Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Hole in Bucket on Old Minor League Stats

July 22, 2015
FOLEY WHITE HOUSTON BUFFALOS 1910

FOLEY WHITE
HOUSTON BUFFALOES
1910

This article on Foley White shifted overnight. What was going to be another “mystery player” column now has transformed into a piece on a certain kind of error that may be, or seems to be, occurring at Baseball Reference.Com, relative to certain minor league players from the ancient years ago era who may have played fewer than ten games with certain clubs in the same year they worked for more than one team. Foley White, the player shown above in a T-Card depiction of him as a “Houston” player is our case in point. Baseball Reference.Com does not show him as ever having played fr Houston:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/player.cgi?id=white-001fol

When reader/researcher Davis Barker first sent us the picture card of Foley White, he noted that this player may have been the first Houston team member to ever adorn a baseball card. We at the Pecan Park Eagle, of course, immediately ran into the missing data at “BB-REF.COM” and jumped to the too-soon conclusion that we had another mystery player on our hands. – Who was the guy in the Houston uniform, if he was not “Foley White?” I couldn’t be Foley White. Our Baseball Reference source doesn’t show him as ever playing here. The fellow in the artful illustration had to be someone else.

Right?

Maybe not.

Before starting to work on the “mystery player” column, I e-mailed Davis Barker last night to see if he had anything further to contribute.

Did he ever?

I awoke this morning to the following e-mail response from Davis Barker. It is information that puts a whole new light on certain questions that need to arise any time with minor league players we may be researching back to the early 20th and 19th centuries, when data was sparse, reported unevenly and often missing from available news files. We mean no disparagement of the great job that Baseball Reference.Com has done with the early minor league years data. It’s just that this example points again to how, even in this wonderfully organized new digital era, it isn’t likely that anything we humans do will ever reach perfection.

“At any rate, here’s what Davis Barker said in response to the ews that we planned to write a “mystery player’ column this morning:

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El Paso (TX) Herald Tuesday, May 31, 1910 Submitted by Davis Barker

El Paso (TX) Herald
Tuesday, May 31, 1910
Submitted by Davis Barker

Again, one of those cases where the stats (on BaseballRef.com I assume) are also not exactly correct.  They are based on Reach and Spaulding Guides who are reported by league statisticians who are also sometimes remiss (not to mention the fact of Less Thans – ie: those in less than 10g aren’t included).  At any rate, and based on what I have observed AND Bill Ruggles again, Foley White spent part of 1909 and part of 1910 with Houston and part with Waco … you will find his stats on Waco’s … according to Ruggles notation, it should look something like this:

1909 Houston-Waco
1910 Waco-Houston
“Foley was sort of the region’s “Suitcase Simpson” on the day …. and a lot of his work is buried in being a consistent “Less Than” in league stats and therefore in obscurity … if you want me to followup in the next few days pulling together everything I can find in my files, please let me know.
ALSO …. It is possible that another Houston player may also be in the set …. but I haven’t seen a picture of one or have knowledge of one … BUT …. This is the question I can’t answer … in his Texas League experience he was generally a backup catcher, a Have-Mitt-Will-Travel type of guy, if you will … if that was true, then why did they choose him to represent Houston in this set?  Maybe he knew the photographer ….”
dob (Davis O. Barker)
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Our thorough Mr. Barker also has conveyed these two additional pieces of information since we began this column:
White was released by the Buffs in 1910 in the first week of July …
and … the back of his T-Card picture:
Back of Foley White card

Back of Foley White card

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Thank you, Davis Barker. We will happily take anything else you may find and post it on this column. We too share your question. How a short-timer like Foley White got his image depicted on a Houston baseball card is still a mysery, as is the question: Was the Foley White card the first of its kind in all of Houston baseball history?
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Herskowitz Is Our Houston Writing Icon

July 21, 2015
MICKEY HERSKOWITZ ~ IN HIS HOUSTON POST, BY-LINED, SALAD DAYS

MICKEY HERSKOWITZ
~ IN HIS HOUSTON POST, BY-LINED, SALAD DAYS

Mickey Herskowitz was our featured speaker at the July 2015 meeting of the Larry Dierker Chapter of SABR in Houston last night. Our Spaghetti Western restaurant sanctuary room on Shepherd Drive never rocked more FULLY with laughs and good information. Matt “The Handsome One” Williams, a local boy and former pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays and yours truly were the other presenters on the card lined up by our chapter program manager, Jim Kreuz. Mickey was great; Matt was awesome; and yours truly probably would have done well to simply have yielded his time to his two seasoned baseball world program companions.

Matt Williams did a beautiful job describing the awe he felt facing the TV stars of his childhood on the New York Yankees at home in his MLB pitching debut in Toronto – and then again five days later in Yankee stadium. We will never forget the imagery of Matt going “cheek-to-cheek” in hero worship with the Lou Gehrig monument in the stadium outfield at the original Yankee Stadium – and then having to be reeled in by his coach in time to warm up for the game.

Mickey Herskowitz, as per usual, was one seamless flow of funny stories and comments as he poured over memories in much the same way he once wrote about them for about a half century in both the Houston Post and Chronicle. We had never heard the story previously of his Hungarian-born immigrant grandfather, but I will never forget it now. When Mickey was only 14 years old, and already working at Buff Stadium as the volunteer stat manager for Buffs broadcaster Lee Hedricks at AM radio station KATL, Mickey’s grandfather, who neither understood nor cared anything about baseball, used to stay up every night the Buffs were at home – just to hear announcer Hedricks’ sign-off comment – “we would like to close again tonight by once more thanking our 14-year old statistician, Mickey Herskowitz, for being here to help us bring you this game more fully.”

Grandfather Herskowitz simply wanted to hear his grandson’s name go out into the Houston broadcast night before he turned out the light and went to sleep.

Later in life, once Mickey had established himself as one of the top biographers in America, he took on the daunting job of writing for famous actress Bette Davis. Ms. Davis insisted that he change his first name for her book because she felt that “Mickey” was unbecoming of a writer of his stature. In short, her book became the only one that Mickey signatured as “Michael Herskowitz.” – He had no choice. Ms. Davis’s “suggestion” was really a “demand.” – Mickey says he always wondered what his grandfather would have thought about that move, but he already knew.

After thousands of breakfasts over the years, many of us preferred an order of two eggs over easy, bacon, toast, and Mickey’s column as the way we chose to start our day. As such, we had so many opportunities to chuckle quietly over his wit and awareness of little under-the-radar facts that immediately made sense as soon as he wrote them. I brought up a vivid example of such when I spoke last night. – Mickey once wrote about a night in which he and the late Howard Cosell had dinner together.

“Howard Cosell is the only dinner companion I’ve ever known who actually broadcasts the meal,” Mickey once observed.

How great an observation is that one? If you’ve ever heard Howard Cosell drone along on those old ABC NFL Monday Night Football telecasts, can’t you just imagine him doing the same thing that Mickey observed at dinner? In fact, this Cosell propensity to broadcast every waking moment of the day was used at the conclusion of that old Woody Allen movie, “Bananas”, when Cosell was called into the bedroom of Allen’s movie character to telecast the conjugal completion of his “happy ending” wedding.

When asked, Mickey also described the terror attacks at the 1972 Munich, Germany Olympics as the biggest moment in his reporting career. In Munich as a sports writer, Mickey Herskowitz suddenly found himself handed a primary role in reporting on the far more horrible state of human affairs –  and he handled it with all the clarity and professionalism of a seasoned war correspondent.

Mickey Herskowitz is – and always will be – a Houston icon – and a giant of the American world of media and literature. He covered it all – and he covered everything as well or better than anyone else that comes to this mind. And, in a curious way, it just may be that the universality of his work, ironically, has kept him from receiving the Baseball Hall of Fame’s highest award to any baseball media journalist, The J.G. Taylor Spink Award.

Now, if a Houston faction ever wants to get behind a movement, per se, The Pecan Park Eagle certainly will stand with you on promoting Mickey Herskowitz for that honor. From all his baseball books, columns, the delightful “Letters from Lefty”, and newspaper beat work coverage dating back to a 14-year old kid who once kept stats on the entire Texas League, there isn’t a Spink winner out there who has done more for baseball than Mickey Herskowitz!

By “coincidence”, I arrived home last night to find that good old Darrell Pittman had sent me a link to something Mickey Herskowitz had written about Apache Junction back in 1963. – Check it out. – And rack up another run of the idea floor by Mickey H!

ttp://www.azspringtrainingexperience.com/article/the-land-of-the-nonbreaking-curveball—sports-illustrated-march-11-1963

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Follow Up #1 on Hillsboro Phenom

July 20, 2015
The Light Shines a Little Brighter Today Our Mystery Guy is John Douglass ~ Courtesy of Contributor Davis Barker

The Light Shines a Little Brighter Today
Our Mystery Guy is John Douglass
~ Courtesy of Contributor Davis Barker

Our story on the 1899 Hillsboro, Texas Pitching Phenom named “Douglass” began yesterday with the column you will find at this link:

Hillsboro Pitching Phenom is Mystery Man

We heard the same day from a reader and other researcher named Davis Barker of Jacksonville, Texas with this comment at the column site:

“The DOUGLASS you are referring to was JOHN DOUGLASS – he starred at the Univ of Texas in ’96, ’99, and 1900 … although he desired to make a living with his law degree, he was talked into playing briefly with Austin’s Texas League team in 1900, becoming the first UT player to play pro ball … if you desire to see the newspaper article this is based on, send me an email address and I will send it to you … I don’t think I can post it here.”

We  immediately accepted Mr. Barker’s offer and sent him an e-mail of interest in his supply of further information. Davis Barker came through with an immediate additional newsprint clip from the same summer of 1899 that contained additional confirming information on the full identity and life outcome that apparently unfolded for John Douglass, whose talent for pitching a baseball apparently was not matched by any passionate desire for greatness in the game:

Houston Daily Post August 15, 1899 Contributed by Davis Barker Jacksonville, Texas

Houston Daily Post
August 15, 1899
Contributed by Davis Barker
Jacksonville, Texas

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Mr. Barker also added the following information to the content section of his follow-up e-mail:

Am trusting Bill Ruggles’ old book (The Texas League) as source that he played with Austin in ’99 – over the last thirty years of research, while I haven’t found him to be perfect – it is a good place to start … stats were also limited in nature in those days.  … I will check further to see if I can find boxes to collect stats ….

 “JOHN STEVENS DOUGLASS (1876-1946) … got his law degree from UT in ’01
After his days in Hillsboro, he relocated to Galveston and served as claims agent for Santa Fe Railroad
Although passed over for many years, he was eventually elected to the UT Sports Hall of Honor”
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It is conceivable that a UT student athlete and pitcher with the talents of Mr. John Douglass did pitch for the 1899 Austin Senators of  the four-club Class C Texas Association, but the 19th century records of Baseball Reference, at this point, do not yet cover that specific association of minor league play. We will continue to keep the door open on this subject and, if merited, generate new ongoing columns of follow-up on our no-longer-a-total-mystery subject. The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, which also is not unerring, especially is that last decade of the 19th century period and first decade of the 20th century, doesn’t even show Austin as fielding a professional team in 1900. And that’s about all we know for sure this evening. Darrell Pittman and I, and everyone else who hangs out or gets involved here at The Pecan Park Eagle in this kind of research is still appreciative of the much extra light that Davis Barker has brought to our search for John Douglass.

Thanks, Travis! – And stay in touch!

The mystery for any of us who ever may have dreamed of having his kind of talent for baseball will always have no better than answer than the not-so-simply digestible fact that all of us are uniquely different in our aptitudes, abilities, and aspirations. – John Douglass chose getting his law degree and then going to work in Galveston as a claims agent for the Santa Fe Railroad over the possibility of a great career in baseball.

Really, John? …. Really?? …. Really???

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Addendum Information from Darrell Pittman:

Baseball Reference shows him (with one “s”) pitching one game for Austin, a  complete-game five-hit shutout, also going 1-for-4 at the plate, and they give the start and end of his career as June 3, 1899:

http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/player.cgi?id=dougla004joh

San Antonio Light June 4, 1899 Submitted by Darrell Pittman

San Antonio Light
June 4, 1899
Submitted by Darrell Pittman

What would have been a 4-0 victory for Austin was expanded into a 9-0 forfeit victory in favor of Austin as a result of the umpire’s ruling on the field debacle. Pitcher John Douglass still kept his one-game professional career stats, framed forever as a perfect undefeated 1-0 record and an ERA of 0.00. One other basic performance question remains unknown, according to Baseball Reference.Com. As for hitting and throwing, was John Douglass a righty or a lefty? I’m betting he was right handed. Had Douglass been a lefty, that probably would have been better publicized during that Turn of the 20th Century era as one of the “scientific” explanations for his unusual attitude about the game of baseball.

Thanks, Darrell Pittman, for the rapid expansion of everything we are learning about “The Curious Case of the Young Man Who Hated What He Did So Well!”

Senator Owner Sees Open AL Race in 1928

July 18, 2015
CLARK GRIFFITH, OWNER 1928 WASHINGTON SENATORS

CLARK GRIFFITH, OWNER
1928 WASHINGTON SENATORS
“YOU GOTTA HAVE HOPE!”

March 18, 1928. The air of spring is a powerful intoxicant. In baseball, it sometimes empacts how we view the near future of our favorite club, what we hope for, and, if we are the team owner, it very definitely has the power, along with our concern for the bottom line, how we want our team’s fans to see the case for fresh hope. Here, with a good example of the owner’s loaded lungs of spring and personal fiduciary investment, is how Washington Senators owner Calvin Griffith saw the coming of the 1928 season.

Keep in mind that the 1927 New York Yankees were the club that came to be regarded by many over time as the greatest club of all time. The ’27 “Murderers’ Row” Yankees won 110 games, while losing only 44. They finished 15 games ahead of the second place Philadelphia Athletics and 25 games up on the third place Washington Senators before sweeping the NL’s Pittsburgh Pirates 4 games to nothing in the World Series. And, oh yes, 1927 was Babe Ruth’s apex 60 HR year and also the season that Lou Gehrig chipped in 47 homers of his own.

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SENATOR OWNER SEES OPEN RACE AMERICAN LOOP

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Clark Griffith Is One Who Doesn’t

Believe Yanks Can Make It Runaway Affair

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Tampa, Fla., March 17. (AP) – Clark Griffith, president of the Washington baseball club, first a great pitcher in the American League and later a smart  manager in both the American and National, votes a straight and emphatic “no” on the resolution to turn the 1928 pennant over to the world champion New York Yankees.

“Not at all,” said the gray thatched baseball man with young eyes when asked if the Yankees could be considered “in.” “In spite of all that has been said of the murderous qualities tucked away in the Yankees’ bats, you can count the real hitters of the club on one hand.

“Against ordinary pitchers, yes, but against real, outstanding, smart pitchers, no.

“A clever pitcher can stop the New York sluggers with a base on balls here and there, and when they are not piling up the runs, they will not be such terrors. They can be scored on plenty. The champions’ pitching staff is not a world beater.

“I confidently look forward to a race this year. I hope and believe we will be in it.

“I am as confident as I can be of anything at this time of year that we will get good pitching. I don’t know who the pitchers will be. That’s Bucky’s (Manager Harris) business but there are 14 out there working their heads off to get on the team and there will be a tough crowd to beat when they are finally picked.”

~ Associated Press, Wichita Daily Times, March 18, 1928, Page 13.

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Fall of 1928. The New York Yankees did win 9 fewer games in 1928, but they still repeated as AL champions, with a record of 101 and 153 that was still good enough to edge the second place Philadelphia Athletics by 2.5 games and 19 games over the third place St. Louis Browns. Mr. Griffith’s club, the Washington Senators, failed to live up to their owner’s hopes, slipping to fourth place in 1928, and 26 games behind the pennant repeating Yankees – or one full game further behind New York than they did in 1927. Ruth again led the big leagues in homers in 1928, but he also slipped from 60 to 54 in that single season.

The 1928 New York Yankees again swept the World Series – this time, avenging that seven-game loss they suffered in 1926 to the St. Louis Cardinals.

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From Here to Eternity, In Baseball and in Life: Hope returns every spring. It’s really with us everyday, if we are open to its scent in some new form. And we need to sense  it – no matter what we may be up against. It is the breath of life itself and the portal to all spiritual awakenings.

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Hornsby 1922 Deal Is MLB Roof-Raiser

July 16, 2015
After hitting .397 with 21 HR in 1921, Rogers Hornsby held out for $25,000 in 1922. The Cardinals wanted him to be happy with $17K. Hornsby finally settled for a figure between $20K and $ $25K and then batted .401 with 42 HR in 1922.

After hitting .397 with 21 HR in 1921, Rogers Hornsby held out for $25K in 1922 after the Cardinals offered $17K. Hornsby finally settled for a figure between $20K and $ $25K and then batted .401 with 42 HR in 1922. – Talk about a club getting some bang for their buck! Cardinal leader Branch Rickey never met a star he couldn’t poor-mouth down the scale at salary negotiation time.

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CARDINALS’ BRIGHTEST STAR COMES TO TERMS

By Associated Press

St. Louis, Mo., March 9 (1921) Rogers Hornsby, leading batsman in the National League (in 1921), who has been holding out (on his salary for 1922), late this afternoon agreed to sign a contract and will depart for the Cardinals’ training camp at Orange, Tex., in time to participate in the exhibition game at Dallas Saturday with Cleveland, it is announced.

The agreement was reached after a long conference with Manager Branch Rickey. Terms of the contract were not made public but it is understood that the salary is between $20,000 and $25,000, with a clause increasing the salary if the club finishes first, second or third in the league race. Hornsby has been demanding $25,000 and the club recently offered to give him $17,000

The contract makes Hornsby the highest paid player in the (National) league.

~ THE GALVESTON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1922

Thank you again, Darrell Pittman, for the news clipping that inspired the presentation of this column.

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As non-economists, we are not specifically sure how those 1922 dollars translate into a baseball season salary for 2015, but we seriously doubt that 1922’s .401, 42 HR hitter Hornsby’s salary would even come close to today’s MLB minimum wage. For most, if not all, of his big league administrative career, Branch Rickey reportedly had a bonus clause in his contract with employers in St. Louis and Brooklyn that paid him for money he saved in player negotiations. And he didn’t just haggle down the big stars; he did it with any player asking for a better deal than the club (Rickey) had offered.

The late Bobby Bragan told me that his trade from the early 1940s Philadelphia Phillies to the Brooklyn Dodgers was really the biggest moment in his career. In one fell swoop, he had gone from the arguably most horrible club in the big leagues – to the up and coming contender Dodgers, thanks to Brooklyn GM Rickey. When Bragan later expressed some unhappiness with Mr. Rickey’s salary offer for the following season, it became a very brief uprising. “If you’re not happy with the Dodgers, Bobby,” Rickey supposedly told Bobby, “I can always arrange for your return to the Phillies. They’ve already let me know that they wouldn’t mind having you back.”

Enough said. Bragan signed for whatever the Dodgers were willing to pay him from there. And he remained a Dodger during the major event that deeply altered his life forever. The 1947 arrival of Jackie Robinson ultimately caused Alabamian Bragan to re-arrange his thinking about race, discrimination, and prejudice – and to blossom into one of the best teachers of the game and, even more importantly, a lifelong supporter of causes to help young people.

In my book, the best baseball people are not just the guys, players or administrators, that cut the best deals for themselves alone, but for those who, like the late Bobby Bragan and the still very present Jimmy Wynn, Larry Dierker, Craig Biggio and now, young Carlos Correa too, just to name a few, who all have dedicated – and just started giving – so much energy and money of their own to programs helping disadvantaged members of our communities, – and especially, kids.

Keep it up, guys!

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Deep Time By Rob Sangster is Great Read

July 15, 2015

“DEEP TIME”
BY
ROB SANGSTER
2015

Deep Time found its breath in Ground Truth. Now its principal character lives on to fight another day of compelling, fast-moving story action, with much of it darkly unfolding in a literal ocean of mystery and intrigue. Jack Strider quickly arises again as the character-to-care-about, as he did in Ground Truth. Now he surfaces in Deep Time, this time, from the ocean’s great unknown, with all its ancient fears of the deep, and some new ones to consider, as well.

Jaws gave us the teeth of the monster to worry about; – Deep Time gives us the minds of men to fear.

The pace is wonderful, the plot reaches the mind-numbing scary level, and the cast of characters are so real that they once more scratch that primordial wish that many of us share for the triumph of good over evil. Congratulations to the author on another “can’t-put-it-down” masterful job of dangerous plot writing.

Rob Sangster is the best new “undiscovered” mystery/suspense writer in America” today. – Deep Time should be the cure for that issue.

~ Bill McCurdy, The Pecan Park Eagle, a NetGalley.Com Review, July 2015

“GROUND TRUTH”
BY
ROB SANGSTER
2012

Check out a previous Pecan Park Eagle column, Ground Truth: By Rob Sangster at the following link:

Ground Truth: By Rob Sangster

ROB SANGSTER TODAY! Living Proof That Age is Just a Number!

ROB SANGSTER TODAY!
Living Proof That Age is Just a Number!

Back in the fall of 1955, neither of us could see the unfolding of the different paths our lives were about to take beyond St. Thomas High School, but our choices of universities may have been the first hint. Rob headed for Stanford in the fall of 1956. I took the Gulf Freeway to UH. – Rob found the river that rolled through law school. My stream carried me into the world of psychology and a lifetime of clinical mental health work.-  Rob’s life spanned the mountaintops of the globe and literally carried him to the seven wonders of the world. I remained in Houston as one of those who found awe in the Eighth Wonder of the World. – Rob has ended up living a half year at his home on the Nova Scotia coastline and the other six months at a second home in Memphis. I’m still a 12-months a year, 24/7, one house Houstonian.

In spite of these differences in our life scripts, the writing waters that started for both of us as reporters for the St. Thomas High School Eagle in Houston have swept both of us back together in contact through the Internet. I could not be happier to have my old Eagle brother and fellow writer back in my life.

And, just a note to all of our other St. Thomas classmates. – Rob would dearly love to hear from all of you who care to write. His e-mail address is rob@sangster.com

I guess the signs of Rob’s adventurous life-to-come were there at St. Thomas back in the day. I remember looking across the aisle at Rob during Civics class once as we all practiced endurance at a monotone lecture after lunch on organizational structure. I thought Rob was taking notes until I took a closer look at the elaborate four-letter script he had finished composing in favor of heavy embossing the thing in bold black ink reinforcement.

It read: “Chairman of the Bored”.

Hope all of you will consider purchasing “Deep Time” through Amazon.Com. You will be in for a super cool introduction to the most unforgettable ongoing fictional hero since Travis McGee. His name is Jack Strider, but he moves with all the same worldly mental and physical high energy as his creator, a fellow named Rob Sangster.

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Many a Hit Has to Fall – But It’s All – In the Game

July 14, 2015

Many a Hit Has to Fall – But It’s All – In the Game

a parody of Tommy Edwards’ classic hit, “It’s All in the Game”

by Bill McCurdy

Many a hit – has to fall – to stand tall – in the game

All in the wonderful game – with bat, ball – and glove

 

When your team – can’t win – and the schedule’s – looking dim

That’s the time – your heart must rise – above

 

Soon wins may be – by your side – if you don’t – change shirts

Wear the same socks everyday – til the smell – flat hurts

 

Lady Luck’s – your friend – if you humor her – to every end

Then the balls – will fall – your way

“HERE COMES YOUR LUCK, FRIEND! ~ GET READY FOR THE DROP!”

The All Time All-In-The-Name All Stars

July 14, 2015
WILLIE STARGELL The only real star on this team In Name and Actuality

WILLIE STARGELL
The only real star on this team
In Name and Actuality

The All Time All-In-The-Name All Stars    

Pitchers ~ DENNY STARK (BL/TL) (1999-2009) (15-14, 5.81 ERA)

DICK STARR (BR/TR) (1947-1951) (12-24, 5.25 ERA)

RAY STARR (BR/TR) (1932-1933, 1941-1945) (37-35, 3.53 ERA)

HERM STARRETTE (BR/TR) (1963-1965) (1-1, 2.54 ERA)

Catcher ~ GEORGE STARNAGLE (BR/TR)

(1902, 1 Game, 0 for 3) (.000, 0 HR)

First Base ~ WILLIE STARGELL (BL/TL) (1962-1982) (.282, 475 HR)

(Hall of Fame, 1st Ballot, 1988)

Second Base ~ CHARLIE STARR (UNK/TR)

(1905, 1908-1909) (.211, 0 HR)

Third Base ~ DOLLY STARK (BR/TR) (1909-1912) (.238, 0 HR)

Shortstop/Catcher ~ BILL STARR (BR/TR) (1935-1936, 24 AB)

(.208, 0 HR)

Left Field/Catcher ~ MATT STARK (BR/TR) (1997-1990, 28 AB)

(.179, 0 HR)

Center Field/Pitcher ~ CONRAD STARKEL (BR/TR)

(1906, 1 Game, 3 IP) (0-0, 18.00 ERA)

Right Field/ First Base ~ JOE START (BL/TL) (1876-1886) (.300, 7 HR)

Club Notes: Of the 12 men who made it to MLB with the letters “S-T-A-R” at the beginning of their surnames, five got there, and mostly by their fingernails, and ever so briefly, as pitchers. Raising the question: Does the presence of “star” at the beginning influence the way almost half of the “star” possessed name group pick their positions. After all, the pitcher is the only guy on the field who is guaranteed to have his hand on the ball before it’s ever put in play.

As for the talent on this team, only the great Willie Stargell is the proven ability “star” of this club, but that’s OK. This one’s all in the name of fun on All Star Game Day. *

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* Errata: Mark W’s greater research on 19th century player Joe Start has led me to amend that “only Willie Stargell” as the solitary proven talent on this club. Here’s what Mark W. wrote in the Comment section that quickly has caused me to also include Joe Start as a second able contributor to the favorable fates of our team, presuming they were all still alive and in their primes:

“Bill, I’d say Joe Start was recognized as a star in his day. His 32.2 career WAR in 16 seasons isn’t too shabby, and at the age of 41 he was a key player on the great World Champion Providence team of 1884. He broke in as a 28 year-old rookie on the 1871 National Association New York Mutuals and was one of their top players with a .360 BA and .372 OBP. He was 43 in his last season with Washington. Had he been 7 or 8 years younger when he broke in as a pro, he’d have logged 23 or 24 pro seasons and he might be a Hall of Famer today.” – MARK W., 7/16/15

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A Salute to the Real Stars: Be proud of them, fans. The 2015 All Star Game Tuesday night will feature two members of the Houston Astros in the starting lineup of the American League. Correct me if I’m wrong, but, unless my memory fails here,  this is a feat that our Astros never accomplished in half a century as members of the National League. – Congratulations to Jose Altuve and Dallas Keuchel!

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AL Changed Schedule for Gehrig at 1st AS Game

July 13, 2015
Lou Gehrig, 1939 Six Years Earlier, AL President WIll Harridge Saved Gehrig's Run at the Consecutive Games Played MLB Record.

Lou Gehrig, 1939
Six Years Earlier, AL President WIll Harridge Saved Gehrig’s Run at the Consecutive Games Played MLB Record.

As we all know, our coast-to-coast Major League Baseball alignment of 30 clubs was all made possible by the jet-propelled commercial aircraft. Today we simply take for granted that all stars playing in games for their regular clubs on the previous Sunday will have no problems being on the field in Cincinnati two days later for a Tuesday evening All Star Game.

Things weren’t that simple in the summer of 1933, the year of the first All Star Game. The game was scheduled for Thursday afternoon, July 6, 1933, at Comiskey Park in Chicago, but no prior attention had gone into the planning of the regular season schedule to accommodate a super-star game that had been promoted into existence by Chicago sportswriter Arch Ward without any thought as to how that was going to effect the teams and their all star players who already were scheduled to play regular season games for the 16-clubs that comprised the big leagues in those days from upper east coast of Boston to the midwestern city of St. Louis. It wasn’t a problem in every instance, but it was enough to merit attention as a problem.

Without any change, the games scheduled for Wednesday, July 5, 1933 were going to require all star member clubs in cities far away from Chicago to play those games without one or more their best players. Most of those “All Stars” were going to need that July 5th time to travel by train to Chicago.

The biggest rationale for making some schedule change came to the attention of AL President Will Harridge. The New York Yankees were scheduled to play a game in Washington against the Senators on July 5th. That meant that the Yankees All Stars would have to miss that game and use July 5th for train travel to Chicago.

Lou Gehrig’s run at Everett Scott’s consecutive games played record of 1,307 was just a little shy at this point, but the fly of interest in baseball circles suddenly crash-landed in the soup of the AL standing pat on this matter. Without any change to the New York @ Washington game scheduled for July 5, 1933, Gehrig’s growing reputation as “The Iron Horse” was likely to fall as a victim to his July 5th ride on a regular “iron horse” ride to Chicago.

Will Harridge took action to avoid that unintended consequence of the first All Star Game. The AL President postponed the scheduled NY game in Washington of July 5th to a time to be determined later. Gehrig and his other Yankee All Star mates, including the great Babe Ruth, would be free to travel without causing an end to Gehrig’s games-played run until 1939.

A few other pre and post All Star event regular season games had to be rescheduled to accommodate other players and clubs, but that’s simply how things were done back in 1933. It’s hard to imagine that kind of SNAFU coming up in MLB today. Today the MLB schedule makers stumble over deeper, less controllable holes – like, how do you place a Central Time zone club in a division in which most of the other clubs are located in the Pacific Time zone – and then create a mostly night game schedule of games that will be so attractive that the Central Time zone fans will want to stay awake during the week and watch their clubs play games on television that start at 9:00 PM?

This information and further notes on the 1933 first MLB All Star Game are available in a nice article by Todd Radom for The Sporting News at the following link:

http://www.sportingnews.com/mlb/story/2015-07-06/mlb-all-star-game-lou-gehrig-consecutive-games-played-streak-alive-new-york-yankees-1933

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THE PECAN PARK EAGLE

THE PECAN PARK EAGLE

Only Winners Have Slumps

July 12, 2015

“You gotta have heart!
Miles and miles and miles of heart!
When the odds are saying,
“You’ll never win,
That’s when the grin should start.”
~ “HEART”, FROM “DAMN YANKEES”

On the Sunday morning prior to the All Star Game break, we must wait until this afternoon’s games are played, Houston @ Tampa Bay and LA Angels @ Seattle, to know for certain which club goes into the big summer recess as the technical leader of the AL West. Today, thanks only to the Angels’ stubbed toe defeat Saturday at Seattle, the Astros (49-41, .544) hold a half game lead over the Angels (47-40, .540). For several hours Saturday afternoon, the Astros had relinquished their division lead for the first time since the early in the season by percentage points after a 3-1 loss to the Rays before the Angels gave it back later in the evening with a 5-0 loss to the Mariners out on the west coast.

The good news is – only winners have slumps. The bad news Astros of 2011 through 2014 lost games at the same rate as their 2015 brethren, but those weren’t slumps, or departures from the norm of a good club. Those recently bad year losing streaks by the Astros happened because they each were bad clubs. Losing was their norm.

Losing is not the norm for the “good club” evaluation that most people who know baseball place upon the 2015 Astros, but that advantage could change over the course of the long season. Those who remember the 1979 NL West season will get that point immediately. The Astros led the Reds in the NL West in 1979 by something like 10 games on the Fourth of July, but ended up losing the division title to Cincinnati by 1.5 games. They were still a “good” team. They simply weren’t good enough – or lucky enough – to win out at season’s end.

We are among those who appreciate what Astros GM Jeff Luhnow has done in rebuilding the farm system into something that has made this “good team” progress to contender status for the Astros in 2015. We also like the intelligent and even-handed way Astros manager A.J. Hinch has guided the 2015 Astros, even through – make that “especially” through the current slump. Hinch could not help the bad luck of losing George Springer to injury immediately prior to this current nightmarish road trip – and the earlier long-time loss of Jeff Lowrie – nor could he have done anything about the lesser time injury losses of Rasmus, Marisnick, Altuve, and Qualls, plus a few others. He’s simply had to adjust, but he could only have done so had the Astros not had some stock at the higher minor league levels to call up into service.

There are some specific things about this good club that make dealing with this slump more difficult. Prior to this road trip, the Astros were winning on offense with the long ball from several guys who still couldn’t hit .200 They have needed, but have not had, enough guys with high OBPs to win without the long ball. The club has also continued to need, at least, one more superior starter, and the current, still-improved bullpen has not been as lights-out reliable as they need to be.

We also have that psychological factor going that always seems to come with no certain handles for change. The glum depressed faces in the Astros dugout are discouraging. Astros batters appear listless and lacking in confidence when they come to the plate. Like most everyone else, we keep hoping that someone will breakthrough with a crisp and strategic hit that will light the fire for others. How about a game-winning hit from someone like Jon Singleton. “Come on, John, get a big hit and kill two birds with one stone. – Convince others on the club that, if you an do do it, they can too. – And convince yourself that you really can do what others seems to think you can do – and be a good MLB hitter.

We are not micro managers here, but we hope that Manager Hinch finds a way to get Jeff Lowrie back in the lineup, asap, upon his return. If Singleton and Carter cannot show as hitters, first base seems to be a good spot for Lowrie, unless Valbuena could shift to first and allow Lowrie to take over at third.

A little shift in luck to the good side too would help. Hard smashes by struggling hitters that elude glove capture, and line drives that kick up chalk down the lines, rather than landing an inch foul, with the bases loaded while the outfielders are shifted the other way would also goose the dugout endorphins and adrenaline as well.

Who knows? Maybe the Astros will get it kick-started today! Even if they don’t, it’s still a long season. And this is the first year in a long while that hope in Houston and the All Star Break arrived in our town at the same time.

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THE PECAN PARK EAGLE

THE PECAN PARK EAGLE