Archive for 2013

Regarding That Miggins-Musial Dugout Photo

November 10, 2013
Who's in this picture with Larry Miggins? Guess now because most of the answers are revealed in the following narrative.

Who’s in this picture with Larry Miggins? Guess now because most of the answers are revealed in the following narrative.

That wonderful Cardinals dugout photo that we used yesterday in the Miggins MLB HR story yesterday is a new find for many of us. I had never seen it until one of the adult Miggins sons, Neil Miggins, e-mailed it to me on 10/30/13. The Miggins family also had only discovered it when they found it among photos in a recent Time magazine pictorial on the great Stan Musial.

Can you imagine how that must have felt? To be perusing your way through one of America’s last iconic magazine periodicals and – hold 0n – oh my gosh – there’s Dad – and he’s sitting right there in the dugout as a young man in a Cardinals uniform – leaning intently forward into his look upon the field – and he’s also sitting between two Hall of Fame members – Stan Musial and Red Schoendienst!

Who else is in the photo? Here are the names of all, but two:

Far right: That’s pitcher Joe Presko in the Cardinals jacket and cap. A balding third baseman Tommy Glaviano appears to be whispering into Joe’s ear.

Directly behind Larry Miggins: That’s Solly Hemus.

People you (should) already recognize: That’s Stan Musial, sitting to the immediate left of Miggins; Red Schoendienst is seated to Larry’s immediate right.

To the right of Solly Hemus in the second row: I can’t recall the name of the doctor/trainer in white to Solly’s immediate right, but that’s pitcher Vinegar Bend Mizell in the warm up jacket seated to the “Doc’s” immediate right. I also don’t recognize that hard-to-see face down the row from Mizell’s right.

Let us know how you did with a comment below. And if you think you know the identities of our two unidentified people, please enlighten us here too.

And have a peaceful, laid back Sunday!

Larry Miggins’ Two Big League Homers

November 9, 2013
1952 St. Louis Cardinals: That's Larry Miggins sitting between Stan Musial and Red Schoendienst. How many other Cardinal players do you recognize?

1952 St. Louis Cardinals: That’s Larry Miggins leaning forward and sitting between Stan Musial and Red Schoendienst. How many other Cardinal players do you recognize?

You fellow members of the Larry Dierker Chapter of SABR (The Society for American Baseball Research) know of local baseball legend Larry Miggins as the tall and eloquent Irishman who is also one of the regulars at our monthly chapter meetings in downtown Houston. For those of you who do not know him, Larry is a former Houston Buff and St. Louis Cardinal – and one of the men who played in Jackie Robinson’s first organized baseball games when Jackie began as a member of the 1946 Montreal Royals. Miggins played third base for the Jersey Giants that fine April day.

“Robinson should have remembered me – and also been grateful for the fact I was there that day,” Miggins will tell you. “Because my manager was making me play deep, I managed to kick in two infield bunt base hits to his first day totals on the road to Brooklyn.”

Miggins had one “oh for one” time at bat with the Cardinals in 1948 and then returned for 42 games as an outfielder for the 1952 St. Louis NL club. That was it for Miggins and the majors, but remember too, these were the days of the reserve clause, when the Cardinals controlled some of the best talent available to the entire 16-club big league scene.  If you got a chance at all at the big club, at all, and many did not, you had to almost play like a future Hall of Famer in the big club short-term to stick – and Larry didn’t get that done. He batted only .229 in 42 games and 96 official times at bat in 1952 and, also like all the others bound to one club back then with no other in-the-field options, Larry never got another shot at the big leagues.

But while he was there, Larry Miggins also hit two homers off two of the greatest players in the game. One of them would even go on to the Hall of Fame as one of the greatest, most durable lefties of all time. And, as so often is the case with Mr. Miggins, there was a story behind each classic homer.

 

Miggins HR # 1: May 13, 1952/ Brooklyn Dodgers 14 – St. Louis Cardinals 8 / @ Ebbets Field in Brooklyn / Miggins hits a 2-run HR off right hander Preacher Roe in the 4th inning.

The story here belongs to baseball broadcasting icon Vin Scully. Scully and Miggins were high school classmates in New York City when Vin predicted to Larry: “One of these days, you are going to be making your debut in the big leagues and I’m going to be there to call the shot on your first big league home run. When Miggins came to bat against Preacher Roe, Vin Scully was just breaking in as the junior announcer on Dodgers radio broadcasts and he happened to be at the mike when Larry came to bat in the fourth. Unfortunately, we do not have a transcript of Scully’s call on Miggins’ home run, but wouldn’t it have been wonderful to hear now, if we did.

 

Baseball Almanac Box Score: SL Cardinals 8, Brooklyn Dodgers 14
Game played on Tuesday, May 13, 1952 at Ebbets Field
St. Louis Cardinals ab   r   h rbi
Stanky 2b 5 1 1 0
Hemus ss 4 0 1 0
Lowrey rf 4 1 0 0
Musial 1b 5 3 3 4
Schoendienst 3b 5 1 3 0
Westlake cf 5 1 2 2
Miggins lf 5 1 1 2
Rice D. c 3 0 2 0
Presko p 1 0 0 0
  Schmidt p 0 0 0 0
  Yuhas p 1 0 0 0
  Werle p 0 0 0 0
  Rice H. ph 1 0 0 0
  Boyer p 0 0 0 0
  Slaughter ph 1 0 0 0
  Bokelmann p 0 0 0 0
Totals 40 8 13 8
Brooklyn Dodgers ab   r   h rbi
Reese ss 4 2 1 1
Cox 3b 5 3 2 1
Robinson 2b 4 2 1 0
Campanella c 5 1 3 2
Pafko lf 4 2 1 2
Snider cf 4 1 2 3
Hodges 1b 4 1 2 3
Furillo rf 4 0 0 0
Roe p 2 0 0 0
  Wade p 3 2 2 1
Totals 39 14 14 13
St. Louis 0 0 0 4 0 0 2 0 2 8 13 1
Brooklyn 0 2 4 0 4 1 0 3 x 14 14 1
  St. Louis Cardinals IP H R ER BB SO
Presko  L(1-2) 2.0 5 5 5 2 1
  Schmidt 0.2 1 1 1 3 1
  Yuhas 2.0 3 4 4 4 2
  Werle 0.1 1 0 0 0 0
  Boyer 2.0 1 1 1 1 1
  Bokelmann 1.0 3 3 3 1 0
Totals
8.0
14
14
14
11
5
  Brooklyn Dodgers IP H R ER BB SO
Roe 3.0 7 4 4 2 1
  Wade  W(1-1) 6.0 6 4 2 1 6
Totals
9.0
13
8
6
3
7

E–Boyer (1), Cox (2).  DP–Brooklyn 1. Robinson-Reese-Hodges.  2B–St. Louis Schoendienst (7,off Roe); Westlake (3,off Roe), Brooklyn Snider (4,off Presko); Wade (2,off Bokelmann).  3B–St. Louis Hemus (1,off Roe).  HR–St. Louis Miggins (1,4th inning off Roe 1 on 0 out); Musial 2 (4,7th inning off Wade 1 on 2 out,9th inning off Wade 1 on 0 out), Brooklyn Hodges (3,2nd inning off Presko 1 on 0 out); Wade (1,6th inning off Boyer 0 on 1 out).  Team LOB–8.  IBB–Hodges (1,by Yuhas).  Team–12.  SB–Pafko (1,2nd base off Werle/D. Rice); Campanella (3,2nd base off Bokelmann/D. Rice); Cox (2,Home off Bokelmann/D. Rice); Pafko (1,2nd base off Werle/D. Rice); Campanella (3,2nd base off Bokelmann/D. Rice); Cox (2,Home off Bokelmann/D. Rice).  U-HP–Artie Gore, 1B–Bill Stewart, 2B–Augie Guglielmo, 3B–Jocko Conlan.  T–3:20.  A–4,951.

Game played on Tuesday, May 13, 1952 at Ebbets Field
Baseball Almanac Box Score | Printer Friendly Box Scores

Miggins HR # 2: September 19, 1952/ St. Louis Cardinals 8 – Boston Braves 6 / @ Braves Field in Boston / Miggins hits a 2-run HR off left hander Warren Spahn in the 6th inning.

In a game the Cardinals went on to win, 8-6, Larry Miggins’ 2-run shot in the 6th tied the score at 3-3.

Many years later, Miggins and Spahn met again when both signed up to play in an Oldtimers’ Game at the Astrodome in Houston. Larry didn’t really know Spahn, but he could resist approaching the great Hall of Famer to see if he even remembered him from the 1952 season.

“Remember you?” Spahn briskly reiterated Miggins’ question. “Of course, I remember you. You were the rookie that hit that curve I left hanging over the plate in late September. Cost me the game. You don’t forget stuff like that.”

Baseball Almanac Box Score: SL Cardinals 8, Boston Braves 6
Game played on Tuesday, September 16, 1952 at Braves Field
St. Louis Cardinals ab   r   h rbi
Hemus ss 4 3 3 3
Schoendienst 2b 3 1 2 0
Musial 1b 5 1 3 3
Slaughter rf 5 0 1 0
Lowrey cf 2 1 0 0
Miggins lf 4 1 1 2
  Chambers p 0 0 0 0
  Yuhas p 1 0 0 0
  Brazle p 0 0 0 0
Glaviano 3b 2 0 0 0
  Rice H. ph,lf 1 0 0 0
Rice D. c 5 0 0 0
Mizell p 2 0 0 0
  Miller p 0 0 0 0
  Stanky ph 1 0 1 0
  Stallcup pr 0 1 0 0
  Benson 3b 2 0 0 0
Totals 37 8 11 8
Boston Braves ab   r   h rbi
Jethroe cf 4 2 0 0
Logan ss 4 1 1 1
Mathews 3b 4 1 2 0
Cooper c 4 1 1 2
Gordon lf 4 1 1 1
Torgeson 1b 5 0 1 1
Sisti rf 2 0 1 1
  Daniels ph,rf 2 0 0 0
Dittmer 2b 4 0 1 0
Spahn p 1 0 0 0
  Jester p 0 0 0 0
  Cusick ph 1 0 0 0
  Chipman p 0 0 0 0
  Burris ph 1 0 0 0
  Cole p 0 0 0 0
Totals 36 6 8 6
St. Louis 1 0 0 0 0 2 4 1 0 8 11 3
Boston 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 0 1 6 8 1
  St. Louis Cardinals IP H R ER BB SO
Mizell 5.1 7 4 4 4 4
  Miller  W(6-2) 0.2 0 0 0 0 1
  Chambers 0.1 1 1 0 0 0
  Yuhas 2.1 0 1 0 2 2
  Brazle  SV(15) 0.1 0 0 0 0 0
Totals
9.0
8
6
4
6
7
  Boston Braves IP H R ER BB SO
Spahn  L(14-17) 6.0 9 7 7 4 4
  Jester 1.0 0 0 0 2 1
  Chipman 1.0 2 1 1 2 0
  Cole 1.0 0 0 0 0 1
Totals
9.0
11
8
8
8
6

E–H. Rice (4), Benson 2 (4), Sisti (16).  DP–St. Louis 2. Hemus-Schoendienst-Musial, Hemus-Schoendienst-Musial, Boston 1. Jethroe-Torgeson.  PB–D. Rice (7).  2B–Boston Dittmer (7,off Mizell); Gordon (20,off Mizell).  HR–St. Louis Miggins (2,6th inning off Spahn 1 on 1 out); Hemus 2 (14,7th inning off Spahn 1 on 0 out,8th inning off Chipman 0 on 1 out); Musial (18,7th inning off Spahn 1 on 0 out).  Team LOB–10.  Team–9.  SB–Lowrey (3,2nd base off Jester/Cooper).  U-HP–Augie Donatelli, 1B–Lee Ballanfant, 2B–Al Barlick, 3B–Tom Gorman.

Game played on Tuesday, September 16, 1952 at Braves Field

 

Thank God for Larry Miggins.

Larry Miggins Former Big Leaguer and Active SABR Member

Larry Miggins
Former Big Leaguer and Active SABR Member

Larry Miggins is one of God’s major league contributions to the human race and a storied life in baseball history on many levels. In closing today, for example, there was the time he showed up early for baseball practice as a freshman student athlete at the University of Pittsburgh. No one else was there, but this old man with a ball and glove and it was still too cool to just stand around and wait for the others. The old man flipped the ball to Miggins and the two played catch as they awaited the rest of the team and staff.

The old man turned out to be Honus Wagner, who was there as a volunteer coaching assistant, apparently for no greater reason than the fact he was a baseball man and wanted to do what he could to help the kids learn to play and love the game too.

And now that special young man, Larry Miggins, is an active member of our Larry Dierker SABR Chapter in Houston.

How many other SABR chapters have a member who not only homered off Preacher Roe and Warren Spahn, but also, more than once, played catch with Honus Wagner?

Not too many, I would think.

Houston Baseball Fans of 50 Years Ago: The More Things Change, The More They Remain The Same

November 8, 2013

A MOO

Back on July 11, 1963, Galveston Tribune sports staff reporter Chuck Pickard collected these fan opinions into one column on the needs of the Houston Colt .45s in their second year of MLB life. Much of what the fans sa0d back then may sound familiar today.

Fifty years later, the more things change, the more they remain the same.

Enjoy!

********************

Better Days Await Colts

By

Chuck Pickard, News-Tribune Sports Staff, Galveston Tribune, July 11, 1963

Although Houston is floundering around in the Depths of the National League this season, better things are ahead for the Colt .45s in the next five years.

At least this was the opinion gleaned in an interview with 12 Galvestonians Wednesday.

Leading off the interview was J.W. BROWN, manager of Walgreen Drugs.

For the first pitch, Brown was asked to pinpoint the main reason for the decrease in Houston’s attendance this season.

“There was more general public interest in the Colts last season,” the druggist answered. “There were a lot of fans went to games last season just out of curiosity. This year the Colts are having to depend more on the dyed-in-the-wool fan.”

The next batter was ARNOLD NEFF, manager of the Style Mart clothes store. Neff, who has been a baseball fan all his life, has viewed four games in Colt Stadium this season and he hopes to see every team in the league play at least once this year.

Domed Stadium Will Help

As for the future, Neff feels Houston will eventually become one of the top drawing teams in the National League. “The dome stadium will attract people from all over the country,” he said.

RON LUKER, a salesman at Skain’s Sporting Goods, thinks the Colts’ inability to win on the road is putting a crimp in home attendance.

“Another thing that hurts the gate is the Colts’ failure to put together a winning streak,” Luker said. He still feels Houston’s home attendance will reach the 850,000 mark.

Hitting cleanup in the interview was young MIKE LUQUETTE, a member of the Ball High football team.

Although he will quickly tell you football is his favorite sport, Luquette is happy he lives near major league baseball. The Ball High gridder has attended only one Colt game this summer, but he hopes to see more, time permitting.

GILBERT MENDIOLA, a parking lot attendant, hated to see Houston trade away Roman Mejias to the Red Sox. Mendiola has seen two games this season and is a regular listener on radio.

Barbers SAM and CHARLES PISTONE are avid Colt backers, but they both feel Houston is killing its gate, especially in the outlying areas, by blacking out major league telecasts on the weekend.

Sam thinks Mejias would have turned the tide in some of the one-run defeat suffered by Houston this season. Brother Charles calls Dick Farrell “one of the best pitchers in the league.”

I.C. JONES, a Texaco Service Station owner, hasn’t seen the Colts play this year, but he hopes to make at least one game on their next homestand. He wants to see the Mets. “Maybe Houston can win then,” smiled Jones.

ALEX BALFOUR, a fireman who has followed Houston baseball dating back to the days of Joe Medwick and Dizzy Dean, thinks the Colts need more depth before they can move up in the standings.

Should Televise Home Games

FAYNE NEWBURN thinks attendance at Colt games would improve if the team would televise its home games.

“Just look what TV did for bowling,” remarked Newburn, a desk clerk at the Jean Lafitte Hotel. “There’s no reason TV couldn’t do the same for baseball.”

MRS. G. BROOKS doesn’t let working as a cashier at the Martini Theater keep her from hearing Colt games. She had her portable radio tuned to every play of Houston’s 2-0 victory over Pittsburgh Wednesday night.

Mrs. Brooks is another who objects to the blackout of major league games in Galveston. “This is stamping out baseball interest on the island,” she claims. “Now we don’t see American League teams at all.”

GENE MARINELLI was the last to take his swings, and the Galveston barber predicts better things for the Colts.

“Houston has had a lot of bad luck on the road, but with a few breaks turning their way the Colts should start winning,” Marinelli said.

The Colts made a prophet of Marinelli by beating Pittsburgh.

********************

In 1963 and 2013, hope springs eternal.

Last Call for the Dome’s First Pitch

November 7, 2013

Long before the apparently last pitch for the Astrodome on November 5, 2013, the first pitch for the now shaky life expectancy of the 8th Wonder came down the 60’6″ baseball game toll road on April 9, 1965. It was the first game ever played at the Astrodome and the brand new Houston newly named Astros were there to entertain the visiting New York Yankees in a pre-season exhibition contest. The right-handed Turk Farrell had taken the mound for the Astros amid the first loud indoor baseball park roar had just approached crescendo as Mickey Mantle of the Yankees stepped up to the plate, eager and ready to become the first batter in Astrodome history.

As we continue our mourning for the impending loss of Houston’s Eiffel Tower-class icon, here’s how the brilliantly descriptive, talented, and sadly-for-us, long deceased Wells Twombly described this first-Astrodome-pitch event in his April 10, 1965 column for the Houston Chronicle:

EPSON MFP image

That’s it. As unsensational and ordinary and clairvoyantly symbolic it may have been for most of the Astros’ future in the Dome, it was done. The first pitch in Astrodome history had been delivered.

Happy late week adventures, everyone. If you have a favorite public or personal moment in Astrodome history, please think about sharing it with the rest of us here as a comment on this column.

Thank you,

The Pecan Park Eagle

Death of The Eighth Wonder

November 6, 2013
The Astrodome Our Once Proud and Still World-Recognized Eighth Wonder of the World

The Astrodome
Our Once Proud and Still World-Recognized
Eighth Wonder of the World

Born: April 9, 1965

Born: April 9, 1965

Died: November 5, 2013

Died: November 5, 2013

Rest in Peace

Rest in Peace

... and thank you, Houston voters, for once again for showing up with your usual deep appreciation for unique world-class architecture and local history, as long we don't go back too far or pass on the opportunity for creating more parking space.

… and thank you, Houston voters, for once again showing up with your usual deep appreciation for unique world-class architecture and local history, as long as we don’t go back too far – or pass on the opportunity for creating more parking space.

VOTE FOR PROP 2 TODAY!

November 5, 2013

If you haven’t yet read this eloquent Mike Vance article from yesterday, please do so – because it speaks to the heart of today’s election business in Houston and to the center of the referendum which will determine the resurrection or death of our beloved and iconic Astrodome:

https://thepecanparkeagle.wordpress.com/2013/11/04/more-than-8-reasons-to-save-the-8th-wonder-of-the-world/

 

Then please, please, please: Go to the polls TODAY and cast your vote FOR the approval of Harris County Proposition 2 that will transcend our world-acclaimed architectural symbol of Houston into a new and vital and profitable life.

USF@UH13 14

“Save the Astrodome. ~ Give new life to the Eighth Wonder of the World. ~ Vote Yes on Harris County Proposition 2.”

“Save the Astrodome. ~ Give new life to the Eighth Wonder of the World. ~ Vote Yes Today on Harris County Proposition 2.”

More Than 8 Reasons to Save the 8th Wonder of the World

November 4, 2013
“Save the Astrodome. ~ Give new life to the Eighth Wonder of the World. ~ Vote Yes on Harris County Proposition 2.”

“Save the Astrodome. ~ Give new life to the Eighth Wonder of the World. ~ Vote Yes on Harris County Proposition 2.”

More Than 8 Reasons to Save the 8th Wonder of the World

 by Mike Vance

Mike Vance is a native Houstonian, an historical researcher of the first order, the author and creator of several written and film treatments of local and Texas history, and the Executive Director of Houston Arts and Media (HAM), “where local writers, film makers, and media artists bring knowledge, education and local history to life.” ~ For more information about the non-profit organization HAM, please click this link: http://www.houstonartsandmedia.org

I’m not quite old enough to recollect the first time I walked into the Astrodome, but I know it was in April 1965 for a contest against the Baltimore Orioles that was part of the inaugural five-game exhibition series that also included the famous Mickey Mantle home run. My earliest memories do include a barrel full of moments at the Dome, though. It’s where I saw the great Bob Gibson and Willie Mays, where I can still visualize Roberto Clemente rounding third to beat a throw to the plate. And it’s where Jimmy Wynn and Rusty Staub became my first favorite ball players.

Our sports memories, however, are not created in a vacuum. I was at that 1965 baseball game with my dad. He’s the guy who took me to hundreds of other games there. It was with my parents that I saw the fabled UH-UCLA basketball game in 1968. The All Star game played there that same year? I saw that one with my dad and my cousin. When I earned a pair of free Astros tickets for being a straight-A student, I took my grandfather, a man who helped stoke my early fire for baseball. In the 1980s, my best friends and I were regulars for the Astros and Oilers, and experts at heckling the Dodgers and Steelers. By the last decade of the Astros’ Dome days, I was taking my own daughter to her first baseball games. As wonderful as the sports portion of my Dome visits might be, the warm memories of the people with which I shared them is far more important.

All of those people are among the reasons that I helped organize a coalition of history and preservation groups. Running a campaign to educate voters about Harris County Proposition 2 has given all of us involved a chance to interact with literally thousands of other Houstonians who can’t wait to share their own memories. Places can touch lives, and the Astrodome is a place that is part of Houston’s DNA.

The Astrodome cost $37 million to build in the early 1960s, and it quickly became the most important building in the history of our city. Nothing else even comes close. It is our icon. Houstonians could travel the world over, and at the mention of their hometown, people would say “Astrodome!” It symbolized Houston as surely as the Eiffel Tower meant Paris or the Empire State Building meant New York.

But if passion and pride don’t move you, then maybe good economic sense will. The National Trust for Historic Preservation, one of the primary partners in the Our Astrodome coalition, initiated an outreach tool called “8 reasons to save the 8th Wonder of the World.”. With input from coalition partners, they were refined, and I’m paraphrasing them here because they’re damn good reasons.

Over the years, since the initial public money used to construct it, the Dome has benefited from many more millions in maintenance and upgrades, and would cost almost $300 million to replace in 2013. We’re sitting on an enormous investment of public money. Why throw that away?

And what would physically throwing it away mean? In a word- Waste. If demolished, the Astrodome would contribute thousands of tons of waste to local landfills, and result in an embodied energy loss of 1.38 billion MBTU. It’s even more wasted energy to tear it down and haul it away –10.5 billion BTU. And the monetary cost to tear it down, haul it off and fill the hole? Well, that’s been estimated from $40 million to as much as $100 million. It’s a well-documented fact in construction that the greenest building is the one that’s already built, so it makes infinitely more sense to fill the Astrodome with people than fill landfills with the Astrodome.

The New Dome will serve all of Harris County – from high school football, graduations and swimming championships, to international festivals, the Houston Livestock and Rodeo Show, special events and expanded fan tailgating experiences. The Dome will be a vital part of the experience at Super Bowls and Final Fours held here. It will be a true destination, and just as the original stadium did for decades, a repurposed Astrodome will foster memories and experiences for generations of Houstonians and visitors to our city.

For those who still have questions, here’s one you need to ask: Does Houston really need one more surface parking lot? The answer is no. Without getting too deep into the amazing selfishness that makes Houstonians believe they are entitled to a close parking space anywhere they go as the sole occupant of their private cars, I can give this one an absolute no. A large percentage of people at the Texans games are using multiple spaces already for tailgating, and the option of a parking garage has been floated and turned down before. If we truly wish to continue to spurn sensible public transportation, then at least we could use our space more wisely and build a garage. A couple of hundred more surface spaces benefits only the guy pocketing the parking money.

Another common and completely specious refrain from naysayers is “if they can tear down Yankee Stadium, they can tear down the Astrodome.” First off, how is that a logical argument at all? It’s metaphorically like saying if they can shoot Lincoln, they can shoot McKinley. For one thing, the original Yankee Stadium was pretty much torn down in the mid-1970s. All that was left was a piece of façade. It was such a complete replacement that the ball club played at Shea for most of two seasons. Secondly, and most importantly, Yankee Stadium wasn’t the first of its kind in any way whatsoever. It was a completely indistinctive architectural work. But don’t take a Houstonian’s word for it. Earlier this year, the New York Times called the Astrodome “the most important, distinctive, influential stadium ever built in the United States.”

Sometimes it seems as if people outside of Houston recognize the importance of this building more than we do ourselves. An engineering marvel and an icon of Modernist architecture, it was the largest domed structure on Earth when it opened, eclipsing the previous largest dome by almost twofold. The Astrodome set the standard for decades of design and construction of arenas and stadiums around the world. The Dome literally changed the way we watch sports. It had the first luxury boxes. For better or worse, it had the first artificial turf. It was the first stadium in the world to defy weather. The Astrodome was the first domed stadium. in the world. EVER.

The repurposing will once again position the Astrodome as a one-of-a-kind special events venue, allowing for more column-free exhibition space than any other facility in the world. For the last several years, our largest convention, the Offshore Technology Conference, has been forced to operate partly out of tents in the parking lot. The OTC enthusiastically supports prop 2 because they know the New Dome will make their event even bigger, and that comes from a conference that already draws more than 100,000 attendees to Harris County with an estimated annual economic impact of $160 million. The addition of a revitalized Astrodome will enable Houston to attract the biggest of the big conventions and meetings. That, my friends, means money.

The last reason I’ll list is my personal favorite, and it’s this: The Astrodome symbolizes Houston’s ingenuity and innovative spirit, which is stronger than ever today. A repurposed, reimagined, living Astrodome will once again shine a national spotlight on Houston and be a tangible example of our can-do character. It would qualify as the largest critically endangered structure ever saved.

This Tuesday, Harris County votes. A YES vote on County Prop 2 saves the Astrodome and makes it a living building once again. A no vote, and it gets demolished. Let’s make some more memories for future generations of fathers and daughters, grandfathers and grandsons. Let’s show the world that Houston is capable of taking the long-term view, that we don’t tear down all of our history. Let’s make a smart decision. Vote YES on Harris County Prop 2.

********************
“Save the Astrodome. ~ Give new life to the Eighth Wonder of the World. ~ Vote Yes on Harris County Proposition 2.”

“Save the Astrodome. ~ Give new life to the Eighth Wonder of the World. ~ Vote Yes on Harris County Proposition 2.”

Case Keenum: Awards and Stats are not the Story

November 3, 2013
Case Keenum #7 Starting Quarterback Houston Texans

Case Keenum #7
Starting Quarterback
Houston Texans

Most of us from UH have been waiting for this day from the moment that the Houston Texans signed Case Keenum to their taxi squad as a non-drafted free agent after the 2011 season. We knew from his career in college that, if he ever got his chance, he would shoot past Yates and Schaub into the driver’s seat as the Texans’ best leadership shot at climbing out of their “good enough to fail” malaise and start making the real move on the Super Bowl.

The modest, always humble but trenchant student of the game did just what we thought he would do. After almost disappearing from print last year, Case went to work learning the Texan system as a member of the practice squad, finally getting some critical game time in the 2013 pre-season. He quickly proved himself too valuable to be left off the active players’ roster at the start of the season. The Texans knew that he had shown enough to have been gobbled up fast by some other quarterback-desperate NFL club had they not protected him.

Then came the four-game stretch of Schaub “six-picks” and a fifth game extension of this offensive black plague by Yates for another loss and the Keenum ascension into the “starter tryout seat” as the QB to go up against Kansas City and one of the best defenses in the NFL set the stage for long-term change. Case acquitted himself beautifully, even though the Texan inability to protect Keenum from the blitz and conservative play-calling contributed greatly to Houston’s one-point loss. Case had shown what he could do, winning his promotion to the starter’s job for the balance of this fading away season. Schaub has no future here – and Yates appears to be little more than a younger version of Schaub. The Texans need to be convinced that Keenum is their guy for the future before the next draft and the only way to do that is to play him out there as the starting QB for the rest of the season.

A comparison of the college career numbers for Case Keenum and Andrew Luck is quite interesting on many levels. Take a look at the following chart. Please note the staggering difference that exists in their cumulative numbers. Only some of that chasm of difference is due to the fact that Case played four plus seasons from 2007 to 2011 due to an early season injury in 2010 that allowed him to return for his banner year in 2011. Luck, on the other hand, only played three seasons in a much less pass oriented offense at Stanford (2009-11) before coming out early as a Heisman candidate on his way to becoming the No. 1 pick in the same NFL draft that avoided Keenum altogether.

A Brief Comparison of the Collegiate Football Statistics of Case Keenum and Andrew Luck:

STAT CATEGORIES CASE KEENUM ANDREW LUCK
PASS COMPLETIONS 1,546 713
PASS ATTEMPTS 2,229 1,064
PASSING YARDAGE 19,217 9.430
PASS COMPLETION % .694 .670
PASSING TD TOTAL 155 82
PASS INTERCEPTIONS 46 22
PASSER RATING 160.6 162.8
RUSHING ATTEMPTS 300 163
RUSHING YARDAGE 897 957
RUSHING AVERAGE 3.0 YARDS PER CARRY 5,9 YARDS PER CARRY
RUSHING TD TOTAL 23 7
AGE/HEIGHT/WEIGHT 25/6’1”/205 24/6’4”/239

Case had the best answer to an oft-thought, if not always asked question from Channel 13’s Bob Slovak yesterday. Slovak wanted to know how Case felt about going up against the No. 1 Draft pick in today’s Cots@Texans game as the guy with all the new college passing records that no NFL team claimed in any round.

“When all is said and done,” Keenum answered in slow deliberate words: “This league is not about past awards or records. It’s about football. It’s not about the draft and all the externals that come with it,” Keenum added. “When the whistle blows, and that ball snaps, it’s about football.”

Case Keenum is not about ego, or keeping track of records, or getting his feelings hurt. He’s about playing the game with all his heart, mind, soul, and intelligence; he’s about learning from his mistakes and getting better; and he’s about knowing that the learning process never stops and that nothing worthwhile in life is ever possible without effort and a willingness to take nothing for granted.

Case Keenum could fail in his new opportunity with the Texans, but I, for one, wouldn’t bet against him. By season’s end, unless he gets hurt, God forbid, my guess is that the Texans are going to be counting their lucky stars that they gave this great young man from the University of Houston a chance at a time when everyone else was willing to write him off as a “too small, systems-assisted quarterback”. He’s so much more than that gross misunderstanding of the man who starts today for the Houston Texans.

Go Get ‘Em, Case! Your jury can hardly wait!

 

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“Save the Astrodome. ~ Give new life to the Eighth Wonder of the World. ~ Vote Yes on Harris County Proposition 2.”

“Save the Astrodome. ~ Give new life to the Eighth Wonder of the World. ~ Vote Yes on Harris County Proposition 2.”

New Photos of the Astrodome

November 2, 2013

My son Neal and I attended the UH game with the University of South Florida at Reliant Stadium on Thursday night. By the time we got there for the 6:00 PM nationally televised kickoff, our rainy day in Houston had cleared into a wispy high cloud twilight of bright skies and beautiful formations in the heavens above. The air was crisp and clear and still at ground level – and the temperature hovered somewhere in the high 60s. It could not have been more pleasant for Halloween.

It was also a beautiful day for photography of the old architectural icon that so many of us are hoping to save from the wrecking ball next Tuesday by a majority vote in favor of Proposition 2 in the General Elections, but this is not a piece on that issue. The Pecan Park Eagle is expecting a much more closely informed guest columnist to do that for us in the next couple of days. – This is simply a brief photo exposition of a few new Halloween 2013 pictures that yours truly took prior to the Cougars’ 35-23 win over USF that evening – and what their images say to us about saving the Astrodome.

“Save the Astrodome. ~ Give new life to the Eighth Wonder of the World. ~ Vote Yes on Harris County Proposition 2.”

Halloween 2013, 5:45 PM: Cougar Fans at Reliant Stadium Get a Taste of the Astrodome’s Massive Grandeur Prior to Kick-Off.

Photo One above is a sight that deserves to be there forever while it also serves a useful purpose to both Houston and the world. Those skies burst forth with hope, joy, vision, fulfillment, and a big taste of Houston’s legacy to everyone in the generations that shall follow us as the people of this vast city of Houston at large.

Halloween 2013: 5:000 PM. Reliant Stadium and the Astrodome. Houston History, Joined at the Hip.

Halloween 2013: 5:00 PM. Reliant Stadium and the Astrodome. Houston History, Joined at the Hip.

These two Houston venues could be enhancing each other with the Astrodome restored through a new and relevant business plan. It does not have to be another lost battle for preservation in which only the new survives while the old gets torn down and turned into parking space.

Halloween 2013: From Reliant Stadium, Looking West, Near Sundown.

Halloween 2013: From Reliant Stadium, Looking West, Near Sundown.

We need to stay bullish on Houston, even when the sun goes down.

“Save the Astrodome. ~ Give new life to the Eighth Wonder of the World. ~ Vote Yes on Harris County Proposition 2.”

“Save the Astrodome. ~ Give new life to the Eighth Wonder of the World. ~ Vote Yes on Harris County Proposition 2.”

Have a nice weekend, everybody!

If Kids Could Throw the Penalty Flag

November 1, 2013
If Kids Were Like Football Referees and Could Throw Penalty Flags at Home ...

If Kids Were Like Football Referees and Could Throw Penalty Flags at Home …

If American kids were like American football referees and could throw the penalty flag on their parents whenever they felt wronged, here’s how a few penalty terms would re-translated into everyday life at home:

(1) Encroachment: “Mom, you came into my room to search through my stuff without asking my permission. That’s going to cost you 15 hours of cooperation.”

(2) Unnecessary Roughness: “Dad, you came home and spanked me for drinking your last beer after Mom had already grounded me for the afternoon on the same charge. That offense is going to cost you one mowed lawn this coming Saturday morning.”

(3) Off Sides: “Sis, you leaned too far to the left at dinner tonight and ate my apple pie when I wasn’t looking. Next time you come home late through a window, don’t expect me to cover for you.”

(4) Pass Interference: “Dad, you knocked me down just as I was about to catch the keys from my brother and take the car downtown on the getaway.” Just for that, no car wash for you.”

(5) Intentional Grounding: “Just for trying to take the car without your permission, you sent me to my room for the weekend – and you did it on purpose too. Just don’t bother me. I’ll be texting and Tweeting to the world about how unfair you are.”

(6) Illegal Use of the Hands: “Grabbing me by the hair and throwing me against the wall for what I just said was uncalled for. – I’m calling CPS.”

…. Wait a minute! ….. The parents are grabbing the red flag from the kid! …. And they are throwing down a penalty flag of their own:

(1) Delay of Game: Son, as a result of all the things that your previous penalties upon us say about you, our parenting, and our family life, we have decided upon the following measures:

(1a): You, your brother, and your sister will immediately turn over to us all your cell phones, Internet-wired computers, iPads, Game Boys, radios, music playing devices, and credit cards;

(1b): You will cancel and desist from all of your current social plans until we can figure out if a genuinely loving and trusting relationship with each other as a family is even possible;

(1c): We will enter into an intensive plan for family therapy on all the issues that keep us from being the strong American family we always hoped we would be;

(1d): We now see that strong families cannot be bought with bigger houses, more cars, more electronic stuff, or with kids calling the shots on what we do next;

(1e): The game of life for our family must be delayed until, if and when, we come up with a winning family script; and,

(1f): If we cannot save our families without changing the culture of excess, than we had better change the culture before it destroys the kinds of families that got us through several major wars and one consuming Great Depression.

We can only wish that the examples parodied in this column were not so prevalent today, but they are this bad, and far worse, in many cases. If we don’t seek active solutions, in the Name of God, who will?

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“Save the Astrodome. ~ Give new life to the Eighth Wonder of the World. ~ Vote Yes on Harris County Proposition 2.”

“Save the Astrodome. ~ Give new life to the Eighth Wonder of the World. ~ Vote Yes on Harris County Proposition 2.”