A 12-Step Program for College Football Addicts

November 28, 2016

goodbye-major-tom_edited-1

A 12-Step Program for College Football Addicts
Step 1: We admitted we were powerless over the idea that our alma mater should win the national championship  – and that our lives had become unmanageable annually when they did not.

 Step 2: Came to believe that no power greater than our own lusty egos could restore us to sanity.

Step 3: Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of our head coach, as we understood him – in a culture duly dedicated to the vicarious accomplishment of fan success through the successful actions players, coaches, administrators, and deep-pocketed alumni.

Step 4: Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves – and why we need someone else to achieve things for us.

Step 5: Admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human being the exact nature of our wrongs – that we viewed ourselves as too inept to even win a stuffed purple elephant at a carnival whenever the game required enough talent from us to hit an empty drinking glass with five pennies thrown from three feet away.

Step 6: Were entirely ready to have others cover all these personal defects of character – and to affirm that our low esteem about our low athletic talent levels were correct in the first place.

Step 7: Humbly asked others to overcome our shortcomings – so we could play athletic games in our own behalf – or else, make our peace with the reality that buying season tickets as fans was as close as we were ever going to get to the real action on the field.

Step 8: Made a list of all persons we had harmed in behalf of our alma maters, and became willing to make amends to them all – even to the UH Cougar fans – every time we needed to break their hearts by hiring away their best stepping stone coaches.

Step 9: Made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure our alma mater’s chances of winning the national championship.

Step 10: Continued to take personal inventory – and when we were wrong, promptly admitted it – and when we were right to also quickly make others pay for standing in the way of our progress.

Step 11: Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God, as we understood Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry that out. – Make that “almost” praying only for knowledge of his will. –  If UT ever has to tell Tom Herman that he will have to “knock the snot” out of Kansas in the last game of the season – just to have a slim-to-none chance of keeping his job another year – we pray that Charlie Strong can be there to cheer him on to whatever dubious win is still possible.

Step 12: Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these Steps, we tried to carry this message to other college football fans, and to practice these principles in all our affairs, as long as we were still free to anonymously keep on doing all we liked to do on the sly to keep our alma mater in the only hunt that matters in the center of our dog brain appetites for money, power, and success by vicarious institutional associations and accomplishments.

____________________

Irony Footnote on Tom Herman’s first peripheral word to his new players at UT. Herman told them that they are going to find his disciplinary approach to coaching very similar to the one they had experienced under former Coach Charlie Strong, but then he offered a word of caution by pulling out social media’s favorite definition for insanity. i.e., “Insanity is when we keep doing the same things that failed previously, hoping for a different result” as he further noted that there would be some changes from the previous coaching administration.

The irony here is simple. UH does not need to hire another Tom Herman. Ever. If possible.

____________________
eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Judas Iscariot Rides Again

November 26, 2016

Saturday, November 26, 2016

Coach Herman had a way of showing affection for his players at UH. ….

He kissed 'em once. ....

He kissed ’em once. ….

Kissed 'em twice ....

Kissed ’em twice ….

Kissed 'em once again 'til all were kissed.

Kissed ’em once again ‘…. til all were kissed ‘fore each game.

Today he left the Cougars for the Longhorns …. and he got his first lesson in the kind of kiss-relocation that will do him more good at UT. ….

hermie-kisses-bevo_edited-1

____________________

Hello, I Must Be Going Lyrics

Based on new lyrics to an old Groucho Marx Song from 1930, here’s how Tom Herman sang the news of his immediate departure for UT to UH Fans …

Tom Herman Sings ….

Hello, I Must Be Going

First I would like to take a bow for Briles and Sumlin.

Hello, I must be going.
I cannot stay,
I came to say
I must be going.
I’m glad I came
but just the same
I must be going.

 

UH Fans Chorus of Remorse ….

 

For our sake you must stay,
for if you go away,
you’ll spoil this party
We are throwing.

 

Tom Herman Answers ….

 

I stayed a year – now two,
I  coached the last game through,
but I am – telling you,
…. I must be  ….. going.

 

UH Fans Get It and Conclude ….

 

Goodbye, we want no staying,

If you’re not in, then stop the spin

It’s truth decaying,

And hit the road ‘fore we explode

In ways dismaying.

 

And we’re not telling you,

But we are smelling you,

And you mustbegoing.

 ____________________
goodbye-major-tom_edited-1
And don’t fall into the stream while you are checking out your grill in your facial water reflection on the way to the bank.

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

An Ode to Ralph Branca

November 24, 2016

ralph-branca

A Farewell Ode to Ralph Branca

By Bill McCurdy

The Pecan Park Eagle

 

We never know – when we take the mound

Of anything – that’s our main ground

This time – may not be the climb – we thought we needed

 

And so it was for Ralph – that day

He came to save – the Dodger say

In lining up the Yanks next – unimpeded

 

October 3rd of ’51 – the date now etched – in joy and none

Still echoes over time – in lamentation

The tears of Brooklyn rain ’til time is done

 

Ralph’s second pitch to Thomson – still unfurling

“The Shot Heard ‘Round the World” – is up and curling

Till 90 years of age – it keeps on swirling

 

Ralph Branca left us yesterday – up in Rye, NY – in the USA

As his last breath gave fully away – to the late day shadows dark

And the homer finally stops – at last – with no pain left to bark

 

“The Giants Won The Pennant” – that long ago Polo Grounds day

But you won our warrior hearts over time – Mr. B

With each never ending – grainy replay

 

Your gifts to the game of baseball and life

Are much larger – than that painful day thing

For you – they are done, sir – but our world carries on with your sting.

 

You deserve every second of tranquility that eternity has to offer

Rest In Peace, Ralph Branca

____________________

Triskaidekaphobia, Indeed ….

ralph-branca-13

Ralph Branca? …. Not So Much.

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Our Happy Thanksgiving Baseball Club

November 23, 2016

thanksgiving

 

Happy Thanksgiving 2016, Everybody!

If you can help us find – or do without – gravy – The Pecan Pie Eagles is ready to serve up this lineup for the Thanksgiving Day dinner table with family and friends. We got close to “gravy” with Gavy Cravath,  but, due to our stringent selection standards, we could not “Mulligan” Gavy into the mix because of that important missing “R” in his first name. Thank goodness for phonetic selections. Otherwise, there wouldn’t be any “dressen” to go around this year.

Here’s Our Happy Thanksgiving Baseball Club ~

RH Pitcher ~ Camilo “Little Potato” Pascual (1954-1971, MLB) All Star. Career W-L, ERA = 174-170, 3.63)

LH Pitcher ~ Ed Wineapple (1929, MLB) Career W-L, ERA = 0-0, 4.50 in one 4 inning game appearance.

Catcher ~ Turkey Stearnes (1920-1940, Negro League) HOF. Career BA = .344, Career HR 176.

1st Base ~ Ham Hyatt (1909-10, 1912-15, 1918, MLB), Career BA = .267, Career HR = 10.

2nd Base ~ Chuck Dressen (1925-31, 1933 MLB) Career BA = .272, Career HR = 11.

3rd Base ~ Pie Traynor (1920-1937, MLB) HOF, All Star, Career BA = .320, Career HR = 58.

Shortstop ~ Stuffy Stirnweiss (1943-1952, MLB) All Star. Career BA = .268, Career HR = 29.

Left Field ~ Darryl Strawberry (1983-1999, MLB) All Star. Career BA = .259, Career HR = 339.

Center Field ~ Ty “The Georgia Peach” Cobb (1905-1928, MLB) HOF. Career BA = .366, Career SB = 892.

Right FieldGoose Goslin (1921-1938, MLB) HOF. Career BA = .316, Career HR = 248.

Designated Hitter ~ Jim Rice (1974-1989, MLB) All Star. Career BA = .298, Career HR = 382.

Enjoy your Thanksgiving Weekend too, friends. It’s going to take most of us far more than a single day to celebrate everything we have to be grateful for in this life. No matter how much we’ve all been stung by losses and obstacles that fall to all of us, sooner or later – sometimes continuously – but we’ve also grown over time to understand – each of us – that – when the big storm winds come, they don’t miss a soul. So, let’s hang together – and do what we can to help others – as we each are able – and find the individual willingness to do so.

baseball-family

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Baseball Reliquary in LA as a Model

November 21, 2016
Sponsor of the Carmelita Chorizos East Los Angeles, CA Early 1970's

Sponsor of the Carmelita Chorizeros
East Los Angeles, CA
Early 1970’s

In their own website words, the Baseball Reliquary in Los Angeles County, California exists as “a nonprofit, educational organization dedicated to fostering an appreciation of American art and culture through the context of baseball history and to exploring the national pastime’s unparalleled creative possibilities. The Baseball Reliquary gladly accepts the donation of artworks and objects of historic content, provided their authenticity is well documented. The Baseball Reliquary is supported, in part, by a grant from the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Arts Commission.”

Under the intelligent and passionate leadership of Terry Cannon, “The Reliquary” stands as a model for what many other areas on the baseball big map could be doing to research, archive, preserve, and present the culture and history of baseball in their own geographical regions – and that definitely includes what we could be doing in Houston, using our own various resources, to accomplish local preservationist goals on a more organized and focused basis. . If we could be the only major league baseball SABR area group to research and write the only exhaustive history of baseball in the Houston area, as our Larry Dierker Chapter of SABR did with “Houston Baseball: The Early Years, 1861-1961” in 2014, why could we not also reach out broader to the other baseball and historical research sources in our community and, at least, begin a dialogue on what we might improve in our local efforts.

Check out this material on the Baseball Reliquary in Los Angeles County, paying special attention to the kinds of support they’ve put together from local government and Whittier College in service to the aims they are accomplishing, especially, but not exclusively. In the land of Dodgers and Angels, and living libraries and other preservationist friendly factions, there certainly must be a weight of support for this kind of activity in a larger sprawling population area – and their own story of how they got their ball rolling in the first place could be invaluable to any other area that might be interested in a preservationist program, even if every community is always a slightly to greatly different proposition for change and new direction. Maybe finding a way to work with the Astros and their plans for a “baseball museum” could be a place to start.

Shorty Perez, Manager CARMELITA CHORIZEROS 1946-1981

Shorty Perez, Manager
CARMELITA CHORIZEROS
1946-1981

Here is the link to the Baseball Reliquary’s upcoming December 3, 2016 program of recognition and honor to the Carmelita Chorizeros, one of the best semi-professional baseball clubs in the history of East Los Angeles. Both the company billboard and oil portrait of long-time manager Shorty Perez will be on display.

Simply give the material you are about to read about the Baseball Reliquary and the December 3rd program they are planning an open mind – and ask yourself this question: Would such an effort In Houston on any scale be worth your time, energy, and interest? – And please – please post whatever comments you may wish to share with the rest of us in the comment section that follows this column. It would help if we could simply find a forum for ongoing discussion of how our future with local baseball history is less fragmented than one thing for the Astros, another for the Astrodome, something else for ancient baseball history prior to the 1962 onset of our big league status, and yet another for amateur and youth baseball, and still another for the “greatest players in all of Houston’s baseball history”.

Thank you very much.

Link to the Carmelita Chorizeros Program, Dec. 3rd

http://www.baseballreliquary.org/2016/11/dedication-shorty-perez-painting-carmelita-chorizo-billboard-december-3-2016/

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Joe Mowry, Sr: Now a Houston Buff with a Face

November 20, 2016
Photo of Joe Mowry, Sr. Houston Buffs (1905-1915) El Paso Herald, September 16, 1910 Found by Bill Hickman

Photo of Joe Mowry, Sr.
Houston Buffs (1905-06, 1908-10, 1912-15)
El Paso Herald, September 16, 1910
Found & Contributed by Bill Hickman

Thanks to the wonderful contributing SABR member from Maryland and Chicago Cubs fan since childhood, Bill Hickman, we at last have a photograph of former Houston Buffs dead ball era catcher Joe Mowry, Sr.  Mowry is significant to the history of the Buffs to this extent. – Over the course of his 9-year official playing record, Joe only appears as as an actual game player in each of those seasons as an on-the-field game-active career contributor to the baseball minor league winning causes of the Houston Buffs.

The e-mail note that Bill Hickman wrote in conjunction with this photo find reads as follows:

____________________

The Bill Hickman E-Mail
Hi, Bill  –
Stumbled across the attached photo of an ancient Houston Buffalo, and thought you might be interested.
 
Joe Mowry, Sr., was an outfielder with the Buffs for eight seasons, which is unusual stability for a minor leaguer.  He had his only chance for big league action when he was called up to the Phils at the end of the 1910 season and sat on the bench, thereby becoming a member of the noted “Bill Sharman Society.”   Documentation comes from the El Paso Herald of September 16, 1910, which reported: “Joe Mowry of the Houston team has been ordered to the Philadelphia Nationals at once and is now on his way to Quakerville.”
 
Perhaps Joe got his satisfaction in life some years later when his son, Joe Jr., became a full-time major leaguer with the Boston Braves during the 1933-1935 period.
 
http://www.baseball-reference.com/register/player.cgi?id=mowrey001jos
 
By the way, baseball-reference doesn’t show it, but Joe was quite a speed merchant on the bases.  He stole 45 in 1907.
– Bill Hickman
____________________
 The Bill Sharman Society

We shall not presume that every reader knows the meaning of the “Bill Sharman Society” reference that Bill Hickman included as applicable also to Joe Mowry, Sr. Aptly named for one of the great NBA two-sport players of the post WWII era, Bill Sharman, it includes all baseball players who also made it to the roster of big league clubs, but never got to appear in actual regular or post-season games. Sharman’s identity for all those who fell to the same fate is amplified by the fact he not only played professional basketball, but played and coached well enough to later become a two-time Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame inductee, having been inducted in 1976 as a player, and in 2004 as a coach. As far as we know, the late Bill Sharman is the only member of “Bill Sharman Society” who may have been “other worldly” in another sport.

Of course, the society has nothing to do with great athletes who actually did play major league baseball and also did fair to very well in other sports too. Bo Jackson of the Kansas City Royals and NFL Oakland Raiders – and MLB/NFL/ great Olympian Jim Thorpe also jump immediately to mind.

____________________

Bill Hickman and Our Relentless SABR Research Passion

We are not all relentless about all things baseball, nor does one have to belong to SABR to enjoy the firing up of this engine to learn more about the game’s history and its people and past cultures, nor are we all hot about developing better, fairer, clearer, and more meaningful ways to analyze the game of baseball, nor do all of us have a pointed passionate specific torch burning. Some of us simply enjoy going to the games and being around other baseball people – as in “all of them” – and “all of them.”

Bill Hickman is relentless about baseball photos, especially those of players we have heard about, but never seen. And we now have Bill Hickman again to thank for making Joe Mowry, Sr. a little more real to 2016 baseball people than he was 24 hours ago. Also, The Pecan Park Eagle has no doubt. – If there’s another photo of Joseph Aloysius Mowry, Sr. out there somewhere, – that Bill Hickman will one day “stumble across” it too.

~ Thanks again, Bill Hickman! ~ And Congratulations again, Chicago Cubs! ~ You’re blessed to have some great baseball people as your fans!

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

College Football Upsets Defined

November 19, 2016

Full Definition of upset

upset

upsetting

  1. transitive verb
  2. 1 : to thicken and shorten (as a heated bar of iron) by hammering on the end :  swage

  3. 2 : to force out of the usual upright, level, or proper position :  overturn

  4. 3: to trouble mentally or emotionally :  disturb the poise of

    upset

    me> b :  to throw into disorder c :  invalidate d :  to defeat unexpectedly upset in the primary>

  5. 4 : to cause a physical disorder in; specifically :  to make somewhat ill upsets my stomach>

Simple Definition of upset

noun up·set \ˈəp-ˌset\
  • : an occurrence in which a game, contest, etc., is won by a person or team that was expected to lose

  • : an unpleasant feeling of illness in your stomach

  • : a period of worry and unhappiness caused by something that has happened

Simple Definition of upset in College Football

  1. : any time Auburn beats Alabama in the Iron Bowl and the game broadcaster starts repetitively shouting, “Auburn’s gonna win the football game!”>
  2. : any time a Nick Saban-coached Alabama football team fails to win the national championship>
  3. : if it ever happens, anytime the national champion is not a Power 5 conference team>

Definition of biggest upset in College Football

  1. : if the Supreme Court ever decides that college football is a business, not a sport, and finds the NCAA guilty of using slave “student” labor as a basis for financing the university’s brand and expenses>

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

College Football’s 2nd Biggest Flaw

November 18, 2016
UH 36 - #5 LOUISVILLE 10. Louisville QB and Heisman Hopeful Lamar Jackson had his back to the wall all night in loss to the Cougars last night, 11/17/2016.

UH 36 – #5 LOUISVILLE 10.
Louisville QB and Heisman Hopeful Lamar Jackson had his back to the wall all night in a big loss to the Cougars on Thursday, 11/17/2016.

Unless you include the sport’s ability to ignore sexual depredation upon females by certain players under certain administrations at certain universities for the sake of keeping their best ability players on the field at all times, regardless of legitimate reasons for having them arrested and charged with felony crimes, the biggest problem with college football today is that the sport’s ability to determine an annual champion each year at the top NCAA level is that it still depends as much, if not more, to the very end, upon what the voting public thinks of a school’s tradition for winning, if not more, than it does upon whom a team actually plays and manages to beat.

Unlike the NFL, the NBA, Hockey, or Major League Baseball, there are no round robin schedules or extensive playoff systems to assure as much as possible that opinion and marketing minds are not making the greater mark on the determination of a national champion than direct head-to-head competition.

Things are better now with the four-team post-season playoff tournament, but those four teams still get there as much by name, historic reputation, and membership in one of the five self-designated superior conferences as they do by going undefeated – or 11-1 – during the regular season. Ultimately, the four team championship, two-game playoff competition will be determined by the blue ribbon panel of experts that selects which four teams get those head-to-head honors.

Last night, the # 5 ranked University of Louisville Cardinals most probably ended their chances for climbing one-place up into  the playoffs  by season’s end by coming to town and getting blown away, 36-10, by the unranked University of Houston Cougars before a record crowd at TDECU Stadium on the UH campus.

There won’t be many tears for Louisville beyond a 12-block distance from Churchill Downs. Louisville is still one of the new kids on the power conference block at one of the arguably two least esteemed leagues, the Atlantic Coast Conference. The other great pretender would likely be the Big 12.

Everyone else, except for Notre Dame, who plays independently – or who plays as members of one of the minor conferences, is just there to serve as set-up opposition for the big boys – and shut up about needing greater opportunity.

i.e, The probable Texas A&M message to Prairie View A&M before the latter signed to play Texas A&M at College Station this year: “Don’t worry about getting blown out. Just come play us before 100,000 plus fans and take the big pay check you will be taking home at the end of the day – and try not to spend it all in Hempstead on your first driving home pit stop.” And, in fairness to Texas A&M, it is not just the Aggies who schedule “breathers” with smaller schools who live for the big payday.  This practice is simply the long-time breath of the college football culture.

Texas A&M could probably lose 4 games and finish in the Top 25 in 2016. After all, they belong to the SEC and the voters need to cut them a break for their strength of schedule annual challenge. As for UH, we make no excuse. They may have beaten OU and Louisville this year, but they also lost to Navy and SMU! – How bad is any team that loses to SMU? The fact is that UH went into Dallas all banged up. And, so what? Everybody gets banged up – especially in an era controlled by ESPN, Thursday Night Football, and playing the game on short recovery time.  Besides, UH played SMU on a Saturday, and SMU was the better team that day. That kind of stuff happens in college football.

In short, we look forward to the day when the college bowls games are adjusted to handle a field of 16 post-season tournament teams. College football will never shed all of the subjectivity dangers of picking the field for obvious reasons of brand prejudicials, most notably, the fact that football, unlike baseball, is not a sport that lends itself to everyday play or doubleheaders. And there are more than 100 top level teams classified as potential champions at the start of every season. – When in doubt, the decision-makers will still pick the ones with the best reputations for winning – and for bringing fans that “have money, will travel.”

Having said that, we still think that a 16-team playoff is do-able – and that it will go a long way to assuring most fan bases that the real potential champion had been included in the format.

Have a great weekend, everybody!

___________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Rob Sangster: A Man of Great Passion for Life

November 17, 2016
Rob Sangster Great Writer Great Friend

Rob Sangster
Great Writer
Great Friend

 

Rob Sangster is a friend of mine from our days at St. Thomas High School as members of the writing staff for the St. Thomas Eagle. Rob’s solitary sense of humor was always a trait that attracted me to his company. A very bright and expressive fellow, Rob never held back from peripherally sharing his current state of mind in class, even if he had to do it with the cartoons he drew in class as the only safe option under the spell of the school’s tight policy on classroom silence. One hot afternoon in the spring, (we had no AC at STHS back in the 1950s), Rob and I were sitting side-by-side near the back of the room, just trying to stay awake  through the drift of a Latin class review when I looked over to check out why Rob was taking so many notes. There should have been no need. We already knew this stuff.

Rob wasn’t taking notes. He was drawing what appeared to be a self-portrait of himself, falling asleep at his desk. The caption he wrote became iconic to every memory forward in my own lifetime of all the instances I’ve found myself feeling the same way in certain organizational meetings.

In Gothic letters, Rob had described his self-portrait sketch in these precise terms: “Chairman of the Bored”.

Rob Sangster and I lost track of each other for fifty years after our 1956 graduation from high school. He went on to Stanford and then UCLA for law school, if memory serves, and I burrowed into my own academic track at UH, Tulane, and UT as a mental health professional. Neither of us immediately became writers as we once may have each dreamed of becoming, but the writer gene in each of us never died, even if mine blossomed late with a few books and this almost daily blog. Thanks to the Internet, Rob Sangster and I found each other again at some point in the past ten years – and I got up to speed on the general awareness that this ancient friend of mine had been living a life that some of us only have dreamed of living.

I learned that Rob’s early success in law could have launched him up the political lines from Los Angeles, but he turned the opportunity down. Rob wanted more than money and power. He wanted substance and wisdom. So, instead of becoming the next “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington”, Rob Sangster decided that he didn’t need the trip to DC to confirm his belief that it would only serve to tell him what he already knew, that it wasn’t for him , and, if he went to Washington, that he could be vulnerable to watching his life get gobbled up by some of the ambition alligators that still live in those federal political swamps. So, Rob Sangster went out and had his own open road life instead, complete with the all the risks that come with living outside the box of any established lifestyle entitlement system.

That decision is probably the reason that Rob Sangster now appears to me, his age contemporary, as someone who more closely resembles literature’s Dorian Gray. He’s also not the shorter guy that I went to high school with at St. Thomas. After he went to Stanford years ago, he grew to 6″4″ and, as you may be able to easily tell from the recent picture of him that has been included with this column, and another one, a close-up that you will find at the linked website. It is tempting to conclude that Rob’s youthfulness most likely is the synergy result of good genes working inside of someone who has been willing over his lifetime to live the risk of finding and then delivering his true self to the world. Not everybody does that these days, but pay attention to those who do. These people are our greatest teachers, if we are but open to hearing what they have to say.

From here forward, my information from e-mails and limited phone contact about Rob’s life gets spotty. Out of respect for his privacy, I won’t speculate about what I don’t know, and I would never do so about a friend, or anyone else, for that matter. I just know that he has lived the life of a world traveler, that he got back into writing travel articles about some of his adventures, that he is married, and that the Sangsters now have homes in both the USA and Canada – and that he is now dedicated to writing fiction, and that they are both dedicated to issues of social justice, great literature, the lessons of history, art, music, and the beauty of the world and it’s people.

Speaking of the man as a writer, Rob Sangster has authored two of the most compelling, well-written action/adventure novels of all time. You simply have to read them to discover that assessment for yourself. Attorney Jack Strider is the lead character in both of these serial adventures,  “Ground Truth” and “Deep Time”. Another in the Strider Series isn’t mentioned on Rob’s Website, but we do understand that it is deep in progress. Rob’s fiction work also is available at Amazon.com, by the way.

For a look at all of Rob Sangster’s work, check out the availability of his novels and earlier travel book material at this site:

www.amazon.com/Rob-Sangster/e/B006ZN9KTS
www.robsangster.com/books.html
rob@sangster.com
(901) 458-2722 (U.S.A.)
(902) 688-1122 (Nova Scotia)

Here too are three photos that Rob Sangster took the other day from his office home study in Nova Scotia. He sent these and several others to me earlier today with the following one liner: “I took all these moonies from the second-floor deck that opens off my office. – Rob.”

During the Super Moon Nova Scotia Photo by Rob Sangster

During the Super Moon
Nova Scotia
Photo by Rob Sangster

 

 During the Super Moon Nova Scotia Photo by Rob Sangster

During the Super Moon
Nova Scotia
Photo by Rob Sangster

 

 

 During the Super Moon Nova Scotia Photo by Rob Sangster

During the Super Moon
Nova Scotia
Photo by Rob Sangster

____________________

eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas

Egregious Anomalies in Baseball We Hate Most

November 16, 2016

EPSON MFP image

The Three Egregious Anomalies in Baseball We Hate Most.

There are others, but these are the ones we hate the most. And they all begin with: Here at The Eagle, we think they’ve been bad for the game ever since baseball decided to ….

  1. Melt AL/NL Identities into a Singular MLB marketing brand, but ignore the fact that the two leagues continue to play two different kinds of baseball because of the DH use in the AL.
  2. Continue Inter-League play in spite of the DH variant that imposes a disadvantage in each such contest because of the rule which imposes the DH rule in games played at AL parks and then switches to traditional baseball with no DH in games played in NL parks.
  3. Continue the ridiculous Selig Solution to All Star Game apathy by allowing the annual All Star Game winner to determine home team advantage in the same year’s World Series.

Does anyone in Major League Baseball have the gonads to stand up in opposition to these incongruous conditions? Or do we simply have to make our peace with the fact that the people who run professional baseball are simply experts at sanctioning half-baked ideas and allowing baseball to strangle on misguided concepts like the All Star Game solution because that position – of political squat – is preferable to hurting the feelings and image of the ex-car dealer/commissioner who somehow dreamed up the All Star Game elixir from his “buy one – get one free” automobile marketing notes catalogue.

Possible Solutions.

  1. Vote the DH all the way in – or all the way out. – One MLB with one brand of baseball is preferable to the mixture. – Get it done – even if it means dealing with the Players’ Union over the need to increase roster sizes, if the DH goes. This is harder to do now because baseball put this off so long that we now have generations of fans who have grown up with the DH – and they feel as strongly about the DH as the purists do about the damage that the DH does to managing the game of baseball. – It’s either make the tough choice – or live with the fact that MLB is really an alliance between two similar games of baseball.
  2. Discontinue inter-league play until MLB decides if it’s going all DH or no DH – or MLB simply admits for the first time that baseball has now evolved into two similar, but not identical games.
  3. Accept the All Star Game for what it is. – It is both a party and a way of honoring the game’s greatest. – Increase the roster sizes, if need be. Include 3-4 extra pitchers who may only be used if the game goes into extra innings, but kill that World Series home field advantage rule, asap. – The World Series team with the best record should have the home field advantage. – In the event of record ties between NL/AL winners, simply work out an additional gradient factor for breaking the tie based on field performance in key areas.

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eagle-0range
 Bill McCurdy

Publisher, Editor, Writer

The Pecan Park Eagle

Houston, Texas