Questions About the Juiced Ball Are Back

November 12, 2017

The Sandlot Ball
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What baseballs eventually look like when you don’t take ’em out of the game after their first contact with the bat or ground.

 

We began to hear of them again during the 2017 World Series. Some pitchers were complaining that the ball was harder to grip, that the seams were bound too tight for certain holds they needed for the sake of throwing certain pitches. Along with those complaints, others questioned the increased liveliness of the ball, suggesting again that home runs that were departing from both World Series parks at a World Series record clip were doing so at a “juiced ball” clip, thus ensuing images of “1930”, the historical season symbol of juiced ball impression upon the game of baseball.

My problem with that whole first paragraph is that we have no way of proving or disproving the truth. These were just things I heard as sideline media comments. They included no specific player attributions nor did they include any evidence to support whatever the truth really is. I did take a close look at the 2017 World Series official ball. The seams did seem a little deep, but that means nothing to my untrained investigative eye in this area.

If MLB itself does have any serious concerns about the ongoing predictability of its game balls, it needs to install detailed quality control standards which define how baseballs are meant to be, including the ball’s dimensions and weight; the construction materials to be used throughout; the standards for assembly, including the kinds of manual and robotic assembly work that shall be expected; and a way by MLB for testing each filled order to see if what they are getting is what they were ordering.

If that’s too much trouble or expense to monitor, then everybody in MLB, everybody covering baseball for the media, and the rest of us too, we all need to just shut up about “juiced junk” and simply play ball!

 

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2017 World Series Baseball

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Article Addendum, Late in the Day, 11/12/2017

Wayne Chandler is one of the administrative icons in Astros history. In charge of the big new galloping electronic scoreboard at the Astrodome, Wayne also got to see just about every home run ball that was ever hit at “the Eighth Wonder” – from Day One through the old park’s twilight – and those homers included the two that Doug Rader and Jimmy Wynn once pasted into the high gold seats in the deep nearest-to-heaven section of far left field. When he sent me the following e-mail today, and then followed my request that he express these same thoughts on juiced balls as a column post comment, I felt it needed to be brought up here, even closer to the attention of those of interest in this subject. Here is Wayne’s full comment – and thank you,  Mr. Chandler, for this this solid substantive contribution to our apparently endless hunger for the truth about juiced or lively baseballs:

“Bill, I don’t know about this year, but I remember that about 1970, during spring training and the first month or so of the regular season that we got a batch of balls that I think were different from the rest. I don’t think any official inquiry was made, but balls jumped out of the Astrodome. One week, after Doug Rader and Jimmy Wynn each hit home runs high in the gold seats near the left field line, that I had Rader and Wynn go up there where we had painted a red rooster and a toy cannon on the seats and we photographed them, for their tremendous clouts. None others were ever hit in that location. About that same time, the Cincinnati Reds’ Bernie Carbo hit one that was monumental, high over the Judge’s box in right field.

“We were told that some of the balls were manufactured that spring at a different Caribbean island country. I don’t remember much uproar about the balls at that time, but the barrage soon subsided. I think that happened because the league stopped buying those same balls. – Wayne Chandler”

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Our World Series Trophy Deserved Better Care

November 11, 2017

The 2017 World Series Trophy
of the
Champion Houston Astros

 

The new Houston World Series trophy took on some damage last night. The headlines in today’s Houston Chronicle Internet report appear as follows:

“World Series trophy takes a tumble at Houston men’s gala.”

This damage occurred while the World Series trophy was on table display Thursday at “One Great Night in November,” a MFAH’s annual men-only event at the Museum of Fine Art Houston.

What the Houston Chronicle says:

Friday Version …. “Halfway through dinner during “One Great Night in November,” the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston’s high-powered, mens-only fundraiser, the table collapsed that held the 2017 Commissioner’s Trophy, which Astros owner Jim Crane had brought to the MFAH to give the evening a celebratory start.

“The trophy was swiftly placed back onto the table, but it did not survive the fall unscathed. Suddenly, men in tuxes were giggling about how “we’ll just have to win another one” while a cohort of large men with earpieces assembled around the trophy like bodyguards.”(Houston Chronicle article, 11/10/2017)

Saturday Version …. No update, so far. Sometimes these Internet reports change as new information comes in. Nothing had changed as of 7 AM Saturday. The original story was still running. If someone actually dropped the trophy as they were trying to handle it, that sensible possibility has yet to be confirmed. It’s still hard to see how an injury of this kind this could have happened by the support table collapsing on its own.

Our Questions about What Really Happened:

The article doesn’t expressly say that the damage was caused by human interaction with the trophy or table, but neither does it explain how a valuable article display table now in use by the MFAH would suddenly collapse on its own – or why “a cohort of large men with earpieces assembled around the trophy like bodyguards” – was even suddenly necessary?

Injured tables do not need immediate security from themselves after an independent collapse, but a collapse that may have been hastened by people leaning extra weight into the table – or taking it upon themselves to touch or try to pick up the trophy from a precarious position among others at the table could have helped spurn a “tumble” of Houston’s brand new hard-earned symbol of earned honor at the World Series.

Nobody is saying that happened. We’re simply suggesting it could have happened. Of course, for that to be true, you would need a room of socially powerful people, mostly aging, but steeped in their own senses of entitlement to special privilege, based upon worldly accomplishments, social standing, or both. The presence of alcohol in the system and its aggrandizing negative capacity for altering personal judgment, human balance, and the use of hands and feet already affected by digital nephropathy. The presence of those profile factors easily could have sparked an affirmative answer from some to the question: “Do you think you can lift that trophy?”

No Question Here:

When the news of damage to the trophy got around, the Chronicle also reports that “suddenly, men in tuxes were giggling about how ‘we’ll just have to win another one’ ” as the apparent depth of their sense of loss about the damage done.

What a damn shame.

The Amazing Mr. Jim Crane

I don’t care how powerful these guys at the MFAH event are. Anyone of them who truly thinks the Houston Astros, beginning with our wonderful Mr. Jim Crane, also thinks in that same shallow pool of the giggler who joked about winning another crown to get a new and unbroken copy, is nothing less than sadly mistaken.

The Astros are World Champions today precisely because their owner may be the world’s greatest business genius in the field of logistics. How to get important items (or conditions) moved from one place (or condition) to another over a studied period of time is exactly what had to happen. Jim Crane saw that objective going into baseball from his experience in logistics. And that’s the success culture that has bred its way into Astros franchise life as a result. Crane found his genius baseball logistician in General Manager Jeff Luhnow and he listened – about what to spend – when to spend – and where to spend. And at the same time, in turn, Mr. Luhnow kept fine tuning until he had Manager A.J. Hinch in tow also as the field leader and talent developer –  of some really great talent in the pipeline.

It should also be noted that the total rebuilding of the franchise was begun earlier, by Tal Smith and Ed Wade in 2011. Drafting George Springer, developing Jose Altuve, and cutting bait on certain high salaried players who were nearing the end of their careers also figured strongly into the motion for the drastic change that followed.

The system now is as lean of entitlement as it probably ever will be and that’s good. The appetite for success works best when it is fed by the idea that accomplishment works best when its also fed by the idea that the goals to be attained are best reached by earned effort. As long as the Astros work culture remains free of entitlement among its people at all levels – ownership, administration, players, and fans – our chances for repeated success remain high, but never guaranteed.

Entitlement is what cost the managers at Boston and New York their jobs.

Entitlement simply brims from the giggler quote, “we’ll just have to win another one.”

Because of all the chance vagaries, and the muses of the so-called “baseball gods”, next year’s championship is never a sure thing.

So, please, Mike Acosta, as soon as you are able. Please get the 2017 trophy repaired and put on display in some easy-to-see, under glass display case at Minute Maid Park.

Our 2017 Astros World Series Championship is worth better care than it received last night at the MFAH men-only function.

The article link.

Here’s the link. Now do yourselves a favor. Read the whole thing. Words and pictures, it’s not very long.

Then ask yourself: How could the World Series trophy possibly have been injured in the innocent evening company of all these fine Houston gentlemen?

And what were the eventually plentiful security people doing prior to the trophy’s injury?

http://www.chron.com/sports/astros/article/Astros-World-Series-trophy-knocked-over-damaged-12347319.php?cmpid=nzltr-chron-bn#photo-14522048

Forgive us, baseball gods! – We’re first timer champion Houston – and we’re paddling as fast as we can.

GO ASTROS!

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

Altuve and Springer are 2017 Silver Sluggers

November 10, 2017

OUR TWO ASTRO 2017 SILVER SLUGGERS (LEFT) ENJOY A DAY AT DISNEYWORLD WITH HOST MICKEY MOUSE AND ANOTHER FAIR SLUGGER HIMSELF, CARLOS CORREA.

 

The list of 2017 Silver Slugger Award winners includes two members of the World Series Champion Houston Astros. Unsurprisingly, three-time AL batting champion Jose Altuve is the man at second base for the Junior Circuit and, most deservedly,  George Springer joins his AL brother as one of the three AL outfielders. Springer provided the bookends on AL hitting in 2017 too. Playing at home, he hit the first pitch of the season he saw for a home run that got the Astros off to a winning start. Then, in Game 7 of the World Series, Springer smashed his last home run of the season at Dodger Stadium. It would be one that put pitcher Yu Darvish and the LA Dodgers in a 5-0 hole from which they would never recover.

YES. Both Astro selections were 2017 Silver Sluggers Deluxe.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Catcher: Gary Sanchez (Yankees)
First base: Eric Hosmer (Royals)
Second base: Jose Altuve (Astros)
Third base: Jose Ramirez (Indians)
Shortstop: Francisco Lindor (Indians)
Outfield: Aaron Judge (Yankees)
Outfield: Justin Upton (Angels)
Outfield: George Springer (Astros)
Designated hitter: Nelson Cruz (Mariners)

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Catcher: Buster Posey (Giants)
First base: Paul Goldschmidt (D-backs)
Second base: Daniel Murphy (Nationals)
Third base: Nolan Arenado (Rockies)
Shortstop: Corey Seager (Dodgers)
Outfield: Giancarlo Stanton (Marlins)
Outfield: Marcell Ozuna (Marlins)
Outfield: Charlie Blackmon (Rockies)
Pitcher: Adam Wainwright (Cardinals)

An MLB.com report excerpt on our two Astros Silver Sluggers:

“(Jose) Altuve, whose four straight Silver Sluggers coincide with his four straight 200-hit seasons, is a leading Most Valuable Player candidate after leading the AL with a .346 average and 204 hits. The 5-foot-6 wonder didn’t lead the charge to the postseason alone, however, as the first Silver Slugger won by outfielder George Springer helps attest. Springer delivered from the top of the lineup that led all of baseball with 896 runs scored, hitting all 34 of his homers as a leadoff man and whacking nine leadoff homers. He set career highs in homers, RBIs (85), average (.283), slugging percentage (.522) and OPS (.889).”

Here’s a link to the complete article on the two 2017 Silver Slugger teams:

http://m.mlb.com/news/article/261136728/2017-silver-slugger-awards-announced/

Way to go, Jose and George. Once again, Astros Nation is both proud of you and happy for you!

GO ‘STROS!!!

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Sports Illustrated Touts Astros Again

November 9, 2017

More on Astros in new Sports Illustrated
Publication Date, November 13, 2017

 

That 2014 Sports Illustrated publication that made the call on the Astros as the future winners of the World Series in 2017 is a ship that’s taken on a lot of wind in its full sails from firing the latest baseball shot around the world and then watching its 36-month flight of hope and destiny land successfully together in Los Angeles on November 1, 2017, but it got there. It happened. And it’s always going to be hard for anyone to top that kind of long-range projection again. Even if it gets written about the New York Yankees, the Boston Red Sox, or the Los Angeles Dodgers. Unless, or until, the vagaries of cash, ego, and power striation invade the Astros baseball culture as they years ago did the big boy clubs we just mentioned, the Houston Astros will remain everybody’s best choice as the next heavyweight champion of the baseball world three years hence.

Next week’s November 13, 2017 publication supposedly will go into the “Wild Ride” of the club from 2014 to 2017 nirvana and how “this World Series Trophy won’t be their last.”

In case “SI” misses this point, we feel the need to express it here.

Unlike the Boston Red Sox, the New York Yankees, or the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Houston Astros didn’t expect to just show up and be anointed for greatness by the club that lined up to play them this deep in the season. The Astros came to take the prize as a team – and that’s exactly what they did – and with all respects for the St. Louis Cardinals – against the three richest, most storied other franchises in baseball.

The first two fallen foes – the Red Sox and Yankees – apparently didn’t even know who did them in. They, in turn, placed the blame on their managers and fired John Farrell and Joe Girardi. The Dodgers, on the other hand, have gone a week without also canning Dave Roberts as their manager, but we shall see. Some of the Dodger family weren’t too happy with Roberts’ handling of his pitching staff, but the Astros did have a little to do with the Dodger pitching staff effectiveness. We shall see.

The point is even simpler: The Astros played harder and better than their foes. They played together as the team they are. Their energy was connected to the energy and shared challenge of their fans in Houston as a result of Hurricane Harvey. And they never gave up. Hit ’em hard – and they simply hit back harder. Knock ’em down – and they simply got back up and knocked their foes down – until they just stayed down – and left the scene forever in 2017 on a 4-3 roller ball out, one that features Jose Altuve and Yuli Gurriel – in a five second movie that now plays on variously in the minds of all Astro fans.

The Houston Astros are not merely the World Series Champions of 2017. – They are the kind of champions that shall live on in our hearts and minds forever.

Indeed – forever. As these words hit the page, may the joy it spills splash strong enough to hit you straight in the eye of your own heart and hope.

GO ASTROS! ~ FROM HERE TO ETERNITY!

And thank you, Sports Illustrated, for bringing our boys into the brighter light.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

World Series Tie Game of 1922 Arouses Suspicion

November 9, 2017

Don’t look for any baseball ties at any future World Series game.

… unless you run into Bill Gilbert and he’s wearing one of these kind of baseball ties.

Over the past week, I’ve spent an inordinate amount of time going over the Wikipedia List of Previous World Series Winners. My compulsion seems highly influenced by the joy that comes each time I reach the year 2017 and find our wonderful Houston Astros sitting on the throne as the current – and our forever – Champions of Baseball.
It also fine tunes attention to the fact that there have been three tie games played in the separate World Series years of 1907, 1912, and 1922. A closer look at what happened in 1922 also explains why it has not – and will not – happen again. Let’s take a look at what we’ve easily learned from Wikipedia – with some excellent research assistance from good friend and staunch SABR colleague Sam Quintero.
We know there’s more, but what we’ve got short term is all in the Wikipedia notes – and in the knowledge of the fragile public distrust in baseball that existed in 1922 on the heels of the 1919 scandal.

Wikipedia notes: In the 1922 World Series, the New York Giants beat the New York Yankees in five games (four games to none with one tie; starting this year the World Series was again best-of-seven.) By now, the term “World Series” was being used frequently, as opposed to “World’s Series”.

As with the 1921 World Series, every game was played at the Polo Grounds since it housed both teams, with the home team alternating with each game.

The Giants pitched around Babe Ruth and scored just enough runs to win each of the games outside of the controversial Game 2 tie. That game was called on account of darkness, but many thought there was sufficient light to have played some more innings (the sun was still in the sky), and there were some suspicions that one or both teams might have “allowed” the tie to happen to increase the overall gate receipts. Commissioner Landis was among those who was dissatisfied with the result. One story is that Landis asked Umpire Hildebrand, “Why the Sam Hill did you call the game?” The umpire answered, “There was a temporary haze on the field.” The game decision was in the hands of the umpires, but the Commissioner’s Office controlled the gate receipts. Landis ordered the money, more than $120,000, turned over to World War I charities, thus nullifying any impropriety. The tied game would turn out to be the third (and final) tied game in the history of the World Series. The other two tied games occurred in 1907 and 1912. No ties are possible under the modern rules, which allows for suspension of a tied game and resumption of it at a later date, as with Game 5 of the 2008 World Series.

This 1922 appearance would prove to be Giants’ manager John McGraw’s third and final World Series win. Although McGraw would return as the losing manager for the Giants against the Yankees the very next season as AL New York club celebrated its first of now 27 Yankee World Series wins in their brand new 1923 Yankee Stadium. McGraw’s Giants would also lose in 1924 to the Washington Senators in his final World Series run as a manager.

The List of World Series Winnershttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_World_Series_champions

The Propriety Concern Makes Sense. Baseball was still seeking its way back into trust by the baseball-ticket-buying public in the early 1920s. The 1919 Black Sox Scandal had stung the sport hard and the still new first solitary Commissioner of Baseball, Judge Kenesaw Landis had every reason in the world to suspect the umpires for calling Game 2 at 3-3 with an arguable amount of daylight remaining for clear crooked number and honest decisive settlement of the game’s winner.

A called tie would otherwise presumably allow the clubs to keep the gate from a settled tie game – and also make up for the lost income potential that came with the fact that 1922 represented a return to a “best 4 of 7” format after three consecutive years (1919-21) of play in a “best 5 of 9” plan.

The umpire’s direct defense to eye-witness Landis held no water of credibility. There was no case for a “temporary haze” – unless the old arbiter was making reference to twilight – and we all know what happens to twilight if you wait long enough for it to clear.

Since his office controlled the disbursal of receipts, Landis had the power to act here. He turned the gate receipts from the Game 2 tie over to charity, thus clearing the way for the elimination of tie games in the future by the removal of ties as bonus money sources,

Seeking Input from Knowledgeable Source. We don’t have time to do credible research on another point this morning, but, if any of you know the answer, please leave your information here as a comment on this post and we will make sure it’s brought up top with credit to you as an important contribution to this topic.

The question is simply this: Were the individual player game statistics for each of the three World Series tie games (1907, 1912, 1922) all included in the World Series Player Record Books? Or were they simply dismissed? Or handled differently in different years?

Bill Hickman to the Rescue (Within an Hour of Our Request)

“Individual game stats were included for the tie games in 1907, 1912, and 1922. An old copy of the Neft and Cohen Baseball Sports Encyclopedia confirmed that the World Series records for players on each of the teams in those three world series amounted to a sufficient number of games to have included the tied games. Then I selected three players — one from each of those years who played the maximum number of games in that WS, and checked his Retrosheet record to confirm that an identical number of World Series games showed up for him in the given year. It did.” – Bill Hickman, SABR Colleague, Baseball Friend, and Pecan Park Eagle Reader

Thanks, Bill Hickman!

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Maxwell Kates: A Couple of No Hitters

November 9, 2017

Roy Halladay
Born: May 14, 1977
Died: November 7, 2017

“A COUPLE OF NO-HITTERS”

By Maxwell Kates

Whoever coined the expression “no crying in baseball” must not have been following the Tuesday evening news. Earlier in the day, a small private plane, an Icon A5, registered to Harry Leroy Halladay III crashed into the Gulf of Mexico near New Port Richey, Florida. The 40 year old right hander was the pilot and tragically, he did not survive. Halladay leaves a young widow, Brandy, and two sons, Ryan and Braden.

Halladay posted stellar numbers in a sixteen year major league career with the Toronto Blue Jays and the Philadelphia Phillies. With a lifetime record of 203 wins against 105 losses, he registered 2,117 strikeouts against only 592 walks, good for a lifetime earned run average of 3.38. Perhaps most astonishingly, in the era of specialization in which he pitched, Halladay threw 20 shutouts amid 67 complete games. He went 22-7 for the 2003 Blue Jays and 21-10 for the 2010 Phillies, earning the Cy Young Award in both seasons. Nominated to eight All-Star teams, Halladay was brilliant in his five postseason starts with an earned run average of 2.37. In 2017, he was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.

A late season push by the 1998 Blue Jays to unseat the Boston Red Sox as the wild card finalists proved to be unsuccessful. Still, failing to make the playoffs did not prevent 38,036 spectators from converging on SkyDome to watch the final game of the season on September 27. Entertaining the visiting Detroit Tigers, young Roy Halladay was about to pitch the second start of his big league career.

Roy Halladay
Rest in Peace

Not one Detroit batsman had reached first base through four innings. Leading off the fifth inning, Tony Clark reached second base on an error by Toronto infielder Felipe Crespo. However, the next base hit yielded by Halladay, the Blue Jays’ first draft pick of 1995, would be the first.

Halladay remained dominant through eight, throwing only 85 pitches, 66 of them strikes. No Detroit batter even saw a three-ball count all afternoon. Gabe Kapler led off the ninth by flying out to left field. One away. Then Paul Bako grounded out to second base. Two away. You could hear a pin drop at SkyDome when Detroit manager Larry Parrish summoned Bobby Higginson as a pinch hitter. Higginson swung on the first pitch he saw, and that ball landed in the centre field seats for a two-out solo home run. Roy Halladay’s no-hit bid was over.

The final score, Blue Jays 2, Tigers 1. It was no doubt a disappointing end to Roy Halladay’s afternoon. A year later, I was wandering around downtown Toronto after a game when I spotted Halladay. With his red beard and imposing 6’6” frame, he was not difficult to miss. After introducing myself with “Excuse me, Sir, is your name Roy?” he replied to the affirmative. I continued, “I was at that game last September against Detroit. Mark my words, you’re going to throw a couple of no-hitters before your career is over.”

Why I said ‘a couple,’ I will never know. On May 29, 2010, by now a member of the Phillies, Roy Halladay pitched a perfect game against the Florida Marlins, a 1-0 decision for him. Then on October 6, Game 1 of the National League Championship Series against the Cincinnati Reds, Halladay entertained a crowd of 46,411 at Citizens Bank Park with a 4-0 victory. Throwing only 104 pitches, after giving up a walk to Jay Bruce in the fifth inning, not one other Red reached base.

And there were his ‘couple of no-hitters.’

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Thank you, Maxwell Kates, for that fitting tribute to Roy Halladay. Our deepest sympathies go out to this fine man’s wife, children, and family. Nothing can take away the pain of such a loss for them, and only time can bring about the kind of relief that shall come about over the years that lay ahead for his surviving loved ones. And that relief takes the form of healing perspective about great loss. It is not the eradication of pain or caring, but a growing recognition that people who die living life fully may leave larger holes in the souls of those who mourn their everyday presence, but because they are who they are, full live-for-life people, they also often serve to awaken survivors to take a greater personal responsibility for filling those gaps that spawn from death with a pursuit of their own surviving life passions.

Rest in Peace, Roy Halladay. ~ And thank you for your passionate service to life during the time you were here.

~ The Pecan Park Eagle

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

 

 

Kate Upton: The Man I Literally Love

November 7, 2017

The Man I Literally Love

By Kate Upton (We Assume)

With More Soulfully Poetic Help

From George and Ira Gershwin

And an Apt Suggestion by Tom Hunter

Kate and Justin
On Their Wedding Day
November 7, 2017

Some day he’ll come along,
The man I love
And he’ll be big and strong,
The man I love
And when he comes my way
I’ll do my best to make him stay.

He’ll look at me and smile
I’ll understand;
And in a little while,
He’ll take my hand ;
And though it seems absurd,
I know we both won’t say a word

Maybe I shall meet him Sunday
Maybe Monday, maybe not ;
Still I’m sure to meet him one day
Maybe Tuesday will be my good news day

He’ll build a little home
Just meant for two,
From which I’ll never roam,
Who would – would you ?
And so all else above
I’m waiting for the man I love.

To Kate Upton and Justin Verlander
With Our Astro Fan Wishes For
Peace, Love, Loyalty, Health and Happiness
Now and Forever

 

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YouTube

Want to hear “The Man I Love” sung and heard as intended, click the following link and immerse yourself into an era in which love songs were far more than swamp gas gurgles of barely intelligible performers:

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

You Can’t Take That Away From Us

November 7, 2017

Astros Win Game Seven, 5-1
Take Dodgers in World Series, 4 Games to 3
Dodger Stadium, November 1, 2017

 

You Can’t Take That Away From Us

In Appreciation Also to George and Ira Gershwin

For Their Original Similar Words About Love

There are many many crazy things
That will keep us – loving you
And with your permission
May we – list a few

The way you swing a bat
The way you hit – A Plus
The memory of all that
Oh No – they can’t take that away from us

The way our defense bites
Recall that Bregman Throw
And all those Springer flights
Oh No – they can’t take that away from us

We may never, never meet again, on that bumpy road of glove
But we’ll always – always – keep – the memory of

Verlander’s baseball knife
How Morton danced three plus
The way you changed our life
Oh No – they can’t take that away from us

Oh No – they-can’t-take-that-away …… from us

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Little Known New 2017 World Series Facts

November 6, 2017

Game 7, Bottom of 9th, 2 outs
Astros Catcher McCann Pulls up to Grab 98 mph Fastball
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Larry King (2nd from right, rear) Looks on to impending, 5-1, LA Loss.

Little Known New World Series Facts

  1. A.J. Hinch and Bobby Cox are now tied for most wins by a World Series Manager.
  2. Phil Garner now trails Hinch and Cox by a mere single win.
  3. The Houston Astros are the only club to have played in the World Series as a representative of both the American and National Leagues.
  4. At this writing, the Milwaukee Brewers are the only club eligible to repeat (in reverse) the Astros dual league representative accomplishment.
  5. Two recent winning World Series managers (John Farrell of the 2013 Boston Red Sox and Joe Girardi of the 2009 New York Yankees) were both fired for losing to the Houston Astros in the 2017 American League Playoffs.
  6. The Houston Astros are the only Texas-based franchise to ever have won a World Series.
  7. Of the 30 MLB franchises, only 2 clubs (the Seattle Mariners and the Washington Nationals) have yet to play in a World Series.
  8. Of the 28 World Series appearance clubs, the Houston Astros are now among the top 14 who have achieved a .500, or superior winning percentage, in their overall competitions.
  9. The 2017 World Series is the first to conclude on a throw from a guy from Venezuela to a fellow from Cuba.
  10. 2017 was the Series-on-TV year that answered a burning question: “How come we never see Larry King on ‘Dancing with the Stars’?”

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Addendum, 11/06/17

“If the screen grab had been just a little more to the right, you would have seen someone a little easier on the eyes than Larry King: Mary Hart. She and her husband are regulars at Dodger Stadium during the baseball season.”
~ Tom Hunter

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle

Astros Did It! ~ A Replay Request!

November 5, 2017

As Predicted by Sports Illustrated for 2017 Back in 2014!

 

Astros Did It! ~ A Replay Request!

Late in the evening of November 1, 2017, a Dodger batter’s ground ball to second baseman Jose Altuve quickly got picked up and thrown to first baseman Yuli Gurriel for the last out in a fifty-five year quest for what this final out of a ball game has to offer for all time. At last, the 2017 Houston Astros had accomplished something that all our fan hearts and ballplayer efforts have been leaning into getting done for well over half a century. With the 4-3 put out, the Houston Astros, finally had risen to the goal that always lay before them. They were finally the Champions of the World Series, Champions of the Baseball World.

On the original “Astros Did It” column, we posted the same featured prediction cover from Sports Illustrated shown above here, the one featuring the Houston Astros as their pick for the World Series Championship of 2017.

And what do you know? Three years later, as of Game 7 in the World Series, that oracle work is now fulfilled. The Houston Astros are now Champions of Baseball, for a first and forever time.

Sadly, I just managed to do something here at The Pecan Park Eagle that I’ve never done before. In cleaning up some never published draft files this afyernoon, I accidentally deleted the original “Astros Did It” column, along with the fewer than a handful of comments some of you left there. Now I have a request to go along with my apology:

Would all of you who commented on your first reactions earlier, please do so again here. I promise they will not be lost again.

And will more of you, while we are still close to the event itself, please write something about what the World Series Championship for the Houston Astros now means to you? On some level down the road, our reactions to what has just happened in Houston baseball history are part of the legacy we leave to all those who come after us and, since I’m going to do all I can to make sure that these few thousand columns are archived for the ages, and maybe even continued by someone other than me, once I’m gone, your help here will be greatly appreciated.

Not just appreciated. Required is the word. The Pecan Park Eagle isn’t limited to what I think and feel as publisher and editor. It’s about all of us. What we think, and what we feel, each in our own unique ways. And it’s about what we are learning and gaining from this ride into the sunset with Houston Baseball – as everyday Houstonians and partially gilled water-breathing people of this general area and the humidity hinterlands.

Please don’t send your responses here to me by e-mail. Simply post them as comments in the section that follows this column. And please don’t wait too long. The sooner you write it, the fresher it will be to the truth.

If you find questions helpful, here are a few for all of us: What does this 2017 World Series Victory by the Houston Astros mean to you? – What did you think or feel in the moment that Altuve and Gurriel were taking care of that last out? – Were you surprised by anything that happened in your personal reaction?

Whatever you say honestly here is all that matters. Just say it. The sooner the better, but later’s better than never.

Thank you very much.

 

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Bill McCurdy

Principal Writer, Editor, Publisher

The Pecan Park Eagle