Archive for the ‘culture’ Category

What’s the “W/L” Assignment Worth Today?

September 2, 2018

Cy Young Award (we think that’s his full legal name) won 511 regular season big league games between 1891 and 1911. It’s not likely that he could have come anywhere close to that mark today under today’s pitch count culture and pitcher specialization rules. *

* So, why are we still paying so much attention to a pitcher’s win total at contract and annual award time ~ and even now using “200” as the new “300” benchmark when it comes to thinking about a pitcher like Justin Verlander’s future candidacy for the Hall of Fame?

Maybe this is one of those times in which we, the baseball culture at large, are simply too long on tradition and two short on imagination for a better way of assessing all the players on-the-field and their own individual contributions to winning and losing. If we are going to serve up W and L soup to the pitchers, simply because they set everything in motion first on every play, maybe we should either assign W’s and L’s to all the guys who deserve them – and even spare the pitcher on days they really did little to nothing to cause either final result.

In today’s game, a starting pitcher may hold the other team to a meager 1 run over the five to six innings he’s out there, but still get the loss because his club gets him zero run support over the time he’s pitching. By today’s rules, this good pitching effort takes the “L” because the losing team was behind 1-0 over the time the starter was out there and they never recovered from the avalanche of runs that followed via the charity of his pals in the bullpen.

On another day, a starter may give up four to five runs during the five innings he was out there and still get the “W” because his team tallied ten runs over the course of the same time.

Does that really make any sense? Not to me it doesn’t, but the absence of good sense still doesn’t get in the way of salary and award discussions about pitchers to this very day ~ or so it seems.

Let’s have some discussion about this issue of “W/L” assignments. Do we really need them? And how about their multiple assignment to multiple pitchers, or even multiple or one special position player at times? For example, can you think of a game as recently as last night in which “Ws” could have been assigned to Carlos Correa and Tyler White for their contributions to the 8th inning Astros rally win.

Let’s at least talk about it, maybe even have a SABR meeting discussion about it. I’m not personally talking about the invention of another exotic “WAR” figure here. Those math trips have done little but confirm SABR’s image as a gaggle of geeks. I’m talking about what we can see with our own eyes.

Do we need to look for a better way of assigning the “W/L” for pitchers, do we need to find a way to expand these assignments to other players, or do we simply need to drop individual “W/L” assignments altogether from this “team game” and allow the game’s final score to be the only “W/L” that counts?

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A Peek at the AL Batting Average Race 

Through Games of 9/01/18: 

BATTING AVERAGE

1. Mookie Betts

Boston Red Sox

.341

2. J.D. Martinez

Boston Red Sox

.333

3. Jose Altuve

Houston Astros

.326

4. Jean Segura

Seattle Mariners

.317

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AL WEST Contender Scores

Through Games of 9/01/18:

Houston 7 – LA Angels 3.

Seattle 8 – Oakland 7.

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AL WEST STANDINGS:

Morning of Sun., 9/02/18

TEAMS

WON

LOST

PCT.

GB

Houston

83

53

.610

 —-

Oakland

81

56

.591

   2.5

Seattle

76

60

.559

   7.0

LA Angels

66

70

.485

 17.0

Texas

59

77

.434

 24.0

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SEPTEMBER

2

LAA

SEA

@ OAK

3

MIN

NYY

BAL

4

MIN

NYY

BAL

5

MIN

NYY

BAL

6

7

@BOS

TEX

NYY

8

@BOS

TEX

NYY

9

@BOS

TEX

NYY

10

@DET

11

@DET

@BAL

SD

12

@DET

@BAL

SD

13

@BAL

@LAA

14

AZ

@TB

@LAA

15

AZ

@TB

@LAA

16

AZ

@TB

@LAA

17

SEA

@HOU

18

SEA

LAA

@HOU

19

SEA

LAA

@HOU

20

LAA

21

LAA

MIN

@TEX

22

LAA

MIN

@TEX

23

LAA

MIN

@TEX

24

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

25

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

26

@TOR

@SEA

OAK

27

@BAL

TEX

28

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

29

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

30

@BAL

@LAA

TEX

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Maxwell Kates: John Bull Played The Game

August 29, 2018

JOHN BULL PLAYED THE GAME:

SABR AND BASEBALL IN THE UNITED KINGDOM

By Maxwell Kates

Maxwell Kates in London, 2018.

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

“Baseball jerseys.”            32 points!

“Hawaiian shirts.”              21 points!

“Cargo shorts.”                  14 points!

“British fedoras.”

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

Richard Dawson on Family Feud.

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

Maxwell Kates in London, 2012.

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

Leonard Jay Tailor
London, England

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

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

David Block, San Francisco SABR
Researcher of Baseball in England

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

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

Now Pitching, Prince Frederick!

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

Rubbish!

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

British Baseball and the West Ham Club.

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

Harvey Sahker, Croydon Pirates_ Outfielder

The Harvey Sahker Baseball Collection.

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

Models Wearing Ritva Man Sweaters, 1971.

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

British Recording Artist Charlie Dore.

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

The Mike Ross Baseball Collection.

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

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

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

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

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

Congratulations, Bill!

 

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

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

Bill McCurdy, The Pecan Park Eagle

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Spokane Spokesman-Review: Eddie Gaedel Day

August 21, 2018

Gauge, 9, and Kaylee Paulson, 11, parade the Eddie Gaedel trophy through O‘Doherty’s Irish Grille in front of Eddie Gaedel Society manager Tom Keefe during the eighth annual Eddie Gaedel Day, Aug. 19, 2018, in downtown Spokane. (Dan Pelle / The Spokesman-Review)

 

In a nice column and cover photo that he did for the August 19, 2018 edition of the Spokane Spokesman-Review, here’s a link to how writer Dan Pelle handled the celebration of the Eddie Gaedel Society party that convened at O’Doherty’s Irish Pub in Spokane Sunday to commemorate the single-time appearance of the 3′ 7″ tall Eddie Gaedel as a batter in the big leagues for the St. Louis Browns on that same historical date in 1951.

Thanks for the e-mail notice from Eddie Gaedel Society Manager Tom Keene about this coverage of the 2018 party. As a Houston based member of the same group, we want to applaud Tom Keene as “the straw that stirs the drink” for making sure that little Eddie Gaedel’s place in baseball history is remembered accurately and never forgotten.

Here’s the article link:

http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2018/aug/19/eighth-annual-eddie-gaedel-day-celebrated-at-odohe/

 

Have a nice Tuesday, everybody!

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Happy 93rd Birthday, Larry Miggins!

August 20, 2018

Larry Miggins Himself
Age: Age 93 Today
Born: August 20, 1925
Birthplace: Bronx, NY
Identity: 1st American Birth Generation Born off the Boat from Ireland; former St. Louis Cardinal & Houston Buff; Current Active Member of the Larry Dierker SABR Chapter; Loyal Husband of the Beautiful Kathleen Miggins and the Father of their 12 Children.

 

HAPPY BIRTHDAY FROM US ALL, DEAR LIFETIME HERO & FRIEND, LARRY MIGGINS!

Dear Friends and Readers,

We feel sure that Larry would welcome your personal birthday wishes as either a comment below or as an e-mail to Larry in care of his wife Kathleen’s personal e-mail address at kathleenmiggins@gmail.com

So, please give Larry and Kathleen some thought and drop him a line at the address provided here. I say “and Kathleen” today because she has been in this long stretch of smiling, loyal, loving, and happy marriage for much longer than even some of us elder members of the baseball community may venture to recall.

God Bless! ~ God Bless us all! ~ But today especially ~ May God Bless Larry Miggins!

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Our Polish-American All Star Teams

August 19, 2018

“I started out as Aloysius Szymanski. ~Do you know my legal adult famous-in-life baseball identity?”

 

Let’s put it this way. ~ Were it possible, either of the variations offered here is challenge-ably good enough to win any All Star Game they enter by strength of talent alone. The first offering, the one restricted to using only those past MLB Polish-American players whose names end in “ski”, could be more challenged in the event of game injuries to their limited roster, but, come on! ~ If we can bring most of these guys back from the dead with the help of the baseball gods to play a one-shot all-star game, you might think we could also get a little insurance against stubbed toes and Tommy John arm problems suddenly popping up to spoil the fun!

The second roster table has more reserves because we opened the identity gates to include Polish-American MLB vets whose families apparently tried to “Americanize” their surnames by either dropping the “ski” caboose phrase or by simply changing their names to something else.

Lopatynski became Lopat and Szymanski became Simmons. And we don’t personally know what the Musial, Niekro and Konstanty families may have done to change their surnames without further research.

It’s all in fun here. So enjoy. And please feel free to suggest changes or additions.

~ The Pecan Park Eagle

The Warsaw Skis ~ Our Polish All Stars

# Batters L/R Pos Year BA RBI HR
1 Whitey Kurowski R 3B 1945 .323 102 21
2 Troy Tulowitzki R SS 2011 .302 105 30
3 Carl Yastrzemski L LF 1967 .326 121 44
4 Ted Kluszewski L 1B 1954 .326 121 49
5 Greg Luzinski R RF 1975 .300 120 34
6 Rip Repulski R CF 1954 .283 79 19
7 Hank Majeski R DH 1948 .310 120 12
8 Bill Mazeroski R 2B 1962 .271 81 14
9 A.J. Pierzynski L C 2012 .278 77 27
               
  Pitchers L/R Pos Year ERA W-L Sv
  Stan Coveleski R S 1920 2.49 24-14 2
  Ron Perranoski L R 1963 1.67 16-3 21

The Greater Polish-American All Stars

# Batters L/R Pos Year BA RBI HR
1 Whitey Kurowski R 3B 1945 .323 102 21
2 Al Simmons R RF 1931 .390 128 22
3 Stan Musial L CF 1948 .376 131 39
4 Greg Luzinski R DH 1975 .300 120 34
5 Ted Kluszewski L 1B 1954 .326 121 49
6 Carl Yastrzemski L LF 1967 .326 121 44
7 Troy Tulowitzki R SS 2011 .302 105 30
8 Bill Mazeroski R 2B 1962 .271 81 14
9 A.J. Pierzynski L C 2012 .278 77 27
  Bench            
  Carl Sawatski R C 1961 .299 33 10
  Hank Majeski R INF 1948 .310 120 12
  Rip Repulski R OF 1954 .283 79 19
               
  Pitchers L/R Pos Year ERA W-L Sv
  Phil Niekro R S 1974 2.38 20-13 1
  Joe Niekro R S 1979 3.00 21-11 0
  Stan Coveleski R S 1920 2.49 24-14 2
  Eddie Lopat L S 1951 2.91 21-9 0
  Ron Perranoski L R 1963 1.67 16-3 21
  Jim Konstanty R R 1950 2.66 16-7 22

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Too Good To Pass Up

August 15, 2018

 

Thank You, Michael McCroskey for bringing us all together in a great big smile! We Astros fans need all the upside-down frowns we may find within the center of our minds.

 

 

Thanks for being the good man of good cheer that you are, Mr. McCroskey!

Your input tonight is most appreciated, as per always.

Sincerely,

The Pecan Park Eagle

PS: My hands-down favorite among these was the chicken and egg order from Amazon, followed closely by the creative trash wrap and the monkey alarm clock. I’m tempted to try that  trash wrap plan out this coming Thursday. Have no plans to ever wake a sleeping lion, if I can help it, but, …. do you think the monkey’s approach to the lion here might work on the Astros ~ or would it simply get our butts kicked? 🙂

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

The Smells-A-Little-Fishy Lineup

August 14, 2018

 

Couldn’t find a Perch or a Minnow in the entire MLB player batch ~ and we also passed on nicknames like “Catfish” and “The Human Crab” to come up with a slightly less potent (on paper) ~ Smells-A-Little-Fishy Lineup!

It is lamentable that the big leagues, so far, have missed out fielding at least one single  ballplayer whose surname is “Snapper.” If there ever is a Snapper, especially if his DNA runs back to those port city Vikings that long ago came, conquered, and stayed in Ireland in places by the sea ~ is there any doubt as to what his nickname most likely would be?

Today we’ll just have to find consolation in this negatively aromatic lineup of the mind. Perhaps the rest of you can submit nominations for other roster additions that could make it smell better or even worse.

Here it is in its original lineup form:

The Smells-A-Little-Fishy Lineup

# Batting Order Year Pos BA HR RBI
1 Ralph Garr 1974 LF .353 11 54
2 Kevin Bass 1986 RF .311 20 79
3 Mike Trout 2016 CF .315 29 100
4 Tim Salmon 1995 1B .330 34 105
5 Mickey Rivers 1977 DH .326 12 69
6 Geronimo Gil 2002 3B .232 12 45
7 Eddie Lake 1945 SS .279 11 51
8 Bert Whaling 1913 C .242 0 25
9 Sam Fishburn 1919 2B .333 0 2
Pitchers Year Pos Won Lost ERA
P Dizzy Trout (R) 1944 P 27 14 2.12
P Eddie Fisher (R) 1965 P 15 7 2.40

Tim Salmon at 1st and Geronimo Gil at 3rd are playing out of position for the sake of filling out the defensive needs of the club, but large outfielders have been known to make the move to 1st OK in many other instances ~ and where else do you put a slightly slower catcher when you want him in the lineup ~ and 1st is already filled? – Third Base! ~ Of course! ~ That’s right.

You know what else is fishy? ~ It’s watching the Astros go through this period in which they look like they belong at the bottom of the American League ocean. ~ Maybe tonight they will break out of it. After all, they are only playing the Rockies ~ and all the Rockies are doing these sweat-heavy days of mid-August Houston heat is running tied with the Dodgers, one game back of Arizona in the NL West. ~ How fired up are they going to be on the heels of knowing that the Mariners just pulled the Astros back into a tighter division race than anyone saw coming prior to the pile up of all our local team player injuries?

Baseball moves in mysterious ways. ~ Have a bite on this little Smells-A-Little-Fishy Lineup. ~ It’s all we’re serving up for a late baseball afternoon “afunch” today at The Pecan Park Eagle Bar & Grill.

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Astros To Do List: August 13, 2018

August 13, 2018

An All Time Note of The Day
By Bill Veeck

Since we already are chest-deep into the “Baseball” season part of 2018, and just stepping out of an unforeseen underwater sinkhole that we have endured for four straight days, and as a gift to our beloved team, here’s our Houston Astros List of Things To Do This Monday, August 13, 2018:

(1) Put on your short memory caps.

(2) Enjoy a relaxing off-day ~ alone, with family, or friends.

(3) Watch out for soap in the shower and banana peels on the sidewalk.

(4) If a certain body move hurts from normal motion, you either don’t make that move again ~ or else ~ you go get it checked out. You owe it to yourself and the team not to let a small thing grow into a big thing that also carries you to the DL.

(5) Speaking of the DL, pray that Jose Altuve will be back in the lineup soon.

(6) Read a book ~ especially if you can find one about Ted Williams, Ty Cobb, or Rogers Hornsby on why scored runs are important to winning baseball, why winning baseball usually comes to those clubs that get the most hits, and why the most hits usually come to the club whose hitters never get too far away from the bottom line axiom that separates the hitters from the dreamers among batters:

“See the Ball ~ Hit the Ball.”

(7) Have a nice day! 🙂

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Que Sera, Astroturf

August 9, 2018

Que Sera, Astroturf

(Go to the tune of “Que Sera, Sera”, almost as sung by Doris Day. I relocated some of the musical note phrasings in both the melody and the italicized chorus voice version here. If I could sing it for you, you would immediately hear how each word fits each note used in exactly the right place. If we are ever in the same place, and this script is available, I will be happy to demonstrate. ~ And pardon me for trying too hard. ~ I just never got over the need to give everything I do my best effort. I’m convinced. If I could have thrown the ball 100 mph, I might have been one hell of a closer ~ and without once slugging my own jaw on days that things didn’t go well.)

 

When I was JUST an Astros Pup,

I played the outfield ~ out in the Dome!

On a field of sensation ~ first in the nation,

Heat had no place ~ to roam!

 

Que Sera, Young Pup,

We’ve got you all covered up!

Our roof is a ~ canopy,

For our full blast ~ real big ~ AC!

 

When I ran UP ~ to catch a ball,

I raised my BUG EYES ~ and WHAT did I see?

Nothing like baseballs ~ Round falling baseballs!

That’s when it dawned ~ on me!

 

I cannot SEE ~ the ball,

Just girders and glare ~ that’s all!

Now fearing a mighty fall

From a ball that finds me ~ so small!        

 

Then they got busy ~ fixing things up,

Painting the ROOF ~ did SURE save this pup!

We all could see again ~ catches not “E”s again,

Grinning wide ~ like a VIC-tory cup!

 

Que Sera, Green Grass,

Your time now is ~ sure to pass,

With no sun ~ the grass must go,

Que Sera, Green Grass!

 

Then they found ~ AS-tro-TURF,

In Mon-SAN-to’s ~ door-mat surf,

Blew-it=up ~ to a field-sized girth,

Que Sera, ~ Astroturf! *

And not too many copycat covered stadiums down the road from these early Que Seras, people started to miss real grass playing fields. So, they started building these newer coliseums of covered and air-conditioned comfort with movable roofs that opened and closed to sunlight at will. That way, people could have their real grass back. All they had to do was keep their roofs open long enough during the daylight hours to keep real grass alive and thriving on the field of action. And that’s pretty much the current wisdom on the subject in 2018, but the educational part of this lesson began in Houston, 53 years ago, with the grand opening of the mother of them all, the Astrodome.

 The People of Houston don’t have to change their apartments to change the world. Judge Hofheinz and all the folks at the Houston Astros did that for them, starting back in 1965 with the opening of the Astrodome, or even earlier, whenever it was that the Judge’s mind committed to tying Houston’s bid for major league baseball to the construction of a covered and air-conditioned stadium …. Que Sera, Astroturf!

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Author’s Note: Please don’t blame my artist brother, John McCurdy, for the cartoon I used in this column. I did it about three years ago, long before my brother ever appeared in print here. It just happened to fit the parody subject of today’s freshly born take on a very old Astrodome legendary historical story. ~ Thanks for your patience and support. ~ Bill McCurdy

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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A Snapshot of SABR Members in Houston

August 8, 2018
Microsoft Word - Document1

A red dot shows where each member of the Larry Dierker Chapter of SABR live in the Metro Houston Area. ~ Prepared by SABR Member Chris Chestnut. ~ Thanks, Chris!

“The Society for American Baseball Research had its beginnings in Cooperstown, New York. It was the brainchild of L. Robert Davids, who on August 10, 1971, gathered 15 other baseball researchers at the National Baseball Hall of Fame to form the organization.

“From this modest start, SABR membership has broadened steadily. A decade later, it had reached 1,500; today, it totals more than 6,000 worldwide. Who belongs to SABR? Many major and minor league baseball officials, broadcasters and writers, as well as numerous former players. Primarily, the membership consists of “just plain fans” — anyone interested in baseball can join. While the original purpose of SABR was to band together baseball historians, statisticians and researchers, it is not necessary to engage in research to become a member.

“Ernie Harwell, the late Detroit Tigers broadcaster, said: “SABR is the Phi Beta Kappa of baseball, providing scholarship which the sport has long needed. … An excellent way for all of us to add to our enjoyment of the greatest game.”

~ introductory excerpt from “The SABR Story”. You may enjoy reading the rest ~ and a whole lot more at https://sabr.org/about

Get this straight though. – You don’t have to be a genius researcher, a Ph.D in Baseball, or a former big league player to be a member of SABR. – Like the rest of us, you just have to be a deep fan of the game who might enjoy a steady diet of contact with others who also share many of your own baseball interests, but each in their own differing ways.

SABR covers all the bases – from math – to culture – to history – to literature – to philosophy – to drama and the kind of legend-building that develops from its own unfolding. And you also gain the opportunity to read plenty of published material that arrives in your mail from time-to-time at no extra cost – plus the monthly chance at each of our regular meetings to break bread with others and meet a few baseball people you may never have expected to meet.

What does SABR membership cost? “A 1-year membership costs $65, with discounted rates available for seniors, students under 30, and for 3-year memberships. Current members can also choose to renew for 5 years at a discounted rate if they choose to opt out of receiving printed publications.” (SABR site quote)

Local Contact: If you already were a local member, you would have been able to attend a SABR chapter meeting at Minute Maid Park this coming Saturday prior to the big game the Astros are playing against Seattle at 6 PM – and listening live at the meeting to a talk on the status of the team by GM Jeff Luhnow – and then enjoying the game with many other members.

For a more personal contact about our local chapter, feel free to contact our SABR chapter leader, Mr. Bob Dorrill at bdorrill@aol.com

Come join us in the baseball fun. Collectively, we are much more than just a bunch of red dots on a map of Houston.

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

 

 

 

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