Are the Pitchers Figuring Out Carlos Correa?

May 4, 2016

Carlos Correa, SS ~ 2015-16 Houston Astros

2015 AL Rookie of the Year

 

Carlos Correa could not have come into this 2016 MLB season with more expectations resting upon him. The AL Rookie of the Year was only around for 99 games from June 9th forward in 2015, but, in spite of a two-month late start he played well enough to win the honor he deservedly earned. When a player hits the big time running like lightning that’s just been released from the bottle, people simply don’t forget you, nor do they fail to put all kinds of expectations upon you for ongoing production on the greatness level. And Carlos was every luminous blip – that fabled luminous flying force in Houston’s 2015 return to promise season. With his bat, his arm, his glove, his athleticism, and his baseball maturity, this then 20-year old man showed up in Houston last summer looking like the greatest dad gum ballplayer to ever come out of Puerto Rico since the until recently incomparable Roberto Clemente. – And that widespread Houston wish may still prove true over time.

But that doesn’t stop some of us from wondering early – about his early 2016 down slide.

So what’s happened this year? Is it simply too early to speculate on his less than stellar downturn at the plate? Is Carlos caught up in the same team malaise that now finds the AL Cy Young winner, Dallas Keuchel, now struggling – and even beatable at home? Are we now in the adjustment phase of Correa’s early career, at a time in which the pitching book has caught up with what Carlos got away with last year? Is it time for Correa and his mentors to counter-adjust to whatever the pitchers are doing differently – and more effectively in 2016? – Is it just me – or does he seem to be striking out more often on falling-off-the-table-sliders out of the zone? Would it help to give him a rest away from the #3 hole for now – or would that simply hurt his confidence to move him down, or even up in the order – maybe shifting places with Springer in the #2 hole for a while?

Here are the major comparative offensive stats for Carlos Correa from 2015 and the limited early season of 2016:

Carlos Correa 1 G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO BA
2015 99 432 387 52 108 22 1 22 68 40 78 .279
2016 26 111 93 12 24 6 0 3 10 17 27 .258

 

Carlos Correa2 OBP SLG OPS OPS+ TB GDP HBP SH SF IBB SB/CS
2015 .345 .512 .857 133 198 10 1 0 4 2 14/4
2016 .378 .419 .798 127 39 3 1 0 0 1 3/2

Since any of us can be Astros Manager Hinch on paper, what do you think? Is it too early to tell; is it simply a mountain birthing up from limited data in the 2016 mole hill to even infer that something needs to be done – or does something really need to happen to help Carlos Correa adjust to the way pitchers are handling him these days? If I were a pitcher with a wicked falling away slider, I know I’d be throwing that one to Correa and any other Astros batter I knew who could not stay away from swinging at a two-strike pitch.

____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

Billy Martin: Baseball’s Flawed Genius

May 3, 2016
Billy Martin often claimed he could see everything that was going on from a single glance at the field. On April 10, 1976, no one argued the point with him strongly, if at all.

Billy Martin often claimed he could see everything that was going on from a single glance at the field. On April 10, 1976, no one argued the point with him strongly, if at all.

 

Billy Martin: Baseball’s Flawed Genius

That’s the title that New York Times award-winning writer Bill Pennington gave to his 2015 biography of the late Billy Martin, a beautifully written and researched work based on the author’s experience as a New York Yankees beat writer from the start of Martin’s high profile play as a several times manager for owner George Steinbrenner in 1976. Donald Trump may have become television-famous for shouting “You’re fired”, but the late Yankee owner sort off used that statement daily on somebody handy back in the day – just to clear his throat from all that overnight mucous glop.

The Martin Game Persona

Billy Martin was much more than the sand-kicking manager who sucker-punched people who made him mad, although he claims he never started fights, he simply finished them. By Billy’s definition, that meant he was capable of restraining himself until the other person either made him mad or also appeared ready to throw a punch. That’s when the kid from West Oakland struck first and fast, often ending the rising rancor with a one or two punch knockout of the sometimes anonymous, but always in the end, unconscious foe. – Other people, including umpires, knew about this trait in Martin and they knew that no one was beyond Billy’s reach, once he got close enough – and mad enough. Billy also baited umpires from the dugouts, disagreeing with close calls, and yelling the idea back to them, “You owe me”, not because he thought it would change a ruling this time, but always hopefully – that it might win the next tough call for Billy’s team.

It Only Took Two Yankee Games for Billy’s Style to Shine

Billy Martin also knew the baseball rules as well or better than anyone, as George Brett would come to later learn angrily in the famous “pine tar incident”. In fact, it only took Martin two games deep into his first full-season 1976 debut as the Yankees manager to win over his boss, his players, and the Yankee fans to his way of bully-whipping the umpires against all odds with the rule book, turning a heartbreaking New York road loss into a second chance – and a recaptured Yankee comeback win.

Here’s the deal: On April 10, 1976 at Milwaukee, and after losing on Opening Day, 5-0, to the 2 hit/3 RBI game of Hank Aaron, the Yankees were down again to the Brewers, this time, by 6-0 through six innings. All of the home team’s runs were off Yankee starter Ed Figueroa in 5.1 innings of work, but the Yankees weren’t dead. They scored 4 in the 7th and another 5 in the 9th, taking the script for a 9-6 comeback win into Milwaukee’s last chance in the bottom of the 9th.

As most of you know, things often aren’t easy in baseball.

Although the Yankees still led with two outs, the Brewers already had scored one run in the 9th and now had the bases loaded with two outs – and Yankee reliever Dave Pagan pitching to Brewer third baseman Don Money. – A 9-7 Yankee lead was in grave danger with the tying run now standing on 2nd base.

Wouldn’t you just know it?

Money lifted a high fly to left. The ball had power and arch, as brief silence was quickly slain by the roar of home town jubilation. – It was a Grand Slam! – The Milwaukee Brewers had done the improbable, realizing every sandlot kid’s favorite dream of winning a game with a bases-loaded homer in the bottom of the 9th. – What was left to doubt? – The Brewers were going to win this game over the Yankees by 11-9, and Don Money could go to sleep this night reliving his heroic act in every dream that floated his way.

Oh, really? – Then why is Billy Martin running across the diamond from the third base dugout in rapid rage mode? And why is Yankee pitcher Pagan running from the mound to left field? Does he fear for his life from his own manager?

Pagan was safe from Billy. Martin was after first base umpire Jim McKean.

“You called timeout before the pitch,” Martin screamed above the roar of the home crowd. “He said it over and over, stridently moving quickly into McKean’s face, with hands on hips, stridently repeating his claim in violent bursts – and without even adding its intended meaning. The umpire is supposed to know these things: If an umpire raises his hands and gives the time out sign, no play that results from a pitch thrown after that signal is given, even if the pitcher innocently throws it with no advance knowledge of the time out call, counts for anything. – A home run can not result from a non-pitch thrown during a timeout on the field.

From his dugout, Billy Martin had seen Yankee first baseman Chris Chambliss speaking over his shoulder to umpire McKean – and he had seen McKean give the time out signal in response – with both occurring prior to the time that Yankee pitcher Pagan delivered the pitch that Money had blasted out of the park.

Umpire McKean did not verbally respond to Martin’s incessant and voice-above-the-crowd shouts, but he did finally huddle with his fellow umpires as the public address announcer apprised the crowd that something had arisen that needed to be settled before everyone went home.

Apparently, Billy Martin was the only one in the stadium that had seen the time out signal that umpire McKean knew he had given – and then, after the HR was contested, he had honestly reported it to his fellow arbiters as occurring prior to the “home run” pitch. The umpiring crew had no other choice. The Money grand slam was disallowed. In spite of the loud crowd rage over this reversal of fortune, Money would need to bat again with two outs, the bases loaded, and the Yankees still leading, 9-7.

In slight irony, Martin brought in reliever Ken Brett, the brother of George Brett to finish pitching to Money. Brett got Money on a fly ball out to end the game as a save for himself in the Yankees’ 9-7 win over the Brewers. Sparky Lyle (1-0) got the win; Tom Murphy (0-1) took the loss.

And Billy Martin captured the hearts of all those “New York state of mind” Yankee fans.

And, yes, The Pecan Park Eagle definitely recommends this Martin biography.

____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

 

 

 

 

Bill Gilbert: Astros Falter in April

May 2, 2016

Bill Gilbert 03_edited-1

Bill Gilbert is a long time member of SABR, a superb researcher of baseball history, and one of the premier masterful experts on the application of sabermetrics to player evaluation. Before his retirement move from the Houston area to the Hill Country, where he remains an active member in Austin of the Rogers Hornsby Chapter of SABR, Bill also was the founder several years ago of the still flourishing Larry Dierker Chapter in Houston.  The Pecan Park Eagle is most humbly pleased to host Bill Gilbert’s monthly reports during the Astros baseball season – and anything else he cares to write for us on the game of baseball. – Editor, The Pecan Park Eagle.

____________________

Astros Falter in April

By Bill Gilbert

Ongoing Contributing Writer for The Pecan Park Eagle

billcgilbert@sbcglobal.net

After a surprisingly strong showing in 2015, expectations for the Astros were even higher in 2016. It didn’t happen in April as the team finished the month with a record of 7-17. The only major league team with a worse record was the Atlanta Braves at 5-18. The Astros did not win 2 games in a row all month

What went wrong in April after spring training went so well? Almost everything.   They have just not been playing good baseball. Both the starting pitching and the relief pitching, strong points in 2015, have been way below expectations, ranking last in the American League in ERA at 4.97. Opposing batters have hit .284 against the Astro staff and have scored 5.12 runs per game. The Astro batters have hit only .235 and scored 3.5 runs per game, not nearly enough to offset the poor pitching performance.

The numbers don’t tell the whole story. The defense has been shaky at times and they have made numerous base-running mistakes. Situational hitting has been poor and they have not been hitting well with men on base. The last two games of the month in Oakland illustrate some of the problems. The Astros carried a 4-2 lead after 7 innings in the first game, started by an A’s pitcher making his first major league appearance. However, the Astros bullpen gave up 2 runs in the eighth inning and 3 more in the ninth inning, including a walk-off home run to lose 7-4. In the next game, also started by an A’s pitcher just brought up from the minors, the Astros trailed 2-0 in the ninth inning when they loaded the bases with one out. Evan Gattis then grounded into a double play to end the game.

Individually, there were few bright spots in April. Jose Altuve is hitting the ball harder than ever and had six home runs while batting .305 with an on-base average of .400. He also leads the major leagues in stolen bases with 9. Colby Rasmus also has a .400 on-base average along with 7 home runs and 19 runs batted in. George Springer (.278 average, 4 home runs) and Carlos Correa (.271 and 3) have hit reasonably well but not at the superstar level that was expected. Rookie first baseman, Tyler White, started strong but tailed off later in the month as his batting average dropped to .250. None of the remaining players had a batting average higher than .239 or an on-base average over .290. Center fielder, Carlos Gomez (.213 batting average), catcher, Jason Castro (.140) and third baseman, Luis Valbuena (.183) have been especially disappointing. None of the three has hit a home run

The Astros lead the major leagues in striking out with 238, including seven players having 20 or more. At this pace, they will break the major league record of 1535, set by the forgettable 2013 Astros. And they are doing it without Chris Carter. On a more positive note, the Astros have 29 home runs which ties them for seventh place in the major leagues and they have 18 stolen bases which ties them for third. However, they have been caught stealing 10 times, resulting in an unacceptable 64% success rate.

Now to the pitching. The five man starting rotation has ERA’s of 3.97, 4.41, 4.97, 5.56 and 6.65 and has combined for only 8 quality starts (six innings and no more than 3 earned runs). Ace, Dallas Keuchel has only 2 good games in his 5 starts. Unfortunately, only one start has been in a home game where he has been unbeatable since 2014. Rookie, Chris Devenski replaced winless, Scott Feldman, in the starting rotation in the final game of the month and should remain there.

Luke Gregerson has performed well as the closer converting all four of his save opportunities with an ERA of 2.00. However, Ken Giles, obtained in a trade with Philadelphia has been a major disappointment, allowing 4 home runs in 10 innings with an ERA of 9.00. The bullpen ERA was 4.75.

Can the Astros turn it around and get into contention? It’s certainly possible but they need to get started quickly. The May schedule appears less daunting with 16 of the 29 games at home. If things don’t improve in the next two weeks, expect some changes to be made. If it is any consolation, the Texas Rangers began the 2015 season at 7-15 and rallied to win the AL West Division.

Bill Gilbert

5/1/2016

____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

May Day, Astros! May Day!

May 2, 2016
"I could stop - the Astros losing, With options of my choosing, If I only had a brain. ..."

“I could stop – the Astros losing,
With options – of my choosing,
If I – only had a brain. …”

 

Turning the Corner?

Question: What does it say when a ten-games-under-.500 team’s lead-off hitter in 2016 MLB cranks a home run to start a game for the fourth time in the new 25-game old season, and then gets only one more team hit for the entire nine innings, and still wins the dad-gum game?

Answers: The lead-off homer guy probably was Jose Altuve of the Astros; the Astros still aren’t hitting, but they got some dad-gum good pitching today; this was one of those days in which the law of averages governing good and bad luck distributions showed up and started working on all the hope deficit payments that are due the Houston club; “damifino”; and lastly – we’ll still have to wait and see.

Wait and See What? As fans, some of us even now must ask ….

  1. Is Altuve (.306) really the only true .300 hitter we have on the club?
  2. Are Altuve and Rasmus (7 HR each) our only regular long ball hopes?
  3. Are Correa (.264) and Springer (.267) simply good hitters that MLB pitchers have quickly figured out?
  4. Is White (.238) the failed big league hitter and mediocre fielder he appears to be?
  5. Are Gonzalez (.213) and Valbuena (.183) our only options at 3rd base?
  6. Why is Carlos Gomez (.213, 0 HR) still our center fielder?
  7. Is Castro (.151) confirming that the Astros can only carry a good glove/no bat catcher?
  8. Is Evan Gattis (.249 career) what’s so beautiful about the DH position?
  9. Is something wrong with Dallas Keuchel (2-3, 4.41) that only home games can cure?
  10. Will young Ken Giles (0-2, 9.00 era, 0 saves) ever recover from the shock and personal weight he apparently feels from the expectations generated by his trade to Houston?
  11. How does Jeff Luhnow feel now about the 5 for 2 players Giles trade with Philly?
  12. Who gets pumped up from the farm, if losing often is still the club pattern by June 1st?
  13. Does the club have a Plan B option for a 2016 roster cake whose yeast refuses to rise?
  14. Or does the club hope that cheaper parking will help fans return to watching loser baseball?

____________________

Upon Further Review

Ask The Pecan Park Eagle again about our hopes for the 2016 Astros on a more positive-minded day. Just don’t do it anytime this month, unless the Astros go 12-2 in the 14 games they have on their schedule between now and May 15th. At the end of this day, May 1st, the Astros record is now 8-17. – “12-2” is what it will take for the club to be a game over .500 at 20-19 by the end of the day, May 15th. – Playing .500 ball by June 1st and being no more than 5 games back of the division leader on that date is our personal base for the resurrection of hope in 2016.

____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

MISSIONS BAIT and BEAT HOOKS, 7-3

May 1, 2016

out-of-the-park-baseball-15-57494

Thank you, Kyle Burns of the Houston Babies! I finally followed through on your suggestion today, ordering Out-Of-The-Park digital Baseball. Wow! After 65 years with APBA dice and computer baseball, I’ve finally found a game that appears to put the old pioneer in the shade. “OOTP” looks like APBA-On-HGH by initial comparison. Some of us may never purse all the extension opportunities to practice our brains as Commissioner Manfred, Owner Jim Crane, or GM Jeff Luhnow, but a whole lot of us will enjoy playing Manager Larry Dierker with the 1998 Astros.

All I’ve got tonight is my first run with a game at the most basic level – an exhibition game between the Corpus Christi Hooks and the visiting San Antonio Missions at Whataburger Field. My column, however, is more about the possibilities here. The game itself played out most realistically.

MISSIONS BAIT & BEAT HOOKS, 7-3

Teams   1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
MISSIONS 0 1 4 1 0 1 0 0 0 7 10 0
HOOKS 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 10 1

 

SAN ANTONIO MISSIONS 7 – CORPUS CHRISTI HOOKS 3.

WINNING PITCHER: LUIS DIAZ, SA (1-0)

LOSING PITCHER: FRED MARTES, CC (0-1)

TIME OF GAME: 2:56

ATTENDANCE, 2,459

Corpus Christi TX (AP) 04/30/16: The San Antonio Missions stormed into Whataburger Field this Saturday afternoon and baited the Corpus Christi Hooks into tossing up a 7-3 loss to the visitors from the Alamo City as if it were broccoli on a kid’s plate. The game marked our first roll of the digital dice on the (new-to-me) OOTP Baseball Game. My head is still swimming from the four tutorials I just watched about all this game can do to help us further lose our souls in the game of baseball, as we also remain protected from the windfall of big money coming in – or big money going out.

For about $40 bucks, one can play this game as simply, or as complexly, as you wish it to be. With access to all major leagues, teams, and players from 1871 through 2015, and all minor league farm prospects from the 20th century forward, we “users” finally have the chance to function as the Baseball Commissioner, MLB club owners, general managers, managers, or players – without the actual risk-reward roll of real-life decision-making, public self-aggrandizement, or fan-fomenting character assassinations.

As GMs, we even have a chance to try and low-ball land key free agents or wait for them to tell us to stick it. – And we may even draft the hottest high school prospect in the nation – and then watch him decide late to pass on our signing offer and just shuffle off to college.

For all I know at this point – and my head is still swimming from the information overload on the four tutorials I watched – a user here could even go to India to search and sign the fastest arm in the Greater Calcutta Cricket League and end up hiring actor John Hamm as a club scout for finding more country men like him.

The game contains every strategy I’ve ever heard about. As manager, you can play the game pitch by pitch, shifting offensive and defensive strategy with each change in the game situation – or simply do what I did on my first crusade into this new digital realm of baseball magic. – Just let the computer run everything in a quickie exhibition game mode. As you hopefully will be able to see a little bit from the line score I’m hoping to copy for this report to The Pecan Park Eagle. As for the box score, I’m two hours new and not yet up to the learning curve on how that’s done. – That will change, but not tonight.

OOTP-17 also gives the user the option to organize and play with fictional players in fictional leagues – even intermingling great stars like Ted Williams into the lineup with other power hitters like Bobby Copus of the Barker Red Sox. For an even bigger miracle, how about the introduction of a guy like Mike McCroskey of the Houston Babies into your lineup? – The difference this time is profound. – McCroskey now possesses the ability to run the bases like Cool Papa Bell!

Sometimes – especially in the digital world – this thing we call reality gets to be a pretty elastic substance.

At any rate, if you are interested in exploring OOTP (Out-Of-The-Park) Baseball for yourself, here’s the link to their site:

https://www.ootpdevelopments.com/out-of-the-park-baseball/

The Game is available for Windows, Apple, Steam, or Lynyx.
____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

Say What?

April 30, 2016
""I have a list allright!"

“I have a list allright!”

 

Even if he didn’t write it – even if you don’t like him – give credit to President Obama where credit is due. Last year at the Washington Correspondents Dinner, he got off one of the funniest line’s ever uttered by a sitting president near the end of a second term.

Certainly every president who has survived far enough to see that end coming to all the burden that comes with this toughest political job on earth – all of them – have felt something akin to the emotion that underlay Obama’s clearly stated comment at the 2015 banquet.

Addressing the annual Washington Correspondents Dinner last year on April 25, 2015, President Obama brought down the house with a few well chosen words.

“Some of my advisors have asked me if I have anything like a ‘bucket list’ that I plan to pursue when I leave office,” President Obama stated.

“I told them I don’t have a bucket list,” Obama added, “but I do have a list that sounds a lot like one!”

Thanks for the crisp wit, Mr. President. Even sooner now in 2016, you will get to be the latest president to leave the worst uphill job on earth with a case of perpetual “TGIF”.

This year’s Washington Correspondents Dinner will be held tonight, Saturday, April 30, 2016. The sounds-like “bucket list” can only have grown and growled with the passage into President Obama’s last year in office.

Bucket! ~  A sense of humor sublime is the best healing stitch over time.

____________________

Apologies. Forgive me for the “on-the-run” poor research I did on this attempt at a quickie column tale. I heard it last night on the network news and was so blown away by the comment itself that I mistook it for a remark from this year’s dinner and originally reported the comment as happening at this year’s dinner. – (And that would’ve been something of a time travel challenge, given the fact that the 2016 dinner does not happen until tonight.)

Thanks to an overnight advisory from my collegial friend, reader, and volunteer editor, Tom Hunter of Houston, by way of Denver, I have been able to re-write the original piece in words that make it sound like I had all my ducks in a row on the time facts from the start, except for this humble and embarrassing apology that I must now  make – and that you, my loyal readers, certainly deserve.

An old lesson is duly noted noted here: Even light and brief columns are deserving of the rigorous effort I expend on my longer columns and other items of “serious writing” for publication.

Hoping for your forgiveness and understanding, I remain ~ a flawed, but honest free spirit of hope in our shared search for a better sense of self and clearer contact and contribution with each other for the sake of building a more trusting world. And that’s pretty much how I’ve grown to understand my writing goal in my own words in a poem I wrote years ago:

“To soar once more in spirit, like the Pecan Park Eagle, High above the billowing clouds of a summer morning, In flight destiny – to all that is bright and beautiful.”

~ Excerpt, The Pecan Park Eagle, (1993).

____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

An Early Look at the Astros’ Trade for Ken Giles

April 29, 2016
Ken Giles Relief Pitcher 2016 Houston Astros

Ken Giles
Late Inning Relief Pitcher
2016 Houston Astros

 

The Deal: During the 2015-16 off-season, the Astros gave up five pitchers for the 2015 Phillies closer Ken Giles and a very young throw-in middle infielder. The deal swung on the fact that the re-building Phils were willing to give up a one-season effective young closer for more pitching depth. Principal acquisitions were former first guy in the former first round draft choice Mark Appel was showing some signs of becoming a slow-to-no developing  talent – and Vince Velasquez, who had shown in 2015 some MLB promise as either a starter or useful guy out of the pen. Brett Oberholtzer also went to the Phillies as an established MLB upside possibility.

With no further subjective opinion, here are a few of the early 2016 statistical results for six of the seven players involved. We couldn’t find anything from 2016 on 17-year old Jonathan Arauz so we simply included his 2015 rookie league action for the Phillies and duly noted that we had nothing else on him from this year.

It’s a long season and all that good stuff, but here’s how the seven involved players have done, so far, in MLB and minor league action in 2016. Our data covers all six of the pitchers involved. Only further word on the 17-year old infielder is missing.

First up are two tables on the major and minor league players who went from Houston to Philadelphia, showing how the two major and three minor league ex-Astro organization pitchers are doing for Philadelphia this year, through all games of 4/27/16.

1.) New Phillies MLB Pitchers in 2016 through 4/27/16:

PITCHERS AGE W-L ERA G/GS IP/K WHIP
Vince Velasquez 24 3-1 1.78 4/4 25.1/33 0.87
Brett Oberholtzer 26 1-0 8.74 4/0 11.1/12 2.21

 

2.) New Phillies Minor League Pitchers in 2016 through 4/27/16:

PITCHERS AGE LEVEL W/L ERA G/GS IP/K WHIP
Mark Appel 24 AAA 3-0 1.62 3/3 16.2/14 1.27
Harold Arauz 21 A 1-2 3.94 3/3 16.0/10 1.22
Thomas Eshelman 22 A+ 1-1 1.80 4/4 25.0/22 0.76

 

These second tables simply show how former Phillies closer Ken Giles is doing in a less specific late-game role for Houston in 2016, and also  how the throw-in young infielder did last year for the Phillies.

3.) New Astros MLB Pitcher in 2016 through 4/27/16:

PITCHER AGE W-L ERA G/GS IP/K WHIP
Ken Giles 25 0-2 7.45 10/0 9.2/14 1.86

 

4) New Astros Lower Minor League Infielder’s Phillies 2015 Rookie League Player:

SS/2B AGE 2015 G AB R H RBI HR BA OBP OPS
Jonathan Arauz * 17 ROK 44 173 21 44 18 2 .254 .309 .678

* NO AVAILABLE REPORT ON 2016 RESULTS WAS FOUND.

If you have any comment on how you feel the trade seems to be working out, please feel free to leave it as a comment response to this publication.

Thank you.

____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

Salute to the 1st 25 Years of Houston MLB

April 28, 2016

A MOO

Even though the batter in this featured ancient New Yorker cartoon is righthanded, the thought of it all still reminds many of us in Houston of our old Astros favorite left fielder/clutch hitter,  Jose ….. Cruzzzzzzzzzzz!

We should never forget those that ignited the heart of major league baseball in Houston. People like Roy Hofheinz, R.E. “Bob” Smith, Craig Cullinan, George Kirksey, Mickey Herskowitz, Gene Elston, Loel Passe, Bob Green, Harry Craft, Ken Johnson, Walt Bond, Turk Farrell, Hal Woodeshick, Jim Umbricht, Bob Aspromonte, Jimmy Wynn, Larry Dierker, Carl Warwick, Rusty Staub, Joe Morgan, Jose Cruz, J.R. Richard, Nolan Ryan, Joe Niekro, Tal Smith, Bill Virdon, Buddy Hancken, Mike Cuellar, Cesar Cedeno, Terry Puhl, Alan Ashby, Hal Lanier, Ken Forsch, Joaquin Andujar, Glenn Davis, Art Howe, Enos Cabell, Mike Scott, Phil Garner, Billy Doran, Dave Smith, and Kevin Bass, to name only some of the prime heartbeat pumpers on the field, in the front office, in the managerial post, and in the media, from 1962 to 1987, are the people we speak of here. Today we will just hand the bouquet of thanks to Jose Cruz in behalf of these and all others you other fan/readers/writers/and former players think we should add to our roses of gratitude gift to those who first breathed air into winning major league baseball in Houston.

And please add your own specific additions to our list of picks. The Eagle wasn’t presuming to cover them all for special mention. And not besides the point, either, is the fact that everyone who took the field for Houston in those first 25 years was also a contributor, if not to production, but to our learning curve on what we needed – and didn’t need – in the future.

 

Visit allwallpapersfree.blogspot.com

 

Thank You, .... Jose Cruzzzzzzzzzzz!!! ... and all who came before you in the first 25 years of Houston MLB History!

Thank You, ….
Jose Cruzzzzzzzzzzz!!!
… and thanks to all others who came before you in the first 25 years of Houston MLB History!

____________________

eagle-0range

SABR Night in Sugar Land, 2016

April 27, 2016
Larry Dierker threw out the first pitch and worked an inning with Ira Liebman in the game broadcast. Larry then received this HR-gift from Mike McCroskey, lower left.

Larry Dierker threw out the first pitch and worked an inning with Ira Liebman in the game broadcast. Larry then received this HR-gift from the pleased Mike McCroskey, lower left.

About 25-30 members of the Larry Dierker Chapter of SABR used their monthly meeting night on Monday, 4/25/16, to enjoy a buffet dinner together down the left line at Constellation Field to watch the Independent Atlantic League home club, the Sugar Land Skeeters, entertain the visiting Lancaster (PA) Barnstormers under pleasant skies and through the balmy breezes.

Our peerless chapter namesake former Astro, Larry Dierker, was also there, even finding time to throw out the first pitch and do an interview and one inning stint on the air of the Skeeters radio broadcast with Ira Liebman, a Skeeters media guy and another SABR member. In redundant mention, but with eloquence, the wonderful broadcaster Greg Lucas, also another front line active SABR member handling the telecast portion of the broadcast.

At one point, Larry Dierker noticed the rear view of a bobble head figure staring out the broadcast booth window at the field.

“Who’s that?” Dierker asked. “…. Bill Clinton?”

“No,” answered Greg Lucas, “it’s someone Milo Hamilton would not want to see.”

(Hint: It was Harry Caray.)

Close-Up of the Dierker Shirt A Gift from Mike McCroskey to our Houston SABR Chapter Namesake.

Close-Up of the Dierker Shirt ~
A Gift from Mike McCroskey to our Houston SABR Chapter Namesake.

Later on, Mike McCroskey of SABR presented Dierker with a tee shirt that he felt depicted Larry’s laid back persona. It featured a “Woodie,” an old station wagon, on the upper left hand shoulder also on the unseen here back side of the shirt. – Hmmm! – Have you ever heard of any guy with a woodie on his shoulder? Here’s a closer look at the pattern on the front of the shirt. It was a great and most appreciated gift to Larry Dierker from Mike McCroskey. – Up top, in the large photo of Larry holding the shirt up, that’s Mike McCroskey with the “home run gift-giver” smile on his face to the lower left, sitting down.

Bob Dorrill SABR Chapter Leader "We all trust our car to this man who wore the star!"

Bob Dorrill
Larry Dierker SABR Chapter Leader
“We all trust our car to this man who wore the star!”

Speaking of smiles, The Pecan Park Eagle was there to present SABR leader, Bob Dorrill, with a gift that we felt symbolized the trust and love that rest of us have for him as the “Sheriff of SABR”. Every member in sight was deputized with a (plastic) silver deputy badge, after we designated the first of these as the “sheriff’s badge” and presented it to Bob. – The gift itself was a tribute to Bob Dorrill’s long term service in marketing for Texaco prior to retirement. It was a replica of the famous Texaco man and a little representation plaque that depicted one of the most famous and effective oil company ad campaigns in the 20th century; “You Can Trust Car to the Man Who Wears The Star.” (The plaque says “with the star”, but “Who Wears The Star” is the correct wording from the song that began The Milton Berle Show (aka “The Texaco Star Theater”) on Tuesday evenings back in the early 1950s. – Oh well, Texaco’s loss was SABR Houston’s gain!

Beautiful Constellation Field Sugar Land Texas April 25, 2016

Beautiful Constellation Field
Sugar Land, Texas
April 25, 2016

The Unnecessary Noise of Our Times

Our only complaint was the blaring noise level of the PA announcer’s over-done, constant voice disturbance that just killed the kind of spring night opportunity for enjoyable discussion of the game in specifics or baseball history in general. I spent most of the game sitting between SABR’s Bob Copus of the Barker Red Sox and Larry and Judy Dierker. We quickly gave up story-sharing. The constant BLASTING voice performance was not only a disturbance. It made laid-back story sharing impossible. We simply had to talk in abrupt bursts – and give up on one of the things that once made a night at the ballpark a lot more fun. For the record, before cell phones and electronic game-playing took over, we used to have this thing we enjoyed. We called it conversation.

Let me be clear. The Eagle isn’t blaming the Skeeters as the inventors of this nuisance ambience. It’s the same story downtown at Minute Maid Park today – and so many other places too. The whole baseball world seems obsessed with the idea that if they don’t constantly do things to keep the fans’ attention, that people will bore of baseball itself and go home. The ironies are – this is only hastening the departure of fans who love the game. We’re going home to watch the game on TV, have conversations, and do other things. And the people wired to their cell phones aren’t paying any attention, anyway.

One has to wonder – if there is still a thing called baseball in 2116 – or maybe, as early as 2066, what will it be like?

Til there is no more chance, some of us will hang around for as long as we can to fight for what made live baseball great in the first place – as a game of unfolding drama, theater, and passionately slow-rising to true loud interest in what actually happens in games that can be followed. People who don’t get the flow and this spirit of the game – or who just do what they see others do as baseball producers – are making a fatal mistake. Silence is not a sign of disinterest among real baseball fans. The ones who don’t care are mostly the ones buried in their cell phones, 24/7. And they will not be blasted into anything at the ballpark.

Have a quiet and reflective Wednesday, everybody!

SLS-SABR-042516-02_edited-1

…. And keep smiling too! ~ It is still – a wonderful world!

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Photo Credits: Except for the night ballpark photo by The Pecan Park Eagle, all others are by SABR meeting programmer wiz, James Kreuz. Thanks, Jim! – We also want to give you credit for that foul ball you snared. It was not quite on the level of Willie Mays and “The Catch” in the 1954 World Series, but it must have been pretty darn good. In fact, your personal description of your unwitnessed catch, quite literally, was incredible. 🙂

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eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

 

 

Invasion of The Mind Snatchers *

April 26, 2016

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Invasion of The Mind Snatchers *

  • Formerly Known as “Whoops! Einstein’s Future Fear Is Already Here” – But changed today when the title muse showed up 48 hours post publication.

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Thanks go out to Larry Dierker for bringing the idea for this column into the world today. The Pecan Park Eagle was engulfed with some fun ways to make Larry’s 100% valid point.

With this Tuesday publication of these materials, it looks like this Wednesday is stacking up to be one of the biggest hump days over disappointment we’ve seen in a long, long time – at least, for those who see, read, and are saddened by this brief depiction of the strongest (already recognized) non-digestible and non-injectible (for now, anyway) distraction from human loneliness the world has ever seen.

Going to lunch with co-workers ….

Visiting with the two sisters you haven’t seen since their rescue from abduction ….

Checking with your sister about your mother in the nursing home ….

Meeting boys you’ve never met in person ….

Using the “Fend for Yourselves App” while mom is away with her boss, Mr. Smith, for an important business meeting in Las Vegas.” ….

She Says: “You sound a lot better looking than the husband I’m sitting next to at the airport.”

“But I’m only his secretary, Mrs. Smith. Didn’t Mr. Smith tell you I was going with him on this important trip to Vegas?”

“It’s ‘love at first sight’ on their very first date!” ….

Having fun at the Peckerharder Family Reunion. ….

…. Get the picture???

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Editorial Note: It is the policy of The Pecan Park Eagle to give writing credit to others every time their words appear in one of our publications. Credit for the captions on the selected photos used here was not extended because The Pecan Park Eagle picked the photos and wrote all the captions that seemed to fit beneath each cell phone theme picture. It also was a lot of fun.

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eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/