Archive for the ‘culture’ Category

Hits, Heroes, and Storybook Homers (Improved)

August 7, 2018

Altuve Hard To Catch ~ Even 10 Days Into DL Status

 Jose Altuve hasn’t played since he left a game on Wednesday, July 25th with a knee strain. He’s been on the DL since Saturday, July 28th, and his return to action date is still uncertain. Now, on August 7th, and 13 days into this unfortunate period, Altuve still leads the American League in total hits and he also has a strong hold on 2nd place in the batting average competition, trailing only Mookie Betts of the Red Sox for the top spot in that important category. Betts is hitting .342 and Altuve is temporarily frozen at .329. We look for that chase to heat up as soon as Altuve gets back into action.

Here’s the 2018 hit leadership top ten list for American League batters:

AL Hit Leaders thru 8/06/2018

# Piayer Team Hits
1 Jose Altuve Astros 134
2 Jean Segura Mariners 133
3t Francisco Lindor Indians 132
3t J.D. Martinez Red Sox 132
5 Eddie Rosario Twins 131
6 Whit Merrifield Royals 129
7 Mookie Betts Red Sox 125
8t Andrew Benintendi Red Sox 124
8t Nicholas Castellanos Tigers 124
10 Jose Rameriz Indians 122

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 This time, ace researcher Darrell Pittman comes up with a look at fan giveaways and special game offerings at the Astrodome from over a half century ago. The money value of all matters, of course, has changed, but the idea is still its golden perpetual self. ~ Baseball fans are “attachment” people. We like to have souvenirs that have a direct connection to our team, our heroes, and our community. These things, or a large number of them, at least, may wind up in garage sales down the line, but they will still be worth the feelings we got one fine Houston summer day from the simple exercise of bringing them home one night from the Dome or MMP ~ or wherever else it is we worship in the Church of Baseball.

This article, which Darrell Pittman found in the August 13, 1966 edition of the Victoria (TX) Advocate gives us a pretty good look at the early days of the “game day giveaway” art:

 

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Marwin_Gonzalez

~ Marwin Gonzalez ~ His 3-run HR with 2 outs in the top of the 9th in SF on Monday, 8/06/18 gave the Astros a surprising 3-1 win over the Giants.

A Sandlot Dream Came True for Marwin Gonzalez. His 3-run HR with two outs in thetop of the 9th in SF on Monday, 8/06/18 gave the Astros a surprising baseball-gods-aided 3-1 win over the Giants in a game that was all but lost to Houston until Marwin did his Mudville redemption act.

Had you been an Astros fan in the left field stands, what would you have done with the Gonzalez’s game-winning homer ball, had you been there to catch or retrieve it? Would you have given it to the sad little kid stranger sitting next to you when he saw that you had caught the ball that he also had hoped to catch? And let us know, if you don’t mind sharing this little glimpse into the normally flawed territory of human nature.

Thanks. And enjoy Tuesday’s game from Frisco. It starts soon. At 2:00 PM.

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

August 5, 2018 Lagniappe

August 5, 2018

The 1950 Pecan Park Eagles
Back: Charles Willis, Billy Sanders, Billy McCurdy, Pepsi (McCurdy dog), Eileen Disch, Johnny McCurdy.
Front: Kenny Kern, Raymond Giese, Jackie Perkins, Randy Hunt.

Brand New John McCurdy Sketch of the Pecan Park Eagles

This artistic rendering of the 1950 Pecan Park Eagles by my artistic brother, John McCurdy, arrived in yesterday’s Saturday mail. When he and I talked about his great work earlier this morning, he quite unnecessarily explained his reasons for taking liberty with reality – one more time.

We never had uniforms like that. ~ We never had uniforms of any kind – not even caps. We were a club of “Shoeless Joes” – with toes and soles as tough as nails – and most often tougher than the loose nails, broken beer bottle glass, and runaway garbage tins that so often ended up on our sacred playing ground. All we needed was the time it took to rinse the foot-cut from the faucet in Mrs. McGee’s flower bed and to make sure that the bleeding had stopped and we’d be back at it – full swing.

Way to go Eagles and thank you again, Brother John! – Today’s gift is both a mighty sweet contribution to the folklore surrounding the brief but passionate life of The Pecan Park Eagles ~ and a major step up the line to our little 1950 team gaining eventual acclaim as the Action Comics Mid-20th Century Juvenile Heroes who would best help lead the fight for “Truth, Justice, and the American Way” among their peers.

The Action Comics recognition, of course, was all part our now retroactive dream, but it was easy to find because, at that time, the Pecan Park Eagles were the only kid sandlot baseball team in Houston we know of that also had a girl who played for them as a star pitcher. Her name was Eileen Disch.

And, oh yeah! Eileen also was the only one who always kept her shirt on at Eagle Field. Her personal uniform was blouse and shorts. Otherwise, she was barefoot in the park like the rest of us.

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Lance McCullers, Sr. & Jr.
Minute Maid Park, Houston.

Junior Now has One More Career Win Than Senior

Through all games of August 4, 2018, Lance, Jr. still has a one career win edge over his long ago retired dad at 29 to 28. The comparison is a little irrelevant from the standpoint that Junior a total al starter and his dad was almost exclusively a reliever over similar periods of time ro date.

One thing’s for sure when you look at what both of these men have done and where they’ve done it over time is still pretty clear. – They’ve both got MLB pitching ability flowing through their shared DNA.

A Father & Son MLB Numbers Comparison

Of Lance McCullers, Senior and Junior

Through All Games of August 4, 2018:

McCullers G GS W L ERA IP BB SO HR
Senior 206 9 28 31 3.25 526.1 252 242 47
Junior 80 80 29 22 3.69 451.1 178 505 35

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“Just Brushing My Teeth, Dear!” ~ W. C. Fields. It was a line inspired by too much W.C. Fields drinking time in a locked bathroom at home and a snoopy wife who inevitably asked the “what are you doing in there” question.

“Never Give a Sucker an Even Break!” ~ W.C. Fields

When reached at his present home in a paranormal time dimension beyond our own, here’s what W.C. Fields told our farthest roving reporter when asked if he planned to advise his great-grandson, a Houston Astros season ticket holder for many years, as to what action he should take to the sharp increase in ticket prices for Astros season tickets next year.

Here’s how Fields responded:

Fields: “Help him out? ~ Yes! ~ Good question! ~ Well, I’m not sure I can do that now. ~ You see ~ I just received a handsome consultant fee from the Astros for sharing a piece of advice with them on how this very event might be received by the general public. ~ Yes, it’s pretty tricky territory here! ~ Had to be careful! And fair! ~ After all, the Astros are good, honest people that deserved credit for bringing a World Series title to Houston! ~ And, as everybody knows, it’s going to take some money to keep the championship here!” And keeping the World Series title here benefits all of Houston!

TPPE: “Well, what did you tell the Astros, Mr. Fields?”

Fields: “Sorry, sonny, nothing comes free in this old globe of yours. ~ In other words,  my little little ‘pluck-a-bee’ ~ come up with the dough ~ and I’ll let you know!”

TPPE: “Must be some heavy reading, sir.”

Fields: “It’s not heavy. That’s my cover. ~ The thing’s lighter than air ~ one sentence long ~ all easy words ~ and all put there to shape the heart of every fire-breathing salesman who ever sensed when the fish were jumping into the boat to bite the hook – whether it had a worm on it ~ or not.”

TPPE: “No kidding?”

Fields: “No kidding, my little jabber-wocky! ~ Why, the Astros were so happy with my advice ~ they even gave me a bonus. ~ It’s a tailor-made golf clothes outfit ~ and it comes with two pair of pants ~ just in case I get a hole in one.

“Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got to find the men’s room. It’s time to brush my teeth.”

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

Ya Can’t Tease a Buff in a National Park

August 4, 2018

Ya Can’t Roller Skate in a Buffalo Herd
and
Ya Can’t Tease a Buff in a National Park

Ya Can’t Tease a Buff in a National Park

A Pecan Park Eagle Parody

By Bill McCurdy

 

Ya can’t tease a Buff in a national park

Ya can’t tease a Buff in a national park

Ya can’t tease a Buff in a national park

But you can get arrested if you’ve a mind to

 

Stuck in the car while the traffic’s backin’ up

Stuck in the car while the traffic’s backin’ up

Stuck in the car while the traffic’s backin’ up

Time to make peace ~ not that thing that ya do

 

Ya couldn’t stay sober and just let the time pass

Ya couldn’t stay sober and just let the time pass

Ya couldn’t stay sober and just let the time pass

Now ya may stay in jail ~ where who teases who*

 

 * and even if it’s “who teases whom” ~ your situation is not really improved.

C’mon, Man! ~ Ya just can’t tease a Buff in a national park, or anywhere else, for that matter!

 

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In case you haven’t read the story, here’s an article link which explains how our possibly alcohol-aided fantasy bison matador may actually exist as someone who brought this usually improbable legal problem into his own life a few days ago. Now he will get his day in court to explain how it happened ~ and how the truth differs from the way it appears in the words and pictures so far provided.

https://www.nationalparkstraveler.org/2018/08/man-who-challenged-yellowstone-bison-arrested-glacier-national-park

You’re not guilty until that’s proven in court.

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Pecan Park Eagle Trivia Contest Questions

August 2, 2018

 

1st Annual Pecan Park Eagle
Baseball Trivia Contest
By Maxwell Kates

Questions Today, Thursday, August 2, 2018.

Answers Tomorrow, Friday, August 3, 2018.

Note: Please do not post your answers in the Comment Section of today’s Question Phase of the quiz. We would like to keep this thing open and fun without help for all who wish to play. ~ Posting your answers or thoughts about the quiz tomorrow in the Answer Phase is both invited and encouraged.  ~ TPPE.

Sharpen your pencils, it’s time to play the first annual Pecan Park Eagle Trivia Contest. But first, some baseball nostalgia for you. Most of the questions relate in some way to columns I have written for the Pecan Park Eagle in the past year. Good luck to all those who play.

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

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

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

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

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

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

(7) Five members of the 1982 Houston Astros, four in uniform and one broadcaster, also managed the team. Name them.

(8) According to Irish folk legend, what is the surname of the only man capable of killing a local man-eating sea serpent?

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

(10) How many African American pitchers have won 20 games in a season? Which of the ‘Black Aces’ won 20 games one season for the Astros?

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

12) Name two members of the Larry Dierker Chapter, both of Irish heritage, who played professional baseball before the formation of the Houston Colt .45s. (Note that I didn’t say MALE baseball players.)

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

(14) What pitcher surrendered Rick Monday’s decisive home run in Game 5 of the 1981 National League Championship Series for the Los Angeles Dodgers?

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

Bonus Question:

“We DO have a bonus question for you ~ and we promise ~ it WON’T take much of your valuable time.”

What was the name of Bill McCurdy’s east end Houston 1950 sandlot baseball team?

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Maxwell Kates: Playing Ball With Trevor Hoffman

July 29, 2018

PLAYING BALL WITH TREVOR HOFFMAN

By Maxwell Kates

 

Would you believe me if I told you that I once played baseball with Trevor Hoffman? No? That’s the correct answer, actually. But there’s a story behind it.

Trevor Hoffman, Hall of Fame Class of 2018

This is the Hall of Fame induction weekend in Cooperstown, New York. The Class of 2018 is a diverse one. Chipper Jones and Jim Thome, opposing 3rd basemen in the 1995 World Series, are elected on their first ballot. Joining them are Vladimir Guerrero of the Anaheim Angels, Trevor Hoffman of the San Diego Padres, and from the Veterans’ Committee, Alan Trammell and Jack Morris of the Detroit Tigers. This story, however, is all about Trevor Hoffman.

The year was 2004. The Padres had just moved into their new downtown facility at Petco Park after playing their entire tenure at Qualcomm Stadium in suburban San Diego. Their opponents were the Montreal Expos. Figuring (correctly, as it were) that it might be my final opportunity to see the Expos, I flew to San Diego to watch them play. There was some symmetry in my travel plans, as the Padres were also the opposing team in the very first Expos game I saw in Montreal.

Petco Park
San Diego, CA

Borrowing an idea from Forbes Field in Pittsburgh, the Padres built a sandlot just beyond the outfield fence within the confines of Petco Park. This particular game was a Tuesday evening and I decided to arrive a few hours early. Walking around the perimeter of the facility, I noticed some kids playing on the sandlot. Then I noticed a much taller player wearing uniform number 51, glove in hand, approaching the diamond. It was Trevor.

Born in 1967 in Bellflower, California, a suburb of Los Angeles, Trevor Hoffman almost seemed destined for a career in baseball. His father was the late Eddie Hoffman, the famous singing usher at Anaheim Stadium, while his older brother Glenn was a longtime infielder for the Boston Red Sox. Trevor’s path to the big leagues was a circuitous one. After struggling as an infielder in the Cincinnati Reds’ farm system, he was converted into a pitcher in 1991 by his minor league manager. Almost instantaneously he developed into a star, rising from Charleston to Cedar Rapids, Chattanooga, Nashville, and the Reds’ 40-man roster in slightly less than two years.

Trevor Hoffman as a Florida Marlin

Left unprotected in the 1992 expansion draft, Hoffman was selected in the first round by the Florida Marlins. As it were, Hoffman spent less time in the Sunshine State than a swimsuit model or a Sammy Miami. The Marlins traded him to the Padres in June 1993 as part of a five player deal which brought Gary Sheffield to Dade County. Although the Padres were in a rebuilding mode at the time, they had risen to the top of the National League West five years later. Hoffman was a central figure in the Padres’ resurgence. A ninth inning mound appearance by the closer became known as ‘Trevor Time,’ as AC/DC’s “Hell’s Bells” became Hoffman’s theme music when he pitched. He recorded 53 saves in 66 appearances, yielding a regular season ERA of only 1.48. Although the Padres’ plummeted to the bottom

of their division as quickly as they rose, Hoffman remained an integral component of baseball in San Diego. Though his future seemed uncertain as he missed most of the 2003 season – his contract year – with an injury, the Padres decided to sign him to a one-year, $2.5 million deal for 2004.

Hoffman decided to play catcher in the pickup game in the sandlot hours before his Padres would host the Expos. There were kids throughout the infield and more kids waiting to take their turn to hit. Even though I was taller and had more grey hair than any of them, I decided to stand in line anyways. As I was about to hit, I received a tap from the umpire.

Hoffman and Padres Celebrate.

“Do you notice anything similar about all the other players but you?” he asked.

I replied, “Sorry, I’m from Canada. And we’re not too bright out there.”

“This is for KIDS!” he shot back. “YOU’RE not supposed to be here!”

I pleaded with the umpire, “Please, I just want to take one cut so I can tell my grandchildren that I played baseball with Trevor Hoffman.”

Now I know I had pushed the umpire’s buttons. “Oh yeah!” he screamed. “Well you’re outta here, Grandpa!”

Hoffman became, once again, an effective closer for the Padres in 2004, saving 41 games with a 2.30 ERA for a Padres team that went 87-75. He remained in San Diego until 2008, leading the league with 46 saves in 2006. Granted free agency, Hoffman ended his career with the Milwaukee Brewers, retiring in 2010. His lifetime statistics include 1,133 strikeouts in 1,035 games, a lifetime ERA of 3.69, while his 601 saves was the all-time lead at the time of his retirement.

And no I never did get to play baseball with Trevor Hoffman. Or so it would seem. Let’s look at Doug Brocail’s 2001 season with the Houston Astros. Although not every statistical register counts it, he appeared in one game in 2001. Brocail had no innings pitched, an ERA of infinity, and in fact, spent the entire year on the 60-day disabled list. So how does he have a game to his credit? Let’s look at the boxscore on August 5, 2001. The Astros were hosting the Expos at the stadium formerly known as Enron Field. When Brad Ausmus was hit by a pitch in the 3rd inning, his teammates protested rather vociferously. Brocail must have offered some choice words to umpire Matt Hollowell because in a moment, the injured bench jockey was ejected. Pitcher to the showers!

Pitcher to the Showers!

If Brocail is credited with an appearance for being tossed out of a game, then surely Kates may be given credit for having played baseball with Trevor Hoffman in San Diego.

“Don’t Call Me Shirley!”
~ Maxwell Kates

Is that the story? That’s the story!

 

            Editorial Note to Writer ~

Dear Maxwell,

As our little technicality trips go in the art of seeking a little higher shelf for expressing our involvement in “the game”, lesson number one is to never mention the game by name. If you have to call it out as “baseball”, then you are immediately disqualified from both the higher shelf you seek and the specific opportunity you are now seeking.

Any chance you had of passing unnoticed by the guard in that line of Pygmies who were waiting to do the same passed out the window when you told “that” same guard/umpire: “Please, I just want to take one cut so I can tell my grandchildren that I played baseball with Trevor Hoffman.”

The umpire in this instance was not programmed to hear the still pining deprivations of your own childhood now that you are an adult. He’s there to take care of the kids who live that need today. And you are no longer one of them. So “suck it up and move along” is all he’s going to tell you.

Take consolation in the Brocail Qualifier explanation as to how you still technically qualify by way of a box score that lists everyone that stood in line that day to take a batter’s cut at a pitch from Trevor Hoffman. ~ Even better ~ even if the list just shows 99 Pygmies and one disqualified by age and height tall gangly built Canadian guy – the rest of us will still do all we can to make sure that the world knows that the Canadian fellow was you – and not some singing Mountie like Nelson Eddy.

Too late now, but there is one thing you could have done that painful day to make all this hair-splitting on technicalities unimportant, and it’s the same thing we did on the sandlot to establish who’s in the game – and who’s not. You could have begged, borrowed, or stolen a baseball from one of the Pygmies and just thrown it in the air to Trevor Hoffman from about sixty feet away without saying a word until the ball leaves your hand.

Then you shout, “Heads up, Trev!” ~ Which he will do, of course, and be ready to make the catch with his gloved hand. And, of course, this is presuming that you can make a reasonably accurate throw from sixty feet. If so, Trevor catches the ball with a smile – and ~ from that moment on ~ every time you close your eyes ~ you get to see that Trevor Hoffman smile on the backs of your eye lids every night ~ for the rest of your life.

No technicalities here. The beautiful game always starts ~ as it usually ends ~ with a thrown ball ~ and then a catch.

Great article, Maxwell! Written like a true lover of “the game.”

Bill McCurdy, Editor

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

“And do call me Tex!”
~ Alvis Newman Shirley

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Babe Ruth’s Called Shot, Yes or No?

July 28, 2018

Babe Ruth
Yesterday’s Greatest Myth-Maker

Happy Saturday Morning, Everybody!! ~ And what a great time again to ask the question that will never be answered for certain by even the deepest, blue history thinkers in the game. Even those who do affirm it say their words of support in the most whimsical ways ~ and with everything from a slight to widely spreading smile on their faces when they do.

Did Babe Ruth call his shot at Wrigley Field against the Cubs in the 1932 World Series? ~ Or was he simply pointing at Cubs pitcher Charlie Root, from the plate to the mound, as the two engaged in what we now call “trash talk” with each other prior to the next pitch that ended up flying high and deep off the Babe’s bat as a home run to deep right center ~ and giving birth to a visual communication that engrained the perception in the crowd ~ that they had just witnessed in totality ~ Babe Ruth predicting a home run to center field and them making delivery.

And remember too ~ all this hubbub arose from the mass visual memory of this event. The film you are about to see here ~ or probably already have seen ~ was taken by rare fan in the crowd with an early silent movie camera ~ but it only came to public attention some year in the past twenty or thirty. ~This thing was born and raised on the repetition of often reported memories of those eye witnesses who were there in 1932 to record mental perceptions of Babe Ruth predicting his home runs.

It is the film that brings us the follow-up shots of Babe waving his hand at pitcher Root again as he rounds first and heads for second in his home run trot. Even those motivations can be taken as either the Babe “rubbing it in” or as evidence that it was simply more gloat from the general trash talk that Ruth had decided to engage in with Root.

Ruth doesn’t start making big claims that he called his shot until he finds out back in the dugout after the bases trot that apparently everyone else thinks he did. Then he’s all over the affirmation as the primary source authenticator of that claim.

Enjoy the brief clip and the visual part of this story. It also includes some comment by Lefty Gomez, one of the great Yankee pitchers who was there that day. Plus, a handful of other prominent baseball writers chime in too.

In the end, you will be left with the question that only you can answer: Did Babe Ruth really call his shot in Chicago, or not?

Here’s the link:

 

Addendum: Reader Cliff Blau‘s suggestion in the comment section below is worth the additional look because of the light it sheds on the angle and direction of Babe Ruth’s arm-pointing. Check it out too at the following link once you’ve seen our suggested site film.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FwIlNSi3x7c

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

1962: Larker Finds Use for Colt .45 Bats

July 27, 2018

 

Another great research find by Darrell Pittman.

 

 

GGGGGGGGGGG

Deadball Era Baseball Game Footage (1900-1920)

July 26, 2018

Detroit @ Pittsburgh
During the 1909 World Series
~ Check out the shape of the infield grass.

Thank you, Bill Hickman, for drawing our awareness to this fine silent film collection of baseball cation from the Deadball Era. We miss the sensory completeness that sound and the smells of hot dogs, beer, cigar smoke, less hygenic circumstances of rest rooms from those times, to say nothing of rotten food disposals and the industrial age smoke that filled all breathable air could have added to our sense of presence in what was going on, but we shall happily settle for what we got.

Groundskeeping was poor back in the day. As the featured still shot here shows of the Pittsburgh infield during the Pirates’ tangle with the Detroit Tigers that fall, groundskeeping was not a major priority back in the day. The Pittsburgh infield is half eaten or worn away – and badly harmed also by the automobiles that chugged their ways across the diamond during the pre-game activity. And that’s clodhopper dirt out there – not the carefully groomed and even soil that’s imported for use on the intentional-dirt parts of the infield and base lines.

Other Notices: All the players uniformly knew how to wear their uniforms correctly, with the socks showing from the knee down. ~ Photos. Photographers crowded home plate during crucial at bats. The lenses of that age could not handle the distance and produce photo clarity.

No World Series in 1904. The 1904 New York Giants celebrated themselves at home as “world champions” after refusing to play the AL Champion Boston Red Sox in what should have been the second World Series. The Red Sox had won the first World Series over Pittsburgh in 1903, but the Giants apparently were afraid to play them in 1904. The refusal forced baseball to declare that playing the World Series would not be furthermore left to individuals clubs. Winners of the NL and AL would play each other for the right to make “world champion” claims. And that’s the way it stood until the 1994 management-labor meltdown that cancelled only the second World Series in history.

Black Sox Footage of Joe Jackson and his White Sox Company from the 1919 World Series is very good. 3rd Sacker Buck Weaver has to be the ugliest snaggle-toothed innocent-looking guy that’s ever been banned from the game of baseball. – What a tragedy that whole murky-business in Chicago in 1919 was – and still is. Little Dickie Kerr also shows up. – He’s the little pitcher who came out of the Black Sox mess as the young “good guy” who played it straight and won games for the team that had eight men kicked out for life as a result of the gambling bribes they allegedly took to make sure the White Sox lost the World Series.

Baseball practices included much more pre-game defensive practice, including fungo-struck fly balls to the outfielders. They also seemed to like lining up the bats in a long row before their team dugouts.

Dead Ball Era Athleticism, based upon what these films provide, may lead some of us to wonder how many of these guys could compete against any 21st century MLB club. Several of the pitchers display funky wind ups that wouldn’t carry them too far in today’s game either. – See what you think when you watch the film on this very resourceful link:

Hope you enjoy this excellent opportunity for exploration of the so-called Deadball Era.

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A Back To The Future Addendum

Congratulations to Tom Hunter
Denver Resident but Staunch Astros Fan

Great friend and Pecan Park Eagle supporter Tom Hunter got to Coors Field on Tuesday night, 7/24/18, just in time to proclaim his own presence as he also brought his Houston Astros a bucket of extra inning good luck! ~ Where were you Wednesday night, Tom?

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

A Punch Out By Cat’s Paw

July 25, 2018

Down goes Frazia! ~ Down goes Frazia! ~ Down goes Frazia

It was one of the biggest boxing battles of all time. Could it also have been the first apparent application of the Marquis of Queensbury rules in a cat fight? We’re talking about the largest gate of nearly 60,000 people that paid to see the big fight at the Catstrodome in Las Vegas back on August 7, 1954 ~ the heavyweight championship cat fight between Cautious Catius Claye and Smokey Joe Frazia!

Today’s featured photo shows how the fight ends, but here’s the audio from the national radio broadcast on how the brief less than one round match played its way out forever into our imagery of why this particular cat fight contributed so much to our appreciation of what really charged athletic competition is all about. All the fearless cool cats were in house that night to see it – and you can take it to the bank – there wasn’t a mouse among them.

The broadcaster that night – the voice on our audio – was a guy known for his descriptive, cynical, and baritone-ringing “New Yawk” accent and precise choice of words – and ones that were used repetitively when a fighter was either in trouble – or a knockout path that had just been landed by a decisive punch.

Now gone to wherever the most judgmental of us go whenever our lives on planet earth are spun and done, our audio guide for this little moment is someone the elder among us all remember as Humble Howard Catssell. ~ “Take it away, Howard!”

Glad to do so, Billy, and isn’t it wonderful today – in 2018 – that something like a 64-year old audio tape can be programmed to actually allow a dead person like me to thank a totally live person – or maybe I should say technically live person like yourself – for the opportunity to handle this segue with all the finesse and gracious deference of the stellar personality I once had in unfair numbers above all others in my field? ~ OK, here’s the fight description – all of it transcribable in italics – for the sake of time clarity:

Good evening from the Catstrodome in Las Vegas, cat boxing fans! – This is Humble Howard Catssell bringing you the scheduled 15 round heavy weight cat fight championship match between champion Cautious Catius Claye and challenger Smokey Joe Frazia!

No soul in his right mind thinks this fight is going to go anywhere close to the distance. Both fighters are undefeated – Claye at 25 and 0 – Frazia at 21 and 0 – and all wins by both of these ferocious felines have been by the hard knock out route. 

Someone must fall tonight! – And one man’s fall will be the other man’s adornment of even higher placement on the historic wall of fighter respect. – The bell for round one has now sounded and we’re about to find out as observers to history in the making. – We may be only fly specks on the wall of history, brave listeners – but even flies draw attention – if they land in the right place – at the right time. – Just ask me. – I’ve made a career of it.

Claye goes into his peek-a-boo dance in the middle of the ring. – Frazia from Philly stalks in – like a longshoreman closing in on an open roll call for work on the docks.

Claye dances in a circle around Frazia – sending out left jabs like love pats. – Frazia moves in the middle of the circle – like the fulcrum of a watch that anchors and rotates its time-telling appendages. – Joe keeps a close watch out for any second-hand movements from Claye.

There’s a right to the belly of Claye by Frazia! – But Claye seems to both inhale and take a two-step leap backward simultaneously – softening the blow from Frazia – as Joe takes a clumsy fall forward as the end reaction to Claye’s quick escape from contact harm.

Now they’re on the ropes. – Joe is two-fisted pounding away at the taller Claye’s middle – but Claye is using the ropes famously to ease the contact harm from body fist pounding – – and he’s also extending his arms across his chest – with his elbows perpendicular to the floor to deflect many of the hard Smokey Joe blows.

Now they are at mid ring – when out of the blue – liked greased lightening – here comes a hard and high arching left to the chin of Frazia by Claye – and Frazia’s down! – Frazia’s down! – Frazia’s down!

Frazia’s not moving! – The ref is counting him out! – They’re dragging Frazia to his corner! – And the cat that stings like a bee is now dancing around the ring like a butterfly!

The winner – and still heavyweight champion of the Cat Fight Boxing Association world – its Cautious Catius Claye!

Back to you, Billy! ~ That’s all I’ve got from 1954, and besides, it’s time for me to get back to my very long nap!

Thank you, Howard! ~ And thanks too, cats in the picture, for reminding us of a time in which boxing was alive and thriving. Now they are simply a barely holding on relic of what they used to be as a once major sport – plus the everyday reminder that their sport is one of the few that still values concussion as a successful outcome.

Professional sports also need to remember that boxing exists today as a reminder to all the current most popular sports groups that none of them either should ever make the mistake of taking athlete participation or fan support for granted.

Times come and go. And people change.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Gods Do Not Answer Letters”

July 24, 2018

TED WILLIAMS
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Good shot of Williams at the end of a HR swing at some point in the 1947 season.

On Wednesday, September 28, 1960, famous American novelist John Updike did a fairly ordinary thing, especially so for a New England guy and big fan of the Boston Red Sox. He decided to go see the club play their final home game of the season that afternoon at Fenway Park and, if what I’m given to believe was true, with no big designs upon doing a book, column, or article on the experience.

It turned out to be Ted Williams’ last game ever for the Boston Red Sox, one in which his bottom of the 8th solo home run to right field on a cold, damp and windy autumn afternoon would also stand forever as his last action as a major league hitter.

OK. So Updike went there to see the game, but he was a great writer to the bone. And writers never go anywhere or do anything without bringing that presence of mind and emotion with them. All it needs from there is a little jarring from external events and the muses that provide all the internal packaging of the written word, most authentically in ways that seem familiar, suddenly pour forth through the writer to the world in ways that are never to be forgotten.

“Gods Do Not Answer Letters” is such an expression. John Updike wrote it with muse support to explain why slugger Ted Williams, who was notorious for his disdain of fan support acknowledgement, had refused to come out of the dugout to tip his cap in gratitude to the fans who were tumultuously applauding the dramatic act of their anti-hero hitting a last home run in his last Fenway Park plate appearance – and possibly for all time – if he were to also now sit out the last three games that Boston was still on the hook to play from September 30 through October 2.

“Gods Do Not Answer Letters” is the explanation that Updike offered for Williams’ decision to ignore the fans in the article that he wrote for The New Yorker. But remember. Updike had not intended to write “Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu”. There simply was no way that this dramatic game was going to fail in its successful efforts to interface with the writer presence of Hohn Updike and not become an article of some considerable erudition.

We’ll never know for sure. Maybe part to some to all of Ted Williams’ decision not to play the last three games in New York was part of – or all of – Teddy Ballgame’s ultimate tip of the cap to all the fans who pled in vain for his consoling and healing recognition after the last HR game of September 28.

By not playing in the last Yankee series, Ted Williams had taken all the fans who saw him hit that career homer on Sept. 28th in Boston with him to the walls of history – as the last fans to ever witness a Ted Williams home run. And suddenly I remember another, this time, well-known godly expression:

The Lord Moves in Mysterious Ways.

The Williams Last HR Box Score

Who took over for Ted Williams in left field for the Red Sox in those last three 1960 season games against the Yankees in The Bronx? Check out the first entry in the comment section that follows this column for the answer in case you do not already know and want to play with your mind for that name before it’s simply handed it to you.

A You Tube Look at the Last Ted Williams HR

Now watch this brief, intelligently stated coverage of Ted Williams HR # 521:

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle