Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Eddie Robinson: Cleveland’s Forgotten Man

October 26, 2016
Recent Photo of Eddie Robinson Eddie is Also the Oldest Living Yankee He turns 96 on 12'15'2016

Recent Photo of Eddie Robinson
Eddie is Also the Oldest Living Ex-Yankee
He turns 96 on December 15, 2016

Eddie Robinson, age 95, is baseball’s latest forgotten man. Even though Eddie is the only living member of the Cleveland Indians’ last 1948 World Series Championship, the current AL club champions in that same baseball lineage apparently forgot – or else – they are too young to remember – what this still incredibly healthy and alert good baseball man did for their franchise – only 78 years ago. Their oversight is altogether sad, bothersome, and understandable – in terms of contemporary thinking about forgetfulness among the very young and the very old.

The young often forget the old and yesterday because the accomplishments of past generations no longer matter or bear relevance to them. The surviving old often forget the young and today for reasons of decline in the brain’s capacity for retaining recent names and events. Eddie Robinson’s memory, now only a little more than 5 years away from 100, is working just fine. Of course, he understands the importance of 1948 in baseball, to Cleveland fans, especially. He also understands the relevance of his surviving presence to that last Cleveland World Championship of 78 years ago well enough to have recently uttered this bottom line quote to a question put forth to him by the New York Daily News since the Indians finished off the Blue Jays for the 2016 AL pennant. The Daily News wanted to know what Eddie had heard from the Cleveland Indians since their clincher. Eddie responded in apparent frustration:

“That’s the funny thing about it,” the career .268 hitter told the Daily News. “I haven’t heard a damn word from Cleveland. Not a word.”

“I’m disappointed,” Robinson continued in his remarks to the Daily News about not hearing from his old team. “It just seems like they would want to talk to any member of the ’48 team, let the press talk to them. I don’t understand it. Maybe they’ll get in touch with me.”

Ten years ago, when this editor served a term as volunteer Board Chair of The Texas Baseball Hall of Fame from 2004 to 2008, I was privileged to have served with Eddie Robinson on the board for part of that time. This great man, this same guy who had once been a star member of my childhood collection of Texas-born big league player baseball cards, was simply an ace among aces as a live human being. He knew his baseball, he was bright, alert, and funny, and he treated those of us who were never good enough as players to get anywhere within a thousand miles from a big league field with the all the kindness and modesty of a genuine “raised right” Texas gentleman. When I see Eddie Robinson now in current videos of his reaction to the Cleveland 2016 success, I am simply blown away by the man’s mental sharpness and “still got it” good looks of a much younger man.

http://www.star-telegram.com/sports/mlb/article110179832.html

We first learned of Eddie’s Cleveland “whoops” by e-mail from his biographer, the wonderful SABR researcher and law professor and former Dean of the SMU Law School, Mr. Paul Rogers. Thanks to Paul and John Blake of the Texas Rangers, the Cleveland Indians were apprised of Eddie Robinson’s importance as the only surviving member of the franchise’s last 1948 World Series winner, but, if anything material has resulted from that important prompt of the Indians to “do the right thing”, we’ve heard nothing else.

Here’s the link we received from Paul Rogers:

http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/baseball/eddie-robinson-living-member-48-indians-pissed-team-article-1.2838963

Too bad. – Eddie Robinson would’ve, could’ve, should’ve been there with former Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove to escort the young lady to the mound who threw out the first pitch in Game One at Cleveland last night.

If any reference was made to Eddie Robinson in the pre-game show or telecast of Game One last night, we missed it, and we were “bug-glued” to that event from pre-game to post-game.

Here’s hoping the Cleveland Indians figure out a way to get through their embarrassment and acknowledge Eddie Robinson tonight in Game 2 – which still could be the last game the Indians play at home.

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

The Heritage Society at Sam Houston Park

October 25, 2016
The Heritage Society at Sam Houston Park 1100 Bagby Street Houston, TX 77002 Tel: 713 655 1912 E-Mail: info@heritagesociety.org

The Heritage Society at Sam Houston Park
1100 Bagby Street
Houston, TX 77002
Tel: 713 655 1912
E-Mail: info@heritagesociety.org

Big Move In Place for The Heritage Society

Effective 10/01/2016, two vital forces of service to Houston and Texas historical preservation came together for the sake of enhancing the efforts of each group. On that date, The Heritage Society at Sam Houston Park absorbed Houston Arts and Media into their auspices, forging their operations  into a newer, and a more dynamic and assertively active and visible program of historical preservation and public education about the history of Houston and Texas .

Alice Collette of the Heritage Society remains on board under accountability to the Board of Directors as Executive Director, and Mike Vance, the former capable leader of Houston Arts and Media is now engaged as the Heritage Society Program Director.

We do not know Alice Collette, but we are given to understand that she is a passionately committed warrior for historical preservation and a person of the highest integrity that is always needed for a position of this nature. Mike Vance, on the other hand, we know very well as a colleague in the local Larry Dierker Chapter of SABR, aka, The Society for American Baseball Research. Mike, yours truly (Bill McCurdy), and several other SABR members (Bob Dorrill, Joe Thompson, Marsha Franty) and one independent contributor (Steve Bertone), were the researchers and co-authors of Houston Baseball: The Early Years, 1861-1961Bright Sky Press, 2014. Mike Vance did a beautiful job for us also as editor of the 367 page coffee table sized hard cover book – and the only history ever recorded about the long expanding life of baseball in the Greater Houston area.

Mike Vance is an intelligent and passionate person about all things historical – and he does his work with a thorough dedication to exhaustive research for the nearest primary source documentation before he allows anything to go to print as truth – or probable truth. He also isn’t afraid to challenge historical legends that have been passed down as factual events without any documentation to validate their reality. He also is an assertive searcher for those artifacts of history that either need to be saved or memorialized – and – once he sees them – he organizes plans with others on the best ways to intervene in their behalf.  Mike Vance was the prime mover behind the two memorial plaques in Houston that now commemorate the sites of Houston’s first two professional baseball parks in the near downtown area. In brief, the future of Houston’s history is in the best hands available with Mike Vance. We can think of no one who could make a better Program Director for this worthy organizational upgrade in the now viral battle to destroy Houston’s ancient and sad older reputation afar as the city that turns history into strip malls and parking lots. It’s no longer a just conclusion in all cases – as evidenced too by the Mike Vance-supported effort to halt the demolition of the Astrodome and the conversion of that space into a very large parking lot. So. far, it’s beginning to look like Houston will get to keep its architectural equivalent to the Eiffel Tower. Houston has a legion of Mike Vances on that issue – and we also are one of the thousands of happy Houstonians to claim membership in that club. We also appreciate Mike’s efforts in behalf of us all.

The View from Sam Houston Park To Downtown Houston

The View from Sam Houston Park
To Downtown Houston

Before you miss out on what’s coming up in November and December 2016 – please check out The Heritage Society at Sam Houston Park website to find out about the many exciting events coming up before the new year – and – if you have a fire for history too – to learn more about how you may become involved as a volunteer in this ongoing effort to preserve Houston and Texas history.

https://www.heritagesociety.org/

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Go Cubs! Take the World Series Too!

October 24, 2016
Photo Contribution By Bill Hickman Fan of the 2016 NL Champs The Chicago Cubs

Photo Contribution
By Bill Hickman
Fan of the 2016 NL Champs
The Chicago Cubs

Late this afternoon, the following e-mail message and the above shown 1946 Chicago Cubs Game Program and 1946 game tickets photo arrived here from Bill Hickman, a SABR colleague, digital world friend, Cubs fan, and formidable collector of baseball photos for the sake of their contributions to history.

Here’s what Bill Hickman had to say on Sunday:

Hi, (Bill McCurdy) –
 
I enjoyed your selection of Spencer Tracy to play Joe Maddon.  It was spot on. (Bill Hickman was referring to what he saw and read in our previous column, Sunday Sports Soup: 10/23/2016.)
 
Thought you might like to see what the Wrigley Field souvenir program looked like the last time the Cubs were the reigning NL Champs.  The attached is from the first major league game I attended.  My father took me to see the Cubs play the Cincinnati Reds in 1946.   I can’t tell you who won, because I don’t know the exact date of the game.
 
It’s nice to be able to say that the Cubs are the reigning NL Champs again.  It has been a long wait.
 

              Regards,

Bill Hickman
____________________

Here’s my column answer to Bill Hickman:

Thank you, Bill Hickman, and special congratulations to you on the success of the 2016 NL Champion Chicago Cubs. Did you feel that spiritual body hug and hand clasp that you no doubt received from your dad when it happened last night – or are these words helping you realize what suddenly caused that involuntary body staggering and that almost simultaneously bone-crunching sensation in your right hand as the Cubs ended the Dodgers in the 9th with a Tinker-to-Evers-to-Chance play that sealed their 5-0 game win and 4-2 NLCS triumph?

Put The Pecan Park Eagle and its editor in the corner of all the “other team other fans” who are hoping the Cubs now go all the way. Like you, I didn’t grow up thinking about the Cubs and Billy Goat curses – or the 1908 funny business that Johnny Evers pulled off against the Giants in the famous “Merkle Boner Game” that later became the dubious first seed of curses talk because of how that chicanery “may have mysteriously” contributed to the Cubs’ last World Series victory.

That being said, why has it taken 71 years for the Cubs to win another NL pennant? And why has it been 108 years since the Cubs won their last World Series? I think you’ve explained that one to me very well in a previous e-mail response to a recent column we wrote on the Chicago Cubs Curse business. For anyone who’s interested, here’s the link to that Cubs Curse column:

Time for the Legend to Live or Die

Any MLB club can have a bad century when ownership operates for almost the entire period on the cheap, while also trading talent like future Hall of Famer Lou Brock for pitchers like Ernie Broglio.

Here’s how Bill Hickman expressed the picture of what it was like growing up a Cubs fan on the North Side, starting as a little kid in the Post World War II Era in 1946, when his dad took him to his first game at Wrigley Field to watch the Cubs entertain the Cincinnati Reds:

Here’s the view of this old Cub fan:

1. I didn’t see the 1945 World Series. No TV in our house (or most homes at the time). But I heard it on my parents’ car radio. Those were my first impressions of major league games.

2. Growing up around Chicago, I never heard about a curse. We kids simply rooted for the Cubs because we were on the north side. Not much different from all you Houston fans cheering for the Astros, despite some frustrating seasons.

3. I still don’t believe in a curse. A close examination of Cubs’ history will show ownership and management deficiencies for most of the past 70 years. Certainly during the Wrigley and Chicago Tribune ownership periods, there was a governing philosophy which wasn’t conducive to putting together the best team. Day baseball, while rival teams were playing night ball at home, may have contributed to the problem.

4. At my age, I’d be happy to see the Cubs in the World Series again, much less than aspire to win the whole shebang. Of course, it would be terrific to break the streak of not winning the Series since 1908, but even the National League Championship would be a treat.

5. “Lovable Losers” is in the eye of the beholder. To someone who has pulled for the Cubs for more than 70 years, they are simply “the Cubs.”

Bill Hickman

____________________

Any club can have a bad century when they are run on the cheap over most of the same period by people who are only capable of acquiring great talent by blind luck and leveraged low play. Once the players develop under that kind of situation, they have to be traded or lost to free agency to avoid a rising payroll. And the team never gets much better than average, if that good.

That “On The Cheap” era seems to have ended when the Thomas J. Ricketts family bought 95% full ownership pf the Chicago Cubs on 10/27/09. The Ricketts ownership then hired Red Sox wunderkind talent assessor Theo Epstein as their President of Baseball Operations on 10/12/11 and Jed Hoyer as their General Manager on 10/19/11. Once they then hired Joe Maddon as their Field Manager prior to the 2015 season the new Chicago Cubs were now “good-to-go” – and go they have done. On 10/21/15, the Cubs lost the NLCS to the New York Mets in a 4-game sweep, but they came back like a grown up bear in 2016. Their 103 2016-season wins were the highest total in MLB. – And last night, 10/22/16, the Chicago Cubs did something they haven’t they haven’t done since 1945. – They closed the day in Wrigleyville as 2016 Champions of the National League.

Congratulations again, Bill Hickman and patient Cubs fans everywhere! Here’s hoping you touch one more base in this still very much alive 2016 baseball season opportunity before all is said and mainly done.

We will cap this piece with another photo that arrived today from another friend. We had never seen it previously. It supposedly was taken in Chicago in 2016. Any ideas why the two gentlemen in the picture seem to be forcing the reluctant bear cub to take third base? It’s nice to know he finally cot there, but it did take him another 100 years to reach that big home plate he crossed last night, 10/22/2016.

Wrigley Field, 2016 Photo Contribution By Miriam Edelman

Wrigley Field, 1916
Photo Contribution
By Miriam Edelman

Forget how much time it took to reach home. He got there last night. And now there’s one more bigger home plate to be touched by Cubs feet – and often – at both Wrigley and the Cleveland park.

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Sunday Sports Soup: 10/23/16

October 23, 2016

Houston Home Cooking Question from New Local Sports Fans

GO WITH AFP STORY IN SPANISH BY JULIA RIOS A Cougar  (Puma concolor), lies at its cage of the Nicaraguan National Zoo, April 22, 2009 during Earth Day in Managua. Different species of animals in danger of exctintion are in many zoos around the world. AFP PHOTO/Miguel ALVAREZ (Photo credit should read MIGUEL ALVAREZ/AFP/Getty Images)

“Sometimes we have to fall hard before we rise again on stronger limbs to more clearly see and get done what needs to be done in the name of love.” ~ “In Time” is our UH motto.

My wife did not grow up in America. She did not follow sports at all until she married me a thousand years ago. Even now, she is only a marginal fan of the American Big Three, but she is still far more knowledgeable than your average cell phone space fans at MMP.

Last night it finally happened. When I slowly walked out of my study to report that UH had lost to lightly regarded SMU, 38-16, Norma immediately played her “remember, honey, it’s only a game” card, but this time, with a different added twist. She very recently had expressed her disappointment in the NFL Houston Texans after watching all of their losing games to date on TV – and she already, much earlier, had expressed her same, but less intense dismay at the collapse of the Houston Astros this season – and both of these unyeasted sports cakes had come long after the NBA Houston Rockets had buried local hopes for supreme victory in their own arena.

Last night she asked me a question I’d never heard from her previously. Of course, it was “the” question that all Houston sports fans ask eventually. That’s right, it’s the one that cannot be answered scientifically, but it’s great soil for all those folks who care to venture into the spiritual occult and come up with supernaturally-based interpretative answers – sort of searching for the local equivalent of the bambino and billy-goat curses that have become associated with Boston and Chicago baseball over the years.

Norma asked: “Why is it that every time a Houston team of any sport comes up with a team that looks like they cannot lose – they do?”

I didn’t have an answer.

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gorcey_ 

More Gorceyisms

Took my mind off the UH loss to SMU by watching the Bowery Boys 1954 movie “Jungle Gents” before going to bed. In this one, idiot boy “Sach” Jones, played by Huntz Hall, acquires an ability to smell diamonds as a result of a powerful anti-biotic he takes for a head cold. As a result, an American investors group pays Sach, his    keeper, “Slip” Mahoney, played by the language mangling Leo Gorcey, along with the rest of the Bowery Boys to fly to Africa and sniff out some large rocks of valuable ice.

Here are my two favorite “Gorceyisms” from “Jungle Gents”:

  1. Explaining Sach’s reason for taking the powerful anti-biotic in the first place, Gorcey says, “He took it to clear up a sinus infatuation.”
  2. Describing The Boys’ overseas destination, Gorcey notes that “we are flying to the place they call The Dark Condiment.”

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The Actor Who Could’ve Played Joe Maddon in the TV Movie

John Maddon Manager Chicago Cubs

John Maddon
Manager
Chicago Cubs

Spencer Tracy Iconic Movie Actor 1930s-1960s

Spencer Tracy
Iconic Movie Actor
1930s-1960’s

This morning it’s an “iffy” prospect. Let’s just assume for the sake of this disclosure that their may be a TV movie about the Chicago Cubs winning their first World Series since 1908, if they defeat the Cleveland Indians in the upcoming 2016 Series pairing. If that happens, and as the above photos show, it’s too bad that Spencer Tracy is not still around to play Cubs Manager Joe Maddon. He’s a comfortable physical match, sort of talks like Joe too, and, let’s keep in mind – Tracy already had played a similar role to “Maddon” in the 1957 version of Ernest Hemingway’s “Old Man and the Sea” when he brilliantly played the old Cuban fisherman who single-handedly brought in one of biggest fish ever caught off the coast of that island nation. His burden in that story was every ounce as heavy as the one facing Joe Maddon in the World Series – and that’s the erasure of “1908” as the marker on the last time the Chicago Cubs won a World Series.

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“Grrrrrrrrrrrrrr….OUCH!”

How did a good team become a bad team in 2 weeks?

As we write – here comes the big question for UH fans and  most of the good possible multiple answers about the UH Cougars fell so hard from grace against SMU last night as the rude awakening of a three straight game decline.  Thank you friend, colleague, and fellow UH alumnus, Dr. Don Matlosz, for placing them so quickly in motion:

I have asked my 8 ball this question(out to lunch) and now I am asking a former sage-soothsayer and former Amway salesman:

  1. Injuries and suspensions
  2. Being denied entrance into the Big 12 conference
  3. Herman for president noise
  4. Navy loss ended hope of conference championship
  5. Boise State will go undefeated and kill UH ‘s chances if Navy stumbled
  6. Todd Orlando has failed to alter his defensive schemes
  7. Minor Apple butter play calling with Greg Ward continuing to run between the tackles does not work
  8. All of the above

 TPPE Response to Dr. Matlosz

Gotta go for choices (1) through (4) above, my friend. (5) went off the table when UH lost to Navy; (6) has more to do with adjusting defense for Navy’s veer. UH hasn’t been the same on defense since Navy; and (7) had more to do with the injuries and suspension effect 0f (1) above. Our O-Line couldn’t block at all yesterday.

Plus, the oldest reason in the book at the collegiate football level was in play yesterday. The young Cougar players looked briefly at the game schedule for this week after their near-escape from defeat by Tulsa last week and mistook the initials “SMU” next to the date Oct 22nd and thought it meant it would be a game that was barely going to be one-step up from an open date trip to Dallas for the weekend.

One other less visible factor was the background of SMU red shirt freshman QB Ben King, the guy who took the UH defense apart like he was Tom Brady. King had recruited to play for UH by former Coach Tony Levine, but he asked for a commitment release once Levine was fired and transferred to SMU, only to sit out last season. King had an axe to grind and the football equivalent skills to back up his personal attack on the school who dumped the coach he wanted to play for at UH. Stuff happens.

Herman learns more football in his sleep than Levine could have mastered by design over the next decade, but that doesn’t always matter to recruits. Their relationships with a future coach are often based on personal reasons that have nothing to do with which future coach is going to be their best teacher.

What does the 38-16 UH loss to SMU tell us over at Cougar Nation?

1) The Cougars are not nearly as good as we thought they were;

2) UH will not repeat as American Conference champions;

3) Our Coogs may drop out of the AP Top 25 now because our loss was to SMU; and,

4) We’ll need more time to season our current players and increase the quality of our depth to stop the kinds of injuries and suspensions we’ve had this year from making us as thin as we looked yesterday.

What other good could from come from the UH loss to SMU?

1) We get to find out. – Are our UH players good enough to define themselves? – Or will they allow their play in the last three games define how they play the balance of their schedule?

2) Now the college football world has proof that UH Coach Tom Herman doesn’t walk on water.

3) Maybe some of the current players and potential recruits will now believe Tom Herman when he says he plans to be at UH a very long time.

4) UH fans get a reality check. This is not our year for a national championship.

____________________
eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Digital Times, They Are a Changin’ Everything

October 23, 2016

“Here’s lookin’ at you on big screen HD home TV, kid!”

Almost Rained Out on a Beautiful Blue Sky Autumn Day in Houston

Even a congested head and viral/allergic reaction to the change of seasons will not keep The Pecan Park Eagle completely on the “DL” list this otherwise beautiful Saturday. It already has caused me to miss my usual trip to a vintage baseball game doubleheader at the George Ranch Texian Market Days Festival near Sugar Land this morning and afternoon, but it cannot stop our need to write, even if the outcome of the games between our Houston Babies and Barker Red Sox remains unknown to this office after 8:00 PM.

First the Movies

Today we can watch a better big HD picture of any movie – with better sound – closed captions, if we want – without having to pay $4.00 for a drink of bottled war – or pop corn and candy priced like steaks – and in our most casual clothes – in our favorite comfy chair – and without the nuisance-presence of those strangers who keep doing their social media stuff in the dark while sending out those distracting little rectangles of bright blue light that cannot be missed by those trying to lose themselves in the screen story. We saw a televised story this past week about how the big income-invested movie houses are starting to battle the threat by plans for such things as more comfortable chairs, the creation of more dining room movie houses where customers can order gourmet quality food and yada yada yada.

When asked if some these things would make going to movies more attractive again, one theater-estranged man in their focus group poll supplied what has to be the bottom-line conclusion that the public theater phase of the movie industry is little more than a dead man walking – a man taking aspirin in the face of a death rattle.

The man dismissed the ideas for improving the comfort of movies theaters with this great tag line: “…. no matter what they do, you’d still have to wear pants while you’re watching the movie at their place.”

How Comfortable is Home TV Baseball in this Digital Age?

We each have our own answers. All we know is – The Pecan Park Eagle is one of the few such birds that wears anything at all. And – when we are watching baseball at home – with all the multiple angles that are available to us clearly  – and viewing close ups on every replayed gem – or close decision – a pair of gym shorts is all we need to stay comfortable – and the water is relatively free at home – and the fridge food is good and affordable – and there is no line in the bathroom – and no one stands up in front of us at home to block our view of big plays – and nobody shoots tee shirts at you at home – and the club’s stadium people can’t force you at home to listen to that loud stuff they call music at the ballpark – and nobody in social media is texting a “friend” in your eyesight as a blue light special distraction to your focus upon the game – when you’re just kicked back in comfort – and watching the game at home – and the comfort is tall – fetal position and all.

Have a nice Sunday, Everybody – whether you do it in person or by electronic proxy.

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Potential World Series Match Ironies

October 22, 2016
If the Cubs reach and win the 2016 World Series, President of baseball Operations, Theo Epstein, earns a shot at unsual record that could earn votes for Cooperstown someday.

If the Cubs reach and win the 2016 World Series, their President of Baseball Operations, Theo Epstein, grabs a record that could earn him votes for Cooperstown someday.

We’ve already hit this one a side blow or two, but let’s air out the whole thing.

  1. A Re-match of the 1920 World Series Pairing: Dodgers vs. Indians.

If the Dodgers rally from their current 2-3 games won deficit to the Cubs, a Dodgers-Indians contest would re-engage the two franchises that met previously in the 1920 World Series. The Cleveland Indians. led by player-manager HOF great Tris Speaker, took their first appearance in a World Series, 5 wins to two, in 1920 over the  then located and identified Dodgers franchise that called themselves the “Brooklyn Robins” in that era. The mascot name “Robins” served as a nod of affection and allegiance to their own beloved manager, Wilbert Robinson. For the Robins and Robinson, the “Dodger franchise” was making their second unsuccessful World Series showing in five years. The Robins also lost their first trip to The Show in 1916, dropping a 4-1 World Series pairing to Boston manager Bill Carrigan, star pitcher Babe Ruth, and the rest of the deep talent bank that made up the roster of the 1916 Boston Red Sox.

  2. A New Match Between Former 2004 Red Sox 1918 Curse Breaker Leaders Epstein and Francona: Cubs vs. Indians.

A pairing of the Cubs and Indians reunites the two men who led the Boston Red Sox to their first World Series win in 2004 since 1918 and the beginning of the so-called “Curse of the Bambino” pox that fell like an iron curtain when owner Harry Frazee sold Babe Ruth to the Yankees prior to the 1920 season. Theo Epstein, the wunderkind GM of the 2004 Red Sox club – and Terry Francona, the dynamic field manager of baseball wizardry that got the job done in 2004 with the talent acquired by Epstein. Now they sit in and behind opposite club dugouts.  Francona field manages the Indians; Epstein is the GM sitting behind the Cubs dugout that we see a few times close up during the Cubs’ NLCS trial with the Dodgers.

      3. A Chance for History for Theo Epstein, if the Series turns out to be Cubs over the Indians.

If the Cubs play and defeat the Indians in the 2016 World Series, Theo Epstein becomes the only baseball administrative leader in history to lead both of the most famous allegedly “cursed” MLB clubs from World Series success – first, with the Red Sox as their General Manager  in 2004 – and then with Cubs as their President of Baseball Operations in 2016. Until 2004, the Red Sox had not won a World Series since 1918. If the Cubs win this year, it will be their first World Series victory since 1908.

The Pecan Park Eagle credits Tom Hunter from Denver for this one. Tom and your TPPE guy (me) have been Internet friends for sometime, but we finally enjoyed a good old fashioned luncheon meeting today at the great Southeast End Houston old school “health food” diner – a place called Kelley’s, off the Gulf Freeway on Park Place Boulevard. Great time! Tom Hunter is every bit the baseball, UH, Original Houston guy, and bright, literate fellow I already knew him to be. Today was great fun. I haven’t had much time for lunches this summer due to some other commitments, and I really enjoyed it. Let’s do it again some time. Next time I’m in Denver, whenever that may be, I’ll give you a shout that I’m on my way. Meanwhile, thanks again for bringing a small taste of Denver fall weather with you to Houston today.

      4. A Shot at Ghost-Busting Accomplishment for Terry Francona, if the Indians defeat the Cubs.

Even if a Cleveland victory over Chicago this year only prolongs the 108-year time lapse since the Cubs’ last World Series win, Terry Francona does rate recognition for a dual accomplishment of his own, if that happens. He will have managed the 2004 Red Sox to the end of an 86-year Word Series victory drought, going back to 1918; and, if the 2016 Indians take care of business in the World Series, against either the Cubs or Dodgers, he will have ended a 68 year skein for the Indians not winning the big one that goes back to 1948.

Whatever Happens, This 2016 World Series Should Be a Lot of Fun!

As stated, it’s been 108 years for the Cubs; 68 years for the Indians; and even 28 years for the Dodgers that any of these franchises have won the World Series. Unless any of them are suffering from some kind of, as of yet, unidentified and DSMR-V classified mental disorder called “baseball anorexia”, all three of the teams should be hungry as anyone who has ever fasted all Thanksgiving Day for the treat to come, but only learned too late for any tide-me-over snacks at a relative’s house that the meal would not be served until 6:00 PM.

The Pecan Park Eagle is hungry for this World Series, no matter which NL club gets there to face Cleveland. To some of us, the World Series is still the most exciting 5 to 9 days of drama in all of sports. And, yes, we are including the two days of travel that normally space out a 2-3-2 home game format – and we can even live fine as wine with further extensions of time caused by inclimate weather. Then – whenever it does end – there are many of us who wish that it never had to end at all.

There is a partial cure for “end of the baseball season” withdrawal. It’s called SABR.

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

A Scorecard Picture Worth a Thousand Words

October 21, 2016
Remember. There were no cell phones in 1951.

Remember. There were no cell phones in 1951.

Preamble Cautions

A scorecard picture truly is worth a thousand words and, even though this particular scorecard graphic from the 1951 Texas League season at Buffalo Stadium has been stuck in my head for 65 years, I’ll do my best to keep the written word count well under our Millennial Era A.D.D. intolerance for longevity break-point, but, even as that thought finds expression, my error is visually apparent from the number of characters already used in this first paragraph.

Millennials don’t perceive “word counts” with their eyes. They see only waves of  “TL-DR” (“too long-didn’t read”) black print on the white page. As per the Twitter prescription: 140 characters per “tweet” is the limit, with even fewer characters being better – and the grandchildren thoughts of “LOL” style characterizations in this digital age are also both preferred and much too cool to be missed. With th0se caveats in mind, here we go with our old style English assessment of the picture on the above featured scorecard.

The Image Itself

The whole focus here is upon the lone kid, with lifted eyes and outreaching  arms extending high, preparing for a bare two-handed cup catch of a high foul ball into the stands. The twelve or so fully and partially featured adults around the kid are mostly scattering or cringing in fear of a ball that they know is coming, but cannot all see.

Three of the grown men fans clearly see the ball coming down: one is simply cringing – and losing the wiener from his hot dog in the process. A cigar smoking guy also prepares his hands for a two-fisted cup catch that looks more like a muff-in-the-making.  The man behind our stogie guy, the fellow with the skyward gaping mouth-wide-open look of apprehension has raised his scorecard skyward as his body slinks to his left.

A woman in a green blouse, with green-tinted glasses and a green hat band is covering her ears in front of the wiener-dropping man.

Another summer straw hat man on the front row has taken the ostrich defense upon himself, closing both eyes and then double covering them with both hands. The woman in the yellow blouse and red skirt to his left has simply turned the other way as she also covers her left ear with her left hand as she protects the top of her head with her right hand by holding a scorecard over it. …. Interesting reflex.

In the very front, lower near right,  a bespectacled mustachioed man, wearing a brown fedora, is glancing skyward as he also protects the top of his head with both hands.

On the far left, a head-0ut-0f-the-picture woman in a pink dress, nearer the bottom, and a similarly scattered headless man near the top, in a yellow shirt, both stand out as champions of the “fall away and save your skull” strategy.’

One final other partial reaction is notable in the far top right corner. A blonde woman appears to gazing skyward, while the man sitting to her right is obscured by the “10 cent” scorecard script.

The only oblivious person in the crowd is located in the extreme lower right corner of the picture, immediately under the “HOUSTON BUFFALOS” script. She’s the lady wearing a black and yellow patterned blouse. This fan has to have been the 1951 equivalent of the far more plentiful cell phone fans we see at the ball park in 2016. – She is too busy putting on lipstick to be distressd by the impending descent of a hard-landing baseball in her area. And, even if she does appear to be looking skyward, we think it’s more probable that she’s simply thinking: “I wonder if I left the rest of my make-up supplies in the car?”

The Wholistic Message to Fans in 1951

Few people get mired in the detailed mess we just traveled through in the previous detail section. In spite of all the missing cell phones in the picture we would have seen, had this beautiful artistic rendering been created in 2016, the 1951 message was pretty clear:

“You have to be a kid at heart to enjoy everything that happens at the ballpark!”

The Implicit Message to Fans in 2016

“In this digital apparatus era, can you even be a kid at heart directly with baseball today and also do all the other digital stuff you do with wi-fi at the same time the beautiful game of baseball is alive before your eyes – and unfolding –  in dramatic mystery and graceful, athletic motion?”

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Cleveland Rocks

October 20, 2016
Cleveland's newer

Cleveland’s newer “Chief Wahoo” (L) and how he looked back in 1948 (R) when the Indians last won the World Series. Should Cleveland keep using these kinds of representations of their team mascot? Or should they simply drop the mascot name “Indians” and become a winning version of the old Cleveland Spiders? Where do you stand on the political correctness issue of the Cleveland’s mascot name and logo depictions now that the question is again ratcheted  into public awareness by their 2016 capture of the AL pennant?

Well, one of the hungriest two “It’s Been a Long, Long Time” 2016 World Series title competitors got it done this afternoon. The Cleveland Indians knocked off the Blue Jays in Toronto, 3-0, to take the American League pennant, 4 games to 1, before grabbing a brief break, awaiting the Cubs and Dodgers determination of the National League Championship Series, which now stands 2-1, Los Angeles, at this writing. Either way that NL series turns out is intriguing.

If LA wins, it will pit Cleveland against the Dodger franchise for the only other time they met in a World Series back in 1920. Back in 1920, as most of you know, the Tribe was led by playing manager and future Hall of Fame Great Tris Speaker. The Indians’ 1920 NL World Series foes weren’t located in Los Angeles back then either – and they weren’t nicknamed the Dodgers that season. They called themselves the “Brooklyn Robins” – drawing their mascot derivative identity from manager Wilbert Robinson’s last name. 1920 was also the heavy heart season of Cleveland’s late season loss of shortstop Ben Chapman, who became that season’s first and only man ever killed by an official pitch during a time at bat in a regular season game. The 1920 Indians won their first World Series appearance, 5 games to 2, in contest that was then played on a “best 5 of 9” wins formula. The Indians haven’t won a World Series since 1948, when they beat the Boston Braves, 4 games to 0. The Los Angeles Dodgers haven’t won a World Series since their last appearance in 1988, a five game victory over the Oakland A’s.

If Chicago wins, it will match Cleveland against the only club with a longer thirst for victory in a World Series than any other team that previously has won it all. Again, as most of you know, the Cubs have won a World Series since 1908. The Indians, as we stated earlier, hasn’t won since 1948.

An Indians-Cubs match up would also produce another binding oddity. And that is simply that it would match up the two men most identified as the on field and office brain trust behind the 2004 Boston Red Sox ending their supposedly cursed disappearance from a World Series victory wreath since 1918. Former Red Sox field manager Terry Francona now hold those same reins for the 2016 AL Champion Indians; and former wunderkind GM for the 2004 WS Champion Red Sox, Theo Epstein, is now the President of Baseball Operations for the Chicago Cubs. Something has to give in every World Series pairing – and the Francona-Epstein contest is no exception, even if its importance gets obscured by the louder speaking heroics on the fields of the very near future, if that is to be.

For two or three more days, at least, the Los Angeles Dodgers may have something loud to say about whether 2016 is the first year that the Cubs get back to “The Show” since 1945.

Baseball is always full of surprises – even if they don’t all jump out and bite you in obvious places. It’s sort of like my wife’s mini-seminar – the one she pulls out every time she finds me foraging through the refrigerator for something healthy to eat:

Home Sweet Home

Bill: (staring through open refrigerator door).

Norma: (entering kitchen from the right) “What are you looking for?”

Bill: “I’m looking for the apples. I can’t find the apples.”

Norma: “Did you look in the fruit drawer?”

Bill: “They’re not in the fruit drawer?”

Norma: “Did you look inside that HEB bag – the one on the very top shelf?”

Bill: “No, I did not. – Why would I look there?

Norma: “Because that’s where the apples are!”

Bill: “Then why didn’t you put them in the fruit drawer?”

Norma: “I just got home about ten minutes ago – and I’m planning to put them there.”

Bill: “I see. Well, I just came in the door this minute – and didn’t realize the situation.”

Norma: “The problem with you, Bill, is that you don’t know how to look.”

Sometimes baseball research is like the “where are the apples?” problem. We get slowed down in our looking when we aren’t aware of what others have done, or not done, before we arrived on the research scene with our expectation in place that we shall find the apples in the fruit drawer. Some of us have to learn that it’s best to leave our expectations outside the closed refrigerator door – and, if anything is expected, once the door opens, let it be our expectation of the unexpected.

Dearest Norma

I will try to apply this lesson better to future refrigerator services. In the future, when you find me gazing looking at the kitchen counter, let’s say, looking for bananas – and you know we don’t have any, just whisper the short cut answer in my ear. Something like, “Yes, we have no bananas – We have no bananas today” will do just fine.

Now, come on Dodgers and Cubs, let’s get this NL berth in the 2016 World Series settled as soon as possible. The Cleveland Indians await either of you – and with tomahawking intentions.

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

The Big 12 Funny Papers

October 18, 2016

Early August, 2016 ….

Big 12 Conscience:

Big 12 Conscience: “Why don’t we give UH and BYU a chance to join our conference? They could make us even stronger!”
Big 12 Leadership : “Sure, why not?”

Friday, October 14, 2016 ….

B 12 Commissioner:

B 12 Commissioner: “Hell, UH beat OU without the help of our money; Barry Switzer says “Hell, no to UH too!” – Barry says that we would just make UH stronger by letting them in – and to make it worse – UH Head Coach Herman gets a $5 million dollar bonus that we’re paying for if we let UH into the Big 12. – How dumb are we? – We gotta keep ’em out!”

The Big 12 Commissioner directs his administrative assistant, Snow White, to get a head count of the ten Big 12 schools who will back his plan to nebulously kill expansion, for now. “This is not a rejection of expansion as a possibility,” Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowlsby emphasizes, with an incredible ability to keep a straight face without cracking into loud guffaws of laughter, “but it is a reinvestment in the strength of the ten clubs we now have.” It is more probable that ESPN has killed the move by offering the ten Big 12 clubs more money to not expand at this time, a move which could cost ESPN a whole lot of additional money as payments to the 2 to 4 new clubs.

The presidents of seven dwarf Big 12 dwarf schools show up to give their support to Commissioner Bowlsby's

The presidents of seven dwarf Big 12 schools show up to give their support to Commissioner Bowlsby’s “kill the expansion deal” plan. UT and Baylor weigh in on the same side later as Bowlsby prepares his Monday 10/17/16 press conference announcement.

After Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowlsby’s droll news announcement, a weak old friend pays him a return visit.

Big 12 Conscience:

Big 12 Conscience: “How could you speak to the world as you just did, Mr. Bowlsby?”
Big 12 Commissioner: “Give me a break, Jiminy! You know I tell the truth whenever it’s convenient!”

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Larry Dierker SABR Chapter Honors Bill Brown

October 18, 2016
Oct. 17, 2016: Bill Brown addresses SABR at our monthly meeting at The Spaghetti Western Ristorante in Houston, expressing his humble delight and appreciation for award he received from his fellow chapter members. ~ Photo by Bob Dorrill

Oct. 17, 2016: Bill Brown addresses SABR at our monthly meeting at The Spaghetti Western Ristorante in Houston, expressing his humble delight and appreciation for the award he received from his fellow members.
~ Photo by Jim Kreuz

On Monday night, October 17, 2016, the Houston-based Larry Dierker Chapter of SABR honored the life achievements of fellow member Bill Brown with a trophy that acknowledged this good man’s career contributions to baseball broadcasting as the television play-by-play face and voice of game telecasting. Bill spent the last 30 of his 40 year career calling the televised games of the Houston Astros.

The award was presented by Bill McCurdy (left) and Bob Dorrill (right. The smiling fellow behind the mike in the middle, of course, is again our honoree, Bill Brown. ~ Photo by Bob Dorrill.

The award was presented by Bill McCurdy (left) and Bob Dorrill (right). The smiling fellow behind the mike in the middle, of course, is again our honoree, Bill Brown.
~ Photo by Jim Kreuz

Here are the scripts from each of his double trophy plaque hardware (quite visible in the photos that follow) that pretty well summarize it all about the man we at SABR also love and appreciate as a fellow SABR member, a research colleague, and fellow friend in the Houston baseball community:

The Bill Brown Trophy ~ as it appeared at The Monarch Trophy shop that helped us design and create it.

The Bill Brown Trophy
~ as it appeared at The Monarch Trophy shop that helped us design and create it. – Photo by Bill McCurdy

The Bill Brown Trophy Inscriptions

The Bill Brown Trophy Inscriptions – Photo By Bill McCurdy

When Bill Brown announced his retirement from telecasting the games of the Houston Astros at the end of the 2016 season, The Pecan Park Eagle also featured an earlier column about the man and his career that goes into greater detail. If you have not read it previously, here’s the link:

Bill Brown: Great Man, Great Broadcaster

Thanks to all of you fellow SABR members too who helped make the presentation last night a memorable evening by your presence. The telecasting of Astros games in 2017 is going to be a little different. We’re all going to miss him, but life’s that way for all of us, isn’t it? Sooner or later, we all move on to something else. And that thought is frozen in my imagery memory by the following concluding photo. Let’s dedicate this one as the wish for all of us – that we all eventually get to leave any labor that has served as our passion for life over time – knowing full well – that we gave it everything we had to give. Nothing more. But nothing less.

And thank you again, Bill Brown, for modeling how that is done.

Peace and Love

Peace and Love

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas