Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds Deserve Hall of Fame Induction
December 29, 2014 by Ron Juckett · 5 Comments
Chances are Roger Clemens and Barry Bonds are not going to be inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame next summer in Cooperstown, NY, but they deserve the honor. The argument against Clemens and Bonds is valid. They, allegedly, juiced. Both men faced action in court and both beat perjury raps. If you are […]
The Baseball Historian’s Notes for August 5, 2013: A-Rod Lacks the Good Will to Help Himself
August 5, 2013 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
News is expected today announcing the fate of maligned New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez. For his role in the Biogenesis performance enhancer scandal, he is expected to face anything from a lengthy suspension to being banned from the game. He has reportedly vowed to fight to the end, and accept no punishment despite […]
The Kid from Santa Barbara
April 8, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! I’m sure you know who has the most career home runs (Barry Bonds with 762), who has the most career wins (Cy Young with 511), and who has the longest consecutive hitting streak in baseball history (Joe DiMaggio with 56). However, do you know who holds the record for most games played in as a […]
My Top Five Baseball Families
March 2, 2013 by Matt Nadel · 3 Comments
Hey baseball fans!Matt Nadel here with another dose of baseball history. In today’s post, I will be telling you all who I think are the top five families in baseball history. (Note that I originally posted this for Big Leagues Magazine, a really great online magazine that I write for. Hope you check it out.) Number […]
Kid Blogger Interviews MLB’s Official Historian
December 14, 2012 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! I just received the answers to the interview questions that I sent to…. John Thorn, the Official Historian for Major League Baseball! Thorn was appointed Official Baseball Historian for Major League Baseball by the Commissioner on March 1, 2011. He has written books like “Treasures of the Baseball Hall of Fame” and […]
There Are People Who Confused Things…
June 23, 2012 by Andrés Pascual · 1 Comment
I am one of those who felt (I wrote it in the article concerning the Bonds trial that it was a monstrosity to serve time in jail to any accused for offences arising from the use of steroids. When I read of the dismissal of all charges against Clemens, I felt relieved, because there was […]
2012 Milestones (And Beyond): Home Runs
January 14, 2012 by Mike Lynch · Leave a Comment
Depending on which camp you’re in, 2012 will either tickle you pink or make you throw up in your mouth. With 629 home runs already under his belt, Alex Rodriguez is only one away from tying former teammate Ken Griffey Jr. at 630 and 31 away from catching Willie Mays for fourth place on the […]
Poetic Justice
December 7, 2011 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
Following the winter meetings is like watching grass grow. Washington baseball fans are waiting anxiously to see whether Santa wraps Mark Buerhle up and places him in the Nationals stocking and if so, what else might there be under the tree. There is the issue of center field with so many options there that even […]
Clearing The Bases
October 19, 2011 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
The 2011 World Series is upon us with the Texas Rangers representing the American League, not a shock, and the St. Louis Cardinals doing the same for the National League, quite a shock. The Rangers were considered the best all around team in the AL for most of if not all of the season. Yes […]
Belated 2011 MLB Predictions
April 3, 2011 by Bob Lazzari · Leave a Comment
Yes, folks, the 2011 MLB season is underway. Rosters have changed and managers have changed; Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens HAVEN’T changed. Here’s how they’ll finish: AL EAST Boston Red Sox N.Y. Yankees T.B. Rays Baltimore Orioles Toronto Blue Jays AL CENTRAL Chicago White Sox Minnesota Twins Detroit Tigers Kansas City Royals Cleveland Indians AL WEST Texas […]
A Composite Portrait of Barry Bonds Before He Reached the Majors
March 5, 2011 by Arne Christensen · 3 Comments
These items are pulled together from various articles in newspapers from 1974 to early 1986. They’re presented here to shed some light on Bonds’ early personality and the talent and power he displayed before reaching the majors, many years before the steroids talk began. In 1974, Barry Bonds’ father, Bobby, left the Giants for the […]
The All-Left Field Team
March 1, 2011 by Dan McCloskey · 5 Comments
This post originally appeared on my personal blog, Left Field…hence, the concept of an All-Left Field Team.
With great power comes great responsibility
January 14, 2011 by John Cappello · Leave a Comment
September 24, 1988: While pointing his finger to the sky and staring tauntingly at rival Carl Lewis of the United States, Ben Johnson of Canada crosses the finish line as he breaks the 100-meter world record at the Olympic Games in Seoul, South Korea. Three days later, Johnson is stripped of his gold medal and […]
Tim Raines – Some Stars Get No Respect
November 21, 2010 by Michael Hoban · 2 Comments
Tim Raines appeared on the BBWAA Hall of Fame ballot for the third time in 2010. In 2008, he got 24.3% of the votes, and in 2009, he got only 22.6% of the vote. In 2010, he increased to 30.4%. This would apparently indicate that he does not have a good chance of being elected […]
Pete Rose: Justice Delivered, But Only Temporarily And Only In Theory
September 12, 2010 by Aaron Somers · 17 Comments
Twenty five years ago today one of the most hallowed records in baseball history was broken when Pete Rose singled to left field against San Diego Padres pitcher Eric Show (who’s tumultuous life and death were chronicled by ESPN’s Outside the Lines) for career hit number 4,192, passing the legendary Ty Cobb. Fireworks instantly went off […]
Steroids and Kids: Trying to Answer the Unanswerable Question
September 8, 2010 by Dave Heller · Leave a Comment
It started with an innocent question, as are all questions which come out of the mouth of an 8-year-old. Except this question cut at the heart of Major League Baseball – past, present and future. I was at Miller Park, attending a Brewers-Cardinals game with my wife and two sons. Up to the plate stepped […]
Just How Good were Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens?
August 2, 2010 by Michael Hoban · 2 Comments
Here is the short answer. According to the numbers alone, Barry Bonds had the #2 best career of any position player of the modern era (behind only Babe Ruth) and Roger Clemens is the greatest right-handed pitcher of the period (since 1920). And yet neither of these great players may make it into the Hall […]
Mr. President: It’s Time to Let Bonds and Clemens Fade Away
June 12, 2010 by Jon Pessah · Leave a Comment
Dear Barack, I know how big a sports fan you are, so I’m sure you saw yesterday’s court decision to throw out key evidence in the perjury case against Barry Bonds. Your prosecutors have not commented on whether they will continue to try the case or fold. So before they can decide to waste more […]
Great What-If Matchups
March 16, 2010 by Gabriel Schechter · 1 Comment
One of most baseball historians’ favorite things to speculate about is how certain players would have done if their careers had happened in different times and places and against different opponents. How spectacular would Ozzie Smith have been on a dirt infield with a small glove instead of on Astroturf? Suppose Ted Williams had been […]
Roger Talks, and the Seamheads.com Team Responds
March 8, 2010 by Jon Pessah · 1 Comment
After new Seamheads.com writer Jon Pessah sat down and talked with Roger Clemens last month, he polled his fellow Seamheads for their take on the Rocket and his place in baseball. Here’s the transcript of the conversation that followed. “I used to be the biggest Roger Clemens fan alive. Then he left the Sox and I […]