So What If Crisp Can Steal
February 3, 2006Here is one projected starting line up that I've seen: Crisp, Loretta, Ortiz, Ramirez, Youkilis, Nixon, Varitek, Lowell, Gonzalez. I don't like it. Here's the order I'd prefer to see: Loretta, Youkilis, Ortiz,
Youkilis is the lineup's calculated risk with only 79 major league at bats last year, but who among us doesn't think he's ready to play everyday? Talk about paying dues - he's been grinding in Pawtucket for years. The time is finally here to see what the Youk can do. Hayes brings up a good point by writing that he hopes to see Tito place the Greek God of On-Base-Percentage into the number two slot and use Loretta as leadoff - Loretta has a decent OBP, but doesn't carry much
Crisp would make for a nice number six guy. Just because the man can steal bases is no reason to make him the lead off hitter of the Boston Red Sox as many Boston sports writers are penning for - the Sox don't steal bases (except when it counts). The bottom line is that Crisp doesn't have a high OBP, and the Sox want guys on base when Papi and
Varitek has got to be the number 5 - Papi, Manny, and Tek are the heart of this order with each of them able to get on base and hit for power.
Trot'll work out nicely in the seven slot. He's got a medium ability to get on base, and he's got medium power. Plus, it's the number he wears
I stuck Lowell at number 8 based on last year's numbers. If he hits like pre-2005, then all bets are off. A return to form for Lowell would make him much more valuable towards the front of the line up where he
With all this said, please, let's not forget good people, that spring training hasn't even begun. If you look at pre-spring training starting line-ups for 2004, then you'll see Nixon and Garciaparra sitting snugly amongst the other cowboy-uppers, but neither of them saw an at bat on
Theo Fever Can Cause Dementia
January 20, 2006I have been upset about the replacement of Mueller with Mike Lowell at third base mostly because of the combination of Mueller being my favorite player and Lowell's abysmal 2005 season. Lowell's 2005 wasn't just bad, it was horrendous. However, one year, a career doesn't make. So I decided to look at a larger sample, say 5 years. Low and behold my eyes played tricks over the last five years, Lowell was the better offensive player. Not by much, but by enough. 2005 and 2003 were Mueller's, but 2004, 2002, and 2001 were Lowell's and Lowell is 3 years younger than Mueller (and less prone to injury as can be seen
It's funny, but they're almost the same offensive player. If we call 2005 an injury year for Lowell (mental
Moving forward two years Mueller was relatively healthy in 2005, Lowell's crappy year, and Mueller only had 4 more RBI's and 13 more runs on the most productive line-up in baseball (I grant that runs and RBI's aren't the most scientific comparison, but still). It could be argued that Mueller wouldn't have been better than Lowell in 2005 if
It's comforting to see that the Red Sox might be fine at third base in 2006 with the out-ing of Mueller and the in-ing of Lowell - maybe even better, if Lowell returns to pre-2005 form. But the fact remains that Mueller is not an average player. Average players don't win batting titles; average players don't hit grand slams from both sides of the plate in one game; and average players don't get nicknames like "Billy Ballgame." It bothers me that the Boston sports media (and often the Boston fans) tend to re-write a player's history after they leave the Sox. They suddenly lose all the talent that they had while they wore a Boston uniform. As one of the most educated sports towns in the country we have one important thing to learn if we want to have more seasons like 2004 - we need to be baseball fans first, and Red Sox fans second.
Leave It To College Beaver
January 2, 2006
In 1996 I philosophized that any genius entrepreneur would try to create a second Super Bowl since the current one is the largest day of promotional commerce in existence. I predicted that it would be The College Super Bowl or Super Bowl II. The BCS is the failed, transitional precursor to this (until there is a playoff) but this year they accidentally got it right. History will look back at this Wednesday's game as the first College Super Bowl like MTV's The Real World is widely regarded as the first Reality Show. Do I dare put a stamp on this vision by doing $2 USC-Texas, College Super Bowl Squares?
(X rebutted that he thought Leave It To Beaver was the first "reality show."
Kelp still RIPs (the ball)
July 25, 2005I mean who else, but Kelp, had back-to-back inside-the-park bunt home-runs? Who else herded and slaughtered his own cattle to ensure a stiff yet supple glove? Who else was not only a master grounds-keeper but could also explain the Brownian Motion of his knuckleball? Don't
Only Kelp would dare you to love the game more than he did. Only Kelp would call for the 7th Inning Stretch of the Imagination. Only Kelp would have the largest collection of beach balls that accidently made it onto the field of play such that play was halted during a World
When I got home from work, I was flipping through the Baseball Encyclopedia and it brought back some memories. I had forgotten that Kelp was the only player to pitch, to bat, and to umpire. Yes, on July 30, 1976 in Baltimore he impersonated an umpire. His longtime rival was making a bid at Kelp's "strike-outs during a solar eclipse" record. Kelp gave out lots of bases on balls that day and latter in the week when he was exposed by a reporter, he explained: "I don't mind losing
Kelp was loyal that way. And, his mother and his other couple of fans loved him back all the more. He would get to you. He got to me. I was lucky enough to be at the game in Arlington, Texas when he pitched a shutout against those bastards, the Royals. He looked buff and mighty on the mound that night. And who can forget, with just one more out to go, he produced a puppy from beneath his jersey and presented it to a young fan in the front row. He had the whole stadium bawling, including the Royal's clean-up hitter who proceeded to swing three times lamely,
Kelp was a fierce competitor with that madman edge. Kelp once had a bat made out of rare and brittle type of balsa wood. The bat exploded upon contact with the baseball. The catcher left the game with 50 toothpicks in his face. Oh, the Cowhide Brand! That Kelpian Insanity! Kelp once told a reporter he would slide head first into third base because he always pictured it to be a naked young woman with her legs wide open. Which might not only explain all of the triples, but also the chatter
Sure, he was a silly madman, a baseball evil genius, and a bastard low-life drunk grounds-keeper licking life's spitball with his own tongue... but Kelp had no qualms about winning. He was a great near-champion. It is said by his teammates that Kelps' thirst for
Kelp got his start in the minor leagues, as a regular caller to a local sports radio show. Kelp complained so much about the hometown team that the host of the show finally said to Kelp, "Sisu or tissu! Do you think you can do any better?" And so what started out to be the radio promotion dare of the decade, turned out to be start of an not-so-quite
Some say, if Kelp had ever bothered to tie his shoelaces, he would have been bronzed and placed along side the Legends. But, regardless, he was the only player to ever stub a toe on homeplate and go on the 15-day disabled list, his baseball card is still worth well over $3.52, and he
I know it is unpopular to be a "Cowhide" fan. After all, wasn't it Kelp that said, "They call the damn umpires umpires, because 'Dumb Fuck' is reserved for the fans." But, I've got a theory going that he considered himself the biggest fan of the past-time ever. Why else would he have spiked himself to death on that day today twenty years ago? Perhaps he just liked all things to do with corks, logically putting wine bottles
Participant Observation
July 2, 2005Here I am living amongst the "primitives" and adopting their ways. One of the really basic problems with this is that I am finding myself
Culture Is Really Tricky To Pin Down
July 2, 2005All means of communication, art, material things and objects that a society has in common are all pretty nifty once you get a handle on the