The Bull-Moose Juju
April 25, 2013 by Ted Leavengood · 2 Comments
As the first month of the baseball season drew to a close in 2012, the Gio Gonzalez trade looked like an inspiration. Stephen Strasburg was back and the Nationals had the best pitching in the National League. Davey Johnson was looking for offense and summoned Bryce Harper. Everything Mike Rizzo touched in 2012 turned to […]
The Baseball Historian’s Notes for April 14, 2013
April 14, 2013 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
The 2013 baseball season has gotten off to a rollicking start. From Yu Darvish’s near-perfect game to the exciting emergence of young players like New York Mets’ pitcher Matt Harvey, there has been a lot of good stuff for fans to digest. For all the fun baseball provides, the game also sometimes has a darker […]
At 23 and 5-Foot-6, ‘Veteran’ Independent Umpire Takes His Talent to Affiliated Baseball
April 13, 2013 by Bob Wirz · Leave a Comment
Kevin Winn couldn’t be blamed if he popped a few pride buttons these days with three of the umpires he has supervised working major league spring training games and half of the 10-man umpire contingent in the Class A California League coming out of the American Association, but I found him this week largely singing […]
Early Look at Possible NL Pennant Match Up in Cincy
April 5, 2013 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
The baseball season is the sum of a million small parts, “millions and millions of stars” as Carl Sagan used to say. As with the cosmos, the magic of baseball is both the enchanted aggregate and its many component parts. And that is why even at this early juncture there is no shortage of excitement […]
We Declare Peace on War
March 28, 2013 by Josh Robbins · Leave a Comment
The 2013 Major League Baseball season begins Sunday night. In preparation for another exciting campaign, the founders at 60ft6in.com has introduced a new pitching metric called Pitcher Evaluation ACE (PEACE). This new tool compares each pitching season to the average historical season. The structure of PEACE is similar to Factor12. However, adjustments have been made to account for […]
Early Thoughts on the 2012 AL Rookie of the Year Race
June 15, 2012 by Andrew Martin · 4 Comments
While still early, the 2012 major league baseball season is now more than a third over, and many rookies have made intentions about being up to stay clear through their play. It’s never too early to start speculating about the Rookie of the Year race, and the American League has a number of impressive candidates. […]
Can They Keep Up Their Hot Starts?
June 1, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
The first third of the baseball season is just wrapping up and has already been marked by numerous injuries, slow starts, and surprises galore. In particular there are some players who have come out of relative obscurity and are well on their way to posting seasons beyond what even the most optimistic analysts predicted during […]
While Early, Attendance Is Strong With Numerous Crowds of 7,000
May 25, 2012 by Bob Wirz · Leave a Comment
Joke all you want about how everything seems bigger in Texas, but there is a certain truth in the early weeks of the Independent Baseball season with El Paso luring the biggest single game crowd (7,823) and Sugar Land reaching the 7,000 plateau in each of its first six home games. Lone Star State teams […]
Independent Baseball Season Fires Up Next Week With Three More Leagues Starting Play
May 11, 2012 by Bob Wirz · Leave a Comment
Joe Calfapietra is one of the real veterans among the 32 Independent Baseball managers preparing teams to open the season in one week (May 17) when the Can-Am League, American Association and Frontier League hear the “Play Ball” cry. The 42-year-old New Jersey Jackals skipper has had time to develop a plan for building a […]
The Day of the (Starting) Pitcher
April 6, 2012 by Gabriel Schechter · 2 Comments
So we’re one day into the new baseball season, and most of what we’ve seen is great starting pitching. Even though the Mets moved in the outfield fences at Citi Field, the Mets and Braves managed to scratch out one puny run between them. Kyle Lohse didn’t allow a hit to the Marlins until the […]
Mr. President, Baseball Lasts Til Almost November
January 13, 2012 by Ted Leavengood · 3 Comments
The St. Louis Cardinals are in the Rose Garden soon for the customary victory lap stop-over at the White House. It will be a rare baseball event for President Obama, and that is a sad commentary for both the game and for a president whose political advisors are so clearly asleep at the switch. Presidents […]
Wrong Place, Wrong Time, Good Fries
October 13, 2011 by Terry Keshner · 1 Comment
When the team you root for is left home during October the true frustration of a sub-par season begins to painfully nip at your toes and whisper profanities into your ear. That’s because watching good teams fight for the crown in the playoffs makes one realize just how bad – and uncontending – your team […]
Clearing The Bases
September 30, 2011 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
Wow, what a last couple of days in the baseball season. Hard to believe that both the Braves and Red Sox choked up huge leads in the month of September, but as everyone likes to say, “that is why they play the games”. The playoff matchups in the Wildcard round offer up some intriguing possibilities. […]
Gambling at the Hall of Fame: Part Three
July 29, 2011 by Gabriel Schechter · 1 Comment
In the last of this three-part series on gambling at the Hall of Fame (please read the first two parts if you haven’t already), it’s time to talk about gambling that goes on AT the museum every day of the year. I’m referring to fantasy sports, and if your reflex response is “gee, that’s no […]
Out of the Park Baseball 12 Available Now!
June 22, 2011 by Seamheads · 5 Comments
Now Batting: Out of the Park Baseball 12! Own the Greatest Baseball Sim We’ve Ever Shipped For Just $39.99! Swing, batta, batta! Sa-wing, batta! The baseball season is underway, and now you can launch your digital version of the annual pennant chase in Out of the Park Baseball 12, the most comprehensive version yet of […]
Clearing The Bases
June 11, 2011 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
The baseball season is more than 1/3 completed, the weather is warming up, and pennant races are starting to shape up. We are in mid-June; no longer can any player state that they are in a slump. Slumps don’t last two plus months. With that in mind we are going to take a look at […]
Spring Into Winter
March 31, 2011 by Terry Keshner · Leave a Comment
The problem with starting the baseball season in March is that we haven’t had enough time to digest spring training. Or at least, to write about it. I spent the final weekend of spring play in Arizona and caught games at Camelback Ranch – the home of the Chicago White Sox and Los Angeles Dodgers […]
10 Reasons You Should Already Be Especially Psyched for Opening Day
March 16, 2011 by Seamheads · Leave a Comment
The smell of freshly laid sod, ballpark hot dogs and seven-dollar beer is in the air (or on the ground). Baseball season is quickly approaching, and fans everywhere — well, perhaps except for Houston, Pittsburgh and Seattle — are champing at the bit to find out how the 2011 MLB season will unfold. Opening Day […]
Daubach Interesting Choice as Bryce Harper’s First Manager
March 10, 2011 by Bob Wirz · Leave a Comment
    One of the charms of spring training that builds so much momentum for a baseball season is the great writing that emerges, and the memorable stories those in the baseball-writing business dig up.      Washington Post writer Dave Sheinin brought to the surface the fact Brian Daubach, who managed in the Can-Am League at […]
The Class of 2010 – the New Hall of Famers
October 29, 2010 by Michael Hoban · Leave a Comment
At the beginning of the 2010 baseball season, there were eight active major league players who had already earned obvious Hall of Fame numbers during their careers. Here are those players: Alex Rodriguez, Manny Ramirez, Ken Griffey, Jr., Chipper Jones, Derek Jeter, Jim Thome, Jason Giambi and Mariano Rivera. By the end of the 2010 […]
Brownsten finding his way
September 16, 2010 by Paul Gotham · Leave a Comment
Cory Brownsten is right where he belongs. The Lockport, New York native will board an airplane with his destination set for Orlando, Florida – home of the Atlanta Braves training complex. He will spend the next few weeks in the MLB fall instructional league and prepare for the 2011 baseball season.
Who’s the Alpha?
September 14, 2010 by Josh Deitch · Leave a Comment
The battle over who’s the alpha dog of the American League East has commenced, and the Tampa Bay Rays drew first blood.
Late Summer Concerns of a Yankee Fan
September 4, 2010 by Josh Deitch · Leave a Comment
This summer, I’ve finished up a master’s degree and changed my relationship status to “married.â€Â I haven’t had a ton of time to watch my beloved Yankees, but I have observed as they’ve compiled the best record in the majors, along with the best run-differential in the league. They’re in first place in the AL […]
A ‘Strasburg Was Here’ Doubleheader
September 1, 2010 by Gerry Von Hendy · 1 Comment
Game One Friday, August 27, 2010 Syracuse, N.Y. “The greatest powers of the physical environment slam into the resilient forces of life, and nothing much happens.” E.O. Wilson, The Diversity of Life             It’s the first day of the New York State Fair, and I’ve dropped my sister off for a concert by her favorite […]
Former Baseball Player Charlie Maxwell Honored in Paw Paw, Michigan on Monument and Ball Diamond
August 30, 2010 by David Stalker · 10 Comments
Paw Paw, Michigan celebrated Charlie Maxwell Days on August 7- 8, 2010. The two day event started Saturday in downtown Paw Paw at the Carnegie Center. From 10:00 to 3:00, family, friends and fans were able to attend the open house and view a slide show and memorabilia. Following this event there was an open […]
Those Who Dominated the Mexican League in Offense Now Back in Indy Leagues for Late-Season Run
August 26, 2010 by Bob Wirz · Leave a Comment
It is not uncommon early in an Independent Baseball season to see a number of quality players opt to play in Mexico or an Asian league where they can make more money. But the Mexican League ends early so some of those who have been prominent do an about face and come back to the […]
Denny’s Chickens Interview Baseball Superstar John Kruk
July 12, 2010 by Seamheads · Leave a Comment
From Tim Dove: This baseball season, Denny’s is teaming up with ESPN to sponsor Wednesday Night Baseball’s “K Zone†and “Value Player†features and the “Touch ‘Em All†and “Grand Slam Moment†elements during Baseball Tonight. As part of Denny’s commitment to baseball, The Chickens Show interviews All-Star John Kruk, and Denny’s presents the 2-4-6-8 […]
Do the Hats Really Have to Be Red, White, and Blue?
July 6, 2010 by Josh Deitch · 3 Comments
Memorial Day, Independence Day, and Labor Day. They’re the holy trinity of American summer holidays. The triumvirate of patriotic celebrations. The mention of these three days evokes the image of American flags planted at the heads of lawns, the scent of charcoal slowly burning to its embers, and the mild droning of baseball games playing […]
The Third Sunday in June
June 17, 2010 by Joe Shrode · Leave a Comment
As a child, I didn’t know the date of Father’s Day. I knew my friend Bob couldn’t come out and play because his family celebrated with his dad. I’d walk past his house anyway, hoping he would see me. When he didn’t come out I would hang out in the tree house; or ride my […]
Remembering “The Bird”
May 4, 2010 by Bob Lazzari · 2 Comments
The year was 1976; “Frampton Comes Alive” was gaining in music popularity, a former football player was still patrolling the White House, and yours truly had just received a driver’s license. Baseball season started with my next-door-neighbor, Al–a HUGE Detroit fan–telling me about this eccentric, young kid who had made the Tigers’ pitching staff. “They […]
Atlantic League Economics Seem Bright As 2010 Independent Baseball Season Launches
As best we can read it, the economic picture could not look a whole lot better than it does in the Atlantic League as the 13-year-old circuit prepared to raise the curtain on the 2010 Independent Baseball season this very evening (Thursday). Definitive figures are not easily assembled, but Camden (NJ) Riversharks General Manager Adam […]
Live It, Love it
April 17, 2010 by Josh Deitch · 2 Comments
For a few weeks now, things have been a little different for me. I’ve had a spring in my step, a twinkle in my eyes, and a smile curling from the corner of my lips. The grass has been greener, the sun shining brighter, and the pollen count off the charts. I’m in love, you […]
Stud prospect using baseball to do his part in community
March 24, 2010 by Steve Lenox · 1 Comment
“I hope I can inspire you, no matter what your age, please know that you too can do something to make a difference in your community everyday.â€Â Elliot Mast The above mission statement comes from an 11-year-old young man who hails from Altoona, PA. As he readies himself for his upcoming baseball season, Elliot Mast […]
The Waiting is the Hardest Part…
March 18, 2010 by Shelly Riley · 1 Comment
Tom Petty was right, the waiting is the hardest part. The Tigers home opener is exactly 20 days away and I can’t wait any longer. My ball park bag is packed, my score books are ready, my pencils are sharpened, binoculars are focused, opening day attire picked out, day off of work approved, tickets in the mail, but alas, […]
Lyman Bostock: What Might Have Been
March 18, 2010 by Bob Lazzari · Leave a Comment
What coulda been–a man taken from us WAY too soon…. It’s been 35 years since the very memorable 1975 baseball season–one that saw future Hall of Famers Jim Palmer and Tom Seaver win Cy Young Awards, Frank Robinson become MLB’s first black manager, and another “no-no” thrown by Nolan Ryan. It also featured the Tigers […]