Archive for the ‘Baseball’ Category

Original Colt Dean Stone Has Died

September 2, 2018

Dean Stone
Author of Houston Franchise’s 1st MLB Complete Game Shutout
~ Dead at Age 87

 

Pitcher Dean Stone is dead. He passed away at his home in Moline, Illinois at the age of 87 on August 21, 2018, following a lengthy illness. May his soul and spirit now rest in peace or soar at will as needed.

Stone was selected by the Houston Colt .45s from the St. Louis Cardinals in the November 27, 1961 Rule 5 player draft that stocked their club and the other new NL expansion team, the New York Mets, before both began playing in 1962.

On April 12, 1962, Dean Stone pitched the first complete game shutout in franchise history, besting the Chicago Cubs, 2-0, in Houston in the third game in the team’s first series. Stone gave up only 3 hits and 2 walks, whole striking out 9. It wasn’t the first club shutout. That happened the previous day when lefty Hal Woodeshick also shut out the Cubs, 2-0, but he only went 8 innings, needing Turk Farrell to pitch the 9th for the club’s first save in history.

A week later, on April 19, 1962, Stone again shutout the Cubs, 6-0, in Wrigley Field, but immediately from there, for whatever reason, went south as a reliable starter and was traded to the Chicago White Sox for pitcher Russ Kemmerer on June 25,1962.

Dean Stone was 2-3 with a 4.47 ERA in 15 games for the 1962 Houston Colt .45s. His eight season MLB career mark (1953-57, 1959, 1962-63) in 215 games was 29 wins, 39 losses, and an ERA of 4.47 (the same as his shorter term mark in Houston). For his career, he pitched 19 complete games with 5 shutout wins total. He also walked 373 and struck out 380 in 686 innings pitched.

Stone is best remembered today as the winning pitcher of the 1954 All Star Game, even though he never retired a single batter. This bizarre occurence took place at Cleveland Stadium on July 13, 1954 when Stone entered the game with two outs in the top of the 8th to face Duke Snider, with the American League trailing by 9-8. Red Schoendienst, the baserunner on third that Stone inherited, tried to steal home and Stone threw him out at the plate. The American League then scored three runs in the bottom of the 8th and won the game, 11–9, as Virgil Trucks hurled a scoreless 9th inning to save the win for the hardly perspiring pitcher of winning record credit.

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

“What Else Could Be Perfect For Us?”

September 1, 2018

“What Else Could the Three of Us Do Together That Would Be Perfect for Us?” ~ Asks Jose Altuve in the popular HEB Food TV Commercials.*

* Well, Jose, as we wrote about more generally this morning in our Thursday column, you three guys could get together and, just by being the actual talents you each already are, and solve the mystery of the missing hum in our batting order.

Forever Framber. The absence of early run support for rookie pitcher Framber Valdez, was sorely felt Friday and could not be overcome alone by his great talent and personal confidence in his own stuff. It got him through five scoreless innings and a yield of only two Angel hits, but a run charged to him in the sixth caught Valdez with his first MLB loss when veteran Colin McHugh couldn’t resist letting that runner score and adding a couple of extra runs from his own bag as his Astros reliever that same inning.

As our latest victimized starter to suffer from the lack of early run support, young Valdez deserved a better fate, but that’s not how it works in this era. In low early scoring games, the pitch count almost guarantees that at least one of the starters is going to receive a loss that’s more tied to his club’s lack of early hitting than it is his own quality mound work. It not only happens to the greats of Justin Verlander’s rarified ilk, but to rookies like Framber Valdez as well.

Unfortunately, Jose, you three HEB store stars did accomplish something in the bottom of the eighth that we hope to not see again too often. With the Astros trailing, 3-0, Josh Reddick led off the bottom of the eighth with a single to center and went to third on a sharp double down the right field line by Tony Kemp.

Wow! Hope springs again! With runners on 2nd and 3rd, and nobody out, here comes George Springer to the plate with a chance to either make this a one-run deficit game with a hit that stays in the park ~ or maybe he even ties it up with one of his still famous “dingers” into the Crawford Boxes that also jars the nuts loose from the screws holding the rafters in place at MMP.

Doesn’t happen. After a spirited struggle with some serious heat from the 6’6″ Angels’ Ty Buttrey, George Springer fans for the first out. Alex Bregman then walks against the giant speedballer Angel to load the bases with one out.

“MVP! MVP! MVP!” becomes the crowd’s game soundtrack as you walk to the plate this time, Jose Altuve. Wow! Any Astros fan could write the movie version for Hollywood, We all know when the pregnant moment has arrived, And this is it: It’s our “Popeye” taking on their “Blutto” to the bittersweet resolution of all conflict.

But somebody forgot the spinach.

Jose Altuve goes down swinging hard for the second out. Now it’s up to Carlos Correa to do something about those three potential scoring starers at each base/ He give it his all, running the count all the way out, but there’s apparently too much rust left upon him as a result of the DL time away. Carlos Correa pops a feebly low pop fly down the first base line near the bag. It’s on its way to becoming out number three and the eighth inning rally’s final third failure.

We all witness the frustration in Correa. It is a perplex that we all share, by the way, in this latest moment of joy denied. Again. Carlos Correa tries to strangle the bat on his hapless trot to first during the short air flight of out number three. The ball is easily caught for the third out and the last call for any serious chance of winning this game dies unanswered..

OK, so most of us around here understand that baseball pretty much imitates everything about life, except for the pay scale, but let’s hope this business of you three special guys almost single handedly killing our best chance of winning a particular game in a single inning together doesn’t happen again ~ or, at least, anytime soon.

Just be something near your 2017 selves, if possible, and everything should be OK again.

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

A Peek at the AL Batting Average Race 

Through Games of 8/31/18: 

BATTING AVERAGE

1. Mookie Betts

Boston Red Sox

.341

2. J.D. Martinez

Boston Red Sox

.333

3. Jose Altuve

Houston Astros

.326

4. Jean Segura

Seattle Mariners

.317

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

AL WEST Contender Scores

Through Games of 8/31/18:

LA Angels 3 – Houston 0.

Oakland 7 – Seattle 5.

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

AL WEST STANDINGS:

Morning of Sat., 9/01/18

TEAMS

WON

LOST

PCT.

GB

Houston

82

53

.607

 —-

Oakland

81

55

.596

   2.5

Seattle

75

60

.556

   7.0

LA Angels

66

69

.489

 16.0

Texas

58

77

.430

 24.0

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

SEPTEMBER

1

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

2

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

3

MIN

NYY

BAL

4

MIN

NYY

BAL

5

MIN

NYY

BAL

6

7

@BOS

TEX

NYY

8

@BOS

TEX

NYY

9

@BOS

TEX

NYY

10

@DET

11

@DET

@BAL

SD

12

@DET

@BAL

SD

13

@BAL

@LAA

14

AZ

@TB

@LAA

15

AZ

@TB

@LAA

16

AZ

@TB

@LAA

17

SEA

@HOU

18

SEA

LAA

@HOU

19

SEA

LAA

@HOU

20

LAA

21

LAA

MIN

@TEX

22

LAA

MIN

@TEX

23

LAA

MIN

@TEX

24

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

25

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

26

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

27

@BAL

TEX

28

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

29

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

30

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Astros Need to Get The Hitting Hum Back

August 31, 2018

Two pitchers going late with no runs are like two cross country runners taking on Death Valley with no canteens for support. The first that finally does find water probably wins, but chances are that neither survives the grind long enough to win anything.

What messes up an inning in which two of the first three hitters get it started with a single and a double? You got it. – It’s when the only man that doesn’t hit is the middle guy – and his contribution is to hit into a 6-4-3 double play, followed by a fourth batter who leaves the runner at 2nd base, via a called or swinging strikeout, a can-of-corn fly ball out, or a foul out to the catcher.

This kind of time at bat inning can happen anytime, even with great teams, it’s simply far less noticeable when a really good team like the Astros is trying to get the hum back into the flow of a talented batting order still struggling to get back into the roaring hum of their best aggressive and pitcher supportive lineup.

Right now, the boys are still trying to recover, even though the H.E.B. Grocery television commercial stars are back in the lineup. Neither Springer nor Correa are hitting at levels we know they are capable of producing, and that goes for average or strategic game spot hitting.

For now, the strategic hitting hummers in the lineup are pretty easy to identify. The first two are really easy to pick: Alex Bregman and Tyler White, plus Marwin Gonzalez and Yuli Gurriel, they are the two plus two to go ready now in the company of Mr. Altuve, but even he is human. Did you ever think you’d live to see the day of the little giant striking out four times in a row? ~ What’s the color of the sombrero awarded for that hapless-at-hitting accomplishment?

Now we need to get McCann back – and hitting from the heels of the hitter he already is – and we need Springer and Correa humming as the hitters we all already know they are. They have nothing to prove. They just need to be the hitters they really are.

Maybe then – a guy like Justin Verlander can go out there and pitch the kind of game he pitched last night and actually get the kind of early run support he needs to win most games of that type.

Two pitchers going late with no runs are like two cross country runners taking on Death Valley with no canteens for support. The first that finally does find water probably wins, but chances are that neither survives the grind long enough to win anything.

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

A Peek at the AL Batting Average Race 

Through Games of 8/30/18: 

Batting Average

1.

Betts • BOS

.342

2.

Martinez • BOS

.336

3.

Altuve • HOU

.329

4.

Segura • SEA

.317

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

AL WEST Contender Scores

Through Games of 8/30/18:

LA Angels 5 – Houston 2.

Seattle 7 – Oakland 1.

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

AL WEST STANDINGS:

Morning of Fri., 8/31/18

TEAMS

WON

LOST

PCT.

GB

Houston

82

52

.612

 —-

Oakland

80

55

.593

   2.5

Seattle

75

59

.560

   7.0

LA Angels

65

69

.485

 17.0

Texas

58

76

.433

 24.0

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

AUGUST

31

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

SEPTEMBER

1

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

2

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

3

MIN

NYY

BAL

4

MIN

NYY

BAL

5

MIN

NYY

BAL

6

7

@BOS

TEX

NYY

8

@BOS

TEX

NYY

9

@BOS

TEX

NYY

10

@DET

11

@DET

@BAL

SD

12

@DET

@BAL

SD

13

@BAL

@LAA

14

AZ

@TB

@LAA

15

AZ

@TB

@LAA

16

AZ

@TB

@LAA

17

SEA

@HOU

18

SEA

LAA

@HOU

19

SEA

LAA

@HOU

20

LAA

21

LAA

MIN

@TEX

22

LAA

MIN

@TEX

23

LAA

MIN

@TEX

24

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

25

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

26

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

27

@BAL

TEX

28

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

29

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

30

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

A Tribute to Tyler “The Great” White

August 30, 2018

Tyler “The Great” White Delivers a Walk Off Homer
Astros 5 – Athletics 4
Minute Maid Park
August 29, 2018

 

A Tribute to Tyler “The Great” White

(Singable to the old “Chicken Dance” Melody)

At the end of A’s Game Three

Tyler White’s all we can see

Trotting round the base paths free

Marching into history.

 

What we need’s no mystery

A shot of Astros chemistry

Firing every time we play

Both at home and far away.

 

No time for us to sit and gloat

As ‘Stros paint the orange coat

Our joy spills from all they tote

…. We’re gonna need a bigger boat.

Thank You, Tyler White, for today’s chemical bite!

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

A Peek at the AL Batting Average Race 

Through Games of 8/29/18: 

Batting Average

1.

Betts • BOS

.340

2.

Martinez • BOS

.337

3.

Altuve • HOU

.327

4.

Segura • SEA

.317

5.

Machado • BAL

.315

6.

Trout • LAA

.311

7.

Smith • TBR

.307

8.

Merrifield • KCR

.307

9.

Brantley • CLE

.302

10.

Andujar • NYY

.300

 

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

AL WEST Contender Scores

Through Games of 8/29/18:

Houston 5 – Oakland 4.

San Diego 8 – Seattle 3.

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

AL WEST STANDINGS:

Morning of Wed., 8/30/18

TEAMS

WON

LOST

PCT.

GB

Houston

82

51

.617

 —-

Oakland

80

54

.597

   2.5

Seattle

74

59

.556

   8.0

LA Angels

64

69

.481

 18.0

Texas

58

76

.433

 24.5

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

AUGUST

30

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

31

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

SEPTEMBER

1

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

2

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

3

MIN

NYY

BAL

4

MIN

NYY

BAL

5

MIN

NYY

BAL

6

7

@BOS

TEX

NYY

8

@BOS

TEX

NYY

9

@BOS

TEX

NYY

10

@DET

11

@DET

@BAL

SD

12

@DET

@BAL

SD

13

@BAL

@LAA

14

AZ

@TB

@LAA

15

AZ

@TB

@LAA

16

AZ

@TB

@LAA

17

SEA

@HOU

18

SEA

LAA

@HOU

19

SEA

LAA

@HOU

20

LAA

21

LAA

MIN

@TEX

22

LAA

MIN

@TEX

23

LAA

MIN

@TEX

24

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

25

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

26

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

27

@BAL

TEX

28

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

29

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

30

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

 

A 1″ Pitch Mistake = A 400′ Baseball Ride

August 29, 2018

“DAD GUMMIT! ~ WE CAN’T WIN ‘EM ALL, BUT…. WE LET GAME 2 IN THIS SERIES WITH THE A’S SLIP TOO EARLY AND AGAIN TOO LATE DOWN THE BAD TIMING PITCHES SIDE TO BE RECOVERED IN THE NAME OF VICTORY! ~ GO GET ‘EM IN GAME 3 THIS AFTERNOON, ASTROS!”

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

A Peek at the AL Batting Average Race 

Through Games of 8/28/18: 

1. J.D. Martinez, BOS

.338

2. Mookie Betts, BOS

.336

3. Jose Altuve, HOU

.329

4. Jean Segura, SEA

.315

4. Manny Machado, BAL

.315

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

AL WEST Contender Scores

Through Games of 8/28/18:

Oakland 4 – Houston 3.

San Diego 2 – Seattle 1.

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

AL WEST STANDINGS:

Morning of Wed., 8/29/18

TEAMS

WON

LOST

PCT.

GB

Houston

81

51

.614

—-

Oakland

80

53

.602

1.5

Seattle

74

58

.561

7.0

LA Angels

64

69

.481

17.5

Texas

58

75

.436

23.5

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

AUGUST

HOUSTON

0AKLAND

SEATTLE

29

OAK

@ HOU

@ SD

30

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

31

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

SEPTEMBER

1

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

2

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

3

MIN

NYY

BAL

4

MIN

NYY

BAL

5

MIN

NYY

BAL

6

7

@BOS

TEX

NYY

8

@BOS

TEX

NYY

9

@BOS

TEX

NYY

10

@DET

11

@DET

@BAL

SD

12

@DET

@BAL

SD

13

@BAL

@LAA

14

AZ

@TB

@LAA

15

AZ

@TB

@LAA

16

AZ

@TB

@LAA

17

SEA

@HOU

18

SEA

LAA

@HOU

19

SEA

LAA

@HOU

20

LAA

21

LAA

MIN

@TEX

22

LAA

MIN

@TEX

23

LAA

MIN

@TEX

24

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

25

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

26

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

27

@BAL

TEX

28

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

29

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

30

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Maxwell Kates: John Bull Played The Game

August 29, 2018

JOHN BULL PLAYED THE GAME:

SABR AND BASEBALL IN THE UNITED KINGDOM

By Maxwell Kates

Maxwell Kates in London, 2018.

In the tradition of British-born television personality Richard Dawson, we asked 100 people the following. “What do people wear to a SABR convention?” Here are some of the answers:

“Baseball jerseys.”            32 points!

“Hawaiian shirts.”              21 points!

“Cargo shorts.”                  14 points!

“British fedoras.”

British fedoras????? What are you talking about? This is a question about American baseball. If you want to count British fedoras, kindly move your survey to the nearest British cricket match.

Richard Dawson on Family Feud.

There was, in fact, one SABR convention where a delegate was spotted wearing a British fedora. I know the legend to be true because I was that delegate. It was at the Royal Sonesta Hotel in Houston back in 2014. When a fellow delegate asked why I bought the hat, my reply to him was, of course, “To match the jacket.”

Maxwell Kates in London, 2012.

This is the jacket, which I purchased from British tailor Leonard Jay. The London haberdasher had about a half-dozen shops to his name, including one where I shopped on Southampton Row. Leonard had a ritual that was somewhat unusual in England. Each year around the Jewish High Holy Days, Leonard and his wife closed up shop and spent three weeks’ holiday in Chicago. Why Chicago? “Because, in actual fact,” Leonard replied, “I like to be close to my Chicago Cubs.” Leonard even convinced me that ‘Cubs’ was an acronym for ‘Completely Useless By September.’

Leonard Jay Tailor
London, England

Leonard was a rarity amongst his countrymen, a baseball fan. Although baseball traces its origins to England, the sport never captivated a following the way football and rugby have. Even though organized baseball leagues elsewhere in Europe, Italy and the Netherlands to name two, have thrived, any attempts at professional baseball in England have not been successful. A high school drama teacher from England named Mr. Saunders even inscribed in my yearbook that “Too many books about baseball are bad for the brain!”

Still, baseball does have a history in the United Kingdom. Much of the story of baseball in England has been brought to life by SABR, as it has on this side of a small pond called the Atlantic. What you are about to read is not only a narrative of four centuries of baseball in England, but also how SABR served to intermediate between Major League Baseball and the British public.

David Block, San Francisco SABR
Researcher of Baseball in England

Back in 2013, David Block, a SABR member from San Francisco, unearthed the following text from the Whitehall Evening Post dated September 19, 1749:

“On Tuesday last, his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, and Lord Middlesex, played at Bass-Ball (sic), at Walton in Surry (sic); notwithstanding the Weather was extreme (sic) bad, they continued playing several Hours.”

Now Pitching, Prince Frederick!

What may be most intriguing about the passage from the Whitehall Evening Post is that Prince Frederick was 42 years old at the time while Charles Sackville was 38. Earlier discoveries suggest that the game was played by juvenile participants in 18th century England. Prior to the David Block revelation, the earliest reference to baseball was an entry in William Bray’s diary that he played the game on Easter Sunday in 1755. Although earlier research traces baseball’s ancestry to a British sport called rounders, this assertion is considered to be problematic. The earliest reference to rounders by that name dates back only to 1828. When in fact some thirty years before, when Jane Austen wrote Wuthering Heights, she described protagonist Catherine Morland as having preferred “cricket, base-ball, riding on horseback, and running about the country…to books.” A second and distinct sport known as ‘British baseball’ does in fact trace its origins to rounders.

Rubbish!

In 1874, the Boston Red Stockings and Philadelphia Athletics embarked on a midseason tour of England. Boston manager Harry Wright was, in fact, a native of Sheffield, England. The first and only professional baseball league in England was established in 1890 by Derbyshire industrialist Sir Francis Ley and former American pitching star Albert Spalding. Although the National Baseball League of Great Britain and Ireland folded after only one season, the Derby County Football Club continued to play at Baseball Grounds for over a century.

British Baseball and the West Ham Club.

Baseball reached its zenith in popularity in the United Kingdom in the 1930s. By the middle of the decade, three semi-professional circuits were established: two in the north and a third in London. Many of the players were American or Canadian, including Quebec’s Roland Gladu who starred at 1st base for West Ham in London. In 1938, the United Kingdom defeated the United States in a series of five tests which today is considered to be baseball’s first World Cup. Some of the matches drew up to 10,000 spectators and baseball appeared to be on the rise when the Second World War broke out. Although there is no professional baseball in the United Kingdom today, the game has survived on an amateur level with 74 teams participating in 2017. There have been a handful of British-born players in the major leagues, including former Astro Keith Lampard, but most learned to play baseball in the United States or Australia.

Harvey Sahker, Croydon Pirates_ Outfielder

The Harvey Sahker Baseball Collection.

Not surprisingly, ‘baseball as we know it’ in England is largely the work of SABR members. Toronto-born Harvey Sahker, who played outfield for the Croydon Pirates for thirteen seasons, has chronicled baseball in his adopted country in “The Blokes of Summer.” London-born lawyer and journalist Josh Chetwynd (who is also director Lionel Chetwynd’s son) has written specifically about one team in “British Baseball and the West Ham Club,” which he co-authored with Brian Belton. In 2008, SABR member Joe Gray founded Project COBB; unlike ‘Cubs,’ COBB actually is an acronym, meaning Chronicling of British Baseball. Not surprisingly, the Bobby Thomson Chapter is active in the Origins Committee and they have met regularly at the Three Kings Pub in Clerkenwell. Bruce Greenberg, an American expatriate from Alabama and an avid Astros fan, serves as its chair.

Models Wearing Ritva Man Sweaters, 1971.

Of course, no narrative about baseball in the United Kingdom would be complete without the accomplishments of Mike Ross. Mike is an American, born in Portland, Maine in 1936. After having graduated from Syracuse University, Mike bought a one-way steamship ticket and sailed to Britain in 1959. Trained as a graphic designer, Mike studied at the Royal College of Arts. He wore many hats over the course of his career. Along with a business partner, Mike owned a wool factory whose ‘The Ritva Man’ knitwear became a part of the fashion scene that characterized the ‘swinging sixties’ in London. Later Mike opened a general store selling American products in London, and later still he became a record company executive, sending Charlie Dore to stardom in 1979 with her hit single ‘Pilot of the Airwaves.’ Finally in 1982, Mike returned to his roots, devoting his career to his first love: baseball.

British Recording Artist Charlie Dore.

Mike’s baseball features and photographs were syndicates in sports pages throughout the United Kingdom, thereby educating a British audience on the game. For example, in 1991 in Baltimore, he covered Queen Elizabeth’s first ever baseball game at Memorial Stadium. Mike even photographed Her Majesty with Hall of Fame manager Tony LaRussa of the visiting Oakland Athletics. He covered several All-Star Games and World Series, including the 1992 Fall Classic between the Atlanta Braves and the Toronto Blue Jays.

The Mike Ross Baseball Collection.

In 1988, he wrote his first book entitled “Baseball.” Modelled after the Bill Mazeroski publication in the United States, “Baseball” provided a narrative on the history of each major league team, along with a composition of the contemporary roster. Eleven years later, in 1999, Mike teamed with fellow Boston Red Sox historians Bill Nowlin and Jim Prime to write “Fenway Saved.” Several of the photos in these two books were taken by Mike Ross. A third manuscript, a biography of Bobo Newsom, was never published. Mike was a regular attendee at the Nine Baseball Conference in Arizona and often travelled home via Houston in order to visit with a personal friend of his, Monte Irvin. The father of Maija Ross, Mike has lived for many years in the Little Venice section of London.

Mike Rpss, Stephen Laski, and “Monte,” in 2007.

SABR has been instrumental in unearthing and narrating the history of baseball in England, the country from where the game originated. Despite the lack of professional leagues in the United Kingdom, the game has retained a small following through newspaper coverage and more recently, the Internet. Today, baseball in England has become its own permanent exhibit. In 2014, two years after my most recent visit with Mike Ross, he donated his entire baseball collection to the British Library. The collection includes over 300 books, personal letters, and even artwork, such as a lithograph of Ted Williams signed and numbered by British pop artist Peter Blake. The collection is housed at the British Library on Euston Road, just a pop fly west of the landmark St. Pancras Station.

Two years later still, in 2016, Leonard Jay’s Chicago Cubs won the World Series. Now he has to come up with a new acronym.

Let’s end by congratulating this man on his retirement.

Congratulations, Bill!

 

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

And thank you again, Maxwell Kates, for another beautifully written and informative article on baseball history and its roots in England. Now we also are primed to the amusing imagery of Prince Frederick of Great Britain pitching ~ and how he might look today, wearing that same 18th century garb, in a critical diamond encounter with Jose Altuve. ~ Man! ~ What a picture that is!

Your work excels and always teaches, friend. Thank you for all you do to bring greater light to the true full history of our game.

Bill McCurdy, The Pecan Park Eagle

 

******************** 

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Aug. 28, 2018: A’s Case for Staring; Standings

August 28, 2018

A’s Case for Drawing Stares….

8/27/18: When the Astros rallied for 5 runs in the bottom of the 3rd to overcome a 4-0 early A’s lead, the crowd roared. And Orbit was overwhelmed with delight. He stared.

8/27/18: When Alex Bregman extended the Astros’ 5-4 lead in the bottom of the 8th with a 2-outs, 3-run homer to right center, the roar of the crowd almost unhinged the roof. Bregman & Co. stared.

8/27/18: And super Astros Fan General Sam Quintero did what only General Sam knows best among all of us Astros Civilian Fan Army. ………. ~ He stared.

8/27/18: Then, when Tyler (The Great White Shark) White finished the 8th with another 3-run homer bomb to left, the Astros broke into an 11-4 final victory grin along with that thing they’ve come to do so well. ~ With Altuve conducting like a Toscanini, they stared again ~ big time.

Then Norma and Bill McCurdy decided to add something that largely has been missing from “the stare”, so far, but simply had to fly this time. ~ They also smiled! ~ Thanks, Astros, for a wonderful evening!

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

A Peek at the AL Batting Average Race 

Through Games of 8/27/18: 

1.

Martinez • BOS

.337

2.

Betts • BOS

.336

3.

Altuve • HOU

.332

4.

Machado • BAL

.315

5.

Segura • SEA

.314

6.

Trout • LAA

.313

7.

Smith • TBR

.307

8.

Merrifield • KCR

.307

9.

Brantley • CLE

.301

10.

Andujar • NYY

.301

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

AL WEST Contender Scores

Through Games of 8/27/18:

Houston 11 – Oakland 4.

Seattle, No Game Today.

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

AL WEST STANDINGS:

Morning of Tue., 8/28/18

TEAMS

WON

LOST

PCT.

GB

Houston

81

50

.618

—-

Oakland

79

53

.599

2.5

Seattle

74

57

.565

7.0

LA Angels

64

68

.485

17.5

Texas

58

74

.439

23.5

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

AUGUST

HOUSTON

0AKLAND

SEATTLE

28

0AK

@ HOU

@ SD

29

OAK

@ HOU

@ SD

30

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

31

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

SEPTEMBER

1

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

2

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

3

MIN

NYY

BAL

4

MIN

NYY

BAL

5

MIN

NYY

BAL

6

7

@BOS

TEX

NYY

8

@BOS

TEX

NYY

9

@BOS

TEX

NYY

10

@DET

11

@DET

@BAL

SD

12

@DET

@BAL

SD

13

@BAL

@LAA

14

AZ

@TB

@LAA

15

AZ

@TB

@LAA

16

AZ

@TB

@LAA

17

SEA

@HOU

18

SEA

LAA

@HOU

19

SEA

LAA

@HOU

20

LAA

21

LAA

MIN

@TEX

22

LAA

MIN

@TEX

23

LAA

MIN

@TEX

24

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

25

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

26

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

27

@BAL

TEX

28

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

29

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

30

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

 

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

Aug. 27, 2018: Scores, Standings & Schedule

August 27, 2018

 

“We’re keeping up with the Astros and we’re coming to town on the last “ring night” to take over! ~ What do you gotta say about that, Mister Orbit Bud?”

“I say we are going to take on the A’s one step, one pitch, one throw, one catch, and one bat swing at a time. There’s only one way to eat an elephant ~ and that’s one bite at a time. And when we’re done, we’re going to pass on dessert and just stare at the leftovers!”

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

American League West Scores

Through Games of 8/26/18:

Houston 3 – LA Angels 1.

Oakland 6 – Minnesota 2.

Arizona 5 – Seattle 2.

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

AL WEST STANDINGS:

Morning of Mon., 8/27/18

TEAMS

WON

LOST

PCT.

GB

Houston

80

50

.615

—-

Oakland

79

52

.603

1.5

Seattle

74

57

.565

6.5

LA Angels

63

68

.481

17.5

Texas

58

74

.439

23.0

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

AUGUST

HOUSTON

0AKLAND

SEATTLE

27

OAK

@ HOU

28

0AK

@ HOU

@ SD

29

OAK

@ HOU

@ SD

30

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

31

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

SEPTEMBER

1

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

2

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

3

MIN

NYY

BAL

4

MIN

NYY

BAL

5

MIN

NYY

BAL

6

7

@BOS

TEX

NYY

8

@BOS

TEX

NYY

9

@BOS

TEX

NYY

10

@DET

11

@DET

@BAL

SD

12

@DET

@BAL

SD

13

@BAL

@LAA

14

AZ

@TB

@LAA

15

AZ

@TB

@LAA

16

AZ

@TB

@LAA

17

SEA

@HOU

18

SEA

LAA

@HOU

19

SEA

LAA

@HOU

20

LAA

21

LAA

MIN

@TEX

22

LAA

MIN

@TEX

23

LAA

MIN

@TEX

24

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

25

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

26

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

27

@BAL

TEX

28

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

29

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

30

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

 

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

Thank You, Friends, for a Wonderful Surprise

August 26, 2018

Retirement Cake ~ Thanks for decorating and presenting our most delicious celebration cake, Marsha Franty! It was great.

 

Yesterday I walked into something that has never been on my rather long list of life experiences, but even bigger for me, it was something also that was never on my much shorter list of life expectations. My Dear Wife, Norma, and a cadre of my SABR friends, it seems, got together and planned in collusion with each other to throw me a surprise retirement party celebration of my retirement from a half century in private practice as a psychotherapist on September 1st.

It worked. I hadn’t a clue when my good friend Sam Quintero invited Norma and me to have lunch with him on Saturday. I still didn’t get it when Sam told me during the drive that we were taking Norma to the Spaghetti Western Ristorante, the place where we normally gold our SABR meetings. And I still didn’t get it when we walked in and Sam motioned for us to follow him to the back ~ and the room where normally hold our SABR meetings.

“Are we having a Saturday SABR meeting that I didn’t know about?” I asked

“Nope,” Sam replied.

I still didn’t get it. I had to be told. – “This is a surprise party in honor of your retirement from practice,” Bob Dorrill explained. Later I learned that I wasn’t the only one confused about the purpose when a couple of people wished me a happy birthday.”

Then we walked into the room after our greeting by Bob and Peggy Dorrill, and there was Mark Wernick and his wife, Luba, Tal and Jonnie Smith, Jimmy and Marie Wynn, Mike and Cindy McCroskey, Larry, Kathleen and Neil Miggins, Marsha Hamby, Greg Lucas, Bobby Copus, Jimmy Disch, Dick Bily, and Tom White. Joe Thompson got there after we arrived.

I will never forget yesterday. The words people used to frame their thoughts of and feelings for me were filled with the kind of whole thought honesty that only lands and survives with sincerity. Thanks you, Bobby Copus, for your love and caring. If you see me as a mentor and a second father, so be it. I love you too.

And thank you, Tal Smith, too for helping me feel at home in the body of Houston baseball history and historians from my Pecan Park Eagles sandlot days forward. ~ Now, if you, or any of you, has some ideas on how I can be saved from my Citizen Kane “rosebud” fears that the beautiful wood piece you see below that my artistic brother, John McCurdy, created for me can escape the furnace of junk piece liquidation someday, I would be grateful hearing them. Our Eagles sandlot baseball was a living symbol of what kid baseball was like in Houston and many other places before the Little League game turned it over to the adults. Maybe, the Hall of Fame would be interested.

 

Thank you too, Mark Wernick, for the collection of early written history by the first captains of Houston’s first voyage onto the ocean of major league baseball. A belated discovery of scanner problems may delay how son I will be able yo get to those volumes #3 and #9 you wanted, but they will get there. Please. Be patient.

 

an original

 

Thank you too for a copy of the book entitled “The World’s Most Travelled Man”, Maxwell Kates. You may be in Toronto now, but your prefect gift arrived in time for the local conspirators to get it here in time for the party. Since this is where we first learned of my good old ancestor Liam “The Dragon Slayer” McCurdy and his horseshoe-virginal club with three nails driven through its head for dragon dispatching. SABR brother Mike McCroskey has made sure that I now have a similar weapon at my disposal. My copy is even autographed.

 

Wonder if MLB would allow Altuve to get away with using this weapon for nailing every pitch?

We have a play-on-words irony going on here with the dragon slaying that my grandfather to the 35th power did relative to my own work in recent times. Grandpa Liam McCurdy fought to help people rid themselves of dragons in the skies. My work has all been about trying to help people rid themselves of dragons in disguise. 🙂

A funny irony: Grandpa Liam McCurdy fought to help people rid themselves of dragons in the skies. My work has all been about trying to help people rid themselves of dragons in disguise. 🙂

Thank you, Bob Dorrill, and other SABR members for the awesome crystal retirement memorial and for the vintage bat and ball that shall always remind me of the year 23 ventured forth into the modern era with our reenactment of the 188 Houston Babies playing 19th century baseball under the 1860 rules. We bent a little history to stretch the Babies back that far, but we put it all back together when we came to write “Houston Baseball, The Early Years, 1861-1961”. As Bob Dorrill was kind and generous enough to mention, that book had been my lifelong ambition, but quality wise, it was too big a job for any single one of us to take on alone. Thanks to all of you who contributed in any single way. And thanks, especially, to the late Patrick Lopez, whose art gave us pictures of Houston’s first ballpark, and his eye for treating us all to the delight of watching something come to life from words.

And, I feel free to say it publicly now. ~ Thanks to the late Solly Hemus for underwriting most of the production expenses involved in our Houston early baseball history book. Solly did things the right way. He never was out for credit. He simply wanted to support causes he believed in.  .

Solly Hemus is proof. ~ We are “Houston Strong” ~ and we have been so ~ in so many areas ~ for so long ~ that it is only the national media that thinks that truism began with Hurricane Harvey.

Thank you, Dick Bily, for that very special Yankee ring and, please, folks, go easy on me if I’ve overlooked anyone else’s gift or kind words. My heart is still in my throat exhausted from the emotional rush of yesterday’s surprise. And, Greg Lucas, yes, thanks for that sidebar on Howard Green. My fond memories are strong of that day trip to and from Dallas for planning the TBHOF move to Houston. As you no doubt recall, there wasn’t much talk about how many oil wells this big move was going to cost either of us,

Thank You, Folks:  The surprise party was totally unnecessary, but it will always be remembered in my house as one of the happiest days in my life. As l said yesterday, all of you are precious to me. If you missed lunch with me, I’m sure you lunched somewhere. All you missed was the good company of other baseball people and at least old guy who wears a bib to protect himself from a bowl of spaghetti. That’s me, of course.

By missing me, however, you would have missed the humor and the eloquence of both Larry and Kathleen Miggins. How priceless they are to the lyrical ear of all the good stuff that makes Houston hum.

I still have my calling to the company of others outside the usual working environment, but Norma, family and SABR has me pretty well covered there. And my calling to baseball and writing shows no sign of letting up, so, I’m beyond OK. – Just don’t ever try to use me as a pinch runner.

What follows are a few pictures from the group that Mark Wernick sent me.

And, oh yes, I love you! ~ All of you!

BillMcCurdyRetirementParty.91

Bob Dorrill was our Master of Ceremonies

 

The birthday cake that someone placed among my major baseball publications and the beautiful art of Patrick Lopez.

 

Mark Wernick and the Great Jimmy Wynn

 

Mark Wernick Showing the Houston Astros World Series Champs cap

 

 

Bill McCurdy and Jimmy Wynn (facing) Larry Miggins

 

Bill McCurdy, Mark Wernick and Jimmy Wynn

 

 

Norma and Bill McCurdy, Bobby Copus

LARRY & Kathleen_edited-1

Larry and Kathleen Miggins

 

Tal Smith speaks at the party;
Jimmy and Marie Wynn in the foreground.

BillMcCurdyRetirementParty.93

Jimmy Wynn and his Astros Bling!

Astros-Ring

Astros Bling Up Close August 25, 2018

 

Eagle Field served as the home of the sandlot club we called the Pecan Park Eagles in 1950, before organized ball opened up big enough to handle all of us Houston kids who wanted to play on “real teams.” The Eagles were real enough for me. My heart still soars with their blessed memory. – Eagle Field existed on a Houston city lot still operated today as a playground in the east end at the fork-corner of Japonica and Myrtle in Pecan Park near I-45S and Griggs. In 2018, the place now bears the name of Japonica Park – with no reference to the “Eagle Field” identity that we once gave it some 68 years ago.

 

 

 

mmmmmmmmm

Aug. 26, 2018: Scores, Standings & Schedule

August 26, 2018

Here’s Lookin’ at You (again), Fans!

 

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

American League West Scores

Through Games of 8/25/18:

Houston 8 – LA Angels 3.

Oakland 6 – Minnesota 2.

Seattle 4 – Arizona 3 (10).

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

AL WEST STANDINGS:

Morning of Sun., 8/26/18

TEAMS

WON

LOST

PCT.

GB

Houston

79

50

.612

—-

Oakland

78

52

.600

1.5

Seattle

74

56

.569

5.5

LA Angels

63

67

.485

16.5

Texas

58

73

.443

22.0

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

AUGUST

HOUSTON

0AKLAND

SEATTLE

26

@ LAA

@ MIN

@ ARI

27

OAK

@ HOU

28

0AK

@ HOU

@ SD

29

OAK

@ HOU

@ SD

30

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

31

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

SEPTEMBER

1

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

2

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

3

MIN

NYY

BAL

4

MIN

NYY

BAL

5

MIN

NYY

BAL

6

7

@BOS

TEX

NYY

8

@BOS

TEX

NYY

9

@BOS

TEX

NYY

10

@DET

11

@DET

@BAL

SD

12

@DET

@BAL

SD

13

@BAL

@LAA

14

AZ

@TB

@LAA

15

AZ

@TB

@LAA

16

AZ

@TB

@LAA

17

SEA

@HOU

18

SEA

LAA

@HOU

19

SEA

LAA

@HOU

20

LAA

21

LAA

MIN

@TEX

22

LAA

MIN

@TEX

23

LAA

MIN

@TEX

24

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

25

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

26

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

27

@BAL

TEX

28

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

29

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

30

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle