Clearing The Bases
June 12, 2012 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
What shall we talk about tonight? So many things going on in the world of fantasy baseball that I feel we need a news and notes column to go over each team. We’ll do the American League first, followed by the National League on Thursday. As always, these teams are in no particular order. […]
The Glory Days: Stocking the Angels and Senators
June 1, 2012 by Thad Mumau · Leave a Comment
On December 14, 1960, an expansion draft was held to stock the Los Angeles Angels and Washington Senators. The eight American League teams were required to pull seven players apiece from active rosters (as of August 31, 1960) and eight additional players from their 40-man rosters and make them available for the draft. The Senators […]
Triple-A Veteran Ed Nottle’s Willingness to Move In ’93 Was an Early Sign Independent League Baseball Would Work
May 18, 2012 by Bob Wirz · Leave a Comment
The 20th season of modern day Independent Baseball gets going full steam tonight (Thursday) when the Frontier League, American Association and Can-Am League join the Atlantic League, which has a three-week head start. Miles Wolff and Ed Nottle, two of the prominent names in the business which currently has 50 teams and annually entertains from […]
NY Times Unloads Last of Red Sox Stake
May 16, 2012 by Seamheads · Leave a Comment
NY Times unloads last of Red Sox stake (via AFP) The New York Times Co., has sold its remaining stake in the Boston Red Sox baseball team for $63 million as the struggling media group moves to focus on its core operations. A regulatory filing Friday said the New York Times Company sold its remaining […]
Clearing The Bases
May 15, 2012 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
Major League Baseball teams for the most part use the first third of the season (April, May) to evaluate their team, the middle third (June, July) to make acquisitions to help the team, and the last third (August, September) to fight for a playoff run. Now trading won’t really pick up for another month or […]
Josh Beckett Working Hard to Assume Role of Scapegoat
May 10, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
Even the most optimistic Boston Red Sox fans would be hard-pressed to classify the team’ last 60 or so games as a slump because a slump implies an anticipated return to an expected level. Since blowing a seemingly insurmountable lead for the wildcard in the final month of the 2011 season, the team has looked […]
Clearing The Bases
May 8, 2012 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
On April 10 I wrote at column detailing the closer situation for each team because there had been a few injuries during spring training that took a couple of closers out for the season. Well a month later half of baseball no longer has the same pitcher closing for them that they planned on to […]
Humble Phil, Powerful Paul
April 27, 2012 by Terry Keshner · Leave a Comment
April 26, 2012 Philip Humber will always be associated with perfection. He just won’t always pitch that way. One start after throwing a perfect game against the Seattle Mariners, the White Sox right-hander plummeted back to reality Thursday night at Chicago’s U.S. Cellular Field, surrendering nine earned runs in a 10-3 loss to the Boston […]
April 20, 1912: The First Game at Fenway Park
April 19, 2012 by Arne Christensen · Leave a Comment
To celebrate the 100th anniversary of Fenway Park, here is a look at how the Boston Globe of April 21, 1912 described the first game at Fenway, played the day previously. Of course it was a Red Sox-Yankees affair, with perhaps Boston’s best team ever winning 7-6 on a run in the 11th. (The Yankees, […]
Bobby Valentine: Enemy of Progress
April 19, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
The Boston Red Sox started off this season in miserable fashion, dropping 5 of their first 6 games, displaying atrocious pitching, and losing MVP candidate Jacoby Ellsbury to injury. Things didn’t look good heading into last weekend, but the team somehow rallied and put together an impressive 3 game winning streak against the formidable Tampa […]
Clearing The Bases
April 10, 2012 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
We always say at draft time don’t overpay for saves, and that piece of advice seems to be especially important this season. Closers normally take a beating as it is the one spot on a baseball team that is sure to have the biggest turnover year after year. Not every relief pitcher is capable of […]
What Does F12 Really Mean?
April 7, 2012 by Josh Robbins · 1 Comment
As previously defined, the Factor12 Rating (F12) is an analytic measurement utilizing league average performance to compare the value of all MLB pitchers. In basic terms, F12 is a rating that takes into account all aspects of pitching. It produces a number on a scale of 0.000-infinity (theoretically), where the average pitcher’s value is 24.000. […]
Bob Lazzari’s Baseball Predictions
April 2, 2012 by Bob Lazzari · Leave a Comment
Yes, it’s that time of the year, folks–the obligatory crapshoot better-known as making MLB predictions. Here’s how they’ll finish in 2012…… AL EAST N.Y. Yankees T.B. Rays Boston Red Sox Toronto Blue Jays Baltimore Orioles AL CENTRAL Detroit Tigers Cleveland Indians K.C. Royals Minnesota Twins Chicago White Sox AL WEST L.A. Angels Texas Rangers Oakland […]
Clearing The Bases
October 26, 2011 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
The 2011 World Series has certainly been memorable. Whether it’s Albert Pujols hitting three HRs in a single game or phone gate when Tony LaRussa couldn’t get Jason Motte warmed up in the bullpen during Game 5, not like we’re going to forget this series anytime soon. Let’s see what else is going on throughout […]
Dealing with the Red Sox Starting Pitchers
October 21, 2011 by Andrew Martin · 3 Comments
More details keep emerging about the hijinks of the top three pitchers in the 2011 Boston Red Sox starting rotation. Just when fans think it can’t get any worse, it does. Although the 2012 season is a ways off, it feels impossible to think right now about how the Red Sox can handle this situation […]
BBA Names Arizona’s Gibson, Tampa Bay’s Maddon Top Managers
October 10, 2011 by Seamheads · Leave a Comment
Top Blogger Organization Awards Connie Mack Award For 2011 Arizona Diamondbacks manager Kirk Gibson and Tampa Bay Rays manager Joe Maddon were named the 2011 Connie Mack Award winners today by the Baseball Bloggers Alliance. The Connie Mack Award recognizes those considered the top manager for the season. Gibson took over an Arizona team that […]
What Sunk the Braves
October 2, 2011 by Dan Schlossberg · 2 Comments
Good teams don’t fold for no apparent reason. Though buried by the publicity piled onto the Boston Red Sox, who also slipped out of the playoff picture in September, the Atlanta Braves should have seen their slide coming. Plagued all season by an inability to score runs, the Braves plodded through the 2011 season by […]
Termino La Regular…Comienza el Juego De Verdad (Finished the Regular Season…Real Game Begins)
September 30, 2011 by Gustavo Hidalgo Estrada · Leave a Comment
Se termino la temporada regular de las grandes ligas. este mes de septiembre supero con creces la emociones de Agosto. Todo definido. Listos los equipos para la siguiente fase. Al hacer el análisis de este periodo ,tenemos que comentar por obligatorio,por extraordinario , lo ocurrido en los últimos días del campeonato regular. En el Este […]
Wildest Card Wednesday Looked Like Tournament Play!
September 29, 2011 by Austin Gisriel · 2 Comments
Immediately, after Wildest Card Wednesday’s games had concluded, the folks at MLB Network and ESPN were saying that this was the greatest night of baseball in the game’s history. Now that we have a few hours’ perspective, it is clear that they were absolutely right. There has never been a night in which the numbers […]
Surviving Your Team’s Collapse
September 26, 2011 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
Until just a few weeks ago, I was traipsing down the path of the content and just, confident in my knowledge that my Boston Red Sox were well on their way to a deep run in the playoffs. They had the most dominant offense in baseball, a pitching staff that was at least adequate, and […]
Losing by Winning
September 26, 2011 by Josh Deitch · Leave a Comment
Sunday afternoon, embattled starter A.J. Burnett, with his postseason life largely on the line, toed the rubber against the freefalling Boston Red Sox. Seven and two-thirds of an inning later, Burnett moseyed toward the Yankees dugout, having struck out six, allowed but two earned runs, and driven another nail into the quickly closing coffin surrounding the Red Sox season. With the capacity crowd on its feet loudly cheering his name, Burnett ambled to the bench with all the alacrity of Mo Vaughn heading to a salad bar, clearly trying his hardest to make that moment last forever.
The Yankees had clinched everything they possibly could, they had the Sox under their boots, and the quixotic Burnett had thrown a gem.
Unfortunately, for Joe Girardi, that’s the worst thing that could have happened.
Here’s a Knuckle Sandwich
August 25, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
With his next win, Tim Wakefield will earn the 200th victory of his career. What better time to read “Knuckler: My Life with Baseball’s Most Confounding Pitch” by Tim Wakefield with Tony Massarotti? Read this book because: 1. Wakefield shares with you what few others know – how to throw the knuckleball. One umpire describes […]
Creighton Gubanich: Making a Grand Entrance
August 20, 2011 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
Drafted in the 6th round of the 1990 baseball draft by the Oakland Athletics, Creighton Gubanich’s 6-3 200 pound build represented his identity as a power hitting catcher. Also playing a little third and first, Gubanich posted solid numbers everywhere he went in the minors, but was blocked at the major league level by All […]
Clearing The Bases
July 27, 2011 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
Unless you’re not all that big a baseball fan, you know the non-waiver trade deadline is this Sunday at 4PM. It’s a major league team’s last chance to fix a problem on their roster before players must pass through waivers in order to be traded. Trades seem to be harder to work out in this […]
Catching up with Bob Zupcic
July 21, 2011 by Andrew Martin · 2 Comments
The first professional athlete I ever met was Ted Williams, when I was about 9 years old. The experience was extremely disappointing, given how profane and cranky Williams turned out to be, even to a little kid like myself. The second professional athlete I met was Bob Zupcic, when I was about 12 or 13 […]
The Memorial Day Brawl of 1932
May 29, 2011 by Mike Lynch · Leave a Comment
Administrative duties have kept me from writing much lately, so I thought I’d dust off an article I wrote for Memorial Day 2009. Enjoy! Twelve years after the Black Sox scandal decimated the White Sox and led to lifetime bans of eight players, a postgame brawl with umpire George Moriarty on Memorial Day 1932 could […]
Culmination or Collapse?
May 26, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
Oct. 2, 1978. Baseball fans readily cite it as the date one of the greatest games in history took place. True, it stands out amid the annals of one of sports’ greatest rivalries. It’s also true that a season hung in the balance. If only that was the end of it. Instead, Bill Reynolds writes, […]
Boston Hitting .500 in $20 Mil Club
May 23, 2011 by Andrew Tuttle · 2 Comments
Much can be said about the Boston Red Sox foray into the $20 million club. This year, for the first time in its history, the club signed a player for $20 million…a year. And, Boston followed that up a while later and signed a second player for $20 million…a year. Boston lost its first six games […]
The Game that Lasted Two Months
May 19, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
And you thought a D’Backs-Pirates game was long. How about the longest game in pro baseball history? The Pawtucket Red Sox and the Rochester Red Wings started their contest April 18, 1981. Eight hours later at 4:09 a.m. on April 19, umpires suspended the game. It resumed two months later. Dan Barry has all the […]
Boston Sweeps Yanks but Playoff Hopes Remain Dim
May 15, 2011 by Andrew Tuttle · 6 Comments
Boston has finally reached .500 this season but now midway through May it’s a likely bet the Red Sox playoff hopes in this overly-hyped season remain iffy at best. Their position in the standings is certainly not bleak, however, for the Red Sox to have any chance of reaching the playoffs, the team would have […]
Rico Petrocelli to Appear on “View From the Lone Red Seat” Tuesday
April 25, 2011 by Mike Lynch · Leave a Comment
Two-time American League All-Star shortstop and long-time member of the Boston Red Sox, Rico Petrocelli, will appear on Tuesday night’s episode of “View From the Lone Red Seat” to discuss Red Sox baseball and his career. Petrocelli was named to the A.L. All-Star team in 1967 and 1969, a year in which he established a […]
Terry Francona’s Do or Die Mission
April 18, 2011 by Andrew Tuttle · 2 Comments
“I think Francona should be gone by the end of the month and the pitching coach also. They both suck.†That’s not me saying it. I intercepted a message on an answering machine from one lifelong Red Sox fan (who lives in Rhode Island) to another lifelong fan. And, no I’m not talking the Twenty-oh-fours. […]
Boston Suffers from an Identity Crisis
April 5, 2011 by Andrew Tuttle · 1 Comment
Everyone knew (free agency) was affecting our club, but we didn’t talk much about it. The thing was, the fun had gone out of the game, not only that year but in the following seasons as well. Baseball went from a team orientation toward an individual orientation. Instead, new guys were coming in and the […]
Clearing The Bases: AL Predictions
April 3, 2011 by George Kurtz · 1 Comment
Clearing The Bases                                                                                                                                         April 3, 2011 By George Kurtz Yeah I know the season is four days old as of this writing, but today I’ll make my predictions for each division. It seems the wildcard is no longer a lock to come out of the American League East, not so much because the Yankees and […]
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 […]