Archive for 2012

Astros 2013: Who Are the Free Agency Targets?

November 20, 2012

No Bloated Veterans Need Apply!
(Unless you give us a Home-cooked Deal Like Rice Got!}

Astros 2013: Who Are the Free Agency Targets – if anybody?

I didn’t have room for that last qualifier in the title to this piece, but it is both the short accelerator pedal and the quick brake foot-pad on this whole idea of signing any free agents who could help the 2013 rebuilding Astros on their transition into the American League style next year.

Chip Bailey over at MLB.Com made the case yesterday for four affordable, signable players:

http://blog.chron.com/ultimateastros/2012/11/19/4-free-agents-who-would-help-the-astros-in-2013/

Lance Berkman already made sense to most of us as an affordable former Astros star who would fit right in as a nice veteran leader and DH on the young club – and Ryan Ludwick figures to be a good affinity pick for Astros GM Jeff Luhnow, given their shared former Cardinal background together. Starter Dan Haren and closer Ryan Madson also make a lot of sense too, but let’s get real.

The Astros aren’t going to the World Series next year, or anytime soon. The real challenge next year is quality playing time for the young candidates that are ready to get used to the driving, fiery style of new manager Bo Porter – while a handful of fair quality, familiar veterans help lead the way for the younger guys, while also helping the fans maintain their identification with the club as still their Astros.

How about signing Lance Berkman as DH and then going after Andy Pettitte and Roy Oswalt for some home-brew discount contracts to finish their careers at “home” with all kinds of hedges built-in to protect the club from physical disabilities that may limit or prohibit actual performance. They don’t have to be great, they just have to be steady, capably average performers whose reputations are already a reminder that Houston does still aspire to again have major league talent on the field in droves someday. Maybe the Astros could even pick up a lien on Chad Qualls as a reliever with some of the same performance-hedge qualifiers.

Check out the free agency list for yourself. Maybe you will see some candidates that make more sense to you.

Baseball Uniform News: St. Louis Cardinals

November 19, 2012

2013 Alternate Home Jersey
St. Louis Cardinals

Here’s a nice look at the new alternate home jersey that the St. Louis Cardinals will be wearing for home Saturday games in 2013. It features the iconic “birds on a bat” with the city’s “St. Louis” name, instead of “Cardinals,” for the first time in a gazillion years – and on an off-white cream-colored background that was popular back in the 1940′ and 1950’s – as it was here in our town when the now-fabled “Houston Buffs” proudly roamed these parts as their Texas League farm club.

Check out both of these links and the film clip included in the first one that goes into more detail on the thinking behind these changes. When Mr. DeWitt goes into the background on the reasons for change, the principal reason for these changes goes unstated: The Cardinals have not made any uniform changes since 1998. It’s time to produce something that fans will need to buy.

New Cardinals Uniform Links:

http://stlouis.cardinals.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20121115&content_id=40305046&vkey=news_stl&c_id=stl

http://blogs.riverfronttimes.com/dailyrft/2012/11/the_cardinals_get_a_new_look.php

Please note that the 11-time World Series Champion Cardinals are not tampering with their “birds on a bat” commitment in this incorporation of “St. Louis” into the mix. The last (and only) time anyone in their front office tried that omission back in the 1940s, the St. Louis native fans came close to storming The Bastille in united protest. And who among us could blame them?

Like the Yankees and their visual bond to the magically crossed “N-Y” letters, those two birds on the bat are the very personification of baseball in St. Louis.  Nobody needs to mess with any identity images that are already in place to the “nth” degree of perfection.

Right, Dodgers?

Aside from the Yankees, Cardinals, and Dodgers, what other clubs do you see, if any, that are pretty much untouchable from major change in their uniforms from an established public bond to what’s already in place?

And, yes, we already got the word about three weeks ago: Houston is not on the “untouchables” list, but I do have to give the Astros credit. – Their 2013 uniforms are a nice return to their fundamental look during the early days of the franchise in the Astrodome and I like them a lot over the pajama look of the recent year pinstripes.

What do you guys think?

A College Football Irony

November 18, 2012

~ The University of Houston ~
New Cradle of Winning College Coaches

Former UH Coach Kevin Sumlin

So, wait a minute, please. Let’s get straight about something that just happened in college football. Yesterday, Baylor knocked off #1 Kansas State, exactly one week after Texas A&M went over to the mother-load country of SEC football and upset #1 Alabama on the road.

WOW!

And what do these two surprises by a couple of Texas schools over a seven-day period share in common beyond the face of their majorly surprising outcomes? How about the connection of their coaches?

Both Art Briles of Baylor and Kevin Sumlin of Texas A&M each reached their current coaching assignments as “hire-aways” from the The University of Houston. Briles left UH first. After coming back to his UH alma mater for five seasons (2003-2007), and returning the Cougar program to respectable recovery from the 0-11 Dana Dimmel coaching disaster, Briles left for more money and “prestige” at Baylor in Waco. Briles was replaced directly by Kevin Sumlin, who, with some considerable offensive coaching help, took the Cougar up-tempo game to a zenith level over a four-year period (2008-2011) that corresponded with the availability of QB Case Keenum and four of his six operative college seasons. Then Sumlin got hired away too, almost drooling all over himself in false humility and quickly adorned Aggie Pride and, of course, hobbling too on that new bigger paycheck as he stumble-ran to his car and sped away last December from “the little university that will never give up” out on Cullen Boulevard.

As a UH alum, I really don’t blame Briles or Sumlin for leaving for more money – or for what they each saw as a better job. I’m just tired of coaches like them, who use UH as a stepping stone after going out and recruiting the players to UH that they later abandon for a “better offer elsewhere.” Please note: I didn’t say I liked either man for leaving. I just said I didn’t blame them for leaving.

Briles was a UH alum. He played under Yeoman. And he left. I understand why. I just never want to see him again, unless it’s on the downside of a Baylor game with UH. Same with Sumlin because of the way he left. He apparently was so busy working out the details of his new contract with the Aggies during the week leading up to, but also including, the day of last year’s C-USA Championship Game that it cost UH a 14-0 unbeaten season for their want of a game plan.

I attribute some of the 2012 Cougar collapse to the holdover UH players being cut off from their Sumlin mentor figure and the powerful coaching assistants who left UH with him. The Sumlin group now “vend” to the Aggies.

UH needs to come to terms with the fact that we now live in an era in which only big money wins out in the end. Forget the prestige factor. UH can hold their own with the best of them, eventually, if they’ve got the cash to make offers that are beyond refusal. And right now, they do not.

Tony Levine may be the second coming of Bill Yeoman on the loyalty side of things, but he is going to have to right the ship to keep the “Good Hope Cougar” afloat. – I like the guy. And I like the way he talks about his players and UH. And, like most Cougar alums, I think, I’m willing to ride out the adjustment time with him now, if he’s willing to later not grind success into just another platform for moving on. That’s why I say, when the time comes, whether it’s Tony Levine, or someone else we’ve yet to meet, UH needs to be ready on the payday side. Our best UH chance of keeping a coach that’s worth keeping is measured by salary and perqs.

At any rate, and with all UH rants aside, it is ironic that this “seven days apart” consecutive week ambush of two #1’s in college football this 2012 season was pulled off by the two most recent head coaches at UH.

Hmmm and what else?

With Kansas State and Oregon, who also lost their game to Stanford last night, now dropped from the # 1 and # 2 spots as previously unbeaten teams, the probability is that #3 and still unbeaten Notre Dame and “only-Aggie” beaten #4 Alabama both shall rise by tonight to those first two spots, with the Fighting Irish likely to take the top bunk on the BCS Express as we head into the Thanksgiving weekend. “Ain’t” college football grand?

Now to the NFL: GO TEXANS, GO! – BEAT THE JAGUARS!

The Astrodome Rediscovered

November 17, 2012

Lindell Singleton and Bill McCurdy
UH Downtown, November 15, 2012

A couple of days ago, I had the privilege of meeting Mr. Lindell Singleton, Creative Director and Contractor for the Texas 28 Films company that is now in Houston, making a documentary film on our beloved, but most recently, more than often lamented – stagnant, but still standing Astrodome.

Singleton made me think, and touch, and feel what the Astrodome means to me personally. And when I later surfaced from my inner prowling, I came to a fuller discovery of a chain-like connection that I could not have possibly owned so quickly in the moment of discussion. It needed time to germinate and grow to full light.

For me, from my East End Pecan Park childhood through now, the layers of soulful discovery through baseball all have shared some transcendent moment of joy that linked forward over time as places in the heart that were really all understand in the end as being one and the same.

The first time I walked into Buff Stadium in 1947 as a nine-year old kid, I felt it. It hit me as a Technicolor scene of vast green ballpark lawn, framed by a twilight sky, the aroma of fresh bread, mustard, and hot dogs, and the sound of ballpark organ music, hopping to the beat of bouncing baseballs in pre-game practice.

It was there on the sandlot, on any of those endless summer mornings of all day baseball. All you had to do was look up in the sky to the northwest regions beyond far center field, beyond Griggs Road, beyond the cemetery, and far into the billowing clouds and on track with the flocks of birds flying up and away. There was a bigger, better world out there for those of us who played and worked hard enough to find it.

It was there in our unfolding lives so very often as we grew from the sandlots, in special first movie dates with beautiful little girls we would never forget. It was there in our first cars, our graduations, our wedding days, our special job moments, the births of our children, and, wow, was it ever again with us the first times we later returned to any kind of field to play baseball with our kids again.

And it was there too for those of us who were coming of age in the adult world at its birth in 1965 as the loudly proclaimed Astrodome, Houston’s “Eighth Wonder of the World,” made its natal passage into our daily presence and mindset.

The Astrodome came as confounding proof of that better world we forever harbored in our dreams.

Standing proudly on the plains that lined the southern pastures south of the Old Spanish Trail, the Astrodome was Judge Hofheinz’s delivery of evidence to Houstonians that we really did deserve better – and here it was.

The Astrodome stood proudly as Houston’s symbol of unique accomplishment, but it also served us internally as physical proof that Judge Hofheinz had somehow broken into the biggest toy store in the world and brought us the biggest gift he could find. In simple terms, it just proved, on so many levels, that we could all get to where we wanted to be, if we went for it – with all we had to bring to the table. You didn’t wait for the “Wizard of Ahs” to bring it. You had to be the wizard of your own home delivery by taking charge of the things you could control about the use of your own passions and abilities in your own life.

And that was the lesson of the Astrodome via Judge Roy Hofheinz. Not entitlement.

Now sadness.

Today the Astrodome still stands, as an old “tattered friend” reminder of what she once was as “the Belle of the Ball” in new stadium construction. The irony is – that is precisely who the Astrodome still is as an architectural icon that has no peer any place else on earth.

She was once the beacon of Houston’s hope for the future and she could be so again, as well as a repository for the rich heritage of this city’s history in all areas of human aim and endeavor.

Now all we have to do is find out which Houston we are: Are we the Houston that will preserve the memory of the Astrodome for all the right reasons? Or are we the Houston that will simply raze a building that is as vital to the history of architecture as the great pyramids and turn hallowed ground into an extension of the Reliant Stadium parking lot?

We’ll soon enough see. The time for finding out is at hand.

In the meanwhile, I would like here to rededicate my old baseball-rediscovered poem, “The Pecan Park Eagle,” to  the Astrodome in the hope that more of us, enough of us to matter, will rally to realize our potential loss before it slips into all of us the way certain nocturnal maladies cause some people to die in their sleep.

LIke the old baseball cover in my poem, the Astrodome once held a larger world within her that helped a legion of us to also find that same larger world in ourselves.

You just don’t throw away people or institutional entities that do that sort of thing for you.

OK, Astrodome, this one’s now for you:

The Eighth Wonder of the World!

The Pecan Park Eagle By Bill McCurdy (1993): Ode To An Old Baseball Cover I Found While Playing Catch with My Eight-Year Old Son Neal On an Abandoned School Yard.

Tattered friend, I found you again, Laying flat in a field of yesterday’s hope. Your resting place? An abandoned schoolyard. When parents move away, the children go too.

How long have you been here, Strangling in the entanglement of your grassy grave, Bleaching your brown-ness in the summer sun, Freezing your frailness in the ice of winter?

How long, old friend, how long?

Your magical essence exploded from you long ago. God only knows when. Perhaps, it was the result of one last grand slam.

One last grand slam, a solitary cherishment, Now remembered only by the doer of that distant past deed. Only the executioner long remembers the little triumphs. The rest of the world never knows, or else, soon forgets.

I recovered you today from your ancient tomb, From your place near the crunching sound of my footsteps. I pulled you from your enmeshment in the dying July grass, And I wanted to take you home with me.

Oh, would that the warm winds of spring might call us, One more time, awakening our souls in green renewal To that visceral awareness of hope and possibility.

To soar once more in spirit, like the Pecan Park Eagle, High above the billowing clouds of a summer morning, In flight destiny – to all that is bright and beautiful.

There is a special consolation in this melancholy reunion. Because you held a larger world within you, I found a larger world in me.

Come home with me, my friend, Come home.

“Because you held a larger world within you,
I found a larger world in me.”

 

BCS Takes Half Step Toward Better Format

November 13, 2012

When the NCAA Division One schools finally decided prior to the 2012 season to replace the current “Top Two BCS-Rated Teams” for the national championship in 2013 with a “Top Four BCS-Rated, Two Round Tourney through the bowl system, I wasn’t totally happy about it, but I felt it was at least an improvement over what has been there now for several years through this season.

The current two team system adds importance to only a single bowl game each year. The four team system will give us three post-season games that matter. An eight team system would take the level of consequential games al the way up to seven – and also quiet a lot of complaints from those schools who miss the cut.

The results of this past weekend simply amplify the case for that eight team post-season tourney. Let’s use the BSC poll results of this past weekend as though they were the last measure of the season and quickly examine how the outsider tears fall accordingly:

Top Eight in BCS Poll though 11/11/12:

Two Team Option: If this had been the final poll of the year, Two undefeated teams, # 1 Kansas State and # 2 Oregon would meet in the national championship game, leaving #3 Notre Dame, a third unbeaten club, and the once felled and very upset and redemption hungry #4 Alabama Tide crying in the rain with no meaningful place to go.

The New Four Team Tourney Option: It would dry the tears of the Irish and the Tide, but possibly leave the door open for some “what about us” howls from the Aggies, should Alabama win the tourney in the wake of the goosing they took from Johnny Football and Friends last Saturday. Plus, Georgia, Florida, and LSU might even grind out a little SEC whining with a few “damn ya’lls” thrown in for good measure.

The Disregarded Eight Team Tourney Option:  It takes away the complaints of any school rated near the top eight list, but, of course, that cuts back on the opportunities for those who want to keep alumni whining alive as an important part of college football.

Oh well. Change in the right direction is better than none at all.

Why doesn’t Division One want the clearer path to a truer championship settled more decidedly on the field? It couldn’t be that they are concerned that their student athletes are going to be distracted from study hall by those extra heavy payday playoff games.

Could it?

The Art of DVR Game Watching

November 11, 2012

This little monster is a DVR. It’s like an old VCR with a much better picture.

Today I was watching the Texas A&M @ Alabama football game on TV; it started at 2:30 PM, during my normal Saturday nap time.

The problem this time was the surprising start that the Aggies got over the No. 1 team in the nation, but it may have been less surprising to people like me. We UH Cougar alums had seen what the “in your face” up tempo Sumlin offense could do pretty quickly against any team that wasn’t ready to deal with the pace as Alabama clearly wasn’t at the start of things today.

Half time brought me to a crisis phase. I could fight sleep to watch the rest of the game after the break and risk falling asleep anyway – or I could just put the DVR on, go take a nap, and then watch the rest of the game when I awoke.

I chose the DVR option, fully aware of the self-imposed conditions one must try to honor for the sake of not having the experience ruined by some uncalled for awareness of the outcome in advance of my DVR viewing.

Things seemed right:

(1) No one else was home, but me. CHECK

(2) After setting the DVR to record the game on Channel 11, I switched the viewing setting to the Turner Classic Movie Channel at 256 on the DirectTV guide. That way, I knew I would not be suddenly shown or told the score when I had awakened again and turned the TV back on. CHECK

(3) I would ignore cell phone call alerts and radios and conversations with neighbors until after I had seen the rest of the game for myself on DVR. CHECK

I did everything I knew to do before going down for a great nap that pretty much allowed me to slumber my way past the actual real-time event of the two games I was now recording. I had not felt up to going to our special UH homecoming game with Tulsa. It was just starting as the Aggie-Tide game was nearing the first half.

When I awoke, I first checked the UH game, only to learn in disappointment that my beloved Cougars were again having their beloved rears handed to them by another of the wannabe-big-shot schools on our schedule. Losing 31-0 to Tulsa in the 3rd quarter in real-time did not hold my attention for long, so I slipped over to the DVR version of the Aggies game that I was certain by the clock was now over.

But not over on digital. The Aggie lead in the 3rd quarter has been cut to 20-17. Can they hold on? We’ll see.

Not so fast.

All of a sudden, my adult son Neal bursts through the front door and sees me watching some game. From the sound, he doesn’t know which one it is. He just has this handy little phone app that gives him imminent data information on everything from game scores to the stock market to new earthquakes by location and Richter Scale magnitude.

Before I can even shout a word in defense, Neal yells out: “Hey, Dad, how about those Aggies beating Alabama? Can you believe that?”

“I can now,” I said.

After a brief discourse between Neal and me over the fact that his information has now accidentally ruined my DVR game experience, I watch the rest of the game, anyway, in spite of the fact that I now know the outcome.

What a great game! The last half of the 4th quarter alone, right down to that last gasp Alabama pass that the Aggies have to intercept in the end zone to seal the 29-25 win, would have been chilling to watch in real time – or on any outcome-blind DVR that has not been spoiled by an unrequested piece of critical information that suddenly falls upon an invested viewer like acid rain.

The new technology. It’s good. – And it’s bad.

Oh well, so far, Neal hasn’t accidentally spoiled a single one of my earthquake watch parties.

Death of DKR Stirs Memories

November 8, 2012

#27 Wade Phillips, the current Houston Texans defensive coaching guru, played linebacker for the UH Cougars in their 1968 classic game against UT. James Street, the father of MLB’s Huston Street, played some QB for the Horns in that same game.

The death of Darrell K. Royal at 88 marks the passing of a college football and UT Longhorn icon, also stirring ancient memories that go way beyond the Austin camp of burnt orange believers. Check out Jerome Solomon’s column in this morning’s 11/08/12 Houston Chronicle and read all the gracious things that former UH Cougar Coach Bill Yeoman had to say about his peer among the coaching gods.

http://www.chron.com/sports/longhorns/article/Solomon-Take-it-from-Yeoman-Royal-one-of-a-kind-4018128.php

The match up between UH and UT in Austin on Saturday night, 9/21/68, turned out to be one of those games for the ages, pitting the veer offense Cougars of Bill Yeoman against the wishbone offense Longhorns of Darrell Royal. UH went to Austin that day on the heels of a 54-7 destruction of Tulane at the Astrodome a week earlier and UT was getting ready for their opening game of the 1968 season. UH was led by the powerful and fast Paul Gipson at running back; UT countered with the speedster exceptional fellow from Spring Branch, Chris Gilbert.

The Veer versus the Wishbone was on!

There was one other charging factor. – UH was entering their third year of probation for the crime of breaking recruitment rules in their signing of national star RB Warren McVea out from under the noses of all the hobnob bigger schools in 1965. The Cougars were extra-charged in 1968 to make every game against a big name school like UT count as their compensatory bowl game and they went to Austin full of confidence that they could beat Texas.

And so did we Cougar alums and fans. I was there with a large traveling entourage of people who caravanned northwest to Austin with no plans that went further than yelling our celebratory songs out the car windows at “Hollering Woman Creek” on the late night/early morning drive back to Houston.

What a game it was!

1st Quarter: 8:24 – Paul Gipson capped an 11-play UH drive with a 1-yard dive over the goal for a TD. (Leiweke PAT) UH 7 – UT 0.

1st Quarter: 7:16 – Three plays into their first possession, Chris Gilbert of UT broke away for a 57-yard TD run that led to the game being tied. (Layne PAT) UH 7 – UT 7.

(No further scoring occurred until the 3rd Quarter as the defenses hunkered down to control the game. Yes, it’s true. Back in 1968, both UH and UT were capable of playing exceptional defense.)

3rd Quarter: 8:05 – Chris Gilbert caps a 6-play drive with an 8-yard run to score a TD that gives UT the lead. (Layne PAT) UT 14 – UH 7.

3rd Quarter: 7:47 – Two plays later, Paul Gipson of the Cougars rips off a 66-yard run that again ties the game. (Leiweke PAT) UT 14 – UH 14.

3rd Quarter: 4:43 – Paul Gipson takes it in for a score from 5 yards out on the 5th play of the drive. Leiweke misses the PAT, but UH has regained the lead. UH 20 – UT 14.

4th Quarter: 14:21 – Ted Koy of UT takes it in from 4 yards out on the 6th play of the drive to tie the game, as Layne also misses the PAT attempt. UH 20 – UT 20.

4th Quarter: (very late – the phantom score that never counted. We had seats directly down this goal line and got to watch the whole thing up close and directly down the goal line.) With the ball perched only a breath way from the goal line on 4th down with about two minutes to play, as I remember, Paul Gipson takes a short turn and pushes into the goal line from the left side. His whole front torso and the ball are over the goal line plane before he is pushed back to earth short of the goal. The referee’s call? – Gipson did not get in. No UH score. The clock ticks quickly into disgruntled history as a tie. Remember, there was no provision for overtime in those days.

That play launched the classic joke:

Cougar Fan: “Hey, Ref! By how far did Gipson miss that last TD?”

UT-UH Game Ref: (He simply smiles and holds up the “Hook ‘Em, Horns” sign as his answer.)

FINAL SCORE: TEXAS LONGHORNS 20 – HOUSTON COUGARS 20.

And it didn’t even feel as good back then as a kiss from your sister!

Over the years, bittersweet has simply churned its way into a treasured memory. I’m just glad I was there, and I certainly don’t blame Darrell Royal for that final call. Darrell Royal scheduled UH at a time he could have hurt us more by avoiding the Cougars.

Darrell Royal was a great man – pure class – and his loss goes way beyond UT and college football. All of American Sports today mourns his departure.

RIP:DKR!

 

The Rap on Manager Rapp

November 7, 2012

Vern Rapp was a guy I watched as a kid while he played as a catcher for the 1950 Houston Buffs. Rapp only batted .188 with 4 homers in 72 games in 1950, but he had some long-term resiliency, batting .266 in 16 minor league seasons that spanned to include some later year token pinch-hitting appearances between 1946 and 1976. Rapp put in 15 partial and full seasons between 1955 and 1976 then 1 full and 2 partial years as a major league manager of both the Cardinals and Reds.

Here’s an excellent article by someone identifying themselves as “retrosimba” that highlights the stones on the rocky road to success that derailed and quickly caused triumph to slip away from Vern Rapp in the bigs:

http://retrosimba.com/2012/03/08/mike-matheny-can-learn-from-pitfalls-of-vern-rapp/

At the end of the day, Vern Rapp was one of those hardworking, rigid thinking guys who was bound to run into conflict with eccentric players from the 1970s like Al Hrabosky over facial hair and fail to understand or be in touch with how his decisions might affect the egos of major stars like Lou Brock or the needs of a guy like Ted Simmons to use loud music in the clubhouse as a way of handling things inside after a tough loss.

Rigid. Mechanical. Out of touch. Unbending. These factors were bound to rattle out as behaviors that were going to get Vern Rapp fired. And so they did. Twice. Once in St. Louis (1978). And Once in Cincinnati (1984).

Managers like Vern Rapp ring too many bells that cannot be unrung. Poor Vern Rapp. After 1984, nobody in baseball rang his managerial bell again.

One irony: When former Buff Vern Rapp had the Cardinal managerial reins removed from his hands during the 1978 season, the club handed it to another slightly better known and accomplished former Houston Buff star named Ken Boyer.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Babies Deal Bob Stevens to Astros for Jose Altuve

November 6, 2012

STEVENS FOR ALTUVE! (That’s new Astro Bob Stevens modeling his 2013 road jersey for the news conference at MMP.) – Houston Babies GM Bill McCurdy announced today that star right fielder Bob Stevens and a bag of vintage base balls had been traded to the Houston Astros for rookie 2nd baseman Jose Altuve and a written SABR report by some literate member of the Astros staff on a baseball book to be named later. Babies Manager Bob Dorrill expressed both his gratitude and regret. “The Babies are happy to get Altuve,” Dorrill said, “but we really are going to miss Bob Stevens and his rifle-arm in right next Babies vintage ball season.”

It didn’t really happen. What really happened Monday night was that SABR/Houston Babies member/right fielder Bob Stevens established himself as the first and only person, so far,  to wear any of the new Houston Astros 2013 uniform gear to the November 2012 SABR meeting at the Inn at the Ballpark next to Minute Maid Park. Bob wore a 2013 Houston Astros road jersey through the door and, in his usual quiet and reserved style, he took his seat in a far corner table and allowed his jersey to speak for him.

Bob Stevens is not your everyday run-of-the-mill runway clothing model. It was all I could do to get him to turn around for a couple of photos. But, in his equally common courteous way, he managed to pivot in his chair long enough to allow two good shots of a good-looking SABR/Babies guy dressed as an Astro.

The trade ruse here simply jumped into my mind as an early morning curve ball from this column’s ethereal muses as an alternative to my intended opener” “Last night we held our November 2013 SABR meeting downtown as the Larry Dierker Chapter in Houston,” which is really today’s article subject.

So, don’t worry. The Houston Babies will not have to contend with a barehanded second baseman named Jose Altuve in 2013 – and they hold on to their rocket-armed and fiercely quick right fielder that is Bob Stevens.

Meanwhile, here’s a pictorial quick view of the Larry Dierker Chapter SABR Meeting at the Inn at the Ballpark onTexas @ Crawford in Houston at 7:00 PM on the evening of Monday, November 5, 2012:

Astros television analyst and former big league pitcher Steve Sparks delivered a talk that was equivalently informative, instructive, entertaining and funny. Steve’s minor league time in Stockton even carried him through a short period of service with the “Mudville Nine,” old Casey’s outfit.

As per usual, we have SABR Chapter leader Bob Dorrill to thank for corralling the best available baseball talent in our area to speak at our monthly chapter meetings. Those of you who don’t attend must not realize how much GREAT baseball talk you are missing.

Tony Cavender presented a humorous book report on a large work that detailed some of the funniest things that baseball players do and say to each other, among other things. One of the stories involved some language a player was using to describe a devilish curve ball, but “Gentleman Tony” was having trouble telling the tale because of the vulgarity. When we discussed the dilemma prior to the meeting at dinner. I suggested that Tony simply call it a “mofo curve” because I was sure that most would know what he really meant. Tony ran with that one – and guess what? – Everybody got it. – Thanks, Tony, for a great total review.

Jo Russell brought a framed aerial photo of Buff Stadium, looking west toward downtown from the Gulf Freeway. It was done by the Bob Bailey Studio in the early 1950s and it is not the one from the late 1930s that also contains a look at old West End Park. Mike McCroskey did most of the narration on this one.

Ira Liebman, the Event Marketing Manager and Broadcaster for the Sugar Land Skeeters, was one of several visiting guests of SABR. Welcome, Ira! We shall hope to see you and all the others at further SABR meetings.

Broadcaster Greg Lucas was among our regular chapter member  folks on hand.

… Astros Radio Broadcasting Icon Bill Brown – and 25-30 of his friends – were also in the house Monday night. Bill also spoke to us about his new book on the history of the Astros, seeking, as good writers do, fresh perspective from SABR people on strategies for maximizing interest in the story and the book.

Loyal SABR member Matt Rejmaniak and his sweet mom were also there.

Former All American Girls’ Leaguer Marie “Red” Mahoney is now a new SABR member and was also there last night with new SABR friend Marsha Franty.

Larry “Irish” Miggins, 87, and Marie “Red” Mahoney, 88 are now our two SABR and Baseball History senior icons. Larry played in Jackie Robinson’s first professional game as a member of organized baseball in 1946. – Marie was a charter member of the famous “League of Their Own” for women that began in the 1940s. Both are deep baseball people – and both are now happy members of the Larry Dierker Chapter. – Join us sometime. Our next meeting is set for 12/10/12. For further details, e-mail Bob Dorrill at BDorrill@aol.com – or call him at 281.361.7874. We would love to have you join us in our non-stop celebration of baseball and rich historical contributions to our culture and country.

Have a nice Tuesday, everybody – and don’t forget to vote!

“The 1954 Houston Cardinals”

November 5, 2012

“I don’t really share this tree limb with any cardinal that looks a lot like me. If you land here and you want to stay, you got to be grey. – I can handle that one – all day.”

Early one morning, back in May 2003, I was getting ready to drive from Houston to St. Louis for the annual St. Louis Browns Alumni Reunion Party when I stepped out in the backyard to check things out one more time before I took off.

The strangest thing then happened.

A fiery red cardinal landed in the yard on the limb of our big elm tree. I stopped in my tracks to just admire him. I love cardinals, but that’s when things turned spooky. Another red male cardinal landed on the same limb, but facing the first, from a distance of no more than eight to ten inches.

I wanted to yell, “Wait! Can you guys hold that pose while I run inside and get my camera?”

Didn’t happen. When two male cardinals really land in a tree limb face-off, it’s no St. Louis baseball photo-op. It’s a territorial thing, as it was this time, with two flyaways, and one cardinal chasing the other. But it sure would have made for a great photographic keepsake to go with the one I maintain in my mind.

The incident reminds me of the time in early 1953 when the rumor floated in Houston that those other red birds, the St. Louis Cardinals of the baseball world, were thinking about moving here as the solution to their problems at home. If you remember, 1953 was the year when everything came to a head in St. Louis as a two-club major league town. The Browns and Cardinals were both losing games and gate and, to make it worse, Cardinals owner Fred Saigh was facing federal penitentiary time for income tax evasion. A move or sale to Houston or Houston interests seemed like a plausible option. The local AA Houston Buffs were even starting to out-draw the Browns too whenever the former fielded a winning team.

Houston turned out to be a “bait and switch” threat to the City of St. Louis that settled out with brewer August Busch purchasing the Cardinals to keep them at home and, later that year, Browns owner Bill Veeck selling his club to Baltimore interests for a 1954 move and morph transition into the Orioles.

What If … the 1953 rumors about Houston had proven true and the NL club had then opened the 1954 season as the Houston Cardinals and had succeeded locally as such through the 2012 season!

Like all things in the “fork in the road option in life” that wasn’t taken, we can only know a few things, for sure, about the impact of choosing an alternate reality, and these are the countable items that suddenly have a cap because of the change. Best example: The St. Louis Cardinals’ collection of World Series titles would have capped at nine pennants and six World Series titles, with the latter as follows in bold type: 1926, 1928, 1930, 1931, 1934, 1942, 1943, 1944, 1946.

The move also would have cost St. Louis the five additional World Series titles they have picked up since 1954. Would the Houston Cardinals fared as well from 1954 through 2012? There’s no way to know.

We also don’t know how long HOF Great Stan Musial would have played, but, given his 1963 actual last season, he possibly could have played ten years for Houston.

We could do this all day and be well on our way to forever.

HOF Great Bob Gibson didn’t actually sign with the Cardinals until 1957. Would he even have been around to sign with the 1957 Houston Cardinals? Who knows? Maybe Bob would have pursued a career in the NBA. He was “pretty good” at that sport too. (With our Houston luck, Gibson might have signed with the Yankees.)

There would have been no Houston Colt .45’s. No Astros. No 2005 Astros-White Sox World Series. And, hey? Would there even have been an “Astrodome”? It’s not likely, not by that name, anyway. There could have been a domed stadium built for baseball, somewhere, but t’s highly improbable “they” would have called it “The Astrodome.”

Would there have been a Judge Roy Hofheinz in the future of the Houston Cardinals? We’ll never know, but former Buffs owner Marty Marion and his friends might have had the best ownership shot at purchasing the “Houston Cardinals” from the Saigh interests.

It’s probable there never would have been a John McMullen, Drayton McLane, or Jim Crane in the ownership lineage because those things hang on such perishable factors over brief moments in time, but, who knows?

That also means it’s unlikely that the Houston Cardinals would be moving to the American League in 2013 and, with a little help from serendipity, maybe there never would have been a Baseball Commissioner named Bud Selig!