Chipper Jones is out for the year with a torn ACL, but let’s hope this isn’t it for the man who has played his entire major league career for manager Bobby Cox. Chipper has made it known since last season that retirement could be around the corner, but like Baseball Tonight’s Eduardo Perez, I don’t see Chipper calling it quits now that his season has ended unexpectedly. He wants to go out on his own terms, and these aren’t them. At 38, his career is nearing the end, but I find it hard to believe that he will be able to say good-bye after watching from the bench as his team battles for the National League crown.
Baltimore Orioles
13 August 2010
21 May 2010
Julio Franco may be the oldest player in Major League history to hit a home run (he also holds a number of other oldest player records), but Jamie Moyer has established himself as the game’s new Ageless Wonder. In throwing a two-hitter against the Braves on May 7th, the 47-year-old became the oldest player to throw a complete game shutout.
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23 April 2010
As if Ubaldo Jimenez’s no-hitter was not enough excitement for one day, the Mets and Cardinals took part in a marathon contest, playing a 20-inning game Saturday in St. Louis. If that does not…, the most remarkable part of the monumental occasion was that the two teams went scoreless through the first 18 frames! That’s like back-to-back shutouts being thrown by both teams! In a game that took nearly seven hours and featured an astounding 18 pitchers (two of whom were actually position players that Cardinals manager Tony La Russa sent to the hill), three Met hitters – Jose Reyes, Jason Bay, and Jeff Francoeur – went a combined 0 for 21. That is an ugly line in the box score for three of the team’s four best offensive players.
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26 March 2010
Today’s post is brought to you from Toledo, Ohio. With Spring Training wrapping up in just over a week, every team has reason to be hopeful that this will be their year. Though it is widely accepted that exhibition games are meaningless, the Giants should feel good about their 18-7 record this spring, and the Indians are certainly pleased that they have won 13 of their first 19 games. The reigning World Series champion Yankees, meanwhile, can shake off their 9-12 record as rustiness. It may not have the excitement of October, but April is when everyone’s glass is half full; no one has ground to make up or nagging injuries to play through. Every team has a share of first place, and that’s what makes it the most promising time of the year.
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12 February 2010
Tom Glavine and Frank Thomas officially announced their retirements this week, ending speculation that either one would attempt a comeback in 2010 after not appearing in a big league game last season. Glavine was a great finesse pitcher of his generation, and Thomas was a premiere slugger of the nineties.
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18 December 2009
After the way Cliff Lee pitched against the Yankees in the World Series six weeks ago, I would have been surprised to hear that the Phillies were even listening to offers for their ace. But when the chance to acquire Roy Halladay comes around, I suppose any team would be crazy not to listen. Before I knew it, Halladay was a Phillie and Lee was heading to Seattle, where he’ll join his third club in the span of four and a half months. How often does that happen to the defending Cy Young Award winner?
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9 October 2009
The 12-inning thriller that was the last regular season game ever played at the Metrodome was exactly what I wanted to see. When the Twins and Tigers played a four-game series in Detroit last week, I found myself rooting for the Twins to close the gap in order to create an exciting finish to the regular season – ideally a one-game playoff. When that happened, I decided it would be great for the city of Detroit to send their team to the playoffs, but what I wanted most was to see a great game. My wish came true when the two teams played a nail-biter that could have gone either way, but eventually sent Minnesota to the postseason. Props to both teams for giving the fans what they deserved.
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25 September 2009
Braves manager Bobby Cox announced this week his plans to retire after the 2010 season and to immediately take on a consulting role with the team. Cox has won 2,409 games as a manager and is fourth all-time in the category, behind only Connie Mack (3,731), John McGraw (2,763) and current Cardinals manager Tony La Russa (2,550). Cox has five pennants and one World Series title to his name, and won the Manager of the Year award four times. Under his leadership, the Braves have won 100 games six times. The next manager of the Atlanta Braves will have big shoes to fill.
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14 August 2009
In the last week, baseball fans have been exposed to a number of unfortunate incidents that involved big-name, All-Star players. My thoughts on each of them follow.
Kevin Youkilis charging the mound: Youk let his emotions get the best of him on Tuesday night after getting plunked in the back for the second consecutive night. The Red Sox need Youk’s bat in the lineup and his glove in the field. Now they have neither for five games.
Continue reading "Poor behavior on and off the field is Bad for Ball"
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31 July 2009
Since I last posted before my trip to Spain, there have been a number of noteworthy occurrences in Major League Baseball.
The American League won yet another All-Star Game – by a single run for the fourth year in a row. Manny Ramirez returned from his 50-game suspension. The Nationals fired manager Manny Acta. Jonathan Sanchez threw the season’s first no-hitter. The Braves gave up on underachieving hometown boy Jeff Francouer, and traded him to the Mets for Ryan Church, who hit the foul ball I caught at RFK in 2007. The most exciting news, however, took place the day I returned from my voyage: Mark Buerhle of the White Sox threw a perfect game. The following day, the A’s traded slugger Matt Holliday to the Cardinals, who now have protection for Albert Pujols.
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14 July 2009
Pittsburgh Pirates Mid-Season Analysis
I moved to Western Maryland a couple of weeks ago and this is part of my ongoing attempt to learn about the sports interests here. Baseball-wise it’s the Pirates, Orioles, and Nationals, and I wanted to get into the one with the best current chance of a playoff push. The Nats are obviously out and the Orioles are 14 games behind first in a ridiculously hard division, so that leaves the Pirates, a tantalizing Homer-pick at 9.5 behind in the absurdly mediocre NL Central. On paper it looks possible that any team could take it, and I hoped that statistical analysis would show some obscure Pirates advantage that could take them over the top, but I just can’t find it. I’m not saying that an X-factor doesn’t exist, just that anyone who claims there is one is obviously from Pittsburgh. In fact, this team so cries for the use of the “The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly” comparison that I spent ten whole minutes looking up how I could work it in. And here it is: Mario Brega, who played Cpl. Wallace, the big cross-eyed prison guard in the film who beat up Tuco to get the name of the cemetery the money was buried in for Angel Eyes ,died 15 years ago this month. So to honor his memory, here’s a breakdown of the Pirates in the spirit of that great film (I resisted using a corresponding pirate-based ranking system, i.e.; Avast Ye Maties, Walk the Plank, and Totally Somalian because even I have standards).
Continue reading "Pittsburgh Pirates All-Star Break Analysis"
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24 April 2009
Someone at MLB must have read my blog post from 5/9/08 and decided that All-Star voting needed to start even earlier this season just to see my reaction. Keep in mind that the 2009 season began later than the 2008 season.
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10 April 2009
Tragedy struck the baseball world Thursday morning, as Angels 22-year-old rookie Nick Adenhart, hours removed from making his season debut, died in a car crash. In just his fourth-ever big-league start, Adenhart threw six shutout innings against the Athletics and left with his team leading 3-0, only to see the Angels’ bullpen surrender the lead and lose 6-4.
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27 February 2009
Big baseball news in my life: I recently found out that I will be working as the Press Liaison for Team Italy at the 2009 World Baseball Classic, set to begin next week.
In the second-ever WBC, 16 teams representing countries in all continents other than Antarctica – from the 2006 WBC champion Japan to Australia to the Republic of South Africa – will vie to be crowned true World Champions of the game of baseball. (One could argue that the World Series is something of a misnomer.) With baseball not scheduled as one of the events at the 2012 Olympics in London, the WBC is an opportunity for players to represent their countries on the big stage.
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16 January 2009
Koji Uehara may not be the answer to Orioles fans’ prayers, but he’s certainly a start. Though it is hard to judge stats from Japanese baseball (because of the perceived lower level of competition and other factors), Uehara holds a 112-62 record with a 3.01 E.R.A. in his 10-year career in Japan. In 1998, he won 15 consecutive starts and 20 overall on his way to being named Rookie of the Year.
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19 December 2008
Francisco Rodriguez just signed a big-money contract with the Mets, who have missed the playoffs the last two seasons. CC Sabathia chose to become the highest-paid pitcher in baseball history, signing with the Yankees in spite of the fact that they play in what is considered the toughest division in baseball and failed to make the postseason in 2008. What drew Sabathia to the Bronx and K-Rod to Queens? It wasn’t a near-guarantee to return to the playoffs, which they could have had with the Angels. They didn’t grow up in New York dreaming of wearing Yankee Pinstripes and Met blue and orange one day. There’s only one thing it could be: money – $161 million for seven years of Sabathia and $37 million for three years of Rodriguez.
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5 December 2008
The Orioles still have a huge hole at shortstop, but that doesn’t mean it was a bad idea to trade their highest-paid player last offseason. Miguel Tejada’s offensive numbers in his first season with the Astros were sub-par and certainly not worthy of the money he is making. In hitter-friendly Minute Maid Park, a .283/.314/.415 line from one of Houston’s heavy hitters is not going to cut it. Believe it or not, Miggy’s numbers actually declined from 2007 (.296/.357/.442), when he battled injuries and underachievement in what turned out to be his last season in Baltimore.
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1 August 2008
What an All-Star Game! Though I incorrectly predicted the National League would win for the first time since 1996, I enjoyed the game more than those in recent memory. My favorite play had to be Nate McLouth’s throw home to nail Dioner Navarro at the plate in the bottom of the eleventh. I wanted to see Rockies pitcher Aaron Cook named the All-Star MVP despite his team losing the game, but that has happened just twice in the award’s history, the last time being 1970. Cook survived two errors by Dan Uggla (who made three in total in extra innings after replacing starting second baseman Chase Utley) and tossed three scoreless innings, getting out of a bases-loaded no-out jam in the 10th that his defense got him into.
Continue reading "All-Star Highlights, Snubs, Other Thoughts"
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