the Brewers in 1988. Don Slaught hit a homer a few rows back of me. Then I went through and discovered that Slaught never homered at home against the Brewers during his Yankees tenure and that the game was against Minnesota.
John Wathan? Larry Owen? Mike Macfarlane?
To be fair, all those guys do suck.
I'll guess you saw Pat Sheridan homer.
Quirk mindlessly sits there with his eyes bugging out of his head as if someone had shoved yet another Secaucus pig up his unexpecting ass.
And he's still better than ##### Williams.
Those 4th and 5th at bats have to be pretty tough for catchers. The 1st and 2nd late in the season probably aren't much of a picnic either with all the dings they must be carrying around by then.
That's basically what I'm saying.
Which, if anyone in the KC organization reads this page, will probably get me banned.
Maybe it wasn't the Royals at all. And maybe it wasn't a homer. Maybe I wasn't even at the game. Maybe I was playing Microleague and yelled "Boo cluck!" And my dad actually died before I was born.
Jamie Quirk is really making me doubt everything I've ever thought I knew.
You are talking about a team that is carrying Tony (.268 OPS) Pena, Jr., Luis (.382 OPS) Hernandez, AND Tug (.143 OPS) Hulett on the 25 man roster.
Dude, chill. You've just passed into a parallel universe where everything is exactly the same except Jamie Quirk never homered against the Yankees -- which, as parallel universes go, is pretty easy to handle. It's not like you passed into one where everyone wears a goatee.
Or the notion that the thing that players want most of all is to win is false.
Anyway, Morgan remembered some game where Wilson, went back into the clubhouse after pitching something like the 6th inning of a game he'd started. Morgan saw him there and saw that Don Wilson had tears in his eyes, because he was in so much physical pain. But, Morgan proudly recounted that even though his arm was killing him, Wilson went back out and threw another inning or two or maybe finished the game. I forget exactly how Morgan told it. But his story was all about toughness.
And this is how times change, I was staring at the tv screen wondering if Morgan or Miller or whoever else was in the booth would ask whether, leaving aside questions of toughness, it wasn't stupid for Wilson to risk his career or for the Astros to risk the career of a very good pitcher.
Trey Hillman wants his players to have that same mental toughness, it seems.
But from this thread, I now realize that it may turn out that it was Willie Crawford, and it was two triples, and it didn't rain but it snowed instead, and wait - it happened in Los Angeles.
:)
You must be Registered and Logged In to post comments.
<< Back to main