Saturday, December 31, 2011
Joe Morgan
Wikipedia - "Joe Leonard Morgan (born September 19, 1943) is a former Major League Baseball second baseman who played for the Houston Astros, Cincinnati Reds, San Francisco Giants, Philadelphia Phillies, and Oakland Athletics from 1963 to 1984. He won two World Series championships with the Reds in 1975 and 1976 and was also named the National League Most Valuable Player in those years. Considered one of the greatest second basemen of all-time, Morgan was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1990. He became a baseball broadcaster for ESPN after his retirement, and now hosts a weekly nationally syndicated radio show for Sports USA. Joe Morgan is also a special adviser to the Cincinnati Reds."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference
YouTube: Joe Morgan HOF
Mike Shannon - "Josh Gibson's Advice for Negro Catchers"
1. Warmup your pitcher without a mitt. It will toughen up your hand and worry your opponent.
2. Don't worry overmuch about dropping a popup now and then.
3. Don't catch more than three games in one day.
Excessive squatting with cause the legs to give out.
4. Never take no guff no pitchers.
Never take no guff no managers.
Never take no guff nobody.
5. Learn to chat with the hitters. It takes their mind off their business. Occasionally tell them what your pitcher is gonna throw. This will paralyze their mind.
6. Thank the Lord for all you got.
7. Let your bat do your talking.
The Day Satchel Paige and the Pittsburgh Crawfords Came to Hertford, N.C.
2. Don't worry overmuch about dropping a popup now and then.
3. Don't catch more than three games in one day.
Excessive squatting with cause the legs to give out.
4. Never take no guff no pitchers.
Never take no guff no managers.
Never take no guff nobody.
5. Learn to chat with the hitters. It takes their mind off their business. Occasionally tell them what your pitcher is gonna throw. This will paralyze their mind.
6. Thank the Lord for all you got.
7. Let your bat do your talking.
The Day Satchel Paige and the Pittsburgh Crawfords Came to Hertford, N.C.
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
The Games Greatest... When Baseball was Wonderful
"A Historic Baseball Dream... When the was Real Game, the players were approachable and the Fans mattered. Vintage Baseball Footage from 1920's to 1960's featuring all the greats."
YouTube
The Fenway Project
"This book offers a behind the scenes account of everything that goes on at Boston's Fenway Park during a Red Sox game. A total of 64 writers compiled the short stories that make up The Fenway Project. Each of the authors are members of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR), and most wrote their accounts after attending Fenway Park for a June 28, 2002 game against the Atlanta Braves."
The Fenway Project
amazon
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Wikipedia - "Jack Eugene Jensen (March 9, 1927 – July 14, 1982) was an American right fielder in Major League Baseball who played for three American League teams from 1950 to 1961, most notably the Boston Red Sox. He was named the AL's Most Valuable Player in 1958 after hitting 35 home runs and leading the league with 122 runs batted in; he also led the league in RBI two other years, and in triples and stolen bases once each. Respected for his throwing arm, he won a Gold Glove Award and led the AL in assists and double plays twice each. He retired in his early thirties as baseball expanded westward, due to an intense fear of flying."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference
SI: A Fear Of Flying
Tom Clark - "September in the Bleachers"
In the bathroom the bad dudes
are putting money on Ali & Kenny Norton
up & down the row of stalls
little coveys of guys with tiny radios
callin out the blow by blow:
Round two to Muhammad! Whoo!
I listen to all this while I'm pissing
& the national anthem's playing outside
then make it back up thru the hot dog line
to catch the first inning, grinning,
my heart tells me Vida will shut out Kansas City tonight.
He goes right ahead & does it before my eyes.
Hummers, Knucklers, and Slow Curves
are putting money on Ali & Kenny Norton
up & down the row of stalls
little coveys of guys with tiny radios
callin out the blow by blow:
Round two to Muhammad! Whoo!
I listen to all this while I'm pissing
& the national anthem's playing outside
then make it back up thru the hot dog line
to catch the first inning, grinning,
my heart tells me Vida will shut out Kansas City tonight.
He goes right ahead & does it before my eyes.
Hummers, Knucklers, and Slow Curves
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
1906 World Series
Wikipedia - "The 1906 World Series featured a crosstown matchup between the Chicago Cubs, who had posted the highest regular-season win total (116) and winning percentage (.763) in the major leagues since the advent of the 154-game season; and the Chicago White Sox. The White Sox, known as the 'Hitless Wonders' after finishing with the worst team batting average (.230) in the American League, beat the Cubs in six games for one of the greatest upsets in Series history. The teams split the first four games; then the Hitless Wonders exploded for 26 hits in the last two games. True to their nickname, the White Sox hit only .198 as a team in winning the series but it bettered the .196 average produced by the Cubs."
Wikipedia
The 1906 Crosstown World Series
How to Win the World Series – Don’t Hit! Presenting the 1906 White Sox
YouTube: Historic Rosters: 1906 Chicago Cubs
George Carlin in Baseball and Football
"One of the most famous stand-up baseball comedy routines was the following dialog by George Carlin. These simple words simply cannot do the dialogue justice, but it is still quite funny and we hope you enjoy his comparison of Baseball and Football."
Baseball Almanac
YouTube: Football or baseball
Sunday, December 18, 2011
61*
Wikipedia - "61* is a 2001 American sports drama film directed by Billy Crystal. It stars Barry Pepper as Roger Maris and Thomas Jane as Mickey Mantle on their quest to break Babe Ruth's 1927 single-season home run record of 60 during the 1961 season of the New York Yankees. The film first aired on HBO on April 28, 2001."
Wikipedia
amazon
YouTube: 61* - Maris Hits HR no. 61 in '61
November 2010: Roger Maris
Sarah Freligh - “City of Tonawanda Softball Championship”
Two down, two out, two on in the ninth
when Sid Szymanski stands in at catcher,
sorry substitute for Larry whose sure
hands were summoned to a plumbing
emergency by his buzzing pager in the bottom
of the sixth. Still, the usual chatter
Hum baby, hey baby hum hey Sidder Sidder Sidder
though Zack's guys are mentally packing
bats in bags, unlacing shoes in order
to get away-fast-before the Panthers,
arrogant bastards, can gather at home plate
in a love knot of high fives and beer foam
and gloat. Strike two and Sid calls time,
steps out to take a couple of practice cuts
a la Barry Bonds, like him a big man,
all head and chest, and Siddersiddersidder
the car keys are out, that's all she wrote
when the pitcher gets cute with a breaking ball,
hanging it a nanosecond too long, time
enough for even fat sad Sid to get around
and give that pill a ride.
Rounding first, already red faced, a crowd
in his throat, Sid wants to believe
it's not the sludge of a million
French fries, but pleasure
more exquisite than the first breast
he touched one winter Sunday
while his dad in the den upstairs
cursed the Packers and Bart Starr, while his mom
chattered on the phone to her friend
Thelma about the macaroni casserole
and menstrual cramps, Sid swallowed
hard and bookmarked his place
in Our Country's History, the page before
the Marines stormed the hill at Iwo Jima
and turned back the godless Japs, a high tide
clogging his chest as Alice Evans unfastened
the pearl buttons of her white blouse
and presented him with the wrapped gift
of her breasts, now second base and third
and the thicket of hand-slaps all the way
home where Sid hugs the center fielder
hurried and embarrassed the way men do,
oh, the moment, replayed again and again
over Labatt's at Zack's, the first pitcher
delivered by the great Zack himself
rumored to have been the swiftest,
niftiest shortstop on the Cardinal farm
but called to serve in Korea and after that
the closest he got to baseball was standing
next to Ted Williams at a Las Vegas urinal
Tomorrow Zack will make a place
for the trophy between dusty bottles
of Galliano and Kahlua while Sid
will field calls from customers complaining
about rising cable rates and too many queers
on TV, pretty much what he'll be doing
five years from now and ten when his wife
leaves a meatloaf in the freezer and runs off
with Larry the plumber and in twenty years,
when Zack's Bar is bulldozed
to make way for a Wal-Mart,
Sid will slump in a wheelchair
in a hallway littered with old men
mumbling and lost, wrapped
in the soft cloth of memory:
The arc of the white ball, a pearl
in the jewel box of twilight sky.
Sort of Gone
when Sid Szymanski stands in at catcher,
sorry substitute for Larry whose sure
hands were summoned to a plumbing
emergency by his buzzing pager in the bottom
of the sixth. Still, the usual chatter
Hum baby, hey baby hum hey Sidder Sidder Sidder
though Zack's guys are mentally packing
bats in bags, unlacing shoes in order
to get away-fast-before the Panthers,
arrogant bastards, can gather at home plate
in a love knot of high fives and beer foam
and gloat. Strike two and Sid calls time,
steps out to take a couple of practice cuts
a la Barry Bonds, like him a big man,
all head and chest, and Siddersiddersidder
the car keys are out, that's all she wrote
when the pitcher gets cute with a breaking ball,
hanging it a nanosecond too long, time
enough for even fat sad Sid to get around
and give that pill a ride.
Rounding first, already red faced, a crowd
in his throat, Sid wants to believe
it's not the sludge of a million
French fries, but pleasure
more exquisite than the first breast
he touched one winter Sunday
while his dad in the den upstairs
cursed the Packers and Bart Starr, while his mom
chattered on the phone to her friend
Thelma about the macaroni casserole
and menstrual cramps, Sid swallowed
hard and bookmarked his place
in Our Country's History, the page before
the Marines stormed the hill at Iwo Jima
and turned back the godless Japs, a high tide
clogging his chest as Alice Evans unfastened
the pearl buttons of her white blouse
and presented him with the wrapped gift
of her breasts, now second base and third
and the thicket of hand-slaps all the way
home where Sid hugs the center fielder
hurried and embarrassed the way men do,
oh, the moment, replayed again and again
over Labatt's at Zack's, the first pitcher
delivered by the great Zack himself
rumored to have been the swiftest,
niftiest shortstop on the Cardinal farm
but called to serve in Korea and after that
the closest he got to baseball was standing
next to Ted Williams at a Las Vegas urinal
Tomorrow Zack will make a place
for the trophy between dusty bottles
of Galliano and Kahlua while Sid
will field calls from customers complaining
about rising cable rates and too many queers
on TV, pretty much what he'll be doing
five years from now and ten when his wife
leaves a meatloaf in the freezer and runs off
with Larry the plumber and in twenty years,
when Zack's Bar is bulldozed
to make way for a Wal-Mart,
Sid will slump in a wheelchair
in a hallway littered with old men
mumbling and lost, wrapped
in the soft cloth of memory:
The arc of the white ball, a pearl
in the jewel box of twilight sky.
Sort of Gone
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Grand slam
Wikipedia "In the sport of baseball, a grand slam is a home run hit with all three bases occupied by baserunners ('bases loaded'), thereby scoring four runs—the most possible in one play. According to The Dickson Baseball Dictionary, the term originated in the card game of contract bridge, in which a grand slam involves taking all the possible tricks. The word slam, by itself, usually is connected with a loud sound, particularly of a door being closed with excess force; thus, slamming the door on one's opponent(s)."
Wikipedia
Baseball Almanac: Grand Slam Records
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Tiger Stadium
Wikipedia - "... In 1911, new Tigers owner Frank Navin ordered a new steel-and-concrete baseball park on the same site that would seat 23,000 to accommodate the growing numbers of fans. On April 20, 1912, Navin Field was opened, the same day as the Boston Red Sox's Fenway Park. The intimate configurations of both stadiums, both conducive to high-scoring games featuring home runs, prompted baseball writers to refer to them as 'bandboxes' or 'cigar boxes' (a reference to the similarly intimate Baker Bowl). Over the years, expansion continued to accommodate more people. In 1935, following the death of Frank Navin, new owner Walter Briggs oversaw the expansion of Navin Field to a capacity of 36,000 by extending the upper deck to the foul poles and across right field. By 1938, the city had agreed to move Cherry Street, allowing left field to be double-decked, and the now-renamed Briggs Stadium had a capacity of 53,000."
Wikipedia
Ballparks of Baseball (Video)
Ballparks
Baseball Almanac
A Photographic History of Tiger Stadium
YouTube: Tiger Stadium tribute(last game and more), Tiger Stadium Demolition
Bill Davis - "The Union Man"
The union man's name was Sullivan.
He came by two or three times a year.
The first time he came
was when I found out who management was,
since they weren't allowed to be around.
Sometimes he would ask
if anyone wanted to picket
at the airport,
or a building downtown,
during the day, for pay.
I don't know anyone who did.
The union was new
and no one understood it much,
and older guys didn't care at all.
It was only when the contract ran out
that the union seemed important,
and even then we settled for less.
After he talked to us,
the union man would listen
as shop steward McGuinness
called the roll,
from Gillan and Cuzzi
through McGillicutty and Collucci
down to the guys I knew.
There were five Sullivans on the list,
but they were hardly ever there.
I only saw two of them ever,
R. Sullivan and T. Sullivan,
and they were only there
when the union man was.
Local 254, 1976
He came by two or three times a year.
The first time he came
was when I found out who management was,
since they weren't allowed to be around.
Sometimes he would ask
if anyone wanted to picket
at the airport,
or a building downtown,
during the day, for pay.
I don't know anyone who did.
The union was new
and no one understood it much,
and older guys didn't care at all.
It was only when the contract ran out
that the union seemed important,
and even then we settled for less.
After he talked to us,
the union man would listen
as shop steward McGuinness
called the roll,
from Gillan and Cuzzi
through McGillicutty and Collucci
down to the guys I knew.
There were five Sullivans on the list,
but they were hardly ever there.
I only saw two of them ever,
R. Sullivan and T. Sullivan,
and they were only there
when the union man was.
Local 254, 1976
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Willie Foster
Wikipedia - "William Hendrick 'Bill' Foster (June 12, 1904 – September 16, 1978) was an American left-handed pitcher in baseball's Negro leagues in the 1920s and 1930s, and had a career record of 143-69. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1996. Foster, the much-younger half-brother of Negro league player, pioneer, and fellow Hall of Famer, Rube Foster, was born in Calvert, Texas in 1904."
Wikipedia
Negro Leagues Baseball Museum
blackbaseball
Seamheads
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Diamonds Are Forever
"This handsome reissue of a beloved baseball classic, sporting a new cover, collects the work of Americas finest writers and artists as they celebrate the passion and excitement of our national pastime. Published in cooperation with the Smithsonian Institution, Diamonds Are Forever collects paintings, drawings, photographs, and literary excerpts, illuminating every aspect of the game-the plays, the parks, the players, the fans. Work from John Updike, Andy Warhol, Stephen King, Edna Ferber, Neil Simon, Jacob Lawrence, Roger Angell, and dozens more make this volume an artistic tribute to the quintessentially American game."
amazon: Diamonds Are Forever
Frank Deford - The Old Ball Game
"Written by Frank Deford in the same entertaining style that we are used to hearing on National Public Radio and reading in Sports Illustrated, The Old Ball Game is essentially a dual biography of pitcher Christy Mathewson and manager John McGraw; they shared a deep friendship as their careers with the New York Giants changed the game in the early 20th century. Deford does a good job appreciating the remarkable talent of Mathewson as a pitcher and McGraw as a player-manager. Mathewson had a stunning career, worthy of his inaugural Hall of Fame induction in 1936. McGraw, who joins his arch-rival Connie Mack as one of the greatest managers ever, was elected by the veterans committee a year later. The Old Ball Game, however is much more than just a simple recounting of baseball statistics and history. The book is fundamentally a character study of two very different baseball characters and a relationship that saw a star player, his manager, and their two wives intertwine their lives to the point of sharing a residence in New York."
SOSH
amazon: The Old Ball Game
Tim Peeler - "Wolfe, Having to Go Home"
For him
The bases were always loaded,
The stadium always packed,
The vendors always rhythmic,
The throngs of Brooklyn
Always the perfect blend,
The gruff and the meek,
Always tuned to a full count pitch,
The ump always rotund,
Slightly cross-eyed,
But fair as the idea of the left field flag
For him,
The pitch was always cranked and leaning,
The hero always a bat crack away from glory,
For him,
The pitches were always wild,
The runners always going,
For thirty-something years,
He never let 'em score,
Kept the game humming
Without letting it move past him,
Never knowing that it wouldn't always last
Another inning.
Touching All the Bases
The bases were always loaded,
The stadium always packed,
The vendors always rhythmic,
The throngs of Brooklyn
Always the perfect blend,
The gruff and the meek,
Always tuned to a full count pitch,
The ump always rotund,
Slightly cross-eyed,
But fair as the idea of the left field flag
For him,
The pitch was always cranked and leaning,
The hero always a bat crack away from glory,
For him,
The pitches were always wild,
The runners always going,
For thirty-something years,
He never let 'em score,
Kept the game humming
Without letting it move past him,
Never knowing that it wouldn't always last
Another inning.
Touching All the Bases
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Wild pitch
Bill Stemmeyer
Wikipedia - "In baseball, a wild pitch (abbreviated WP) is charged against a pitcher when his pitch is too high, too short, or too wide of home plate for the catcher to control with ordinary effort, thereby allowing a baserunner, perhaps even the batter-runner on strike three or ball four, to advance. A wild pitch usually passes the catcher behind home plate, often allowing runners on base an easy chance to advance while the catcher chases the ball down. Sometimes the catcher may block a pitch, and the ball may be nearby, but the catcher has trouble finding the ball, allowing runners to advance."
Wikipedia
W - Bill Stemmeyer
Wild Pitch Records
What They Need: American League
New York Yankees
"Yes, Jonathan Papelbon and Joe Nathan signed lucrative deals to close games for new employers. Sure, teams couldn't wait a second longer to hand out multimillion-dollar deals to a cavalcade of scrappy, talent-deprived middle infielders. But with baseball's winter meetings around the corner, the top free agents still available, and limitless trade possibilities looming, the time for a Hot Stove preview is now. Thirty teams, what they need, what they're likely to get, and what we should expect in 2012 and beyond. We lead off today with the 14-teams-for-one-more-season American League..."
Grantland - What They Need: American League
Grantland - What They Need: National League
Cor van den Heuvel - 1931
under the light
hitting it out of the park
and into the night
____________
dispute at second base
the catcher lets some dirt
run through his fingers
____________
the batter checks
the placement of his feet
"Strike One!"
____________
the ball sky-high
as the crack of the bat
reaches the outfield
____________
after the grand slam
the umpire busy
with his whisk broom
Baseball Haiku
hitting it out of the park
and into the night
____________
dispute at second base
the catcher lets some dirt
run through his fingers
____________
the batter checks
the placement of his feet
"Strike One!"
____________
the ball sky-high
as the crack of the bat
reaches the outfield
____________
after the grand slam
the umpire busy
with his whisk broom
Baseball Haiku
Thursday, December 1, 2011
1986 World Series
Wikipedia - "The 1986 World Series pitted the New York Mets against the Boston Red Sox. It was cited in the legend of the 'Curse of the Bambino' to explain the error by Bill Buckner in Game 6 that allowed the Mets to extend the series to a seventh game. The NL champion Mets eventually beat the AL champion Red Sox, four games to three."
Wikipedia
W - Curse of the Bambino
SI: Good To The Very Last Out
MLB: 1986 World Series | Game 6
YouTube: Battle Lines- 1986 World Series (Pt. 1 of 3), Pt. 2, Pt. 3
MLB: BB Moments: Grounder to Buckner (Video)
CBS: Buckner, Wilson Reflect On 1986 World Series 25 Years Later (Video)
Chuck Estrada
Wikipedia - "Charles Leonard Estrada (born February 15, 1938 in San Luis Obispo, California) is a former American baseball player. Estrada was a 6 feet, one inch tall right-handed pitcher in the Major Leagues from 1960 to 1967, playing for the Baltimore Orioles, Chicago Cubs, and New York Mets. After his retirement from the major leagues, Estrada served as pitching coach in the majors."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference
1960s Baseball
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Baseball and Verse, from Tinker to Evers to Big Papi
Marianne Moore
"Walt Whitman fell for baseball in its first heyday, saying that it had 'the snap, go, fling of the American atmosphere.' He wasn’t the only poet to be drawn to the game. Longfellow reportedly played an early version at college, and even Masaoka Shiki, the 19th-century Japanese haiku master, wrote about its seductive draw:
spring breeze
the green field
tempts me to play catch
(1890, translated by the Shiki-Kinen Museum English Volunteers)"
Poetry Foundation
Poetry Foundation: "Baseball" by Gail Mazur
Poetry Foundation: "The Baseball Players" by Donald Hall
O Holy Cow!: The Selected Verse of Phil Rizzuto (1997)
Mendoza Line
Wikipedia - "The Mendoza Line is an expression in baseball in the United States, deriving from the name of shortstop Mario Mendoza, whose lifetime batting average is taken to define the threshold of incompetent hitting. Even though Mendoza's career batting average over nine seasons (1974-1982) was .215, most often the cutoff point is said to be .200, and, when a position player's batting average falls below that level, the player is said to be below the Mendoza Line."
Wikipedia - Mendoza Line
W - Mario Mendoza
Boston Baseball: The Mendoza Line
Branded for life with 'The Mendoza Line'
Friday, November 25, 2011
The Natural - Bernard Malamud
Wikipedia - "The Natural is a 1952 novel about baseball written by Bernard Malamud. The book follows Roy Hobbs, a baseball prodigy whose career is sidetracked when he is shot by a woman who seeks to kill arrogant athletes to "better the world". Most of the story concerns itself with his attempts to return to baseball later in life, when he plays for the fictional New York Knights with his legendary bat 'Wonderboy'."
Wikipedia
amazon
NY Times
Google - The Natural
W - The Natural (Film)
amazom: Robert Redford
YouTube: Robert Redford in The Natural - The Final Homerun
Comiskey Park
Wikipedia - "Comiskey Park (35th Street & Shields Avenue, Chicago, Illinois) was the ballpark in which the Chicago White Sox played from 1910 to 1990. It was built by Charles Comiskey after a design by Zachary Taylor Davis, and was the site of four World Series (one of which was played by the Chicago Cubs because of a lack of seating at Wrigley Field) and more than 6,000 major league games. The field was also the site of the 1937 heavyweight title match in which Joe Louis defeated then champion James J. Braddock in eight rounds."
Wikipedia
SABR Research Journal Archives
Ballpark History
Comiskey Park
The Encyclopedia of Chicago
Uncle Bob's Ballparks
ballparksofbaseball - YouTube(Video), Old Comiskey Park
Glen Gifford - "Seaver and Stargell"
The pull is strongest late mornings in the Summer.
The sun brings up the light on a sky
Whose promise reaches across decades.
Heat builds outside the plate-glass window,
And I'm ready for hours of sweat-soaked baseball,
Though the schedule says it's an air-conditioned office day.
Since I cannot return, I merely remember:
Two 12-year-old boys, each sharp-boned and scabby-legged,
Face each other from opposite ends
Of the three treeless yards, fed by Artesian wells,
At the crook of their horseshoe street.
One is the league's premier power pitcher,
The other its most feared slugger.
Props are few: Wooden bat, not yet cracked,
An outfielder's glove, almost broken in,
And the remnant of a hardball wrapped in electrical tape.
The breeze off the Atlantic, a mile away, blows in.
The sun spectates, changing position for a better view.
A neighbor's dog umpires from the shade.
The two fall into a pattern they did not create
But infuse with theatrics all their own.
Hit. Field. Throw. Count to three. Count to nine.
Try to stay clear of the cactus and Spanish Bayonet.
Watch out for bad hops on the driveways.
Keep track of the baserunners, stay up on the score.
Game over, they pause to hose off and drink
In long gulps that make their bellies ache.
They bask in the sun's approval of their deeds:
Another 10-strikeout win for one,
Two doubles and a homer for the other.
What you would expect of the league's top players.
In time, the pain in their guts subsides.
They rise slowly, and the sun roars
As they walk back onto the field.
Cosmic Baseball Association
The sun brings up the light on a sky
Whose promise reaches across decades.
Heat builds outside the plate-glass window,
And I'm ready for hours of sweat-soaked baseball,
Though the schedule says it's an air-conditioned office day.
Since I cannot return, I merely remember:
Two 12-year-old boys, each sharp-boned and scabby-legged,
Face each other from opposite ends
Of the three treeless yards, fed by Artesian wells,
At the crook of their horseshoe street.
One is the league's premier power pitcher,
The other its most feared slugger.
Props are few: Wooden bat, not yet cracked,
An outfielder's glove, almost broken in,
And the remnant of a hardball wrapped in electrical tape.
The breeze off the Atlantic, a mile away, blows in.
The sun spectates, changing position for a better view.
A neighbor's dog umpires from the shade.
The two fall into a pattern they did not create
But infuse with theatrics all their own.
Hit. Field. Throw. Count to three. Count to nine.
Try to stay clear of the cactus and Spanish Bayonet.
Watch out for bad hops on the driveways.
Keep track of the baserunners, stay up on the score.
Game over, they pause to hose off and drink
In long gulps that make their bellies ache.
They bask in the sun's approval of their deeds:
Another 10-strikeout win for one,
Two doubles and a homer for the other.
What you would expect of the league's top players.
In time, the pain in their guts subsides.
They rise slowly, and the sun roars
As they walk back onto the field.
Cosmic Baseball Association
Sunday, November 20, 2011
The Biographical Encyclopedia of the Negro Baseball Leagues
Booklist - "This is a landmark publication in the fields of baseball history and African American history. It documents more than 4,000 players on Negro League teams from 1872 through 1950. According to the publisher, this is the first book to comprehensively cover the careers of all African Americans who played with a team of major-league quality or whose careers had some historical significance. It includes all major-league Hall of Fame players who also played in the Negro League. The author traversed the country, interviewing men who played in the Negro Leagues about their baseball exploits and the careers of their now-deceased teammates. Information was also gathered by analyzing archival resources for contemporary accounts of games and by viewing microfilm reels of black newspapers."
The Biographical Encyclopedia of the Negro Baseball Leagues
Blackbaseball's Negro Baseball Leagues
Ernie Harwell
Wikipedia - "William Earnest 'Ernie' Harwell (January 25, 1918 – May 4, 2010) was an American sportscaster, known for his long career calling play-by-play of Major League Baseball games. For 55 years, 42 of them with the Detroit Tigers, Harwell called the action on radio and/or television."
Wikipedia
Ernie Harwell and the story of baseball
Ernie Harwell Audio Clips (Video)
YouTube: Ernie Harwell Remembered - ESPN Video, The Ernie Harwell Story
Friday, November 18, 2011
Baseball: It's all in the Cards
"The Seattle Mariners have some important questions to consider as their new sports stadium is about to open and the answers may lie in the cards. More precisely, the Mariners may want to consult with the Tarot de Cooperstown, the brainchild of Jim Markowich and Paul Kuhrman. This new twist on a very old deck was a natural for the two New York artists who are also avid baseball fans."
"Baseball: It's all in the Cards" by Roberta A. Mayer
Sandra Soto Hatfield - "Riverfront"
Fine drops of rain
run down like young streams from
plastic summer parkas
down the arms of curved chairs
falling from the hair of
three men in row 38B
in row C
an elegant you face intense
carved mahogany, small rivulets
carelessly sliding from aquiline nose
upon a knee
make random patters
merge with cement water then
continue through the human sea
past soggy red-hots Hudepohl and
staggering shells from peanuts delved
now forgotten in one
unanimous need for sun.
billows of tarp begin to wave
rolling tossing toward home plate
slowly moving to the low buzz-sung
stanza of hawkers, families, fans
a man wearing a blue hat
is on the mound
reds near the dug-out
swing various wooden bats
rhythmic oars skimming water from air
beating the haze clear
at last
high up near the flying flags
sings an accented bird-like voice
"vaya, Perez, vaya"
far below a small voice echoes
"let's go Bench"
sun drenches the stands.
Into the Temple of Baseball
run down like young streams from
plastic summer parkas
down the arms of curved chairs
falling from the hair of
three men in row 38B
in row C
an elegant you face intense
carved mahogany, small rivulets
carelessly sliding from aquiline nose
upon a knee
make random patters
merge with cement water then
continue through the human sea
past soggy red-hots Hudepohl and
staggering shells from peanuts delved
now forgotten in one
unanimous need for sun.
billows of tarp begin to wave
rolling tossing toward home plate
slowly moving to the low buzz-sung
stanza of hawkers, families, fans
a man wearing a blue hat
is on the mound
reds near the dug-out
swing various wooden bats
rhythmic oars skimming water from air
beating the haze clear
at last
high up near the flying flags
sings an accented bird-like voice
"vaya, Perez, vaya"
far below a small voice echoes
"let's go Bench"
sun drenches the stands.
Into the Temple of Baseball
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Manny Trillo
Wikipedia - "Jesús Manuel Marcano (Manny) Trillo (born December 25, 1950 in Caripito, Venezuela), also nicknamed 'Indio', is a former professional baseball player who played in the Major Leagues from 1973 to 1989. He played most of his career as a second baseman for the Oakland Athletics (1973-1974), Chicago Cubs (1975-1978, 1986-1988), Philadelphia Phillies (1979-1982), Cleveland Indians (1983), Montreal Expos (1983), San Francisco Giants (1984-1985) and the Cincinnati Reds (1989). He was known as one of the best fielding second basemen of his era with a strong throwing arm."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference
Jack Of All Trades: Manny Trillo
Introducing… Manny Trillo
(Almost) Winning in Milwaukee
Chad Harbach: "On October 16, my father and I drove north from my parents' home in Racine to attend Game 6 of the NLCS — Brewers versus Cardinals. It was my first-ever playoff game, and I felt like an ancient wrong was being redeemed. In 1982, the Brewers appeared in their only World Series, against these same Cards. I was 6, and it was my first season of serious fandom. Someone gave my dad two tickets to Game 5, a Sunday-afternoon game, and my dad, with whom I'd attended many games that season … took my mother. I was baffled. Did she even like baseball? It was unclear. My dad and I had been going all season long, she'd stayed home, and I saw no reason why I'd get demoted now. I consoled myself with the idea that, since it was a rare day game, I'd get to watch the whole thing on TV."
Grantland: (Almost) Winning in Milwaukee
Sunday, November 13, 2011
The Bill James Guide To Baseball Managers
"A decade ago, Bill James published an excellent study of the history of baseball managers, which I happened to re-read recently. It’s a decade-by-decade breakdown of the evolution of baseball, focused sharply on the leading managerial figures along the way. In it, James ranks managers in a variety of ways, including one point-based system he devised to reward achievment of goals that all managers aim for. Without getting into the specific formula here, winning a World Series, pennant or division title drew merits. Likewise, a 100-win season, finishing twenty games over .500 or, simply, a winning record. The beauty of his admittedly imperfect approach was that every manager that earned at 32 points in his system is in the Hall of Fame, while the vast majority of those who fell short are not."
Urban Shocker: Revisiting The Bill James Guide To Baseball Managers
View from the Bleachers
New York Times
amazon
Louis Phillips - "William Shakespeare Celebrates the Return of the Spaldeen"
"Two decades after Spalding discontinued the spongy hollow ball that inspired the urban pastime of stickball, stores will start selling it again." -The New York Times, May 5, 1999
How like 20 yrs. hath your absence been
From NY streets, while your true lovers-Sal, Dean,
Tommy Davis, et al. (oh what dark days seen!)
Lust for your return Spaldeen. Spaldeen!
Soft pink hollow ball that means Summer Time,
& even if I missed making All Dean's
list because of too much stickball in my Prime-
Oh gods call down your blessings on Spaldeen!
Yet, this fortunate return has set sorrow free,
Tho your long absence had cast a pall keen.
Two decades lost! But what new games await thee!
Without you our broomstick bats were mute, Spaldeen!
Only tenured philosophers know what this might all mean-
The glorious return of the spongy ball Spaldeen.
Elysian Fields Quarterly
How like 20 yrs. hath your absence been
From NY streets, while your true lovers-Sal, Dean,
Tommy Davis, et al. (oh what dark days seen!)
Lust for your return Spaldeen. Spaldeen!
Soft pink hollow ball that means Summer Time,
& even if I missed making All Dean's
list because of too much stickball in my Prime-
Oh gods call down your blessings on Spaldeen!
Yet, this fortunate return has set sorrow free,
Tho your long absence had cast a pall keen.
Two decades lost! But what new games await thee!
Without you our broomstick bats were mute, Spaldeen!
Only tenured philosophers know what this might all mean-
The glorious return of the spongy ball Spaldeen.
Elysian Fields Quarterly
Friday, November 11, 2011
Batting order
Wikipedia - "The batting order, or batting lineup, in baseball is the sequence in which the nine members of the offense take their turns in batting against the pitcher. The batting order is the main component of a team's offensive strategy. The batting order is set by the manager before the game begins (although substitutions may subsequently take place). If a team bats out of order, it is a violation of baseball's rules and subject to penalty. When the whole batting order makes plate appearances in a single inning, it is called 'batting around.' In modern American baseball, some batting positions have nicknames: 'leadoff' for first, 'cleanup' for fourth, and 'last' for ninth."
Wikipedia
Baseball Reference
FanGraphs: How Significant Is Batting Order?
Jarry Park Stadium
Wikipedia - "Jarry Park Stadium ... is a former baseball stadium in Montreal which served as home to the Montreal Expos, Major League Baseball's first Canadian franchise, from 1969–1976. It served as a temporary home (for 8 seasons) until the domed Olympic Stadium was finished and made available to the Expos. The ballpark was typically called simply (and incorrectly) 'Jarry Park' within baseball circles."
Wikipedia
BallParks of Baseball
Ballpark Digest
Ball Parks
Andrew G. Clem
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
When The Bronx Was Burning
"I recently finished reading Jonathan Mahler's book The Bronx is Burning, the companion piece to ESPN's miniseries of the same name concluding tonight (which I have not had the opportunity to watch). The title comes from the final collision between Yankee mayhem and civic disorder, when Howard Cosell intoned 'There it is, ladies and gentlemen, the Bronx is burning,' as a massive fire raged in view of the TV cameras during Game Two of the 1977 World Series at Yankee Stadium."
Baseball Crank
amazon: The Bronx is Burning: 1977, Baseball, Politics, and the Battle for the Soul of a City
amazon: The Bronx Is Burning (2007)
Wikipedia
NYT: Mini-Series Revisits the Yankees’ Melodrama During the Summer of ’77
YouTube: FDNY The Bronx is Burning 1972 documentary (Video)
YouTube: The Bronx is Burning, 2007 (Video)
Donald Hall - "The Baseball Players"
Against the bright
grass the white-knickered
players tense, seize,
and attend. A moment
ago, outfielders
and infielders adjusted
their clothing, glanced
at the sun and settled
forward, hands on knees;
the pitcher walked back
of the hill, established
his cap and returned;
the catcher twitched
a forefinger; the batter
rotated his bat
in a slow circle. But now
they pause: wary,
exact, suspended while
abiding moonrise
lightens the angel
of the overgrown
garden, and Walter Blake
Adams, who died
at fourteen, waits
under the footbridge.
Poetry Foundation
grass the white-knickered
players tense, seize,
and attend. A moment
ago, outfielders
and infielders adjusted
their clothing, glanced
at the sun and settled
forward, hands on knees;
the pitcher walked back
of the hill, established
his cap and returned;
the catcher twitched
a forefinger; the batter
rotated his bat
in a slow circle. But now
they pause: wary,
exact, suspended while
abiding moonrise
lightens the angel
of the overgrown
garden, and Walter Blake
Adams, who died
at fourteen, waits
under the footbridge.
Poetry Foundation
Monday, November 7, 2011
Tommy Davis
"Herman Thomas Davis, Jr. (born March 21, 1939 in Brooklyn, New York) is an American former Major League Baseball left fielder and third baseman. He played from 1959-1976 for ten different teams, but he is best known for his years with the Los Angeles Dodgers. During an 18-year baseball career, Davis batted .294 with 153 home runs, 2,121 hits and 1,052 runs batted in. He was also one of the most proficient pinch-hitters in baseball history with a .320 batting average (63-for-197) – the highest in major league history upon his retirement, breaking the .312 mark of Frenchy Bordagaray."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference
SABR
Weaver on Strategy
"If you had to pick one topic that British baseball fans might need some help with, in-game strategy would be near the top of the list. Many of us have never really played the game, never mind spent our childhood playing ball with friends and neighbours. The knowledge that Americans pick up over many years needs to be learned somehow. There is no better teacher than Earl Weaver and no better teaching manual than Weaver on Strategy."
Baseball GB
Book Review: Weaver on Strategy
SoSH
amazon
Saturday, November 5, 2011
1964 World Series
Bob Gibson
Wikipedia - "The 1964 World Series pitted the National League champion St. Louis Cardinals against the American League champion New York Yankees, with the Cardinals prevailing in seven games. St. Louis won their seventh world championship, while the Yankees, who had appeared in 14 of 16 World Series since 1949, did not play in the Series again until 1976. In an unusual twist, the Yankees fired Yogi Berra after the Series ended, replacing him with Johnny Keane, who had resigned from the Cardinals after the Series. His job had been threatened by Cardinals management, and it was unexpectedly saved by the Cardinals' dramatic pennant drive."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference
I-70 Baseball
SI: The story behind Mickey Mantle's 1964 walkoff Series home run
Roger Launius's Blog
YouTube: Cardinals Win the World Series 1964
Critical Past: World Series Baseball matches
Sarah Freligh - "North of Saginaw"
North of Saginaw, south of somewhere
Al's never heard of,
a ball club in Michigan
needs pitchers. Pay stinks,
a couple hundred a week.
Seven-hour rides
in a school bus. A junkyard
for old men, their tattered arms;
smoke-throwing kids with no control,
the misfits with the jumpy
eyes of serial killers.
Still grass, lights, applause, him
and the hitter.
In the Garden of Eden,
there were snakes.
Sort of Gone
Al's never heard of,
a ball club in Michigan
needs pitchers. Pay stinks,
a couple hundred a week.
Seven-hour rides
in a school bus. A junkyard
for old men, their tattered arms;
smoke-throwing kids with no control,
the misfits with the jumpy
eyes of serial killers.
Still grass, lights, applause, him
and the hitter.
In the Garden of Eden,
there were snakes.
Sort of Gone
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Smithsonian Baseball: Inside the World’s Finest Private Collections
"As every baseball collector knows, few things can parallel the powerful memories and emotions that are evoked when we hold a ball that has been signed by Ty Cobb, run our hands over the barrel of a bat once swung by Babe Ruth, or touch a jersey that had actually been worn by Lou Gehrig. Lifelong collector Stephen Wong knows that as well as anyone. He also knows that these treasured items can do much more than simply stir memories and emotions - they can possess inspiring, life changing qualities. On September 27, 2005, Smithsonian Books and HarperCollins Publishers will release Wong's book, Smithsonian Baseball: Inside the World's Finest Private Collections, that chronicles his two and a half year odyssey, in which Wong left the high powered corporate world to seek out twenty-one of baseball's most devoted collectors."
The Odyssey of Stephen Wong
amazon
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Walter Johnson
Wikipedia - "Walter Perry Johnson (November 6, 1887 – December 10, 1946), nicknamed 'Barney' and 'The Big Train', was a Major League Baseball right-handed pitcher. He played his entire 21-year baseball career for the Washington Senators (1907–1927). He would later serve as manager of the Senators from 1929–1932 and for the Cleveland Indians from 1933–1935. One of the most celebrated and dominating players in baseball history, Johnson established several pitching records, some of which remain unbroken. He remains by far the all-time career leader in shutouts with 110, second in wins with 417, and fourth in complete games with 531. He once held the career record in strikeouts with 3,509 and was the only player in the 3,000 strikeout club for over 50 years until Bob Gibson recorded his 3,000th strikeout in 1974."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference.
SABR: Charles Carey
Walter Johnson - The Official Web Site
amazon: Walter Johnson: Baseball's Big Train
vimeo: Walter Johnson game footage
Karen Zaborowski - "World Series, Game 5"
Even God, I think, is here,
so high up in the stands
with my ten-year-old daughter and me
we can almost touch the X
from Schmidty's old home run,
probably the two worst seats at the Vet
but right where the whole world
wants to be.
I let her drink real Coke,
eat Milky Ways and dance with stangers
at 11:30 on a school night and still
ninety minutes from home.
The Philles and we are in control.
For now, the world has stopped worrying
about players who might be traded,
moods that might swing and miss.
There are no thoughts about new uniforms
and the boys who will wear them.
Tonight she is here and finds it easy
to love me for this end-of-season
home game.
We are those jumping red dots
in the center of the universe, my daughter
and me and a baseball game
that is perfect and no more meaningless
than anything else.
Line Drives
so high up in the stands
with my ten-year-old daughter and me
we can almost touch the X
from Schmidty's old home run,
probably the two worst seats at the Vet
but right where the whole world
wants to be.
I let her drink real Coke,
eat Milky Ways and dance with stangers
at 11:30 on a school night and still
ninety minutes from home.
The Philles and we are in control.
For now, the world has stopped worrying
about players who might be traded,
moods that might swing and miss.
There are no thoughts about new uniforms
and the boys who will wear them.
Tonight she is here and finds it easy
to love me for this end-of-season
home game.
We are those jumping red dots
in the center of the universe, my daughter
and me and a baseball game
that is perfect and no more meaningless
than anything else.
Line Drives
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Double play
Wikipedia - "In baseball, a double play (denoted on statistics sheets by DP) for a team or a fielder is the act of making two outs during the same continuous playing action. In baseball slang, making a double play is referred to as 'turning two'."
Wikipedia
Merriam-Webster
MLB: Yanks turn two (Video)
Cyclone Joe Williams
Wikipedia - "Joseph Williams (April 6, 1886 – February 25, 1951), nicknamed 'Cyclone Joe' or 'Smokey Joe', was an American right-handed pitcher in the Negro leagues. He is widely recognized as one of the game's greatest pitchers, even though he never played a game in the major leagues. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1999."
Wikipedia
Baseball Reference
agate type
YouTube - Smokey Joe Williams HOF
Friday, October 28, 2011
The Texas Rangers Are Not World Champions, Thanks To David Freese
"Game Six featured eleven innings, five official errors, numerous others in judgment, and what will not be Albert Pujols' final plate appearance in a Cardinals uniform—a tenth-inning intentional walk—but it was an official game and then some, one the Texas Rangers did not win. The Cardinals owe their stay of execution to David Freese, whose 9th-inning triple with two outs and two strikes forced extras, and whose 11th-inning walkoff homer ensured the first World Series game seven since 2002. Lance Berkman also fought off a two-strike, two-out 10th-inning guillotine by delivering an RBI single. That, of course, was forced by man-of-many comebacks Josh Hamilton, who gave the Rangers a 9-7 lead in the top of the 10th. We'll be talking all about this game Friday, but for now, enjoy the majesty that is David Freese."
Deadspin (Video), The New Yorker: Five Errors, Six Home Runs, NYT: Was It the Greatest World Series Game Ever?, NYT - As Game 6 Echoes, Here Comes Game 7, George Vecsey, Grantland: Can the Texas Rangers bounce back and win the World Series? History says no., Grantland: Game 6 Revisited: "How Did This Happen?"
Mike Shannon - "A Little Extra Sock"
Somewhere back in the sixties
I remember reading that
Aaron or Mays - someone of that caliber -
Fearing for the moral effect on America's youth,
Never allowed himself to be photographed
Having a post-game smoke in the clubhouse
Around the same time in the sixties
Norm Cash of the Tigers was belting homers
With a little extra sock -
Barrels filled with secret cork.
The Day Satchel Paige and the Pittsburgh Crawfords Came to Hertford, N.C.
I remember reading that
Aaron or Mays - someone of that caliber -
Fearing for the moral effect on America's youth,
Never allowed himself to be photographed
Having a post-game smoke in the clubhouse
Around the same time in the sixties
Norm Cash of the Tigers was belting homers
With a little extra sock -
Barrels filled with secret cork.
The Day Satchel Paige and the Pittsburgh Crawfords Came to Hertford, N.C.
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
The Top 21 Moments of a Crazy Game 5
"The top 21 moments of last night's thrilling, ugly, preposterous, hilarious, stupefying, impossible 4-2 Game 5 Rangers win, ranked in reverse order, according to a proprietary formula of leverage, entertainment value, and outcomes that couldn't possibly be true."
Grantland
Hank Aaron
Wikipedia - "Henry Louis 'Hank' Aaron (born February 5, 1934), nicknamed 'Hammer,' 'Hammerin' Hank,' and 'Bad Henry,' is a retired American baseball player whose Major League Baseball (MLB) career spanned the years 1954 through 1976. Aaron is widely considered one of the greatest baseball players of all time."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference, SABR: Hank Aaron, Georgia Encyclopedia, ESPN: Hank Aaron: Hammerin' back at racism, MLB - The Hammer: Hank Aaron, YouTube - Hank Aaron: The Shot, Legends & Legacies: Hank Aaron
Monday, October 24, 2011
Bronx Banter Interview: Glenn Stout
"There is at least one thing Red Sox fans can look forward to this fall and that’s the publication of Glenn Stout’s new book. But it’s not just for Sox fans, it’s a story that will appeal to seamheads everywhere. In a review for The Christian Science Monitor, Nick Lehr writes that Stout’s 'narrative could have easily become bogged down in a never-ending sequence of truncated game recaps, culminating with the World Series; however Stout’s greatest triumph is his ability to manage the pace of the 152-game season, breaking up game summaries by delving into the lives of the teams’ larger-than-life characters.'"
Bronx Banter, The Christian Science Monitor, Verb Plow, amazon
Baker Bowl
Wikipedia - "Baker Bowl is the best-known popular name of a baseball park that formerly stood in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Its formal name, painted on its outer wall, was National League Park. It was also initially known as Philadelphia Park or Philadelphia Base Ball Grounds. It was on a small city block bounded by N. Broad St., W. Huntingdon St., N. 15th St. and W. Lehigh Avenue. The ballpark was initially built in 1887."
Wikipedia, Baseball Statistics, SABR Research Journal Archives, Andrew G. Clem, A Historical Sketch of Baker Bowl, BaseballChronlogy
Bill Davis - "Why People Watch Baseball"
One of the most beautiful events
I have ever witnessed
was the expression on Lou Pinella's face
(dogging it down the first base line
as Yaz settled under the ball in lane)
when the ball somehow hit the wall,
Yaz turned, took it on one bounce,
and from 370 feet away
threw him out at first.
Yaz homered his next time up
after a two week slump,
and the way he went around the bases
is why people watch baseball.
Local 254, 1976
I have ever witnessed
was the expression on Lou Pinella's face
(dogging it down the first base line
as Yaz settled under the ball in lane)
when the ball somehow hit the wall,
Yaz turned, took it on one bounce,
and from 370 feet away
threw him out at first.
Yaz homered his next time up
after a two week slump,
and the way he went around the bases
is why people watch baseball.
Local 254, 1976
Saturday, October 22, 2011
Lance Richbourg
Untitled, 1978, Oil on canvas
Lance Richbourg: "I was the batboy and swept out the wooden bandbox stadium after home games. Those who care about baseball may be relieved to hear that I now enjoy watching baseball. I've come to learn about the game from doing the paintings. I would debate anyone that baseball is far superior to any other sport in terms of its beauty, intricacy, the broad range of skills required to play it, and because of its clarity and its subversion of time. As an artist, I have been satisfied with the formal possibilities of depicting the light and space of the playing field and the variety and grace of player movements amidst explosive action."
OK Harris, Poetry Foundation: "To Infuse (As Life) By Breathing" by Elaine Segal, Field Studies: Lance Richbourg's Baseball Paintings Hit Home, SEVEN DAYS: Blonde Ambition, Posterunlimited
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Why Time Begins On Opening Day - Thomas Boswell
"The long-time sportswriter for the Washington Post, Thomas Boswell, wrote a timeless piece collected in a book of the same name, Why Time Begins On Opening Day, published in 1984. Boswell muses on the 'resolute grasp' that baseball maintains for so many of us" and why our 'affection for the game has held steady for decades, maybe even grown with age.' He asks what baseball is doing among our other 'first-rate passions.' And, indeed, when one looks over the posts on this blog, it could seem incongruous to have baseball up there with such serious and important issues as social justice, civil rights and capital punishment."
Fair and Unbalanced, amazon
Tim Peeler - "Spikes and Leather"
when he throws the
high hard one
it's like a razor
slicing skull
the ball and mitt
slam dancing
to dusty umpired rhythms
the batter
is not wired to his music
and cannot trust
his own instrument
the catcher cradles
a quick leather signal
squatting on new spikes
waiting for the curve
to drop like a head
into his basket.
Touching All the Bases
high hard one
it's like a razor
slicing skull
the ball and mitt
slam dancing
to dusty umpired rhythms
the batter
is not wired to his music
and cannot trust
his own instrument
the catcher cradles
a quick leather signal
squatting on new spikes
waiting for the curve
to drop like a head
into his basket.
Touching All the Bases
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Get Your World Series Programs Here!
"They feature some of the nation’s most famous players, managers, owners, stadiums and even presidents. There are pictures of elephants, bears and tigers, as well as cartoons of babies and spacemen. Some graphics are Baroque, while others scream Art Deco. The World Series program has been a chronicler of the ages, a mirror not only of baseball’s biggest stage, but also of the game’s link to the world wars, the Great Depression and the optimism of the space age."
NYT, NYT: The World Series Cover Story
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Ty Cobb
Wikipedia - "Tyrus Raymond 'Ty' Cobb (December 18, 1886 – July 17, 1961), nicknamed 'The Georgia Peach,' was an American Major League Baseball outfielder. He was born in Narrows, Georgia. Cobb spent 22 seasons with the Detroit Tigers, the last six as the team's player-manager, and finished his career with the Philadelphia Athletics."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference, SABR: Ty Cobb, Ty Cobb, Ty Cobb Museum, amazon, IMDb, YouTube - Ty Cobb's HOF Video Bio, Ty Cobb Footage, "Cobb" Movie - Tommy Lee Jones
O Holy Cow! The Poetry of Phil Rizzuto - "Poem No. 61"
Here comes Roger Maris
They're standing up.
Waiting to see if Roger
Is going to hit
Number sixty-one.
Here's the windup.
The pitch to Roger.
Way outside.
Ball one.
The fans are starting to boo.
Low...
Ball two.
That one was in the dirt.
And the boos get louder. Two balls no strikes
On Roger Maris...
Here's the windup.
Fastball
HIT DEEP TO RIGHT-
THIS COULD BE IT.
WAY BACK THERE.
HOLY COW.
October 1, 1961, WPIX-TV
Boston at New York
Roger Maris batting against Tracy Stallard
Fourth inning, no score, bases empty
Final: Yankees 1, Red Sox 0
Cosmic Baseball
They're standing up.
Waiting to see if Roger
Is going to hit
Number sixty-one.
Here's the windup.
The pitch to Roger.
Way outside.
Ball one.
The fans are starting to boo.
Low...
Ball two.
That one was in the dirt.
And the boos get louder. Two balls no strikes
On Roger Maris...
Here's the windup.
Fastball
HIT DEEP TO RIGHT-
THIS COULD BE IT.
WAY BACK THERE.
HOLY COW.
HE DID IT.They're fighting for the ball out there.
SIXTY-ONE HOME RUNS.
October 1, 1961, WPIX-TV
Boston at New York
Roger Maris batting against Tracy Stallard
Fourth inning, no score, bases empty
Final: Yankees 1, Red Sox 0
Cosmic Baseball
Saturday, October 15, 2011
2001 World Series
"The 2001 World Series (also known as the 'November Series'), the 97th edition of Major League Baseball's championship series, took place between the Arizona Diamondbacks of the National League and the New York Yankees of the American League. The Diamondbacks won the best-of-seven series four games to three. The series went down as one of the most memorable in baseball history, featuring two extra-inning games and three late-inning comebacks. It ended on a Game 7 walk-off hit in the form of a bases loaded bloop single off the bat of Luis Gonzalez. This was the third World Series to end in this way after 1997 and 1991."
Wikipedia, Baseball Reference, amazon, MBB: A fant-AZ-tic finish!, 2001 world series game one intro, Randy Johnson tribute - 2001 WS Game 2 reel, Game 5, Game 7, MLB: 20 Greatest Games #9
1961 Golden Press
"The 1961 Golden Press set includes 33 cards which consist of Baseball Hall of Fame members. The card measure 2 ½” by 3 ½” and feature full color photos. The cards were distributed in a booklet and were perforated so they could be easily detached."
Vintage Card Traders
Thursday, October 13, 2011
Inside the collapse
"... The story of Boston’s lost September unfolds in part as an indictment of the three prized starters. But the epic flop of 2011 had many faces: a lame-duck manager, coping with personal issues, whose team partly tuned him out; stars who failed to lead; players who turned lackluster and self-interested; a general manager responsible for fruitless roster decisions; owners who approved unrewarding free agent spending and missed some warning signs that their $161 million club was deteriorating. How a team that was on pace in late August to win 100 games and contend for its third World Series title in seven years self-destructed is a story of disunity, disloyalty, and dysfunction like few others in franchise history."
Boston Globe, Pitchers Hooked On Beer, Fried Chicken, And Video Games! Francona On Pills! The Boston Globe’s Version Of The 2011 Red Sox Collapse, ESPN - Sources: Theo Epstein, Cubs agree, ESPN - Tito victim of latest Sox smear campaign, Huffington Post: David Ortiz To Yankees? Red Sox Star Discusses Free Agency, Boston Collapse
Season Ticket: A Baseball Companion - Roger Angell
"Face it, unless you're a die-hard fan, the mere thought of going to a baseball game these days is enough to inspire dread. Getting good seats is next to impossible, waiting in long lines for expensive food isn't much fun, and the traffic jams are too painful to contemplate. Well, here's Roger Angell to remind us once again that what goes on between the foul lines is what really counts in baseball, and even a mediocre game can provide enough psychic rewards to justify a trip--however difficult--to the local playing field. Angell seemingly hasn't been to a game he hasn't enjoyed, and his positive attitude is contagious."
LA Times, amazon
Mikhail Horowitz - "Big League Poets" (cont.)
Wallace ICE CREAM STEVENS starred for the Hartford Harmoniums, where he was known as "The Catcher as the Letter C." In the late innings of close games, he was prized for his ability to come up with insurance runs.
Robert LEFTY LOWELL set many records in the Quaker Ballyard at Nantucket. Known for confessional clouts, at time he would fall prey to a regressive hitting syndrome known as Lord Weary's Battingslump; but he was nevertheless a Yankee all the way, and a throwback to the game's Old Glory.
Federico Garcia GYPSY LORCA was a great hitter whose bat was a bitter root. Starring for the old Granada Green Sox, He was a graceful fielder as well, though it was darkly rumored that his glove hid a "blood webbing."
Dylan YOUNG DOG THOMAS twirled for the Swansea Sweetsingers. It was common knowledge to the fans that, whenever he pitched, both the bases and Thomas were loaded. He did not go gentle into that good night-game.
Big League Poets
Robert LEFTY LOWELL set many records in the Quaker Ballyard at Nantucket. Known for confessional clouts, at time he would fall prey to a regressive hitting syndrome known as Lord Weary's Battingslump; but he was nevertheless a Yankee all the way, and a throwback to the game's Old Glory.
Federico Garcia GYPSY LORCA was a great hitter whose bat was a bitter root. Starring for the old Granada Green Sox, He was a graceful fielder as well, though it was darkly rumored that his glove hid a "blood webbing."
Dylan YOUNG DOG THOMAS twirled for the Swansea Sweetsingers. It was common knowledge to the fans that, whenever he pitched, both the bases and Thomas were loaded. He did not go gentle into that good night-game.
Big League Poets
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