Showing posts with label Baseball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baseball. Show all posts

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Debate vs. Baseball?

That's an easy question for most of us....baseball; but would you expect CNN analyst Jeffrey Toobin to answer that way? Well maybe you should. This comes to us from Home Run Derby:

Here’s a screen shot of CNN Legal Analyst Jeffrey Toobin during the October 2nd VEEP Debate - he’s at MLB.com’s GameDay, following the Cubs-Dodgers game on his laptop.

CNN Analyst watches Baseball instead of the Vice-Presidential Debate

Stick it to the Man, Toobin! It’s great to know that CNN Analysts don’t give two craps about the Debates when there’s Playoff Baseball on either.

Get this … Toobin got busted again last night during the final Presidential Debate … this time while surfing Facebook!!

Here’ Toobin’s reply to GIZMODO

“I am clearly a recidivist in this area. I figure as long as I stay away from porn, I can keep my job.”

I love this guy. Not that I would ever surf the internet at work or school, but you know what I mean...

Friday, October 10, 2008

Today's Links

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

A Tribute to Chicago Baseball

In honor of the Jewish New Year and the Cubs epic collapse, my father's best friend from his childhood decided to write a little letter to my brothers and I explaining the 1969 season how he and my father had experienced it. It is eloquently written, funny, and insightful. It gives a look into the changing landscape of the city during the late 1960's as well as a look at how while certain things change, some will always stay the same. This is a must-read for every Chicago baseball fan:

Dear [Brothers],

As we begin the Jewish year of "69" I wish to take you back to the secular year of "69".

In the spring of 1969 two young boys on the SouthSide of Chicago were counting the days before they were forced to leave their beloved neighborhood. They had for some time been unable to attend the neighborhood movie theaters and playing sports at one of the local parks had became dangerous to ones health. Their friends had been steadily streaming out of the the neighborhood and they knew that the shuls, community centers and stores that they knew so well would soon be gone.

In April of 1969 they decided that if there was one thing that could keep them attached to the Southside it was their loyal devotion to "their" baseball team, the White Sox. So they asked one of their mothers to drive them down 47th street to see the Sox play the Seattle Pilots and strengthen their "connection". As they entered the old Comiskey Park they were shocked to find, that also here things were changing for the worse. In this cavernous stadium there were less than 3,000 fans in attendance. Eventually, the Sox would lose the game 5-1, but in the bottom of the 9th with the score 5-0 and less then 1,000 people left in the ballpark the Sox managed to load the bases with no outs. Unfortunately, the rally failed and the boys were reprimanded by the Andy Frain ushers for pounding the empty seats next to them. Of course the young boys were your father and I, and we realized that this was our farewell to Comiskey Park as well for the time being.

By the end of June we were firmly ensconced in West Rogers Park and Lincolnwood; the Sox were 8 games out of the 1st and the "other" Chicago team the Cubs were in 1st by 8 games. Generally our eyes only turned to Wrigley field when the Bear's season started or if we were fortunate enough to get a ticket from my father to one of the games ($7 per ticket). Nonetheless, perhaps it was time for us to take advantage of our new surroundings and see what it was like to see a baseball game at Wrigley.

Your father said we could take the bus down Devon and catch the "L" at Loyola and get off at Addison. Living on the Southside did not lend itself to taking the "L" so we concurred if nothing else would experience a ride on the subway and see a baseball game. As we entered Wrigley Field we were immediately impressed how intimate the park was compared to Comiskey and that for $3.50 we could get unreserved grandstand seats (just above the 3rd base box seats) and follow the action behind the Cubs dugout.

In short, on that day (I don't remember the date) we fell head over heals for the Cubbies and Wrigley Field. Banks, Beckert, Kessinger, Santo, Hundley, Williams, Hickman, Abernathy and Jenkins became our heroes. We must have attended a dozen games between June and the end of the summer, sometimes trying out the bleachers for a buck but mostly sitting in our seat in Section K on the 3rd base line. We followed the box scores, and were thrilled when the entire Cub infield started the 1969 All-Star game. We watched Jack Brickhouse, and listened to Vince Lloyd on the radio to follow late games from the west coast. Our summer of sadness had turned 180 degrees.

Unforunately, we were not educated abpout the Cub legacy and our happiness was about to disappear in a big way. We trully suffered as the Cubs started to melt away in August and how on September 10th of that year the Mets moved into 1st place. We refused to give up hope and were educated for the first time about the "loss" column and the "magic" number....whoa to us. By the 3rd week of September it was over and our hearts were broken. We had been spurned, our hopes shattered, and we said to ourselves that we would never get emotionally involved with this team again. Yes, we continued to go through the motions, getting up at 4AM for Opening Day in 1970 and standing in line in the rain for Billy Williams Day, but by the time we left for Champaign we had returned to our true love, the Sox with Dick Allen.

In any case all of this was written as a prelude in order to say to you guys, " I know how you feel" and I am sorry that the Cubs did not make it to the World Series. However since nearly 40 years has passed since the debacle of 1969; I would like to offer this advice from one who has following baseball for 50 years....find another team as soon as possible! Why subject yourself to the pain and suffering? There are many good alternatives such at the Yankees or Cardinals (you have to admit they have great uniforms) or Angels. Over time you will stop looking at the standings in the NL Central and after that you won't even be aware of the Cubs starting roster. Thinks about it; it will definitely improve your quality of life.

Of course it goes without saying that you are always welcome to join us on the Southside; we would greet you with open arms.

G'mar Hatima Tova


[My Father's Friend]

Friday, October 3, 2008

More Baseball: American League Day

Today we stick purely to the land of the DH with both ALDS series playing a game two.



5 PM Chicago (Buehrle) at Tampa Bay (Kazmir)



So the momentum from the end of the regular season is probably gone for the Sox. They dropped game one, but really the goal is to just grab one of two on the road and take care of business at home. If the Sox can win today they have a great chance of moving on. Will there be more fireworks from the Cabrera - Balfour fiasco? Will Evan Longoria keep it up? I don't know, but I think the Rays win again, because God hates Chicago. 8-4 Rays.



8:30 PM Boston (Matsuzaka) at Los Angeles (Santana - Not that Santana)



Boston has won 10 in a row against the Angels in the postseason (not this postseason, the series would have ended already) and have a good shot at 11 when Dice-K goes tonight. The Angels offense just did not look good-sound familiar?-in game one. I think Vlad and Teixeira get it going tonight though and take game two. This series is going to five games. Angels win 7-3.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Three More Games Today!


Major League Baseball is the anti-NBA when it comes to playoffs...and refs cheating. So the after an opening day of the playoffs that featured three games, we have three more today.

1:30 PM Chicago (Vazquez) at Tampa Bay (Shields)


Of all the playoff teams, these are the only two most are surprised made it. The White Sox had their run at the end, becoming the first team to end the season on a three game streak against three different teams. The Rays? Well they've just always sucked. So how do they react to their first playoff game? The Rays took the season series 6-4, but that was the regular season. I really want to pick the Sox based on the momentum, but it's indoors and on turf today, which thankfully the tiebreaker game was not. I'll go Tampa Bay 5-3. Take heart Sox fans, I'm bad at predictions.

5:00 PM Milwaukee (Sabathia) at Philadelphia (Myers)


The Brewers almost pulled off the win in Game 1, which probably would have meant the series was over. Brad Lidge was able to get out of the jam, giving the Phils a big win. Today though, it's the workhorse, or ox, CC Sabathia. CC wasn't great in the postseason last year, but he wasn't pitching complete games every three days then either. Myers has been pretty good this year and the Phillies are always dangerous on offense, but CC continues his path of destruction. Brewers 5-1.

8:30 PM Los Angeles (Billingsley) at Chicago (Zambrano)

I'm so lost about this game I don't even know what to say. I think we know what we're going to see from the Dodgers. Runs will be hard to come by on Billingsley who has gone 4-0 over his past five starts. As I stated last night, I have faith in Zambrano. This quote gives me more hope: "It's in the past. This is a new age, new stage for the Cubs, new ballgame, new team. And I just have to go out there and try to do my job and have fun." New age. New stage. Z's dropping rhymes before the game. Cubs win. Please? 6-4.

Looks Like More Fukudome...Maybe


Before Game 1 of the NLDS, Lou Piniella said he would like to go with Fukudome in right field for the entire series. Last night's game saw Kosuke go 0-4 hitting in the two spot.

After Fukdome's hitless game, the Cubs manager was less sure whether Fukudome would remain in the lineup for each of the rest of the games, saying
"I'm not sure, we'll just have to wait until [Thursday] and see."

Of course, Kosuke's defense is a factor in the decision, evidenced by his nice stumbling catch by the Dodger bullpen last night. He also did a decent job running up the count and putting the ball in play. Only his last at-bat ended in what has become typical Fuku fashion.

In the lineup or not, I can't imagine he hits in the two spot tonight. That was shocking to say the lesat.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Ummm...Oops


It looked like the Ryan Dempster we have seen all year. Then something changed. The letter-high fastballs designed to draw the swinging strikeouts kept getting higher and higher, while the low breaking ball kept hitting the dirt. Even some of the strikes got fans shaking their heads thinking "that was another ball." In the third you had the bases loaded scare, including a walk of Derek Lowe. But then the strikeout to end it and the Dempster shutout was still on. A quick fourth brought more hope and more confidence.

Enter the fifth inning. Two outs, one on base and another walk. Another walk. Then as the fly ball to center towered, some claps as everyone (including the Dodger bench) thought the inning was over. It wasn't. Grand slam. After that the Cubs barely threatened and it's one game to zero. Dodgers.

That was all Carlos needed for tomorrow. More pressure. Still, keep faith Cubs fans. It's Big Z. At some point you say that he's your guy and he has been for the last four or five years and there is no one you would rather see take the mound.

Lou Piniella is at the helm and he is there for a reason. The team will be ready and the magic is still there. Just don't eat anything to upset your stomach more than it already will be tomorrow.

Playoffs Start Today!


Playoffs?!!

Yep, the playoffs. Here are your games today:

2 PM Milwaukee (Gallardo) at Philadelphia (Hamels)

The Brewers are riding some serious momentum into the playoffs this season. After a few years of frustration they are finally in. However, the Phillies will be too good today with Hamels on the mound. Gallardo is an X factor (Y factor?) today in just his second start since missing five months hibernating...er, with an injury. He was good in his first start, but that was against the Pirates. Big deal. Phillies win today 6-2.

5:30 PM Los Angeles (Lowe) at Chicago (Dempster)

The first game in a five game series is the most important. No, it's not. I don't know why people say that in series. They're all important. Don't lose them. After this game, game two will be the most important. I like the Cubs here because of Dempster. I like the Dodgers because of Lowe. That makes for a nail-biting pitching duel and I think at home in the first game of the playoffs, day will turn to night and the magic will take over as the Cubbies win 4-1.

9:00 PM Boston (Lester) at Los Angeles (Lackey)

The Angels have lost nine straight postseason games to the Red Sox. Will the streak end tonight? One streak will end, that much is certain. The other streak in jeopardy is the Angels' eight game run beating the Red Sox this season. The Angels go with the experience of John Lackey tonight and he'll need it, because he is coming off his worst start of the year giving up 10 runs in two and a third against Texas last Friday. Still, I like the Angels to win this one 10-6.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Cubs Pick up Option on Sweet Lou



Just a day before starting the playoffs, the Cubs picked up the option on Skipper Lou Piniella for the 2010 season.

Sure, all he did was bring back-to-back division titles to the Cubs immediately after the team went 66-96 in 2006.

It feels good to have Lou locked up for a couple more years after the turnaround he has overseen.

Plus, anyone who can deal with Carlos Zambrano on a regular basis deserves a reward.

Hey, the Cubs Play Soon!

Remember the Cubs? It seems like forever since they have played a game. It really hasn't been long, just a little while since you cared what the outcome was. Plenty more Cubs content to come, but here's a quick preview of the series. Check out some position match-ups over at Top Ten Chicago Sports.

Why the Cubs will win:

The Cubs have the pitching to win this series. You can dig into the numbers all you want, but since Lou had a chance to set the rotation, things fall in place well for Chicago. Dempster has been unreal at Wrigley this year and I think anyone would want Harden and Lilly as the two guys trying to steal wins on the road. Then you have Big Z. Call him unpredictable if you want, but everyone knows the Cubs will get all he has on the mound in game two.

This lineup is also more than capable of getting the job done against LA. The Dodgers have great pitching as well, but after last season's playoff performance, these guys have something to prove. With the improvement the Cubs showed in taking pitches this season, we'll be seeing a lot of the Dodger pen.

Add in the playoff experience for Chicago as another positive. Even though it was just three games, almost every player on the team has a taste of postseason ball. Against a lot of right handed pitching we'll be seeing a ton of Jim Edmonds this series. You don't get much more experienced in the playoffs than Edmonds.

The Dodgers don't strike fear in their opponents, especially not the Cubs coming in with the kind of season they have put together. They're a great team, don't get me wrong, but the intimidation factor is zero. Check that, the intimidation factor is Manny (more on that in a bit).

Why the Dodgers will win:

The Dodger's starting pitching has the best ERA in the NL. Sure, there is no Brad Penny, but Derek Lowe chucked a .59 ERA in September, while Billingsley and Koruda (the game two and three starters) were solid as well. If the Cubs pitching falters, the Dodgers have the firepower on the mound to take advantage.

Manny Manny Manny. Manny Ramirez is the most likely guy in the playoffs to carry his team to a series win.

I can't possibly go on in this half of the segment as long as the positives for the Cubs. Suffice it to say they have good starting pitching, Manny, a solid pen, and the experience of Joe Torre running the show.

What does it all mean?

Nothing really. It's postseason baseball. It's the Cubs. Anything can happen, but I think this one looks good for the Cubbies. Sure LA is good in some aspects of the game, but I think the Cubs are clearly better. The opening game of the series is gigantic tomorrow night, but the Cubs pitching just stacks up too well for them to drop this thing. Right? We'll see. Cubs in 4.

One Game Playoff Fun

This is great. The Twins and White Sox in baseball's version of the play-in game. Time to see if the Sox can slam their way to another victory to grab the AL Central Championship and possibly build some momentum going into the playoffs. If you would have told me at the start of the year that the White Sox would be playing the Twins in a one gamer for the division and a chance to play the AL East Champion Tampa Bay Rays, I'd have slapped you, laughed at you, and kicked you right in the pants.

Ozzie of course is talking about the game, this time sticking to his description of Twins starter Nick Blackburn's last outing versus the Sox as "lucky," saying that if he pitches like that again, he likes Chicago's chances.



I don't know who you give the momentum to going into this game, but I'm going to say the Sox have it. Yeah, they were swept by Minnesota last weekend, but the Twins went on to struggle with the Royals and Ramirez's grand slam against Detroit was gigantic. That said, conventional wisdom and the Chicago White Sox have rarely agreed this season.

It's been mentioned over and over recently, but you have to love being a sports fan in this city right now. So turn on the TV (and turn down the volume) and watch the game. Cheer for the Sox, cheer against them, but take it in, because it's a one game playoff and there's only one October in September.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Saturday Baseball Extravanganza

A little roundup of the baseball in Chicago to date:

Chicago White Sox
  • I don't want to be a dick about this, but the Sox completely shit the bed at the Metrodome this week. That is why the situation stands as it does and the Sox aren't preparing for the playoffs right now.
  • The White Sox blew a huge opportunity Friday after Minnesota lost by losing 11-8.
  • Needless to say, Danks did not look like the kind of big game pitcher he would need to be for the Sox to have any success in the Playoffs. He gave up 7 runs in 4+ innings.
  • Griffey did hit 2 home runs in the Minnesota series.
  • The Twins lost today, leaving them in a statistical dead heat with the Sox.
  • As I am writing this, Javy Vasquez has been chased from the game after getting hammered. The Sox are down 7-1 in the 6th inning to the Indians.
  • If the Sox lose, which appears likely, they will be a half game behind the Twins. (**UPDATE: Sox lost)
  • IF the Sox lose tonight and tomorrow and the Twins win tomorrow, the Sox are eliminated. any other combination of Sox win/loss and Twins win/loss will cause the Sox to have to play the makeup game with Detroit. They then may have to play the Twinkies in a one-game playoff.
  • Good news: Quentin looks to be recovering nicely and still remains hopeful to play in October.
Chicago Cubs
  • The playoff rotation has been set: Dempster, Zambrano, Harden, Lilly (if necessary)
  • Their opponent is still up in the air. With the Phillies win today they clinch the division. Milwaukee is now in a tie with the Mets.
  • If Milwaukee wins the WC, the Cubs will play the Dodgers in the first round. If the Mets win the WC, the Cubs will play the Mets in the first round.
  • Micah Hoffpauir has looked good AND bad (boneheaded base running). Will he make the playoff roster?
  • Soto was not back in the lineup after a "minor" injury to his left hand.
  • I almost forgot, the reason Milwaukee is in a tie is because the Cubs beat them. Cubs won 7-3 today, though they did lose 5-1 yesterday.
  • In terms of who makes the 25-man playoff roster, rumor has it the Cubs will only carry 11 pitchers. A BCB fanpost has a decent list of who they think will make it. Pitching-wise I agree except that I think Marquis and Gaudin are not sure things and Marshall may make it. For bats, I agree and I would add Ward and Hoffpauir. (***UPDATE: The Trib is reporting Samardzija was named to the Cubs postseason roster while Gaudin was left off it)

Friday, September 12, 2008

Today's Links--Back on Track Edition

Friday, September 5, 2008

4-2 is a Pitcher's Count


In Detroit Thursday, Angels second baseman Sean Rodriguez worked the count to four balls and two strikes, but instead of taking his base, he struck out.

With the count at 2-2, ump Tim Welke asked Tigers catcher Brandon Inge what the count was. Something is already wrong. Anyway, Inge, ever the prankster, said he thought it was 1-2, Welke and Rodriguez agreed. Gary Sheffield was right. Just sayin'.

After the count was 4-2, Rodriguez fanned and took a seat on the bench. The improbable strikeout was the most impressive moment for the Detroit Tigers this season.

The Angels, closing in on the AL West title, play the White Sox this weekend. Oh, good, because they've never gotten screwed against them.
free counters

Unique Visitors Counter