Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

R.I.P., George “Shotgun” Shuba

October 2, 2014
Geore Shuba shakes hands with Jackie Robinson in Jersey City after Jackie hits his first HR in organized baseball in the 3rd inning of his first game, 4/18/46.

George Shuba shakes hands with Jackie Robinson in Jersey City after Jackie hits his first HR in organized baseball in the 3rd inning of his first game, 4/18/46.

george-shuba-brooklynjpg-0cfdcba6c50beb40 George “Shotgun” Shuba, one of the last Boys of Summer, died at his home in Youngstown, Ohio this week, Monday, 9/29/14. Had he lived until 12/13/14, he would have been 90 years old.

Outfielder Shuba never hit for any great stats as a major leaguer.  Over the course of his seven all Dodger big league seasons (1948-50, 1952-55) Shuba batted only .259 with 24 homers in 355 games, but he was there as a member of the 1955 only World Series victory that the Dodgers ever earned during their years in Brooklyn.

In spite of his limitations on the numbers side of productivity, Shuba was a valuable clutch player on numerous occasions for Brooklyn. His nickname is derived as a description of the way he sprayed those shotgun blast singles to all parts of the outfield at what now seems like almost every time that Brooklyn needed him to come through for them as a clutch hitter.

The linked article below was sent to me this morning by Neil Miggins, one of the sons of our very own SABR member brother and good friend, Larry Miggins, 89, whom we also cherish as a former Cardinal, one of the very last surviving members of Houston Buffs, also, as one of the last survivors of those who played in Jackie Robinson’s original break of the color line in 1946, and a sterling human being and an almost mythical Houston figure of Irish good cheer and storytelling!  We personally also have to add treasured good friend to our list of affections for Mr. Miggins.

The article by Richard Goldstein beautifully eulogizes how teammate George Shuba reached out to become the first white teammate of Jackie Robinson at Montreal during the 1946 season to shake his hand for the 3rd inning, 3-run homer he hit for the Royals against Jersey City  on Opening Day at Jersey City, April 18, 1946. The photo shown  here and on the Goldstein story stands out as testimony to the sincerity of Shula’s total acceptance of Robinson as the first black player in organized baseball to break the dreadfully ugly and unfair baseball color line in the 20th century.

Larry Miggins was the star of a feature by the Houston Chronicle upon the release of the movie "42" in 2013.

Larry Miggins was the star of a feature by the Houston Chronicle upon the release of the movie “42” in 2013.

As many you already know, our Larry Miggins played 3rd base for the Jersey City Giants that day – as did center fielder Bobby Thomson, only five seasons away from his famous heartbreaking home run for the parent 1951 NL playoff New York Giants against Robinson’s future parent Brooklyn Dodgers at the Polo Grounds with his “shot fired ’round the world.” By that time, Mr. Miggins was wrapping up his 1951 season as a member of the Cardinals’ AA Texas League club, the 1951 league champion Houston Buffs.

That’s also Miggins as the Jersey City 3rd baseman on 4/18/46, applying the late tag at 3rd on a safely stolen base by Robinson n his first game. Larry Miggins also likes to “kid” (At least, we think he’s kidding.) that two of Robinson’s other four hits that day, bunt singles down the third base line, were made possible by the deep position that he had taken in defense of Jackie’s lethal stroke of the ball that afternoon.

Here’s the link to the well-written story on George Shuba by Richard Goldstein:

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/01/sports/baseball/george-shuba-whose-handshake-heralded-racial-tolerance-in-baseball-dies-at-89.html?hpw&rref=obituaries&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&version=HpHedThumbWell&module=well-region&region=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well&_r=0

 

 

 

Harvey: “What Happened to Houston vs. Dallas?”

October 1, 2014
"Houston YES - Dallas NO!"

“Houston YES – Dallas NO!”

 

"Dallas YES - Houston NO!"

“Dallas YES – Houston NO!”

Randy Harvey wrote an interesting commentary in the Houston Chronicle this morning on the absence of venom in most Houston vs. Dallas sports rivalries these days. He touches quite accurately upon the lone exception, the Rockets and Mavericks of the NBA – where enmity has been heated by back and forth trash talk between Rockets GM Daryl Morey and Mavericks owner Mark Cuban. That ne may heat up a little in 2014-15 with the free agency signing of former Rocket Chandler Parsons by the Mavericks this past summer. – Our take on this example is that it seems to grow more from the way leadership people have said publicly unflattering things back and forth than it does from anything rooted in a Houston vs. Dallas vein. – It was more like the rivalry that the Astros felt with the Dodgers when they had to both contend with competition on the field and the always running mouth of LA manager Tommy Lasorda.

As childhood memory serves, the Dallas Eagles and Houston Buffs of the AA Texas League were fierce rivals on the fan level, as were the NFL Dallas Cowboys and Houston Oilers. The Eagles-Buffs rivalry fed from an ancient feeling of separation and competition between Texas’ two largest cities on every level of competition for attention, identity, esteem, and economic domination. It was a blanket that covered all. People born or settled in Houston stayed in Houston. People who were born or moved to Dallas stayed in Dallas. Most of us among the people in Houston that we knew never had even traveled to Dallas. We just “knew” from our talk with older Houstonians that people from Dallas were “a bunch of stuck up snobs who were long on words and short of real working ability for anything useful. They may as well not have hands because cannot build or fix anything with the ones they’ve got.”

On the other hand, word got back to us too. – Dallas people thought Houston was little more than “an overgrown hick town.” As one story along those lines went: “Every time East Texas piney woods towns get run over  with too many people, they just run them off to Houston to live in that larger mound of city hicks.” – Stuff like that just made us so mad, as it surely must have stirred the pot up in Dallas with their own tales about what the  hicks in  Houston said of them.

By the time in 1960 that Dallas got both the Cowboys of the NFL as an expansion team and the original Texans as their city’s first AFL team, Houston got the Oilers as their first professional club in the new AFL, as well.

In short, Dallas fans threw most of their support to the NFL Cowboys. The assumption of many was that the AFL would be short-lived – and that when it failed, a few of the stronger clubs might be absorbed by the NFL, but that one of those would not be the Dallas Texans. The city already had the Dallas Cowboys. Meanwhile, down in a more diverse and transiently populated Houston, many new Houston residents and Grade A NFL fans chose to also follow the Cowboys rather than the Oilers for similar reasons to those who picked that same way in Dallas. These Houstonian Cowboy fans wanted to support a Texas team that they felt sure would win the eventual survival battle. In other words, the Cowboys bore a cachet of higher esteem than either the Dallas Texans or the Houston Oilers because they already the real deal – the NFL.

By the time of the first Super Bowl in 1967, the Dallas Texans had been run off to Kansas City. They had been rechristened as the Chiefs and become the champions of the AFL  that would lose to the Green Bay Packers of the older NFL in that first playing of the big post-season. By 1970, the AFL would merge into the NFL and emerge renamed and slightly reconstructed as the American Football Conference of the NFL.

Bottom Line: Even with the AFL-NFL merger of 1970, the Houston-based Cowboys remained Cowboy fans – and they have raised their children and grandchildren in that same allegiance. And today, with television and the Internet, plus all of the corporate mobility and homogenization of city cultures by franchise food and other retail stores, the art of generating a really hot geographic rivalry seems more improbable with each passing year.

Astros fans today could get very worked up over beating the Rangers in the World Series, but that isn’t going to happen now that both clubs are in the same league. That being said, we have to ask, “So what?” It isn’t geographic competition that stirs the souls of Houston fans. It’s the desire to win it all in the World Series against anybody! – As for the “Silver Boot” award, you can take that boot and shove it! – Who needs it?

Thank you, Randy Harvey, for stirring up the subject.

 

The Top 56 MLB Season Hit Leaders

September 30, 2014
Don't forget! _ Jose' Altuve also led the American League iin 2014 with 56 stolen bases!

Don’t forget! Jose’ Altuve also led the AL in 2014 with 56 stolen bases!

In baseball, numbers speak louder than words when we don’t get lost in the self-aggrandizing pursuit of creating new stats that appear as Arabic to the English-comprehending eye. But everybody pretty much gets it that a .341 American League and MLB leading batting average is pretty darn good – especially in a year when no other player passed the .340 mark and only one other came close. People also understand that an MLB leading hit total of 225 in a year in which no one else passed the 200 hit mark is equally quite impressive – as in – Hall of Fame impressive, if this 2014 performance is continued at anything approaching this one season level over time.. And let’s remember too – we fans also have little trouble being impressed by the fact that the same man who did these hitting things also was the guy who lead the American League this season with 56 stolen bases.

Hail again to you, 2014 batting king Jose Altuve!

And while you’re perusing these two charts of impressive one-season hitting from baseball history, please find two examples of numbers speaking for themselves – and with the names of those he now keeps company in the great hall of records as testimonials to his potential for greatness over time.

The other day, Matt Musil of Channel 11 Sports interviewed Jose Altuve in the batting cage and noted that the recently married young Astro was now “off the market” to his adoring single female fans. Jose appeared to blush, but came right back with a statement that went something close to “that’s right, I’m now signed up to a long-term deal!”

Now all we need is two more “long-term deals” – one is a contract that will keep Jose Altuve a Houston Astro for a very long time – and another from Altuve that he will stay in spirit and performance the player he is now – and we think he will. And we have faith that he will – because this is the man that he is – a man gifted with a great talent for baseball, a blazing passion for giving the game his best shot every day, and a basic natural understanding that performance discipline boils down to “doing what you are supposed to do when you are supposed to do it.”

Courtesy of Baseball Almanac, we hope you enjoy these two charts on the highest season hit totals in MLB and American League history:

Baseball Almanac’s Single MLB Season Leaders in Hits
“The Top 56 Ranked Positions from a List of 500″‘
Ichiro Suzuki 262 2004 Seattle Mariners AL 1
George Sisler 257 1920 St. Louis Browns AL 2
Lefty O’Doul 254 1929 Philadelphia Phillies NL 3
Bill Terry 254 1930 New York Giants NL
Al Simmons 253 1925 Philadelphia Athletics AL 5
Rogers Hornsby 250 1922 St. Louis Cardinals NL 6
Chuck Klein 250 1930 Philadelphia Phillies NL
Ty Cobb 248 1911 Detroit Tigers AL 8
George Sisler 246 1922 St. Louis Browns AL 9
Ichiro Suzuki 242 2001 Seattle Mariners AL 10
Babe Herman 241 1930 Brooklyn Robins NL 11
Heinie Manush 241 1928 St. Louis Browns AL
Wade Boggs 240 1985 Boston Red Sox AL 13
Jesse Burkett 240 1896 Cleveland Spiders NL
Darin Erstad 240 2000 Anaheim Angels AL
Rod Carew 239 1977 Minnesota Twins AL 16
Willie Keeler 239 1897 Baltimore Orioles NL
Ed Delahanty 238 1899 Philadelphia Phillies NL 18
Don Mattingly 238 1986 New York Yankees AL
Ichiro Suzuki 238 2007 Seattle Mariners AL
Hugh Duffy 237 1894 Boston Beaneaters NL 21
Harry Heilmann 237 1921 Detroit Tigers AL
Joe Medwick 237 1937 St. Louis Cardinals NL
Paul Waner 237 1927 Pittsburgh Pirates NL
Jack Tobin 236 1921 St. Louis Browns AL 25
Rogers Hornsby 235 1921 St. Louis Cardinals NL 26
Kirby Puckett 234 1988 Minnesota Twins AL 27
Lloyd Waner 234 1929 Pittsburgh Pirates NL
Joe Jackson 233 1911 Cleveland Naps AL 29
Earl Averill 232 1936 Cleveland Indians AL 30
Matty Alou 231 1969 Pittsburgh Pirates NL 31
Earle Combs 231 1927 New York Yankees AL
Freddie Lindstrom 231 1928 New York Giants NL
Freddie Lindstrom 231 1930 New York Giants NL
Tommy Davis 230 1962 Los Angeles Dodgers NL 35
Stan Musial 230 1948 St. Louis Cardinals NL
Pete Rose 230 1973 Cincinnati Reds NL
Joe Torre 230 1971 St. Louis Cardinals NL
Willie Wilson 230 1980 Kansas City Royals AL
Rogers Hornsby 229 1929 Chicago Cubs NL 40
Nap Lajoie 229 1901 Philadelphia Athletics AL
Kiki Cuyler 228 1930 Chicago Cubs NL 42
Stan Musial 228 1946 St. Louis Cardinals NL
Jim Bottomley 227 1925 St. Louis Cardinals NL 44
Charlie Gehringer 227 1936 Detroit Tigers AL
Billy Herman 227 1935 Chicago Cubs NL
Rogers Hornsby 227 1924 St. Louis Cardinals NL
Lance Johnson 227 1996 New York Mets NL
Nap Lajoie 227 1910 Cleveland Naps AL
Sam Rice 227 1925 Washington Senators AL
Jesse Burkett 226 1901 St. Louis Cardinals NL 51
Ty Cobb 226 1912 Detroit Tigers AL
Joe Jackson 226 1912 Cleveland Naps AL
Chuck Klein 226 1932 Philadelphia Phillies NL
Bill Terry 226 1929 New York Giants NL
Jose Altuve 225 2014 Houston Astros AL 56
Jesse Burkett 225 1895 Cleveland Spiders NL
Ty Cobb 225 1917 Detroit Tigers AL
Harry Heilmann 225 1925 Detroit Tigers AL
Johnny Hodapp 225 1930 Cleveland Indians AL
Paul Molitor 225 1996 Minnesota Twins AL
Tip O’Neill 225 1887 St. Louis Browns AA
Ichiro Suzuki 225 2009 Seattle Mariners AL
Baseball Almanac’s Single American League Season Leaders in Hits
“The Top 26 Ranked Positions from a List of 500″‘
Ichiro Suzuki 262 2004 Seattle Mariners AL 1
George Sisler 257 1920 St. Louis Browns AL 2
Al Simmons 253 1925 Philadelphia Athletics AL 3
Ty Cobb 248 1911 Detroit Tigers AL 4
George Sisler 246 1922 St. Louis Browns AL 5
Ichiro Suzuki 242 2001 Seattle Mariners AL 6
Heinie Manush 241 1928 St. Louis Browns AL 7
Wade Boggs 240 1985 Boston Red Sox AL 8
Darin Erstad 240 2000 Anaheim Angels AL
Rod Carew 239 1977 Minnesota Twins AL 10
Don Mattingly 238 1986 New York Yankees AL 11
Ichiro Suzuki 238 2007 Seattle Mariners AL
Harry Heilmann 237 1921 Detroit Tigers AL 13
Jack Tobin 236 1921 St. Louis Browns AL 14
Kirby Puckett 234 1988 Minnesota Twins AL 15
Joe Jackson 233 1911 Cleveland Naps AL 16
Earl Averill 232 1936 Cleveland Indians AL 17
Earle Combs 231 1927 New York Yankees AL 18
Willie Wilson 230 1980 Kansas City Royals AL 19
Nap Lajoie 229 1901 Philadelphia Athletics AL 20
Charlie Gehringer 227 1936 Detroit Tigers AL 21
Nap Lajoie 227 1910 Cleveland Naps AL
Sam Rice 227 1925 Washington Senators AL
Ty Cobb 226 1912 Detroit Tigers AL 24
Joe Jackson 226 1912 Cleveland Naps AL
Jose Altuve 225 2014 Houston Astros AL 26
Ty Cobb 225 1917 Detroit Tigers AL
Harry Heilmann 225 1925 Detroit Tigers AL
Johnny Hodapp 225 1930 Cleveland Indians AL
Paul Molitor 225 1996 Minnesota Twins AL

King Jose’ Rules Today in the Right Way

September 29, 2014
JOSE' ALTUVE, 2B HOUSTON ASTROS 2014 AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING CHAMPION

JOSE’ ALTUVE, 2B
HOUSTON ASTROS
2014 AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING CHAMPION

JOSE’ ALTUVE PICKS UP BATTING CROWN THE RIGHT WAY! BESTS VICTOR MARTINEZ, A DH,  BY PLAYING 2ND BASE! IN FINAL GAME AGAINST NL FOE!  ALTUVE’S .341 BATTING AVERAGE IS TOPS IN THE AMERICAN LEAGUE – AND ALSO THE BEST  IN BOTH MAJOR LEAGUES!

Since his Detroit Tiger club was playing another American League team, the Minnesota Twins, Victor Martinez got to play his normal DH position on this last day of the season and just play for the sake of helping his teammates wrap up the ALC  title by hitting his way also to an average that might help him catch Jose Altuve of Houston for the AL and MLB batting average crowns. The Tigers did win, 3-0, to clinch their division crown, but Martinez went “0 for 3” to drop his final 2014 season batting average to .335.

Back East in New York, whee his Houston Astros were playing the local Mets in their last games, the team stakes meant nothing to either team – and interim Astro manager Tom Lawless wanted to rest Altuve against an NL club that plays by NL rules that scorn the use of a DH. If Altuve played, he would have to also play in the field too and we must only suppose that his manager figured that he would better off sitting on his .340 BA and leave the rest up to the hope that a resting Altuve could still prevail over a charging Martinez who, at .337, needed to have a virtually perfect big day to catch a brass ring on this merry-hitters-go-round.

Altuve protested. And Lawless relented. Altuve wanted to win things the right way and his manager gave in to that desire. Altuve was written back into the Sunday game lineup at 2nd base in the number two hole, a spot that seems to have fit Jose’s productivity more often than not this season.

Jose Altuve responded by grounding into a double play in the top of the first that helped Mets starter Bartolo Colon recover from a lead-off single by Robbie Grossman and then get the next man for a 1,2,3 first inning.

Then, with a one-bounce ground rule double that bounced over the left center field wall in the top of the third, his 47th tw0-bagger of the year, Altuve found his gear. The Astros already were leading, 1-0,  by this time, but Altuve’s hit could not help further after he was subsequently nailed on an attempted steal of third base.

In the top of the 5th, with Colon still pitching, and with runners on 1st and 3rd, Altuve beat out a  single to deep short that advanced one runner to 2nd and knocked in the runner from 3rd to pull the Astros back into a 2-2 tie at the time.

Jose Altuves 4th and final time at bat in the season came in the top of the 8th against Mets reliever Carlos Torres, with 2 outs and nobody on. A quiet 4-3 ground out on his time at bat in 2014 was OK. By this time, Altuve had nailed down the the AL batting championship (.341), highest hit total (221) and most stolen bases on the season (56).

Altuve’s “2 for 4” proved unnecessary in the light of Martinez’s “0 for 3” meltdown, but it was the affirmative of the fact that the newest Astro icon prefers the way of an active risk-taking effort to the passive safe path of backing into a personal championship by not playing. It is the same attitude that needs to take hold of the whole team as an organizational state of mind about reaching the playoffs and succeeding in the World Series.

Congratulations and thank you, Jose Altuve, for showing everyone else how winning needs to be happen!

CONTENDERS TEAM THRU GAME DATE GAMES LEFT AT BATS 2014 HITS   CURRENT BATTING AVERAGE
JOSE ALTUVE ASTROS 9/28 0   660 225 .341
VICTOR MARTINEZ   TIGERS 9/28 0 561 188 .335

___________________________________________________________________________________________

 

"2014 SUCKED! OH WELL! AT LEAST WE WON'T HAVE JETER TO KICK US AROUND NEXT YEAR!"

“2014 SUCKED! OH WELL! AT LEAST WE WON’T HAVE JETER TO KICK US AROUND NEXT YEAR!”

BOSTON BACKS INTO ESCAPE FROM HISTORY AS SOX AND ASTROS BOTH TANK IN LAST GAMES!

The Boston Red Sox lost their final game of the 2014 American League baseball season with a befitting thud. Like an ancient pigeon dying of old age in mid-flight across the Boston Commons, the Sox fell to earth at Fenway on the last Sunday like the unceremonious “coo-and-squat” now-dead-bird they almost always were this whole season. Fortunately for the Boston fans who care about the club’s history and esteem, the Sox’ last 9-5 loss to the Yankees did not hurt them in their desire to finish with a better record than the Houston Astros, who also lost their last season test in New York to the Mets by 8-3.

The double loss by both contending teams allowed the Boston Red Sox to finish 2014 a full game better than the Houston Astros. That minor fact permitted the Red Sox the luxury of escaping this recently trumpeted ignominy of becoming the first fallen World Series winner from the previous year to finish worse in the following season than a club that had lost 111 games during their most recent championship run.

Still, when all is said and done, and avoiding the precisely stated  negative record notwithstanding, a previous season World Series champion that only beats out a 111-game losing foe by one game the following season, is not saying anything that could be mistaken for inspiration by its fans.

REVERSE FORTUNES
GAMES LEFT
WON LOST PCT. GAMES BEHIND
BOSTON RED SOX     0
 71  91 .438       
HOUSTON ASTROS     0
 70  92 .432        1

SCORES OF GAMES PLAYED SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2014:

NEW YORK (AL) 9 – BOSTON 5.

 NEW YORK (NL) 8 – HOUSTON 3.

SCHEDULE OF GAMES FOR MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2014:

NONE. REGULAR SEASON HAS ENDED.

 

Sox Clinch Astro Tie! Batting Title on line Today!

September 28, 2014

red-sox-lose6

BOSTON CLINCHES TIE WITH HOUSTON!

The Boston Red Sox can no longer finish worse than the Houston Astros. Their 10-4 Saturday home win against the Yankees was followed by a bottom of the 9th walk off, 2-outs, 2-run homer by Lucas Duda that handed the Astros a 2-1 loss to the Mets, giving  the New Englanders a full game lead over Houston with each team down to their final season games against the same foes today. The worst the Red Sox can do now is allow a tie by losing on Sunday as the Astros win. A win by the Sox, or a loss by the ‘Stros, in today’s season concluding games prevents even the shortcoming of a tie between last year’s champions and the recently as 2013 111-loss dregs of baseball.

REVERSE FORTUNES
GAMES LEFT
WON LOST PCT. GAMES BEHIND
BOSTON RED SOX     1
 71  90 .441       
HOUSTON ASTROS     1
 70  91 .435        1

SCORES OF GAMES PLAYED SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2014:

BOSTON 10 – NEW YORK (AL) 4.

 NEW YORK (NL) 2 – HOUSTON 1.

SCHEDULE OF GAMES FOR SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2014:

NEW YORK (AL) @ BOSTON

HOUSTON @ NEW YORK (NL)

 ________________________________________________________

Jose Altuve

Jose Altuve

THE PECAN PARK EAGLE DAILY MLB 2014 BATTING CROWN EYE:

CONTENDERS TEAM THRU GAME DATE GAMES LEFT AT BATS 2014 HITS   CURRENT BATTING AVERAGE
ALTUVE ASTROS 9/27 1   656 223 .340
MARTINEZ   TIGERS 9/27 1 558 188 .337

ALTUVE AND MARTINEZ NOW SEPARATED BY ONLY .OO3 PERCENTAGE POINTS FOR AL AND MLB BATTING TITLES!

NOTES, 9/28 AM: Sunday morning. – Wouldn’t you just know this was coming? Jose Altuve went “0 for 4” on Saturday while Victor Martinez of the Tigers went for “1 for 2” in his team’s 12-3 loss to the Twins. With the final games for each batting title contender coming up today, Altuve’s lead over Martinez has slipped to only .003 points. An unfortunate  repeat of today’s performances could hand the AL and MLB overall batting titles to “Tiger Vic.”

C’mon Jose! – You can still win it all! – All you have to do is hit like Jose’ Altuve in high gear on Sunday!

_________________________________________________________

Red Sox Fall! Altuve Holds! Astros Prevail!

September 27, 2014
RED SOX FANS: "WE GOTTA FIND A WAY TO BLAME 2014 ON SOME GUY LIKE HARRY FRAZEE OR BUCKY 'F-N' DENT!"

RED SOX FANS: “WE GOTTA FIND A WAY TO BLAME THE 2014 SEASON ON SOME GUY LIKE HARRY FRAZEE OR BUCKY ‘F-N’ DENT!”

ASTROS TIE RED SOX WITH 2 GAMES TO GO!

Harry Frazee: The Red Sox owner who sold Babe Ruth to the Yankees.

Harry Frazee: The Red Sox owner who sold Babe Ruth to the Yankees.

 The Houston Astros pulled back into a tie with the Boston Red Sox in their “Reversal of Fortunes” battle for the better record in 2014 by downing the New York Mets, 3-1, as the BoSox were getting nipped by their old “Evil Empire” enemies, the New York Yankees, by 3-2. Apparently the Red Sox became so enraptured by their own separation anxieties from all the Fenway Farewells to a retiring arch-foe from New York named Derek Jeter, that they failed to keep their minds as a team upon winning. – One could make the argument that Boston’s inability to focus and follow through on winning Friday night was not unusual for the Sox in 2014 – and that  their 90th club loss on the year had little to do with their heartache over the thought of Derek Jeter retiring.

With two games to go, the Houston Astros still have a good chance of finishing 2014 as the first 111-loss team of the previous season to come back and finish the following year with a better record than the club that won the World Series that also recent time.

As we keep asking of you – stay tuned! – We’re almost there. – This weekend settles this little baseball match question and others.

REVERSE FORTUNES
GAMES LEFT
WON LOST PCT. GAMES BEHIND
BOSTON RED SOX     2
 70  90 .438       
HOUSTON ASTROS     2
 70  90 .438        –

SCORES OF GAMES PLAYED FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2014:

NEW YORK (AL) 3 – BOSTON 2.

HOUSTON 3 – NEW YORK (NL) 1.

SCHEDULE OF GAME FOR SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2014:

NEW YORK (AL) @ BOSTON

HOUSTON @ NEW YORK (NL)

 ________________________________________________________

THE PECAN PARK EAGLE DAILY MLB 2014 BATTING CROWN EYE:

CONTENDERS TEAM THRU GAME DATE GAMES LEFT AT BATS 2014 HITS   CURRENT BATTING AVERAGE
ALTUVE ASTROS 9/26 2   652 223 .342
MARTINEZ   TIGERS 9/26 2 556 187 .336

NOTES, 9/27 AM: Saturday morning. – “…and down the stretch they come!”

As both Jose Altuve and Victor Martinez spent Friday night games on “1 for 4” results against the Twins and Mets, they each dropped a batting average point, but maintained their .006 point differential in the Astro leader’s favor. Jose Altuve’s  .342 to Victor Martinez’s .336 now looms slightly larger with only two games left to play for both contenders. If they again play “match ’em” statistical games today against their same foes, it’s probably as close to being over as things can be without the final nail that strikes at the end of Sunday’s Game 162. – Get your binoculars on the track as they rumble toward the finish line.

The Eagle Eye on Jose Altuve’s pursuit of the 2014 American League and MLB batting average championships will continue daily through the balance of the season. For now, it’s a two-man race between Altuve and Victor Martinez of the Detroit Tigers. Should that change, so will our reporting format. – Bill McCurdy

_________________________________________________________

ASTROS WIN UNOFFICIAL 2014 SECOND SILVER BOOT TROPHY!

On the heels of a 3-1 Houston win in Flushing over the Mets, a later concluding 6-2 home loss by the Rangers to Oakland served only as decorative testimony to the fact that the Astros have now clinched a better overall record for the season than is now possible for Texas with two games remaining. The Pecan Park Eagle, hereby, awards the Unofficial 2014 Second Silver Boot Trophy to the Houston Astros for getting the job done. With two games remaining for each club to play against the Mets and Athletics, the Astros now hold an insurmountable four-game lead over the Rangers.

This is all there is to the Silver Boot No. 2 Award, but we guess in this instance that it is the thought that counts.

Congratulations, Astros!

Here’s how things look now that this hardly noticed race has been decided:

SILVER BOOT II   WON   LOST   PCT.   GB   GL
HOUSTON   70   90   .438   ~   2
 X-TEXAS   66   94   .413   4   2

X = Texas is now eliminated on 9/26/14 in the competition between the two Texas teams for best overall season record in 2014. There will be no further reports in these columns that hardly mattered in the first place.

_______________________________________________________

BoSox Up Lead; Martinez Zooms; Rangers Win

September 26, 2014
"ALRIGHT! ~ ALRIGHT! ~ ALRIGHT!"

“ALRIGHT! ~ ALRIGHT! ~ ALRIGHT!”

The Boston Red Sox used their second win in a row on Thursday to expand their lead to one full game over the Houston Astros in the “Reversal of Fortunes” race. Starting tonight, Boston will entertain the Yankees and retiring star Derek Jeter at Fenway for three game while Houston closes with three in Flushing against the Mets. In the middle of the down-slide, BoSox fans can smile a little more this morning. The long season is almost over. Then it will be time for rest, and for the club to develop A  fresh perspective on what the club needs to do to recover from what has amounted to an almost complete collapse.

Whether they beat out the Red Sox for a better 2014 record, or not, the Astros can take some comfort in the sense that the club has now stopped the bleeding streak of three straight 100 plus loss seasons going into 2014. Now we need to see who the Astros hire as their next full-time field manager for 2015. It will also be interesting to see who gets protected on the forty-man roster. Both are much more involved stories for another day beyond the finish of the present season. Time and space are still the allies to fresh perspective.

REVERSE FORTUNES
GAMES LEFT
WON LOST PCT. GAMES BEHIND
BOSTON RED SOX     3
 70  89 .440       
HOUSTON ASTROS     3  69  90 .434        1.0

SCORES OF GAMES PLAYED THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014:

BOSTON 9 – TAMPA BAY 1.

HOUSTON, DID NOT PLAY.

SCHEDULE OF GAME FOR FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2014:

NEW YORK (AL) @ BOSTON

HOUSTON @ NEW YORK (NL)

 ________________________________________________________

THE PECAN PARK EAGLE DAILY MLB 2014 BATTING CROWN EYE:

CONTENDERS TEAM THRU GAME DATE GAMES LEFT AT BATS 2014 HITS   CURRENT BATTING AVERAGE
ALTUVE ASTROS 9/25 3   648 222 .343
MARTINEZ   TIGERS 9/25 3 552 186 .337

NOTES, 9/26 AM: Friday morning. –With Jose Altuve taking a day off with the Astros as they travel to New York to finish the season with games there against the Mets, Victor Martinez of the Tigers took full advantage of the situation by going “3 for4” against the Minnesota Twins at Comerica Park to help his club to a 4-2 victory in the first of a four-game season-ending weekend series. Victor’s three hits included his 32nd HR of the season in the first inning and later in the game, his 33rd double of the year. Martinez’s big crank on the pressure vice raises his batting average to .337 for a .003 point gain in one game on Jose Altuve t- a gain that leaves the Tiger contender only .006 points back of the .343 mark of the idle Astro slugger for the 2014 American League and MLB total batting average titles.

By having his big night, Martinez did what he had to do to make this weekend the contest we always knew it might turn out to be. Now a bad series by Altuve in New York could fumble away the batting titles goal to the Detroit Tiger star and deprive Houston of its first batting champion of all time. Yeah, we know. The Pecan Park Eagle is biased in favor of our Astro homeboy, but try to see our point of view on our need for this accomplishment as something of a compensation while our Astros club fights to find its way out of these sacrificial doldrum years. After all, it’s not like Detroit has never seen a local batting champion in their many years of competition. – If they get it again, they will have earned it by a tremendous last minute push of heart and talent by Victor Martinez, but we like our guy’s chances with a .007 lead and all the chips on the table in these last three ball games. If Jose Altuve continues to hit like Jose Altuve of 2014 for one final three game weekend series, there will be no chance for Victor Martinez to catch him,

Go. Jose’. go! – Just hit, baby!

The Eagle Eye on Jose Altuve’s pursuit of the 2014 American League and MLB batting average championships will continue daily through the balance of the season. For now, it’s a two-man race between Altuve and Victor Martinez of the Detroit Tigers. Should that change, so will our reporting format. – Bill McCurdy

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The Unofficial Silver Boot II competition between the two State of Texas based MLB teams, the Houston Astros and the Texas Rangers, comes down to a long shot weekend for a tie as the highest possibility for the Rangers that would deny the Astros the honor by the rules governing same record finishes. “In the event of ties, no Silver Boot II Award will be given out by its sponsor, The Pecan Park Eagle.  No great or lasting disappointment is expected, anyway, since the award itself is little more than a digital congratulation a time-relevant future column.

In our case, it’s the thought behind the Silver Boot II Award that counts. The Houston Astros already have wrapped up the Official Silver Boot Award and Trophy by taking the personal 2014 head-to-head series with Rangers earlier, in spite of getting swept by Texas in that last series in Arlington. All that sweep did was position the Rangers for a possible tie by season’s end. And to keep that possibility alive, the Rangers defeated the A’s tonight, 2-1, in Arlington.

As we noted earlier in this column, the Astros are in New York to finish the season with three games against the home team Mets, starting tonight. The Rangers play three more at home, also from tonight through Sunday, against Oakland.  Any win by the Astros or loss by the Rangers will give the Astros the not-so-coveted and totally figurative second Silver Boot.

Here’s how things look in this half-baked race:

SILVER BOOT II   WON   LOST   PCT.   GB   GL
HOUSTON   69   90   ..434   ~   3
TEXAS   66   93   ..415   3   3

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Have a nice Saturday, everybody!

Red Sox Gain Lead Over Astros

September 25, 2014
"HEY, HOUSTON! - IT AIN'T OVER TIL IT'S OVER!"

“HEY, HOUSTON! – IT AIN’T OVER TIL IT’S OVER!”

Just as the Red Sox were about to be wheeled to the baseball coroner for a complete season autopsy, the KG machine suddenly detected the steady beeps of a living heart. As the Astros fell again to the Rangers on Wednesday night, the BoSox woke up some echoes of their own fighting Irish background and took the old shillelagh to the Tampa Bay Rays by 11-3. As a total result of yesterday’s games, the Red Sox have moved into a half game head over the Astros and a chance to stay there by winning out over their final four games at home against the Rays (1) and Yankees (3). “4” is now the magic number for Boston. Any combination of four Red Sox wins or Astros losses – and Boston escapes the minor ignominy of becoming the former World Champion that finished 2014 with a worse record than the Astros club that lost 111 games in 2013.

REVERSE FORTUNES
GAMES LEFT
WON LOST PCT. GAMES BEHIND
BOSTON RED SOX     4  69  89 .437       
HOUSTON ASTROS     3  69  90 .434        0.5

SCORES OF GAMES PLAYED WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2014:

TEXAS 5 – HOUSTON 1.

BOSTON 11 – TAMPA BAY 3.

SCHEDULE OF GAME FOR THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014:

TAMPA BAY @ BOSTON

HOUSTON, NO GAME SCHEDULED

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THE PECAN PARK EAGLE DAILY MLB 2014 BATTING CROWN EYE:

CONTENDERS TEAM THRU GAME DATE GAMES LEFT AT BATS 2014 HITS   CURRENT BATTING AVERAGE
ALTUVE ASTROS 9/24 3   648 222 .343
MARTINEZ   TIGERS 9/24 4 548 183 .334

NOTES, 9/25 AM: Wednesday morning. – Jose Altuve bagged a single in the first inning on the first he saw Wednesday night at Arlington on the way to a “1 for 3” evening that kept his MLB batting average at .343 in the Astros final 5-1 losing game to the Texas Rangers. Meanwhile, Victor Martinez of the Tigers went “0 for 2” at home in Detroit’s 6-1 victory over the White Sox that dropped season batting average to .334. Martinez now trails Altuve by .009 points in the batting race. Martinez and the Tiger have four more home games left against the Twins, starting tonight. Altuve and the Astros have a three game series left in New York against the Mets, beginning tomorrow, Friday, 9/26, but they have today off for travel.

Altuve’s slight percentage gain over Martinez going into the final series weekend for all clubs has prospects and hopes soaring for a first MLB bating championships by an Astro, but let’s take nothing for granted. A sudden hit explosion by Martinez over his last four games and a total shutdown of Altuve in his last three games in New York could still upset the apple cart.

In other words, you Astro fans with presumptuous voodoo powers need to keep your mojos working through this coming Sunday.

The Eagle Eye on Jose Altuve’s pursuit of the 2014 American League and MLB batting average championships will continue daily through the balance of the season. For now, it’s a two-man race between Altuve and Victor Martinez of the Detroit Tigers. Should that change, so will our reporting format. – Bill McCurdy

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A SILVER BOOT LONE STAR SALUTE, PART 11:

While we’re watching a real battle title contest and the imaginary race between Houston and Boston, we need to call to mind one fantasy fight for Astros fans looking for something to cheer about. This one came to be as a result of the Texas Ranger sweep of the Houston Astros in the just concluded last night, three-game series in Arlington. The Astros went into that last 214 meeting between our two Texas MLB teams with a fairly safe 6.5 game lead over the recently high-flying Rangers and an already claimed recapture of the “Silver Boot Trophy” for having already clinched a winning record in their head-to head meetings this season, but they must have forgotten about the unofficial “Silver Boot Lone Star Salute, Part II” that goes to the Texas team finishing with the best overall record for the season.

The Ranger sweep of the Astros leaves the latter with only a 3.5 game lead and three more games to play on the road this coming weekend against the New York Mets. The Rangers, on the other hand, begin a four-game series at home tonight against the Oakland A’s to wrap up their 2014 schedule.

One win by the Astros, or one loss by the Rangers, and Houston clinches the better overall season record and the “Silver Boot Lone Star Salute, Part II” that shall be awarded by The Pecan Park Eagle in this column whenever it happens as a purely digital tip of the old cap. On the other hand, should the Astros lose all three of their games in New York while the Rangers win all four of their home games, the two clubs will finish in a dead heat tie with no possibility of a playoff for an award that fails to exist in any official capacity in the first place.

Here are the standings in a two-club fever pitch (not really) race that could be over with a loss today by Texas at home to the visiting Oakland club:

SILVER BOOT II
  GAMES LEFT
  WON   LOST   PCT. GAMES BEHIND
HOUSTON ASTROS       3    69    90   .434        –
TEXAS RANGERS       4    65    93   .411        3.5

SCORES OF GAMES PLAYED WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2014:

TEXAS 5 – HOUSTON 1.

SCHEDULE OF GAME FOR THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014:

OAKLAND @ TEXAS

HOUSTON, NO GAME SCHEDULED

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1st to Worse-Than-Astros Mark in Reach of BoSox

September 24, 2014
"NUTS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"

“NUTS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”

The Pecan Park Eagle isn’t trying to beat a dead horse here. This one is still snorting, even though it’s now laying on its side, foaming at the mouth, and whimpering in ways that cause its once fire-breathing nostrils to vibrate in sounds of gurgling agony. – It’s simply a fact. The 111-loss from 2013 Houston Astros are on the brink of finishing with a better record in 2014 than the 2013 Champions of the World Series and all of organized baseball, the Boston Red Sox. In the history of major league baseball, it could result for the BoSox as the most graphically worst collapse from the stick ball throne since the beginning of baseball or time itself, depending upon which of these earmarks came first.

The 1914 to 1915 Philadelphia Athletics experienced the worst percentage downgrade for a league champion in a single season, but they were not the defending  World Series champions, having lost to the 1914 miracle team, the Boston Braves, that year before crashing to 8th and last place in the American League in 1915. In the melee of that collapse, the A’s went from a winning percentage of .651 in 1914 to a low of .283 in 1915. That “first to worst” finish added up to a winning percentage loss of .368 points. The 2014 last place Cleveland Naps lost 102 games that season, finishing 48.5 games behind the league-champion Red Sox. The very next  year, those essentially the same Clevelanders finished in 7th place –  a full 14 games ahead of the former champion Bostonians who now resided in the AL’s  last place in 2015.

The famous one-year Philadelphia fold from 1914-15 has been covered with a literary blanket over the years as the crash that came from A’s owner/manager Connie Mack selling off his “Million Dollar Infield” after the 1914 World Series loss for the sake of balancing his operational budget.

So, as we said yesterday, the Red Sox will not escape the infamy that will come from losing closely to the Astros in 2015 by saving a tie or close better record. They still will face accountability for their disappointing finish in the same 2014 neighborhood of the rebuilding Astros – no matter how they exactly complete the season by comparison. Was this New England failure the result of ripe playing stars who were allowed to go elsewhere in 2015 because of the club’s unwillingness to compete with the 2015 teams that signed them? – And how much did aging of the over-ripe players who remained in Boston kick into the fall?

A better record for the Astros in relation to the Red Sox in 2015 simply seals the deal for some kind of successfully diagnosed  big change in Boston’s roster or their way of doing things in 2015. – Otherwise, “2013” could grow to mean over time in the 21st century the roughly same thing that “1918” meant to Boston fans in the 20th century, starting with their fall from a World Series victory in 1918 to a 6th place finish in 1919 and the start of a championship drought that would come to be recognized by Boston fans as a “curse” for the next 86 years.

Of course, there is one bright side for Red Sox fans in late 2014. The Red Sox don’t have another Babe Ruth to give away to the Yankees over the course of the next year, or so. The least the Red Sox can do now is – try to keep from becoming the first World Series champion to finish behind a club that just finished its third straight year as a 100 plus games loser and also a club with the worst record in baseball in 2013 with 111 losses.

Beating out the Astros for best season record won’t spare the Red Sox players from their current doldrums, but it may help player, management, ownership, and fan pride a little. After all, who wants to be the former champs who lost out to one one of the biggest loser dynasties in baseball history?

Have a pleasant Hump Day, Astros and Red Sox fans!

REVERSE FORTUNES
GAMES LEFT
WON LOST PCT. GAMES BEHIND
HOUSTON ASTROS     4  69  89 .437        –
BOSTON RED SOX     5  68  89 .433        0.5

SCORES OF GAMES PLAYED TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2014:

TEXAS 2 – HOUSTON 1.

TAMPA BAY 6 – BOSTON 2.

SCHEDULE OF GAME FOR WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2014:

HOUSTON @ TEXAS

TAMPA BAY @ BOSTON

 

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THE PECAN PARK EAGLE DAILY MLB 2014 BATTING CROWN EYE:

CONTENDERS TEAM THRU GAME DATE GAMES LEFT AT BATS 2014 HITS CURRENT BATTING AVERAGE
ALTUVE ASTROS 9/23 4 645 221 .343
MARTINEZ TIGERS 9/23 5 546 183 .335

NOTES, 9/24 AM: Wednesday morning. – Jose Altuve had a “0 for 4″ game Tuesday on top of the “1 for 4” numbers he put up on Monday. That “1 for 8” in the first two games @ Texas has dropped his average to .343 with four road games left in the season. At Comerica Park in Detroit, meanwhile, Victor Martinez of the Tigers went “0 for 2” against he White Sox to drop his second best average in the big leagues to .335. Altuve’s outs last night included and a looping infield pop to short and three can of corn fly balls.

Stuff happens.

Moving closer to the end of the season, nothing is settled in the race for the batting title. Altuve’s .011 margin of this past weekend has now shrunk three points to .008.  Hopefully, from our Astros fans perspective, Jose Altuve will have a good getaway day in the final Rangers game today, Wednesday, before the club gets on the plane for New York and the final three games of this season against the Mets. Thursday will be an off-day for the Astros.

The Eagle Eye on Jose Altuve’s pursuit of the 2014 American League and MLB batting average championships will continue daily through the balance of the season. For now, it’s a two-man race between Altuve and Victor Martinez of the Detroit Tigers. Should that change, so will our reporting format. – Bill McCurdy

One for the 2016 NE Sports History Calendar

September 23, 2014
Red Sox manager John Farrell admires the 2013 World Series trophy that his Boston club won from the St. Louis Cardinals. - What kind of trophy is in store for the BoSox for finishing worse, tying, or barely doing better than the Houston Astros in 2014?

Red Sox manager John Farrell admires the 2013 World Series trophy that his Boston club won from the St. Louis Cardinals. – What kind of trophy is in store for the BoSox for finishing worse, tying, or barely doing better than the Houston Astros in 2014?

If this one happens, and even it doesn’t and just comes close, here’s a burgeoning new growing fact that deserves a date in the 2016 New England Sports History calendar. We will offer two quick reads here  on how the copy may read, depending upon the outcome of the still-in-progress item we have in mind. – And thank you again, Bill Gilbert, for calling this one to our conscious attention. The Eagle has been so caught up in the Jose Altuve batting championship and new club record hit total arena report that we almost allowed this blockbuster reversal of fortune for the Houston Astros and Boston Red Sox race to pass us by.

Consider that sad neglect of the fact now corrected – as these three possible calendar entries pan out as the only possibilities on the loose, but all still shocking in their own rights, triangulated result possibilities that exist comparatively for the two of them here in the end of days shadows-time of 2014 ML baseball:

Sunday, 9/28/14: The defending 2013 World Seies Champion Boston Red Sox finished the season with a worse 2014 record than the Houston Astros, a club that had primed for this “David Passes Goliath” experience by losing 106 games in 2011, 107 games in 2012, and 111 games in 2013 – for the worst records in MLB on the season for three straight years.

The other two variations on this entry would simply change the outcome reference to the Astros “tying” or ” barely losing out” to the now descending 2013 former champs from Boston.

What a scream this ironic change in directions for both teams reveals itself to be in the same year. For the first time since 2010, the Astros will not loss 100 games in the 2014 season. And for the Red Sox, let’s hope for their modest and charitable fans’ sake that “2013” doesn’t become the new “1918” for their 21st century experience. Too many nice Red Sox fans like Father Gerald Beirne are counting on that so-not-happening as the club’s road map to the near future.

The Astros have two more games in Arlington as they continue against the Texas Rangers tonight and Wednesday. Following a Thursday day off, the Astros finish the season in New York with a three-game series against the Mets. The Red Sox  have six game to go at Fenway, beginning with a three-game series tonight against the Tampa Bay Rays, followed by another three-game set on the last weekend with their old pals, the New York Yankees.

Here’s how the two-club standings print out through all games played by this time in the morning of Tuesday, 9/23/14:

REVERSE FORTUNES LEAGUE GAMES LEFT
WON LOST PCT. GAMES BEHIND
HOUSTON ASTROS     5  69  88 .439        –
BOSTON RED SOX     6  68  88 .4.36        0.5

SCORES OF GAMES PLAYED MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2014:

TEXAS 4 – HOUSTON 3.

BOSTON (DID NOT PLAY).

SCHEDULE OF GAME FOR TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2014:

HOUSTON @ TEXAS

TAMPA BAY @ BOSTON

 

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THE PECAN PARK EAGLE DAILY MLB 2014 BATTING CROWN EYE:

CONTENDERS TEAM THRU GAME DATE GAMES LEFT AT BATS 2014 HITS CURRENT BATTING AVERAGE
ALTUVE ASTROS 9/22 5 641 221 .345
MARTINEZ TIGERS 9/22 6 544 183 .336

NOTES, 9/23 AM: Tuesday morning. – Jose Altuve had a “1 for 4” game on the road as the Astros lost a 4-3 squeaker to the Texas Rangers in Arlington. Altuve’s one hit produced his 46th double of the season, but his batting average took a miniscule slip to .34477 that still rounded nicely to .345. At Comerica Park in Detroit, the Tigers hosted, but got toasted by the Chicago White Sox, 2-0, as Victor Martinez still had a perfect day with two singles and a walk for the losers. Martinez raised his batting average a couple of points to .336, pulling himself to within .009 of MLB leader Altuve. – As we head down the stretch (with yet another model analogy of things measured by results over time) anything is still possible in these final days.

The Eagle Eye on Jose Altuve’s pursuit of the 2014 American League and MLB batting average championships will continue daily through the balance of the season. For now, it’s a two-man race between Altuve and Victor Martinez of the Detroit Tigers. Should that change, so will our reporting format. – Bill McCurdy