Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Your Cheatin’ Heart – Left a Smell on You

February 4, 2017

“Our sleep will not come
Til we know you’re through
Your cheatin’ heart – left a smell on you…”

“Your Cheatin’ Heart”

A Parody dedicated to the Memory of Information Cheaters Everywhere

By Bill McCurdy

 

Your cheatin’ heart
Has made  us weep
We cry and cry
But what the bleep
Our sleep will not come
Til we know you’re through
Your cheatin’ heart – left a smell on you…

Player files roll down
Like fallin’ rain
We toss them ’round
And curse your name
You’ll walk the floor
Tryin’ to lose that pew
But your cheatin’ heart – left a smell on you…

Your cheatin’ heart
Gets your mind some day
You’ll crave the love
That you threw away
The time’s gonna come
When your face turns blue
But that real bad smell’s – gonna still be you…

When the facts come down
From that digital brain
Folks will toss around
Your worthless name
They’ll show you the door
As the Astros do
On your cheatin’ heart – and the smell that’s you…

____________________

Now follow this link to the real story:

The Cardinals’ Hacking Scandal Stands Alone In The History Of Cheating In Baseball

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

SB51: Haven’t Been There; Don’t Need to Go

February 3, 2017

51-jpg-859be1e57ed7be1310f4ca463d5bf9d9

SB51: Haven’t Been There; Don’t Need To Go

Ah, The Super Bowl! Like many of you with enough age behind you – and enough sports fan compulsivity about you – it’s easy to declare that we’ve seen all fifty that have been played, so far, and that we will likely see SB51 – the third to be played in Houston – if we don’t keel over in the brief meanwhile.

We’ll see this one to – the same way we saw all others – and that is, of course, on television. The difference now is that even we average fans could see the game better live at the stadium. Those smaller, grainy picture screens that we used for TV during most of this half century period gave us a pretty good perspective on where the ball was being moved by the offenses, but we had to watch the plays in that fuzzy era of lined picture screens that ribboned the mind with one fairly consistent universal experience and conclusion:  That is, to say, “we would never pay to watch a big screen movie at the theater, if this were the best picture quality they could bring us.

Then, in recent years,  came high definition, digital pixel quality television and many of us devotees of the home screen suddenly realized, at last, that we now owned the better hand on picture quality. The home screen quality was now bigger, richer, clearer, and brilliant in its capacity to expose the human eye and soul to direct light colors that strike our emotions and imaginations much more deeply than the faded movie film colors of the same action on the formerly called “big screen”. – Big screen? – With the health safety that also comes from these new gigantic HD digital TV screens, we may sit as close as we choose to the new big eye on the world at home and enjoy the biggest wraparound viewing experience on the new vivid picture home windows of the simultaneously quite inviting and most foreboding world of the early 21st century.

Our family went to see the NFL Texans play once in 2013 and had to settle for expensive tickets in the south rafters of that end zone for the experience of watching the locals lose to the Oakland Raiders. Most of the game, we watched the action on NRG’s so-called “big screen” simply so we could actually see how each play effected field position. We could have watched the same game on the big screen at home much more comfortably – in underwear and easy chairs, if we so desired. And we do so desire. At least this ancient Papa Bear does. – And, as the bonus – I never have to worry at home about someone standing up in front of me just in time to cover up the biggest plays of the game.

Some of the movie theaters are also getting hip to the message about the growing demand for comfort at the viewing venue. The Cinemark multiple screen theater now offers seating in wide recliners, and they’ve added buffer walls that block viewers from the distraction of OCD people seated in front of you who feel compelled to keep checking their social media site connections throughout the movie. The only problem is – they still will not let theater-goers watch movies in their underwear as they surely might choose to do so at home. For the sake of salvaging some modicum of civility and respect for privacy, that’s probably a good idea.

The final nutshell.

pecan-park-logo

Take it to the bank. If I’m still vertical and breathing the intoxicating sweet air of this beautiful energizing world on Sunday, I will be watching my 51st consecutive Super Bowl. And like the fifty special NFL championship games that have passed before it, I shall, like so many of you, be watching it on a nice sized home screen HD digital pixels television receiver.

My personal record of never having seen a Super Bowl in person with the much over-rated naked eye shall remain intact. – Haven’t been there. Don’t need to go.

Have fun at the big game, everybody – in whatever way that pleases you, if you’re interested at all. If not, there is still a pretty rich reward out there called reading for those whose HD clarity finds its greatest resolution of imagination in the wonderful theater of the mind.

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

UH Cougar Football Panel is Feb. 8th

February 2, 2017

astrodome-uh

The Heritage Society is planning to honor the history of UH Cougar Football next Wed., Feb. 8th, with a program at their place downtown. Read the email from Mike Vance that follows. This wonderfully planned event should be more than enough to attract all deep red-blooded Cougars to the 7:00 pm – 8:30 PM panel presentation and exhibit.

Here’s the way Heritage Society Program Director Mike Vance depicted the event in his e-mail to our attention:

Hi, everyone!I wanted to let you know about the UH football history panel discussion on Wednesday, February 8 at the Heritage Society, 1100 Bagby downtown, from 7 to 8:30 PM. It’s part of the events being done in conjunction with our Bayou City Blitz: The History of Houston Football that is up in our Museum. It is a terrific exhibit and runs through April 29.

Most importantly, we want to be sure there are lots of Cougars faithful who come see the event on February 8. So far the lineup is: Craig Roberts, moderator; Ted Pardee; Chuck Brown; Jerry Drones and author Bob Jacobus who has written at least two books on Cougar athletics history. We are looking to add one more former player, so there might be more. The talk will all be about UH football, including questions from the audience.

For that night, we will leave the Museum open late, so people can come explore the exhibit before they cross our Connally Plaza and go into the panel discussion which will be held in our Tea Room. That is the wooden building that fronts on Bagby.

We held the first panel last week with six former Oilers players, and it was just terrific. We want this to do the same for those who love UH football. Please spread the word

Thanks much,

Mike Vance

www.heritagesociety.org

713.655.1912 x113

1100 Bagby

Houston, TX 77002
____________________

This note arrive later from Mike Vance. – Great Cougar running back Alois Blackwell has been added to the panel of of UH football people who will be there next Wednesday night.
See you next week – and …. “Eat ‘Em Up”, Cougars!
“In Time …. UH …. In Time!”
____________________
eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Dierker’s No-No Now Available on CD

February 1, 2017
Larry Dierker of the Houston Astros No-Hit win over Montreal in the Astrodome Juns 9, 1976

Larry Dierker of the Houston Astros Wins 6-0!
No-Hit win over Montreal in the Astrodome!
July 9, 1976

 

larry_dierker_no-hitter Last night we learned from reader Stan Opdyke that the Larry Dierker 6-0 no-hitter over the Montreal Expos at the Astrodome on July 9, 1976 is now available on CD at Baseball Direct.com for $19.95. The CD covers the game broadcast, handled that day by Gene Elston, Loel Passe, and Bob Prince, the long-time Pittsburgh broadcaster who was only with Houston that single season.

The Dierker CD is new to the public, but Stan cautions that fans interested in acquiring this little gem of Astros history should not dally about the placement of their order. Opdyke says that John Miley, the producer of these items, is sometimes a little capricious about how long he makes certain pieces available and has been known to pull some things off the market for no apparent reason very early in their sales history – and with no guarantee when, if ever, they shall return. for sale. We have no profit interest in the sale of these items so please do not take this warning as your typical Internet “going out of business sale” market hustle.

Just don’t wait too long to make your purchase decision.

Here’s the purchase link to the item, if you are interested:

http://www.baseballdirect.com/broadcasts2.html#1970

Down that page, you will find the Dierker item listed as follows:

1976
July 9
Houston 6, Montreal 0. Dierker hurls no-hitter against Expos in Astrodome. (Elston, Passe, Prince)
#3209

Simply go from there with the easy-to-follow order placement instructions.

As always. Have fun.

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

 

1st Bob Allen Open for Sunshine Kids is a Hit

February 1, 2017
Every story about rhe Sunshine Kids begins and ends with a smile from Hall of Famer Craig Biggio. Photo by Mike McCroskey

Every story about The Sunshine Kids begins and ends with a smile from Hall of Famer and former Houston Astro, Craig Biggio.
Photo by Mike McCroskey

1st Annual Bob Allen Open Benefit for Sunshine Kids is a Hit

 By Mike McCroskey

Cub Reporter

The Pecan Park Eagle

The first annual Bob Allen Open at the Top Golf driving range on the far north side on Sunday, January 30, 2017, and was a big hit with everyone involved. Held for the benefit of the Sunshine Kids is now in the books as a good time for all, and nice contribution of change to the programs supporting the smiles of Houston kids battling major childhood illness.

Named for the iconic Houston sports broadcaster Bob Allen, who died in 2016 from cancer, his memory now serves through this new program what his actions always supported in life for over thirty years, and that is, programs for children with major special needs for love beyond the pale of smiles and shoulder pats alone.

At the suggestion of fellow SABR  (Society for American Baseball Research) member, newly retired Astros Broadcaster, Bill Brown, I decided to attend the first annual program this past Sunday evening.  Now I would like to thank Mr. Brown for encouraging me to attend an event that was literally a very casual, fun-filled evening, one, which also served a worthwhile purpose. I saw a bevy of former SABR speakers, many baseball friends, plus I got to meet some new ones.

I arrived as Hall of Famer Craig Biggio was thanking the crowd for attending and supporting the event.  Former Astros Larry Dierker and Art Howe were standing to one side; former Oiler quarterback, Dan Pastorini was also nearby, listening to Biggio.

During the playful driving range competition, we guests were teamed in groups of six, with one celebrity per team. I was fortunate enough to be in a group with Rita Suchma, a former Astros employee who has been the Director of Development for the Sunshine Kids Foundation since the beginning of 2009.

Rita also was in charge of this fundraiser. It was in her history to do so. She actually began her special relationship with the Sunshine Kids over 15 years ago, while working with the Houston Astros as Director of Community Relations. During that early period, she was then the club liaison to the Sunshine Kids, and she spent a lot of time working with Craig and Patty Biggio on many of the Kids’ ballpark visits and holiday parties.

Rita Suchma made everyone in the group feel welcome.

Former Houston Rocket Robert Reid and Mike McCroskey Photo by Mike McCroskey

Former Houston Rocket Robert Reid and Mike McCroskey
Photo by Mike McCroskey

If that weren’t enough, our celebrity team captain was former NBA Houston Rocket Robert Reid, who, at 61, hasn’t slowed down a bit. With his wife and 17 year old daughter in attendance also Reid was loose, relaxed and a barrel of laughs.

Our group had quite a bit of fun, although no one really figured out until close to the end of the second game, just what we were supposed to be doing, other than hitting a golf ball.

Houston Astro A.J. Reed and Mike McCroskey Photo by Mike McCroskey

Houston Astro A.J. Reed and Mike McCroskey
Photo by Mike McCroskey

We were flanked on one side by announcer Kevin Eschenfelder’s team and on the other by Astros first baseman, 23-year-old A.J. Reed and his team. That kid can really pound the ball. He drew a small audience and was creating ooh’s and aah’s with some of his drives that seemed to be headed toward leaving the Top Golf enclosure. Reid also has trimmed down about 25 pounds from last baseball season, and he seems intent on doing his best to make the Astros 25-man MLB roster this year.

In addition, to Bill Brown, I either spoke with, or saw, former SABR speaker/members Phil Garner, Steve Sparks, Julia Morales, and Astros manager A.J. Hinch.

Mike McCroskey and Julia Morales of the Astros Telecast Team on the Roots Network. Photo by McCroskey

Mike McCroskey and Julia Morales of the Astros Telecast Team on the Roots Network.
Photo by McCroskey

While getting a ball signed by Astros ace pitcher Dallas Keuchel, I explained that the last time I got an autographed ball from him at the beginning of the season, he won the Cy Young award.  He laughed and said he hoped this might be an omen for a repeat performance this season.

Mike McCroskey and Astros Pitching Ace Dallas Kuchel Photo by Mike McCroskey

Mike McCroskey and Astros Pitching Ace Dallas Kuechel
Photo by Mike McCroskey

At the end of the event, Bill Brown and Steve Sparks alternated as auctioneers for a live auction.  Steve was excited when he got a high bid for the auction of $1,300.00 for the last bidding item, an autographed Dallas Keuchel game jersey.  Then someone told him that the winner was his wife, and he needed to go pay! Sparks took the news with a priceless look of surprise.

Houston Astros Manager A.J. Hinch, Mike McCroskey, and the driving range beyond them at Top Golf. Photo by Mike McCroskey

Houston Astros Manager A.J. Hinch, Mike McCroskey, and the driving range beyond them at Top Golf.
Photo by Mike McCroskey

All in all, it was a very relaxing, and, I hope, successful, event.  As Rita Suchma noted, there is a lot of stress to go around when you are trying to pull off an event for the first time. She was very grateful for all the celebrities who donated their time for a worthy cause; and, also, to Top Golf for donating their facility for the event.

I shall certainly try to be a participant again next year.

Also, there were plenty of fajitas!

mike-angel

____________________

eagle-0range
Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Two Colt .45 “Post Cards From Texas”

January 31, 2017
DEAR MIKE, HAVING A WONDERFUL TIME! BUT SORRYYOU MISSED OUT ON A.J. HINCH! WISH YOU WERE HERE! MAYBE NEXT TIME! MEANWHILE TAKE CARE, YOUR PALS AT SABR

DEAR MIKE VANCE,
HAVING A WONDERFUL TIME!
BUT SORRY YOU MISSED OUT ON A.J. HINCH!
WISH YOU WERE HERE!
MAYBE NEXT TIME!
MEANWHILE, TAKE CARE,
~ YOUR PALS AT SABR

Check out these two brief film stories of Houston’s first 1962 season as the Colt. .45s. Mike Vance interviewed the featured speakers from that era and then edited the result into an interesting retrospective on those early days of big league baseball in Houston. Friend and colleague Tom Hunter alerted me to these works after reading our most recent column this morning on the first 1962 Colt .45 marketing tour stop in Victoria.

In this Mike Vance two post cards look at Houston’s earliest 1962 moments in the big leagues, Tal Smith, Carl Warwick, and Bob Aspromonte contribute anecdotally to the spontaneously informative content that makes up the ongoing story line. Houston baseball history is the richer for their shared recollections.

Thanks, Mike Vance, for putting together this nice two-part video from your “Post Cards from Texas” series. Had we known about their availability sooner, we would have given them an even earlier shout-out at The Pecan Park Eagle.

Mike Vance is a member of SABR. He also serves full-time as Program Director for the Heritage Society at Sam Houston Park. He is also an extraordinary historian of early Houston and Texas history.

Here is the link to Part I. You will find the continuation link to Part II on your open YouTube menu screen once you’ve finished watching the first part:

Enjoy!

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Colt .45s’ 1st 1962 Marketing Tour Stop

January 30, 2017
Harry Craft First Manager of the 1962 Houston Colt .45s; Last Manager of the 1961 Houston Buffs.

Harry Craft
First Manager of the 1962 Houston Colt .45s;
Last Manager of the 1961 Houston Buffs.

65 Victoria Fans Greet Touring Colt Group

By John Lyons, Advocate Sports Editor

 

Houston’s first major league baseball team, headed by General Manager Paul Richards, Manager Harry Craft, and three seasoned infielders, made a tremendous impression upon a gathering of 65 baseball fans at a luncheon Monday (January 29, 1962) at Carl’s Barbeque Place.

Traveling in an ultra deluxe bus, the group made Victoria its first stop in a tour that will visit 21 cities in 11 days.

Purpose of the caravan is to spread good will and talk up interest in Houston’s major league team throughout Texas, Mexico, and Louisiana.

Morris Frank

Morris Frank

 With Morris Frank, the peerless Master of Ceremonies from Houston as the spokesman, the baseball tro0ps were most warm hearted and cooperative here, creating a wonderful feeling of respect for Victoria and the surrounding area.

“It is a matter of record,” George Kirksey, executive vice-president of the Colts said, “that every major league baseball team depends heavily on patronage from outside the city. All major league clubs, and this includes the New York Yankees, must draw in large numbers from visitors to do well in attendance. We want you to know that we cordially are seeking your patronage and we believe we can afford you the finest accommodations in the majors.”

(Paul) Richards, one of baseball’s most highly respected strategists, was fighting off the affects of an attack of the flu and did not accompany the team as it left here for a night meeting in Corpus Christi.

When introduced, he (Richards) complied with a short talk in which he expressed optimism with the players now on the Colt .45s roster. “We failed to get only two men of those available in the National League (talent) pool last October,” he said, “Our team has a strong nucleus and  we feel that it will make a good competitive showing in the National League. We hope all of you folks come to our games often but we don’t want you to come just to watch the other teams play. W want you to come and cheer for our team.”

(Harry) Craft, who was in the Chicago Cubs’ organization last summer and who finished the season by driving the Houston Buffs into the (AAA) American Association playoffs, said, “I am enjoying myself almost as well here today as on my last visit here. At that time, I was one of the rotating coaches for San Antonio and we swept a series with Victoria just before the Victoria team moved to Ardmore (Oklahoma).”

Craft gave an excellent talk in outlining plans for spring training at Apache Junction, Ariz., and voiced the opinion that Houston would have a strong defensive club. He expressed particular pleasure over the type of team assembled by Houston officials for that city’s venture into the major league ranks.

Houston kicks off its National League schedule at home Apr. 1o against the Chicago Cubs.

The three Houston infielders in the party were Norm Larker, first baseman acquired from Los Angeles; Don Buddin, shortstop acquired from the Boston Red Sox in a trade; and Joe Amalfitano, third baseman bought from San Francisco.

Bob Aspromonte, second baseman purchased from the Los Angeles Dodgers, was to join the party in Corpus Christi Monday night. He attended the annual banquet of the New York writers Sunday night.

Among the baseball personalities in the audience introduced were Tex Shirley, former major league pitcher; Harvey Alex, 20-year old Yorktown (TX) resident who will report to the San Diego club in the Pacific Coast league this spring; Fern Smathers,  a Victoria catcher of two years ago; Lou Rochelli, who managed Victoria teams in 1957 and 1958; and Derrest Williams, who brought professional baseball to Victoria in 1956.

C.M. Ferguson, Chairman of the Athletic Committee of the Chamber of Commerce, handled the local arrangements for Monday’s meeting.

~ Victoria Advocate, Victoria, Texas, Tuesday, January 30, 1962

____________________

Note: Even though Bob Aspromonte and Joey Amalfitano were both known best as Colt .45s for the opposite positions reported here in the column by John Lyons of the Victoria Advocate, 3rd baseman Apromonte had played a couple of games at 2nd base for the Dodgers in 1961 and 2nd baseman Amalfitano even had more past experience at 3rd base in one of his previous seasons before coming over to Houston in the fall 1961 expansion draft.

____________________

Thank you again, Darrell Pittman, for this timely article about an historical first in the history of our Houston MLB franchise. – 55 years ago yesterday, 1/29/1962, the first annual pre-season team marketing bus tour made its first stop for a luncheon at  Carl’s Barbeque in Victoria, Texas.

____________________

eagle-0range
Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Biggio and Bagwell: Exemplars of Greatness

January 29, 2017
Doubleday Field Cooperstown, New York

Doubleday Field
Cooperstown, New York

The Hall of Fame Roads of Biggio and Bagwell

We could write about the greatness of these two guys all day long and never come close to covering all the ways they’ve both arrived so deservedly at their now completed destiny as the first two pure Astros members of the Baseball Hall of Fame.

The announced selection of January 18th that Jeff Bagwell will be joining his 15-year Houston Astros only teammate Craig Biggio in that highest place of honor for the best that ever played our game will now take place on July 30, 2017 in Cooperstown, when Bagwell is inducted along with two other greats, Tim Raines and Pudge Rodriguez.

As you well know, Craig Biggio has been there as a member since 2015, just waiting for the political air to clear that has delayed Jeff Bagwell from going in at the same time as his old, always bonded-with-him teammate. Biggio and Bagwell are as inseparable a baseball lore memory to Houston Astros fans as those two statues of them completing that play at first base on the Crawford Street ballpark exterior garden at the western property border side of Minute Maid Park.

When we inducted both men together into the Texas Baseball of Fame during my tenure as Board Chair and Executive Director back in 2004, I told them at the inductee speakers’ table from the podium that we humbly hoped they enjoyed the experience that night as something akin to a spring training exercise on their way to the “big hall” that awaited them both in Cooperstown one day. They each smiled appreciatively. Both men were in the latter days of their careers in 2004, but both would play key roles in leading the Astros to their only World Series appearance in 2005. Bagwell would have to retire after 2005 due to that painful unhealing right shoulder issue, but Biggio would continue through 2007, playing the season that allowed him to reach 3,000 hits on a single to right center that came close to being a signature double, had it not been for the out call. Biggio also would retire after 2007 with a career total of 3,060 hits.

Then came the reality that is the constantly shifting political arena of the BBWAA writers who wield the power to open or close the door on anyone – simply because they have the power to do so – or because they either suspect a candidate of doing something to make himself undeserving – and/or they fear that their vote of support for him may come back to haunt or embarrass them, the voters, later.

Nothing has come up since their retirements to implicate guys like Mike Piazza and Jeff Bagwell in old or new steroid use since they each first reached the HOF ballot a few years ago. As a result, enough voters have been freed from their caution and now have voted for these two men on the basis of their actual MLB records. And, as examples of the point, Mike Piazza (HOF 2016) and Jeff Bagwell (HOF 2017) are both former players who are deserving of HOF membership by their career accomplishments.

It only took Craig Biggio three years to receive more than the 75% support vote he needed for HOF induction. Craig’s mild delay was due to both the bottleneck of deserving candidates ahead of him in the first two voting years – and to writers’ commonly applied humility-mode treatment to first or early year candidates. i.e., “you will get in when we say you get in.” Biggio finally vacated his pledge-like status and was elevated to the HOF fraternity in 2015.

As we’ve already said, Jeff Bagwell’s journey was a little rougher and longer. Jeff Bagwell had made the mistake of being a lights out home run hitter during a career in which his almost “Popeye-the-Sailor” sculpted body came along without any proof that he had not been one of the steroid-aided sluggers who did it the illegal way. His batting stance only enhanced the “Popeye” image.

popeyebaseball-1

Proving the negative is invariably dismissed by those whose distrust for complex political reasons is virtually second nature to the cut-throat media culture. Even with Bagwell never scoring positive on the drug tests administered to him during his playing days, the clouds of doubt lingered among the voters, as we described earlier.

Like Mike Piazza before him, Jeff Bagwell simply had to wait and keep his head cool from the kind of frustration that only time can heal by a change in 75% of the voters’ hearts, even if it’s one of those things that never heals for some candidates. Fortunately for Jeff Bagwell, that was not the case in his situation. His voting percentages for approval started rising over the past two years, and, in 2017,  his seventh year on the ballot, Jeff Bagwell racked up an 86.6% affirmative vote for selection into the HOF.

The Doubles of Biggio, The Home Runs of Bagwell

Today we are looking at only two separate career hitting stats in the careers of Craig Biggio and Jeff Bagwell for the sake of space and simplicity. Both men did so much more as hitters, runners, and defenders to have earned their places among the greatest in the game’s history, but these teo data items are handbills to big to ignore.

Craig Biggio is the 5th greatest doubles hitter of all time. – Jeff Bagwell is tied with Vladimir Guerrero for the 38th greatest home run hitter in baseball history. Their cases for greatness are not made by the numbers alone, but by the names on the list that accompany each of two former greats Houston Astros.

After you’ve had a chance to examine these two tables – and perhaps seen or found the names of men who either are also members of the HOF – or should be – you may want to us the list to examine these two excerpted charts from Baseball Almanac.com. The complete lists each include 1,000 names. There will see the names of still active players who still have a chance of moving higher on the lists before they retire.

http://www.baseball-almanac.com/himenu.shtml

Have fun!

Craig Biggio By Opie Otterstad

Craig Biggio
By
Opie Otterstad

Baseball Almanac Presents
The 10 All Time Leaders
Career DoublesCraig Biggio is # 5
Tris Speaker 792 1
Pete Rose 746 2
Stan Musial 725 3
Ty Cobb 724 4
Craig Biggio 668 5
George Brett 665 6
Nap Lajoie 657 7
Carl Yastrzemski 646 8
Honus Wagner 640 9
David Ortiz 632 10

 

Jeff Bagwell By Opie Otterstad

Jeff Bagwell
By
Opie Otterstad

Baseball Almanac Presents
The 38 All Time Leaders
Career Home RunsJeff Bagwell is # 38
Barry Bonds 762 1
Hank Aaron 755 2
Babe Ruth 714 3
Alex Rodriguez 696 4
Willie Mays 660 5
Ken Griffey, Jr. 630 6
Jim Thome 612 7
Sammy Sosa 609 8
Albert Pujols 591 9
Frank Robinson 586 10
Mark McGwire 583 11
Harmon Killebrew 573 12
Rafael Palmeiro 569 13
Reggie Jackson 563 14
Manny Ramirez 555 15
Mike Schmidt 548 16
David Ortiz 541 17
Mickey Mantle 536 18
Jimmie Foxx 534 19
Willie McCovey 521 20
Frank Thomas 521
Ted Williams 521
Ernie Banks 512 23
Eddie Mathews 512
Mel Ott 511 25
Gary Sheffield 509 26
Eddie Murray 504 27
Lou Gehrig 493 28
Fred McGriff 493
Stan Musial 475 30
Willie Stargell 475
Carlos Delgado 473 32
Chipper Jones 468 33
Dave Winfield 465 34
Jose Canseco 462 35
Adam Dunn 462
Carl Yastrzemski 452 37
Jeff Bagwell 449 38
Vladimir Guerrero 449

____________________

eagle-0range
Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Hub Pruett: The Babe Ruth Nemesis

January 27, 2017
Hub Pruett of the St. Louis Browns The pitcher who had Babe Ruth's number

Hub Pruett of the St. Louis Browns
The pitcher who had Babe Ruth’s number

 

Hopefully, you’ve already heard of him. Dr. Hubert “Hub” Pruett once pitched for the St. Louis Browns back in the 1920’s and that fact in itself seemed to own its own legs as a “local boy makes good” story. Born in Malden, Missouri on September 1, 1900, played baseball and graduated from the University of Missouri before breaking into majors with the Browns on April 26, 1922 at the age of 21. Lefty Pruett pitched three mediocre seasons for the Browns (1922-25), posting a record of  14 wins and 18 losses before falling out of the big leagues for a couple of years. Hub returned with the Philadelphia Phillies in 1928-29, losing 17 games in his first new club season and finishing his two-year run with a record of  9 wins and 21 losses. Skipping 1929, Pruett won 5 and lost 4 for the 1930 New York Giants for the only time in his  seven career MLB seasons in which he won more games than he lost. – Skip another season and Hub finished his run in 1932 with a 1 and 5 record for the Boston Braves.

Hub Pruett was out of baseball at age 31, finishing his MLB career with a record of  29 wins, 48 losses, and an E.R.A. of 4.63. Not exactly Hall of Fame stuff.

So what even kept Hub Pruett in the majors for as long as he lasted, given his nothing-to-write-home-about playing record?

Part one of that answer will be found inside 15 of Hub’s 357 career strikeout total. The rest of the answer is contained in the light of whom it was that fanned so often against an otherwise nothing-special left handed pitcher named Hub Pruett.

The 15-times-a-strikeout-victim batter’s name, of course, was Babe Ruth of the New York Yankees! Babe couldn’t hit a pitcher that was no big problem for anyone else – or so it seems.

Contemporary observers said that Hub had an uncanny fade-away delivery that the lefty Ruth just couldn’t handle. We guess so. The fact that Pruett struck out Ruth 13 of the first 15 times he faced the iconic slugger of early 20th century baseball was proof enough. According to one source, Pruett struck out Ruth a total of 15 times in the 30 at bats in which they faced each other from 1922-1924, but he surrendered only two home runs over the same span to the Great One. In effect, the Browns kept Pruett around as their special weapon against one of the greatest hitters of all time. Pruett seemed to have trouble getting everybody else out, but he had found a meal ticket he could punch in his mastery of Ruth.

With the money he made as a Brown – and the money he made later with three NL clubs – Hub Pruett had found the resources he needed to use as payment for medical school, starting with those non-playing seasons that twice appear in his career baseball path. For the Browns, Pruett’s value was a known quantity. For the three NL clubs that came later, Pruett represented some kind of curious once-upon-a-time lightning bottle they could not pass up trying. Their hopes were enough to get Pruett further through medical school, even if the baseball electricity never found a rebirth within the Babe-Slayer in other ways.

Hub Pruett is simply more proof that employers hire newcomers based upon what they think the person may be able to do for their company’s production.  Once that assumption gets tested in real time, things may change pretty quickly – unless the employee has done something along the way to rekindle the employer’s original wishfulness, an “outright release” may be in order for the employee.

Pruett and Ruth never spoke on the field, nor were they friends away from the park, but Dr. Hubert Pruett is said always to have been aware of the role that his mastery of Ruth once played in helping him get through medical school. It is reported, however, that The Babe had no hard feelings – and only marveled at the lefty pitcher’s mastery of him at the plate. It’s said that Ruth would often make eye contact on the field with Pruett at the start of a new series – and then wink and smile, as if to say, “My cap’s off to you, you lucky so-and-so!”

Before Ruth’s death from cancer in 1948, Dr. Pruett went to visit with him in the hospital. Pruett wanted to tell Babe Ruth how much he respected his greatness – and how much he appreciated the part that Babe played in his ability to pay for medical school and become a doctor in the footsteps of his own medical man father. Ruth was quite moved by Pruett’s gratitude.

Near the end, Hub Pruett had brought to the dying Bambino one of the most spiritually good afternoons of his final days.

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eagle-0range
Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Please Affirm or Rewrite This Movie Title

January 26, 2017

 

The balance of power in all human group effort is always made fragile by the variable and shifting gravity pulls upon the people who say they are trying to put it together in service to the greater good.

The balance of power in all human group effort is made fragile by the variable and shifting gravity pulls upon the people who say they are building it together in service to the greater good. ~ The Pecan Park Eagle.

A dear Beeville cousin, Elizabeth Ann Galloway, sent me this delightful ten second movie last night. Before you open the link to it, hear me out first.

The movie came with the e-mail title, “Why There Is No Summer Camp for Senior Citizens.”

Great title! But how about some of these shown below? Do you like any of these just as well or better? Or do you have some other title for the film that you prefer?

Let us know your choice: The original title? One of the suggested alternative titles shown below? Or a fresh title not shown here that you like even better?

Please post your vote in the comment section that follows this column!

Now here is the link to the film, followed by a few alternative titles that occurred to us:

The Movie Link

http://i.imgur.com/2SvpTAA.gi fv

Other Movie Title Suggestions

  1. Nothing good comes from the attempt to get even.
  2. Why Bi-Partisanship Action Dies in Congress.
  3. A Personal Injury Lawyer’s Dream.
  4. What Happens Every Time Congress Tries to Balance the Federal Budget.
  5. Rebuke of the Cane Mutiny.
  6. Another Example of Why Women Outlive Men.
  7. Need any more proof that women are smarter than men?
  8. United We Stand. But Not For Long.
  9. American Political History in a Nutshell.
  10. A lot of us might still be able to hit .300 against a team of these guys.

Don’t be a spoil sport. Let us hear from you.

____________________

eagle-0range
Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle