Archive for the ‘Baseball’ Category

Astro Stats through the 5-Man Cycle

April 3, 2018

Charlie Morton pitches Astros to 4-1 record in 2018.

 

Astros Hitting and Pitching Stats

over the first run through the current 5-man starter crew

It’s a long season, but here’s how the present stacks up individually as the Astros tear through their first cycle of the current 5-man roster of starting pitchers and a thump-worthy lineup of hitters led by the usual suspects. How many of you are surprised that our Latin version of “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” are leading the way with the fire arms – and how old Gaddis – out there doubling his pleasure on the pleasure of hitting doubles. Plus, Justin Verlander is extending his own way of saying thank you to the club for bringing him into the fold by mowing down the opposition in a way that just kills any hope they may have held for any recovery from the stuff he puts out there. Justin Verlander has become the 21st century rendition of John Dillinger on the mound. And thank you, Jeff Luhnow, for making Mr. Verlander now one of our World Series champions and also his story one of our greatest sports legends in Houston baseball history.

One more thing. – W0uldn’t it be great if someone could explain to Jake Marisnick that there are other kinds of hits besides home runs. I love Jake. I just wish he could hit better for average and earn the spot in center field that everything else in his skill set says he should be too – if he could hit for .280 or better on average.

Astros Hitting / First Five Games

Astro Hitters G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB BB SO BA%
George Springer 5 20 2 5 2 0 1 4 0 3 6 .200
Alex Bregman 5 19 1 3 2 0 0 1 0 4 2 .158
Jose Altuve 5 21 5 10 2 0 O 3 1 1 1 .476
Carlos Correa 5 17 4 7 3 0 1 5 1 2 4 .412
Marwin Gonzalez 5 17 1 3 1 0 1 3 0 3 7 .176
J.D. Davis 4 11 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 .091
Evan Gattis 5 19 3 6 4 0 0 3 0 3 5 .316
Brian McCann 3 10 5 5 0 0 0 1 0 2 2 .500
Jake Marisnick 3 14 3 2 0 0 2 3 0 0 7 .143
Max Stassi 2 7 1 3 2 0 0 2 0 0 1 .429
Derek Fisher 4 9 2 3 0 2 0 3 0 0 3 .333
Josh Reddick 3 9 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 .111

 

Astros Pitching / First Five Games

Astro Pitchers G W L ERA GS GF IP R ER H HR BB S0 SV
Justin Verlander 1 1 0 0.00 1 0 6.0 0 0 4 0 2 5 0
Dallas Keuchel 1 0 1 4.50 1 0 6.0 3 3 7 1 1 4 0
Lance McCullers 1 1 0 3.38 1 0 5.1 2 2 4 1 1 10 0
Gerrit Cole 1 1 0 1.29 1 0 7.0 1 1 2 1 3 11 0
Charlie Morton 1 1 0 0.00 1 0 6.0 0 0 3 0 2 6 0
Chris Devenski 2 0 0 4.50 0 0 2.0 1 1 2 1 0 2 0
Brad Peacock 2 0 0 0.00 0 0 2.0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0
Ken Giles 2 0 0 4.50 0 2 2.0 1 1 2 0 0 2 0
Joe Smith 1 0 0 18.00 0 0 1.0 2 2 2 0 1 1 0
Will Harris 2 0 0 0.00 0 0 1.2 0 0 1 0 0 2 0
Tony Sipp 1 0 0 5.40 0 0 1.2 1 1 1 0 2 2 0
Colin McHugh 2 0 0 3.86 0 2 2.1 1 1 2 1 1 1 0
Hector Rondon 1 0 0 0.00 0 1 1.0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0

Gotta love the dominance that our Astros rotation shows. It’s also worth a smile to see how the relief assignments are going around in these less stressful times. All the kittens are getting their fair share – and no, so far, the pressure is only the one we all face in daily slices. It’s the one day at a time, one games at a time, see the ball, hit the ball thing that we all face, every day, even if we don’t have a spot in the Astros bullpen.

Thank God for baseball. I’d hate be going through life alone.

Enjoy those new World Series rings tonight, Stros – and know we love you too!

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Cell Phones as History Changers

April 2, 2018

“Listen, my children, and you shall hear,
Of a phone call made by Paul Revere.”

Have you ever thought about how much cell phones might have changed history, had they been around earlier? Or how about all those times in fictional books and movies in which the plot evolved around mysterious phone calls or the mad search for a usable phone booth during a point of crisis?

With a cell phone handy back in the 18th century, there would have been no need for a  “midnight ride.” Paul Revere could have called it in: “Hello, is this Major Tom Brady? – Paul Revere here. It’s by sea. The Brits are pouring into Boston Harbor right now. I can see ’em getting off at the dock, even as we speak. OK? – Now, if you don’t mind, I’ve got a great dart game to finish over here at Sullivan’s Pub before I scat home to finish polishing some silver. – What’s that? – No problem! Glad to help.”

Perhaps, the following could serve as a few other examples:

1) Non-Fiction / Pearl Harbor, Dec. 1, 1941, A call comes in from Cell Phone Float Tower 29, about 180 miles NW of Oahu, at 7:39 AM:

“HELLO, PEARL! Listen up. This is Cappy Hunt, and I’m out here NW of Honolulu, doing a little fishing off the banks of Tower 29. – Listen real good. – You’re going to need to get some people out here to see what I’m looking at right now as the dawn comes up on us. – It looks like Hirohito has sent the whole dad-gum Japanese Navy out to greet us and it don’t look friendly in any way. As far as my eyes can see, they got destroyers, cruisers, battle ships, and flat tops – and one way and another – they is all loaded to the gills with big guns or them Mitsubishi Zero planes – as they is all decked out to fly, fire, and bomb. Send enough men to do the roadkill work and get everybody braced at Hickam Field and Pearl ready to defend everything we’ve got – with every thing lethal that we’ve got. I’ll hang loose as your lookout for as long as I can out here, but, granddad gummit, I forgot to charge this phone last night.”

2) Fiction / Barbara Stanwyck plays a disabled New York socialite who accidentally over-hears plans for a woman’s murder in the 1948 big movie, “Sorry, Wrong Number”. By the time she learns that she is the intended victim, it’s the last scene in the script and the killer is standing over her bedside, as her husband also calls to check on her, gets the killer, only to hear him say, “Sorry, wrong number” as he finishes the job and the movie through her screams. Had there been digital cell phones in 1948, Stanwyck would have had a suspicious phone number or a GPS on the scary caller – or something early enough – to have saved herself from starring in one of the creepiest bad ending movies of all time.

3) Weather News / Remember the old days, when some really bad storms, like the deadly tornado that struck Waco, Texas in 1953? As per usual, there were plenty of horrifying, but few, if any actual newsreel photos of the twister itself in real time. And we would always say or think: “It’s too bad someone didn’t have a camera handy when this monster hit!” – Now. in 2018,  there are no shortages of cameras – anywhere there are people. It’s all about the digital phone and how we now use them.

4) Cell Phones & The Bullpen / Do we really still need those clunky dugout wall phone land lines to be in touch with the bullpens during big league games? It’s imaginable the bullpen coach could even reply to a manager’s call with a phone video if he really wanted to see for himself if a certain reliever appeared ready.

5) The Cell Phone Immediacy App / (Maybe we already have this app and I just haven’t gotten the word on it.) How about a cell phone app that shuts the instrument down once it detects that the phone is moving through space that exceeds the power and speed of human assistance alone. – And maybe the same app could have the same capacity for broadcasting to the first 100 car-length of phones behind you why everyone is stuck on the freeway and not moving at other times. And it may also throw in some alternate route suggestions to boot.

Footnote: The problem with effective need-serving phone apps is that they immediately convert from need service into entitlements – and we start treating them immediately as desirable conditions of life that we have a right to expect every day from womb-to-tomb that we spend alive on Planet Earth.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Happy Easter 2018, Everybody!

April 1, 2018

The 2018 Pecan Park Eagle

Easter Time All Star Starters

Pitcher – Ted Lilly

Catcher – Tyler Flowers

1st Base – Luke Easter

2nd Base – Pumpsie Green

3rd Base – Pete Rose

Shortstop – Rabbit Maranville

Left Field – Lave Cross

Center Field – Johnny Hopp

Right Field – Pop Joy

HAPPY EASTER.
BASEBALL IS BACK.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Game 2 Astros Loss: The Critical Call

March 31, 2018

6th Inning
Astros @ Rangers
March 30, 2018
***********
Odor getting off his wild throw as Altuve slides into 2nd.

No. This doesn’t mean we are going to try and cover every season game of the 2018 Houston Astros season. We simply could not allow this clear point to pass without mention. What happened in Game 2 of that first series at Texas is part of the stuff that makes baseball the superior thinking game that it is. Sometimes you don’t have much time to think, if you are a baseball field manager, but if you have your head in the game, and you know the rules, speaking up in time may become the difference between winning or losing for your team.

It happened Friday night. And the credit, however begrudgingly its extended, has to be handed to Rangers field manager  Jeff Banister and/or his staff. What Banister did in the top of the 6th inning, with his club leading, 3-1, nobody out, and Jose Altuve running at first, was the critical play that both changed the score in the Rangers’ favor and halted the rally that could have propelled the Astros into a lead that would have only grown larger from there.

It did not. And here’s why.

The top of the 6th started on a funky note for the home field Rangers. Jose lead off by dropping a dying quail liner to right field off right handed reliever Chris Martin that right fielder Nomar Mazzara lazily played into a trapped base hit, a result confirmed by a video review that did not find any secret catch to dispel the effect of poor fielding energy.

OK. Momentum is now up for the Astros. Altuve has reached the beach. The rest of the troops should soon follow.

And it almost worked that way. At first.

Altuve on 1st. Nobody out. Right handed reliever Martin pitching for the Rangers.

Carlos Correa strikes out.

Altuve on 1st. One out. Right handed reliever Martin pitching for the Rangers.

Alex Bregman slaps a ball up the middle. Shortstop Elvis Andrus grabs it behind second base and flips it to second baseman Odor on an attempted foot tag and throw to first for a double play. Altuve is sliding into second beneath when Odor gets his throw off to first, but he immediately regains his running posture and appears to be a couple of steps beyond second by the time Odor gets off his throw to first.

The throw is wild and goes into the Rangers’ first base side dugout. Bregman is safe at first and is awarded second. Since Altuve appears to be beyond second when the throw occurs, he is waved in to score. (If you look at the featured slide picture here, it’s hard to see how anyoe thought that Altuve was beyond second base when Odor released his wild throw.)

Regardless, for a brief uncontested moment, the score is now 3-2, Rangers, with the Astros now sitting on the tying run at second and one out. It didn’t last long.

Rangers manager Banister protests the call. But what for?

As it turned out, Altuve was safe at second base, but he was not beyond the bag when Odor unleashed his wild throw to the dugout. As a result, Altuve was recalled from the dugout to be a base runner at 3rd. The run he scored, of course, was taken off the board.

Protest settlement situation: Astros still trail the Rangers 3-1 in the top of the 6th. They have runners on 2nd and 3rd with only one out.

The Astros still have all the opportunity in the world, but how much momentum is left in the tank as a result of the protest result?

Marwin Gonzalez walks to load the bases for the Astros, still with only one out and Texas up by 3-1.

Evan Gattis strikes out swinging. It remains a 3-1 Astros game in the top of the 6th. The Astros still have the bases loaded, but now there are two outs.

The Rangers bring in lefty Alex Claudio to pitch against lefty Derek Fisher of the Astros.

The Astros counter by bringing in right handed J.D. Davis as a pinch hitter for Fisher.

Davis strikes out swinging to retire the side. End of challenge.

The Rangers go on to score two more, winning the game, 5-1.

Mama said there’d be days like this. And we have to guess she also meant that they even are going to happen to World Champions too. Congratulations to Rangers manager Banister for picking the right time to protest, even if we Astros fans don’t care for the outcome in this instance. It’s part of what makes baseball the fun game that it is.

Yes. Baseball’s both a fun and a funny game. You learn that early. And you also have to learn that all the funny things that happen to you in this game don’t necessarily make you laugh.

The Top of the 6th just qualifies as one of those critical moments that changed the outcome of the game.

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

Hello, Astros / Goodbye, Rusty

March 30, 2018

Second Year in a Row
George Springer Homers to Start Season
March 29, 2018

Uh Oh! The 2018 Astros AL Baseball Season is off to a slow start.

Last year, lead-off hitter George Springer got the Astros 2017 World Series Championship AL Baseball Season off to a flying start by homering on the first pitch of the season. This year, it took him three pitches to accomplish the same feat against Cole Hammels of the Texas Rangers.

We jest. That’s OK. This 2018 team is better than last year’s great club if they can play their remaining 161 regular season games on the field as well as they appear prepared to do it on paper. Get that done with people like George Springer and Carlos Correa supporting the game’s greatest player, Jose Altuve, on the field, and with heavenly humming pitchers like Justin Verlander and Dallas Keuchel tilling the mound – and our Houston chances for a repeated World Series victory in 2018 correctly go from possible, to probable, to almost certain – barring the appearance of nasty fate.

Here at The Pecan Park Eagle, we’ve got the Astros down for a 108-54 record in 2018 and a whatever-it-takes AL roll over the Yankees and other base league playoff pretenders on their way to dumping the Dodgers or whomever else survives as NL contender in the World Series.

That being said, we must add: We’ve been to the rodeo of paper expectations before and had to learn that nobody gets anything until they actually win it on the field, one day at a time, in the face of little and long present issues of injury and reliable availability.

So much too depends on the man in charge. We had this trust twice before – first with Bill Virdon and again with Larry Dierker. And now we have it again with A.J. Hinch.

It’s there, man. If you pay attention at all to the dugout interaction during games between Hinch, his staff, and his players – you can see it and sense it in every other way that’s available to you. These guys are confident. In themselves. And in each other. And in their leaders, they will do all they can to do all that is possible. No trust is lost. And no energy is wasted on distrust.

That 4-1 Astros win over the Rangers on Opening Day 2018 was a nice start, but now it’s a new day. Time for a new day run at being the best team on the field this Good Friday.

And, one more time. Rest in Peace, Rusty Staub!

Rest in Peace
Rusty Staub
Died March 29, 2018
Age 73

It was 1963 when the 19-year old Rusty Staub joined the Houston Colt .45s after one season with the Durham Bulls of the Carolina League in 1962. I was familiar with Staub’s early skill from the time he was finishing play at Jesuit High School in New Orleans, but never got to see him actually play until his rookie MLB year. I started my masters level graduate school work at Tulane in September 1961, after Rusty already had finished his amateur play and signed at age 17 to play for our new NL expansion club.

Everyone I knew at the time was very excited about Rusty Staub as a candidate for stardom when he arrived in Houston, and, like most of those others, I shared in the disappointment when GM Spec Richardson traded him away in that media / commissioner bungled trade to Montreal.

All Staub did after leaving Houston was play about another thousand years while becoming along the way, one of the best pinch hitters and biggest charitable benefactors that the game has ever known.

Thank you, Rusty Staub, for being such an important, if wrongly assessed part of our early Houston MLB history.

We appreciate you because – there will never be another you.

 

Plus Previous TPPE Column Link:

Prayers for Rusty Staub Please

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

 

Rusty Staub Has Died

March 29, 2018

This painful note from our SABR brother, Paul Rogers, and the link to the story of his demise say as well as possible:

“Rusty Staub – “Le Grand Orange” – passed away late last night at 73 after a long hospital stay. Oldsters will remember him as an 18 year-old phenom with the then brand new Houston Colt .45s. Here is the New York Times obituary which aptly describes his career and considerable charitable activities:”

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/29/obituaries/rusty-staub-dead-baseball.html

Also included here is the link to the recent column we wrote about his hospitalization:

Prayers for Rusty Staub Please

Rest in Peace, Rusty Staub.

There will never be another you.

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Mover & Shaker: Walter O’Malley

March 29, 2018

Do you remember why the Dodgers and Giants left Brooklyn and Manhattan after the 1957 NL season and moved to Los Angeles and San Francisco?

It didn’t have to do with fans so much, except for one thing, it did have everything to do with where the fans were now living by this time. Like so many other American families in this era, baseball fans were moving to the boondocks for a shot at more home space at cheaper prices at the expense of a big bump in the cost of daily travel to work in the cities that still served as homes to their favorite baseball teams.

The work-home commute was no big deal for Dodger and Giant fans. The East was built around a great commuter rail system that could take mostly working fathers to and from their new homes in New Jersey and Connecticut to work and back without a problem.

The problem was – how did the bulk of these diehard Dodger and Giant fans remain active patrons of their clubs, especially of the Dodgers in Brooklyn, when there was no great commuter service to Ebbets Field by rail – and only limited, expensive car space for parking, if a fan planned to drive in for a game he may have earlier in life been able to reach on foot?

I prefer to believe the following: Dodger owner Walter O’Malley worked his tail off trying to get the City of New York to help him build a new ball park in Brooklyn near a major commuter train depot – and he also sought help from the city in building this park – with plans for upgrades that even included a domed stadium design. It would have been tailor-made as a plan for retaining all the Dodgers fans that now lived in New Jersey.

It didn’t happen. For whatever political and economic factors that called the hand, the legendary NYC planning genius, Robert Moses, effectively always found a way to block all of the Dodger requests. The next thing we all knew was that the Dodgers and Giants were departing the New York area to begin the 1958 season as the Los Angeles Dodgers and the San Francisco Giants.

Owners Walter O’Malley of the Dodgers and Horace Stoneham of the Giants were breaking from the pack to become the first MLB colonizers of the long-regarded and richly coveted West Coast territory. With the growth of television baseball coverage and the newly available presence of commercial jet plane travel, it would now be possible to schedule and play a regular season of baseball without expanding the time gates on the regular season to any big extent.

What we may never know for sure.

O’Malley’s West Coast Plan B may always have been his actual Plan A. Had Moses of NYC continued to work with O’Malley in a more giving way on the “new ballpark for the Dodgers” proposal, we’ll never know if O’Malley would have found ways to reject each try for the sake of justifying his refusal of each offer in favor of the West Coast baseball version of Sutter’s Mill.

Can’t wait to read “Movers & Shakers” by Andy McCue.

Hopefully, this new work will clarify the end game intentions of what really happened in one of the most significant structural alignment changes in baseball history.

God Willing, this subject will be revisited soon.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

A Problem Facing the Astros Culture

March 28, 2018

Houston Astros Manager Lum Harris
In Company of Astronauts
Gus Grissom and John Young
Opening Day, April 12, 1965

Lexington (KY) Leader, April 9, 1965:

Destiny  and Fate

Destiny is the weight we attach to the eventual fulfillment of our fondest aspirations. Fate is what we get along the way when we do not, or cannot, control the intervening events, conditions and factors, large and small, that determine the time-measurable success or failure of human endeavor.

“My goal as the new Houston manager of the Houston Astros is to win 15 more games than the Colt .45s did in 1964,” said Luman Harris 19th in a special pre-season managerial series of articles for NEA that went to print on April 9, 1965 in the Lexington (KY) Leader.

As things would turn out, the 1965 name and stadium-new Astros would be fated to winning one less game in 1965 than they had in 1964, in spite of their new future-oriented space identity, and regardless of their new and only-one-of-its-kind digs in the world’s only indoor-covered and air-conditioned baseball park.

In keeping with the hoped-for progress goal for 1965, Manager Harris’s expressed number, had it been achieved, would’ve propelled the Astros to 81-81, their first non-losing season, and a good shot at a first division NL finish. As fate dealt it out, however, the ’65 Astros would finish with one less win in 1965. At 65-97, the Astros were good enough only for a 9th place spot above the last place New York Mets at 50-112.

Elements of a Baseball Franchise Culture

1) an ownership that truly embraces the idea that winning the World Series is their shared destiny with the community;

2) an ownership that puts its money where its mouth is, but does not use the threat of leaving to get what they want from the community;

2) a fan base that can both afford and will support an occasionally unreasonable attempt at securing destiny;

3) a baseball community that interfaces the owners and fans with the realty that they must work together;

4) bright minds who plan franchise growth through player development and free agent signings;

5) positive support from local government entities;

6) the presence of “winning” on the field in some early brief form, even if its flag is borne by the successful play of only one or two signature players, or the discernible presence of a team’s ongoing strong element, like pitching or defense;

7) a sense of fan pride or emotional attachment to the club’s mascot identity or ballpark facility;

8) a commitment by the team to giving back to the community in areas of ongoing or crisis need;

9) some kind of annual program that opens the door for the team and its fans to get together and celebrate their commitment to each other and the community at large;

10) a range of flexibility on the acceptance of fan cost increase as an expected result of destiny achievement and the salaries that will be required to keep success churning on the field;

11) a change in the franchise’s external image to other talented ballplayers who now see the first time and most recent World Series winners as potential destiny stops for them as well.

And the element list could go on and on, covering even larger and smaller points. In the ongoing, always shifting process, as the franchise’s baseball culture is put in motion, for better or worse, in service to the destiny of the game in that club’s area of concern.

So, what is culture, anyway?

Culture is the social system we learn from. It’s like the way we once grew up so differently, depending upon the lessons of our own little neighborhoods. Not all the elements we’ve referenced here are going to fit into the particular caricature of our own big league club culture – nor will they appear in a specific order.

Destiny Attained Opens Door to Destiny Defended

What we do see in the featured newspaper article that appears atop this column are the aspirant wishes of a new manager for greater winning, stronger hitting, and better defense. Understandably too. We went through all those early years with him and all other managers from our Astros’ earliest times. Better players. More wins. Ah, yes. We remember it well.

Now that destiny has been achieved, the goal simply expands to destiny-defend,

Our Houston Baseball Culture Grew

Unlike earlier ownerships in Florida and Arizona, Houston did not “buy” their way to a World Series trophy that could not be defended on a long-time basis by the same expensive talent. But now the Houston baseball culture has to deal with the fact that property values around Minute Maid Park are driving the cost of parking to games of the World Series Champion Houston Astros through the roof.

A Present Challenge to the Houston Baseball Culture

Two problems were ignored when Harris County, the City of Houston, and the Houston Astros made the decision in the late 20th century to build a new covered ballpark downtown that was just for baseball:

1) There was no long term plan put into place for the Astrodome; and,

2) There was no attempt to secure and control pricing of other commercial properties around the new ballpark that would keep independent property owners from using the club’s downtown success as an opportunity for profiteering at levels that could make the cost of a downtown game something that only the wealthiest fans could afford.

Now it’s 2018. The Houston Astros are the World Series Champions. And finding ways to curtail independent property owners around the downtown ballpark from making the family of four game trip cost too expensive for the average income dedicated Astros fans should be a priority problem to solve.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

M Kates: 12 SABR Conventions, Part II

March 27, 2018

TOUR DE SABR: TWELVE SABR CONVENTIONS ROLLED INTO ONE

(Part II: 2008 to 2017)

By Maxwell Kates

Maxwell Kates in Los Angeles

When we left off, we listened to a Louie DiPalma doppelganger spar with the Commissioner of baseball, relived the unlikely pennant drive of the 1977 Chicago White Sox, watched the Cincinnati Reds play in Ohio while standing in Kentucky, sang along with Jim Bouton, and lived to tell the tale of an ‘inhuman rain delay’ in St. Louis. On to Part II…

SABR 38 – Cleveland 2008 – The Vendor’s Room

Cleveland had one of the more memorable vendors’ rooms of the conventions I attended. Doak Ewing from Chicago sold audio cassettes of baseball broadcasts while Dick Miller from Cincinnati sold vintage baseball books, many of which were autographed. Meanwhile, Andy Rubin of Baltimore Chop offered a more contemporary selection of books. Different publishers had tables as well, including Maple Street Press, who had released “Sock It To ‘Em, Tigers” about the 1968 World Series champions the previous winter.

Noticeably absent from the vendor’s room was Bob Koehler. The retired teacher from Wisconsin was a mainstay at vendors’ rooms in the past. His collection included yearbooks, media guides, team publications, along with other books. If you bought something from Bob, he would tell you to “Give it a good home!”

Bob’s table was symbolically empty. He had died the previous April, age 67.

SABR 38: Bob Koehler

SABR 39 – Washington 2009 – Secular Pursuits

One of the advantages of changing cities every year is the opportunity to visit local tourist attractions that have nothing to do with baseball. I call these “secular pursuits” in the context of a SABR convention. In Washington, there were many opportunities to explore beyond the friendly confines of the J.W. Marriott Hotel. On Thursday evening, I took a walk on the Mall where young actors were re-enacting a Civil War battle in full regalia. On Saturday, my friend Bill Levenson and I went to the Smithsonian Zoo (we saw pandas) and to FedEx Field in Landover, Maryland to watch Paul McCartney perform in concert.

After the convention was over, Rick Schabowski from Milwaukee and I did our own walking tour of the Mall, stopping at several monuments including Lincoln, Washington, Jefferson, World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. It was a humid day, as Washington in August tends to be, and by 4:00 we realized that we had not eaten lunch. That’s when we stumbled upon Loeb’s Deli. They were about to close for the day but after we told them of our excursion in the Washington heat, they agreed to make us each a sandwich.

The next morning, the first words out of Rick’s mouth were “Loeb’s! Loeb’s!”

SABR 39: Nationals Game

SABR 41 – Los Angeles 2011 – Local Baseball History

The host committee of the SABR convention in Los Angeles organized a fantastic tour of five erstwhile baseball sites scattered all across the Southland. A quintet of Angelenos led by Al Parnis prepared history lessons on the five stadiums, each of them taught on location.

We departed the Long Beach Hilton at the crack of dawn Saturday for an industrial park in suburban Vernon, California. There was a time when Maier Park stood here. It was the home of the Vernon Tigers of the Pacific Coast League from 1909 to 1925. One of the Tigers’ investors was Buster Keaton. Next stop was the site of Wrigley Field, now a city park where a Mexican-American festival was in progress. Both the Angels of the Pacific Coast League and the American League called Wrigley home. Baseball is still played on a sandlot in the park but the magnificent edifice that Steve Bilko built is gone.

SABR 41: Ballpark Tour

After Wrigley, we travelled to the site of Washington Park, located in a parking lot around the corner from the Los Angeles Coliseum. From 1958 to 1961, the Dodgers called this Summer Olympics stadium home while the park at Chavez Ravine was under construction. The last stop of the morning was Gilmore Field, home of the Hollywood Stars from 1939 to 1957. After the ballpark was razed, CBS built its Television City on site. Among the televisions shows to have been filmed here, “All in the Family” and “The Price is Right.” Both Canter’s Deli and the Farmer’s Market were only steps away, keeping in mind that nobody in Los Angeles walks.

At one stage of the tour, Danny Kaye’s “The D-O-D-G-E-R-S Song” played over the loudspeaker on the bus. Three SABR members who shall remain nameless memorized every word, singing it at the top of their lungs. At another stage, it was announced that a rookie went 0-for-3 in his big league debut for the Angels the night before. His name, Mike Trout.

SABR 44 – Houston 2014 – Intangibles

What to write about Houston, knowing that a good complement of The Pecan Park Eagle’s readership attended this particular convention? That’s where intangibles come in. These are the events at any convention that could never have been planned and that you will never see in a program.

About a month before the convention, I attended a screening of “Deli Man” in Toronto. The film chronicled the decline of the delicatessen as a culinary genre. It also focused on the life and career of David ‘Ziggy’ Gruber, a New Yorker who moved to Houston to open a delicatessen called Kenny and Ziggy’s. I e-mailed a longtime friend in Houston about the proximity of the delicatessen from the Royal Sonesta Hotel where the convention took place. His name is Mark Wernick. Considering that Mark and I share a similar ethnocultural background, it stands to reason that we both grew up in delis. Here is my recollection of the conversation that ensued.

SABR 44: Mark Wernick

Me: Wonder how expensive a cab ride it would be to travel to Kenny and Ziggy’s from the hotel?

Mark: Well you know, Houston’s a big place. In fact, all of Israel could fit inside Harris County. Could be an expensive trip just for a sandwich.”

Me: Do you think it would be $100.00?

Mark: Could be. And then you’d have to get back. Tell you what. Why don’t you give me the $100.00 and I’ll drive you there from the convention.

I had a feeling this was Mark’s sense of humour at work. On my first day of the convention, I went for a walk around the hotel looking for a place to eat. Good thing I didn’t take Mark up on his offer – Kenny and Ziggy’s was located right behind the hotel!

Hold on, I have to include one more story because it’s Houston. My cab ride back to IAH was shared with Damian Begley from the New York chapter of SABR. Damian regaled us with stories about the broadcast industry in the Big Apple while discussing his favourite songs growing up in the 1960s. With his Bronx affectation and his Irish brogue, we could have been listening to Regis Philbin!

SABR 44: Damian Begley

SABR 46 – Miami 2016 – Meeting Childhood Heroes

The centre piece of the 2016 convention in Miami was a feature at Marlins Park. Hours before the game between the Marlins and the St. Louis Cardinals, SABR hosted “A Day at the Ballpark” with Barry Bloom. Guests of the program included Don Mattingly, Barry Bonds, Andre Dawson, and stadium engineer Claude Delorme. Also as part of the afternoon, Marlins broadcaster Eduardo Perez interviewed his father, Tony Perez.

Growing up a Montreal Expos fan in Ottawa, Andre Dawson was one of my favourite players. I still remember the game I attended on Father’s Day versus the Cubs. With two runners on and nobody out, the Hawk strode to the plate. My own father advised me to “watch this guy – he’s the best player in baseball.” He cranked the first pitch he saw past the centre field bleachers for a three run home run.

Barry (Bloom, not Bonds) advised me that since the players were on the field and we were in the stands, our chances to meet them were slim. Still, I had an idea. I got on the first bus to the ballpark and sat as close to the front as possible. When Dawson was finished his interview, I scribbled something on my business card and gave it to a stadium attendant. My instructions were to give the card with my scribbles to Dawson. When Dawson asked the attendant who gave him the card, he pointed in my direction. The ordinarily taciturn Dawson looked at me, offered an energetic thumbs up, and smiled.

SABR 46: Andre Dawson

POSTSCRIPT

Why go to SABR conventions? To recap, here are eleven reasons:

  1. Keynote Speeches (SABR 31 – Milwaukee 2001)
  2. Research Presentations (SABR 32 – Boston 2002)
  3. Baseball Games (SABR 34 – Cincinnati 2004)
  4. Lasting Friendships (SABR 35 – Toronto 2005)
  5. Player Panels (SABR 36 – Seattle 2006)
  6. Ballpark Tours (SABR 37 – St. Louis 2007)
  7. The Vendor’s Room (SABR 38 – Cleveland 2008)
  8. Secular Tourism (SABR 39 – Washington 2009)
  9. Local Baseball History (SABR 41 – Los Angeles 2011)
  10. Intangibles (SABR 44 – Houston 2014)
  11. Meeting Childhood Heroes (SABR 46 – Miami 2016)

Now it’s time to bring it all home, saving New York City for last.

SABR 47 – New York 2017 – Bringing It All Home

SABR 47: New York

One of the main speakers at the 2017 SABR convention was once again Jim Bouton. The author of “Ball Four” and other baseball books had an entire panel in his honour. Moderated by John Thorn, the panel also included authors Marty Appel, Mark Armour, Mitchell Nathanson, and Bouton’s wife, Paula Kurman. That day, Tyler Kepner wrote in his New York Times column that Bouton had been suffering from a rare form of dementia for the previous five years. Part of the objective of the panel was to raise awareness for the illness.

By now, SABR was in its fourth year of insisting that questions at panels are submitted on cue cards. I submitted a question that did not pass this selection process. After the presentation was over, I went to Bouton, determined to ask him my question. As it were, hundreds of SABR members had the same idea I did, mobbing the Yankees old timer with autograph requests (and there was no car window for him to slam). It was obvious to anyone watching the scenario that it was overwhelming for Bouton.

Fortunately, I had a strategy. Before the panel, I spent enough time talking to Paula so that she would recognize me in a crowd of SABR bulldogs. When she spotted me, she pointed and bellowed, “Excuse me, everyone, this gentleman was next.” You don’t tug the mask off the old Lone Ranger and you don’t mess around with Paula. . I approached Bouton to inform him that “Larry sends his regards. Some friends and I had dinner with him last February in Houston.” I didn’t mention any last names, only identifying the person as ‘Larry.’ Then I asked Bouton if he remembered “the song.” Without skipping a beat, he went right to business.

“Harry Walker is the one who manages this crew

He doesn’t like it when we eat and fight and…something else

But when we win our game each day

What…on earth…can Harry say?

It makes a fellow proud to be an Astro!”

SABR 47: Jim Bouton

To “all yinz” who attend SABR 48, have a great time in the ‘Burgh. You won’t see me there but for those of you living in the Houston area, don’t be surprised to see me closer to home before calendar year 2018 draws to a close.

 

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finis.

job well done.

the pecan park eagle.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

 

 

 

 

Goodness! Gracious! Great Balls of Orange!

March 26, 2018

Charlie Finley Displays His Orange Balls

~ FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1965 ~

Kansas City’s Finley “Saves” the Astrodome

CHICAGO – (UPI) –

Charles O. Finley turned into a rescue force for Houston’s Astrodome today.

He disclosed that his supply of orange baseballs were being shipped air express to the Houston Astros , after it was discovered yesterday that it’s almost impossible to see fly balls in the multi-million dollar Astrodome.

Finley had the orange balls made as an experiment over the past two years, but they have not won approval from either the American or National leagues.

~ Evansville (IN) Press, April 9, 1965

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April 9, 1965: Mantle waits on a pitch from Turk Farrell. Later in the game, he would take Farrell deep for the first HR in Astrodome history.

HOUSTON CHRISTENS DOME

By Curt Block

UPI Sports Writer

That  $31.6 million domed Colossus, Harris County Domed Stadium, home of the Houston Astros, has every wrinkle in the book plus a few that need to be ironed out.

The stadium is absolutely ideal for night baseball and the Astros were never better than last night when they delighted a partisan crowd of 47,876 that included President and Mrs. Johnson, with a 12-inning, 2-1 victory over the American League Champion New York Yankees.

6th inning: Mantle waits on the pitch from Farrell that will be the first HR in Dome history.

Many in attendance were gazing toward the President’s box or gaping at the luxurious interior of the of the six level structure in the sixth inning when Mickey Mantle unloaded a blast that landed on top of the center field wall 406 feet from home plate for New York’s only run. (Unmentioned here, Mantle’s blast was the first home run in Astrodome history.)

Houston tied the score in their half of the (sixth) inning on an unearned run and won in the twelfth when pinch hitter Nellie Fox delivered Jimmy Wynn with a single.

The Astros played error-less ball while the Yanks committed three miscues.

Curt Block, UPI Sports Writer, El Paso Herald Post, April 10, 1965, Page 17.

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Great Balls of Orange.

It’s doubtful that Charlie Finley’s orange balls got any serious consideration as a solution to the massive sight-line problem for batted baseballs in the Astrodome during its 1965 original form. Problems of efficacy do not mix well for maverick club owners who get on the outs with both the Commissioner and the swamp of powerful owners who dislike those newbie folk who think they have an equally valued vote on things.

It’s still fun to imagine how differently the business of the game might have developed since 1965 had the original issue with day games been one that could have been solved with a simple switch to orange baseballs.

A tempest in a teapot rarely starts a house fire.

 

TPPE Note: Thanks to Darrell Pittman for the Charlie Finley article.

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle