Archive for the ‘Baseball’ Category

Pin Ball Baseball Was Great 4th of July Fun

July 4, 2018

 

During the summer of 1950, this little pin ball baseball game was my “heat of the day” companion during the 12 noon to 3 pm time that we were all forced inside from the so-called polio vulnerable period of Houston’s worst heat, and probably with good reason prior to the polio vaccine of 1957. In the summer of 1950 alone, over 500 Houston kids came down with polio from mild to fatal effect.

 

POOSH M UP, JR. had 4 games you could play on the same field, but baseball was the only one that held my interest from the start. My actual copy of the game was discarded by my dad years ago. He would do that with our things once we seemed to have “outgrown” them. ~ Sometime in the late 1980s, My brother John found this replica of my original game from our Pecan Park Eagle days and gifted it to me. For one evening, at least, I reacted like an addict who had not snorted a line of cocaine for several decades. Then I found a place for it on my wall of memories and have since settled thereafter for its now-quiet presence as a fond reminder of a very happy early time in my life.

 

Under the lower left side, the part that’s covered by the glove in the first photo, there is a lever you pull that propels the little pin balls, one at a time, up the release channel and onto the field. Pulled at full strength, the ball shoots fast on an arc around the top and then bounces off a metal piece that is designed to carry it bouncing all over the place. ~ Over time, you learn what it takes to reach that tiny space between the two large “U” spaces above that are marked here as “single” and “walk”. Get into the narrow slot between these and it counts as a “home run.” I did reach a point as a kid with my perseverating play time with the game in which back-to-backs were not uncommon. No brag. Any kid with finger dexterity and my capacity for obsession could also do it.

 

 

Happy Fourth of July, everybody! ~ Stay cool! Let Love & Peace rule! 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Bill Gilbert: A June 2018 Report

July 3, 2018

Evan Gattis (L) and Alex Bregman were among the Astro hitters to smile this past month and they had good reason to shake on their common ground. ~ They each banged home 30 RBI in June 2018, a new calendar month record in Houston MLB franchise history.

 

Astros Led the Pack in June 

By Bill Gilbert

The Houston Astros had the best record n the major leagues in June (19-8), building a 1.5-game lead over the Seattle Mariners in the American League West Division. They took advantage of a soft spot in the schedule by sweeping a 10-game road trip against three non-contending teams (Texas, Oakland and Kansas City.)

June was the month that the hitting finally picked up. The team batted .275 in June, raising the season average to .263, while scoring 5.33 runs per game. The pitching remained strong but not at the April=May level. The staff ERA was 3.17 in June compared to 2.68 in the first two months. For the season through June, the Astros are scoring an average of 5.07 runs per game and allowing 3.06.

As usual, Jose Altuve led the offense in June with an average of 3.54. Four other Astros batted over .300 for the month – Josh Reddick .333, Yuli Gurriel .330, Tony Kemp .327 and Alex Bregman .306. Bregman and Evan Gattis each had 30 RBIs to supply the power. Bregman had 11 home runs and Gattis had 8.

The five pitchers in the starting rotation have started all 85 games through June. However, only Lance McCullers had an ERA under 3.00 for the month (2.81). The bullpen had an outstanding month with five relievers posting an ERA under 1.00 – Chris Devenski, Brad Peacock, Collin McHugh, Hector Rondon and Tony Sipp. Devenski did not allow an earned run in June and the other four each allowed only one earned run.   Closer, Ken Giles converted his only save opportunity but was replaced in his role by Rondon, who converted 5 out of 5.

While the Astros had great success in June, the month didn’t end well. They lost their last two games in the month and scored only 7 runs in the 4-game series with Tampa Bay. Carlos Correa and George Springer are out with minor injuries and Justin Verlander has been roughed up in the early innings of his last two starts. Meanwhile, Seattle is enjoying a 7-game winning streak. The July schedule doesn’t look too tough, so the Astros have time to increase their lead before a series in Seattle at the end of the month.

Bill Gilbert

   7/2/2018

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

 

 

 

 

Where Sunday’s Game Dagger Was Delivered

July 2, 2018

Where Sunday’s Game Dagger Was Delivered

Nobody died and it’s not the end of the world. Having said that, it’s still hard to go through team slumps when so many of your really exceptional players are all out of sync with the basics of winning at the same time. Aside from our great pitchers, and they’ve had their moments too, most of our hitters are dialed way back to almost nothing when it comes to their usual note of lusty contribution to run-scoring on the road. A.J. Hinch said it best after today’s Sunday loss of their third of four games at Tampa Bay: “We didn’t play well enough to win a game or the series.”

Except for a sparkling double burp of power from Evan Gattis and his two home runs today, lesser single hits by Bregman, Stassi, and Kemp were all the ‘Stros could otherwise muster Sunday, as they also plodded through some defensive lapses, as well. We still aren’t sure what Josh Reddick was thinking as he casually threw that ball back in almost lob-speed as the Rays runner scored the eventual winning run in the bottom of the 7th.

The heart of the loss, however, unfolded on two pitches in the top of the 8th. With one out, the Astros batting, and the Rays leading, 2-1, Diego Castillo came in for Rays starter Blake Snell to pitch to Jose Altuve with the bases full.

As you will see, and probably remember from the Sunday game, his 2-2 up and tight fast one to Altuve’s ear sent our star reeling back in pursuit of safe ground.

The first thought that struck home here as a result was – now we’ve got him. No way Castillo is going to walk or risk hitting Altuve on a 3-2 pitch “up and in” a second time – nor is he going to plate one that allows Jose to do his own damage to their cause. He’s going to hope he can get Altuve on a nasty slider in the dirt “low and outside” that looks so hittable as it approaches the plate and then falls off the cliff and becomes impossible to reach near the plate in any good way. – If Altuve can just hold back and let it go, he’s walked – and we’ve got a tie ballgame.

Photo # 1: Sunday, Astros @ Rays
8th Inning, 2-2 Pitch
Castillo Pitching
Altuve Batting

Photo # 2: Sunday, Astros @ Rays
8th Inning, 2-2 Pitch
Castillo Pitching
Altuve Batting

Oh No! – Photo # 2 says it all. Altuve bit. Swung and missed. Strike Three. Now there were two outs.

Yulie Gurriel then hit a 2-2 pitch for a slow grounder, 6-3 putout. Castillo had done a great job for the Rays. And the game was essentially over. You could just breathe the air of resignation and defeat through the electronic transmission of team despair. Except for the second mighty blast from Mr. Gattis in the top of the 9th, that dire sense of resignation would carry forth with the other remaining Astro batters.

Tampa Bay won, 3-2.

Time to snap out of it, guys. With your help, the Mariners almost have made up all the loss arrears to the Astros they encountered in New York and Boston in the last few days.

Yes. It’s a long season. And these things happen. Even to the reigning world champions.

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Great Thoughts from the Houston Colt .45 Era

July 1, 2018

Watch out for the 360 degree rotations of the wire you complete each time you return the phone call receiver to the hook. One of these days, you are going to have to let the receiver spin free in the middle of a future phone call, or else, hold the whole tangled mess to your chin as you try to finish talking.

Great Thoughts from the Houston Colt .45 Era

…. About the Use of Telephones

  1. Unless you like standing up and trying to talk while someone else is washing dishes, never locate your phone high on the kitchen wall at home.
  2. Try to make sure that Ma Bell installs your phone in a room where its comfortable to sit, but never so close to the bedroom that you have to take the phone off the hook to keep callers from ruining a beautiful nap.
  3. Small pillows or blankets make good sound mufflers to phone rings you do not wish to hear.
  4. Always have a pencil and paper handy at the location spot of your phone. It will be helpful to taking messages and writing down phone numbers of new callers that you probably do not presently have in your Roll-A-Deck files.
  5. Remember. – If you do not have the phone number recorded somewhere, there will be no way to get it later from a silent phone, if you do not know who placed the call.
  6. Remember too. – People are only reachable by phone when they are near the instrument that connects them by wire with others. Try to build at least a mental list on the best times to try and reach certain others by phone.
  7. Make sure you always have up-to-date copies of the white and yellow pages near your phone. That one step alone will give you about a 95% chance of finding and reaching the party you wish to call at the right time.
  8. Phone technology is improving by leaps and bounds. New advances in swivel hooks have experts optimistic that we shall soon enough have a new phone connection wire that will not tangle and have to be unswiveled manually in the middle of an important phone call.
  9. With telephone lines that do not entangle coming our way soon enough, what more could we hope for in the future?
  10. One final consoling thought: If you are tired of getting phone calls, simply go for a walk, take a drive, or go to a ball game or movie. The phone will never catch up with you there.

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

BA Question Sparks Bobblehead Possibility

June 30, 2018

BOBBLE

2018 American League Batting Average Leaders

Through Games of 6/29/2018:

# Leaders Team G AB H BA
1 Jose Altuve Astros 84 329 112 .340
2 Mookie Betts Red Sox 63 242 82 .339
3 Jean Segura Mariners 76 317 107 .338
4 Andrelton Simmons Angels 72 297 86 .322
5 JD Martinez Red Sox 79 302 97 .3212
6 Mike Trout Angels 83 287 92 .3210
7 Matt Duffy Rays 65 257 81 .315
8 Eddie Rosario Twins 77 308 96 .312
9 Michael Brantley Indians 69 280 86 .3071
10 Jon Jay Royals 59 238 73 .3067
  • Astros Above shown in bold type.

The Run of Things Going Into the All Star Break. Jose Altuve has hit a cooler spot in the long season run. It’s not as bad as George Springer’s big chill at the plate, of course, but still close enough to AC room air temp to allow Mr. Altuve more company near the top view of the whole house than he might really desire to welcome.

Anyway, that’s baseball. And it’s all part of the long season.

A curiosity. The PP Eagle will continue to run these updates sporadically during the season – and more often come September as we continue to track Jose Altuve’s pursuit of a 4th American League batting average championship. In that light, we have elected to follow the bare statistical facts that are germaine to the competition – times at bat, hits, and batting average.

We do not, however, have a ready answer to the way Baseball Reference.Com chooses to handle players who qualify by their AL numbers, but would not count, if we took their other playing time with an NL club into consideration too prior to an earlier this same season trade or pick up.

So far, John Jay, the 10th ranked hitter today, forces these questions: Does John Jay really qualify? And, at season’s end, when all of his MLB stats are considered together, will his NL stats at San Diego in 2018 undermine his chances for the AL batting title?

John Jay is hitting .307 as a 2018 AL batter. Baseball Reference.Com does not hold the .244 that Jay batted for San Diego in the 21 games he played there before joining the Royals after the start of this season. If they did, his aggregate average for the whole season would be .291, to date, and he would not be listed among the AL leaders here.

My understanding is that a batter’s performance for a whole season, both leagues combined, would be considered in determining a batting championship.

But, what if a player hit .400 in the NL but got traded at the August 31st deadline to an AL club because he ran off with the NL club owner’s wife – and then hammered the AL pitchers with enough hits in September to qualify as the batting champion of both leagues? How does that work? Do you have to get most of your hits in one league to qualify as the BA champion? Or do you just treat whatever you did in the other league that season as a non-event?

It goes without saying, but leave it to me, I’ll say it anyway: If you are hitting .400 in August, but you get traded before the deadline because it’s learned that you’ve been stepping out with the club owner’s wife, don’t be surprised if the team’s marketing people come up with the world’s first triple person bobble-head giveaway figure – just in time for the first game of the playoffs. – It will feature the club owner getting ready to deliver a serious double-duty kick to the posteriors of both his former wife and former star slugger.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Astros Finish First Half of Season at 53-28

June 29, 2018

With 30 RBI thru June 28, 2018, Evan Gattis now holds the all time club record for the most RBIs in one calendar month to date.

Astros Finish First Half of Season at 53-28

By Bill Gilbert

On June 26, the Astros completed the first half of the 2018 Season with a record of 53-28, in first place in the American League West Division, 3 ½ games ahead of the Seattle Mariners. If they maintain this pace, they will finish 106-56 which would be their best season ever.

The Astros are competing with the New York Yankees (52-25) and the Boston Red Sox (53-27) for the best record in the major leagues to get home field advantage in the playoffs.

The Astros success in the first half was due to 1.) no serious injuries, and 2.) exceptional pitching, especially by the starters. None of the five starting pitchers missed a start and the pitching staff compiled an ERA of 2.82, by far the best in MLB. The Astros are scoring 5.17 runs per game while holding opponents to 3.04 runs per game, which equates to a run differential of 185.

Astros leaders in the first half were:

Batting Average – Jose Altuve .345

On-base Average – Altuve .408

Home Runs – George Springer and Evan Gattis 15

Runs Batted In – Gattis 51

Runs – Springer 58

Stolen Bases – Altuve 11

Innings Pitched – Justin Verlander 113.2

ERA – Verlander 1.82

Strikeouts – Gerrit Cole 146

Wins – Charlie Morton 10

Saves – Ken Giles 11

 

Bill Gilbert

6/27/2018

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Have Faith in Percy Fielding

June 28, 2018

HAVE FAITH IN PERCY FIELDING

By Maxwell Kates

Maxwell Kates

 

Six years ago this weekend, my family and I went for brunch at the United Bakers’ Dairy Restaurant located in the north end of Toronto. ‘The United’ has been owned and operated by three generations of the Ladovsky family since 1912. In accordance with Jewish dietary restrictions which separates meat from dairy, the restaurant is completely vegetarian.

United Bakers Dairy Restaurant – Today!

Parents and children often take opposite sides of controversial issues, in part as a reaction to one another. In our family, this type of psychology could be seen in our choice of baseball teams. My father is a Toronto Blue Jays fans while I have sided with their archrival Detroit Tigers. While my Tigers were struggling early in the 2012 season, the Blue Jays were faring slightly worse. After losing Victoria, Texas native Kyle Drabek for the season due to Tommy John surgery, the Blue Jays could only sit and watch as the disabled list claimed pitchers Chad Hutchinson and Brandon Morrow. Former 1st baseman Pat Tabler, now a Blue Jays analyst, remarked that in a career dating back to 1976, he had never witnessed a team lose three pitchers within a week.

The conversation at brunch turned to baseball, as it often does. I instigated my father with, “Well at least my team didn’t lose three starting pitchers within a week.” He rebutted with, “Yeah? Well at least MY team didn’t spend all their money on…Percy Fielding.”

Prince Fielder (aka Percy Fielding)

And so, from my father’s malaprop, a legend was born – the Legend of Percy Fielding. As the city of Detroit flirted with bankruptcy, the Tigers did indeed reward the erstwhile Milwaukee slugger with a nine year, $214 million contract. Batting cleanup, Percy hit a career best .313 batting average – possibly to match Detroit’s area code – while hitting 30 home runs and driving in 108. At the All-Star Game, Percy won the Home Run Derby against Toronto’s Jose Bautista. Meanwhile, the Tigers recovered in the second half of the season, winning their division before pacing the A’s and sweeping the Yankees on their way to the 2012 World Series.

Meanwhile, the nickname stuck. Through the grace of social media, Prince Fielder the baseball player became Percy Fielding the fictional character. He was known by that sobriquet not only in Detroit, but also places like Seattle and Raleigh, North Carolina. On Facebook I was even suggested to add ‘Percy Fielding’ as a friend, not the Detroit 1st baseman but as it turned out, a retired colonel in Her Majesty’s service. The nickname even developed its own slogan, “Have Faith in Percy Fielding.” It was a nod to the late composer who as it were, probably enjoyed his fair share of meals at ‘the United.’ He grew up in St. John’s Ward when the restaurant was located on nearby Spadina Avenue.

United Bakers Dairy Restaurant – Original Location

But Percy disappointed in the 2012 World Series, going 1-for-14 with an ill-timed force out at home plate as the Tigers were swept by the San Francisco Giants. After a frustrating regular season in 2013, Percy batted .182 in the American League Championship Series against Boston. In Game 6, Percy infamously rounded third base with awkward running antics, culminating with the ‘million dollar belly flop.’ The Tigers had seen enough, trading him to the Texas Rangers that winter for Ian Kinsler.

The Million Dollar Belly Flop

Percy Fielding’s brief but expensive foray with the Detroit Tigers and the Texas Rangers may be over, but the legend lives on. We’ll always have Percy.

Have Faith in Percy Fielding

PECAN PARK EAGLE TRIVIA CONTEST #1

Sharpen your pencils, it’s time to play the first annual Pecan Park Eagle Trivia Contest. But first, some baseball nostalgia for you. Most of the questions relate in some way to columns I have written for the Pecan Park Eagle in the past year. The numbers you see to the left consist of a point scale, for a maximum score of 40 points. To play, simply send an e-mail including your name and address to me at maxwelliankates@hotmail.com with “Pecan Park Eagle Trivia” written as the subject. Then include all of your answers in the text of the message. Contest closes on July 31, 2018. Winners will be announced in early August. Good luck to all those who play.

Trivia Contest

1)            2            Which Hall of Famer was the subject of a recent biography by Marty Appel?

2)            3            In what National League stadium did Willie Mays hit his 600th home run in 1969?

3)            2            Justin Verlander pitched two no-hitters for the Detroit Tigers. Who were the opponents?

4)            2            Which Astros player hit 53 leadoff home runs in his major league career?

5)            4            Roy Halladay was the third Toronto Blue Jays’ pitcher to win the Cy Young Award. Name

the other two.

6)            1            Who won the American League Most Valuable Player Award in 1953?

7)            5            Five members of the 1982 Houston Astros, four in uniform and one broadcaster, also

managed the team. Name them.

8)            1            According to Irish folk legend, what is the surname of the only man capable of killing a

local man-eating sea serpent?

9)            5            What five Astros players represented the team at the 1994 All-Star Game?

10)            4            How many African American pitchers have won 20 games in a season? Which of the

‘Black Aces’ won 20 games one season for the Astros?

11)            1            What village in upstate New York hosted the first SABR convention in 1971?

12)            4            Name two members of the Larry Dierker Chapter, both of Irish heritage, who played

professional baseball before the formation of the Houston Colt .45s. (Note that I didn’t

say MALE baseball players.)

13)            2            Who is the only living Hall of Famer to work as the director of a funeral home?

14)            3            What pitcher surrendered Rick Monday’s decisive home run in Game 5 of the 1981

National League Championship Series for the Los Angeles Dodgers?

15)            1            Who was the winner pitcher in Game 7 of the 1964 World Series?

 

TIE-BREAKING QUESTION

16)            1            What was the name of Bill McCurdy’s East End Houston sandlot baseball team?

“Just One More Thing….”

I’d like to thank Rick Bush, Wayne Roberts, and Tal Smith for following up on Bill McCurdy’s announcement last month for their help with Colt .45s photos for the expansion teams book. Bill Nowlin thanks you and I thank you. Have a great summer, everybody.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

I’m In The Nude With Glove

June 27, 2018

Who dat man?
Who dat man?
Gotta long beard
And a nude left hand!

I‘m In The Nude With Glove

(To the tune of “I’m In The Mood For Love”)

By Bill McCurdy

I’m in the nude – with glove
Simply because – they paid me.
Funny, but when they paid me
I stripped and grabbed – my glove.

Heaven is in – my eyes
Bright as the star – I’m under
Oh! Is it any wonder
I’m in the nude – with glove?

Why stop to think of whether
This little dream might fade?
I’ve put my stuff – together
Now I’m nude one, I’m not afraid!

If there’s a cloud above
If it should rain – I’ll let it
But for tonight, forget it!
I’m in the nude – with glove.

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For breaking news about the forthcoming ESPN annual edition on the athletic “body” in motion feature, check out this one of several multiple sources on the big deal this thing has become in our new “eyes on everything” media culture:

http://abc13.com/sports/dallas-keuchel-to-be-featured-in-espns-body-issue-/3621737/

Dallas Keuchel will be the first Houston Astro to participate in the series that is set to hit the news stands on June 29.

As per usual, one hopes that artful appreciation and scientific curiosity are behind this kind of pictorial attention, and, who knows, maybe this generation of marketing wizards will also become the first to prove that hope to be true.

Either way, yes or no, this old world will keep on turning.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Blue Jay Grichuk Ego Slams Astros

June 26, 2018

Randal Grichuk
Rosenberg TX
Toronto Blue Jays

Randal Grichuk. ~ Add that name to the list of those players whose greatest joy was bringing down the House of Joy for his now distantly fellow local neighbor fans and breaking the hearts, in this instance, of the Houston Astros.

Here’s a link to ESPN and as good a summary as any of the painful game particulars. Had it not been for his 8th inning home run bomb to left, and his 9th inning Spiderman catch in right, the Astros would have won. Had it not been for only one or the other of these lights out plays by the young native of Rosenberg, TX and Lamar Consolidated High School, the Astros probably still would have fallen to the Toronto Blue Jays.

The ESPN Report describes it well:

His soaring 471-foot home run, which clanged off the light pole above the train tracks on the left-field wall, came against Will Harris and made it 6-3 with two out in the eighth.

Grichuk then reached over the short wall in right field to rob George Springer of a homer with two on and no outs in the ninth.

“Those are the plays you dream of that you don’t really get too often,” he said. “But exactly what you hope for happened.”

Here’s a link to their whole story:

http://www.espn.com/mlb/recap?gameId=380625118

Makes you wonder about the mental appetites of the so-called baseball gods – or fate and destiny themselves – don’t you think? Baseball already is a sport that exposes the ironies of life like no other sport ever will, but this one is probably the most curiously joyful and resentfully painful of them all.

Irony of all ironies – our boys have just been defeated by a local guy who grew up worshipping every step the team took as his club of childhood heroes. His joy is not based on revenge, is it? We’ve no record in this instance that the Astros ever singled out Randal Grichuk for rejection. Had they done so, his boundless glee state of self-satisfaction as a result of last night would be much easier to explain.

What is it then? Why was Grichuk so ecstatic over his ability to defeat the Astros on their shared home turf of the Greater Houston area?

It’s still “ego” – and we must remember that ego has many long, spindly, and nearly invisible legs beyond the ones that are easy to see.

Sometimes a young player needs only to see a lack of contact by – or an expression of interest from – the club in their region of origin to view a game like last night as a form of subtle revenge. Maybe Grichuk (unconsciously or not) would simply like the Astros to know they missed out by not signing him as a younger prospect when he was coming of age.

This last statement is also ego:

“That’s OK, Grichuk! ~ The Astros can’t win ’em all! ~ But we’re still in first place! ~ And you’re still playing for a 4th place club! ~ Keep playing like you did last night! ~ And maybe the Astros will pick you up somewhere down the line!”

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

AL Batting Leaders to June 24, 2018

June 25, 2018

Through Games of 6/24/2018:

 2018 American League Batting Average Leaders

# Leaders Team G AB H BA
1 Jose Altuve Astros 79 313 108 .345
2 Mookie Betts Red Sox 59 228 77 .338
3 Jean Segura Mariners 71 296 99 .334
4 JD Martinez Red Sox 75 286 93 .3252
5 Mike Trout Angels 78 271 88 .3247
6 Matt Duffy Rays 61 242 77 .318
7 Eddie Rosario Twins 73 291 93 .320
8 Jon Jay Royals 74 298 93 .312
9 Michael Brantley Indians 64 261 81 .310
10 Andrelton Simmons Angels 67 247 76 .308
  • Astros Above shown in bold type.

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Interesting Hit Frequency Math ….

10 of the top qualifying hitters have hit totals into the 70s decade.

7 of the top qualifying hitters have hit totals into the 80s decade.

5 of the top qualifying hitters have hit totals into the 80s decade.

1 alone of the top qualifying hitters have hit totals exceeding 100.

Will this be Jose Altuve’s final day as the exceptional triple digit numbers member of the flailing away “99 Hits Club” ~ and will this be the day that Jean Segura of Seattle finally does something to technicolorize his rather pale, sparse and occasional movement, but always clear presence near the top of the heap among their vaunted ranks?

Could be. Unless he’s quietly hurt, but saved from the DL. The Mariners play the Orioles in Baltimore this afternoon.

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Gurriel Banging Hard on BA Leaders Door.

Yuli Gurriel’s 3 for 5 day Sunday against KC garnered him 4 RBI from a Grand Slam and two doubles to boot, lifting his season average to .306 (or just outside the Top Ten). Lets hope that Gurriel keeps his mojo working and that guys like George Springer, Carlos Correa, Alex Bregman, Josh Reddick, among others, keep pressing for the return of Astros team hitting to the summer meteor shower level.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle