The Pecan Park Eagle

Astros, Baseball History, and other Musings of Heart and Humor

Archive for the ‘Baseball’ Category

« Older Entries
Newer Entries »

Rookie Larry Miggins Given Dizzy Ride

April 14, 2018

Larry Miggins

Seventy years ago this month, our 92-year old SABR member of the Larry Dierker Chapter and national baseball history treasure, Larry Miggins, was a kid struggling to catch on with a major league club during the reserve clause era days. Given the experience he had with the old waiver rules of that time, Larry more than likely had to check the newspapers daily to know where he would be playing in the afternoon. Here’s how writer Jerry Liska reported the meanderings of Mr. Miggins over that short period. — Glad you made, Larry! — The Pecan Park Eagle.

Rookie Given Dizzy Ride

By Jerry Liska

Chicago -(AP)- The complexities of baseball’s waiver rule have rookie outfielder Larry Miggins of the St. Louis Cardinals (for the moment) on a wild merry-go-round.

Within a week, 22-year old Miggins — a fine Irish husky from New York’s Bronx — was waived by the Cardinals, claimed by the Chicago Cubs, waived by the Cubs and claimed by the Cardinals.

All of this maneuvering was an attempt by both the Cards and the Cubs to shake Miggins loose for further minor league seasoning.

He was drafted by St. Louis last fall from Minneapolis of the American Association. As a drafted player, he must be waived out of the majors for minor league assignment.

The Cards still want to farm him out and the Cubs are ineligible for future claim.

H was claimed by the Cubs for the $10,000 waiver price last Saturday, and joined them at Pittsburgh. Friday he was summoned to the Cub office and informed the team had waived him and the Cards had reclaimed him.

So Friday afternoon, Larry was back on the Cardinals bench, recalling a more peaceful 1947 season when he batted .289 for Sioux City of the Western League and .233 for the Minneapolis Millers.

Manager Eddie Dyer of the Cards, who gave Miggins a whirl in spring training, says he has fine speed and a splendid throwing arm. If he can learn to hit better, he’s a good major league prospect.

— Dubuque (IA) Telegraph Herald, Page 20, April 25, 1948.

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Tags:Rookie Larry Miggins Given Dizzy Ride
Posted in Baseball, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

Miss Lou Mahan’s Ballpark Organ Hits

April 13, 2018

Early TV Comedienne Imogene Coca looked a lot like legendary Buff Stadium baseball game organist Lou Mahan. In her own way, Mahan also did comedy.

In “The Last Pecan Park Eagle”, I wrote about Smiley – and how change had left him behind to the fact that the rest of us had moved on from our active participation in sandlot ball to other things, but that he had not.

Today is partially a footnote to the fact that all of us get left behind eventually – to some thing – or multiple of things – and that we may not realize it for years – if ever. The rest is to present you with a very belated never before published mention of Lou Mahan’s biggest hits.

The real organ music days are done. 40,000 fans who come to ball games in 2018 with telephone devices to “watch” Astros baseball don’t come to hear subtle musical allusions to the game as they did in the old days. Today’s fans like being blasted by songs that blare into the night from the sound system “music” their need for someone to do it harder or deeper. We presume the cry is for a timely long ball hit. What else could it be?

For the tamer minds of the more carefully bordered ambitions of the 1950 crowd, here’s a little chart we composed as an addendum to the first Lou Mahan column from 2009:

Remembering Lou Mahan!

Just think of today’s column as a start on Miss Lou Mahan’s Playlist. There were many, many others – and we will try to add them as they surface and lend themselves to short-time capture in print:

Miss Lou Mahan’s Playlist

Game Situation Lyrics to Melody
Song Title/Reason
Umpires Enter Three Blind Mice Three Blind Mice
Ball rolls up screen Notes go up ABCDEFG One Octave Up
Ball rolls down Notes go down GFEDCBA One Octave Down
Slugger in Slump Been a long, long time Kiss Once Again
Win Run at 3rd Why don’t you hurry home Shrimp Boats
Walk Off Win HR Happy Days Here Again Happy Days
Danny Gardella Donkey Serenade Sang pre-game
Jerry Witte HR Beyond the Blue Horizon The Blue Horizon
Larry Miggins My Wild Irish Rose Sang pre-game
Buffs run pitcher Tootsie, Goodbye Obvious
Loss of Dixie Series I Remember You Never forget you

Enjoy!

And don’t hold back on any Mahan contributions you remember – or questions you may have. Just include them all for public view as comments upon this column in the section that follows this article. Thank you.

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Tags:Miss Lou Mahan's Ballpark Organ Hits
Posted in Baseball | 3 Comments »

The Last Pecan Park Eagle

April 11, 2018

Japonica Park in Houston
Former Home of The Pecan Park Eagles
1947-1952

It was late August of 1954. Most of us who played ball for years in the city-owned park across the street from our house as The Pecan Park Eagles sandlot club were in high school by this time. A few of us still played organized kid baseball, but none of us any longer haunted the old ground we once called Eagle Field during our halcyon year of 1950. It had returned to being “the lot” – the ordinary place where Japonica and Myrtle Streets converged near the far western boundaries of Pecan Park on Houston’s southeast side – just off Griggs Road – to the left as you drive south, even now, on the Gulf Freeway, on the start of any drive to Galveston.

It was near twilight as I came flying out the front screen door of our house for a one-step leap off our tiny concrete slab front porch onto the grass on my celebratory way to the family wheels, a 1951 Oldsmobile Rocket 88 – and the ignition key already jangling in my anxious-to-roll right hand. I did have to chip in a dollar’s worth of gas to get Dad’s permission to use the family wheels. After all, regular gas had risen to something like 26.9 cents per gallon over the summer months.

The big occasion – I had a dreamy date for the local CYO (Catholic Youth Organization) back-to-school “sock hop,” and I was both wired and inspired by my thoughts of the little lady I was about to pick up as my companion for the evening.

As I reached the driver’s side door handle (remember, we had no remotes in those days), I heard a familiar voice calling out to me from the other side of the yard.

“Hey, Billy,” the voice cried out. “Have you got time for a few flies and rollers before it gets dark?”

No question who it was. It was a fellow I came to think of over time as The Last Pecan Park Eagle.

I’ll call him “Smiley” here because that’s how I thought of him. He was a kid my age, but with a lot more native ability to run, catch, steal bases, hit for average, and hit for power. He just couldn’t keep his mind in the game for situations that required you to think ahead or adjust quickly. He didn’t communicate a lot of what he had felt clearly to all, but you would have to be thick as a tree stump to not get how much he loved baseball, and wanted to be one of The Pecan Park Eagles.

Smiley’s kind were once known as “slow learners” before the special needs programs began to sweep through our schools in the 1960s, and actually improve the learning curve. He got along well with his Eagle teammates, but he apparently had no free range parental permission to roam Pecan Park with the rest of us when we weren’t on the diamond.

The contact I had with Smiley in the late summer of 1954 was the last time we ever saw each other face-to-face. I recently learned that he had finished school at some point, and spent the rest of his health-shortened life working in grocery store produce here in Houston. He died early from undisclosed health problems, around the age of 50.

Somehow, even at age 16 for each of us, I “got” what was going on with Smiley from his question back on that summer afternoon in 1954. The rest of us Eagles had changed; moved on. Smiley had not. He was still waiting on the next game at Eagle Field across the street.

“Can’t make it tonight, Smiley,” I said, with a key-jangling wave of the right hand. “Got some place to be. See you later.”

Later never came. The kid in the white tee shirt and blue jeans I looked back and saw in the rear view window of my car as I drove away was walking his barefoot self home. He was banging the business end of his bat on the sidewalk and carefully protecting the ball in the pocket of his ancient five-finger Wilson glove as he moved quietly away. We would never see each other again in a speaking situation. And Smiley would never again come by to try and stir up a game of flies and rollers.

By this time that night, “Sh Boom” by The Crewcuts was blasting away on the car radio. It was not loud enough to snuff out the conclusion that has grown in my mind over the nearly 64 years that have passed since that 1954 brief contact with Smiley.

He truly was – the Last Pecan Park Eagle.

Thank you, old friend, for all the spirit and hope you brought to the game of baseball that we Eagles played. Wish I had possessed the insight that day in 1954 you dropped by for one more practice session to thank you for your contributions, but I didn’t. Some of us are a little slow in learning how to express appreciation.

So here it is – a little late:

Long live the memory of anonymous you,

  …. the Last Pecan Park Eagle!

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

 

 

Tags:The Last Pecan Park Eagle
Posted in Baseball | 13 Comments »

Bill Christine’s Al Oliver Story

April 9, 2018

Maybe we need to write a little amendment to Wee Willie Keeler’s early 20th century line about how to get a hit. Remember that one? Willie said, “Hit ’em where they ain’t!”

What? But how can they be true all the time?

If a ball falls safely to the ground without every being touched by a fielder, as Alex Bregman’s home plate pop fly did Saturday for the Astros, and no fielder has even come close to touching it, that’s a hit – right?

Not in every case – as Wee Willie’s axiom clearly states. – Nope. The rules point to instances in which balls fall safely, but should have been caught. And the rule intention is unmistakable by implication. – You don’t give a batter credit for a hit he doesn’t deserve. – You don’t leave a fielder blameless for a ball he should have handled. – And you don’t hang a loss on a pitcher at the same time by calling the winning score that resulted “a hit” – making it the producer of an earned run that also hikes the ERA of the pitcher who did nothing to deserve the extra discredit.

All those violations of the rules resulted from the Hosmer Play call. Astros batter Bregman got credit for a game-winning hit he did not earn. Padres first baseman Eric Hosmer got off the hook for a pop fly ball fall to earth he should have caught. And the San Diego pitcher took both the game lose and a hike in his ERA because the play was ruled a hit.

Then legendary Pittsburgh Pirate official game scorer Bill Christine found out about it from the Pecan Park Eagle and all of the national media that were also hitting the Hosmer Play story like a swarm of Gulf Coast mosquitoes slamming into the bug zappers of our fair city every July.

Our local scorer had given Bregman a hit and an RBI. “No way” was the tempered essence of Christine’s appraisal. He also provided documentable support from the official rules of baseball in not form:

“NOTE (2) It is not necessary that the fielder touch the ball to be charged with an error. If a ground ball goes through a fielder’s legs or a pop fly falls untouched and in the scorer’s judgment the fielder could have handled the ball with ordinary effort, an error shall be charged.”

He also called the Bregman/hit, Hosmer/no error call in three spartan sentences what he thought of it:

“There have been some bad official-scoring decisions over the years. I even committed a few myself. But this is the worst of all-time.”

Larry Dierker also added his own implicit comment of support in one sparse, but clearly written sentence:

“That was an error on Hosmer. Period!”

Saturday, April 6. 2018, Minute Maid Park, Houston.
Eric Hosmer stands in front of his missed pop fly, but is not charged with an error on the play that cost the Padres the game in the bottom of the 10th to the Astros, 1-0.

Then I awaken this pre-crack of dawn Monday morning to this wonderful follow up story from Bill Christine about his own personal experience with former Pirate outfielder Al Oliver when he once had to apply the correct interpretation of the rule on a play from a game with the Braves when the two mental Atlanta middle infielders were both “Hosmerized” by a ball hit up the middle that fell safely when both men deferred to each other for any catching to be done. And neither did. The ball fell safe. And Oliver had reached first base safely.Thinking he had a hit.

Here’s how Bill Christine describes the rest of the ride – once Al Oliver gets the ruling and decides that Christine has taken a hit away from him.

Bill Christine’s Al Oliver Story

Al Oliver, a hothead but a helluva ballplayer, is batting for the Pirates on a Friday night in Pittsburgh.

He hits a dying swan just over second base, high enough for both the second baseman and the shortstop of the Atlanta Braves to converge. They might have been Felix Millan and Sonny Jackson.

This is an old story.

The two infielders look at one another as the ball drops. In this morality play, Millan plays Alphonse and Jackson plays Gaston.

Oliver, loafing all the way, is safe at first base.

In the press box, Official Scorer Bill Christine intones into the mike: “That’s an error. I’ll call down to the Atlanta dugout when they come in, to see if somebody will take the blame.”

Oliver, doing a not-so-slow boil, trots out to his position at the end of the inning. He thinks he’s been jobbed out of a hit. He’s going to hit .312 instead of .313.

In the Atlanta dugout, there’s no problem. One of the Braves’ infielders volunteers a mea culpa. “Give me the error,” he says.

The Braves end their at bat, and Oliver returns to the dugout. He picks up the phone and gets Christine in the press box.

“That was a f-in hit,” he yells. “You’re taking money away from me.”

“The rulebook says nobody has to touch it,” Christine says. “I could have caught that ball if I had been out there.”

“I wanna see you in the f-in runway after the game,” Oliver says.

No hero, no dummy, Christine says:

“I won’t be there.”

“You’re not a f-in man if you’re not down here,” Oliver says.

“I don’t care what it makes me, I’m not gonna be there,” Christine says.

“Start without me.”

“F-U,” Oliver says, and hangs up.

The next afternoon, before a day game, the Pirates are taking batting practice. Christine is around the batting cage, and he can’t help hearing Oliver still grumbling about the hit-error call the night before. But Oliver doesn’t go over and confront the scorer.

Roberto Clemente pulls the still-steaming Oliver aside. Clemente knew the rulebook inside out. He’s worried that Oliver will spend the rest of the day cursing Christine instead of concentrating on

that afternoon’s pitcher.

“You know,” Clemente says to Oliver, “I don’t agree with that guy a lot of the time. But he’s right this time. It’s in the rules. That wasn’t a hit.”

“No shit,” Oliver says.

The following spring, Bill Virdon is managing the Pirates. The club is leaving its Florida training base for a few games in Venezuela.

Before a get-away exhibition game, Christine and Virdon are talking in Virdon’s ballpark office.

“OK if I leave my suitcase next to yours in here?” Christine says. “They won’t forget yours, and if mine’s next to yours, I should be OK.”

“Sure,” Virdon says.”Go right ahead.”

Christine starts to leave, and as he reaches the door, Virdon has an after thought and calls out:

“Hey, Bill.”

“Yeah?” says Christine, turning around in his tracks at the door.

“Maybe,” Virdon says,”you better ask Oliver if it’s all right.”

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

Oh well. If young Alex Bregman goes on to have the long MLB career he appears prepared to handle – and if hits a career .300 on the nose, many of us will remember where he got the extra hit he needed to get there by the rounding up of his precise BA from its previously deficit mark of .2994.

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Tags:Bill Christine's Al Oliver Story
Posted in Baseball | Leave a Comment »

What Are The Odds…

April 8, 2018

“I got it! ~ I got it! ~ I got it!”

“Whoops! ~ I missed it!”

“ASTROS WIN! ~ASTROS WIN ~ ASTROS WIN!, 1-0!”

“NEXT TIME I BRING YOU A CAN OF CORN, MR. HOSMER,
…. BRING A CAN OPENER!”

In fairness to Eric Hosmer, in spite of its rarity, it was the sort of thing that gets to happen to almost everyone who plays the game long enough, in one form or another. The game of baseball is the speed lane to humility through personal kinds of embarrassment on the field. And for most of us, our player memories do not extend far beyond the sandlot and Little League fields of early life. In Hosmer’s case yesterday, it looked as though he either over committed on how far to run in or lost the ball in those strangely placed arc lights. It certainly was no depiction of his normally superior abilities.

It was just bigger than everyday baseball life.

What are the odds that any of us will ever see that game-deciding play again in our lifetime – let alone, see it at all? My last and only memory of it goes back to my original sandlot baseball Pecan Park Eagle days – and we played loose as a goose with the rules in those days. – That is to say, as kids, we knew enough not to change any rules that might violate the integrity of the game. We never used “designated hitters” – and we sure didn’t place freebie runners at second base to help shorten extra inning games.

Pardon this quick fugue of thought. – Maybe San Diego first baseman Eric Hosmer was simply secretly test-driving a rule change for Commissioner Manfred. i.e., “Let’s see what happens in extra innings in these situations with two outs: Place a freebie runner at second. Then instruct the infielders and pitcher that they are required to let the first infield pop fly to fall safe once – just to see if that moves the game to a faster finish. If that does not occur to score a run, the freebie runner will have to await a legitimate play if he is to score.”

But seriously, folks….

We’ve never seen that game-ending in over seven decades of playing and watching baseball. What are the odds against us ever seeing it again? – And what are the odds against it ever happening again in all our collective short and long remaining life spans?

What a night Saturday, April 7, 2018 at Minute Maid Park turned out to be!

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

Addendum: This e-mail from legendary Pittsburgh Pirate game official scorer Bill Christine deserved additional status here. Christine covers a whole point we ignored in our moment of royal “aweness”. It now comes your way in Bill Christine’s e-mail subject title message to me:

Don’t shoot the official scorer in Houston; he’s doing the best he can: With two outs and the winning run on base Saturday between Houston and San Diego, the Houston batter hit a high pop fly that first baseman Hosmer of San Diego overran. The ball dropped several feet behind Hosmer and the winning run scored. The batter was credited with a hit and an RBI, the pitcher charged with an unearned run.
This is one of the rules of scoring: “NOTE (2) It is not necessary that the fielder touch the ball to be charged with an error. If a ground ball goes through a fielder’s legs or a pop fly falls untouched and in the scorer’s judgment the fielder could have handled the ball with ordinary effort, an error shall be charged.”

So why wasn’t Hosmer charged with an error and the run ruled unearned?  I’d like to hear the official scorer’s explanation.

There have been some bad official-scoring decisions over the years. I even committed a few myself. But this is the worst of all-time.

– Bill Christine

 ____________________

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

Tags:What Are The Odds...
Posted in Baseball | 2 Comments »

Bill Gilbert: 2018 Astros Expectations

April 8, 2018

There have been a few great injury-hampered players in baseball history – Mickey Mantle jumps immediately to mind – but we offer that there have been no greater “DL”-plagued baseball thinkers, researchers, and true students of the game than the man who writes this initial prospectus for us on the 2018 Houston Astros today in The Pecan Park Eagle.

Thank you, Bill Gilbert, for your service to the game.

Please take care of yourself and get as well as you can be.

 

What Should Be Expected from the Houston Astros in 2018?

By Bill Gilbert

For the first time in their 57 year history, the Astros open the season as World Champions. Astro fans need to be aware that anything less than a repeat will be viewed as a disappointment to some. The Astros defeated the rest of the Division by 21 games in 2017 which gives the team a pretty good cushion even though other teams have improved, most significantly the Los Angeles Angels. A reasonable expectation might be winning the AL West but failing to again make it through three levels of playoffs.

The Astros did not stand still. They traded for starting pitcher, Gerrit Cole, a former All-Star without giving up either of their two top prospects, providing them with possibly the strongest rotation in the league. Justin Verlander can’t be expected to do as well as last year but should be a big winner. Dallas Keuchel and Lance McCullers Jr. should be better if they can stay healthy. Cole and World Series hero, Charlie Morton are better than other team’s mid-rotation starters. They also strengthened the bullpen, which wore down late in the season with the signing of free agents, Joe Smith and Hector Rendon.

In last year’s preseason article, I forecast that the Astros would improve their run production from 4.5 to 4.8 runs per game resulting in 7 more wins. I totally blew that prediction when the team increased run production to 5.53 runs per game resulting in 15 more wins.

The nine starting position players from the World Series team return intact. It will be difficult to match their 2017 offensive production but it should be close. League MVP, Jose Altuve, may not repeat but he will be one of the best players in baseball. George Springer, Carlos Correa and Alex Bregman are all young and improving and should be even better this year than last. Yuli Gurriel. Brian McCann and Evan Gattis are all solid contributors at the lower end of the lineup. Marwin Gonzalez and Josh Reddick had exceptional years in 2017 and fill out a lineup that is strong from top to bottom.

I expect the Astros to score 5.0 runs per game in 2018 while the pitching allows 4.0. This makes for a successful season that should carry over in to the playoffs.

The Astros should have a good start with their first three series against likely non-contenders, Texas, Baltimore and San Diego. They could lead the AL West Division from start to finish as they did last year.

I realize it’s not fair to write a pre-season forecast after eight regular season games. It wasn’t by design. I have been hospitalized since March 25 with limited access to my computer and other resources and no access to the MLB Network. I had this report pretty well formulated in my mind before the season started. However, I am on my way to recovery and should have more analysis in a report at the end of April.

Bill Gilbert

4/7/18

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Tags:Bill Gilbert: 2018 Astros Expectations
Posted in Baseball | Leave a Comment »

The Soulful Art of Opie Otterstad

April 7, 2018

On Friday Night, Jose Altuve, George Springer, and Justin Verlander all celebrated the art of their 2017 achievements with gifts from the wonderful sporting artist, Opie Otterstad.

The snapshot above does little justice to the rich tones, life energy, and incredible art passion that comes with each piece ever done by the famous Texas-based sports artist, Opie Otterstad, but we must invite you to see that for yourself from the many other items on display at his website as publicly available originals and prints. Opie Otterstad also does privately commissioned work too, and he explains the process that’s open to explore that possibility with interested parties at his site.

By the way, I am not a secret salesman. I’m just one of Opie Otterstad’s biggest fans. And I have been ever since he individually painted all of our inductees into the Texas Baseball Hall of Fame during my tenure as their Board President and Executive Director in the early years of the 21st century. Opie Otterstad was the man who brought art, passion, and character to the individual works we gave to each inductee on our list – and his artful outcomes in each instance came out wearing the souls of the men they each depicted.

Craig Biggio, 2004
By Opie Otterstad

The pieces Opie did of Jeff Bagwell and Craig Biggio as joint TBHOF inductee members of our 2004 class speak loudly for everything this fine artist and generous fan of the game contributes. They were “The Killer Bees” down to the bone – right down to the fact that Opie used some kind of genuine bees wax as the fundamental substance in each of their works.

You will find these two iconic Astros and those depictions shown here today.

I will say this much. Copies of the Bagwell and Biggio pieces shown here may still be available through the Opie Otterstad site as prints. He’s also done other things of both men and quite a bit, we see, from the 2017 World Series Glory Hour that followed the Astros triumph in Game Seven.

Jeff Bagwell, 2004
By Opie Otterstad

Here’s the link. And have fun:

http://www.opieart.com/main.html

Have a great weekend, everybody!

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Tags:The Soulful Art of Opie Otterstad
Posted in Baseball | Leave a Comment »

Through a Glass Darkly with Rob Manfred

April 6, 2018

Rob Manfred
Commissioner of Baseball

In Game Two of the Baltimore @ Houston Series, Tuesday, April 3, 2018, Commissioner Rob Manfred was on hand to pass out the World Series Championship rings to all deserving members of the 2017 Houston Astros club and organization. It was a perfect time for the ROOTS TV broadcasting crew to get Manfred on camera for some spontaneous comment on the state of baseball. Scott Kalas and Geoff Blum spent the top of the 2nd inning doing exactly that.

Regrettably, I did not have a recording of the interview that I watched from the catbird seat of my Astros TV Zone study at home, but the tone and the message were sufficiently memorable to support what I needed for this column:

As the conversation quickly floated into baseball’s need for change, if any, from the way the game plays out at the ballpark and on TV, Manfred quickly adopted a cajoling attitude about the fact that we shall always have older players/people who will not want to change anything. I felt that Kalas pretty much followed Manfred into the same “hole in the ground”, but that “Blummer” did a good job of maintaining his distance from that stance. Kalas even made reference to some unnamed former player in our local midst who opposes any changes to the game.

The Commissioner balanced the “no change” oldies against the “change needed” younger fans OK, but then he sort of found the big hole in the ground – the one that leads to Baseball Wonderland – and ended up staring too long into the dark mirror he found there for his own conclusions.

As a result, Manfred appears to be looking at the problem oppositely from its true location:

1) Manfred thinks the game at the park and the surrounding experience for game attending fans is great. The games have never been better and the fans have never had more to do at the ballpark than they do now;

2) On the other hand, the Commissioner says he fears that younger fans at home may get bored and change the channel because they lack all those choices at home that are available at the ballpark.

3) Our 1st Question: If the Commissioner thinks he’s right, do we need a change like the free-runner at 2nd on extra inning tie games? i.e., “Stay tuned, folks! This game goes to the 10th tied 9-9! It’s time to see if that freebie runner that now hustles down to 2nd base can score the first unearned offensive winning run in baseball history!”

4) Our 2nd Question: Is the Commissioner’s Office now located on Mars? Here’s what we get with a trip downtown for a big game in most big league cities:

(a) a parking place that may cost as much or more than our game ticket;

(b) a game seat that jams you between two other (usually large and overlapping) people, with no space for aisle travel;

(c) a chance to rise and wiggle, every time an aisle traveler needs to pass;

(d) a view of the game that will be severely altered by the person sitting in front of you. I remember one game in Houston sitting behind this bald 6’7″ guy. I recall little of the game, but I have retained a pretty good picture of the cardiovascular system that was observable from the rear of that fan’s head;

(e) a chance to rise with each batted ball, or remain standing with each rally, or stay seated and wait for the crowd’s reaction to feed you the good or bad news on a general basis about what happened;

(f) a chance to catch a free tee-shirt that’s been cannon-fired into the stands, unless, of course, you’re sitting behind that 6’7″ guy I told you about – and you really lust for cannon-fired tee-shirts that prbably won’t fit anyway;

(g) the option to visit one of the food, drink, or souvenir shops – and spend more money than you planned – all the while remembering – that satisfying our need for immediate gratification is made possible by our immediately painless addiction to credit card purchasing;

(h) at the ballpark, you get to hear loud words spoken to you that you cannot understand – to loud music played that you don’t want to hear; and,

(i) when its over, then you get to find your car and drive home to the boondocks.

(5) As for the baseball-at-home TV experience, Commissioner Manfred needs to remember that we Americans have become the biggest multi-task culture in the world:

(a) At home, we can watch TV baseball, other shows, and evenuse the computer and phone side-by-side in our own self-established den or comfort zone – and never miss a lick at anything we are doing;

(b) It cost us nothing to park in our own garage – and all we have to do for food and drink is to hit our own kitchen or favorite home delivery phone number; (and there’s no cashier in the kitchen!);

(c) No one’s going to block our view of the game at home on the big screen HD TV – and no one’s going to suddenly stand in front of us prior to a big play. I would have loved being at the park for Game 5 of the 2017 World Series, but I have no big regrets. I actually got to see the game – as it can only be seen on HD TV in a state of blended mindfulness, from proven camera placement angles, and then transmitted to us in the best close-up picture quality available – and without anyone even once blocking the view and intense state of total immersion in what may well stand up over time as one of the greatest baseball games ever played!

(d) If Millennials hit the change channel on baseball, it won’t be because a 9-9 game is now going into extra innings. It will be because every time they hit the button to reach the game, the broadcast is on another commercial break.

Summary Message to Commissioner Manfred

1) Don’t make changes in the rules that support the basic integrity of the game. i.e., no free runner at 2nd base to start extra inning games with a shot at a one-pitch walk-off single in any bottom half.

2) Change the ballparks to maximize a fan’s chances for actually seeing a game in person. i.e., give us smaller parks, more comfortable seat spacing, true unobstructed sight-lines to the field; true aisle space for fans passing in and out; and diverse multiple big screens that show us the close-ups that made Game 5 on TV the classic it now is in our real-time memories.

3) If you think the ballpark game is great and the TV game needs to be fixed for boredom, you are dealing with a reversal of the truth. It’s the other way around. The home TV game fits beautifully into our multi-tasking life styles. Just shorten the commercials. Do something about the ballpark infrastructure interference with comfort and our ability to even see the games we attend in person.

4) Charge more for fewer TV game commercials breaks.

5) Find the sky on how high salaries may go and work to get management and labor to come to some kind of agreement that works for most, always keeping in mind that we shall always have egos that will fly higher than the economics of the baseball market can afford. At least, get people working toward rational long-term solutions to the game’s expense before it settles everything else by becoming too rich for the average fan consumer.

Thanks for listening. Thanks for trying. We appreciate any real help you care to bring to the game.

Bill McCurdy, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

 

Tags:Through a Glass Darkly with Rob Manfred
Posted in Baseball | 5 Comments »

Column 3,000 @ The Pecan Park Eagle

April 5, 2018

The Pecan Park Eagle
Celebrates its 3,000th Column Today
April 5, 2018

We began writing and publishing at WordPress on July 21, 2009 with a mundane greeting column we called “Goodbye Chron.Com! Hello WordPress.Com!” After a short first try at Chron.com doing the same thing, we had moved over to WordPress because of our frustration with the graphics and lack of support at the first site. We had heard good things about WordPress and, wow, did they turn out to be right. Here we are, on April 5, 2018, still in place and afloat, writing the 3,000th column on baseball, Houston history, humor, or other musings.

We write 98% of what we publish. The rest is provided by wonderful contributing writers, researchers, and photographers  like Bill Gilbert, Maxwell Kates, David Skelton, Bob Dorrill, Darrell Pittman, and Mike McCroskey. Thanks, guys, for all you do to make The Pecan Park Eagle a living, breathing, communicating thing. Please forgive me if I lamely overlook any more names. We are all givers at this little stop on the road and that includes credit where credit is due. Few of us arrive prepared for moments of honest full gratitude – and sometimes gratitude expressed is delayed by the vagary presence of human memory. Try to know its there with me. Always. And genuinely. Even if it is not immediately expressed. It’s here. Burrowed deeply into my soul.

This just in. – Thanks go out to my unofficial editor, Tom Hunter. Without researcher Darrell Pittman throwing ideas at me like manna from heaven – and editor Tom Hunter retrieving wild pitches to the plate, I don’t know where I’d be at this date, but it probably would not be at 3,000 in the confidence in quality stage it is today. Thanks, fellows.

“In The Big Inning….”

From the start.

At first, we did a lot of pieces on the sandlot baseball adventures of The Pecan Park Eagles sandlot baseball club, historic Houston restaurants and amusement spots, local car dealership theme songs, teenage hangouts in the 1950s, the Jimmy Menutis night club culture, early Houston television shows, definable Houston neighborhoods, a light look at the history of our minor league Houston Buffs, the Houston Oilers and college sports, and fun attempts at the compilation of lists for the worst baseball movies and baseball-playing actors – and worst movie villains of all time.

The Menutis columns resulted in a connection with Jimmy and Ruth Menutis at their retirement home town of Lafayette, Louisiana and a couple of large parties that resulted there attended by hundreds from Houston. What a wonderful world this is!

Over time, we have been more and more been drawn to the subject we harbor most in our heart and soul – and that subject for us, of course, is the game of baseball. Our Astros World Series success in 2017 has simply made it easier to hit the baseball highway with our keyboard as our decisive “road most traveled”.

All 3,000 columns are still timely and available. Depending on your own interests, some are home runs, some are swinging bunt singles, some are straight down the middles bashes, and others are down the line chalk-chippers. But none are errors. Everyone was directive, intentional, and seeded in passion.

TPPE, BY COMPARISON, NOT INCLUSION

NAME HITS RANK
Wade Boggs 3,010 29
Al Kaline 3,007 30
Roberto Clemente 3,000 31
The Pecan Park Eagle 3,000
Sam Rice 2,987 32
Albert Pujols 2,968 33

At the Pecan Park Eagle, we write from the heart. To us it isn’t work. It’s where we go to breathe the best air of life.

It must be. Twice during this nine-year period of our existence, I have been privileged to co-write two baseball books on subjects of great baseball love for me. In 2010, Jimmy Wynn and I co-wrote his “Toy Cannon” memoirs. Then, in 2014, I recruited the help I’ve needed for years on this job and together, several of us wrote “Houston Baseball: The Early Years, 1861-1961”. Thanks extend eternally to Mike Vance, Mickey Herskowitz, Bob Dorrill, Marsha Franty, Joe Thompson, and Steve Bertone for the fine research and writing – and special thanks to Mike Vance for his service as our Editor-in Chief.

I shall always believe that it was my wiring to write that derives from The Pecan Park Eagle that fed into my participation in both of those important Houston baseball book projects. Writing is a connection wire to other things we need to do – but will not do until it becomes our passion to do them. Together we reach levels of passionate accomplishment that we cannot approach on our own – or from a state of loneliness. (See the 2017 Houston Astros for an example.)

For me, maybe it’s simply another variation on what I offered yesterday:

“Thank God for baseball. I’d have hated going through life alone.”

At any rate, thank you for your most doggedly patient readership support.

See the ball. Hit the Ball. Write.

Bill McCurdy / Publisher, Editor, and Principal Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Tags:Column 3000 @ The Pecan Park Eagle
Posted in Baseball | 12 Comments »

The Ring Is The Thing

April 5, 2018

The Ring Is The Thing
That blew in this Spring
And “Champ” is now Our Astros Bling

Congratulations, Astros, on those beautiful new symbols of your accomplishment in behalf of us all! Everyone in town and everything in “H” town that represents that same zest for accomplished athletic excellence is now consumed in awe by the grand looking hardware version of “best in the world” – and also all these rings represent to all others about the spiritual core and drive of our wonderful city. – Right, Rockets, Texans, and others?

Go, Houston! Keep up the good work! And if we are going to be the late harvesters we apparently are, why don’t we check and bring in the sheaves of our other fields that we have been plowing under these SE Texas sunrises for quite a bit of the same time?

Larry Dierker

A Dierker Doppelganger? Hey, Larry! It looks like some of your public now thinks that you’re not quite as tall and handsome as you used to be!

Today I was waiting on the elevator to open the door that would take me to a routine medical appointment on the west side. I was wearing shorts, an Hawaiian shirt, and an Astros “World Series Champs” cap.

When the door opened for me to enter “the lift”, I was greeted by one of four men also going up, already on board.

“Look whose riding with us,” smiled the elder member of the group. “It’s Larry Dierker!”

I smiled and gave them the fingered Hawaiian “Aloha” sign.

They either forgot how tall and handsome you are – or else – the Astros cap and Hawaiian shirt are just too strongly imprinted in the minds of Houstonians to ever be seen as anything but “Larry Dierker”.

Thanks for empowering the rest of us with the objects we need to walk in the pathway of our hero, Mr. Dierker. We appreciate you and we look forward to the coming of your new website, 49sFastball.

Keep us posted on how the site is coming along and, yes, for sure – please know that The Pecan Park Eagle is behind you all the way as a participant, a contributor, and a supporter in any way you would like our input.

The Pecan Park Eagle started in 2009. Today marks the closure on our Column # 2,999. Look for Column # 3,000 within the next 24 hours. And don’t blink too fast. We like what we do – and the moments around the Eagle’s Nest pass quickly.

Thank God for baseball. I’d have hated going through life alone.

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Tags:The Ring Is The Thing
Posted in Baseball | 1 Comment »

« Older Entries
Newer Entries »
  • Unknown's avatarHouston, Baseball, & Other Musings.


Blog at WordPress.com.
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • The Pecan Park Eagle
    • Join 224 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • The Pecan Park Eagle
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...