Bill Gilbert’s Take on the 2016 Astros Season

April 4, 2016
Baseball Analyst Bill Gilbert's First Look at the 2016 Season of the Houston Astros on Opening Day.

Baseball Analyst Bill Gilbert’s First Look at the 2016 Season of the Houston Astros on Opening Day.

What Should Be Expected from the Houston Astros in 2016?

By Bill Gilbert

After a surprisingly successful season in 2015, expectations for 2016 are for an even better year.  Sports Illustrated has picked the Astros to beat the Cubs in the World Series. One of the bookmaking sites in Las Vegas, Vegasinsider.com, has quoted the Astros odds of win- ning the World Series at 13-1, better than those for the Royals, (14-1), the Dodgers (15-1) and the Cardinals (15-1).

Are these expectations realistic?  Possibly not, but the success in 2015 was hardly a fluke.  The Astros outscored their opponents, with a run differential of 111, second only to the Toronto Blue Jays in the American League and they ranked among the major league leaders in home runs, stolen bases, pitching and defense. They had a few soft spots that cost them in the end but they took measures during the off-season to shore them up (bullpen, first base, excessive strikeouts) and, on paper, they are stronger than last year.

What are the primary reasons for optimism?  They should have full seasons from short- stop Carlos Correa and outfielders George Springer and Carlos Gomez.

They have the reigning Cy Young Award winner in Dallas Keuchel, the 2015 American League Rookie of the Year in Correa, the league leader in hits and stolen bases in Jose Altuve and a potential superstar in Springer. They have strong management that is capable of making moves to improve the team and, hopefully, an owner who will provide the cash to get it done.

However, there is a potential downside.  Baseball is an unpredictable game which is one reason so many people enjoy it through a long 162- game schedule. There is a history of teams that have made a strong move up one season, only to regress in the following year.  A prime example is the Cleveland Indians with an improvement from 60 wins in 1985 to 84 wins in 1986 only to fall back to 61 wins in 1987. They did it again with 78 wins in 2006, 96 in 2007, 81 in 2008 and 65 in 2009. Kansas City had a similar experience going from 62 wins in 2002 to 83 in 2003 before falling back to 58 in 2004.

The greatest vulnerability that the Astros have is a serious injury to a key player like Correa, Altuve, Springer or Keuchel. Since all four had excellent seasons in 2015, especially Correa and Keuchel, some drop-off in their production might be expected.  However, this could be offset by an improvement in performance by some of the other players.

Overall, a realistic expectation for the Astros is a record of 91-71, a five game improvement over last year. This should put them in contention for the Division championship with the Texas Rangers with a good chance of another wild card, if they fall short.

Bill Gilbert

billcgilbert@sbcglobal.net

4/3/16

____________________

A Second Invitation: If you missed Sunday’s column, “The Pecan Park Eagle Cartoon All Stars”, because it only reached publication by mid-afternoon, please give it a second look-see see chance. It was late because I got lost in the fun of putting it together. 🙂

Here’s the link:

The Pecan Park Eagle Cartoon All Stars

Thanks. And have a great first week of the new baseball season, starting with the Astros season opening game tonight against New York at Yankee Stadium.

Go Astros! – Our Eagle prediction is a fan-emotional and talent-based appraisal of 108 2016 Astros wins, 17 more than the more conservative, but unquestionably more logically presented prediction by Bill Gilbert of 91 and a squeeze into playoff contention. Our TPPE bid is for that “once every 500 years” season we have been waiting for in Houston since 1962. ~ Let the good times roll, Astros Nation. ~ Let the good times roll.

____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

The Pecan Park Eagle Cartoon All Stars

April 3, 2016

Good Afternoon, 2016 new season baseball fans!

It’s about time to start another play-on-life baseball season soap opera by spanking the baby with another breath-imparting first pitch. Hope everybody’s ready for the emotionally sudsy ride, especially in Houston, where the prospects of a shooting star and astro-filled orange sky come October have never been brighter. We could not possibly cartoon the best moments of what appears yet to come because of the physical laws governing time and space separation – and the slim, but all important difference between – what we think may happen from our present day perspective – and what actually happens in the immediate six months of tomorrows that lay out-of-sight before us on this date, April 3, 2016.

As a result, we shall simply content ourselves this morning with drawing conclusions from that other time zone that serves our electronic media so handily. That is, whatever happened in the past, starting with the event that happened an hour or 24 hours ago – and all the way back to Eden or the Big Bang – depending on one’s point of view about whenever everything really got started.

We shall use the past impressions of childhood here to present The Pecan Park Eagle Cartoon All Stars – by lineup and ancillary personnel. Please join us now in hearing range of this digital megaphone for the following introductions:

The Lineup

Rpadie "Meep-Meep" Roadrunner

Roadie “Meep-Meep” Roadrunner, SS

  1.  Roadie “Meep-Meep” Roadrunner, SS ~ With incredible range in the middle infield, Roadie has a home-to-first best-time of 1.01 seconds. Anything he hits that cannot be caught on the fly is a potential home run, if not handled perfectly.

    Wile E. Coyote, LF

    Wile E. Coyote, LF

  2. Wile E. Coyote, LF ~ A genuine table setter in the lineup, Wile always brings his own knife and fork. Aided by the extra momentum he derives from batting directly behind Roadie Roadrunner, Wile’s hitting improved by .075 points last season. Wile credits the book he purchased from Acme Publishing, “How To Avoid Indigestion While Eating On The Run”, for his .325 mark last season. With his own good running times, Wile sometimes is able to bump Roadie into his uncatchable hyper-speed pace, and sometimes allowing the “burner-bird” to score from first base on a Coyote swinging bunt.

    Popeye "The Sailor" Mann, 1B

    Popeye “The Sailor” Mann, 1B

  3. Popeye “The Sailor” Mann, 1B ~ Acquired from San Diego in the off-season (Where else do you find sailors who can hit?), Popeye is the best slugging 1st baseman since Jeff Bagwell. In fact a lot of people think he has the same arms and stance as the former great Astros (hopefully) future Hall of Famer.

    Casey "At-The-Bat-Only" Dooditt, DH

    Casey “At-The-Bat-Only” Dooditt, DH

  4. Casey “At-The-Bat-Only” Dooditt, DH ~ Our Casey is not to be confused with his cousin back in Mudville, Casey “At-The-Bat-Only” Didunt. When our Casey’s Pieville club defeated Mudville, 4-2, in the famous game that sucked the joy from that earthy named place with a grand slam home run that stood up in the face of a failed Mudville rally in the ninth, it was our Dooditt slammer from Pieville that did it!

    Charley Brown, 3B Snoop Dogg. Mascot

    Charley Brown, 3B
    Snoop Dogg. Mascot

  5. Charlie Brown, 3B ~ Signed for mere peanuts, Charlie Brown has turned into a real spark plug at the hot corner – and, batting behind “Our Casey”, he is expected to become our second speedy lead off man in the lineup. In the featured photo, we see Charlie clowning around at his position with his pet and the club’s mascot, Snoopy “Snoop” Dogg.  We have no clue as to what he plans to do with that bat at 3rd base.

    Mighty Mouse, CF

    Mighty Mouse, CF

  6. Mighty Mouse, CF ~ Forget “The Catch” by Willie Mays in the 1954 World Series. When our Cartoon-Club’s defensive need arises, its “death to all other flying things” for the most redemptive airborne rodent in the history of biological anomalies. Anytime an enemy striker connects on a moon-bound baseball, our Cartoon-Club manager only has to grab the dugout phone and shout, “sending out a call to you-know-who … sending out a call to you-know-who” …. and guess what? … “Here he comes to save the day …. by tracking the ball down on the fly and making the sensational catch!”

    Donald Duck, 2B

    Donald Duck, 2B

  7. Donald Duck, 2B ~ Who’s got the glove at his position? ~ One guess, guess who! ~ Who’s got the softest kind of sweet glove touch? ~ Who never tries to trip the runners much? ~ Who makes the pivot ~ on the double play? ~ Who gets the throw to first ~ on time each day? ~ Who only errors ~ in a game of bad luck? ~ No one ~ but Donald Duck!

    Lucy Van Pelt, RF

    Lucy Van Pelt, RF

  8. Lucy Van Pelt, RF ~ Lucy is our most versatile starter. She covers right field well; also removes all flowers in her area that could divert a hard-hit grounder into becoming a tough to reach rolling extra base hit; and she also offers psychiatric help to bleacher fans between innings for five cents an opinion.

    Goofy Mann, C

    Goofy “Dog Face” Guy, C

  9. Goofy “Dog Face” Guy, C ~ Is he a dog that dresses like a man? ~ Or is he a man with a face and ears like a dog? ~ We don’t know? ~ All we know is ~ he’s the best catcher we could find! ~ But isn’t that how it often is these days with catchers? ~ If you can find one that handles pitchers and throws out runners well – he can’t hit your grandmother’s age! ~ If you find one that can hit .280 or better ~ well ~ he throws out runners the way hoarders throw out trash! ~ Uh! ~ Right, Astros?

    Raymond "Bugs" Bunny Starting Pitcher

    Raymond “Bugs” Bunny
    Starting Pitcher

  10. Raymond “Bugs” Bunny, SP ~ Each batter he faces is a “carrot vs. stick” encounter, but he is very good at escaping the high pitch count holes he get into with his uncanny rabbit ball mind and experience with same. Every time he induces another high pop fly with his rising fast ball, Bugs always like to grab a carrot chomp from his glove-hidden orange treat bag and loudly ask the batter as he jogs hopelessly down the first base line in frustration ~ “Eh … (chomp. chomp. chomp) … What’s Up, Doc?”

    Casper "The Ghost" Friendly Reliever/Closer

    Casper Friendly
    Reliever/Closer

  11. Casper “The Ghost” Friendly, RP/Closer ~ On those occasions in which starter Bugs Bunny needs help, opponents don’t have a ghost of a chance against reliever/closer Casper Friendly. ~ Who wouldn’t have trouble hitting a full house of great pitches that came to the plate as barely visible balls thrown by a barely visible pitcher?

    Mickey Mouse Field Manager

    Mickey Mouse
    Field Manager

  12. Mickey Mouse, Manager ~ Who else are we going to get to manage the “Mickey Mouse” team that we just put on the field? We also got Mickey in a cash deal from the Chicago Cubs. Mickey is actually an automaton who has been programmed with all the traits for winning baseball that have been derived from Cubs managers since Frank Chance stepped down as their Peerless Leader after the 1912 season.

    Pinocchio Corleone General Manager

    Pinocchio Corleone
    General Manager

  13. Pinocchio Corleone, General Manager ~ Our GM promises to keep our hopeful lineup in the annual AL pennant hunt by continuing to make each of them yearly contract offers that they cannot refuse, and, at the same time, he is equally committed to remaining honest with the owner, management, the players, the media, and the fans in all matters of importance to the team’s success.

    Porky Pigg Radio Broadcast Play-By-Play

    Porky Pigg
    Radio Broadcast
    Play-By-Play

  14. Porky “The Ham” Pigg ~ Porky Pigg has been signed to do the TV/radio simulcast play-by-play for the Cartoon-Club.

    Daddy Warbucks Club Owner

    Daddy Warbucks
    Club Owner

  15. Daddy Warbucks, Club Owner ~ A close friend and look-alike of Houston NFL Texans owner Bob McNair, Warbucks promises that his Cartoon Club baseball team will be in the hunt for the World Series every year, but he has requested that fans and media both need to stop asking him if he plans to sign a quarterback who can actually win games. Warbucks adds that quarterbacks  have no value to him whatsoever. – “Maybe that’s the baseball in me,” he added, “or maybe it also comes from hanging out with my buddy McNair since 2002! – Until he signed the QB from Denver, I was beginning to think that QBs had no importance to winning in football either.” mister-magoo
  16. Mr. Jim Backus Magoo ~ Umpire in Chief ~ Uh ~ who else gets this job? ~ It’s gotta be Big Jim Magoo!

pprky-thats-all____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

 

 

The National Ballpark Museum, Denver

April 2, 2016

 

The National Ballpark Museum Denver, Colorado Bruce Heberstein, Curator

The National Ballpark Museum
Denver, Colorado
Bruce Hellerstein, Curator

 Taking  a break from doing my 2015 tax return,  decided to chill out with one of my favorite programs to DVR, “Mysteries of the Museum with Don Wildman” on the Travel Network, Channel 283 on Direct TV, Thursday nights at 8:00 PM. This one featured a Polo Grounds aisle seat that now rests in the “National Ballpark Museum” in Denver, a half mile from Coors Field, as an artifact lead-in connection to an ancient baseball story they wanted to tell. Although the TV program’s presentation of this famous baseball story was a little incomplete and overly simplified in service to broadcast time,  it certainly hit home with me as an eye opener to the fact that this I’m sorry I never knew about this place earlier, but I’ve only been to Denver on plane travel stops.

The program used the old Polo Grounds seat as an inanimate witness (oxymoron noted) to the famous Merkle bonehead play in 1908 that ultimately tilted the pennant victory to the Cubs, thus, becoming the Cubs’ ostensible original “curse” rationale for explaining the fact that they have not won another World Series in the 117 years that have now passed since that awful-for-the-Giants day that set up Chicago for entering and winning their last World Series.

Curator Bruce Hellerstein And Friends The National Ballpark Museum Denver, Colorado

Curator Bruce Hellerstein
And Friends
The National Ballpark Museum
Denver, Colorado

Check out the site and, especially take the time to read the section tagged as “Learn More” under the “Come Visit Us” column. It’s worthwhile as an exposition of how one fan’s passion for the game, its history, and artifact collecting led him to something even bigger – a way to share that love with the world.

Home

The Denver Bears Played At Bear Stadium ~ Right, Bill Gilbert?

The Denver Bears Played
At Bear Stadium
~ Right, Bill Gilbert?

Congratulations, curator Bruce Hellerstein. ~ It seems as though you’ve done the game of baseball and the beautiful City of Denver proud. Hope to get up there and see your place one of these days.

Regards, Bill McCurdy

The Pecan Park Eagle

____________________

eagle-0range

 

 

First HR in Professional League History

April 1, 2016
Ezra Sutton 1st Professional League Home Run May 8, 1871

Ezra Sutton
1st Professional League Home Run
May 8, 1871

 

Ezra Sutton, May 8, 1871

We will most likely will never know who hit the first home run in the history of baseball back in the 1840s Elysian Field days. Perhaps, though, it will be, or already is, available and possible to  reconstruct from some ancient scoring records in a descendant’s attic trunk, the identity of the first player on the famous 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings’ undefeated independent club to have “run yard”, but we have no clue at the moment. All we know is that the identity of the first HR author is found in the record-keeping data of the first short-lived all-professional team league, the 1871-1875 National Association.

Ezra Sutton hit the first home run by a professional ballplayer playing in a professional baseball league on May 8, 1871. He did so as the third baseman for the Cleveland Forest Citys in a game they played against the Chicago White Stockings. It happened in the 4th inning against pitcher George Zettlein. With Cleveland’s Al Platt running at first, Sutton lined a shot over the head of left fielder Mart King. The force of the blow and the long roll of the ball made it also the most common kind of home in the 19th century, an “inside the park” job that was always a literal run home for the first home run credit, as well.

Later in the game, the sometimes cross-hand-hitting right-side hitter hit another home run, making him also the owner of both the first and second homers in professional league history – and also the first guy to hit more than one home run in a single league game.

Although Sutton’s career spanned from 1871-1875  in the NA through the start of the NL in 1876, and ending for him after 1888, our baseball basher of the first four-base hit only totaled 25 over the course of his 18-year career. And that was pretty good for those days.

As most you already know, home runs were rare in the early days because of soft baseballs, distant or non-existent fences, and a style of hitting that aimed to line the ball over the heads and in the gaps between outfielders. These were the true “hit ’em where they ain’t days” when the wisdom prevailed, until Babe Ruth and the lively ball changed the game forever, that the attempt to hit the ball out of any park back then was mostly dooming one’s chances for reaching base because of the much more probable long fly ball outs they produced.

 

Ross Barnes 1st National League Home Run May 2, 1876

Ross Barnes
1st National League Home Run
May 2, 1876

Ross Barnes, May 2, 1876

Now, if you choose to be pedantic, and to insist upon the creation of the National League in 1876 as the true start of a sustainable professional baseball league, the first home run honor passes to Ross Barnes of the Chicago White Stockings (the “Sox” version that later indelibly came to be  known as the Cubs). Ross Barnes posted the first National League home run on May 2, 1876.

The Pecan Park Eagle elects to keep the honors for first professional league home run attached to Ezra Sutton. Ross Barnes’ honor for being the first in the NL should be good enough, but like Sutton before him, neither was a home run hitter. It was an era in which there were no seasonal home run hitters that really lived up to our expectations of what that term came to mean after the coming of Ruth and the lively ball through the present time in the early 21st century.

Barnes “hit” only six home runs over the course of his 9-year (1871-79, 1881) professional baseball career.

____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

Houston Brewery To Host Final 4 “Floor” Show

March 31, 2016
A Section of the 1971 Floor Houston Astrodome Courtesy of the Houston Chronicle

A Section of the 1971 Playing Floor
NCAA Final Four, Houston Astrodome
Courtesy of the Houston Chronicle

 

“An east side craft brewery, 8th Wonder Brewery, is showing off a 45-year-old piece of Astrodome history from the first time the Final Four was held in Houston. To celebrate the Final Four in Houston this weekend at NRG Stadium, officials from the University of Houston reached out to the brewery to see if they would like to show off a portion of the court used for the 1971 games. The brewery’s owners jumped at the chance to showcase a piece of Dome history, March 30, 2016.” – Houston Chronicle Sports, Chron.Com, March 30, 2016

Check out the Chron.Com story:

http://www.chron.com/sports/college/marchmadness/article/A-piece-of-Astrodome-history-on-display-at-7217393.php#photo-9724347

You may want to check this one out this coming weekend, folks. Coinciding with the return of the NCAA Basketball “Final Four” tournament to Houston, the little privately-owned suds factory is placing a portion of the Astrodome floor used for that same halcyon conclusion to “March Madness” again in our town – with that first time being 1971, a full 45 years ago.

“45” is a number that keeps cropping up in our local sports association with those old and new grounds for amphitheater venues (now moving clockwise) at the Old Spanish Trail, Fannin, Loop 610 South and Kirby Drive large quadrant locale, The 2016 Final Floor takes place this coming Saturday and Monday at the now converted NRG Stadium rodeo “wild bull ride” set into a new first class, thousands-of-butts-in-the-seats basketball championship game arena.

Saturday, April 2, 2016, Schedule

Oklahoma plays Villanova in the 5:00 PM opener.

Syracuse plays North Carolina in the 7:49 PM second game.

Monday, April 4, 2016, Schedule

Saturday’s two winners play each other in the 8:18 PM championship game at NRG.

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.

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 IN THE GAME OF THE CENTURY THAT CHANGED THE BIG STAGE COURSE OF COLLEGE BASKETBALL FOREVER.

Tickets

You had better either have them already, know somebody, or be prepared to surrender your scalp to see the game live. The best HD flat screen views will be available, either through your favorite sports bar or home cable/satellite connection to TBS, the cable folks who are handling television for the whole playing event. – I am one of those who each year prefers more and more to watch sports of any kind from my own home man cave. My HD screen is only three feet from my eyes, to the left of my computer writing station, the concession stands and rest rooms are never crowded, and I have yet to stand up in the middle of all the action because I had been forced to allow someone to pass in front of me to get a beer or take a …. short walk to the rest rooms.

A Broader Wonderment About Game Watching

My new preference for the home viewing choice as best for me is certainly affected by the mobility problems that have descended upon me over time, but that’s not the whole thing. My UH Cougar football season tickets locate me in a place that protects me from crowding and the need for continuous aisle standing, but that is not the case for me at Minute Maid Park, where I’ve never bought anything but limited game package seating, and then, not often.

Baseball is just different with me. On a level of its own. I don’t go to baseball games to be shot at by tee shirt cannons – or to have the rest of my hearing blasted away by contemporary rockers who will never be the kind of “two-three the count, nobody on; he hit a high fly into the stands; rounded third – headed for home – he was the brown-eyed handsome man” that Chuck Berry used to be!

Beyond the generational gap that now exists for me – but only on some banal levels – is the fact that baseball, the eternal game, is not a creature that depends upon constant attention-span revival to be the best game ever. It just is. Baseball is an everyday melodrama, with every game playing out its own plot, its own variable levels of suspense and action, intrigue and combat, miserable failure and joyous redemption – or abject sorrow. Those are the qualities that make baseball more like a devotion to  reading great fictional literature – and never really being disappointed in what happens because you have become the kind of fan who has grown in learning what to watch for. Nobody has the ability to bring you to that awareness by tee shirt cannon blasts and loud music bangs upon your ears, brains, and sensitivities.

Great literature is to baseball what The Roadrunner and Wyle E. Coyote are to The Harlem Globetrotters and The Washington Generals. And the same high station exists for baseball in relation to football as a game of children’s war toy soldier figures and robotic toy tanks.

If baseball loses the current generation to short attention spans, it probably also means the end of all great American works of incredible fiction.

Oh, Yeah

Enjoy the Final Four. And your trip to the brewery. If those are your things.

___________________

Was Last Out Strike 3 in WS Perfecto a Swing?

March 30, 2016
Only Perfect Game in World Series History Don Larsen, New York Yankees October 8, 1956

Only Perfect Game in World Series History
Don Larsen, New York Yankees
October 8, 1956

In the column I wrote about Yogi Berra this week, I described him, among other things, as “the guy who celebrated Don Larsen’s 1956 World Series perfect game by leaping into his arms after Dale Mitchell took a dubious called strike three final out.”

That comment prompted a tempered, but clear rebuttal by e-mail from SABR friend Mark Wernick about the outcome of that pitch. Mark implicitly removes the “dubious” aspect  that has long been associated the question ” was the pitch really in the strike zone” and he places it – where he and other think it belongs: It was a called strike three, alright,  but it should have been ruled a swinging – no question, batter Mitchell’s out – strike three by examining the whole pitch and swing sequence with the kind of cutting board stop action technology available to us today.

When you look at the tape today with our current modern technology for instant replay review of hard to call plays, you can see – clear as day – it was a swinging strike three that simply wasn’t added to umpire Pinelli’s quick call, just prior to Mitchell’s wrists breaking into a swing at the pitch as the ball passes.

Even Mitchell’s quick recoil of the bat to beg for a “swing check on ball four” could not sell any reconsideration by umpire Pinelli. To my eyes, it really looked like a hittable ball that Mitchell missed.

Whether it was in the strike zone as a hittable ball isn’t even the question. He swung at it. And he missed. And just maybe – that was why Dale Mitchell didn’t make a bigger stink about the strike call than he did. Mitchell knew, even if he never said so, that he didn’t deserve a break. He swung. And he missed. On strike three.

Here’s how Mark Wernick expressed it briefly: “One thing about the Mitchell 3rd strike in the perfect game,  which seems to be pervasively missed by so many,  including no less a luminary than George Will:  it was a swinging strike,  not a called strike. Mitchell tried to hold up,  but his bat was well out past the plate when Pinelli rang him up. Freeze this footage at the 2:59 mark,  and you will see clearly that this is a swinging strike 3.”

http://m.mlb.com/…/bb-moments-56-ws-gm-5-don-larsens…

“For all we know,  the  ‘Pinelli missed the call’  wave began before freeze-frame YouTube videos were available to all.  This YouTube phenomenon also helped verify Yogi Berra’s claim that Jackie Robinson was really out,  and that Babe Ruth really pointed towards center field,  while both Root and Hartnett had their backs to him.” ~ Mark Wernick.

Larsen365375CORBIS

The Iconic Visual Moment The World Series Perfect Game Five New York 3 – Brooklyn 0 October 8, 1956

 As one who watched that strikeout in Houston on a grainy 17″ television set between classes as a UH freshman, it never occurred to me to ask for a second look at the pitch. We didn’t have that little technological game-changer at our disposal back on October 8, 1956.

Even if we had been so blessed/cursed, it still may have been impossible to click it off in stop-action mode and told much on the kinds of sets we watched in those days. George Wills says the ball was “a foot and a half” outside. Really? Maybe George Will had his buddy Michael J. Fox fly a 70″ flat screen and game-officials quality replay equipment back from the future to wherever he watched the game at age 15. None of us could really see where the ball was pitched that accurately back in the day, but that didn’t stop many of us from creating and perpetuating the mind-teaser that maybe – just maybe – that third strike “call” was really the umpire’s contribution to the perfect game.

My worst regret? About fifteen years ago, I had about an hour of private time in St. Louis with Don Larsen in the hotel lobby where we were both attending the same banquet that night. All we talked about was the World Series perfect game. – And I never asked him anything on this specific vital detail beyond “was that last pitch really a strike?” Larsen answered with a smile. “It was a strike, alright, and it’s always going to stay a strike.”

It was the strike that immortalized the memory of Don Larsen and the visage of Yogi Berra running to the mound and jumping into Don Larsen’s arms, but no real memory of Dale Mitchell stood out quite so boldly, other than that feint call to doubt that the pitch may have missed the strike zone. I, for one, had no TV memory of the Mitchell swing. I was too busy jumping on a couch in over-the-top celebration with Yogi and Larsen.

I did ask Don Larsen that early 21st century day we talked in St. Louis one question that he, at least, told me was new to him. That news surprised me. It could easily have been the first question any of us might have asked him back anytime after October 8, 1956.

“What was the last thought you had before you released that two-strike pitch to Mitchell in the top of the ninth with two outs?” I asked.

Don Larsen stared at me with those steely blue eyes for a brief moment. Then he spoke in three deliberately quiet words.

“Here. Goes. Nothing.” End of answer. No need to ask more. Larsen’s voice was steady. His face was as frozen as Gary Cooper’s,  just prior to the big shoot-out in “High Noon,” as his piercing blue eyes again met mine as he spoke those three distinct words. His fierce look seem to caution me to ask no more.

“Here. Goes. Nothing.”

It was nothing, alright. The kind of big nothing that will be the big something we shall always use as our legacy memory of Don Larsen – along with the dance that he and Berra pulled off just after the last out.

____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

 

The Untold Larry Miggins “Garagiola Story”

March 29, 2016
Larry Miggins One of Baseball's Great Storytellers

Larry Miggins
One of Baseball’s Great Storytellers

 

As a kid, I remember being impressed by a 1948 movie called “The Boy with Green Hair”, starring Pat O’Brien and Dean Stockwell. Had this previously unpublished story by my dear friend and former Houston Buff, Larry Miggins, gone public only three years after the aforementioned movie, it may have served as the basis for a sequel-script to the aforementioned film.

The Miggins/Garagiola story happened in 1951, during the St. Louis Cardinals’ only season under manager Marty Marion, and during the Cardinals’ spring training camp in St. Petersburg, Florida.

Garagiola and Miggins hit it off with each other in camp, but they would soon part ways. Joe Garagiola would spend 1951 with the Cards as their back-up catcher, but it would be his last dance for his hometown team. He would be dealt to Pittsburgh prior to 1952 and be retired from baseball as a player by the end of the 1954 season. Larry Miggins would be sent down to Houston for the 1951 season and the chance to help power hitter Jerry Witte lead the Buffs to the 1951 Texas League title. Miggins would spend some brief time with the Cards in 1952, but he too would be done as a player, by mid-season of 1954.

It was an earlier time. Maybe Joe Garagiola didn't want anyone forming mental images of sitting on the john.

It was an earlier time. Maybe Joe Garagiola didn’t want anyone forming mental images of him sitting on the john.

 

Larry says he tried to get Garagiola to include this true story in his book of several years ago about the funny side of baseball, but Joe declined.

“I can’t do it, Larry,” Garagiola explained. “it’s too delicate a matter to go to print.”

 

Oh, really? It’s one of the funniest baseball culture stories you may ever hear, and one that Larry Miggins was more than pleased to know that I wanted to do this column about. Yeah, it’s a little on the immodest, personal hygiene side of things, but it is no slight upon the strength, character, courage, good sense of humor and incredible goodness of the man who lived it. Larry was more than happy to give me his full permission for this first publication of a story that needed to be preserved for “posterity”.

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The Previously Unpublished Garagiola Story By Larry Miggins

Here’s the story, as told to me today by Larry Miggins:

“I was hopeful of making the big club roster in 1951 – and ready to try just about anything that might help give me that last extra edge needed that might make a difference. By everything, I’m not talking about drugs, but about playing technique, training, or diet. Anything like that, I wanted to hear more about.

“One day this salesman/farmer came to camp to talk with the Cardinals’ famous trainer, Doc Weaver. He was promoting natural strength ingredients that came from products he says he developed from his own crops. A lot of them included the ground roots of the plants themselves, whatever they may have been. He must have sold Weaver because the guy was given the chance to promote and sell his ideas to us individually as players. I ended up being one of the fellows who agreed to try them. And, mind you, all of this was happening as we went into mid-March, a little late for anything to make much of a difference, one way or the other, but I figured, what have I got to lose?

“To appreciate what happened next, you have to get the picture of what that Cardinal clubhouse was like in 1951. We had four toilets – total – and they were all lined up against one wall, side-by-side. We’re talking no stalls here – just the toilets themselves – with no privacy. If you needed to talk with somebody – and that need matched up with both of you having the same big job more basic need at the same time – here was the time and space to get it all done.

“One day, only a few days after I started eating those plant and root supplements, I was sitting on the far right john – and Garagiola was sitting on the facility to my immediate left. We had enjoyed a good discussion about hitting for about ten minutes, but we were both ready to finish about the same time. – I stood up to wipe myself, but I was suddenly taken aback by what I saw on the paper. – It was totally covered with green marks!

” ‘What the heck’, I exclaimed loud as sunrise, ‘Look at this, Joe!’ I shouted. ‘Look what this stuff I’ve been taking has done to me!’ Of course, I had to show him the tissue.

“Joe looked over in amazement. – Then he even peered into my pot and just started laughing his bald head off! When I reached for the handle, he even grabbed my arm and screamed for joy, ‘Oh, no, Larry! – Don’t flush it. – Just finish getting dressed, as will I!’

“Garagiola then proceeded to gather the rest of the Cardinals around us for their own gander at my doings. Then he raised both hands to the sky to make his point. Even I had slipped up on what day it really was! – I had totally lost myself to thinking only of spring training until this moment.

” ‘It’s St. Patrick’s Day, right guys?’ Joe shouted through his laughter.  ‘And just look at who almost forgot it was St. Patrick’s Day – until he sat down!’

“I took the kidding in good spirit because I knew Joe Garagiola well enough to know that he meant no harm by it. He wasn’t that kind of guy. Almost needless to say, I stopped using the farm supplements. And that kind of greenery went away.”

____________________

Thank you, Larry Miggins, for being a very dear good friend, and one of baseball’s great treasures!

And thank you too, Joe Garagiola. Your greatest contributions to baseball only began once you stopped playing and started talking and writing about baseball and life. Say hello to Yogi for us fans too. OK? We fans already miss both of you!

____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

 

 

When You Come to a Fork in The Road, Take It

March 28, 2016

YOGI-FORK_edited-1

We all have our favorite “Yogi-isms.” I like them all, but my favorite is one of the least famous of lot. That is, if reciting it to others who say they had never heard it before is any gauge on fame or notoriety. This one concerns a seemingly innocent returned compliment from Yogi to the wife of Mayor John Lindsey after she greeted him so cordially to a fundraising luncheon that her husband had staged in New York City one fine spring work week day many years ago.

When Yogi arrived, he was dressed as the very first breath of spring, wearing a lime-colored striped seersucker suit, a bright flowery green tie, white leather shoes, and a floral boutonniere in his left coat lapel.

Mrs. Lindsey greeted Yogi with as much welcoming spirit as all true New Yorkers hold out for the coming of sunshine that actually remains long enough to melt away the winter snow. It is that time of year when in-touch society dresses cool as a personification of the change in seasons.

Grasping both of Yogi’s gnarled and nubby catcher’s hands, Mrs. Lindsey could hardly contain her great approval of the Yankee star’s spot-on fitting attire for the benefit day-timer event.

“Oh, Yogi,” she gushed, “the mayor and I cannot thank you enough for coming today. “I also cannot tell you sufficiently how much I adore your outfit today. You look so cool!”

“Well, thank you, Mrs. Lindsey,” Yogi reciprocated, before adding, “You know, you don’t look so hot yourself!”

____________________

Once you finish laughing, which I reasonably know is going to happen, if you have never heard this story before, let’s look briefly at why Yogi’s one-liners work so well.

First of all, Yogi Berra is a lovable guy, who just happens to have been one of the great Hall of Fame catchers, a New York Yankee, a longtime symbol of World Series victory, the guy who celebrated Don Larsen’s 1956 World Series perfect game by leaping into his arms after Dale Mitchell took a dubious called strike three final out, the guy who in an earlier Series went ballistic when Jackie Robinson stole home because the umpire called him safe under Yogi’s hard tag, the guy from “The Hill” in St. Louis, Joe Garagiola’s childhood friend, one of the guys who landed on Omaha Beach with the army on D-Day in 1944, a guy who smiled and patiently shook hands with people he never met and would soon forget – guys like me and the hundreds of other Houstonians who greeted Yogi when he came to town for the Hall of Fame’s road trip exhibit at the Houston Museum of Fine Arts in 2004, and a guy who spoke the truth in ways that we all thought were funny, ironic, or sometimes filled with innocent sarcasm or hard-to-figure wisdom.

The Fork in The Road Quote

What better example do we have of “hard-to-figure-wisdom?” All of us grew up in this western culture with the wisdom that our lives are shaped differently by both the roads we take – and fail to take – at the various crossroads (or forks in the road) that came up along the way. Where you went to school. Who you chose to marry. If you chose to marry at all. What you chose to do for a living, Where you chose to live. They are big forks in life, but they are only a small number of those that fill out the big picture for all of us. – How many of us, once we reach a certain age, have not spent a single moment reconsidering, at least, a single choice we might have made differently, now that we’ve had the time to harvest the results of the choices we did make in life?

So how does Yogi’s advice fit as hard-to-figure wisdom? Everybody knows we can’t have it both ways when we come to a fork in the road and get the same result by going either way? Oh yeah? Well, it makes sense if you are both Yogi Berra, and you know what he was really talking about in the first place.

According to an Internet site, The Quote Investigator, “This precise quotation was printed in the salient 1998 work “The Yogi Book: I Really Didn’t Say Everything I Said!”, and its author Yogi Berra provided some context for his statement: ‘I was giving Joe Garagiola directions from New York to our house in Montclair when I said this.’ ”

Nearing Yogi’s New Jersey home, apparently there basically was a “fork in the road” that ultimately would reveal itself after a short drive in either direction from the “fork” as being a loop that actually passes by the Berra home from either the left or right entry points.

So, Yogi was telling the truth. And why not? When he said something, that’s what Yogi did in life. He simply left out the loop part details as he was giving his good friend, Joe Garagiola, something factual. The bottom line: Yogi was trying to tell Joe: “Listen, Joe, when you get to that fork in the road, hey, go left or right. It’s a loop. Either way will get you to my house.”

Only that’s not what he said. What Yogi said was: “When You Come to a Fork in The Road, Take It!

Once the word got around, without the explanation behind what Yogi actually meant, it was left to our minds to pick it up and run with it as something that sounded funny, impossible, and, yes, downright mystical.

Sleep in peace, Mr. Berra. ~ We still love you. ~ And we hope that you and Mr. Garagiola enjoyed your first pepper game together in the Great Beyond on this Easter Sunday of 2016. Wish you could tell us something. – Is Heaven like “The Hill” neighborhood in St. Louis – or is that expectation too literal and too big for the Easter basket wish list?

____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

 

The Easter Nine Good-Egg Lineup, Plus One

March 27, 2016
.... almost.

…. almost.

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Easter Morning, March 26, 2016

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The Easter Nine Good Eggs and Their One-Man Bench

Pitcher – Ted Lilly (1999-2013)

Catcher – Tyler Flowers (2009-15)

1st Base – Luke Easter (1949-54)

2nd Base – Mose Eggert (1925)

3rd Base – Jeff Cross (1942-48)

Shortstop – Rabbit Maranville (1912-35)

Left Field – Bob Christian (1968-70)

Center Field – Johnny Hopp (1939-52)

Right Field – Pop Rising (1905)

Plus One Bench – Jesus Alou (1963-79)

Manager: Pete Rose *

  • A managerial contribution by Len Levin.

Other Eagle Add Ons:

Easter Team Fight Song: “The Bunny Hop”

Easter Team Spirit Band Leader: Bunny Berrigan

Favorite Band Song When Team Pitching Ace Fails: “Can’t Get Started With You”

____________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy      

Heart of the Easter Lineup

Heart of the Easter Lineup


 

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/

 

The Easter Good-Eggs Bench POSTED WARNING: "DON'T SLAM THE WATER COOLER IF YOU STRIKE OUT! WE DON'T WANT YOU TO GET YOU ALL OVER THE REST OF US!"

The Easter Good-Eggs Bench
POSTED WARNING:
“DON’T SLAM THE WATER COOLER IF YOU STRIKE OUT! WE DON’T WANT YOU TO GET YOU ALL OVER THE REST OF US!”

The Eagle Proposal for DH Change

March 26, 2016
Since God gave us the first "designated pitcher", what's wrong with Him also giving us a a new testament for a better way to use the"designated hitter"?

Since God gave us the first “designated pitcher”, what’s wrong with Him also giving us a a new testament from 42 MLB years experience with the old way for a better way to use the “designated hitter” in this century?

 

The problem with all the DH arguments is that they all start and end on two faulty premises that leave neither the pro or con sides any place to go. Both sides, in small groups or large, come together. Unload. Get nowhere. And then walk away to brood some more. Or else, in the case of old NL enthusiasts, simply stop going to see AL games because they are “not real baseball.” – My 31-year old son, Casey, is a perfect example. Those quoted words are his too. He only has seen one Astros game at MMP since Houston moved to the AL and that was in our first new league season. And that was only because the Astros were playing the Cardinals, Casey’s newly adopted team. As you know, the Cards play in the “real baseball” NL, but even the St. Louisans are compromised when they come to Houston because the AL DH rule is in place here. It was one and done for Casey in 2013, once that fact became abundantly clear in person.

The Two Faulty Premises

Faulty Premise #1: That Baseball is exempt from the rules of change that effect everything else in life. Not so. Baseball had been changing all along. It simply bit into one change by MLB that proved divisive over time when the AL was allowed to separately install the DH while the NL continued to play by the old rules.

Faulty Premise #2: That the DH Rule adopted by the AL in 1974 was the only alternative as the answer to pitchers being a dead spot in the batting lineup. Also not so – and we will hope to make a case for a new use of the DH that actually increases all managerial responsibility for strategically deciding how a roster of players are best used in the interest of winning ballgames. Those who support the current DH rule will no longer be able to sit back and wait for the NL to either “come around” or “be forced” into adopting the current DH rule as the only option for that idea.

There’s got to be a better way and some of us think there is.

Where the Eagle DH Plan is coming from

I’m a born in Beeville and raised in Houston NL guy. Unlike most of my NL-blooded friends, however, I have experienced a couple of epiphanies over the three years that the Astros have been in the AL. Here’s what I now see differently:

(1) The strategic depth of decision-making gravity associated with the NL managerial option to pinch hit for the pitcher is over-rated as a hitting strategy move. Just as often, what seems to happen is that managers will use a pinch hitter as a pitcher-change strategy move. It becomes a way to get an ineffective hurler off the mound on the pretext of there being a greater need to pinch hit for him that outweighs the value of leaving him in the game. That way, the manager doesn’t have to go to the mound and hurt the feelings of a big-headed and/or insecure pitcher by taking the ball out of his hands.

Pinch hitting for the pitcher is no superior strategy move. It’s an easy way for NL genius managers to simply kill two birds with one stone.

(2) With pitchers not hitting in the AL, managers in what we in Houston used to call “the other league” have no easy way out, via a pinch hitter, for removing an ineffective pitcher. If the AL manager takes his pitcher out a batter too late, it’s on the manager’s resume’ – with no easier way out of a close interpersonal encounter via a calculated act of pinch-hitter subterfuge.

The AL manager has to make the pitching change move directly by removing the ball from one guy’s hand and placing it the hand of another. If the very first batter against the new pitcher then gives up a bomb, the fans won’t be saying “too bad we had to remove the first guy for a pinch hitter our last time up.” They will be yelling at the manager: “Why did you put that bum reliever in the game?”

Where we are going with this suggestion

First of all,  we need to add that the whole idea came together this afternoon. I needed to write it down now before I lost any of its central points. Parts of it have been growing in my mind for some time, but it wasn’t until I read another specific suggestion by Bob Hulsey at Astros Daily about mid-day this Good Friday that all the parts began to fall in place here.

Bob Hulsey also offers an alternative to the current DH rule that I prefer to what we now have – and it frankly inspired me to take all the governors off our range of choices about the DH. We need to see if reasonable people on both of the current AL/NL polar sides can actually hear something they both would prefer over the current DH we’ve been stuck with for 42 years.

Here’s the specific article link to where I found Bob Hulsey’s DH Plan column this morning at Astros Daily.com:

http://www.astrosdaily.com/column/11302141213fan.html

Here’s where we are going with a far-reaching plan:

(1) First we have to buy into accepting that those two faulty premises I listed at the start are true. Adhering to either of those false premises keeps baseball  from moving ahead. Hulsey’s plan fired the final “eureka” at me when this thought later landed: It’s not the DH that’s so bad. It’s failing to see that the DH could be used differently to actually put more strategical options in the hands of the field manager – and truly beyond any range of thought that now exists in either league. And, of course, we have to both see and accept that even baseball has to deal with change over time, but it doesn’t have to be passive, unconstructive change. It can be, and, hopefully, will be change based upon active study and rethinking and putting into action the finer points of everything I’m about to describe as a better way to use the DH.

Keep in mind – the DH is not going away, but it is in sore need of a better plan for its use in the game – and not be continued as a rule that has established a new position for aging hitters who can no longer run, catch, or throw the ball.

The DH should be a “tool rule” and not a “fool rule”!

(2) Those two points I described in “Where the Eagle Plan is coming from” have been germinating in my noggin for quite some time. If you can see what I’m saying, it will be easier to see why I’ve written my ideas for change in the DH in the way you shall see next. The Eagle Plan (just to give it a name) allows the pitcher to hit, if the manager allows him to do so under the new rules, but it also allows the manager to completely use the NEW DH system with pitchers. If the manager wishes to pay the price of not having to bat at all in a normal game in which the pitcher only comes to bat no more than 4 times, it will cost him on multiple DH tool deployments in one game – and he will have to have a depth of players available who can qualify as answers to the need for one individual time at bat per game.

(3) The Eagle Plan separates pitching and hitting decisions about the pitcher completely. The manager will no longer be able to use one to handle the other.

Here is the proposal in rudimentary form:

The Eagle Plan for the DH

(1) The new DH rule will only apply to pitchers. All hitting substitutions for position players shall continue to be governed by the current rules governing pinch hitters.

(2) The pitcher will bat for himself throughout the game, unless the manager decides to use a DH during a specific time that is coming up for pitcher – and then makes that decision known by the DH’s name to the umpire by the time the man batting ahead of the pitcher finishes his time at bat – and before the pitcher takes a single pitch as a batter.

(3) The use of the DH for any single time in the game does not affect the pitcher’s eligibility to continue. He stays in the game, unaffected on the mound by the manager’s decision to use a DH once or multiple times. Only the manager, injury, or ejection can remove a pitcher from the game.

(4) Only roster players who have not been in the game are eligible for service as a DH. Once they have completed a single time at bat in this role, these players are ineligible to return to the game for any further service as a DH or position player. Batting as a DH now becomes a “one and done” time as a batter assignment per game.

(5) If the pitching spot has 4 chances to bat in a single game, the manager has the power to let him use all, some, or none of those opportunities. If the pitcher (whomever it may be at the time the pitching spot comes up) does not bat at all on a 4 batting opportunity night, for example, it is going to cost the manager 4 roster players whose only service to the game will be their one-each times at bat for whomever is pitching at that time.

(6) To repeat for emphasis: Each DH appearance will be by the manager’s choice. The DH must be a fresh, previously unused player – who then makes a “one and done” batting appearance in the game. The pitcher is not removed because the DH bats for him. Unless injured or ejected, he must stay on the mound until the game either ends, or the manager removes him. Any multiple DH appearances beyond the first one are based on the same conditions and effects that applied to the first DH – for as long as eligible players remain on the bench to fill this “ONE APPEARANCE PER PLAYER PER GAME” role – and the manager decides to use them for the DH purpose.

The Good Effects of the Eagle Plan

(1) More Decisions By Managers. Hitting and pitching decisions by the manager are now totally separated. A pinch hitter cannot be used to remove a pitcher on the bubble. Only a DH can bat for a pitcher. Even if a manager has someone left to hit for a pitcher in the bottom of 16th inning, he’s still considered a DH if he bats for the pitcher – and cannot remain in the game to play any position in the field. – The pitcher, of course, will be allowed to continue, if the manager elects to stay with him in the top of the 17th.

(2) More Balance in the Roster. The roster size may stay the same or even increase, but there will be no career-extension positions called the “DH”. With a single time at bat per game limit upon service to that role, clubs will have to shop for bench players who can both hit and add some strength to the needs of defense and base-running.

(3) Flexibility. Unless a manager calls for a DH, it will be business as it always used to be – and still is in the NL. He may allow a great pitching/lousing hitting pitcher to bat for himself the whole game, if he likes. But if that same pitcher is throwing a no-hitter and is coming up in the bottom of the 8th in a 0-0 tie with two outs, the manager doesn’t have to take the guy out of the no-no opportunity. He can bring in an unused bench hitter as a DH and, if that guy brings a couple of ducks home with his bat, the pitcher can still go back out and finish his no-no in what now becomes a 2-0 win, for example.

(4) Both the NL and AL will finally be playing the same game again. NL managers will then have more strategy decisions to make than they ever had previously; and AL managers will have more strategy responsibility for strategy decisions than they do now.

(5) We can stop worrying about some lights out .352 career DH going into the HOF someday without ever having made a “can of corn” catch in the field.

(6) It’s a very simple plan. The only two groups who won’t “get it” are either the same people who think we can take baseball back to what it was in 1973, or those who currently favor the present DH rule – and who also are patiently waiting for MLB Commissioner Manfred to “make the NL an offer they can’t refuse.”

(7) Keep in Mind. The game has changed. It is not going back to what it was in 1973. And the DH is not going away. Now the question is – can we have a better alternative to the current 42-year old MLB DH plan? – Or do we simply pause – as some pout their way to the baseball exit door – while the rest of us wait for MLB to make that DH offer to the NL that they cannot refuse? If the latter happens, the game is then stuck forever with the current elevation of DH to a position filled with the potential for producing 3,000 hit guys who never take a ground ball in the field.

___________________

A Closing Riddle: What if this happens someday? Two 50-year old guys are standing beside each other at the HOF Induction Ceremonies in July of 2037. One is a .310 hitting, 10-year Gold Glove shortstop; the other is a .329 hitting career DH who broke Pete Rose’s total hits record, but never played a single pitch in the field. They are bumped by a stagehand while they are both standing with the other inductees, plaques in hand, facing the crowd. Both drop their plaques at the same time.

Question: What happens next?

Answer: The former shortstop reacts quickly with his left former glove hand, snaring the falling plaque before it touches the floor of the stage. – The old DH simply looks down at his scratched and shattered plaque on the floor. Since he cannot bend over too well, he smiles and asks the old shortstop to help him pick up the pieces.

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3/26/2016: ADDENDUM: CREDIT WHERE CREDIT IS DUE!

This afternoon, Larry Dierker commented on my column the following:

“I suggested this exact rule change in an email to someone (I thought it was you) a year ago. ….” ~ Larry Dierker, 3/26/2016.

I wrote back in response to Dierk’s comment:

“Larry – You didn’t send it to me. I would have written this column a long time ago and given you credit too, had you done so, but I’m glad we agree on an idea that only blossomed in my head over the past 24 hours. …” ~ Bill McCurdy, 3/26/2016.

A couple of hours later, I decided to research my archives for any possible notice from Larry Dierker on this subject – just to double check my memory. Here’s what I found from Larry Dierker in a comment he posted on this subject in response to my column of 9/10/2015. The column was entitled “The Baseball Rules: Should Any Be Changed?”

Larry Dierker wrote: “Eliminate the DH. Worse than the Black Sox Scandal and almost as bad as MLB. In it’s place, the manager can pinch hit for the pitcher any time without removing the pitcher. But the pinch hitter cannot re-enter the game. The union would squawk. Give them a 26th man on the roster. With 13 pitchers (which is ridiculous in and of itself), managers in the only real baseball league (NL) need an extra pinch hitter anyway. ~ Larry Dierker, 9/10/2015.

My apologies, Larry. You deserve the credit too for this idea. I do not remember reading your comment from last September – and I certainly would have given you initial credit for that central part of the plan, had I consciously remembered. If I did read it, I’m sure it rolled around on some subliminal level and found its way into the blitzkrieg of thought that has assailed me on this subject in the last 24 hours. I know for certain that all of the other ideas I expressed here were things that suddenly converged from a long train ride of private thought. The business of separating pitching change and hitting choice decisions with respect to who bats for the pitcher have been with me a very long time.

Now let’s get on to the important point. – How do we get into a plan for putting this kind of idea into play for serious consideration by all of MLB

_____________________

Easter_Egg

Happy Easter, Everybody!

_______________________

eagle-0rangeBill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

https://bill37mccurdy.com/