An Interview with Trevor Hoffman
October 19, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! I have another interview for you today! It’s with the great former closer Trevor Hoffman! It was arranged and recorded by the really cool web site, Sqor.com. By the way, Sqor (www.sqor.com) is a new sports and social networking web site that brings athlete content to fans from over 1,200 professional and amateur athletes, […]
An Interview with MLB Commissioner Selig
August 22, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! Today I have a very special interview for you. One of my biggest ones yet. It’s with a very famous baseball figure and someone who I am very honored to have interviewed via email. He used to be the owner of the Brewers, but he is currently the Commissioner of Major League […]
The Ryan Braun Debacle
August 19, 2013 by Paul Heinz · 3 Comments
As a lifetime Brewer fan and—until recently—a defender of Ryan Braun’s (yes, I was taken in by the ferocity of his public statement in February of 2012 . Call me an idiot, or, in the immortal words of Bugs Bunny, “What a gull-a-bull. What a nin-com-poop.”) I feel compelled to comment on the unfortunate situation […]
Kid Blogger’s Live Interview with Rollie Fingers
July 19, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! Here’s the latest in my series of Baseball Hall of Fame Classic live interviews. If you’d like a hint: this pitcher was a three-peat World Series winner and he also won my countdown of the greatest facial hair in the Hall of Fame. If you haven’t guessed who he is, I’m talking about […]
The Daily Stream: 4/13/2013
April 13, 2013 by Chris Mitchell · Leave a Comment
Saturday is the day where streaming truly begins. You have a good idea where you stand and what you need which makes risk taking a bit less risky and a bit more about pure desperation so lets get right into it. As I mentioned in yesterdays column, this week is unique because there have been […]
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 […]
Paul Molitor – The Ignitor
January 30, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! I have no idea why I haven’t blogged about this guy in the past. Why do I say that? Only because he is my favorite American League player in the history of baseball! I’ll give you a hint: he hit for average, was named 1993 World Series MVP, and “ignited” his team […]
Kid Blogger Interviews Brewers Owner Mark Attanasio
January 27, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! I have yet another interview for you! This time, it is with Milwaukee Brewers owner, Mark Attanasio! He was a really interesting guy and a fun person to interview. We spoke for over an hour!! And the Brewers happen to be my favorite National League team!! Anyway, in case you didn’t know much about […]
Produced Before Steroids: Happy Felsch’s Great Clouts in 1914
January 13, 2012 by Dennis Pajot · Leave a Comment
Oscar “Happy” Felsch was a Milwaukee boy who came to the American Association Brewers in August 1913, after playing with the Milwaukee/Fond du Lac Mollys of the Wisconsin-Illinois League. In the W-I League Felsch had hit .337, including 10 home runs, in 49 games—mostly as a shortstop. He only managed to hit .183 in for […]
Clearing The Bases
October 7, 2011 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
The Rays’ magic ran out in the 1st round playoff loss to the Rangers. They won the first game, but their lack of offense was a glaring weakness in three straight losses that sent them home. The Yankees had a disappointing end to their 2011 season with a Game 5 loss to the Tigers at […]
Clearing The Bases
July 19, 2011 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
There was no column last week as I was diagnosed with Lyme Disease and needed a few days to recover. I’m back now and with the non-waiver trading deadline just 12 days away it seems prudent to talk about some of the players that might need to send a change of address to the post […]
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 […]
A Cautionary Note
August 13, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
I’ve been thinking about this topic for a bit, but before I could write about it Brian Burwell, for once, beat me to it.  There’s been a lot of optimism out of the sweep of Cincinnati, as well there should be.  However, I’m not sure we can say this team has turned the corner and the […]
A Cardinal Weekend
June 7, 2010 by Daniel Shoptaw · Leave a Comment
The Cardinals had a good weekend against the Brewers, though it could have been better. Â Their slipup last night on ESPN’s game of the week dropped them back into a tie for first. Â I go over this series and the Reds series in my weekly column, but let’s take a look at them here as […]
2010 NL Central Preview
March 31, 2010 by Kevin Wheeler · Leave a Comment
The NL Central may not be the strongest division in baseball but the top four teams in for 2010 have all improved over what they were in 2009, at least on paper. There is some depth to this division that didn’t exist before and that should make for an exciting Summer.
Jim Abbott and the Question of One-Armed Power
March 18, 2010 by Arne Christensen · 2 Comments
A while ago, thinking about Jim Abbott and his missing right hand, I wondered how much power he could possibly have generated swinging the bat with one arm. I found this story from the USA Today of March 19, 1991, about Abbott hitting a triple in spring training: Ever since he began his career with […]
Those Thrifty Milwaukeeans
February 14, 2010 by Dennis Pajot · 1 Comment
Being born and raised in Milwaukee I know we have a reputation for being thrifty, frugal, financially conservative (O.K., cheapskates!). But I found it goes back well over one hundred years. The Western League Brewers built a new park on the city’s north side at 17th and Lloyd Streets in 1895. By the next year […]