2/07/2007

1943 Homstead Grays

'43 Grays -- comparable to '27 Yanks?
One of the Negro Leagues' best ranks fifth on experts' list

Which team is the greatest in the history of black baseball? That's the kind of question that's likely to spark a debate. While many people can rattle off the great Negro Leagues players, most baseball fans would be hard-put to pick the greatest teams. So as a tribute during Black History Month, MLB.com put the question to Negro Leagues historians and experts. Twenty-two people responded, and 25 teams got at least one vote. The countdown to the greatest five teams begins at No. 5 with the 1943 Homestead Grays. Here is their story.

Hall of Fame sportswriter Leonard Koppett wrote that any man willing to rank another ballclub ahead of the 1927 Yankees would have to make a case based on unimaginable factors.

Brad Snyder agreed.

Snyder, an author who's written extensively about black baseball, won't dare rank another team above those storied Yankees of '27. He is, however, bold enough to say the 1943 Homestead Grays were, at least, the Yankees' equal.

To Snyder, Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig stood no taller than Buck Leonard and Josh Gibson. Both sets of teammates hit homers and drove in runs; both took their teams to championships.

And like the '27 Yankees, the '43 Grays had more than two stars.

With Leonard and Gibson providing power and runs, Cool Papa Bell was running amok on the bases, Jud Wilson was lacing singles everywhere and Ray Brown was winning games every time he pitched.
...
During the '43 season, Gibson hit more homers at Griffith Stadium than the entire Washington Senators team. What's even more astounding, he crushed more pitches over the left- and center-field fences at that ballpark than the entire American League.

"Left field was 405 feet down the line, and there was a spot in left-center that was 457," Snyder said.

"Griffith Stadium was a huge ballpark. So the '43 season was -- at least statistically -- the apex of Gibson's time in Washington with the Grays."

That year also stood out among the legendary Gibson's many great seasons because he was able to overcome a nervous breakdown earlier in the year.

"He sort of has an up-and-down couple of years with his weight and whether or not he's got a tumor," said Robert Ruck, a Negro Leagues historian and a history professor at the University of Pittsburgh. "There's some mental issues or something going on, but it's a little uneven."

Whatever Gibson battled, fans still flocked to Griffith Stadium to watch him that season more than in any other. Snyder said at least 225,000 people in 1943 attended the 26 Grays appearances in Washington, a total that shattered a single-season attendance record set a season before.


Click on the headline and read the whole article. The story on team number four should be posted later today.

Lew Burdette

From mlb.com

Former Braves star Burdette dies
Right-hander threw three complete games in 1957 World Series

Former Braves 1957 World Series hero Lou Burdette passed away Tuesday morning at his home in Winter Garden, Fla., after a lengthy battle with lung cancer. He was 80.
Burdette's '57 Series one to remember

In the 1957 World Series, Burdette won three games, shutting out the mighty New York Yankees twice in a row. Milwaukee, referred to as "Bushville" by some in the Yankee party, triumphed, and nobody was more central to the outcome than Burdette, the Series MVP.
...
But more than anything else, he will be remembered for that magnificent October performance. Three starts against the heavily favored Yanks. Three complete games. Two shutouts. Working on what today would be considered impossibly short rest. A total of two earned runs allowed. And one World Series championship for the Braves.

Long before Mark Fidrych became known for his antics on the mound, Burdette talked to the ball, talked to the batters, talked to the umpires, and talked to himself. This activity, combined with an elaborate set of mannerisms that accompanied his work, made his appearances on the mound unique occasions. But the main thing was, he could pitch.

He was the winning pitcher in one of the greatest games ever pitched. when Pittsburgh's Harvey Haddix threw 12 perfect innings against Milwaukee, but lost in the 13th on May 26, 1959. Burdette, who had a well-honed sense of humor, famously asked for a hefty raise the following winter, reasoning that if he had won against the greatest game ever pitched, he must be pretty deserving himself.

Farewell to a hero
Crafty pitcher led Braves to glory in '57

Burdette, who was 80, had planned to attend the Braves' 50th anniversary celebration of the '57 championship in August in Milwaukee.

"I talked to him a couple of months ago and he said he was coming," said Johnny Logan, who played shortstop during the Braves' glory years in Milwaukee. "I was looking forward to seeing him again. This is so sad. He loved this team and the people here."


From jsonline.com

My dad had a Lew Burdette glove that he used when we played catch. And he let me use it when I first started playing organized ball.

As for the Lew/Lou thing for his first name:

Born Selva Lewis Burdette Jr., he sometimes signed his autograph as "Lew" and other times as "Lou." He was commonly known in his playing days as Lew, and standard baseball references routinely list his name as Lew.

It must be noted that his family said Tuesday that its choice was "Lou" and that was the way the name would appear on his gravestone. No disrespect is meant here by the use of Lew, because that was the way the name looked at the time of his greatest achievements and that is how he is remembered in the official records of those epic events.

Lew or Lou, either way he was a unique pitcher and a major talent. It is sad for Braves fans to lose him, on this, the 50th anniversary of the World Series championship.

Baseball History -- February 7

Complete entry for February 7 is at BaseballLibrary.com HERE.

Highlighted entries:

1994
Basketball superstar
Michael Jordan signs a minor league contract with the Chicago White Sox. He is invited to spring training with the team as a non-roster player.

1962

Lawyer Melvin Belli obtains a writ laying claim to Willie Mays -- among other assets -- unless the Giants pay him the judgment awarded by a jury in January. Belli claims the club failed to file a motion for a new trial before the deadline.

Wow. Just wow.

1959

White Sox President Mrs. Dorothy Rigney agrees to sell the team to Bill Veeck for a reported $2.7 million. Chicago insurance broker Charles O. Finley allows that he can match the price. Charles Comiskey will try and stop Veeck from buying the Sox but will be unsuccessful.

Veeck, Finley, Comiskey, and $2.7 million. Sounds like the start of a joke.

2/06/2007

58 Days to Opening Day

April 5, 2007 is Opening Day for the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers at Fox Cities Stadium. That is just 58 days from today.

The number 58 is represented by Appleton Baseball Hall of Famer Carlos May.


May had 58 RBI for the WHite Sox in 1974. That link on his name above takes you to his Wikipedia page. That page is also where the picture used in this post is from.

THIS will turn everyone around...

What to do when a poll shows that over 70% people disagree with your point of view? Write an article for Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette that earns the headline:

City poll respondents uninformed

The headline is being kind. The opening salvo:

The article about downtown revitalization and the proposed stadium, "Poll backs downtown, not stadium/Ballpark called crucial to plans” (Jan. 21), was certainly interesting and thorough. But after reading it, I still had two very big questions: Who were these people that were polled and in what city do they live?

If the answer is some random cross-section of Fort Wayne residents, then I have another question: Under what rock have they been living?

Many of the responses were completely ignorant and some were down-right frightening. Here are a few about the proposed stadium:

“We already have a good stadium in a good location.” Not quite, says the owner of the Wizards. They want a new stadium. They want it downtown. They will help pay for not only the stadium, but also some additional development. Or they could move the team to a new city.


I haven't seen any comments by the Wizard wanting a new stadium. I have seen that they are willing to put up money if the downtown project moves forward. That is a little different that "Build this or we leave."
“There’s no interstate exits to downtown.” What?! You mean I can’t take a 10-lane noise-polluting Autobahn right into the ballgame? We should be glad that we can get anywhere in the city in a very timely fashion without having to get onto an interstate.

Monthly bus pass or Prius owner? Sarcasm works both ways.

There is more, but the toppers are in the last two paragraphs:
Thirty percent feel that improvement or “revitalization” of downtown Fort Wayne is not important. You folks need to pack up and leave right now. Do not pass “Go,” do not collect $200. If you choose to remain huddled in whatever cushy little corner of the city you call home, I implore you to talk to somebody who remembers what downtown used to be like. Their eyes light up. They get a huge smile on their face. And they begin to tell you the first of an endless number of fantastic stories.

Fort Wayne! Love it or leave it, hippie taxpayer!
If you have no interest in finding out what that feels like, then you have no business living here. For the rest of you, here’s the bottom line: Downtown can be great again. It’s going to take big, bold steps. It’s going to take risks. It’s going to take time. Grand Wayne Center was a good first step. The main library has just re-opened. Harrison Square is perfect to take things to the next level. Starting now we can make downtown the amazing destination it should be. Who knows? Maybe someday we’ll even host a Super Bowl.

Now that's just crazy enough to change some minds. I'm sure the next poll will have 70% or more people in favor of the project. Calling people ignorant and mocking their positions beats well-reasoned arguments every day of the week.

It's for charity...

The Bees have a neat way to raise some money for some friends starting soon.

NASCAR Contest Fundraiser Takes Another Lap

Entries are being accepted for the 3rd annual Friends of Community Field NASCAR Raceday Contest. The contest gives you 25 chances to win up to $250. A total of $500 is awarded each week. The contest starts with the Daytona 500 on Sunday, February 18th and runs through September 16th. Each entry costs $25.

Each week, entrants are randomly assigned three of the top 30 starting positions in the race. How the drivers in these starting positions finish the race determines your points earned for the week. All three drivers' points are added to determine your score. The top four scores will win a cash prize with first place winning $250, second place $150, third place $75 and fourth place $25. In case of ties, the prizes will be combined and split.

Winners will not need to contact anyone to claim their prize. The Friends of Community Field will issue checks by mail after the points are tabulated each week.


If I could just scrape together $25. Friends of Community Field is a non-profit corporation that raises money for capital improvements to the home of the Bees.

New Season Resolutions

There are a few resolutions that I am making for the 2007 season. I'll share them before Fan Fest on April 3. A sneak peek: Do not complain about the weather.

That being said:
Current Conditions -10°

Wind: W 8 mph Humidity: 65% Dew Point: -17 Visibility: 10.0 mile Barometer: 30.40 Windchill -27

Note. Not complaining. Just reporting.

Greatest Negro Leauge teams

MLB.com has this:

The greatest teams of black baseball
Experts' top five to be revealed during Black History Month

Baseball fans and Negro League historians have long appreciated Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson, Oscar Charleston and other iconic figures in black baseball.

Those same fans, though, have been slow to embrace the teams for which these stars played.

Bob Kendrick isn't surprised.

"The tendency is to focus more on these characters," said Kendrick, the marketing director of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, Mo. "They were great characters -- great nicknames, great flair. So the teams have almost been a little bit de-emphasized in the minds of baseball fans."
...
But which were the greatest of those great teams? The choices are many. Was it the 1910 Chicago Leland Giants? Maybe it was the '26 Baltimore Elite Giants. The '46 Newark Eagles? The possibilities are many.


Team number five will be revealed today.

M's Mailbag (2/6)

Corey Brock answers fan questions again.

Not much involving ex-Rattlers until you get down near the end, but it is worth it.

What's the latest regarding Mark Lowe's rehabilitation? I heard that some Mariners insiders are afraid his injury is career threatening. I hope that it isn't. What have you heard? -- Jon P., Kirkland, Ore.

Seattle trainer Rick Griffin said recently that Lowe could resume throwing next month and, if all goes well, could return to pitching in a competitive environment in mid-May or early June That's certainly good news for the hard-throwing 23-year-old, who impressed during a rookie season that saw him open his career with a club-record 17 2/3 scoreless innings.

Lowe had elbow surgery in October to repair a defect in the cartilage. He was given every scenario about if and when he could return to pitching.

"He's still working on strength and range-of-motion improvement," Griffin said. "He has not starting to throw. With this particular type of surgery, you can't guarantee anything, and, unfortunately, that's what you have to tell the player. That's one of the reasons we're going slow. This kid has got tremendous upside. We want to give him every opportunity to heal. It's an operation where the consequences can be kind of bad."

Baseball History -- February 6

Complete entry for February 6 is at BaseballLibrary.com s HERE.

Highlighted entries:
1968
Voters in King County (Washington) approve by 62 percent a $40 million bond issue to build a domed, multipurpose stadium.

This was for the Pilots, but that didn't happen. The Kingdom did wind up being built for the Mariners and the Seahawks.
1891
The New York Giants' salary list is leaked to the press. It shows a total player payroll of $54,600 with
Buck Ewing's $5,500 salary topping the scale.

Think about those numbers for a minute.
1887
At Hot Springs, Arkansas, Albert Spalding meets with the Chicago players and exacts from each man a pledge of total abstinence from drinking during the coming season. With the entire outfield gone from last year's team and P Jim McCormick holding out at home in NJ, the champion White Stockings will have to rely on young players.

No comment. None at all.

2/05/2007

59 Days to Opening Day

April 5, 2007 is Opening Day for the Timber Rattlers at Fox Cities Stadium. That is just 59 days from today.

The number 59 is represented by Appleton Baseball Hall of Famer Brian Downing.

Downing had 59 RBI for the Angels in 1989.

Photo from Sports Encyclopedia.com

This new guy is going to be just fine

While checking the mysa.com for news about the Missions, I found this story from last week about Brian Anderson. He was the radio announcer for the Missions is is now the new TV announcer for the Milwaukee Brewers.

Anderson's artwork at Wolff leads to Brewers job

A half-hour before Brian Anderson's first radio broadcast, amid the chaos of the first game at Wolff Stadium, a man arrived at the press box with a telegram for him.

Anderson was stunned, especially considering the recent St. Mary's graduate had never even seen a telegram. It was from his father in Austin, and it contained one simple bit of advice for a play-by-play man: "Paint me a picture."

He did at the Missions game that night — April 18, 1994 — and more than a thousand times afterward, from El Paso to Jackson, Miss., from 1994-98 and 2000-03. He developed a polished, traditional style, one that meshed well with veteran partner Roy Acuff.


Read the whole story to find out who sent the telegram and a lot of other good stuff about the new member of the Brewer broadcast team.

One last Super Bowl note...

Now, I like Van Halen. Both the David Lee Roth and the Sammy Hagar versions. But, if you're the Colts and you've just won the Super Bowl, do you really want to have the NFL play this song immediately after the game.

Hey, Baby, Whew!
I know that you believe in me,
That's all I ever need, uh huh.
No, No, nothing's gonna stop me,
Nothing will be scaring me, oh no
Hey baby, it's the only way out
Oh, little darling,
C'mon what's it all about?

Standing on top of the world
For a little while.
Standing on top of the world
Gonna give it all we got.

Now, I am squarely on the side that We Are the Champions is an incredible cliche by now, but there had to be a better choice out there....like nothing. Letting the Colts bask in their achievement, maybe?

Lombardi didn't get carried off the field in Super Bowl II to the strains of My Way.

A Tale of Two Cities

It was the best of times.


It was the worst of times.
It was the season of Light.


It was the season of darkness.

Colt photos from Indianapolis Star. Bear Photos from Chicago Tribune.

Another Correction

Yesterday's post about Super Bowl XXIII's halftime show was partially wrong..which makes it wrong. The Elvis Presto halftime show is still the worst in the history of the NFL, but Super Bowl XXIII is the game with the Joe Montana to John Taylor TD in the last minute of the game to win for the 49ers, NOT Doug Williams and his spectacular second quarter.

CORRECTED

Baseball History -- February 5

Complete entry for February 5 is at BaseballLibrary.com HERE.

Highlighted entries:

1956
New York Mayor Robert Wagner and Brooklyn Borough President Frank Cashmore sponsor a bill to create a Brooklyn Sports Center Authority to build a $30 million sports center in downtown Brooklyn.

The ML owners reject the players' request for an increase in the minimum salary from $6,000 to $7,000.


One had nothing to do with the other.
1942
In one of their best trades ever, the Braves get minor-leaguer
Tommy Holmes from the Yankees for Buddy Hassett and Gene Moore. Hassett will hit .284, then join the Navy and will not make it back to the ML. The much-traveled Moore will be traded by the Yanks in less than three weeks. Holmes, with three .300+ seasons in the IL, could not break into New York's all star outfield. In 10 seasons with the Braves he will hit over .300 and win the MVP in 1948.

Gotta love when that happens....to the Yankees.
1886
The patent dispute between Thayer & Wright and
A.G. Spalding & Brothers goes to court in Chicago. Thayer is the Harvard pitcher who claimed to have invented the catcher's mask, while G. Wright and Spalding are former teammates on the champion Boston Red Stockings. In the eventual settlement, Thayer's claims will be upheld and he will receive a royalty on masks sold from Spalding's company. Spalding will buy out many rivals on his way to establishing a monopoly in the sporting goods business.

So everybody won?

2/04/2007

60 Days to Opening Day

April 5, 2007 is Opening Day at Fox Cities Stadium for the Timber Rattlers. That is 60 days from today.

The number 60 is represented by Appleton Baseball Hall of Famer La Mar Hoyt.

Hoyt had 60 strikeouts for the Chicago White Sox in 1981.

Image from Baseball Cards of the Minor Leagues.

Gehrig's Football Career

On Sunday's during the off-season, Rattler Radio is running excerpts from Luckiest Man, Jonathan Eig's biography of Lou Gehrig. This week, how Gehrig began his collegiate athletic career at Columbia...as a football player.

Gehrig [a halfback] also played defensive tackle and punted. In his first game, a 48-3 victory over Ursinus College, he scored two touchdowns. The school's Alumni News noted: "Gehrig is the beef expert and has mastered the science of going where he is sent, for at least five yards. His plunges seem to carry force, for they invariably sent the defenders back when they tackled him." He may have been the school's finest athlete, but he somehow managed to make it seem utterly unglamorous. Yearbooks and newspapers routinely described him as "consistent".

The worst Super Bowl half-time show ever

Super Bowl XXIII should be remembered for the performances of Doug Williams and Timmy Smith and the biggest quarter in Super Bowl history.

But, I remember it for three things. Getting a case of Coca-Cola on the day of the game to get a pair of 3-D glasses for the halftime show, but the case didn't have the glasses in it. Drinking eighteen cans out of a case of Coca-Cola and getting one of the biggest caffine rushes (and subsequent caffine headaches ever). Being glad that I didn't have the 3-D glasses because the halftime show was the worst ever. Don't believe me? Just click on the YouTube video below. You will know what is coming when Bob Costas introduces Elvis Presto.

Why was there no uproar over this? There should have been something equal to the outrage over the Janet Jackson thing a few years ago.

Prospect Insider with more, um, Prospect Inside stuff...

Jason at Prospect Insider continues his top 50 list of Mariner prospects with numbers 21-30.
These prospects aren't ranked 21-30. They are just considered 21-30 on his list.

Players in this ranking are:
Mike Wilson
Michael Garciaparra
Luis Valbuena
Alex Liddi
Oswaldo Navarro
Carlos Peguero
Ryan Rowland-Smith
Caesar Jimenez
Austin Bibens-Dirkx
Craig James

The two players on the list likely to be Rattlers this season are Liddi and Peguero.

Comments on Liddi:

The only thing “wrong” about Liddi’s profile is that he doesn’t bat lefthanded. He’s the youngest player in the top 30, stands 6-4 and weighs 185 - already - and possesses solid all-around athletic skills that suggest he could stick at the hot corner, a big bonus, and could make an easy transition to the outfield if necessary.

Liddi also has above average bat speed and a good understanding of the game of baseball. The Italian Stallion even put all those tools to good use in his first season in the states, hitting .291 and slugging .450 combined between the Rookie and Midwest Leagues. How much power Liddi will develop is the big question. Can he continue to sharpen his plate skills year after year and turn into a Joe Crede or even David Wright in terms of home run power? Will his strike zone judgment follow suit to allow him to maintain a high average while he’s mashing for power?


Jason, please, there is only one Italian Stallion. He is not The Big Ragu either, because that's taken.

Comments on Peguero:

The Mariners are laced with young, high-ceiling, high-risk talents in short-season and low A ball, and Peguero may have the highest offensive ceiling of them all. He shared the rookie league lead in home runs before getting a taste of the Northwest League.

Peguero, like Gerardo Avila and most other kids in the system, must learn to make consistent contact and his 83 whiffs in 256 PAs are proof of that. He has yet to improve on his skill to work the count, but he has raw power that rivals any in the entire system, including Wladimir Balentien.

Peguero has enough athletic ability to play a corner outfield spot but could end up at first base where his bat may play well enough. If it does, the Mariners could be sitting pretty with a power-hitting lefty. But the Dominican native has holes in his swing that won’t be easy to correct.

A good post about the Extra Innings and DirectTV

Matt Simmons at DRaysBay has a post about the impending deal that would move MLB's Extra Inning package exclusively to Direct TV.

It is thoughful, hits all the high points, gives the perspective of a baseball fan, and uses a Bruce Springsteen song for the title.

There's 57 channels and nothing's on...

I love the MLB Extra Innings package. I love TELLING people to buy it. I think it's a great deal for several reasons. First, I simply love baseball. I like watching a game other than the Rays game or our bi-weekly Red Sox/Yankees series getting shoved down our throats. Being a history buff, I love looking at the out-of-town ballparks and seeing rivalries that I can't always see with network or regional cable coverage. Being a sports broadcaster, I love seeing how other teams handle their broadcasts in other markets. I love listening to legendary voices like Vin Scully make a ho-hum game sound exciting. I like seeing the exciting plays during a game, and not during a 18-second recap on ESPN News. Finally, I love MLB Extra Innings simply because it's better than most of the garbage network TV has to offer during the summer. Dancing with the Stars?!? Are you kidding me? I'd rather watch the Royals and Indians any day over that mess.

So why would MLB move its very successful Extra Innings package from the 75 million cable subscribers to a DirectTV audience that is 1/5 of that audience? Well, this may come as a surprise to you, but it's all about... MONEY! Even though millions of people pay $175 every summer religiously to watch the out-of-market games Extra Innings offers, MLB just can't keep its eyes off a seven-year deal worth $700 million overall. DirectTV would also be the creator of the new MLB channel, but that's nothing since the main draw to Extra Innings is the games.

Do the math. That's $100 million per year, divided by 30 teams comes out to $3.3 million per year, per team. So for slightly more than a one-year deal for Mark Hendrickson, MLB has said, "Bend over if you want to watch us."

Thanks, but I'll pass. And I have a feeling millions more will as well if this deal does indeed happen.
...
I think the biggest problem with this whole idea, other than it stinks as a hasty money grab, is MLB thinks it is the king of the world when it comes to sports. I hate to inform them this, but they're wrong. Yes baseball is as American as mom and apple pie, and people are still showing up in droves to watch their favorite team even if amphetamines are in every coffee pot in a big league lockerroom, but MLB's ego is getting a bit too big. The reason why the NFL can get $700 million PER YEAR with DirectTV is because Americans love football. It doesn't matter if their home team is 3-8 come December, they still want to watch every game offered as the playoff push comes. In baseball, not so much. Even though there have been some exciting playoff races, and great rivalries born in the past five seasons MLB Extra Innings has been around, most people can fall back on typical summer things to do other than subscribing to DirectTV to see their favorite teams.

Even though Extra Innings will likely go away to us cable subscribers, I can live without it. I'll just watch more Rays games, new episodes of "Dirty Jobs" and "Mythbusters", and the occasional Fox telecast which always seems to feature the Yankees, Red Sox, Cubs, Braves, and Mets for some reason.



One argument that may be made by MLB is that fans can still watch the Extra Innings package on their computers at MLB.com.

I can't find the rebuttal now, but it went something like this on another blog. "I'm supposed to be on the computer for eight hours at work, come home and watch a three hour baseball game on my computer at home? No thanks."

Cub countdown continues

Bleed Cubbie Blue has been counting down the top 100 Cubs of all time.

Their countdown has reached #15. The two that have caught my eye were #18 Greg Maddux and #16 Mark Grace.

Both Maddux and Grace have odd baseball cards at their respective posts.

I am not posting them here. You just need to go check them out. Really. You need to just go there. Now.

Oh, grow up....

Here are two stories from the front page of mlb.com:

First Fantasy Summit to be at The Jake
MLB.com, Indians to host special live event for fans Tuesday

They might not be wearing an Indians cap. In fact, quite often, they're actually wearing the gear of the Tribe's opponent.

Nonetheless, they still get in Travis Hafner's ear before an at-bat and encourage him to come through at the plate.

Is it Hafner's endearing personality that they find impossible to resist? Is it sheer respect for his accomplishments that causes them to cheer him on?

Nah, they're just looking to pad their fantasy baseball stats.

"People will come up to you and say, 'Do something good, I've got you on my fantasy team,'" Hafner says.

The man known as Pronk takes no offense, because he's one of them.

For when the NFL season rolls around, he, too, becomes an unabashed supporter of players he might otherwise not be rooting for. If you're a member of one of his three fantasy football teams -- including the cheekily named "Pronktically Unbeatable" squad -- you have Hafner's attention.


Oh, please. Make it stop.

Yes, the fantasy sports craze has enveloped all segments of society, from the Average Joe to the big-time jock.

The Indians have certainly taken notice, which is why they're opening up their ballpark to Cleveland's finest fantasy fanatics.

In partnership with MLB.com, the club will hold its first-ever Fantasy Baseball Summit from 6-9 p.m. ET Tuesday at Jacobs Field. For $75, fans get parking in the players' lot, a buffet dinner in the visitors' clubhouse and two drink tickets.

They'll also have access to a Q&A session with Indians general manager Mark Shapiro and assistant GM Chris Antonetti and be in attendance for a live broadcast of MLB.com's Fantasy 411 radio show, hosted by Mike Siano and Cory Schwartz.


Mark, is Shin-soo Choo going to be a regular or will you just have him platoon and face right-handers? What about Asdrubal Cabrera? Should I draft him? Is he going to make the club out of spring training?

I've played fantasy baseball once. In college. When I found myself rooting for Floyd Youmans, I just had to stop.

Another story? Sure.

Boston's Hansen wins first PBGL title
Red Sox righty gets past representative from Damon's project

An hour before the scheduled start of Saturday's first-year finals of the Professional Baseball Gaming League, top-seeded Seth McClung, the Devils Rays pitcher, sat practicing where the video-game finals would take place.

"Look who's the most dedicated," McClung said with a smile. "I was up real late like the rest of the guys, but you see I'm here practicing, while the rest of 'em are sleeping."

McClung's zeal for preparation could not be questioned, yet it didn't translate to victory on this day. The PBGL regular-season champion had to settle for a tie for third place in the finals.

He lost in the semifinals to Steve Robison, a representative from Yankees outfielder Johnny Damon's Wounded Warriors project. Robison in turn lost the title to Red Sox pitcher Craig Hansen.

Hansen, a 6-foot-5, 185-pound right-hander preparing for his second Major League season, defeated Robison two straight in a best-of-three competition in Gran Prix-style racing. Hansen won handily by choosing the optimum type of car for each race, depending on its variables.


I know it's for charity, but the Devil Rays and Red Sox must be sooooo proud. Just like I'm so proud that I once played JOUST for an hour on one quarter in the basement of the UW-Platteville Student Union. I wish that it would have been for charity though.

It wouldn't be a a video game tournament unless their was a Super Bowl preview. Who won?

In Friday's "Battle of the Commissioners" that opened the competition, celebrated hip-hop entertainer Snoop Dogg, using Indianapolis Colts players, defeated Damon, playing with Chicago Bears players, in a 16-10 squeaker.

Damon was concerned about being routed, based on the pre-battle scuttlebutt, but the game was tight all the way. Perhaps a comment that Damon savored the most came when Snoop Dogg blurted at some point in the second half, "Man, you're making me work for my paper [money]."

Baseball History -- February 4

Complete entry for February 4 is at BaseballLibrary.com is HERE.

Highlighted entries:
1990
The St. Petersburg Pelicans get home runs from
Lamar Johnson and Steve Kemp
and rout the West Palm Beach Tropics 12–4 to win the first-ever championship of the Senior Professional Baseball Association.

Lamar Johnson is a member of the Appleton Baseball Hall of Fame.
1969
Attorney
Bowie Kuhn is a compromise choice for commissioner of baseball and is elected on a pro-tem basis.

Fifteen years later the compromise left office.

1893
The first recorded version of "Casey at the Bat," as sung by Russell Hunting, hits the music charts. DeWolf Hopper's more famous version will not be released until
October 1906.

The first version that I remember was Disney's Casey at the Bat. Then, the sequel Casey Bats Again. Now, since it's Disney, there is no way that YouTube could have this. So, I'll have to go with this Rocky and Bullwinkle version.

What? You thought Jay Ward would let Bullwinkle hit a home run?

2/03/2007

61 Days to Opening Day

April 5, 2007 is Opening Day for the Timber Rattlers at Fox Cities Stadium. That is just 61 days away.

The number 61 is represented by about the person you would think:
Roger Maris hit 61 home runs in 1961. And how did he feel about that?
"I never wanted all this hoopla. All I wanted is to be a good ball player and hit twenty-five or thirty homers, drive in a hundred runs, hit .280 and help my club win pennants. I just wanted to be one of the guys, an average player having a good season."

No, really. How did he feel about that?
"It would have been a helluva lot more fun if I had not hit those sixty-one home runs."

Okay. I won't ask again.

Baseball card from BaseballAlmanac.

The Hucksters

This week's Baseball on TV episode is from season seven of Happy Days. The title of the episode was The Hucksters. It originally aired on February 5, 1980. The tie to baseball is through who you would expect on a TV show set in Milwaukee in the 1950's.

Mr. C comes back from a hardware convention and somone gives him the idea to ADVERTISE on TV. The first attempt draws in three people (well, two people plus Fonzie). Richie has an idea to hire an ad agency that is run by a guy (Mr. Van Buren) who lectured in some of his (Richie's) classes.

I'm going to let Happy Days Online (Yes. There is such a site) take over here.
Howard talks to Mr. Van Buren at the house. Howard would be happy with a 25% increase in business, but Van Buren guarantees him a 40% increase in 2 months for complete control of the commercial. Van Buren sees the 4 family members in the commercial. They later shoot a commercial at the hardware store. They have a new slogan. Van Buren sends Richie to look younger. They bring in a kid - Billy. Little sister Joanie is then replaced by Scuffy a dog. Howard is replaced by Bart, a younger looking man. Howard is Iggy the stock boy. Marion is replaced by the young and blond Ingrid. Fonzie stops by to watch the filming. Henry Aaron makes a special guest appearance during the rehearsal. Fonzie says Howard is lying and asks him if it is legal. Van Buren says it is not completely clean. Marion, Richie, and Joanie arrive. They film the commercial live and Howard interrupts the commercial to show his real family. Hank Aaron talks to Richie. Fonzie then tells everyone to come to the store. Back at the house, Hank says goodbye to everyone.

Iggy the stock boy, man that still cracks me up today. Plus, just the random way that Hammerin' Hank is brought out at the end of the live commercial...Classic.

Dear, Giant Fans...

From AP

Giants send letter to fans about Bonds

Giants owner Peter Magowan sent a letter to about 27,000 season-ticket holders this week explaining why the club decided to re-sign free agent slugger Barry Bonds for another season.

"The process of negotiating this contract was complex, lengthy and highly unconventional," Magowan wrote Monday in his letter, obtained by The Associated Press on Friday. "This decision was not taken lightly and we spent significant time evaluating all of the elements and circumstances surrounding the negotiations before we made a final determination to move forward."

What drives Jim Parque?

Today's article in the Seattle Times about pitcher Jim Parque is interesting to me at least. Parque has been out of baseball for a few years. Things were going along great...

He founded the Big League Edge baseball academy and soon had a thriving business, one in which the only baseball action he saw was "messing around" in batting practice.

That is, until a junior-college prospect attending the camp last July saw Parque on the mound and called out jokingly, "Oh, there's the has-been!"

Parque dared the player to step into the box against him. On his first pitch, he sent an 82-mph fastball whizzing down the heart of the plate.

"I hadn't thrown anything that hard in two years," Parque said. "I didn't really know what to think."

That one pitch led to others, some sessions of playing catch and later some more serious workouts that resulted in Parque, who turns 32 next week, signing a minor-league deal with the Mariners on Thursday. A pitcher who started Game 1 of the 2000 Division Series against Seattle while pitching for the White Sox will get a spring-training invitation and attempt to resurrect a career long presumed dead.


"Oh, there's the has-been!" will have to be added to the daily phrases I use to motivate myself. It will go right up there with "Stupid Loser!", "You are a moron!", and "Idiot!"

The Big Game Bandwagon

Once again, MILB.com jumps on the big event bandwagon with a story about what might have been....

Bears' Benson passed on baseball
Super Bowl running back could have been 'next Bo Jackson'

[Cedric] Benson will take the field Sunday in Miami, looking to help the Chicago Bears win their first Super Bowl in more than two decades. But [Jesse] Benavidez, who coaches baseball at Robert E. Lee High School in Midland, Texas, believes that Benson could just as easily have been helping the Dodgers in their playoff push last October.

Benavidez has been the coach at RELHS for 16 years and was one of the first people to see Benson's potential as a baseball player. He certainly wasn't the last, though. The Dodgers, also sensing they may have found a Bo Jackson clone, selected Benson in the 12th round of the 2001 First-Year Player Draft, despite the fact he had already committed to the University of Texas to play football.

"He had all the tools to make it in the big leagues," Benavidez said. "To me, looking at him was like looking at the next Bo Jackson. He was a center fielder, and he had the tools. If he had spent more time with baseball, he would have been great at baseball. But they play so much football here that he didn't have a chance to participate in [serious] baseball [instruction] until the very end.


I think Benson made the right choice. Even if he wound up playing for the Bears.

Ballpark Food?

This was posted last week, but it's new to me...Brian VanOchten of the Grand Rapids Press has a blog and is not afraid to use it, especially when it comes to rating new potential foods at Fifth Third Ballpark, the home of the Midwest League Champion West Michigan Whitecaps, after a taste test.

Brian has a top five, but all you really need to know are the top two:

1. The pretzel bun for hamburgers and other gourmet sandwiches. "You can use it with any one of our gourmet sandwiches. It's my favorite," he said.

The skinny: It got a big thumps up from the rest of the testers. Expect it to be offered at the ballpark this season.

2. Deep-fried Pepsi and Mountain Dew: "It's unique and different," Timon said.

It's made by combining the soft drinks with a dough batter, frying it in zero-trans-fat oil (sounds like a health food, huh?), pouring Pepsi or Mountain Dew syrup over the doughnut-hole-shaped confections and finishing them off by drizzling Pepsi- or Mountain Dew-flavored icing on top.

The skinny: It sounds disgusting, but it should be a big hit with kids. I tried it but wasn't that impressed. The flavors are a little too subtle and I'd rather get soft-serve ice cream for dessert. For kids, though, it's a home run.


See, the caffine in the Mountain Dew fires through the arteries and blasts out the clogs. At least that's my theory. Who says ballpark food isn't healthy? You? Over there? Well, you are so wrong.

Outage soon

I see that Blogger has a scheduled outage coming up in about 90 minutes. Plus, I have some things that I need to take care of here. The rest of the days posts will be up later this afternoon. Because, well, quite simply, I don't have a life.

My food is talking to me again

We can't help everyone. But everyone can help someone.

Favre 4Ever!

He's coming back.

The answer came in a phone call to general manager Ted Thompson Friday morning right around the time Green Bay was warming up to a toasty 5 degrees.

"I think I'll go one more time," quarterback Brett Favre told Thompson.


This play from the end of the last Packer game at County Stadium is why we like Favre in Wisconsin.

Welcome back.

Speaking of Jay

One of his jobs this season is to apparently point out my mistakes on this blog.

Earlier this week, I wrote that the Packers selected Rich Campbell instead of Joe Montanta in the 1979 draft.

That was WRONG! Montana was drafted by the 49ers in the 1979 draft. Campbell was in the 1981 draft. The Packers took Eddie Lee Ivery with the 15th pick in the '81 draft.

Corrected.

Alumni Report

Plenty going on in Jay's Timber Rattler Alumni Report at the Rattler home page.

For example:

Northern League
Winnipeg Goldeyes
Agreed to terms with INF Brent Metheny ('03,'04)

Brent is proving he will go anywhere to play baseball. After playing for the Mid-Missouri Mavericks of the Frontier League in 2005, he was back in affiliated ball in '06, playing for [Omar] Munoz and the Kannapolis Intimidators in the White Sox organization. 2007 leads him back to independent ball (at least to start), as the 26 year old heads up to Canada .


Look down the page a bit and see how well Metheny hit in Colombia this season.

American Association
Coastal Bend Aviators agreed to terms with RHP Bryan Heaston ('03,'04)
Heaston played independent ball prior to coming to the Rattlers in '03 and returned there after his release from Mariners following the 2004 season. He spent the 2005 season with the Edinburg Roadrunners before joining Coastal Bend in '06 and going 7-4. Former Timber Rattler Derrick Van Dusen ('01) also played for the Aviators last season.

Australian Claxton Shield Tournament
Craig Anderson ('00) - 3 G, 0-0, 1 SV, 1.86 ERA in 9.2 IP, 8 K, 3 BB
Dan Floyd ('01,'02) - 15 AB, 2 RBI, 1 SB, .400 AVG

Floyd hit very well for his Western Australia squad, but didn't have much help as they went 0-5. Floyd's .400 average was second best in the tournament. Floyd last played in the States for Rockford of the Frontier League in 2004. Anderson 's New South Wales team made it through the first round a perfect 5-0, but lost twice to Victoria in the championship round to finish second.


More names and stats at the link.

Baseball History -- February 3

Complete entry for February 3 is at BaseballLibrary.com HERE.

Highlighted entries:
1994
Atlanta OF
Ron Gant breaks his right leg in a motorbike accident a week after signing the largest single-season contract in history.

Whoops!
1982
Minor league C Angel Rodriguez, who played for the Pirates' Alexandria club (Carolina League) last season, is suspended from organized baseball for one year for telling opposing Latin American batters what pitches were coming. Rodriguez had been suspended by the Pirates last season after being caught in the act during an August 19th game against Lynchburg.

It's funny in Bull Durham. It's not a good idea in real life.
1934
Powel Crosley, local millionaire, heads a syndicate that buys just over half the stock in the Cincinnati Reds from Sidney Weil. No price is announced. Crosley, owner of a 500,000 watt radio station, is on the board of the Central Trust Bank, and it is the bank that had loaned money to Sidney Weil and his syndicate to buy the Reds. Weil was in the process of raising money to pay off the bank when Crosley's purchase takes place. The Reds' home park will be renamed Crosley Field.

Is this a conflict of interest? I can't tell.
1900
Rival forces fight for control of the Union Park ball grounds in Baltimore. John McGraw's men camp around a fire at 3B.
Ned Hanlon, his former manager in Baltimore in the 1890s, now manager of Brooklyn and still president of the Baltimore club in the National League, has forces camped around 1B.

Wasn't this in Gangs of New York?

2/02/2007

62 Days to Opening Day

April 5, 2007 is Opening Day at Fox Cities Stadium for the Timber Rattlers. That is 62 days from today.

The number 62 is represented by Appleton Baseball Hall of Famer Terry Forster:

Forster appeared in 62 games for the White Sox in 1972. He was a member of the Appleton Foxes in 1970 and went 6-1 in ten games. He was in the majors in 1971.

He is best known (at least to members of my generation) for this:
While with the Braves, he began gaining notice for his weight problems. The 6'3" Forster reportedly weighed 270 pounds while with Atlanta. David Letterman gave the left-hander national notoriety in 1985, when he referred to the lefty as a "fat tub of goo" on his Late Night show. Forster later appeared as a guest on Letterman's show following the comments and even recorded a novelty song called "Fat Is In".

I met and interviewed Forster at his induction a few years ago. Great guy with good humor about the Letterman thing.

Again. Nothing on YouTube. What the heck good is that site if the Forster appearance on Letterman is there.

The card is from BaseballAlmanac.com

Babe! I Got You, Babe!

First D.J.: Okay, campers, rise and shine, and don't forget your booties 'cause it's cooooold out there today.
Second D.J.: It's coooold out there every day. What is this, Miami Beach?
First D.J.: Not hardly. And you know, you can expect hazardous travel later today with that, you know, that, uh, that blizzard thing.
Second D.J.: [mockingly] That blizzard - thing. That blizzard - thing. Oh, well, here's the report! The National Weather Service is calling for a "big blizzard thing!"
First D.J.: Yessss, they are. But you know, there's another reason why today is especially exciting.
Second D.J.: Especially cold!
First D.J.: Especially cold, okay, but the big question on everybody's lips...
Second D.J.: - On their chapped lips...
First D.J.: - On their chapped lips, right: Do ya think Phil is gonna come out and see his shadow?
Second D.J.: Punxsutawney Phil!
First D.J.: Thats right, woodchuck-chuckers - it's
[in unison]
First D.J.: GROUNDHOG DAY!
Second D.J.: GROUNDHOG DAY!

It's Groundhog Day!

You want a prediction about the weather, you're asking the wrong Phil. I'll give you a winter prediction: It's gonna be cold, it's gonna be grey, and it's gonna last you for the rest of your life.

I'm a god. I'm not *the* God... I don't think.

This is one time where television really fails to capture the true excitement of a large squirrel predicting the weather.

I don't deserve someone like you. But If I ever could, I swear I would love you for the rest of my life.

Somebody asked me today, "Phil, if you could be anywhere in the world, where would you like to be?" And I said to him, "Prob'ly right here - Elko, Nevada, our nation's high at 79 today." Out in California, they're gonna have some warm weather tomorrow, gang wars, and some *very* overpriced real estate. Up in the Pacific Northwest, as you can see, they're gonna have some very, very tall trees.

I was in the Virgin Islands once. I met a girl. We ate lobster and drank pina coladas. At sunset we made love like sea otters. *That* was a pretty good day. Why couldn't I get that day over and over and over...

Rejection Theater

This week's rejection letter from the past is from the Johnstown Chiefs.

Actually, it was a rejection note that the GM hand wrote inside a Chiefs Thank You card. He sent it on September 26, 1997.

Dear Chris,

Thank you for your interest in the Johnstown Chiefs.

Currently there are no positions available at this time.

I'm sure you'll have no problem finding another position elsewhere. Good luck.

Again,

THANK YOU


That last part was already on the card.

Next week, WSAU in Wausau.

Of two minds today

From Successories. It says: Go Over. Go Under. Go Around. Or Go Through. But Never Give Up.


From despair.com. You can read this one pretty clearly.

Oh, one more.


I'm just about ready to go to work.

Negro Minor League History

MILB.com has the following interesting story up at their site:

The little-known 'Minors' of the Negro Leagues
History shows proof of a farm system in black baseball

1920 was a very significant year for black baseball.

After three-and-a-half decades of false starts and premature endings, the first successful baseball league featuring black players was established. This circuit, the brainchild of former pitching star Rube Foster, was called the Negro National League and it was the first of several "Major" Negro Leagues that would exist at various points over the next four decades (including a second Negro National League, which came into existence two years after the original disbanded in 1931).
...
Within this reality, it is not surprising that the Negro Leagues never developed anything remotely resembling a coherent Minor League system. It was often difficult for these leagues to stay afloat from season to season, let alone assemble an organized hierarchical player development system.

Yet black professional baseball at the time of the Negro National League's founding in 1920 was hardly a new phenomenon. From semi-pro collectives and company teams to established city squads and elite barnstorming teams, black players had become commonplace on the United States' burgeoning baseball landscape. Therefore, the NNL and its various rivals and successors had an established talent pool from which to draw from, haphazardly organized as it was.

In fact, the NNL's official motto of "We Are the Ship ... All Else the Sea" brazenly acknowledged the reality of black baseball at the time of its inception. This proverbial "sea" was an exceedingly loose network of teams and players that served as a sort of de facto "Negro Minor Leagues."


Read it all.

Now these are slogans

Not an update on the voting in West Tennessee. Seattle Marinerds has the slogans of the Japanese League teams for 2007.

Click on the link for the whole post. But, here are some of my favorites after being translated into English:

FANS: Focus, Advance, Nexus Spirit

"Mezase sekai ichi!" Again, no official English version, but they've had this slogan for three years now... effectively "Aim to be the best in the world!"

Think Hard, Win More.

The Hiroshima Carp have gone with "All-In." Will Doyle Brunson be making an appearance at a Carp game this year?

Baseball History -- February 2

Complete entry for February 2 is at BaseballLibrary.com HERE.

Highlighted entries:
1969
Pitchers Stan Coveleski and
Waite Hoyt are voted into the Hall of Fame by the Special Veterans Committee.

Are they celebrating Stan Coveleski Day in South Bend today?
1950
The TV show WHAT'S MY LINE premiers with
Phil Rizzuto as the very first mystery guest.

My favorite What's My Line? mystery guest to sign in was Ray Nitschke.
1943
After experimenting with a vest worn over knit jerseys, the Cubs return to conventional baggy flannels for 1943. The outfitting change saves the organization $2,000 on the cost for uniforms.

$2,000 was a lot of money back then.
1936
The baseball writers vote for the first players to be named to the new Baseball Hall of Fame. Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Honus Wagner, Christy Mathewson, and Walter Johnson each receive the requisite 75 percent of ballots cast. Active players also are eligible in this first election, with Rogers Hornsby finishing 9th, Mickey Cochrane 10th, Lou Gehrig 15th, and Foxx 19th. Tainted former star Hal Chase receives 11 votes for 25th place, and Joe Jackson has two votes to tie for 36th place.

I'd take everyone that received a vote in this election on my team.
1895
The New York Clipper and the Cincinnati Times-Star both express disapproval of the proposal of putting numbers on uniforms as a means of identifying individual players. The Times-Star advocates a return to the use of "distinctive colors in club uniforms," or the practice of assigning to each position a specific color pattern, first enacted in the early 1880s.

Notice that the New York Clipper and the Cincinnati Times-Star are no longer around while the numbers are going strong.

2/01/2007

63 Days to Opening Day

April 7, 2007 is Opening Day for the Timber Rattlers at Fox Cities Stadium. That is nine weeks (or 63 days) from today.

The number 63 is represented by Appleton Baseball Hall of Fame member Zoilo Versalles.
Versalles scored 63 runs in 1967 for the Minnesota Twins. Versalles played for the Fox Cities Foxes in 1959 before being called up to the Washington Senators later that season.

Card image from The Virtual Card Collection.

Speaking of Fox Cities Stadium

I took this picture around 4:00pm on Tuesday and got around to downloading it this morning.

Just a note

Keep your eye on the Timber Rattler home page over the next few weeks. There are some big things that are going to be happening at Fox Cities Stadium in preparation for the 2007 season.

That's all I can say right now. But, you'll know when they happen.

It's just a start

Ballparkdigest.com has a link to this column in the Journal Gazette

Stadium just a start in renewal endeavor

I was buying a sandwich downtown the other day when the restaurant operator asked what I thought of the new baseball stadium proposed just down the street.

I hemmed and hawed, and then he said, “I think it’s a waste.”

Why spend all that money on a new stadium that’s going to be used only four months a year, he asked. He pointed out the new convention center expansion across the street from the proposed stadium. It’s empty most of the time, he said.
...
Last October, in a story about the United States hitting 300 million in population, U.S. News & World Report described Fort Wayne as a gritty, Rust Belt city. Not many people caught the reference. Not many fumed as they did when other magazines labeled Fort Wayne fat and later dumb.

The label, though, does cause one to pause and wonder what outsiders think of the city. The city leaves a negative impression on a lot of people, both visitors and residents. Go to the newer suburbs and the city is anything but gritty. In the interior, the city has plenty of grit to go around – closed factories, run-down neighborhoods overrun by abandoned homes and crime.


Here is the end of the column

A new stadium downtown where you can watch minor-league baseball isn’t going to prove any more of a lure to Fort Wayne than a stadium on the outskirts, he said.

The criticisms are valid.

But I’m not going to go on a rampage against the stadium, though I don’t think it will perform the magic people are hoping for. But if you’re going to revitalize a city, you have to start somewhere. That’s the key. This would be just a start.

Fort Wayne is fixated on downtown. It has been for years. It tried the Courtyards project about 20 years ago. It didn’t revitalize the area. In fact, businesses slowly left. The area looks nice but it empties like a schoolhouse when 5 p.m. arrives.

Now the city is setting its sites on a mildly gritty, blighted corner of downtown, a weed-filled plot with broken-down curbs and sidewalks and litter.

But the city can’t stop there. What about the blight that will continue to exist a few blocks to the south, or a few blocks to the east? The plans are just a start.

Ultimately, though, are the questions: Will people come to the area when it’s done? Will they shop there? Will they socialize there? Will they stay there after a game, or after a show? Will they gravitate there when there isn’t a game or a show? If not, why not?

I can’t answer those questions, but the questions should be answered, first.

When promotion goes bad

I think that there is such a thing as bad publicity.

Froth, fear, and fury
Cartoon devices spur antiterror sweeps; two men are arrested

Enraged city and state officials yesterday readied a legal assault against those responsible for a guerrilla marketing campaign that dotted the city with small battery-powered light screens, setting off fears of terrorism and shutting down major roadways and subway lines for parts of the day.

Authorities last night were retrieving the 38 magnetic signs depicting cartoon characters under bridges, on storefronts, and outside Fenway Park, among other locations, that were installed as part of a Turner Broadcasting System marketing blitz for a Cartoon Network television show.

For much of the day, police treated the signs, which measure about 1 by 1 1/2 feet and feature protruding wires on one side, as potentially dangerous. But their investigation shifted when they happened to move one of the signs into a darker area. The sudden lack of sunlight prompted the lights forming the character's image to brighten into color. Sometime between 2 and 3 p.m., according to a public safety official, a Boston police analyst recognized the image as a cartoon character, and police concluded it was likely a publicity stunt.


When I worked for the Gamblers, Mark Osiecki -- the head coach -- set up a scavenger hunt as a team-building exercise. I drove all over Green Bay on the morning of the hunt and put six or seven pucks in six or seven locations.

As you might imagine, Lambeau Field was a location to put some pucks. Someone with the Packers noticed the pucks and thought, "Hey, these don't belong here." and move them before the players could get there.

Fortunately, the police weren't called and Red Batty, the equipment manager for the Packers and a big hockey fan, saw the pucks, called Mark, found out what was going on, and put the pucks back.

Another fortunate thing, only the players found the pucks that were in the stairwell of the parking garage in downtown Green Bay. I don't think that Red could have bailed me out of that one.

Easter Sunday 1987

The Brewers went to 12-0 with a five run bottom of the ninth inning to beat Texas 6-4 on Easter Sunday in 1987. Brewer Classics played that game last night on Fox Sports North.

Things that struck me as I caught the end of the game:

The Brewers did not televise the game. It was the Ranger television broadcast.

There was Mitch Williams before he really became MITCH WILLIAMS: A dominant 1-2-3 eighth inning followed by a lead-off walk and a seeing-eye single to start the bottom of the ninth. He did get one out, but was taken out so he didn't have to face right hander Rob Deer.

After the Deer homer to tie the game, County Stadium was ROCKIN'! so much that the centerfield camera couldn't stay steady.

Texas manager Bobby Valentine had the same mannerisms then as he does now.

The bubbler in the visitor dugout looked worse than some I've seen in a municipal park.

Some guys in the bleachers really shouldn't take their shirts off, especially just twelve games into the season.

Cecil Cooper and Jim Ganter both were wearing the same style of glasse. Cooper made them look good. Ganter....not so much.

Anyone know how to put some of this stuff on youtube?

Baseball History -- February 1

Complete entry for February 1 is at BaseballLibrary.com HERE.

Highlighted entries:
1976
East Lansing police arrest Dodger reliever
Mike Marshall for disobeying the orders set by the Michigan State University police prohibiting him from taking batting practice. MSU feared he would hit balls too far and injure students on an adjacent tennis court. Marshall protests that it is against his rights as an MSU instructor and files a lawsuit against the school.

Welcome to OverReactionTheater! Parts I and II
1913
Jim Thorpe signs with the New York Giants, but the Indian Olympic-medal winner will be more of a gate attraction than a threat at the plate.

Thorpe hit .252 with seven home runs over six seasons with the Giants, Reds, and Braves.
1896
National League umpires oppose the proposed rule giving them the authority to eject "obstreperous players." They claim that the imposition of fines is a more effective form of discipline.

Where is the fun in fines? There isn't a chance to play Hit the Road, Jack when a player or manager is fined.
Site Meter