When to use the term “Hall of Famer”

By Blaidd Drwg

I see a headline on ESPN.com today that says “Hall of Famer Conlin accused of molestation”. It was a sad story about famed Philadelphia sports writer Bill Conlin being accused of molesting a couple of kids in the 1970’s. My problem is with the headline – winning the Spink Award or the Frick Award or the Buck O’Neil Award (o.k. maybe the O’Neil winners should be called Hall of Famers as the award has had 2 winners, one of which is they guy who the award is named after and SHOULD be in the real hall) does not make you a Hall of Famer. Yes, they get to make a pretty speech during the induction ceremony, but they aren’t being inducted into the Hall of Fame. The Baseball Hall of Fame website does not list winners of these awards in its Hall Of Famers section and they don’t have plaques in the Hall of Fame. Contrary to popular belief, there is no “Broadcasters Wing” of the Hall of Fame. The award winners for the Frick and Spink awards have a display in the section of the museum devoted to baseball in the media in a gallery called “Scribes and Mikemen.”

To the media – PLEASE STOP CALLING WINNERS OF THE FRICK AND SPINK AWARD WINNERS HALL OF FAMERS! When you wrongfully call someone as perverted as Conlin a Hall of Famer, you are doing a disservice to the memory of all of the cheats, liars, racists, drug addicts, alcoholics and all-around assholes that are currently inducted into the actual Hall of Fame (not to mention the large number of guys who were inducted that were actually nice guys).

Post Script – After writing this and before posting it, ESPN changed the title to “Veteran writer…” from “Hall of Famer…” What do you want to bet ESPN got a nastygram from the Baseball Hall of Fame about the misuse of the term Hall of Famer.

The 2012 Baseball Hall of Fame Ballot

By Blaidd Drwg

The 2012 HOF ballot has been released. Here is the list of player for your review:

Jeff Bagwell
Jeromy Burnitz
Vinny Castilla
Juan Gonzalez
Brian Jordan
Barry Larkin
Javy Lopez
Edgar Martinez
Don Mattingly
Fred McGriff
Mark McGwire
Jack Morris
Bill Mueller
Terry Mulholland
Dale Murphy
Phil Nevin
Rafael Palmeiro
Brad Radke
Tim Raines
Tim Salmon
Ruben Sierra
Lee Smith
Alan Trammell
Larry Walker
Bernie Williams
Tony Womack
Eric Young

If I had a vote, it would be Bagwell, McGwire, Palmeiro, Raines, Trammell and Walker. I am not sure any of these guys will get in, but considering the talent that is going to be on the 2013-2017 ballots, this might be the last chance for Larkin, Edgar, Morris, Murphy, Raines, Smith and Trammell to build any real momentum for getting in. Heck, I am pretty sure that if these guys don’t get in on this ballot, they won’t get elected by the BBWAA. Your thoughts? Who gets your vote?

Average Would Be Nice

by A.J. Coltrane

  Offense Defense
Mariners (runs) 30th of 30 15th of 30
Seahawks (points) 26th of 32 15th of 32
Seahawks (yards) 28th of 32 11th of 32
     
Seahawks (rushing) 27th 8th
Seahawks (passing) 25th 15th

(Stats current as of November 26 pm.)

The first Seattle team to “win” will be the team that can get to at least average on offense. I think both teams are at least two years away from that happening.

Albert Pujols and the 2011 World Series

By Blaidd Drwg

Here is your weird World Series stat of the day:

Albert Pujols is hitting .278 in the 2011 World Series with an OPS north of 1.200.

Pujols had 5 hits and 3 home runs in game 3.

In the other 4 games in the series, he is 0 for 12 with 4 intentional walks, yet has only managed to strike out once.

A perfect example of why sample size matters.

Random Baseball Thoughts

By Blaidd Drwg

Just had a random thought – the Rays have now made the playoffs in 3 of the last 4 seasons and prior to 2008, were the only baseball team that had not appeared in a post season game. They also made it to the World Series that season, which means they beat these teams to the punch:

Seattle Mariners (no WS appearance since 1977)
Montreal Expos/Washington Nationals (no WS appearance since 1969)
Texas Rangers (made their first WS appearance in 2010)

This then lead me to the question, “How many teams have failed to win a World Series?” The list is a bit longer:

Colorado Rockies (lost in 2007)
Houston Astros (lost in 2005)
Milwaukee Brewers (lost in 1982)
San Diego Padres (lost in 1984 & 1998)
Seattle Mariners (No WS)
Tampa Bay Rays (lost in 2008)
Texas Rangers (lost in 2010)
Washington Nationals (no WS)

The Rangers are still alive, so one of them still has a chance to remove themselves from the list, although it would have been interesting to have both them and the Brewers in this year’s World Series looking for their first title.

Other interesting never have lists:

Never thrown a no-hitter:
The Padres and Mets are the only 2.

In researching this, I found the longest stretches without being no-hit in each league belongs to the A’s in the AL, who have not been no-hit since 1991 and Cubs in the NL, who were surprisingly last no-hit by Sandy Koufax back in 1965, in a game that featured just 1 run and 1 hit 1 walk and 1 error by both teams, combined.

Never had a 200 hit season:

Just one – Tampa Bay. Aubrey Huff had the highest single season total with 198, but no one has cracked the 200 mark.

Never had a 20 game winner:
Colorado and Tampa Bay. Both teams have had a 19 game winner, but no 20 game winner.

Never had a 40 Home Run Hitter:
Only the Royals have failed to accomplish this (the franchise record is 36 by Steve Balboni in 1985). They somehow completely missed out on the steroid era.

Why Baseball is Better than Football and Other Random Thoughts

By Blaidd Drwg
Jim Caple of ESPN.com recently wrote a piece, which, among other things had a list of reasons why baseball is better than football. Here are some of the better points:

2. The world’s game: This week the Mariners called up Alex Liddi, the first major leaguer born and raised in Italy. He wasn’t their first European this season, either — that distinction went to Greg Halman, who grew up in the other Haarlem, in the Netherlands. So contrary to what the International Olympic Committee may think, baseball’s popularity is growing around the world. In fact, there currently are major leaguers who grew up playing baseball on five continents — North and South America, Australia, Asia and Europe — plus, there are minor leaguers from Africa. And of course, Manny Ramirez was from another planet.
Meanwhile, the NFL closed its European league four years ago. But at least fans across the Atlantic no longer have to worry about the owners blacking out non-sellout games on Radio Free Europe.

True on so many fronts, especially the comment about Manny Ramirez.

5. Fan relations: It never ceases to amaze me how shabbily the NFL treats its fans. Can’t afford a ticket? You’d better hope the rest of your city can, or the league will black out television coverage of a game played in the stadium you helped fund with your tax money. Have enough money for a season ticket? Well, before the team will sell you one, you’ll also probably have to buy equally priced tickets to meaningless exhibition games (and don’t get me started on personal seat licenses). Imagine if baseball teams required their season-ticket holders to buy tickets to every Cactus and Grapefruit League game as well. NFL fans should consider themselves lucky the league doesn’t require they attend two-a-days.

It is amazing that you have to pay full price as part of your season ticket package for 2 meaningless exhibition games which you may get to see your team’s starters for one quarter in each game, unless you were lucky enough to get to see the 4th preseason game this year in which most of the teams didn’t even play their starters. Then again, I will argue that I had to pay full price for my 6 meaningless September Mariners games as part of my season ticket package just to see the AAA Rainiers lineup they are currently running out there every day.

A few other fine snippets from the article:

BASEBALL CARD OF THE WEEK
Here’s the amazing thing about this card (1979 Topps No. 595): Even though Phil Niekro looks like Jamie Moyer’s crazy grandfather, what with the long gray-and-white hair as well as the warm-up jacket buttoned up to his neck, he was still in his 30s when it was released. He pitched for another eight years!

It never occurred to me, but he is right. Niekro did look like he was about 60 at that point. On the flip side, he looks pretty much the same now as he did back in 1979.

Jim has a box score of the week which I easily got as the Mike Scott no-hitter which clinched the NL West for the Astros in 1986. What I had forgotten was that this from the box score:

Rick Lancellotti PH

You are probably saying, “Who the hell is Rick Lancellotti?” Well, I will tell you. He was a terrible OF for the Padres, Giants and Red Sox who had the distinction of appearing in the majors in 3 different seasons each 4 years apart (1982, 1986 and 1990) and was out of baseball in the US between 1986 and 1990.

His career transactions look like this:
June 7, 1977: Drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates in the 11th round of the 1977 amateur draft.
August 5, 1980: Traded by the Pittsburgh Pirates with Luis Salazar to the San Diego Padres for a player to be named later and Kurt Bevacqua. The San Diego Padres sent Mark Lee (August 12, 1980) to the Pittsburgh Pirates to complete the trade.
October 7, 1982: Purchased by the Montreal Expos from the San Diego Padres.
May 30, 1983: Released by the Montreal Expos.
June 10, 1983: Signed as a Free Agent with the Texas Rangers.
July 26, 1983: Released by the Texas Rangers.
August 2, 1983: Signed as a Free Agent with the San Diego Padres.
March 31, 1985: Traded by the San Diego Padres to the New York Mets for Rusty Tillman.
July 31, 1985: Purchased by the San Francisco Giants from the New York Mets.
October 15, 1985: Granted Free Agency.
February 7, 1986: Signed as a Free Agent with the San Francisco Giants.
November 10, 1986: Released by the San Francisco Giants.
May 17, 1989: Signed as a Free Agent with the Boston Red Sox.
October 15, 1990: Granted Free Agency.

The guy had been around with a few teams, not counting stints in Japan, Canada, Mexico, Italy, Venezuela and the Senior Professional Baseball Association.

I Mean No Disrespect But … If we absolutely must demonstrate proper, dignified respect for our nation by playing a patriotic song before “Cotton Eyed Joe” (Yankees and Rangers), “Louie Louie” (Mariners), “Thank God I’m a Country Boy” (Orioles) and “Build Me Up Buttercup” (Angels), then why not occasionally mix in a more pleasing tune than Kate Smith bellowing “God Bless America” again? There is no song that makes you feel better about being an American than Ray Charles singing “America the Beautiful.” There is no more empowering and inclusive song than “This Land is Your Land.” And it would be nice to hear them. …

I still don’t understand the need to play God Bless America during the 7th inning stretch. It really slows the game down and honestly, I hate the song. It was a nice thing to do for the remaining games in 2001 and was probably fine for the first couple of years in NY, but there is no reason why it couldn’t be done before the National Anthem. Either of the two songs he mentioned would be better choices anyway – besides when it comes to American icons, I would say Ray Charles and Woody Guthrie are more well-known than Kate Smith. Besides, how many people even knew who Kate Smith was before 2001?

Remain Calm, All Is Well

By Blaidd Drwg

Last night produced not one, but two epic disasters in the majors with wide ranging playoff implications.

While the Cardinals were pounding the snot out of the Astros last night, the Braves were clinging on to a lead. In the 7th, the Braves were up 3-1 with Tim Hudson cruising along nicely. With one out, Raul Ibanez doubled and then Placido Polanco hit a shot up the middle that was stopped by a great dive by Dan Uggla, preventing Ibanez from scoring, putting runners on the corners. Hudson then got Carlos Ruiz to hit a hard ground ball right at Jack Wilson. The ball was hit just to the shortstop side of second and Wilson hardly had to move. You could have hardly asked for a more tailor-made double play ball. Wilson then proceeded to let the ball bounce off him, extending the inning and allowing Ibanez to score. The Braves eventually got out of the inning with a 3-2 lead, but that run would be important.

Flash forward to the top of the 9th inning. The Braves bring in flame thrower Craig Kimbrel to close out the Phillies. Kimbrel gives up a leadoff single to Polanco and then strikes out Carols Ruiz. Two outs away. After the strikeout, the wheels come off. Kimbrel all of a sudden can’t find the strike zone and walks both Ben Francisco and Jimmy Rollins to load the bases, bringing up Chase Utley. Utley smacks a fly ball to left, easily deep enough to score the runner from third and tie the game. Another walk to Hunter Pence loaded the bases and the Braves mercifully removed Kimbrel from the game. The new pitcher, Kris Medlen got the next hitter to pop up and end the inning, but not before we have bonus baseball.

The Phillies eventually broke the tie in the 13th with a walk and couple of hits, ending the Braves season. The Braves managed to blow an 8 _ game lead in the wild card and would probably be remembered for this epic collapse if it weren’t for what happened in Boston and Tampa last night.

The interesting thing about this game is where the damage was done by each team. The Braves score all of their runs early in the game against Joe Blanton and Cole Hamels (making a relief appearance) and then managed just 2 hits and 4 walks in the final 8 innings of the game against a parade of Phillie relievers. The Phillies however did their most severe damage against the vaunted Braves bullpen – Braves relievers gave up 5 hits and 8 walks in their 6.2 innings of work, but they also threw a lot of pitches – Venters took 27 pitches to record 3 outs, Kimbrel 29 and Linebrink 32. I do have to give the Phillies credit; they played like they were trying to win the game, unlike what happened in Tampa.

Just up I-95, an even bigger collapse was brewing. Everything was lining up for the Sox to take the wild card – they had Jon Lester pitching against Alfredo Simon and were hanging onto a 3-2 lead with the Yankees pounding David Price to the tune of 7-0. Much was being made of Lester pitching on 3 days’ rest, but here is the way I see it – he only threw 55 pitches in his last start, he has dominated the Orioles over his career and he is the best starter the Sox, so who else would you want to hand the ball to? Lester did not look sharp – I don’t think it was fatigue; he hasn’t looked sharp all month. The 6th inning was a nail biter as Lester labored to find the strike zone. Three walks made it tight. The Sox were saved by a double play ball hit by Guerrero that took a great play by Marco Scutaro to make it happen. The Vlad Guerrero of 5 or 6 years ago would have easily beaten the throw to first on that play, but the current Vlad can’t run and was thrown out at first by a good bit. That ugly inning ended Lester’s night since the rain came in the 7th inning. The Sox pen shut down the O’s in the 7th and 8th, but the offence could not extend their lead. In the 9th, the Sox brought in Jon Papelbon to shut the door. Papelbon had been having a great stretch in August/September, giving up just 1 run and 6 hits over 19 innings with 25 strikeouts and just 2 walks. Papelbon didn’t have the most stellar outing of the season on the 27th when it took him 28 pitches to close out the Orioles, giving up a run and 2 hits in the process. The last time that he pitched 2 consecutive games was early August (where he pitched 3 straight days, throwing 37 pitches over 3 innings). I was concerned after watching him on the 27th – he didn’t have his best stuff and I was nervous with him closing the game out. He got off to a great start, striking out the 2 biggest threats he would face – Mark Reynolds and Adam Jones. Then the wheels came off – a couple of doubles and a single and all of a sudden, the Sox lose. Couple that with the incredible comeback in Tampa where the Rays managed to score 8 runs against a parade of Yankee relievers, and my worst fear was realized – the Sox, a team built to win the World Series, wouldn’t even be going to the playoffs.

This is not the end of the world, well as long as the Yankees don’t win the World Series it isn’t.

Now is the Time to Panic

By Blaidd Drwg

A scant one month ago, on September 2nd, the AL and NL wild card standings looked like this:

  W L GB
Red Sox 83 54 —-
Rays 74 63 9.0
Angels 74 64 9.5

 

  W L GB
Braves 81 56 —-
Cardinals 73 65 8.5
Giants 73 65 8.5

It looked like the Sox and Braves were mortal locks. Injuries, poor play and a couple of hot streaks eventually brought us to this as of this morning with 2 games left to play:

  W L GB
Red Sox 89 71 —-
Rays 89 71 —-
Angels 86 74 3.0

 

  W L GB
Braves 89 71 —-
Cardinals 88 72 1.0
Giants 85 75 4.0

The Giants were eliminated on Sunday and the Angels last night, so both divisions have a dog fight in the last 2 games. The Braves, just 8 – 15 in the month of September, have the unfortunate luck of matching up against the Phillies in Atlanta for the last 2. The Phillies are starting their regulars, so they aren’t rolling over and playing dead and making it easy on the Braves. Braves have to deal with Lowe vs. Oswalt tonight and Hudson vs. TBA tomorrow. I assume that pitcher is either going to be Joe Blanton or Tim Worley and not Cole Hamels, although Hamels would be in line to pitch game 3 of the NLDS on regular rest if he starts tomorrow.

The Cardinals play the worst team in baseball (the Astros) in Houston for the last 2. The Astros did beat the Cards last night behind their best starter, Wandy Rodriguez, and have Jake Westbrook and Chris Carpenter scheduled to start for their last 2 games, so they stand a pretty good chance, especially considering the opposing pitchers are Henry Sosa and Bret Myers.

Over in the AL, it is panic time for the Red Sox Nation. A couple of weeks ago, I wrote this as a comment to a post about the wild card race:

I am most concerned about the Yankees/Rays series at the end of the Month. If the Yankees have already clinched after playing the Sox and there is still a race between the Sox and the Rays, I would be concerned about the Yankees rolling over and playing dead, letting the Rays sweep the last 3.

Well, the worst case scenario is upon us. The Yankees started Hector Noesi last night, Bartolo Colon tonight and a TBA tomorrow. I would not be surprised if the TBA is someone making their first MLB start, while the Rays are countering with their 3 best pitchers – Shields, Hellickson and Price. The Yankees have been playing their regulars for part of the game and then pulling them out, so a sweep by the Rays, who are 15-8 in the month, is not out of the question.

As for the Red Sox, what can I say? They lost last night against the Orioles (!), dropping their record for the month to 6-17(!!!). I can’t imagine that they will be swept by the Orioles, so you have to figure that either Erik Bedard or Jon Lester will salvage at least one win. The critical game is tonight – the Sox need to win regardless of what the Rays do – and I would feel much more comfortable with a 1 game lead going into the last game of the season against the Orioles with Jon Lester on the mound.

What looked to be a boring September has turned out to be one hell of a finish.

Maybe the Marlins Should Hire a New Designer

By Blaidd Drwg

Have you seen the new Miami Marlins logo for next season? Dave Schoenfeld called it an ABA logo from 1973. Paul Lukas thought it was a photoshopper’s concept of what it might look like. It is just plain ugly.

Here it is in case you are morbidly curious. Would anyone really buy a hat that looked like something a Marlin puked up?

Feeling the Breeze on a Warm September Day

By Blaidd Drwg

The new ‘aggressiveness’ for the Mariners at the plate is really paying off – in terms of inflating the opponents strikeout totals.

Here are the last 7 Mariners games I attended with the gritty details:

Date Opponent Score Mariner Hits Mariners Walks Mariner Strikeouts
9/9 Royals M’s win 7-3 15 2 12
9/10 Royals M’s lose 4-2 2 0 16
9/11 Royals M’s lose 2-1 6 1 12
9/13 Yankees M’s lose 3-2 6 4 17
9/16 Rangers M’s win 4-0 6 2 9
9/17 Rangers M’s lose 7-6 8 1 13
9/18 Rangers M’s lose 3-0 6 2 14

This final stretch of M’s games that I will be at this season started off with a legit 7-3 win. They pounded one of the worst pitching staffs in baseball for 15 hits and 7 runs as they should have, so I could forgive the 12 K’s with only 2 walks. I also got to see Alex Liddi’s first MLB hit and the pitching debut of Steve Delabar, so it was all good. The wheels just came off after that – the next 2 games against the Royals were a disaster, making their mediocre pitching staff look like the Phillies  with the Mariners offense producing just 3 runs on 9 hits, 1 walk (!!!) and 28 strikeouts(!!!!!!).

Things went from bad to worse against the Yankees as the M’s had AJ Burnett on the ropes early, but couldn’t put him away. There was a lot of swinging and missing that night for the Mariners as they managed to strike out more times than I have ever seen one team strike out in a single 9 inning game.  On the flip side, I did get to see Mariano Rivera’s 600th save, so something could be said for that game.

The Rangers series wasn’t as bad, but the one win was ugly (probably would have been a 1-0 game if Ian Kinsler had not made a bad throw on what was a routine ground ball that should have ended the inning or if the routine bouncer up the middle 2 batters later had not bounced off the bag keeping the inning going), but it guaranteed that they would not lose 100 games this season.

This offensively may be the worst seven game stretch I have seen 12 walks and 93 strikeouts is not a winning formula in any way. It also goes a long way to explaining the attendance in some of those games – the game on the 13th against the Yankees had a whopping 18,306 show up while the weekend games against the Mariners drew 22,000 for fan appreciation night on Saturday and 21,000 for kids appreciation day on Sunday, although the Sunday game felt a lot emptier than that.