Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Bagwell and Thomas: The Power Twins

January 4, 2016
"C'MON, BBWAA!  ~ IT'S  PAST TIME YOU PULLED JEFF BAGWELL OUT OF THE SHADOWS HE DOES NOT DESERVE AND PLACE HIM INTO THE BRIGHT LIGHT OF DAY HE DESERVES AS A MEMBER OF THE BASEBALL HALL OF FAME!"

“C’MON, BBWAA! ~ IT’S PAST TIME YOU PULLED JEFF BAGWELL OUT OF THE SHADOWS HE DOES NOT DESERVE AND PLACE HIM INTO THE BRIGHT LIGHT OF DAY HE DESERVES AS A MEMBER OF THE HALL OF FAME!”

 

May 27, 1968 was a busy day for storks specializing in the delivery of future MLB slugging first basemen. You see, on that date in history, a fellow named Jeff Bagwell was born in Boston, Massachusetts as another guy named Frank Thomas was glimpsing his first light of day in Columbus, Georgia. In the early 1990s, in 1991, both would make their major league debuts as first basemen in the separate American and National leagues. Thomas would make his first appearance for the Chicago White Sox in a game played on August 2, 1990. Bagwell would break in with the only big league club of his 15-year career, the Houston Astros, on April 9, 1991.

1991 would prove to be the first full season for both Thomas or Bagwell, with Bagwell hitting .294 and 15 home runs and fielding beautifully in his first season as a first baseman. Bagwell would spend his entire 15-year career (1991-2005) with the Astros; Thomas would spend the first 16 years (1990-2005) of his MLB time with the White Sox and then finish out with 3 final seasons (2006-2008) in a mixture of service to the Oakland A’s and Toronto Blue Jays.

One final irony was the fact that the 2005 World Series finally brought the two men into direct competition against each other, but, by then, the impaired shoulder of Jeff Bagwell had forced him into limited service and retirement prior to the 2006 season and a diminished role for Thomas with Sox. Frank Thomas probably could have retired too at the same time, but the White Sox handling of their diminishing interest in the man they once called “The Big Hurt” most likely kicked the big guy in the ego hard enough to get him moved to Oakland and Toronto for some hanging around time.

When the dust cleared, and he became eligible for the Hall of Fame, Frank Thomas was whisked into Cooperstown with Biggio and other company in 2015. Now eligible for a much longer period, power twin Jeff Bagwell languishes in waiting, stained by the unfairness of “guilt by association” with the fact he had built himself up considerably during his attempts to compensate or heal naturally from the battle he eventually lost to his shoulder injury, but there were those who tainted him with their steroids suspicions in the face of his denials about ever using any HGH compounds – and no evidence provided – that he ever did.

The following simple table shows how close Frank Thomas and Jeff Bagwell were to each other on career offensive accomplishments. It doesn’t begin to scratch any of the more mind-numbing SABR approaches to analytics, nor does it even touch how good these two guys were as defensive first basemen and team leaders.

A Brief Tabular Comparison of Hall of Famer Frank Thomas

And His Ought 2B There Too Twin Super Star, Jeff Bagwell:

Players Games Hits HR BA SA OBP ASG MVP SS ROY RBI
Jeff Bagwell 2150 2314 449 .297 .540 .408    4    1   3 1991 1529
Frank Thomas 2322 2468 521 .301 .555 .419    5    2   4   No 1704

 

Key to Above:

HR = Home Runs

BA = Batting Averages

SA = Slugging Averages

OBP = On Base Percentages

ASG = All Star Game Appearances

MVP = Most Valuable Player Awards

SS = Silver Slugger Awards

ROY = Rookie of the Year Awards

RBI = Runs Bated In

____________________________________________

Come on, BBWAA, do the right thing! – Put Jeff Bagwell in the Hall of Fame Now – It’s Where He Belongs!

____________________

FRANK THOMAS BASEBALL HALL OF FAME 2015

FRANK THOMAS
BASEBALL HALL OF FAME
2015

Bill Gilbert Tags Jeff Bagwell for HOF in 2016

January 3, 2016
Astros analyst Bill Gilbert lights the fires of the Hot Stove League season with a look at Who's Likely yo make the HOF in 2016 based on Win Shares.

Astros analyst Bill Gilbert lights the fires of the Hot Stove League season with a look at Who’s Likely to make the HOF in 2016 based on Win Shares.

Pecan Park Eagle Note: Here we go with a very timely report from Bill Gilbert on the chances of Jeff Bagwell and others reaching the Hall of Fame this year. Results of the Baseball Writers of America 2016 class vote will be anounced this coming Wednesday, January 6, 2016. Induction is only achieved by the eligible candidates who garner a minimum of 75% of the eligible writer votes.

 

Rating the 2016 Hall of Fame Candidates Based on Win Shares

By Bill Gilbert

 

One of the first items of business in baseball each year is the announcement of players elected to the Hall of Fame. This leads to lots of speculation and a little analysis prior to the announcement which is scheduled for January 6, 2016.

Many systems exist for evaluating player performance. One such system, the Win Shares method, developed by Bill James in 2002, is a complex method for evaluating players which includes all aspects of performance – offense, defense and pitching. James has stated that, “Historically, 400 Win Shares means absolute enshrinement in the Hall of Fame and 300 Win Shares makes a player more likely than not to be a Hall of Famer. However, future standards may be different. Players with 300-350 Win Shares in the past have generally gone into the Hall of Fame. In the future, they more often will not”.

The 2016 class of Hall of Fame candidates consists of 17 holdovers and 15 players eligible for the first time. Twelve holdovers have over 300 Win Shares, Barry Bonds with 661, Gary Sheffield 430, Roger Clemens 421, Tim Raines 390, Jeff Bagwell 387, Mark McGwire 342, Fred McGriff 326, Alan Trammell 318, Sammy Sosa 311, Mike Piazza 309, Larry Walker 307 and Edgar Martinez 305. Two newcomers have over 300 Win Shares, Ken Griffey Jr. 403 and Jim Edmonds 301.

In 2015, four players received the necessary 75% of the vote for election by the Baseball Writers of America (BBWAA).   The 2015 ballot included 17 newcomers and 17 returning candidates. Three newcomers, Randy Johnson (97.3%), Pedro Martinez (91.1%) and John Smoltz (82.9%) were elected on the first ballot. Only two others, Gary Sheffield (11.7%) and Nomar Garciaparra (5.5%) received the necessary 5% of the votes required to remain on the ballot.

With the strong incoming class last year, only Craig Biggio (82.7%) among the holdovers was elected.   The 2016 class is not as strong which should allow some holdovers to move up. The only holdovers with over 50% of the vote in 2015 were Mike Piazza (62.2%), Jeff Bagwell (55.7%) and Tim Raines (55.0%).

Several players on the ballot have the numbers to be elected but remain tainted with the steroid cloud. Many voters are likely to wait until more is known about the extent of steroid usage before giving them a pass. This, along with the number of strong newcomers on the ballot the last two years has resulted in the ballot becoming quite crowded. A total of 571 ballots were submitted last year and each voter could vote for up to 10 players. The number of ballots will be reduced this year as writers that have not actively covered the sport for the past ten years will no longer be able to vote. It will be interesting to see how this will impact the results. Over the years, voters have typically voted for 5 or 6 candidates but last year they voted for an average of 8.4. This increase is likely to continue since there are at least 20 candidates on the ballot for which a reasonable case can be made for induction.

The Hall has made a significant change in the voting for this year. Players are now kept on the ballot for 10 years rather than 15 years. Players that had already been on the ballot for 10 or more years stay on for 15 but those with less than 10 years will be removed after their 10th year. Alan Trammell is in his last year in 2016 (15th) as is Mark McGwire (10th). Lee Smith (14th) and Tim Raines (9th) are in their next to last years on the ballot.

Earlier this year, the Pre-Integration Era Committee consisting of a panel of Hall of Fame players, sportswriters and baseball executives voted on a group of ten players and executives for induction. None received 75% of the votes from the 16-member Committee.

Following is a list of Win Shares for the 32 players on the ballot. Players on the ballot for the first time are shown in bold. Voting results for 2014 and 2015 are shown for the holdovers.

PLAYER SHARES 2015 VOTES 2015% 2014 VOTES 2014%
Barry Bonds 661 202 36.8 198 34.7
Gary Sheffield 430 64 11.7
Roger Clemens 421 206 37.5 202 35.4
Ken Griffey, Jr. 403
Tim Raines 390 302 55.0 263 46.1
Jeff Bagwell 387
Mark McGwire 342 55 10.0 63 11,0
Jeff Kent 338 77 14.0 87 15.2
Fred McGriff 326 118 20.7 67 11.7
Alan Trammell 318 138 25.1 119 20.8
Sammy Sosa 311 36 6.6 41 7.2
Mike Piazza 309 384 69.9 355 62.2
Larry Walker 307 65 11.8 53 10.2
Edgar Martinez 305 148 27.0 144 25.2
Jim Edmonds 301
Mike Mussina 270 135 24.6 116 20.3
Jason Kendall 245
Garret Anderson 230
Curt Schilling 227 215 39.2 167 29.2
Nomar Garciaparra 219 30 5.5
Luis Castillo 201
Lee Smith 198 166 30.2 171 29.9
Troy Glaus 189
Trevor Hoffman 188
Mark Grudzielanek 186
Mike Lowell 185
Billy Wagner 182
Randy Winn 171
Brad Ausmus 169
Mike Sweeney 162
Mike Hampton 144
David Eckstein 143

 

The 26 players elected by the Baseball Writers since 2000 have averaged 356 Win Shares, a figure exceeded by six players on this year’s ballot.

Player                                    Year            Win Shares

—————                           —–     ————-

Dave Winfield                        2001                   415

Kirby Puckett                        2001                   281

Ozzie Smith                            2002                  325

Gary Carter                             2003                  337

Eddie Murray                         2003                   437

Paul Molitor                            2004                   414

Dennis Eckersley                   2004                   301

Wade Boggs                            2005                   394

Ryne Sandberg                       2005                   346

Bruce Sutter                            2006                    168

Cal Ripken                               2007                    427

Tony Gwynn                            2007                    398

Goose Gossage                         2008                   223

Rickey Henderson                   2009                   535

Jim Rice                                     2009                   282

Andre Dawson                           2010                   340

Roberto Alomar                         2011                    375

Bert Blyleven                              2011                    339

Barry Larkin                               2012                    347

Frank Thomas                            2014                    405

Greg Maddux                              2014                    398

Tom Glavine                                2014                    314

Craig Biggio                                 2015                     411

Randy Johnson                           2015                    326

John Smoltz                                 2015                    289

Pedro Martinez                            2015                    256

——

Average                                          351

Win Shares are fundamentally a quantitative measure of a player’s accomplishments. A measure of the quality of a player’s offensive performance is OPS+ which compares his OPS (on-base percentage plus slugging average) adjusted for park effects and era with the league average during his career. An OPS+ of 120 suggests that his performance is 20% better than that of a league average player. A similar approach (ERA+) can be used to compare a pitcher’s ERA against the league average during his career.

Following is a rank order of OPS+ and ERA+ for the 32 candidates on the 2016 ballot:

PLAYER HITTERS OBP+ ST PITCHERS ERA+ RELIEVERS ERA+
Barry Bonds 182
Roger Clemens 143
Mark McGwire 163
Curt Schilling 127
Jeff Bagwell 149
Mike Mussina 123
Edgar Martinez 147
Mike Hampton 107
Mike Piazza 143
Larry Walker 141
Gary Sheffield 140
Ken Griffey, Jr. 136
Fred McGriff 134
Billy Wagner 187
Jim Edmonds 132
Trevor Hoffman 141
Sammy Sosa 128
Lee Smith 132
N. Garciaparra 124
Jeff Kent 123
Tim Raines 123
Troy Glaus 119
Mike Sweeney 118
Alan Trammell 110
Mike Lowell 108
Garret Anderson 102
Randy Winn 99
Jason Kindall 95
Luis Castillo 92
M. Grudzielanek 90
David Eckstein 87
Brad Ausmus 75

The Win Shares system favors players with long productive careers like Sheffield and Raines, although it appears to under-rate pitchers, while OPS+ rewards strong offensive players who had shorter, more dominant careers like Edgar Martinez and McGwire. ERA+ favors relief pitchers since their ERAs are generally lower because they are not charged with runs scored by inherited runners.

Conclusions:

  1. Three players will be elected in 2016, Ken Griffey, Jr., Mike Piazza and Jeff Bagwell.
  1. Trammell and McGwire will fail to win election in their final year on the BBWAA ballot.
  1. Raines will gain significant support but will not receive enough votes for induction. However, he should be in a good position for election next year.
  1. Edmonds, Wagner and Hoffman should receive enough votes to remain on the ballot.

5.   There will not be a groundswell of support for Randy Winn, Luis Castillo, Mark   Grudzielanek, Jason Kendall, David Eckstein and      Brad Ausmus, among others.

  1. If I had a ballot, I would cast votes for Griffey, Jr., Piazza, Bagwell, Raines, Schilling, Trammell, McGriff, Kent, Wagner and Mussina.

Bill Gilbert  

1/2/2016

____________________

jeffbagwell 2

Our 2016 Hopes for The Houston Astros

January 2, 2016
Houston Post January 1, 1900 Contributed by Darrell Pittman

Houston Post
January 1, 1900
News Photo Contributed by Darrell Pittman

 

Our Top Ten Hopes for the Houston Astros in 2016

10) Astros Shortstop Carlos Correa will continue to show us that he is who we think he is – a future Hall of Famer!

9) Astros 2nd Baseman Jose’ Altuve will continue to be who we think he is – a future Hall of Famer!

8) Astros outfielder George Springer finally will show us that he is capable of hitting .300 with a high OBP!

7) Astros starter Dallas Keuchel will continue to be undefeated at home and the force of our pitching staff!

6) Someone will arrive, via trade or personal development, to become that “3rd man ‘sure thing’ in the starting rotation!

5) The Astros will find or acquire guys capable of playing 1st and 3rd bases with good hitting for average and power stats!

4) Improved hitting for average, OBP, and steady power from outfielders Marisnick, Rasmus, Gomez and Tucker.

3) Better stick work from catcher Joel Castro – or the acquisition of a guy who can also hit and play the position.

2) Hope that burner Ken Giles shows up as the quality closer we need him to be.

1) Fewer strikeouts among our hitters, better execution of basic base running skills by all, and a little more work on basic defensive measures. Outfielders need to better understand why hitting your cut-off man on extra base hit throws is important to the prevention of opposition runners from scoring.

BONUS: This one is off the field, but it is equally important to both the history of the Astros and the City of Houston. ~ The Pecan Park Eagle hopes mightily that 2016 turns out to be the year in which a firm and appropriate plan for the preservation and re-purposing of the Astrodome finally is found, approved, and placed into developmental motion.

____________________

happy-hou-1900b

Note: There were no Houston Buffaloes in 1900 as Houston and several other Texas cities took a hiatus from professional baseball for a little recovery of creative planning, everyday gumption, and a renewed cash and credit pledge of the money it would take to get this baseball cash cow business back into motion again.

Our City: One for All and All For One

January 1, 2016
Happy New Year, Everybody!

Happy New Year, Everybody!

Late last night, I added the following three paragraphs as an addendum to yesterday’s brief, apparently singular topic column, “All I Want for New Years is a Cougar Win”:

____________________

Thanks, Houston Cougars, for making my New Years wish come true. Your 38-24 win over a good Florida State Seminoles team earlier this afternoon not only sweetened New Years, it also turned out to be the happiest New Years Eve birthday gift I’ve ever received.

After the game, my family treated me to a terrific steak dinner at Taste of Texas, one that came complete with a complimentary birthday dessert and sparkler-lighted natal day photo salute to me making it through another year. These birthdays days always hum with hope and rejuvenation for me, anyway, but this one really came upon me with an extra special wallop charge.

Thanks, dear family! ~ And thanks again, you growling, rolling Cougars of Coach Tom Herman, thanks  for putting the special buzz on bliss for everybody in Cougar Nation this time around the birthday horn.

____________________

The lesson of UH’s win over Florida State, however, was much larger than a monumental game in the history of Cougar football and its hopefully now sooner return to national respect as big time player. It was an event that enhances the City of Houston brand as a place where people not only dream big, it is a culture where people also put their hopes into action with character, hard work, and a determination for success that actually gets the job done.

The Tom Herman story alone is the dynamo that stirs this energy drink. – How many schools anywhere have had Don Quixote come in as a football coach and take a previously lackluster group of young men in one season to 13 wins and victory over a major foe in their first year at the helm? Stop right there. You already have the list. And his name is Tom Herman. Whether he stays with us three years, five years, or a most welcome forever, by what we’ve seen, so far, Tom Herman already has placed UH on a track to restored national respect, an eventual Top Five conference home, and made UH an immediately much stronger recruitment attraction for the nation’s top high school players.

Tom Herman was no psychotic Don Quixote who only idly led any who followed him into tilting their swords at windmills they could not hope to topple with dreams alone. This UH Don Quixote came prepared to lead the Cougars into knocking down the windmills of resistance that have stood in the way of long-term success since the Yeoman years. Herman even got to the UH Board of Regents on the oblique. UH finally saw that they had to start paying their coaches at a level that would give the university a chance of retaining winners. The elevation of Herman’s salary wasn’t all that will be needed, but it was a significant step up from the “stepping stone” salary level that previously cost them Art Briles to Baylor and Kevin Sumlin to Texas A&M.

The first general point we hope to make this morning is that UH made the City of Houston look good yesterday – and anything that makes our city more respected in a legitimate way benefits us all. UH football success is not going to hurt UT, A&M, or any other Texas university. It will only help us all. It may make recruiting a little tougher, but tougher competition makes every school, including UH, stronger. – Without competition, many young student athletes will simply make the dead-head decision to just sign up with “THE” school to go to – and then lapse into the sort of entitlement culture that makes some four and five-star recruits show up at their chosen special school expecting stardom to just kick in as soon as they turn on the game cameras in the fall.

Note: UH beat talent-loaded FSU yesterday without any big five stars. Fortunately, UH was not short of players who had been taught by Tom Herman to learn and take passionate personal responsibility for playing the game to the best of their abilities for the team goal of winning.

The second point today makes sense too, but only if you see and agree that anything legitimate that makes any part of Houston look better to the world also makes the whole of Houston look better too. It is important to the issue of how we finally settle the future of the Astrodome question, hopefully, in 2016.

They may be distant and silent for now, but the whole world really is watching what we are about to do with a structure that is revered by others as an architectural icon. Will the larger reward from re-purposing the Dome’s utilization destiny for the sake of history help Houston build a new reputation as a city with the character to care about historical preservation?

Yes! You bet it will!

Astros-Emojis 01

Will the demolition of the Astrodome only serve to reinforce the impression of many others that Houston is strictly a marketplace that cares nothing about history – and a city where some developers would pave over cemeteries for additional parking space, if they could get away with it?

Yes! You bet it will!

Refresh the Happy New Year! button on that note, friends.

____________________

Temple@UH 120515 07

 

 

 

 

 

All I Want for New Years is a Cougar Win

December 31, 2015

EPSON MFP image

All I want for New Years is a Cougar win!

A Cougar win! ~ A Cougar win!

All I want for New Years is a Cougar WINNNNNNNNN!

So my heart can dance with Lady Shas ~ ta!

shasta

____________________

A Post-Game Reflection, Thursday, December 31, 2015, 11:15 PM CST

taste-of-tx-12-31-15a

Thanks, Houston Cougars, for making my New Years wish come true. Your 38-24 win over a good Florida State Seminoles team earlier this afternoon not only sweetened New Years, it also turned out to be the happiest New Years Eve birthday gift I’ve ever received.

After the game, my family treated me to a terrific steak dinner at Taste of Texas, one that came complete with a complimentary birthday dessert and sparkler-lighted natal day photo salute to me making it through another year. These birthdays days always hum with hope and rejuvenation for me, anyway, but this one really came upon me with an extra special wallop charge.

Thanks, dear family! ~ And thanks again you growling, rolling Cougars of Coach Tom Herman for putting the special buzz on bliss for everybody in Cougar Nation this time around the birthday horn.

____________________

Happy-New-Year-Clip-Art-Free

Happy New Year

December 30, 2015

Happy-New-Year-Clip-Art-Free

Auld Lang Syne for unforgettable friends and acquaintances, plus a certain reverie for personal experience, all take on a richer, sometimes sad or now settled “what might have been” quality with age, but that’s not our original discovery. It lived in recognition among the ancient Greeks.

As humans, we have the capacity to grieve over anything. From what is now done and gone forever, we may grieve. But we may also grieve for all those things we once valued that were either never done – or left alone and unfulfilled.

These are the stuff, including the people involved, that are the producers of Auld Lang Syne. What we did, and didn’t do; whom we engaged as mates and partners in any life mission; and those we separated from, for reason or whim – all of these  are the fodder for our personal Auld Lang Syne.

And so our personal Auld Lang Syne rests within each of us as either the seed of wisdom that blooms over time – or sadly, if it is not absorbed, it becomes a major missed golden opportunity for those who never do get it. The absence of wisdom gained from personal experience is the major tax on those who live by the “Ignorance is Bliss” adage.

In fact, the tax on our rejection of the lessons from painful experience is to live in a state of redundancy, going through the same painful experience repeatedly over time for as long as we refuse the lesson –  or until we either get the lesson and make changes – or grow broke, mad, or die from the experience of avoidance.

We don’t like to think about this sort of thing, especially  on New Years Eve, but it is what it is. It’s with us as the driving wheel in our repetition of any pattern of similar disappointing consequence which fails us  as a teacher of the lesson it carries.

Behind every resolution we make at the new year is the energy we have used in the past to avoid the thing we now say we want to change.

longfellow_stamp

The other day, St. Thomas friend and author Rob Sangster sent me “The Meeting,” a lesser known poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. This work by an iconic 19th century American poet implicitly personifies how aging too may inspire and enrich our appreciation for both the things our minds tell us that we did and did not do with our lives.

Our memories of “experiences fulfilled” and “experiences missed” work together to shape our abilities for greeting the new year on some level of peace with ourselves – or not.

In the end, as Longfellow describes it, it’s hard for us to distinguish the ghosts from the guests among our reverie ~ “and a mist and shadow of sadness steals over our merriest jests.”

The Meeting

by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

After so long an absence
At last we meet again:
Does the meeting give us pleasure,
Or does it give us pain?

The tree of life has been shaken,
And but few of us linger now,
Like the Prophet’s two or three berries
In the top of the uttermost bough.

We cordially greet each other
In the old, familiar tone;
And we think, though we do not say it,
How old and gray he is grown!

We speak of a Merry Christmas
And many a Happy New Year
But each in his heart is thinking
Of those that are not here.

We speak of friends and their fortunes,
And of what they did and said,
Till the dead alone seem living,
And the living alone seem dead.

And at last we hardly distinguish
Between the ghosts and the guests;

And a mist and shadow of sadness
Steals over our merriest jests.

____________________

Happy New Year, Everybody!

10_14_07-039

 

 

Remembering Abner Haynes

December 30, 2015

Thanks, John “Big Foot” Phillips for reminding me what a great column this story would make.

If you watched the New England Patriots’ 26-20 OT loss to the New York Jets on December 26, 2015, you saw how important those pre-OT coin toss calls are to winning and losing. To fully appreciate the mistake in this instance, if Patriots Coach Bill Belichick was on the level with his post-game attempt to explain the confusion, we need to begin with a clear statement of what the two choices are for the team that wins the coin toss.

Coin Toss Winner Options: Winning the coin toss gives the winning team the right to (1) either receive or kick off on the first possession; or (2) choose which goal your team will defend.  If a team chooses to kick off, as the Pats did Saturday, the other team automatically earns the right to receive the ball, without doing anything else, and also now has the right to choose which goal they will defend as the receiving team. That choice is not always a big deal, especially in indoor venues, but it can also be huge this time of the year when fields have a north-south layout and some tough winds are roaring in from the north.

When Pats special teams captain Matthew Slater jogged out to make the coin toss call for the Pats, he says he had clear instructions from Coach Belichick to tell the officials that his team wanted to kick off, although his need to confirm that choice three of four times suggests that even Slater may have privately questioned the wisdom of kicking off and giving the Jets a chance to win the game with a sudden death TD on the first possession.

“We thought it was the best thing to do,” Belichick said in his post game press conference, reinforcing his statement that Slater’s call was not a mistake, even if still remained a mistake on another level.

You see, Slater expressed his team choice in these words: “We want to kick, that way.”

It took a few moments to clarify for Slater that he didn’t own the choice of goals too since he had already used it first as the team that would choose to kick off.

As fate sometimes dictates, the choice to kick off was fatal. A few plays later, the Jets scored a a touchdown which, under the modified rules governing scoring in NFL OT games, immediately made the Jets the winners by 26-20.

Slater apparently had confused the choice call to the more normal way a team uses it when they want the ball second. The coin toss winner  states which goal they choose to defend in almost 100% certainty that the other team will use their default choice to receive. It’s hard to figure what Belichick was thinking. He knows that better than of us. Sure, the Jets might have chosen to kick, but it’s not probable they would have done so. Technically, however, Belichick was correct. – The only certain way to assure that your team kicks off is to win the coin toss and have your representative say “We want to kick,” as Slater did. He simply didn’t own the “that way” portion of the selection.

Abner Haynes Dallas Texans AFL, 1962

Abner Haynes
Dallas Texans
AFL, 1962

If you are old enough, the Pats-Jets coin toss call mix-up is remindful of one that great running back Abner Haynes made in behalf of his Dallas Texans club in their 20-17 double OT AFL 3rd Championship game over the Huston Oilers at Jeppesen (later Robertson) Stadium on the UH campus back on December 23, 1962. The Oilers had won the first two new AFL crowns in 1960-61 under QB George Blanda and were battling hard to continue their string against the hated foes from Dallas. No true Houstonian cared at all for these Texans back in 1962. As you also probably know, owner Lamar Hunt got squeezed out of his market by the Cowboys, transferring his first Texans team to Kansas City and re-naming them as the Chiefs.

A crowd of 37,981 showed up at “The Jep” to cheer the Oilers. Yours truly was young, single, and down in Beeville, Texas in 1962 with my girl friend for a family Christmas visit. We watched the game on ABC-TV with my dad, hoping that the Oilers would win one for him on his birthday, but they did not.

After falling behind 17-0 in the first half, George Blanda brought the Oilers back to a 17-17 tie at the end of regulation time. It was also time for Abner Hayne’s signature call of the coin toss as the Texans’ representative.

Because of strong winds from the north, Coach Hank Stram wanted to defend the north goal in OT and to move toward the goal that held the large scoreboard to the south. (Remember, this is one of those things in which you “can’t never get what you want you want if you don’t say it right.”)

Wanting to defend the north goal and allow Houston the right to receive, Haynes won the pre-OT coin toss, expressing his wishes in these words: “We’ll kick to the clock!”

Haynes got what he asked for, not what he wanted. – The Oilers got to receive the ball by default and then use their pick to defend the goal with the wind at their backs.

Fortunately for Abner Haynes, the Oilers weren’t able to convert their good fortune on the call into a third straight AFL championship. The absence of scoring in the extra quarter simply carried the game into professional football history as the first double overtime game ever played. The Dallas Texans won it all on a Tommy Brooker field goal in double OT, 20-17.

Happy New Year Again, Everybody! – Hope your Christmas time was as peaceful, simple, and blessed as ours!

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happy-new-year-2016b

 

 

Bill Gilbert: Triple Milestones – 2015

December 29, 2015
Astros analyst Bill Gilbert light the fires of the Hot Stove League season with a look at Triple Milestone winners from 2015.

Astros analyst Bill Gilbert lights the fires of the Hot Stove League season with a look at Triple Milestone winners from 2015.

 

Triple Milestones – 2015

 By Bill Gilbert

      Offensive production in the major leagues increased slightly in 2015. The number of runs and home runs per game increased in 2015 and batting average, on-base percentage and slugging average also increased in 2015 after steadily declining since 2000.

Year      Runs/Game HR/Game BAVG      OBA   SLG   OPS      Triple Milestone Hitters

—-      ——— ——- —-   —-   —- —     ————————

1990     8.51     1.58   .258 .324   .386   .710                  2

1991     8.62     1.61   .255 .323   .384   .707                  3

1992     8.23     1.44   .256 .322   .377   .699                  2

1993     9.20     1.78   .266 .332   .404   .736                  5

1994     9.85     2.07   .270 .339   .424 .763                  3

1995    9.69     2.02   .267 .338   .417   .755                  8

1996      10.07      2.19   .270      .340      .427   .767                 21

1997         9.53      2.05   .267      .337      .419   .756                  7

1998         9.58      2.08   .266      .335      .420   .755                 14

1999      10.17      2.28   .271 .345   .434   .779                 19

2000   10.28     2.34   .271 .345   .437   .782                 26

2001     9.55     2.25   .264 .332   .427   .759                 21

2002     9.24     2.09   .261 .331   .417   .748                 12

2003         9.46      2.14      .264      .332   .422   .754                  8

2004     9.63     2.25   .266 .335   .428   .763                 12

2005     9.18     2.06   .265 .330   .419   .749                 10

2006     9.72     2.22   .269 .336   .432   .768                 13

2007         9.59     2.04   .268 .336   .423   .759                  8

2008         9.30      2.01      .264 .333   .417   .750                   7

2009     9.23     2.02   .262 .333   .418   .751                 6

2010    8.77     1.90   .257 .325   .403   .728                 6

2011    8.57     1.87   .255 .321   .399   .720                 7

2012     8.64     2.03   .255 .319   .405   .724                 4

2013     8.33     1.92   .253 .318   .396   .714                 3

2014     8.13     1.73   .251 .314  .386   .700                 2

2015    8.50     2.02   .254 .317   .405   .721                 1

      Runs and home runs were up in 2015 to the highest level in 3 years. Nine players hit 40 or more home runs in 2015 compared to one in 2014 and two in 2013. The 30 home run level was reached by 20 players in 2015 compared to 11 in 2014 and 14 in 2013.

      A useful indicator for tracking offense is the number of players who hit for both power and average by achieving a .300 batting average, 30 home runs and 100 runs batted in. A record 26 players reached all three milestones in 2000, but that figure has dropped significantly in recent years. Only one player achieved all three in 2015, the lowest since 1989 when no players did it. Of the 20 players with 30+ home runs, only three batted over .300 and eleven had 100+ RBIs. Maintaining a .300 batting average is clearly the major problem in achieving triple milestones.

            The player that made the .300-30-100 club in 2015 was Paul Goldschmidt of Arizona, who did it for the second time

Player           Times BAVG-HR-RBI            Comments

Paul Goldschmidt      2      .321-33-110             Also stole 21 bases.

      The two MVP players just missed as did four others.

Player           Times BAVG-HR-RBI            Comments

Bryce Harper       0   .330-42- 99            Needed one more RBI.        

Josh Donaldson     0   .297-41-123         Lost .300 average in last week.

Mike Trout         0   .299-41- 90         Hasn’t made it yet.

Nelson Cruz       0   .302-44- 93         Better numbers than Trout.

Yoenis Cespedes   0   .291-35-105         Split between both leagues.

Jose Abreu         1   .290-30-101         Made it as rookie in 2014.

One other player made it in 2014 in addition to Abreu.

                           2014           2015

   Player           Times BAVG-HR-RBI   BAVG-HR-RBI  

Jose Abreu         1   .317-36-107   .290-30-101

Victor Martinez  1   .335-32-103   .245-11- 6

      The following list contains the names of players, active in 2015, who have had multiple .300-30-100 seasons in the past but have not done it in the last three years. Many have been limited by injuries. Some are still productive players like Albert Pujols, Ryan Braun and Adrian Beltre, but not at the same level as in their peak years. Since this list was started in 2004, David Ortiz is the only player that has come back with another triple milestone season.

                                Last

               .300-30-100 .300-30-100

Player           Seasons      Season     2015    Comments

Albert Pujols       10           2010   .244-40- 95   Five straight years under .300

Mark Teixeira       3           2008   .255-31- 79  Injuries have taken toll.

Ryan Braun           3         .2012   .285-25- 84   Minor comeback in 2015,

Aramis Ramirez       2           2004   .246-17- 75  Plans to retire.

Matt Holliday       2          2007   .279- 4- 35  Slowed by injuries.

David Wright         2           2008   .289- 5- 17 Injured most of season.

Josh Hamilton       2           2010   .253- 8- 25   No longer a superstar.

Adrian Beltre       2           2012   .287-18- 83   Slow start, strong finish.

      Twenty nine of the thirty major league teams have had at least one triple milestone hitter since the year 2000. Kansas City has not had a triple milestone hitter since Danny Tartabull in 1991.

      Only one minor league player recorded a triple milestone season in 2015.  

Player            Team (Level)         Organization Age      BAVG-HR-RBI

A.J. Reed            Lancaster (HiA)       Houston Astros 22         .346-23- 81                    

                 Corpus Christi (AA)                               .332-11- 46

                                                                     .340-34-127

     Another player, who split time between the majors and minors, just missed:

Carlos Correa     Corpus Christi (AA)   Houston Astros   20        .385- 7- 32      

                 Fresno (AAA)                                      .276- 3- 12

                 Houston (MAJ)                                      .279-22- 68

                                                                     .299-32-112                               

      No college players achieved triple milestones in 2015.

      Pitchers also strive for triple milestones – 20 wins, 200 strikeouts and an ERA under 3.00. Only two pitchers made all three in 2015 and they were the Cy Young Award winners:

               Wins-SO-ERA

Jake Arrieta     22-236-1.77

Dallas Keuchel   20-216-2.48

      Four other pitchers came close:

Gerrit Cole     19-202-2.60

Zack Greinke     19-200-1.66

Madison Bumgarner 18-234-2.93

David Price       18-225-2.45

      Of these six pitchers, Price is the only one with a previous triple milestone season. Arrieta and Keuchel were the only 20-game winners in 2015 but there were 12 pitchers with an ERA under 3.00 and 15 pitchers with 200 strikeouts. Winning 20 games is clearly the biggest obstacle in achieving a triple milestone season.

Bill Gilbert

bgilbert35@yahoo.com

12/28/15

 

____________________

Happy New Year to all from The Pecan Park Eagle!

happy-new-year-2016b

Remember Our Troops, Now and Forever

December 23, 2015

remember-our-troops

Overnight, going into Tuesday, 12/22/15, I received a really fascinating poetic seasonal tribute to the service of our military to the rest of us Americans. It was sent to George Comiskey, one of my classmates from the St. Thomas High School in Houston Class of 1956, by an old friend named Patrick McEnroe, but there had been no specific identification of the work’s author.

That being said, here’s how George Comiskey presented the e-mail gift to me and a mass list of other recipients: “Thank you Admiral Patrick McEnroe, my shipmate on the USS Howard D. Crow Galveston Bay, from Admiral George A. Comiskey Texas Navy and the U.S. Navy, Merry Christmas and Happy New Years.” ~ George Comiskey.

George latter added these details about his friendship history with Patrick McEnroe, adding his own resolve to help find the name of the poem’s author: “Admiral Pat McEnroe graduated from Stephen F. Austin High school (Houston). We met when I was a junior at St. Thomas and joined the Naval Reserve and Pat was in my class at the Naval Reserves. Pat’s son graduated from St. Thomas and went to the Air Force Academy and just retired from the Air Force. As an enlisted man, I had appointments to the Naval Academy and Air Force Academy. I chose the Naval Academy, where I served with Bill Gillespie from the class of 1955. I will find out Pat’s source of the poem.”

I forwarded the poem package to a number of you Tuesday morning, but your resounding positive reaction told me loudly that this piece truly deserved its own place as a Pecan Park Eagle Christmas tribute column to our military service people, complete with all the photos (except for the last one, added here) that had been worked into the cyber space presentation by its unnamed visual creator.

In time, when the author’s identity is learned, it will be added here. The writer who heard the muses for the sake of bringing life to this beautifully “different Christmas poem” deserves both our credit and appreciation.

Along the way, so far, we have been able to also clarify the side issue  that our George Comiskey, indeed, is a distant cousin of Charles Comiskey, the Baseball Hall of Fame player and early twentieth century owner of the Chicago White Sox. George explained his connection in these words:

“Charles Comiskey (of the Baseball Hall of Fame and Chicago Whites Sox ownership note) is my Grandfather James Comiskey’s cousin from Ireland. I was raised a White Sox fan in Cleveland.” – George Comiskey.

George left out the part of his family moving to Houston in time for his attendance and graduation from dear old St. Thomas.

A very special tribute and expression of gratitude flows from this work for those few of us who are specially called to defend the rest of us. This poem is not about the politicians and leaders who make mistakes with both our use, and non-use, of military power. It is about all the glorious men and women in uniform who give up their lives to the idea that America is deserving of their service, even if it means surrendering their own lives for the greater good.

Read it well. And listen mindfully to its message.

We cannot thank you enough, men and women of our American military services. Indeed, each of you who faithfully serves this nation are the polar opposites of those whose  base personal greed dictates all.

 

Peace and Love to All at Christmas Time!

c1-unnamed

A Different Christmas Poem

By Author Unknown (For Now, 12/22/2015)

c2mail.google.com

The embers glowed softly, and in their dim light,
I gazed round the room and I cherished the sight,
My wife was asleep, her head on my chest,
My daughter beside me, angelic in rest,
Outside the snow fell, a blanket of white,
Transforming the yard to a winter delight.

c3 mail.google.com

The sparkling lights in the tree I believe,
Completed the magic that was Christmas Eve.
My eyelids were heavy, my breathing was deep,
Secure and surrounded by love I would sleep.
In perfect contentment, or so it would seem,
So slumbered I, perhaps I started to dream.

c4 mail.google.com

The sound wasn’t loud, and it wasn’t too near,
But I opened my eyes when it tickled my ear.

Perhaps just a cough, I didn’t quite know,
Then the sure sound of footsteps outside in the snow.

My soul gave a tremble, I struggled to hear,
And I crept to the door just to see who was near.

Standing out in the cold and the dark of the night,
A lone figure stood, his face weary and tight.

c5 mail.google.com

A soldier, I puzzled, some twenty years old,
Perhaps a Trooper, huddled here in the cold.

Alone in the dark, he looked up and smiled,
Standing watch over me, and my wife and my child.

“What are you doing?” I asked without fear,
“Come in this moment. It’s freezing out here!

Put down your pack, brush the snow from your sleeve,
You should be at home on a cold Christmas Eve!”

For barely a moment I saw his eyes shift,
Away from the cold and the snow blown in drifts.

To the window that danced with a warm fire’s light
Then he sighed and he said, “It’s really all right,
I’m out here by choice. I’m here every night.”​

c6 mail.google.com

 

“It’s my duty to stand at the front of the line,
That separates you from the darkest of times.

No one had to ask or beg or implore me,
I’m proud to stand here like my fathers before me.
My Gramps died in Europe on a day in December,
Then he said, “That’s a Christmas ‘Gram always remembers.”
I’ve not seen my own son in more than a while,
But my wife sends me pictures. He’s sure got her smile.

Then he bent and he carefully pulled from his bag,
The red, white, and Blue American Flag.
I can live through the cold and the being alone,
Away from my family, my house and my home,
I can stand at my post through the rain and the sleet,
I can sleep in a foxhole with little to eat,
I can carry the weight of killing another,
Or lay down my life with my sister and brother,
Who stand at the front against any and all,
To ensure for all time that this flag will not fall.”

“So go back inside,” he said, “harbor no fright,
Your family is waiting and I’ll be all right.”
“But isn’t there something I can do, at the least,
“Give you money,” I asked, “or prepare you a feast?
It seems all too little for all that you’ve done,
For being away from your wife and your son.”
Then his eye welled a tear that held no regret,
“Just tell us you love us, and never forget.

c7 mail.google.com

To fight for our rights back at home while we’re gone,
To stand your own watch, no matter how long.
For when we come home, either standing or dead,
To know you remember we fought and we bled.
Is payment enough, and with that we will trust,
That we mattered to you as you mattered to us.”

_____________________

carol18cb

 

EPSON MFP image

Old Age is Not for Sissies

December 22, 2015

old-man

No Baseball Game Today!

But thanks to friend Earl Aldridge in Missouri, here are a few geriatric anecdotes for those who have lived long enough to be prepared for the lesson that “growing old is not for sissies,” nor is it an adventure that will be at all pleasant without the presence of a sense of humor.

Thanks for the following stories, Earl. We don’t know where you got them, but who cares? They are right on point to some fairly common experiences we all may get to see a piece of in ourselves or loved ones over time. My late mom introduced me to the territory about 25 years ago when I attended a St. Patrick’s Day party in San Patricio, Texas, where the purest Irish blood in my family comes from.

Early in the day, Mom called me over for introductions one of her friends. “Bill,” Mom said, “I want you to meet a lady who is one of my dearest friends in the world ….” (A long pause followed as Mom turned to the woman standing beside us.) …. “Excuse me, dear,” Mom said to the lady, “what did you say your name was?”

You betcha! That was quite a party. – It was good that the woman was compassionate, understanding, and in possession of a sense of humor. After she then introduced herself to me, the friend turned back to Mom. “Don’t worry about it, Doris,” she said. “I forget all about you all the time,”  she added, as they both laughed and hugged.

These stories from Missouri should resonate everywhere:

1) The Ice Cream Bowl Request

A couple in their nineties are both having problems remembering things. During a check-up, the doctor tells them that they’re physically okay, but they might want to start writing things down to help them remember. Later that night, while watching TV, the old man gets up from his chair ‘Want anything while I’m in the kitchen?’ he asks.

‘Will you get me a bowl of ice cream?’

‘Sure.’

‘Don’t you think you should write it down so you can remember it?’ she asks.


‘No, I can remember it.’


‘Well, I’d like some strawberries on top, too. Maybe you should write it down, so as not to forget it?’


He says, ‘I can remember that. You want a bowl of ice cream with strawberries.’


‘I’d also like whipped cream. I’m certain you’ll forget that, write it down?’ she asks.


Irritated, he says, ‘I don’t need to write it down, I can remember it! Ice cream with strawberries and whipped cream – I got it, for goodness sake!’


Then he toddles into the kitchen. After about 20 minutes, the old man returns from the kitchen and hands his wife a plate of bacon and eggs. She stares at the plate for a moment.

‘Where’s my toast?’

 

2) A Rose is Not Always the Rose that Comes to Mind

An elderly couple had dinner at another couple’s house, and after eating, the wives left the table and went into the kitchen. The two gentlemen were talking, and one said, ‘Last night we went out to a new restaurant and it was really great. I would recommend it very highly.’ The other man said, ‘What is the name of the restaurant?’

The first man thought and thought and finally said, ‘What’s the name of that flower you give to someone you love? You know, the one that’s red and has thorns.’ 

‘Do you mean a rose?’

‘Yes, that’s the one,’ replied the man. He then turned towards the kitchen and yelled, ‘Rose, what’s the name of that restaurant we went to last night?’

 

3) Never Assume from the Obvious

Hospital regulations require a wheel chair for patients being discharged. However, while working as a student nurse, I found one elderly gentleman already dressed and sitting on the bed with a suitcase at his feet, who insisted he didn’t need my help to leave the hospital. After a chat about rules being rules, he reluctantly let me wheel him to the elevator.  On the way down I asked him if his wife was meeting him. ‘I don’t know,’ he said. ‘She’s still upstairs in the bathroom changing out of her hospital gown.’

 

4) Necessity is the Mother of Invention

A senior citizen said to his eighty-year old buddy: ‘So I hear you’re getting married?’

‘Yep!’

‘Do I know her?’

‘Nope!’

‘This woman, is she good looking?’

‘Not really.’

‘Is she a good cook?’

‘Naw, she can’t cook too well.’

‘Does she have lots of money?’

‘Nope! Poor as a church mouse.’

‘Why in the world do you want to marry her then?’

‘Because she can still drive!’

 

5) Say again


A man was telling his neighbor, ‘I just bought a new hearing aid. It cost me four thousand dollars, but it’s state of the art. It’s perfect.’

‘Really,’ answered the neighbor. ‘What kind is it?’

‘Twelve thirty.’

 

6) Get the Doctor to Write It Down


Morris , an 82 year-old man, went to the doctor to get a physical. 


A few days later, the doctor saw Morris walking down the street with a gorgeous young woman on his arm. A couple of days later, the doctor spoke to Morris and said, ‘You’re really doing great, aren’t you?’  Morris replied, ‘Just doing what you said, Doc: ‘Get a hot mamma and be cheerful.”

The doctor said, ‘I didn’t say that! ….  I said, ‘You’ve got a heart murmur; be careful.!’

Two more ….

 

7) Falling …. It’s one way of getting to where you often think you need to be.

You know you’re getting older when you fall in your own house and the first thought that comes to mind upon hitting the floor  is – ‘I wonder what else I can get done as long as I’m down here?’

 

8) Nuts to You

A little old man shuffled slowly into an ice cream parlor and pulled himself slowly, painfully, up onto a stool. … After catching his breath, he ordered a banana split. The waitress asked kindly, ‘Crushed nuts?’

‘No,’ he replied, ‘Arthritis.’

____________________

"Don't forget to keep moving, folks. Christmas is only 3 days away!"

“Don’t forget to keep moving, folks. Christmas is only 3 days away!”