Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

The Sporting Life’s Sad Lexicon

October 21, 2015

Tinker Evers Chance

Baseball’s Sad Lexicon
These are the saddest of possible words:
“Tinker to Evers to Chance.”
Trio of bear cubs, and fleeter than birds,
Tinker and Evers and Chance.
Ruthlessly pricking our gonfalon bubble,
Making a Giant hit into a double –
Words that are heavy with nothing but trouble:
“Tinker to Evers to Chance.”

~ Franklin Pierce Adams

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Back in the summer of 1910, when Franklin Pierce Adams, a columnist for the New York Evening Mail, wrote those now famous baseball lines, he did so on his way to see the Giants play the Cubs at the Polo Grounds, but only because his editor just happened to have chided him as he left about coming up with a column that was a little longer in content than the one he recently had been submitting. When his quickly composed doggerel was included with his column of July 12, 1910, no one, even Adams, thought much of it as a thing of value, but those initial judgments proved wrong. Readers and other papers and writers liked it. – The thing literally did what the written word does ever now and then. It took on a life of its own.

First published as “That Double Play Again,” it was reprinted by the Chicago Daily Tribune on July 15, 1910 as “Gotham’s Woe.” Three days later, after much energetic feedback, it was published again in the New York Daily Tribune by the title that would crown its place in the history of baseball literature as “Baseball’s Sad Lexicon.”

All that being said, it occurred to me today that the poem, in a way, was about two guys named Tinker and Evers leaving the legacy of their talents up to “chance”. If the guy on first doesn’t make the final catch in this three-second performance, none of these three bear cubs are remembered well enough together to all later make it to the Hall of Fame – let alone to have inspired a beleaguered columnist to write the lines under pressure from his boss as column space fillers – only to see them become words that would soon rise to a level of historical stature far exceeding the memory of either the man who wrote them or the newspaper that published them.

The following respectful parody is dedicated to everyone in life, not baseball alone, although our sport has contributed its fair share to the total of those who sadly have frittered away opportunity because they were not able to grow up in time to see what they were doing to themselves until it was too late:

          The Sporting Life’s Sad Lexicon

These are the saddest of possible words:

“I tinkered forever with chance.”

Loving to play, I soared with the birds,

“Why go to work? Let’s just dance!”

Restlessly living my life on the bubble,

“I want what I want! Don’t give me no trouble!”

Words that lead only to life on the stubble:

When you tinker forever with chance.

                         ~ Bill McCurdy

Complex Rules May Quash Ambidextrous Pitching

October 20, 2015
Ambidextrous pitcher Pat Venditte 2008 Staten Island Yankees

Ambidextrous pitcher Pat Venditte
2008 Staten Island Yankees

 

When an ambidextrous throwing hand closing pitcher came into a June 19, 2008 game to get the last out for his visiting team against a switch hitter for the home club, the only usual circumstance at play here was the fact that both players and their teams had names. Pat Venditte had taken the mound for the visiting Staten Island Yankees; Ralph Henriquez was at the plate for the Brooklyn Cyclone.

What happened when they met under the game circumstances we usually view as “normal” was everything to the polar contrary – and without a first pitch from Venditte ever leaving either hand as a throw to the plate.

When batter Henriquez first stood in to hit as a right handed batter, Venditte shifted his special ambidextrous glove to his left hand to indicate that he now intended to throw right handed. Noting the change, Henriquez simply stepped to the other side of the plate to indicate that he now intended to bat left handed.

Since there were no rules in place seven years ago to prevent this laughable farce, it went back and forth through unreported repetitions until the not-so-happy-about-it umpire finally ordered Henriquez to hold his spot as a right handed batter and take a right handed time at bat against a right handed Venditte. Four pitches later, Henriquez struck out and the game was in the books as a win for Staten Island and a save for Venditte.

This is baseball, remember. The call went out immediately for the creation of rules to govern and control against this eventuality of this same “dance” every time an ambidextrous pitcher came into a game facing a switch hitter. Here’s what the Professional Baseball Umpire Association (PBUC) quickly came up with as the new rules governing this special circumstance after consulting with a number of deep-blue-sea baseball sources, including the Major League Baseball Rules Committee:

• The pitcher must visually indicate to the umpire, batter and runner(s) which way he will begin pitching to the batter. Engaging the rubber with the glove on a particular hand is considered a definitive commitment to which arm he will throw with. The batter will then choose which side of the plate he will bat from.

• The pitcher must throw one pitch to the batter before any “switch” by either player is allowed.

• After one pitch is thrown, the pitcher and batter may each change positions one time per at-bat. For example, if the pitcher changes from right-handed to left-handed and the batter then changes batter’s boxes, each player must remain that way for the duration of that at-bat (unless the offensive team substitutes a pinch hitter, and then each player may again “switch” one time).

• Any switch (by either the pitcher or the batter) must be clearly indicated to the umpire.

• There will be no warm-up pitches during the change of arms.

• If an injury occurs the pitcher may change arms but not use that arm again during the remainder of the game.

All of this information is derived from an informative July 2, 2008 article by Benjamin Hill for MLB.com. My apologies if this story and article is simply old news to you, but we weren’t aware of it here at the Pecan Park Eagle until Darrell “Old Reliable” Pittman sent us all this information yesterday afternoon. – Thanks again, my friend.

http://m.mlb.com/news/article/3051858/

Darrell Pittman also has provided us with an historical reference to the few ambidextrous pitchers, going back to the 19th century:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switch_pitcher

About Pat Venditte. Pat Venditte finally broke into MLB in 2015, posting a 2-2, 4.40 ERA record as a reliever for the Oakland A’s in 26 game appearances.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/v/vendipa01.shtml

Ambidexterity in General. All we care to say about the problematical issue of making sensible room for ambidextrous pitching in baseball is brief. – If their own genetic rarity doesn’t continue to make them a non-issue in the first place, they most probably are going to be governed into normalcy by those oh-so constrictive rules against their best use of that very special power to surprise batters by randomly throwing every pitch they learn at the batter by whim or design – and with either hand – whenever they want. Those opportunities no have been pretty much “ruled out” – and, I’m sorry, I have neither the information nor the time to dig it up this morning to say anything about how, if at all, ambidexterity now benefits Pat Venditte.

Have an exciting or peaceful Tuesday, everybody, with whatever happens to be your compulsion or choice of behaviors on the way to whatever your fate or destiny may be today! This Tuesday is either a day – or your day. Use it as you either choose – or feel you must.

____________________

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Random Thoughts on a Sunday Morning

October 18, 2015
Costello:

COSTELLO: “Hey, Abbott! Do you know who’s running for mayor in Houston?”
ABBOTT: “Yes, I do! Who’s a good man!”

Random Thoughts on a Sunday Morning

  1. If a certain candidate for Mayor of Houston is elected in November, “Abbott and Costello” will be governing the State of Texas and its largest city in 2016.
  2. If “Tal’s Hill” is such a terrible threat to the health of center fielders at Minute Maid Park, why hasn’t a single one of them suffered any serious harm beyond an ego bruise in the sixteen full season years of its existence to date?
  3. Gene Elston was the original voice of our Houston MLB franchise from 1962 through 1986 and a Ford Frick Award winner. Milo Hamilton was with the Houston club from 1986 until his 2015 death and the second voice of the Astros from 1987 to 2015. Milo also earned the Hall of Fame’s Ford Frick Award for broadcasters. The two men died recently, only 12 days apart. – Why is it then that only Milo was honored with the “MH” placement of his initials on the team’s uniforms for the balance of the season? – Is “GE” protected from use as the trademark property of General Electric? – Or did Gene Elston simply make his contribution to the team’s history so far back in the past that it no longer matters that he was not equally remembered by the Astros on a level with Milo Hamilton?
  4. Friday night’s televised mayoral candidates debate was encouraging. All the candidates seemed to be in favor of fixing the potholes; greater fiscal accountability; reducing crime; improving mass transportation; attracting new business and industry to the community; creating greater employment diversity opportunity for everyone; while reducing taxes that have chased many lost taxpayers to the suburbs beyond Houston’s city limits. – Based on the promises, it looks like we can’t go wrong with anyone we may happen to elect.
  5. At the mayor’s race TV debate, candidate Sylvester Turner expressed it best when he said: “If we can dream it – we can do it!” … Or maybe it was “if we can do it – we can live in a dream” – or something like that. Whatever it was, it sounded pretty good.
  6. The Astros’ 2015 progress in 2015 has fully re-lighted our hopes for a Houston World Series in the next two-years. The progress, of course, doesn’t guarantee that our Astros will earn their way that far in 2016 or 2017, but it does assure us of one thing: The cost of our hope is going to be more expensive at the game ticket office in 2016 – and especially for season ticket holders.
  7. I’m now pulling for the Cubs to break their 1908 drought this year and get that onerous failure to prolong the curse on to the backs of either the Royals or the Blue Jays. When the Astros go for their first World Series win, hopefully very soon, we don’t need the Cubs to lose this year and set up our Astros to be the same team that performs that same jinx-breaking service for the other team from the Chicago north side too.. We already took care of helping the White Sox break their 1919 Black Sox Scandal curse and the effect it had upon keeping the Pale Hose from winning the World Series since 1917. By allowing the White Sox to sweep them in 2005, the Astros got to be the patsy that helped them break the south side jinx. We want no part of the Astros doing that same favor for Chicago twice!

The morning’s over. That’s all I’ve got – for now, anyway.-  Have a restful rest of this Sunday, friends.

Bill McCurdy

The Pecan Park Eagle

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eagle-0range

Bill Gilbert’s Playoff Observations – 2015

October 18, 2015
Baseball Analyst Bill Gilbert's First Comments on the 2015 MLB Playoffs.

Baseball Analyst Bill Gilbert’s First Comments on the 2015 MLB Playoffs.

Bill Gilbert’s Playoff Observations – 2015

~ Only one AL team (Kansas City) that was in that league’s playoffs in 2014 is back in the AL playoffs in 2015.

~ The first four post-season games played this year were won by the visiting team, three of them by teams from Texas.

~ The two wild card play in games were both won by the second wild card team behind the shutout pitching of Cy Young Award candidates, Dallas Keuchel and Jake Arrieta.

~ I wonder if Jason Castro has a vision problem. He swings and misses at an alarming rate.

~ The Astros lost both of their long time broadcasters and Ford Frick Award winners Gene Elston and Milo Hamilton, in September.  They chose to honor Hamilton by wearing his initials on their jerseys in the playoffs but did not do the same for Elston. Not good.

~ The scheduling for the Division Series could be improved. The American league teams played their 4th games before the National League teams played their 3rd.

~ All four of the underdog teams in the Division Series (Cubs, Mets, Rangers, Astros) were up two games to one with a clinching game 4 in their home parks.  Only the Cubs took advantage but the Mets won Game 5. The Rangers and Astros were eliminated by losing games 5 and 6.

~ The Astros definitely need a flame throwing relief pitcher who can get a strikeout in key situations. Remember Billy Wagner and Brad Lidge?

~ In a 5-game series with Clayton Kershaw and Zack Greinke starting 4 of the games, the Dodgers should win. They didn’t.

Bill Gilbert

10/16/15

billcgilbert@sbcglobal.net

Life Imitates Sport in Houston

October 17, 2015

“You Gotta Have Heart!”

There were two big collapses in the same block of Crawford north on Texas Avenue in Houston this week. The first fall happened to the Houston Astros at Minute Maid Park in the top of the 8th inning of NLDS Game 4 on Monday, October 12, 2015. The Astros were on their way to a 6-2 game and series finishing win over the KC Royals when the bullpen collapsed, allowing the visitors to score 5 times for a 7-6 win that swelled to a 9-6 final score win for KC in the 9th, forcing Houston back to Missouri for their formal 7-2 execution in Game 5 two days later.

The second fall happened this morning, Friday, October 16, 2015, when the construction scaffolding on the mid-rise apartment building that is going up across the street on Crawford from MMP collapsed violently, injuring a handful of 4 to 6 workers, but miraculously, not seriously, as it scattered twisted limbs of bonded together steel all over the portion of Crawford that separates the ballpark from the new residential project.

Fortunately, no one died in either fall, although both were setbacks to aspirational and commercial hopes. We also need to be grateful that today’s building construction site disaster did not happen on the same morning of the Astros’ Monday afternoon baseball dreams crash.

Had the construction crash preceded the Astros crash, MLB might have been forced to push Game 4 back from noon to Monday evening, and the game would have unfolded differently. No way that the top of the 8th could have played out exactly as it did, but that doesn’t mean the Astros would have been spared anything but the horrible memory that all of us who saw it in person or on TV have now been forced to file away. That’s not how life works. The Royals might have put a 10-run 1st inning on us, had the game been forced to reschedule.

This just wasn’t a great week for either the short term hopes of the Houston Astros or the construction company working across the street.

Stuff happens, right?

In this instance, life followed sport, even though we Astro fans could argue that we all carried our own life train wreck experiences into the top of the 8th last Monday in the hope of some joy and some vicarious achievement that might lessen the pain of unhealing regrets. It just wasn’t meant to be. And maybe it never will be, but that’s life. We either make our peace with past regrets or live with the ghost of painful disappointment. Baseball just happens to be a sport in which joy or agony is often tensely little more than a single final strike or single lonely run away.

Once in while, we baseball fans get to soar with the champagne taste of joy, but when we do, we have to endure the bitter wine of hanging in there through the bad times with our club to make the eventual victory of our team – a win that belongs to the whole club family – including us dyed-in-the-wool fans. Bandwagon fans do not get to drink at this banquet.

On the 6:00 PM news tonight, we learned that OSHA is flying a team into Houston to study the construction collapse to learn what they can about its actual cause and more about what can be done to keep it from happening again. That sounded like another connection point with the Astros and their baseball collapse last Monday. If bullpens are the scaffolding the game uses to build a house of champions, maybe the Astros will begin their own OSHA review of our time and space similar collapses this week as one of the steps the team takes to finish building the house of champions that now appears as close to our reach as those apartments going up across the street on Crawford.

The tandem collapse on Crawford Street this wek is an ironic summary of life imitating sport:

In baseball, if your supportive essential relief pitching staff collapses on your way to building a house of champions, you will need to study and conclude what really went wrong and then rebuild the staff that has a much better chance of not collapsing again.

In construction, if your supportive scaffolding collapses on your way to completing a new championship quality project, you need to study and conclude what really went wrong and then rebuild the staff that has a much better chance of not collapsing again.

In baseball. In life. Collapse is part of the ride to resurrection and redemption. One uniting point rules. We gotta have heart to make the whole ride – and we absolutely must have the intelligence to learn from the factors that caused an earlier collapse.

The MLB “Special K” Problem

October 16, 2015

“The problem with calling my shot is not arrogance, but it is bad role modeling. By 2015, they are all going to think they can do it just because I once did!” ~ Babe Ruth.

Yesterday at The Pecan Park Eagle, reader/professional data analyst Andy Biles made his case with some easy to see data support that “Plain and simple – too many strike-outs” had killed the 2015 Astros’ chances for an AL pennant.

Andy Biles Says: Too Many “K”s Killed Astros

As a comment on the same column, long-time respected baseball media broadcaster and author Greg Lucas added an expansion thought about the “K” as a general problem for baseball today:

“Strikeouts are a problem everywhere, but the Astros have been the poster children over the last three years. More pitchers than anytime in the history of the game are throwing FBs at 95 mph or more so it is natural that more are K’ing. However, the object still has to be to cut down on the totals and have smarter at bats. No ball in play guarantee no hits. Balls in play give the offense a chance. Lots of walks and higher OB% are only helpful if someone can make contact, get a hit and drive them in. Waiting for bases loaded walks to score won’t win any pennants.” – Greg Lucas.

From there, it is both easy and obvious – and the case makes itself – that all of the defensive shifting we see in MLB today is nothing less than a direct response to the growing numbers of players who come to bat to pull the ball out of the park or sit down, with small chance of hitting the ball at all – let alone hitting it to the opposite field. They are trying to be Ted Williams when they are not even close to being the “Splendid Splinter”. In irony, these go-for-broke “hit or sit would be bombers” are more likely to be picking up a not so splendid, but much more painful splinter from the benches that support most of their “hit or sit” efforts.

Greg Lucas makes a good point about how much the growing presence of pitchers who throw 95 mph, or better, also buries the hopes of most wannabe sluggers. Add to that thought the fact that many of these new fireballers also now possess the ability to throw gradiently slower change ups that make the challenge of timing the fastball even tougher – especially when this new tougher breed of bigger, stronger pitchers also has one of those fade away sliders or curves that land in the low outside dirt like an irresistible carrot – and result is – there’s far more sitting than hitting.

Some of us are getting tired of 2-1 final scores that often are simply the result of three home runs in which those long balls were part of of 5-hit game in which the other two hits were accidental boomer-swing infield singles – while both teams struck out in double digit totals.

What should baseball do, if anything? Maybe nothing. Maybe something. I’d still like to see MLB leaders seminar or bejabber the snot out of this subject this off-season, and especially before Minute Maid Park brings that center field fence in about 30 feet and completes the shift of our very unique site into a total home run band box and an even stronger invitation to play “hit or sit” ball.

The argument has been expressed that studies have shown bringing the fences in at MMP will not result in a significant increase in homers to center, based upon some study of many current fly balls that were either caught or fell in as extra base hits under current conditions. The flaw in that reassurance is that these studies were of hitters who were mostly trying to avoid hitting fly balls to a foreboding 436 feet away fence. Once the distance is 400-405 feet, and the from the heels guys of 2017 see it, just watch and count the increase in balls hit to dead center that will make it over the new shorter fence. Our money is on a dramatic increase in center field homers – and another reenforcer to the thought – “Just go up there and knock it out of here. If we get enough people going yard, we won’t need any base runners.”

Making a baseball field smaller only encourages “swing-from-the-heels” baseball. Hitters need to see the possibility of a triple somewhere – or else – they may as well join the crowd of trying to reach all of the now very reachable fences.

So, what is a good option?

I’m a great fan of looking for the best adaptability answers first. Hitters who learn to take advantage of those open fields that the new shifts leave could do things: (1) They would break up the “shift” on all hitters who demonstrate the ability to hurt that extreme one side defense: and (2) Such an adaptation could help batters remember that singles or doubles down the opposite field line also count as hits – and they help bring back that rarer commodity known as “the base-runner” to the game.

The other choices all have to do with changing the height of the pitching mound or the distance of the pitching rubber from home plate. In these regards, I am totally opposed to any change that alters the basic comparative conditions that have been almost sacredly protected over time.

The home run would not disappear if we built some parks that were at least 330 feet down the line and allowed dead center to be 415 feet, but I also am not a fan of cookie cutter dimensioning answers either. Our ballpark variability on fence distances are a big part of our game’s uniqueness. I’m cool with Houston’s 315 feet left field Crawford Boxes, but only because of the deeper dimensions that now exist from left to right center.

Finally, maybe it doesn’t need to be a movement. All it takes is for a few smart players, or one team with enough of those guys in roster stock, to see being the first to acting on the vulnerability to the current trend puts you or your club at the head of the class – and starting with learning to hit to the opposite field is the obvious place to start.

The home run isn’t going to disappear with the returned of table-setting base runners. Television would never allow that to happen. Homers are TV’s signature moment. They simply are not the whole game of baseball that makes the diamond drama the closest athletic brother to the game of chess.

Andy Biles Says: Too Many “K”s Killed Astros

October 15, 2015
1o/15/2015: The Pecan Park Eagle is still thinking "orange" and always will.

1o/15/2015: The Pecan Park Eagle is still thinking “orange” and always will.

The Pecan Park Eagle Says: Now that it really is over, we Astros will continue to digest our experience with the young and hopeful 2015 Astros. I don’t think any new impression will overcome for me the joy of having this club to watch over those unwatchable 100-game losers of recent years, but I’m also sure that we shall all come to some clearer perspective on why the 2015 pennant chase for us died last night. Right now, it still feels like it got lost to us in the top of  the 8th of Monday’s Game 4, when we couldn’t, for the first time this year, hold a 4-run lead over KC that would have had us waiting all week to play the Blue Jays in Toronto tomorrow night with Dallas Keuchel ready to go – and our memory of his nightmarish relief appearance in the bottom of the 8th at KC last night now erased as something that never happened. Too bad about that blight. The 3-run homer that Keuchel surrendered was little more than snother sliver of glass on the floor from the Crushed City fall.

In the meanwhile, friend and reader Andy Biles has written this morning to put some legs on what many of us think was the root cause of why the Astros couldn’t win the pennant in 2015, although I have to say we still might have beaten the odds had the bullpen not failed us on Monday. Overall, the middle relief pen was another serious weakness, as were the absence of a catcher who could both catch and hit – and the missing corner infielders who could hit for both power and average.

Andy Biles Says:

“Plain and simple – too many strike-outs. If you look at the attached sheet, the last column is the strike-out ratio as a percentage of plate appearances without a base hit or walk. Everyone on the team, except for Altuve and Correa (barely), has a strike-out ratio greater than their batting average. Five players (Rasmus, Carter, Castro, Marisnick, and Conger) have strike-out ratios greater than one-and-a-half times their batting average. The batter must put the ball in play in order to generate base runners and score runs. You can’t advance, if the opposing pitcher wins most of the time. It was the long ball that got them this far, but the lack of team batting average kept them from winning a pennant.” – Andy Biles, 10/15/2015.

Andy Biles stats____________________

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As Time Goes By

October 15, 2015

“Shut up, Miles! I know the Astros lost to KC, but you have to pull yourself together and take it like a man! Besides, we work in San Francisco – and we can ill afford it for the word to get around that we are both really closet Astros fans! Our Giants clients would ditch us faster than all the dames we try to hustle do now.”

Castablama

 (Singable to the melody from “As Time Goes By”)

 By Bill McCurdy

It’s still the same old story,

A fight to win – that’s gory,

In which – we always die,

The fundamental things go wrong,

… And Houston – cries!

Moon shot – for two runs,

Great to – start the game,

Then it all – ends up,

Pretty much – the same,

We want to win once,

But winning’s – not our thing,

… That no one – can deny!

But we’ll go back to – square one,

This year was such a – fun run,

Our hopes will rise again!

That we will see the Astros – win one,

… As time goes by!

Code Blue: Cubs Reach Next Round First

October 14, 2015
Cubs Fan at MMP in 2009 Six years later, the Cubs are still counting.

Cubs Fan at MMP in 2009
Six years later, the Cubs are still counting.

It happened within ten minutes of 7:00 PM, CDT, Tuesday, October 13, 2015 at Wrigley Field. The Chicago Cubs finished off a 6-4 win over the St. Louis Cardinals to take their NLDS match by a 3 wins to 1 measure, becoming the first club in the four-game, two-league playoff process to move on to the next round of play in both the NL and AL. At this writing, the Mets host the Dodgers tonight, leading their series, 2-1, with a chance take the other NL spot in the NLCS in opposition to the Cubs.

Barring weather problems, the ALDS pairings are both tied at 2-2 and will be decided tomorrow, Wednesday, when the Blue Jays host the Rangers in the afternoon at Toronto and the Royals entertain the Astros in Kansas City. We Astros fans will only hope that the Royals’ view of “entertainment” is not fulfilled again as it was in Houston yesterday when our Astros team and all of us Astros fans had to settle for a loss that came in the form of a royal shaft to all our brief 7th inning joy by way of an 8th inning Houston nightmare collapse of legendary proportions.

Speaking of legends, this is Tuesday night. No one should be jealous – or too angry at the Cubs tonight – for what they accomplished against the Cardinals this afternoon. Remember – this is the pretty darn good 2015 team of the franchise that hasn’t won a World Series since 19-friggin’-08!

Do you have any working idea of how long ago that was in approximate terms?

2015-1908 = 107 years!

107 years = 1,296 months!

1,296 months = 38,880 weeks!

38,880 weeks = 272,160 days!

272,160 days = 6,531,840 hours!

My calculator cannot perform the further math that reduces our answer into how many minutes and seconds have passed since the Cubs won the 1908 World Series, but it has been way more than a minor moment of nervous impatience. The next time someone in the family tells you to “wait a minute” as they are dressing for some kind of occasion you are both planning to attend together, have a little patience as you try to remember: In Chicago Cubs terms, “waiting a minute” is not an outrageous request.

As a fan of the game, I wold love to see the Cubs break their World Series drought, As an Astros fan, however, I do not want to see them do it against our club. Because of our unique circumstantial league change, the Astros are in a position to do something that no other club could ever do – since we already have fulfilled the first essential part:

In 2005, as the NL champions, the Astros helped the Chicago White Sox to break the “Black Sox Curse” that had kept the club from winning a World Series since 1917. The Pale Hose defeated the Astros, 4 games to none, to take the 2005 World Series jinx-breaker.

Now, scary as it sounds, for at least another 24 hours, barring a loss tomorrow night in Kansas City, the Astros are still on track to possibly be the AL representative in the World Series – and that’s a desirable goal in one clear respect – the Astros would become the first MLB club to play in the World Series as a representative of both leagues. Of course, we could never become the first team to win a World Series as a representative of both leagues by virtue of the fact that we blew our one NL chance to win when we got bounced by the Sox in 2005.

But the door remains open for the Astros, pending tomorrow’s results in KC, that the Astros could still become the club that helps both Chicago clubs remove their special curses, regardless of their sources. We want no part of that distinction.

So, what am I saying?

  1. I am hoping the Astros will beat the Royals tomorrow – then hopeful they will knock off the Rangers/Blue Jays winner for the AL pennant – and then defeat whomever represents the NL in the 2015 World Series. Our Astros franchise World Series remorse is ever bit as justifiable as that of the Cubs. The differences are clear: (a) the Cubs mourn 1908; the Astros don’t even have a past World Series win to mourn; and, (b) the Astros and their fans don’t simply show up at the park to celebrate being “lovable losers” as the Cub fans do – and we never will!
  2. If the Astros survive KC, I would prefer to see the Astros beat up on the Mets as a payback for 1986, but I would secondly enjoy beating the Dodgers for 1981 and all those other times they made it hard on the Astros in the NL West.
  3. If we have to play the Cubs, then the Pecan Park Eagle says: “Beat ‘Em, Astros! Extend that World Series hibernation into its 109th year, but let the Cubbies come back to break their jinx in a year the Astros are not there too as their AL opponent.

Keep thinking orange, Astros fans – no matter what happens Wednesday night of this week.

____________________

eagle-0range

It Ain’t Over Til It’s Over

October 13, 2015
Monday, October 12, 2015 Minute Maid Park Houston, Texas 12:00 PM Game 4: Royals @ Astros

Monday, October 12, 2015, 12:07 PM
Minute Maid Park
Houston, Texas
Game 4: Royals 9 – Astros 6 (but we ain’t dead yet!)

When the Astros grabbed a 6-2 pulling away lead going into the top of the 8th, and an advantage that could have been 8-2, had we figured out a way to get men home from 2nd and 3rd with only one out and not settled for two “Ks”, things looked pretty good for an imminently  jubilant jolt of great victorious celebration on the field by our  “Crush City Conquerors” or “Hustle Town Hackers.” Take your pick. It was only six outs away.

Some of the Astros fans around us in section 118 were already toasting the 4-run orange tally in the bottom of the 7th as though victory were now a fait accompli and that the two remaining time at bat for Kansas City were little more than a pleasurable formality on the way to the trophy dinner.

Suddenly, I felt swept up by an eerie foreboding that we had all been swept up by a powerful “high” that could possibly lead us to an even more painful, but familiar to many of us “low” from our past experience.  This was a not an enrichment of foresight that abruptly hit upon me; it was an encroachment of hindsight from the painful Astros playoff memories of 1980 and 1986 that once dashed hope and set up this recurring memory of what happened back then to two games that appeared to be in the bag – but were not.

On October 12, 1980, exactly 35 years ago today, the Astros went into the top of the 8th in the final Game 5 of the NLCS at the Astrodome with Nolan Ryan pitching for Houston and leading the Phillies by 3 runs, 5-2. Astros fans were celebrating early then, as they were again today. – And guess what happened – in case you don’t remember. – The Phillies hammered Ryan out of the box, bringing in Joe Sambito as the first in a conga-line of relievers, scoring 5 times for a 7-5 lead. – The Astros tied it at 7-7 with a 2-run spot in the bottom of the 8th, but the Phillies went on to capture the game, the NL pennant, and eventually the World Series by an 8-7 mark in ten innings.

On October 15, 1986, three days shy of 29 years ago today, the Astros went into the top of the 9th at the Astrodome with a 3-0 lead over the New York Mets that they had held since their first time at bat. Lefty Bob Knepper was pitching and seemed to have the Mets eating out of his hands on the Houston club’s way to a win in Game 6 of a 7 game NLCS that would tie things at 3-3 in wins and leave the Mets at the mercy of their great nemesis, Mike Scott, in Game 7 at the Dome. Some Astros fans were again doing the early celebration of their good fortune when, suddenly again, in the top  of the 9th, the Mets and strange play misfortunes allowed the visitors to tie the game at 3-3. The Mets went on to win the game, 7-6, in 16 innings. The hard fought victory allowed the Mets to take the NLCS and pennant 4 games to 2 as they also later rallied past the Boston Red Sox in the World Series.

Today was just another reminder of Yogi Berra. “It ain’t over til it’s over for sure, Yogi” and that’s a blade that cuts the same for both teams in any game or series. Give KC the credit that’s due them. They pulled off an amazing late recovery to stay alive and take the final game of this five-game series back to western Missouri, but neither them or the Astros have won anything yet.

“It ain’t over til it’s over!”

Keep thinking orange, Astros fans!

POSTSCRIPT:

When I'm home watching Astros baseball on my HD big screen TV, these guys who sat in front of me at today's game never show up to block my great view of all the action.

When I’m home watching Astros baseball on my HD big screen TV, these guys who sat in front of me at today’s game at MMP never show up to block my great view of all the action.

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