Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

The Astrodome: From Here To Eternity

April 11, 2015
From Here To Eternity!

From Here To Eternity!

Veteran broadcaster, writer and author Greg Lucas said it best yesterday as a comment addition to our “Dome. Sweet Dome” column on the April 9th 50th Anniversary of the Astrodome party we covered in words and pictures:

https://thepecanparkeagle.wordpress.com/2015/04/10/dome-sweet-dome/

Greg Lucas

Greg Lucas

 “Have to admit I didn’t get in line to see what we have now. I remember what it was well enough. However, was on hand and extremely happy with the support. Now if everyone can really learn what the plans may be I am sure there will be more than enough support in the county to keep the building alive and useful once again. While it can never be the main stadium again, it very well can be the centerpiece of the whole complex for sure. The Astrodome IS our Eiffel Tower or St. Louis Arch. But unlike those two icons the Astrodome can have a real function and not just a place to see and climb! There is already more history to the ‘Dome than most centerpieces can ever hope to have.”

~ Greg Lucas, Pecan Park Eagle column comment in response to “Dome, Sweet Dome”, published Friday, April 10, 2015.

Greg Lucas recorded a three-pitch strikeout of any serious opposition to the restoration of the Astrodome into useful service to the community now and the ages to come:

Strike One:The Astrodome IS our Eiffel Tower or St. Louis Arch.”

Strike Two:But unlike those two icons the Astrodome can have a real function and not (be) just a place to see and climb!”

Strike Three: There is already more history to the ‘Dome than most centerpieces can ever hope to have.”

No matter who opposes saving the Astrodome, be they business interests with a financial investment in turning the great icon into more parking space – or transient Houstonians with a nose sniff of indifference to our community’s history and legacy because of their fear of additional taxes – Greg’s words are the challenge to all of us who support the city’s need and responsibility for preserving this incredibly history-packed structure that once served as the beacon vehicle to Houston’s march into the station of becoming a world class socioeconomic culture and city.

Over 30,000 Houstonians showed up for the 50th Anniversary party on Thursday – and most of those entered into the two hours long line – and some remaining there deep into the evening, beyond the original 8:00 PM announced closing – just to get inside and rekindle their memories of the Astrodome.

You just don’t kiss goodbye anyone or anything that’s meant that much to you in a single lifetime. – You fight back to keep and restore your relationship with that person, ideal or object to a renewed level of awareness and purpose.

The Astrodome must be saved and renewed to genuine purpose. Any other outcome is totally unacceptable – from here to eternity.

Dome, Sweet Dome

April 10, 2015
Inside the Astrodome For The 50th Anniversary Party April 9, 2015

Inside the Astrodome
For The
50th Anniversary Party
April 9, 2015

30.000 Astrodome fans waited in line for two hours for the opportunity in many cases to stir old favorite memories. We didn't come to say goodbye. We came to say hello to new life for the grand old girl of Houston's beacon to the world.

30.000 Astrodome fans waited in line for two hours for the opportunity in many cases to stir old favorite memories. We didn’t come to say goodbye. We came to say hello to new life for the grand old girl of Houston’s beacon to the world.

Lingering in the heart of Houston's greatest moments in sports, entertainment and politics, the ghosts of ancient heroes and unforgettable times were everywhere - and only deaf-insensitive to our generation's responsibility for preserving this legacy for the Houstonians of tomorrow

Lingering in the heart of Houston’s greatest moments in sports, entertainment and politics, the ghosts of ancient heroes and unforgettable times were everywhere – and only the deaf-history insensitive to our generation’s responsibility for preserving this legacy for the Houstonians of tomorrow could have failed to see and feel its presence.

Even Orbitt of the Astros  and the fuzziest of all selfie-photographers were clear on this point: The Astrodome must be saved and restored to a useful purpose of community service. - She belongs to the Ages. - She belongs to the world - as the iconic face of Houston.

Even Orbitt of the Astros and the fuzziest of all selfie-photographers were clear on this point: The Astrodome must be saved and restored to a useful purpose of community service. – She is our child. – She belongs to the Ages. – She belongs to the world – as the iconic face of Houston.

April 10, 2015 Our city awoke today to the Houston Chroncle's fine front page story of last night birthday bash for "The Eighth Wonder of the World." Hundreds also took photos of our little mini-me version of the big dome at out SABR table.

April 10, 2015
Our city awoke today to the Houston Chroncle’s fine front page story of last night’s birthday bash for “The Eighth Wonder of the World.” Hundreds also took photos of our little mini-me version of the big dome at out SABR table.

The neat thing about the mini-dome - which ordinarily lives in a safe deposit box, is that its top is removable so that some people may see again - or for the frst time - how things looked inside when the Dome was configured for baseball.

The neat thing about the mini-dome – which ordinarily lives in a safe deposit box, is that its top is removable so that some people may see again – or for the first time – how it looked inside when the Dome was configured for baseball.

Voila! Play Ball!! One More Time!!!

Voila!
Play Ball!!
One More Time!!!

It's even possible to get a good shot of the roof from inside the minii-Astrodome too. Of course, you have be either an endoscopic camera or a very, very tiny person to capture the view in this detail!

It’s even possible to get a good shot of the roof from inside the mini-Astrodome too. Of course, you have be either an endoscopic camera or a very, very tiny person to capture the view in this detail!

Come on, Houstonians! All kidding aside. It's time for all of us to save the Astrodome for all right reasons and responsibilities to history that are so much more important to our quality of life tna the immediate financial plans of a few wealthy individuals and corporations who only value the rest of us as a transitory market for their own personal gain. Weneed the help of those weathy individuals nd corporations who care about the measure of life in "our town" on a deeper level.

Come on, Houstonians! All kidding aside. It’s time for all of us to save the Astrodome for all the right reasons and responsibilities to history that are so much more important to our quality of life than the immediate financial plans of a few wealthy individuals and corporations who only value the rest of us as a transitory market for their own personal gain. We do need the help of those wealthy individuals and corporations who do care deeply about the measure of life in “our town” on a deeper level. – You know who you are! – Save the Dome! – She belongs to the ages!

Astrodome 50th Anniversary Party Tonight

April 9, 2015
THE ASTRODOME WAS  HOME TO UH COUGARS FOOTBALL FROM 1965 THROUGH 1996.

THE ASTRODOME WAS HOME TO UH COUGARS FOOTBALL FROM 1965 THROUGH 1996.

Here’s one link from Harris County Judge Ed Emmett’s office on the plans for tonight’s Astrodome 50th Anniversary Party this Thursday, April 9, 2015. Cars should enter from the Kirby at McNee entrance for free parking in Red Lot 4 – and don’t forget to bring your own folding chairs for the outside event that will include free tours inside the Astrodome.

http://www.judgeemmett.org/news_release.asp?p=7&intRelease_ID=8005&intAcc_ID=66

Let’s all try to keep in mind that the long-term goal here is building support for preserving Houston’s iconic symbol to the world – and to doing it in a way that gives genuine long-term value to a “re-purposed Astrodome”. Lest we forget, the original attraction of crowds to the Astrodome in 1965 was its futuristic bells and whistles  personification as the place where even baseball could be protected from the weather and played as scheduled.

Over time, however, as “the novelty and newness wore off,” it was the substance of baseball, football, groundbreaking basketball, the rodeo, and appearances by Elvis Presley, the Rolling Stones, Muhammad Ali, Billie Jean King, Bobby Riggs, and the Republican Party that made its place in history the deeper substance of our memories.

ELVIN HAYES AND UH-EX BILL McCURDY IN RECENT TIMES. ON JANUARY 20, 1968, "THE BIG E" LED UH TO A 71-69 WIN OVER UCLA AT THE ASTRODOME THAT CHANGED THE BIG STAGE COURSE OF COLLEGE BASKETBALL.

ELVIN HAYES AND UH-EX BILL McCURDY IN RECENT TIMES. ON JANUARY 20, 1968, “THE BIG E” LED UH TO A 71-69 WIN OVER # 1 UCLA BEFORE 50,000 FANS AT THE ASTRODOME THAT CHANGED THE BIG STAGE COURSE OF COLLEGE BASKETBALL FOREVER.

The idea of the indoor park is fine for openers, we think, but let’s try to keep in mind that we are not simply looking for the cheapest way to build an in-door version of downtown’s “Discovery Green” – as one that will fade like the bloom of the rose once the novelty again wears thin. We, hopefully, are looking for a place that will continue to educate people on the history of Houston during the Dome’s first incarnation – and also a place that will grow as a resource/educational/entertainment venue as a particular service to researchers, community planners, and school children on the heart of history that has pumped all the present life into our fourth largest city in the nation.

Museums on everything from the individual sports to the ship channel to the petrochemical industry to the rodeo to whatever could blend together into a presentation that is beyond anything else operating anywhere else – until now – and supported by commercial enterprises offering food at all levels, collectibles, and top level public entertainment.

And, after all,  wasn’t that exactly what the original Astrodome did?

1898: Houston Gets Real Time Scorebaord

April 8, 2015
Houston Daily Post, April 9, 1898 Contributed by Darrell Pittman

Houston Daily Post, April 9, 1898
Contributed by Darrell Pittman

Thanks to the rapid spread of telephone communication between almost all places during the 1890s, `Manager George Reed of the Houston Buffaloes, with the help of Dean Tompkins and Carl Druesdow, have been able to get Houston to move to the cutting edge of the modern technology by having a live, real-time scoreboard installed at the Travis Street Park at Travis and McGowan.

Now Houston fans shall be able to enhance their enjoyment at Houston’s home games by simultaneously keeping up with the progress of their nearest rivals in league game action played elsewhere. As the article states, live telephone connection to the other parks will now make it possible for Houston fans to find out about runs scored elsewhere in a matter of the seconds or minutes needed to receive and post new developments as they occur.

What will they think of next? Winged vehicles that transport whole teams of Buffaloes to faraway places from Houston for the sake of playing a game tomorrow against a club in Los Angeles? That would be pretty amazing, but an even more amazing development than our now new-found power to telephone people in the colder climates up north to complain about the heat in Houston would be – the appearance of some bright inventor who came along with some kind of device that could actually make our home temperatures cooler. – Maybe a super fan, blowing over a continuous new supply of ice would help condition our Houston air to a more pleasant temperature. And, if that were to work, perhaps some wonderful wizard will someday float into Houston on a hot air balloon and talk us into building an air-conditioned, covered base ball park.

Forget the simple scoreboard, friends. That last invention of a comfortable indoor ball park, indeed, will most truly qualify for the descriptor given it by its promoter, the “Wizard of Awes”!

Indeed, when it happens, it shall surely be Houston’s iconic statement as – “The Eighth Wonder of the World!”

Wake up! – We are not dreaming! – We are humbly clairvoyant! – If you are reading this conjectural statement in a musty old digital file in a future parallel universe version of Houston, and you happen to be living close by on Thursday, April 9, 2015, make sure that you come out to the 50th Anniversary Celebration of the first indoor major league exhibition base ball game at a place called “The Astrodome” – from 6 to 8 PM that evening.

We shall be there with you in spirit – and in our new generational presence.

The Pecan Park Eagle, April 9, 1898.

Icon Appreciation: St. Louis vs. Houston

April 7, 2015
Which came first? .... The Chicken?

Which came first?
…. The Chicken?

.... Or The Egg? Better yet .... which will be around forever?

…. Or The Egg?
Better yet …. which will be around forever?

By their separate actions, which place apparently appreciates the iconic structures of their two respective cities the better, St. Louis or Houston?

Ralph Bivins, editor of Realty News Report, is a past president of the National Association of Real Estate Editors. and the author of an op-ed article this week for his own journal that unequivocally shows St. Louis in the better light while dutifully chastising the wealthy Houstonians – whom we often reference here as the local tycoons “With deep pockets and short arms” who never seem to show up when we locally rouse and raise the question, once again, – “What are we going to do with the Astrodome that is both a fitting and workable usage plan for preserving our Houston icon – and one of the world’s great modern templates of stadium architecture?”

http://houston.culturemap.com/news/real-estate/04-06-15-st-louis-absolutely-shames-houston-on-the-astrodome-with-unabashed-big-money-love-of-its-own-historic-icon/

Bivins goes straight to some bottom line evidence stretching back to the early 1960s in favor, so far, of St. Louis:

“While  St. Louis labored for its Arch, Houston was building its Dome. Both were unprecedented feats of engineering and construction know-how. The builders attempted things that had never been done before and erected remarkable structures.

“St. Louis is stepping (up) to the plate — now spending $380 million to keep its 1965 masterpiece a vital part of the community.

“If St. Louis can raise that much money, why can’t Houston come up with $242 million?

“It’s time for the leadership of Houston to lead. Whether it’s Rich Kinder, Ric Campo, Gerald Hines or some of our elected officials, Houston has great leaders who can mobilize this city. A great task lies ahead. May our leaders step forward now on behalf of the Astrodome’s future.

“The Astrodome can be transformed into something grander than it ever has been. Let’s dream big . . .  again.”

Thank you for stepping up to plate, Mr. Bivins, and becoming the latest writer to swing for the fences in behalf of Houston’s “Eighth Wonder of the World”.  The Pecan Park Eagle has been a long-time supporter of converting the Astrodome into the greatest collection of museums on local history anywhere – while interspersing fun places t0 dine, be entertained, or shop for items that are appropriate to the general theme of the venue’s new, more far-reaching and meaningful purpose – one that can serve the educational needs of school educational tours throughout the year.

And we still prefer an idea on that level to notions that an indoor park for people who are willing to pay for parking at ten bucks a car is a cheaper way to go.

Hope to see a lot of you this Thursday night at the 6:00-8:00 pm , April 9, 2015 celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Astrodome’s first baseball game. Admission and parking are both free and we may all get a chance to actually go inside the Dome on this special occasion. Stay tuned to the Houston Chronicle and other media on where to enter and what you may wish to bring. Most of the evening will be spent outside on the north side of the Dome and we are being told that, if you shall want a place to sit, you should bring a light, easy-to-carry folding chair.

We will be sitting with the folks at the SABR (Society for American Baseball Research) artifact presentation table.

Regards, Bill McCurdy, The Pecan Park Eagle.

 

Chronicle Gets It Wrong on West End Park

April 6, 2015
Travis Street Park,in an artistic rendering of how it appeared  in 1896 was the original home for professional baseball in Houston from 1888 forward. The buffalo in the foreground is an artistic allusion to the team's new and growing identity as Houston's team from 1896 forward. ~ Artwork by Patrick Lopez

Travis Street Park,in an artistic rendering of how it appeared in 1896 was the original home for professional baseball in Houston from 1888 forward. The buffalo in the foreground is an artistic allusion to the team’s new and growing identity as Houston’s team from 1896 forward.
~ Artwork by Patrick Lopez

Was West End Park the original home of professional baseball in Houston? – Nope! It’s just not yet so plainly understood as it needs to be as – WRONG!

In an otherwise fine homage to the Astrodome on the eve of its 50th anniversary as an indoor venue for baseball – one that began as front page Easter Sunday news that set its pace against a large pictorial backdrop of the Dome’s catacombed sky looking up from the field through a concentric web of beamed together glass panels – writer Andrew Danby got one frequently misunderstand historical fact “wrong” along the way.

No big deal – except that now the misinformation is set in permanent print for a ream of lazily researched terms papers on the Astrodome by students from the year 2065 – on the occasion of the Astrodome’s 100th anniversary.

When our Larry Dierker Houston Chapter of SABR (The Society for American Baseball Research) took on the rather challenging task of researching the comprehensive history of baseball in Houston in 2011, we already knew for certain that the first “Houston Base Ball Club” was formed in 1861 – and that there are other timeline and historical facts to support the probability that the 1836 founders of Houston from the northeast section of the country already knew the game of “base ball” when they came to these hallowed banks of the Buffalo Bayou on the wings of Texas’ victory at San Jacinto on April 21, 1836.

What we soon learned in 2011, thanks to the fine independent research work of Mike Vance of HAM, with some coincidental assistance from Darrell Pittman of Astros Daily, was that Houston’s first “base ball” professional club venue – the one used by the “Houston Babies” when they began their first 1888 season of existence as the club that would later come to be known years later as the “Houston Buffaloes” was NOT West End Park – but a field built at the corner of Travis and McGowan that back then was identified variously over the years, but fairly often referenced as “the Travis Street Park”.

West End Park – once located downtown in the area across the street from historic Antioch Baptist Church – in the same general area that is now consumed by Allen Center – did not open or become the second major Houston professional baseball venue until 1905 – when stands were constructed that year, and professional play began on a field previously used for amateur baseball games. By public contest, the name selected for the new venue was “West End Park.”

Mr. Danby simply fell into the misconception that most of us held before the truth in this matter came to light in our 2014, 368-page comprehensive research work, “Houston Baseball: The Early Years, 1861-1961”, when he wrote, as published on Page 20A of the Easter Sunday, April 5, 2015, edition of the Houston Chronicles these erroneous words: “Professional baseball in Houston started on the west side of downtown (at West Side Park).”

We forgive you this time, Mr. Danby. Maybe this error could have been avoided last year – had we been able to get the Houston Chronicle to review our research book as a legacy contribution to Houston history and then published their findings for the whole world to see that something had taken place in Houston that no other community group of research professionals has done anywhere else as a non-profit contribution to local baseball history.

"Houston Baseball: The Early Years, 1861-1961" (See ordering information at the closing of this article.)

“Houston Baseball: The Early Years, 1861-1961”
(See ordering information at the closing of this article.)

For all of you who want your own copy of the only whole truth about our local baseball legacy,  “Houston Baseball: The Early Years, 1861-1961”, it is available in Houston at your nearest Barnes and Noble location, through Amazon.Com, or through special direst orders with our SABR Chapter representative, Mr. Bob Dorrill.

To reach Bob Dorrill for s special price on this beautifully expressed factual history of Houston baseball in words, pictures and art, simply e-mail him at bdorrill@aol.com

Bob Dorrill may also be reached by cell phone during the daytime at 281.630.7151.

Baseball Is ~ Hope Springing Eternal

April 4, 2015
"You Gotta Have Heart ... Miles and Miles and Miles of Heart!"

“You Gotta Have Heart …
Miles and Miles and Miles of Heart!”

 

In all consideration of baseball’s organic connection to life itself, it is impossible to tread again upon that tie without laying the foundation of all else that follows. And that broad base simply happens to be everything that stirs our lust for a life well lived – from the inside out – in all we do – from the soul-investing moment of our very first breath to our last quiet or loud exhalation. The trinity of love, faith, and hope governs all – free of the lesser ambitions of the human ego for acquisition and power – and fastened solidly to the idea of giving all that we genuinely are – back to life – with the tools we possess as individuals that came to us from life – regardless of the name we assign to our creator.

For those of us who are Christian – and these ideas do not apply exclusively to Christians – or even to deistic believers alone – this Easter weekend is a great time to share these thoughts anyway – and how the trinity of our three greatest energy forces in life apply to the game that so many of us Americans especially love. And there it is. No honest talk of baseball can move far without acknowledging that our forever first force in life – in marriage, family, friendship, creativity or baseball – is always “love”.

We are born on the wings of love. Love is also what comes to us when we meet our true soul mate – and love is what remains with the survivor of that union – when one partner dies before the other. And love is what still lives within the person who either never met – or feels they lost their soul mate to abandonment or immaturity. Love is never absent – but it is often hard to see or accept when life is going tough. – Sometimes, we simply mistake the absence of immediate consolation in our lives as the absence of love, but that is not the case. – Love never dies – or goes away. – We complexly go away or get lost from it.

If love never dies, then maybe we need to open our hearts to the understanding that life neither – ever dies – and that we simply need to look for “forever” in the place it always lives – in the only time zone that is not governed by the clocks – in a place called the present – the here and now – and the here and now – is eternal – the only time zone that is real.

The present never goes away. – We simply go away from it. – The more we are able to remain in the here and now – untethered to resentment and regret about the past – and free of expectation, fear or doubt about the future – the easier it is for us to find the strike zone with whatever we happen to be pitching – or conversely, hitting. I’ve always believed that Yogi Berra’s famous answer to the question, “What do you think about when you’re hitting, Yogi?” was based upon his instinctual awareness that “thinking” is what drives us out of the “here and now” – and that thinking in the moment of hitting is what destroys the present-focus we need to embrace to have any good chance of hitting a baseball coming at us in the mid-90s.

Remember what Yogi said? “I don’t think nothing. I can’t hit and think at the same time” – or something akin to that paraphrase.

Stay in the here and now to hear this next statement (Then think about it all you want): Faith in a power greater than ourselves is what gets us wherever we may be trying to go. The 1927 New York Yankees won 110 games. – They also lost 44 games. – By all accounts, however, they were one of the greatest teams of the early twentieth century – maybe of all time. – Do I really need to mention the names of the guys who played for that team to this readership? – I didn’t think so.

The point here is – the ’27 Yankees were a club with great individual ability – but also one that believed in themselves as a team. They didn’t take the field expecting to win – but they carried with them the belief that winning was always possible – anytime they took the field. Again, the power of the present moment is also the residence of “faith”. – Faith is inherent to the moment that a pitcher working in the “here and now” mind-state releases a rising inside fastball – that the ball is on its way to sending a message to the batter about his distance from the plate.

As for baseball played without faith, the old St. Louis Browns are but a single example of what happens to perpetual “losers” in the area of faith. – Faith does require results that justify restoration – once a team starts losing at a dynastic pace. A few of the old surviving Browns that I have known in my lifetime (men who shall remain nameless here in respect for their ancient wishes) admitted to me long ago that things reached a point where the only question that came up daily was “I wonder how we are going to lose today?” (I never had a chance to discuss this same phenomenon with any members of the 2012-2013 Houston Astros.)

And the last leg of our three-point stool in the “here and now” is hope. The importance of Hope in baseball- spells itself out in the “Damn Yankees” song “Heart” – “You gotta have hope – Mustn’t sit around and mope! – Oh, it’s fine to be a genius, of course – but keep that old horse – before the cart! – First – you gotta have heart!”

And “Heart” is a good name for this rediscovery of “forever” as always existing only in the present moment. “Heart” is the place where Love, Faith, and Hope all flourish forever in the here and now – as the place for joyful focused accomplishment in baseball – and in everyday life. In the end, “Heart” is the name that embraces everything I’m trying to share with each of you today.

We don’t really “gotta have heart”. – We’ve already got it. – We simply have to let our own paths of passion flow into the use of our hearts in giving of ourselves to life in ways of our own choosing – and sometimes – in response to issues in life that call out to us – if we only have ears to hear the invitation.

Happy Easter Weekend, Friends – even if you are just waiting on the Easter Bunny!

Darwin Would Have Loved Baseball

April 3, 2015
Don Zimmer was a baseball man who lived his whole life hungry for the game he loved. Here's the cue for us all. - If you want to have some fun in life, spend it with people who really enjoy being who they are. The fallout lessons are wonderful.

Don Zimmer was a baseball man who lived his whole life hungry for the game he loved. Here’s the cue for us all. – If you want to have fun in life, spend it with people who truly enjoy being who they are. The fallout lessons are wonderful.

The thing I always hated the most about the “DH” was the fact that it seemed to change one of the natural laws of baseball. Just as the sun always rises in the east, the pitcher always bats for himself. Baseball isn’t one of those games that we made up last summer and are still refining. It’s been around a long time, like the earth itself, and players have been adapting to its conditions over time or perishing for their inabilities to do so for as long as most of us can remember. Baseball, in effect, is the purest example of Darwinian thought that creatures either adapt to the laws of chemistry and physics governing this world – or else, they fade away as a surviving species. We are not here today in large numbers in a place called Houston, for example, because God or nature suddenly reversed the laws governing our Houston August heat. – We are here because some of our smarter members invented affordable home and car air-conditioning, the adjustment condition that made full-time life in Houston tolerable for most people who didn’t grow up here.

The real laws governing baseball are more like the laws of nature than any other sport. Our best players aren’t always the most able, or even the most intelligent. Most of those who survive as ten-year, .265 MLB hitters are there because of their adaptability – and our sport even has some masters at the cockroach level of adaptability when it comes to finding ways to survive as ballplayers that some club will want at any given time of that player’s still usable ability capacity as a either a player or mentor.

Look at all the guys like Earl Weaver, Sparky Anderson, Tony LaRussa, and Bobby Cox, for example. – Those guys had so much to give that each made it to the Hall of Fame, but those guys truly were gifted. The real cockroach-level adaptables  are not Hall of Famers, per se. They are just the street smart, adaptable, and, usually, quite likeable baseball people. The limited player and thinker Don Zimmer, for example, may have been the biggest cockroach of all time. Look at all the benches he occupied – and look at all the uniforms that Zimmer wore during his lifetime. He even prided himself at never making a penny of doing anything for a living outside of playing, coaching, or managing in the game.

And what are the qualities that set apart these “baseball cockroaches” from all others. It’s not enough to simply say that they are all survivors. I say it’s more like this: baseball is their food – and they are always hungry. If they want a job in the game with a certain club – and the door is closed and turning others away – they will simply wait until dark and scramble under the clubhouse door’s crawl-space to find a place on the bench. Then, if things work out, they will be smiling at the manager’s side when the awards and new contracts are passed out. – If not, and things go south on the field, and some media types turn the light on to that condition, they also will be the first to take note and be slithering their way out the same crawlspace they came in – and faster than anyone may need to call Orkin – but always popping up elsewhere once the dust clears – and none the worse for wear – in successful search of their next meal.

Having now read the current interview in the Wall Street Journal with new Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred, I was taken favorably with his reflective perspective on the need for caution with any action imposing radical change upon the almost scientific antiquity of the rules that govern baseball. That is exactly why I am now less concerned that he would step in and try to impose a rule which would restrict or prohibit a defense from pulling a shift on a talented, but stupidly stubborn pull hitter. The cockroach pull hitters will punish defenses that try to impose a shift upon them – even if the most talented, prideful pull hitters continue to wing outs into the net that awaits them. To the prideful, the shift defenses almost seem to be taunting them: “Hey, mister! Please don’t hit the ball into this briar patch! Our gloves aren’t too good and you just might hurt us if you hit the ball  too hard!”

http://www.wsj.com/articles/a-q-a-with-baseballs-new-commissioner-1427991663?mod=WSJ_hpp_sections_sports

Four balls is a walk. Three strikes is an out. Three outs ends a time at bat for each team. Visitors bat first, Each team gets nine innings to bat, if needed, to try and get more runs than the other team. Whoever has the most runs at the end of nine innings, wins the game. If the game is tied after nine, you keep playing extra innings until an inning occurs that finds one team leading the other. When that happens, the team with the most runs is the winner. – Nine men per team, each playing a different position, but setting themselves up on the field where their manager thinks they will do the most good under the circumstances, Each man bats in an order that does not change – unless a substitution is made. Once you leave the game, you can’t go back. Just give it your best while you’re n there. Play the game as though your heart was in it. Don’t spit on artificial surfaces, if you can help it. And don’t step off the mound or away from the plate just to tug at your underwear.

And, even if some of us are getting used to the DH since the Astros went over to the AL, write the Commissioner if you can think of any way to get rid of it. After all, it was an aberration of the natural conditions governing baseball. And write him anyway. He also needs to kill that stupid rule that awards home team advantage in the World Series to the league that wins the All Star Game. As in life, no team should be awarded an advantage that they didn’t earn directly for themselves.

Entitlement and baseball are like oil and water. – Remember that one?

And have a great and joyful Good Friday, everyone – even if you are only waiting on the Easter Bunny.

Easter Addendum: If we have to have the “DH”, I like the suggestion that Larry Dierker made to me by e-mail, but both of his ideas here have great merit:

“Two more things: in baseball you can’t emphasize your best offensive players as in other sports. Each hitter must wait his turn and have a greater or lesser chance to produce depending on the base/out situation.

“As far as the DH, how about you can hit for the pitcher anytime you want but must not use that hitter thereafter in the game. Would make for a lot of tough decisions by the manager early in the game. Union would protest because it would eliminate a high salary. Give them a 26th roster spot in return. The way managers use pitchers these days, they need it.”

~ Larry Dierker

Lost in Time: What’s an “Unaccepted Chance”?

April 2, 2015
Box Score From the April 19, 1888 Edition of the Austin American-Statesman

Box Score From the April 19, 1888 Edition of the Austin American-Statesman for a Game Played by Houston and Fort Worth.

Friend and research colleague Darrell Pittman sent me this question overnight – along with the above featured 19h century box score: “What is an ‘unaccepted’ chance?” Hmmm! If you examine the details of the ancient game account, please note that Howard, the Houston shortstop, is credited with an “Unaccepted chance”.

My answer is the ever popular “damifino”! Although the question does leave ample room for considerable room for non-serious conjecture:

(1) For one thing, and this is the first thought that jumps out at me, why is the Austin American Statesmen waiting until April 19, 1888 – almost two weeks – to publish a game account and box score for a game played on April 7, 1888? – Was the esteemed capitol city newspaper making up for an earlier “unaccepted chance” to publish this story in a timely fashion?

(2) We note that Houston took a one-run lead in the top of the 9th, but that Fort Work fought back for a two-run rally that gave them a 7-6 victory in the bottom half of the last regularly scheduled game inning. – Is it possible that Fort Worth scored their winning run from third base after a batter struck a slow rolling grounder to short that Howard didn’t even bother to throw because he saw that he had no chance to get the runner – and that the official scorekeeper invented “unaccepted chance” as a credit on the play as opposed to either scoring it a “fielder’s choice” or an “infield single” by the Fort Worth batter?

(3) Is it possible that Houston shortstop Howard had the annoying habit of spitting tobacco on his manager’s shoe prior to his every time at bat for good luck – and that the team’s peerless leader had threatened Howard with an immediate benching, if he did it again? And when it did happen again in the top of the 9th, Howard batted anyway, and that his manager said nothing – passing on his “unaccepted chance” to bench Howard for cause for the sake of getting his often timely bat to the plate in a game critical situation, – and that the scorer – who was sitting behind the Houston bench the whole game to witness the entire building transaction – then erred in crediting the “unaccepted chance” to Howard rather than assign it to his manager – where it truly belonged.

(4) We have no real idea what an “unaccepted chance” once was, but it sounds like an archaic expression for fielder’s choice. If you know, please enlighten the rest of us in the comment section which follows this column.

Thank you! – The Pecan Park Eagle.

We leave you this Thursday morning with our own “accepted chance” to post our Question of the Day – based upon certain current news events in our Houston area:

Question of the Day:

Under what circumstances is the word “alright” worth $45,000 per use – up to three utterances per scheduled event?

Answer:

When the word “alright” is used by actor Matthew McConaughey as the commencement speaker to the Spring 2015 graduating class from the University of Houston.

No More Columns Today – April Fool!

April 1, 2015
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Except this material is no “April Fool’s Day Joke”. – It’s the real deal. The Japanese love baseball so much that it also drives their television marketing of goods and services.

Paul Rogers, the author of works on Tris Speaker, Eddie Robinson, and many other subjects, along with being the former Dean and still teaching Professor of Law at SMU, sent me this one from YouTube this morning. Please turn on your sound and give it the two minutes it deserves as testimony to how much the Japanese love, revere, and “get” what the flow and movement of baseball is about to all of us. I’m certainly no Deacon Jones-level hitting coach, but to me, some of the ladies in this TV fantasy foray seem to have rudimentary batting forms that are worthy of MLB prospects.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ag4OziaRtj4

No fooling. Enjoy. Simply enjoy.

Thanks, Paul – and since you are also on our Pecan Park Eagle column mailing list, here’s a good thing coming back to you on the same day you released this little butterfly of Japanese baseball joy in Dallas.

It really made my day.

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