Archive for the ‘Baseball’ Category

Bill Gilbert: Astros Win 2017 ALCS

October 23, 2017

Minute Maid Park is now the home of the only MLB franchise to have won both the NL (2005) and the AL (2017) pennants.

 

Houston Astros Win 2017 American League Championship

Bill Gilbert’s Report
on the
2017 Houston Astros
Taking the AL Pennant

By Bill Gilbert

The Houston Astros defeated the Boston Red Sox, 3 games to 1 and the New York Yankees, 4 games to 3 to win the 2007 AL Pennant. After beating two big payroll teams, they are now faced with the granddaddy of big payroll teams, the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series.

In the Astros runaway win in the regular season, the hitters carried the day, leading the major leagues in most offensive categories, while the pitchers were only slightly better than the MLB average. However in the playoffs, the opposite was true. The pitchers carried the team, particularly Justin Verlander and Dallas Keuchel, who accounted for 6 of the teams 7 wins. The relief pitching was inconsistent but the team received a big bonus when Charlie Morton and Lance McCullers, Jr. combined for a shutout in the clinching game with the Yankees.

The hitting was another story, especially in the three losses in Yankee Stadium. The team batting average in the two series was only .247 compared to .282 in the regular season. Only Jose Altuve (.400), Yuli Gurriel (.366) and Carlos Correa (.295) hit better than .250. However, the bats started to come alive in games 6 and 7 when the team arrived home. The team hit 12 home runs in the two series, 10 of them from infielders Altuve, Correa and Alex Bregman. George Springer hit the only home run by an outfielder and Altuve led all players in the playoffs with 5 homers.

The Astros will have their hands full with the Dodgers in the World Series. The Dodgers were the best team in MLB in the regular season with 104 wins and they have been even better in the postseason with a record of 7-1 in their wins over Arizona and the Cubs. They will have the home field advantage which the Astros enjoyed against the Red Sox and Yankees. The Dodgers have the best starting pitcher in baseball in Clayton Kershaw and they have probably the best closer in Casey Jansen. They have two emerging superstars in Corey Seager and Cody Ballinger and also have a number of productive lesser-known players like Justin Turner, Chris Taylor and former Astro draftee and farmhand, Kike Hernandez. Hernandez and Altuve both have had three-home run games in the playoffs this year.

The Astros and Dodgers did not play each other during the regular season. The Dodgers starting rotation is largely left-handed which should be an advantage to the Astros with their predominantly right-handed lineup. However, the Dodgers have greater depth than the Astros and much stronger relief pitching. The first two games will be played in Los Angeles before the Astros return home for the next three. If the Astros can win one of the first two in LA, they should have a reasonable chance to pull an upset in the Series.

 

Bill Gilbert

10/22/17

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

M. Kates: Signing Off on Astros History

October 22, 2017

 

SIGNING OFF ON ASTROS HISTORY

Maxwell Kates

By Maxwell Kates

 

Visit the home of any SABR member and without question you will be inundated with memorabilia and books. My own house is no different. One corner features a long row of autographed baseballs, including one from the Houston Astros’ 50th anniversary celebration in 2012. Now you may wonder, where does a collector from Canada come to own this particular baseball? What you are about to read is the story behind the ball. It details how I obtained it, who signed it, and how I identified three seemingly unintelligible signatures.

Jim Kreuz

The story begins at the silent auction on the floor of SABR 44, held at the Sonesta Hotel in the Galleria section of Houston back in 2014. A tall man with a moustache wearing an autographed St. Louis Cardinals jersey was presiding over the silent auction items on Thursday. His name was Jim Kreuz and he asked if I were interested in any items. The array of prizes included autographed baseballs from Derek Jeter and Mariano Rivera, a piece of the original Astroturf from the Astrodome, and the first pitch at the SABR game. And there was a baseball that caught my eye.

Ball Panel Signatures on Panel with Astros Fifty Years Logo

“That’s a nice item,” Jim advised me, “and it carries a low starting bid of $20.00. You know, it once belonged to the Toy Cannon.” Only a ground ball away from Jim and I, there was the real Toy Cannon. He was signing copies of his autobiography of the same title along with his co-author by the name of McCurdy. Anybody know the guy? The Cannon was the nickname of early Astros slugger Jim Wynn. In eleven seasons of Houston National League baseball, Wynn slugged 223 home runs and 719 RBI, including one in 1970 that landed in the centre field bleachers of the cavernous Astrodome. The seat where the ball landed was painted with a toy cannon and ultimately presented to Wynn when the Dome was closed in 1999.

As part of the Colt .45’s panel held earlier in the day, Wynn responded to a question on a cue card about a home run he hit at Crosley Field in 1967. Proving that Steve McQueen did not hold the monopoly on ‘Cincinnati kids,’ Wynn launched a home run above the Hudepohl scoreboard before landing on Colerain Avenue, not far from his childhood home and where his parents still lived. Following the 1973 season, Wynn took his star to Los Angeles where he propelled the Dodgers to their first National League pennant in eight years. He retired in 1977 after tours of duty with the Braves, Yankees, and Brewers.

Jimmy Wynn
The Toy Cannon

I quickly registered the minimum bid in an auction that closed at 5:00 on Friday. But I had competition. Another gentleman, let’s call him Gary, also had his sights on the ball. No sooner did I bid $20.00, Gary bid $30.00. I bid $40.00, Gary bid $50.00. Then I developed a strategy. “Let’s see if anybody else places any bids.” There were none. Gary was the only other person who wanted the ball, so I thought, “Let Gary think he’s going to win. Then I’ll swing in for a bid at 4:59 pm on Friday. Otherwise this could spiral out of control.”

The plan seemed to work except for one flaw. A third party decided he wanted the ball and bid $60.00. Now Gary raised the ante to $70.00. Time flew at SABR 44 and before long, it was 4:40 pm on Friday. I returned to the pit where the silent auction items were on display. So did Gary. I knew if I were too eager, Gary would outbid me and possibly price the ball out of my reach. Instead I hovered. As I waited for the clock to strike five, I approached the auction sheet that corresponded with the baseball and wrote my name and suite number. Sold for $80.00. Then I took the ball back to the room – and that’s when I learned that Gary was staying next door to me!

J. R. Richard
A Sweet Spot Signature

At quick glance, I was able to identify the names of most of the signatures. Let’s start with the name on the sweet spot, J. R. Richard. Born in Louisiana, the 21 year old J. R. struck out 15 San Francisco Giants in his first game with the Astros back in 1971. An imposing figure on the mound standing 6’8″, he won at least 18 games annually from 1976 to 1979. In 1978, he became the first righthanded pitcher in National League history to eclipse the 300 strikeout barrier. J. R. repeated on his success in 1979, not only leading the league with 313 strikeouts but also a 2.69 ERA. Sadly, a dream 1980 season which featured a record of 10-4 and a 1.96 ERA was cut short in July when he suffered a massive stroke. J. R. Richard remains one of the most beloved figures in Astros history.

Fittingly for a team based in the state of Texas, the ball is signed by a number of native Texans. There was Carl Warwick. A slugging outfielder from Dallas, he played parts of two seasons with the Houston Colt .45’s before retiring to a career of real estate in the Bayou City. Then there was Ron Cook, a native of Jefferson who pitched in parts of two seasons for the Astros in the early 1970s. Number 10 on the ball belongs to Roger Metzger from Fredericksburg. Hardly a ‘metzger’ in the field, Roger won a Gold Glove at shortstop in 1973 and retired with a .976 fielding average. Among his eight seasons with the Astros, he led the league in triples twice. Roger Metzger was traded in 1978 but a year later, the Astros got Craig Reynolds. The first native Houstonian to play for the Astros, Reynolds perpetuated stability in eleven years at shortstop before retiring to become a minister. Although Greenville native Burt Hooton never actually pitched for the Astros in his fifteen year career, he served as pitching coach for several years in the 2000s.

Ball Panel Signatures
of
Ron Cook, Roger Metzger, and Terry Puhl.

Also having signed the ball, an eyewitness to perhaps more Astros history than any other person. His name was Larry Dierker and he created much of that history himself. Joining the Colt .45’s in 1964, he pitched his first big league ballgame on his 18th birthday, striking out Willie Mays in the 1st inning. Dierker’s best of thirteen seasons in a Houston uniform was in 1969 when he won 20 games, completed 20 games, and struck out 205 batters in which he registered a 2.33 ERA. In 1976, his final year with the Astros, Dierker no-hit the Montreal Expos on “foamer night” at the Dome. After eighteen seasons in the broadcast booth, he returned to the dugout, managing the Astros to four division titles in five years. With two books to his credit, Dierker’s accomplishments make a fellow proud to be an Astro (and yes, he wrote that song as well).

Johnny Edwards, who caught six seasons of Astros baseball, is on the ball. He recorded 1,135 putouts and 1,221 total chances in 1969, the first of three consecutive seasons in which he led the league in fielding percentage among catchers. In a fourteen year career which also included stops in Cincinnati and St. Louis, Edwards caught a whopping 109 shutouts.

Larry Dierker – Cesar Cedeno

In 1970, a year after Edwards joined the club, the Astros promoted Cesar Cedeno from the minor leagues. Hailed as the heir apparent in the National League to Willie Mays by manager Leo Durocher, Cedeno won Gold Gloves annually from 1972 to 1976, achieving the tandem of 20 home runs and 50 stolen bases in three of those five seasons. Twice hitting for the cycle and twice leading the league in doubles, Cedeno also batted in 102 runs in 1974. A mainstay in the Astros’ outfield for twelve seasons, Cedeno was joined in 1977 by Terry Puhl. A native of Melville, Saskatchewan, Puhl batted a robust .526 in the 1980 NLCS despite losing to the Philadelphia Phillies. Puhl remained an Astro for another ten years, retiring with a lifetime .993 fielding percentage.

A more modern player to have signed the ball was Shane Reynolds. An Astros pitcher for eleven years, he enjoyed his most successful season in 1998. He won 19 games and posted a 3.51 ERA for an Astros team that won 102. One of the better control pitchers of his era, Reynolds won 103 games in a Houston uniform, including 7 shutouts among 20 complete games. Scipio Spinks, Ryan Bowen, and Jack Howell also served and they also signed the ball.

More Ball Signatures
Top to Bottom, Scipio Spinks, Ryan Bowen, Burt Hooton, and Craig Reynolds.

Now, to identify the three mystery signatures. Attending the Astros game on the Saturday of the SABR convention, I was told that Jim Wynn would be there and that he could decipher the signatures. The first appeared to read “GR 45.” Excluding the 2014 season, there were eighteen different Astros to wear the uniform number 45. One of them was Gil Rondon, who pitched briefly for Houston in 1976. By deductive reasoning, I identified the first mystery signature as Rondon’s.

The second signature looked a lot like a second Cesar Cedeno but with a more intense emphasis on the two letter C’s. It definitely appeared to be a Latino signature; looking at it more closely, could it have been a rushed Jose Cruz? Perhaps the two C’s were actually an A and a T? Alex Trevino, perhaps? I had nothing better to go on. Trevino played thirteen seasons as a catcher in the majors from 1978 to 1990, including parts of three with the Astros. After he retired, he returned to the Astros for several years as a Spanish speaking announcer.

Top to Bottom:
Jimmy Wynn, Carl Warwick, Larry Dierker, Johnny Edwards, and Craig Biggio (See next Biggio card for verification).

Which brings me to one final signature. It did not look much like anything but a pen stroke, a number 8, followed by another pen stroke. It seemed rather incredulous that any player would simply sign his name by drawing a number. The 8 had to be something else, perhaps the letter R, the letter L, the letter B…then I had an idea. In the recesses of my mind, I knew I had recognized the signature from my own collection. I still have all my autographed cards and went to look at the signature. Comparing the autograph on the ball to the one on the baseball card, the two signatures matched. Yes, I was looking at a Craig Biggio autograph.

A Signed Craig Biggio Card

The most successful position player in Astros history, Biggio joined the team as a catcher in 1988 before moving to second base three years later. He earned seven All-Star Game berths, four Gold Gloves, five Silver Sluggers, and led the truncated 1994 season in stolen bases. Biggio, along with Jeff Bagwell and Lance Berkman, formed the “Killer Bees” in the middle of the batting order on a Houston team which made the playoffs six times in nine years between 1997 and 2005. As part of his farewell tour in 2007, Biggio rapped his 3,000th hit. He retired with 3,060 hits, along with 1,175 RBI, 414 stolen bases, a .281 batting average and a .984 fielding percentage. Biggio also held the distinction to lead off 53 games with home runs. In 2015, one year after Houston hosted the SABR Convention, Biggio was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

There you have it, fifty years of Astros history documented on a baseball by the signatures of the players who created that history, documented that history, and most of all, earned that history. Of course, if the 50th anniversary celebration was the most illustrious in Astros history, that feat was certainly eclipsed on Saturday by those who watched the game. The Astros 4, the Yankees nothing, and it’s off to Los Angeles to face the Dodgers in the World Series.

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The preceding essay was a submission to The Pecan Park Eagle by freelance writer Maxwell Kates.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Eerie Timing of Words and Action Makes Point.

October 22, 2017

Breaking Through!
*********************
The Houston Astros are the 2017 Champions
of
The American League

 

Eerie Timing of Words and Action Makes Point.

Three days ago, on 10/19/17, in a column we wrote about the disappearance of the complete game. After summarily covering the work of writer Frank Jackson on how the role of the starting pitcher has changed over the past twenty years, we wrote the following as a suggested new model for thought on the role of starting pitchers in this era of shorter mound duty and fading player accountability:

“If a starter could become lights out proficient over 5 innings, then why not find his twin to be the second half starter in the top of the 6th? The idea doesn’t seem any crazier than the hodge-podge of other titles the game is now giving to the relievers who come in early, in the middle, or late in the game. And the two-starters game could better reenforce the idea of responsibility for outcomes among fewer pitchers entering the game.”

The Incompleat Starting Pitcher by Frank Jackson

Holy Wow! – Isn’t that exactly what Astros Manager A.J. Hinch did last night, on 10/21/17, as the best demonstration of how the two-starter game could work at its very best? Three days ago, when we wrote our piece, we couldn’t have found a better demonstration of the two-starter game bringing home the bacon with greater dividends than the one that brought Houston the American League pennant in a Game Seven, 4-0, Astros victory over the New York Yankees at Minute Maid Park last night.

This brief table on the two-starter shutout by the Astros over the Yankees in Game Seven last night, again, on 10/21/17, reads as follows:

Starters W/Sv IP H R ER BB SO HR PC-S ERA
1) Morton W 5.0 2 0 0 1 5 0 54-37 0.00
2) McCullers Sv 4.0 1 0 0 1 6 0 54-38 0.00
TOTALS >   9.0 3 0 0 2 11 0 108-75 0.00

PC-S = Pitch Count to Strikes Thrown

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Another Franchise First!

Pay attention. This simple fact is somewhat of a head-spinner to our attention spans. Please forward all headache complaints to former Commissioner Bud Selig in care of the Hall of Fame. One way or another, Selig is the one who was responsible for both the Brewers relocation to the National League and later, for the Astros relocation to the American League.

Not city, mind you, but franchise-speaking, the Houston Astros franchise is now the first entity in MLB since the 1903 start of our current World Series to have won pennants as a member of both the NL and AL and to thus appear as such in separate years, of course, as participants in the World Series. The Seattle Pilot/Milwaukee Brewer franchise could someday be the second such club, should they ever win the NL pennant. The Brewers already have been to the World Series as the AL champs back in 1982, but they lost to the St. Louis Cardinals that year. Winning a World Series as a franchise representative from both leagues, of course, is currently an impossibility. The Houston (AL) and Seattle-Milwaukee (NL) franchises both lost their only World Series appearances as members of their original, but now opposite leagues.

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Congratulations, Houston Astros!

We fans are proud of you for fighting back and bringing the American League pennant to Houston – and we are now pulling hard for you to bring the World Series trophy back to Houston as well!

 

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

Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

YES! BRING ON LA!

October 22, 2017

 

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“Come and Try to Take It, LA! – The Heart and Soul of Houston Astros Fandom Awaits you! ~ And We Are Not Here to Make You Happy!”

 

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

“That’s What I’m Here For”

October 21, 2017

George Springer, About to Make Catch of the Game in 7th of Game 6
***********************************************
Photo by Karen Warren, Houston Chronicle

 

When George Springer made this catch in the top of the 7th of Game 6, it protected the Astros’ lead of 3-0 from dropping to 3-2.

 

Justin Verlander prepares to land a hug of appreciation on George Springer at the end of the 7th. The play also primed the Astros to run their final victory score to 7-1 over the Yankees.
***********************************************
Photo by Karen Warren, Houston Chronicle

 

“That’s What I’m Here For!” ~ Justin Verlander

How we handle a Game Six experience as fans is a very individual thing. Age and experience both have something to do with it. And learning from our heroes is also part of the education.

Unlike my younger times, when I would have dared not missed the live action, I chose to stay home and watch it with my sweetie, whose much later in life introduction to baseball still incites her to ask questions like the one that popped out of her mind when Correa and Altuve pulled off that magnificent double play behind Verlander in the first inning: “Hon,” she said, “tell me again. What is the term they use when a ball is hit and, after the ball is caught and thrown around a lot, the two men running for the other team now have to go back to the dugout and sit down with their teammates?”

I was up to handling every question my dear wife of great academic accomplishment could offer. What I couldn’t handle was that extant sense of foreboding that first landed within me in full flourish in 1980 and then returned to leave that permanent scar on my Astro fan psyche one very long fateful early autumn day at the Astrodome in 1986.

It was back. And it was quietly awful in ways that silently stung hard.

I wanted to turn away from the game to a movie distraction, but could not. The compulsion to watch and go through this pitch-by-pitch game experience as a conscious transcending moment was too great. Then I looked hard at what Mr. Verlander was trying to do for us. And I was transcended to a better place by what I now finally digested from his actions and words.

To heck with fan discomfort. What about Verlander’s challenge? He couldn’t bug out on the reality that hope and joy are fragile commodities in the instant moment of show, tell, and deliver on the field. He couldn’t stop working now – and tune in later to see what happened. Of course not! He’s the guy who both said and understands the full meaning of his statement to the media, when they asked him about the pressure he felt going into Game Six.

“That’s what I’m here for.” Verlander told the media.

Right out of Shakespeare.

“To be or not to be” for anything happening in any given moment is most often decided by the presence of someone who understands his or her role in any small or large matter in the terms expressed by Justin Verlander. Whether it’s giving your MLB club its best chance of winning a crucial Game Six by your performance on the mound, being a good partner in marriage, being the best parent possible, being the best citizen we can be, or just being the best fans we can be, we have to understand and try to live by the words that this good man put forth, even if we are never perfect or guaranteed the result we are hoping to achieve.

“That’s what I’m here for” still remains our best game plan for living and acting in the here and now.

Give us all you’ve got in Game Seven, Astros! ~ We’ll be with you! ~ Pulling for you all the way! ~ No mater what!

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The Morning Line on Game Seven

We don’t really know the Vegas odds, but we would not be surprised if they were pro-Yankee in flavor.

The Yankees are starting C.C. Sabathia, 14-5, 3.69 ERA, the winner of Game Three in New York.

The Astros are starting Charlie Morton, 14-7. 3.62 ERA, the loser in Game Three in New York.

Here’s a table on how Sabathia and Morton both fared in tht first face off with each other. It also features how Colin McHugh performed in that same game and how Lance McCullers did in Game 4. In our view, McHugh and McCullers were the other two good options to start today, given how all has played out. Maybe manager Hinch will end up using all three Astros on the chart before the day is done. After all, for the losers of Game Seven, there is no tomorrow.

PLAYER CLUB/REC G DR IP H R ER BB SO HR ERA
SABATHIA NYY/1-0 3 4 6.0 3 0 0 4 5 0 1.15
MORTON HOU/0-1 3 4 3.2 6 7 7 2 3 1 10.13
McHUGH HOU/0-0 3 4 4.0 0 0 0 1 3 0 0.00
McCULLERS HOU/0-0 4 3 6.0 2 1 1 2 3 1 1.50

Bold Type: Named Starters

DR: Days Rest

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ONE FINAL THOUGHT WE ALL KNOW. Regardless, the Astros have to keep their reawakened bats going against the formidable Mr. Sabathia for Houston to have a second World Series that we are looking forward to playing in 2017 when it’s this time Sunday morning.

One last published time: GO ASTROS! ~ PLEASE GET US TO THE WORLD SERIES IN 2017! ~ IF AT ALL POSSIBLE!

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Go Get ‘Em, Marie Laveau

October 20, 2017

OCTOBER 13, 14, 20, 21, 2017
*******************************
ASTROS YES!!!!

MARIE LAVEAU!

OCTOBER 13, 14, 20, 21, 2017
****************************
YANKEES NO!!!!

 

KATONIS DE NOSTRUM CARBANO DRO KAY!

MI CASUM DE CARIF TE SORBO MOR SAY!

KE LAMBUS DE ASTROS TERNALE QUO ZAY!

KE POKO DE YANKEES TERNALE AD BAY!

Footnote: Any chance that these phonetically fitting phrases actually translate into anything comprehensible beyond the conveyance of the general notion that they are a mystical chanting appeal to Marie Laveau in behalf of the Astros over the Yankees is strictly coincidental and purely improbable chance at best.

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GO ASTROS! ~ WE’LL TAKE ALL THE HELP WE CAN GET, BUT ONLY YOU GUYS CAN PUT THE PERSONAL VOODOO BACK INTO THOSE 2017 BATS AGAIN! ~ SO PLEASE ~ HAVE AT IT! ~ JUSTIN’S GOING TO NEED YOUR HELP TONIGHT! ~ AND THAT MOMENT IS LESS THAN AN HOUR AWAY AT THIS WRITING!

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Body and Soul, We Are Houston to the Bone

October 20, 2017

They Will Need Plenty of Help, Of Course, But The Spiritual Forces That Have to Show Up Tonight ~ And We Think They Will ~ Are These Two Guys !

This Version Of
JUSTIN VERLANDER

This Version Of
JOSE ALTUVE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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A Testy Riddle for Comic Relief as we less-than-patiently await the Yankee storm that will now descend upon us in less than ten hours at this writing. ….

Question: Why do Astro players never make contact with their dogs as these pets are returning from a trip to the back yard?

Answer: Because their pets always race back to the house on a darting path that inevitably finishes low and away.

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Do We Really Need Another Yankees-Dodgers World Series?

# YEAR W BY GAMES DODGERS YANKEES
1 1941 NY, 4-3 0-1 1-0
2 1947 NY, 4-3 0-2 2-0
3 1949 NY, 4-1 0-3 3-0
4 1952 NY, 4-3 0-4 4-0
5 1953 NY, 4-2 0-5 5-0
6 1955 BRK, 4-3 1-5 5-1
7 1956 NY, 4-3 1-6 6-1
8 1963 LA, 4-0 2-6 6-2
9 1977 NY, 4-2 2-7 7-2
10 1978 NY, 4-2 2-8 8-2
11 1981 LA, 4-2 3-8 8-3

NOTE: Bold type shows continuing World Series record between these two teams since the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles in 1958. In all World Series action against each other, the Yankees have won a total of 37 games; the Dodgers have won a total of 31 games.

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C’mon, Astros! Houston hasn’t had much to brag about since we once saw the 32-story Gulf Building go up as “The Tallest Skyscraper in the South!” May the force of all us diehard Astro fans go with you tonight ~ and with the wonderful Mr. Justin Verlander and all his teammates too! ~ Then go out Saturday and punch our tickets to the World Series, guys! ~ We will be with you all the way, body and soul!

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

The Incompleat Starting Pitcher by Frank Jackson

October 19, 2017

WARREN SPAHN
Pitched 382 CG
In 21 Season Career

 

This tabular depiction of what’s happened to the complete game in baseball over the past twenty years speaks volumes for itself about a significant change in the game over these same two decades. It appears in an article from The Hardball Times by Frank Jackson on October 18, 2017, entitled “The Incompleat Starting Pitcher.”

See this link: https://www.fangraphs.com/tht/the-incompleat-starting-pitcher/#.WedYddl2rUc.email

We also have our North Texas SABR compatriot, Mr. Paul Rogers, to thank for sending this whole package our way. We can’t thank you enough, Paul. This is really good support for the new culture as a big reason why Justin Verlander‘s “CG” performance in Game 2 of the 2017 ALCS for the Houston Astros stood out even more boldly last week. It was playing way above the lower expectations we all now have of starters in ordinary regular season games in these days – and Verlander was imposing this aberration upon our baseball minds in a critical ALCS playoff game.

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Complete Games Overview, 1998-2017
Year MLB Total Team(s) with Most # CG Team(s) with Least # CG Avg Per Team
1998 302 Braves 24 Brewers 2 10
1999 237 Braves 16 Brewers 2  8
2000 234 Dbacks 16 Brewers 2  8
2001 199 Tigers 16 Rays 1  7
2002 214 Dbacks 14 Rockies 1  7
2003 209 A’s 16 Astros 1  7
2004 150 Expos 11 Yankees 1  5
2005 189 Cards 15 Rays 1  6
2006 144 Indians 13 Dodgers/Nationals/Twins 1  5
2007 112 Blue Jays 11 Marlins/Nationals/Rangers 0  4
2008 136 Blue Jays 15 Tigers/Yankees 1  5
2009 152 Giants 11 Dodgers/Brewers 1  5
2010 165 Phillies 14 Cubs/Pirates 1  6
2011 173 Phillies 18 Padres 0  6
2012 128 Reds/Tigers  9 Rockies/Brewers 0  4
2013 124 Rays  9 Braves/Rockies/Twins 1  4
2014 118 Giants/Cardinals  8 Cubs/Rockies/Mets 1  4
2015 104 Indians 11 Orioles/Marlins/Pirates 0  3
2016  83 Giants 10 Marlins/Brewers/Yankees/Blue Jays 0  3
2017  59 Indians  7 Braves/White Sox/Rays 0  2

We don’t have the average innings pitched for starters available to us over this same 1998-2017 period, but we would not be surprised to find 2017 starters in the 5.0 to 6.0 innings range. If a starter could become lights out proficient over 5 innings, then why not find his twin to be the second half starter in the top of the 6th? The idea doesn’t seem any crazier than the hodge-podge of other titles the game is now giving to the relievers who come in early, in the middle, or late in the game. And the two-starters game could better reenforce the idea of responsibility for outcomes among fewer pitchers entering the game. As of now, too many of the one inning pitchers just seem to go out there and leave all the accountability with the manager who put them on the mound. i.e., “If you don’t like the way I’m pitching today, take me out.”

Warren Spahn will always be my role model for pitching accountability. – Accountability apparently was the bug he picked up from seeing himself as a guy who expected to go 9 innings, or more, every time he took the mound.

Those were the days, my friend.

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ON THE ASTROS BEING DOWN TO THE YANKEES, 3 GAMES TO 2 ….

Just remember the words of a former Astro …..

“It ain’t over til it’s over!”

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Channel 13 Story on Larry Miggins & ’51 Buffs

October 19, 2017

Larry Miggins
Left Fielder
Houston Buffs
1949, 1951, 1953-54
——————–
Photo by KTRK-TV, Channel 13

 

Patricia Roijas of KTRK-TV, Channel 13, somehow got my name from someone and called me last week about doing a Playoff Season-connected piece on the Houston Buffs for airing this week. We did the program at the home of former 1951 Houston Buff, Larry Miggins, age 92, last Friday and it ran tonight, Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2017 on the 10 PM Channel 13 News.

In case you missed it, here’s an link to the even more complete story at the Channel 13 website.

http://abc13.com/sports/who-were-the-buffs-former-player-relives-memories/2550282/

At any rate, good friend Larry Miggins came across as his usual charming, informative, and eloquent self, and without any script, mind you, he built pictures with his words implicitly on how the early success of the Buffs at the minor league level strongly helped Houston to position itself for MLB membership in 1960 for a team that would come to life in 1962 as the Houston Colt .45’s.

Thank you, Mr. Miggins, for all you have taught Houston over the years about baseball, the ethics of peaceful living, and the lost art of true friendship. I don’t even want to think of how much I would have missed over the span of my own lifetime, had you not always been here for me – first within one of the hero imagery folders you shared in my knothole gang mind with Jerry Witte, Solly Hemus, and Frank Mancuso, back in the days when you all played, together, or at different times, with the Houston Buffs – and then as the smiling friend of our latter years whose company I shall cherish over whatever forever time we each have remaining on God’s good earth.

Congratulations on the success of this digital essay too, Mr. Miggins!

You did your family and friends proud, Larry~ And we all thank you too – for being just exactly who you are!

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Second Guessing McCuller’s Removal in 7th

October 18, 2017

$$$ BULLPEN CLOSER FOR SALE! $$$
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* MLB QUALITY BEEF!
* TWO DEADLY CUTTERS!
* NO TOLERANCE FOR MOUND-CHARGERS!
* KILLER FARM TEAM RECORD!
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SEE AGENT! ~ MAKE OFFER!

 

Is it too late to make a deal for another late inning pitcher? I saw one this week in a bullpen near me that could be the kind of guy the Astros are looking for.

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LAST MINUTE QUICK NEWS ADDITION: LARRY MIGGINS WILL APPEAR IN A QUICK BASEBALL SEGMENT TONIGHT ON THE CHANNEL 13 TV NEWS AT 10:00! It’s a baseball story that reporter Priscilla Roijas did last Friday in an effort to tie in Houston’s baseball past with its very big present and bright future. – Tune in to KTRK-TV, Channel 13, Houston, at 10 pm tonight, if you get this notice on the day of Wednesday, October 18, 2017!

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The Fox Sports studio panel of Alex Rodriguez, David “Big Pappy” Ortiz, Keith Hernandez, and Hall of Famer Frank Thomas had a field day with the moderator’s ALCS Game Four post-game autopsy question: “What did you think of Astros Manager A.J. Hinch’s decision to remove starter Lance McCullers after 81 pitches right after Aaron Judge led off the Yankees’ 7th with that club’s 2nd hit, a monster HR blast to center field as a blast that narrowed Houston’s lead to 4-1?”

It landed like a foul ball in the Knothole Gang at Buff Stadium back in 1951. The smiling, gleeful panelists were all over it. We should be glad they did not have cokes to knock over or hot dogs to throw down in hot pursuit.

What follows is an excerpted taste of what they said – and a feel for the general flow of conversation from one smiling participant to another. None spoke with any kind of mean-spirited dead aim at Hinch in particular, but it was also clear that none of these guys are boosters of analytics as the code book on game-in-progress decision-making, nor were any of them going to miss out on the opportunity for doing something they each had lived with as players: getting second-guessed for something they each once did, or failed to do, at a critical game moment.

Here’s a short taste of the bump and buzz that ignited on Hinch taking out McCullers when he did:

Keith Hernandez: (In reference to a preceding clip in which Hinch affirmed that McCullers was quite OK when he was taken out.) “Hinch said McCullers  felt great. So, I don’t understand. The game has changed in this regard. It’s more relying now on bullpens, but when you’ve got a got a guy who’s going like that, given up only two hits, even if he’s just given up a home run and it’s now 4-1, so what? Let him get through the 7th inning. This is just a new part of the game that I have a hard time with.”

Moderator Kevin Burkhardt: “But Hinch went with Verlander all the way in Game 2. What’s the difference here? Why does he pull McCullers, if he’s not hurt?”

Alex Rodriguez: “McCullers gave up 2 hits on breaking balls, but 65% of his pitches in this game were breaking balls and he was spinning the ball so well. If you’ve got an Indians or Yankees bullpen, maybe you take him out in the 7th, but I say, let him go a bit. Let him go.”

Frank Thomas: “Yes. McCullers has got that make up. His dad was a big leaguer. You got to trust your eyes. The guy wasn’t even sweating yet.”

David Ortiz: “Don’t make sense. Only 81 pitches. The guy is controlling the hitters’ actions. I mean, I don’t get it.”

Alex Rodriguez: “Pappy, when you’re sitting in the Yankees dugout – you are saying – YES! – GET THAT GUY OUTTA HERE! – NOW WE GOT A SHOT!”

David Ortiz: (eyes excited; sitting to left of A Rod and now excitedly pointing both index fingers at him) “THANK YOU! – THANK YOU VERY MUCH!”

Everything else was embroidery to the points the panel made in the safe shadows of second-guessing what someone else did in his job on the firing line.

I personally think that A.J. Hinch is one of the principal reasons the Astros are even playing for the AL pennant and their second ticket to the World Series. I wish he had stayed with McCullers too, but I don’t get paid to second guess in the company of my buddies about something none of us were in the line of fire for handling in real-time-real-life. Hinch’s awareness and skill at pulling together “talent” into a championship competitive “team” that takes care of each other member in their common pursuit of baseball’s holy grail has been fun to watch. For many of us, that’s what makes the Astros games both fun and exciting to see. Like the rest of us, Hinch is not perfect either, but I guess that’s what managers are paid to be, regardless.  – Right, John Farrell?

Sadly, what Game 4 exposed was the dirty little non-secret we’ve lived with all season. The Astros Achilles Heel is its bullpen. When several of its prime suspects show up in the same critical game, as they did yesterday, it’s going to make the decision-making of the manager who made their appearances possible in that moment pay the disappointment toll. And, since this is all second-guessing, “what if” Hinch had left McCullers in the game until all the runs that actually scored had crossed the plate at Lance’s expense? Would that have produced a chorus of “why have a bullpen, if you aren’t going to use it” comments?

Let’s just hope that Dallas Keuchel can get us a win in Game 5 – and spare us another serious challenge to our bullpen’s abilities – or our manager’s magical pitching change decision-making skills in real-time. We’ve now seen another post-game variation on how the studio second guess version on pitching change decisions works – and that after-the-fact variation – separate, apart, and detached from personal consequence to those who freely speak out about the behavior of others later – seems to go pretty smoothly.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle