While New Leagues Are Slow to Develop, Independent Roster in Majors Grows Rapidly
August 23, 2013 by Bob Wirz · Leave a Comment
Independent Baseball is continuing to turn out major league players in impressive numbers—two more just this week—but operators are not finding it nearly as easy to start new leagues or even to nail down new franchises. A new league has not started and lasted since the Can-Am League launched in 2005, and even that was […]
From the Eyes of a Patriots Fan
August 17, 2013 by Bob Hurte · Leave a Comment
It was a picture perfect night for baseball on Friday (August 16th). While I realize that statement this is cliché’, it is apropos that evening at TD Ballpark, home of our Somerset Patriots of Bridgewater, NJ. The park bustled with activity, from a dance performance given by a troupe of young entertainers, to the obligatory […]
View to a Thrill
July 24, 2013 by Austin Gisriel · 5 Comments
Of the thousands who watched the Home Run Derby this past Monday, no one in Citi Field had a better view than George Carroll, who was directly behind home plate. And I mean directly behind home plate: Carroll was one of two catchers who most people saw all night long and probably never noticed. Carroll […]
Astros Show Some Improvement in June
July 2, 2013 by Bill Gilbert · Leave a Comment
The Astros entered the final weekend of the month of June with a 12-12 record and a chance to have their first winning month in years. However, they were swept at home by the Los Angeles Angels and finished 12-15 for the month. The month started on a positive note as the Astros won their […]
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 […]
Giving Away Outs to the Braves
April 14, 2013 by Ted Leavengood · 4 Comments
It wasn’t the newly arrived Upton brothers that crushed the spirits of 120,000 fans that flocked to Nationals Park this weekend. No, it was a team effort. The Atlanta Braves beat the Nationals in every aspect of the game. They outscored Washington 18-5 for the three game series. After Friday night it never really seemed […]
She’s Not Pretty, But Has a Great Personality
April 10, 2013 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
I know pretty when I see it. There was lots of it last night at Nationals Park. But when my attention was drawn to the field where the Nationals beat the White Sox 8-7, well, let’s just say that when Davey Johnson described the Nationals’ win as “not pretty,” he was just being kind. It’s […]
There’s Optimism Over Red Sox Newfound Mound Speed
March 30, 2013 by Dave Rattigan · Leave a Comment
The guy I like best from Red Sox spring training is the guy who brought the stopwatch to the bullpen. Maybe it was Manager John Farrell or Pitching Coach Juan Nieves. I don’t care. But someone brought the stopwatch as a teaching aid for Red Sox starting pitchers, and that person deserves a Duck Boat […]
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 […]
A New Beginning for Astros in April
May 3, 2012 by Bill Gilbert · Leave a Comment
While the Astros 9-14 record in April was a disappointment, it was better than the last 2 Aprils and there were some encouraging signs. The Astros outscored their opposition104-100 which should have equated to a record of about 12-11. It is still too soon to determine if young players like Jose Altuve, J.D.Martinez, Jordan Schafer, […]
Get Used to It Mr. Strasburg
April 27, 2012 by Gabriel Schechter · 1 Comment
On the same afternoon when I watched Mike Pelfrey pitch eight innings of one-run ball only to see the bullpen (aided by a muffed fly ball) blow a 4-1 lead and cost him the victory, I saw that the same thing happened to Stephen Strasburg. That is, he left the game as the potential winning […]
Cardiac Kids Take Chicago
April 9, 2012 by Ted Leavengood · 10 Comments
Three tense and tightly contested games yielded two road wins for the 2012 Washington Nationals in Chicago thanks to surprising late inning magic. Call them the “Comeback Kids,” the “Cardiac Kids,” whatever you will, but the Nationals scored nine times in the last two innings during the three-game set in the Windy City. The late […]
West Virginia Power Looking for Excitement in 2012
April 4, 2012 by Ronnie Foreman · Leave a Comment
Yesterday was a beautiful day for media day here in Charleston, WV for the West Virginia Power, Class A affiliate of the Pittsburgh Pirates. Sun, freshly cut grass, the smell of baseball in the air leading up to a season of great expectations on the ballfield. The Power returns eight players from last year’s […]
Baseball Gauge – Introducing our new version of Wins Above Replacement
March 29, 2012 by Daniel Hirsch · Leave a Comment
In celebration of the new season, Seamheads.com and The Baseball Gauge are proud to announce our new Wins Above Replacement. The updated calculation has two major changes from our previous system. The first upgrade is our Fielding system, which now uses Runs Saved from Michael Humphreys Defensive Regression Analysis. This allows us to compare and […]
Catching Up With Former Yankee Johnny James
December 9, 2011 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
If there is anything more difficult in baseball than making it to the major leagues, it is making the roster of a successful team. Thus imagine the upward climb that pitcher Johnny James had as he worked his way through the New York Yankees farm system in the 1950’s, the golden age of the game’s […]
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 […]
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 […]
The Lighting of the Hot Stove
October 17, 2011 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
Perhaps the Hot Stove season does not commence until after the World Series. Or maybe it adds fuel to the fire. Either way there are instructive failures from last year to consider. There were Carl Crawford and Jayson Werth–just two of the biggest disappointments among the 2011 free agent class. Then at the summit is […]
Former Pitcher Larry Burchart Reminisces
October 9, 2011 by Andrew Martin · 1 Comment
The Los Angeles Dodgers really, really wanted collegiate star right-handed pitcher Larry Burchart. In 1967 they took him in the first round of the June phase of the amateur draft. Since he was enrolled at Oklahoma State, he did not sign. This did not deter the Dodgers, who took him again in the third round […]
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 […]
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. […]
First Division Finish
September 29, 2011 by Ted Leavengood · 5 Comments
No, the Nationals are not headed for the playoffs, and yes, the smug fans up the coast will shake their heads in bemusement at the joy we share at finishing in the top half of the 30 Major League baseball teams. But remember and cheerish that grin, because the Nationals don’t just “hear that train […]
Brust named NYCBL Coach of the Year
September 3, 2011 by Paul Gotham · Leave a Comment
Four years in the making Dave Brust got his just due. The New York Collegiate Baseball League announced its post-season awards, and the Webster skipper nabbed the top honor. Brust’s Webster nine set new organization standards and broke a league record en route to a 30-14 regular season mark and an eventual spot in the […]
Clearing The Bases
September 1, 2011 by George Kurtz · 2 Comments
We’ve had to take a few weeks off due to some software problems, but we’re back today, just in time to watch all of the players that major league teams will call up to fortify their bullpen and bench during this final month. The Yanks and Red Sox have been playing a big series this […]
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 […]
To Shave Or Not To Shave?
June 22, 2011 by Seamheads · Leave a Comment
THE ANSWER MAY BE A BIT MORE COMPLICATED FOR PROFESSIONAL ATHLETES Philips Norelco and Elias Sports Bureau crunch the numbers to see whether crushing a sinker starts at the sink. Stamford, CT – While only a few teams in baseball have official policies on facial hair, Philips Norelco and the Elias Sports Bureau have learned […]
Let’s Play Two
April 17, 2011 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
The Sunday doubleheader was a staple of baseball in the Golden Era of the game, you know, when the World Series was played in the first half of October and kids listened to Don Larsen’s perfect game on the radio in Ms. Hill’s sixth grade class. Â The Nationals and Brewers played a Sunday doubleheader today. […]
Another Indy Milestone Achieved With 150th Major Leaguer
April 7, 2011 by Bob Wirz · Leave a Comment
    Independent Baseball reached another impressive milestone shortly after the major league season opened.           Appearances by rookies Tom Wilhelmsen and Aaron Crow plus a re-appearance by Eric Almonte, who is at the game’s highest level for the first time in eight years, jumped the non-affiliated branch of baseball past the 150 mark in getting […]
Baby Birds Show Early Signs of Life
April 4, 2011 by Chip Greene · 2 Comments
This afternoon, in their home opener, the Orioles won again. Wow, 4-0; who would have thought it? Now, I know the season just started and the Os still have 158 more games to go, but at least allow me to savor this moment. After all, as a long-suffering Orioles fan, their start is a like […]
Wilhelmsen, Almonte Step Up, Give Indy Game 14 on Opening Day Rosters
March 31, 2011 by Bob Wirz · Leave a Comment
    Erick Almonte’s unexpected jump onto the Milwaukee Brewers’ bench grabbed much of the Independent Baseball attention during spring training, but now that the reality of Opening Day is here the 32-year-old, who has not been in the major leagues since 2003, has to share the spotlight with a quartet of pitchers who also have […]
Turning the Corner in DC
March 28, 2011 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
The future for the Washington Nationals is about to arrive. Â The major league team looks vastly improved from the ones that finished dead last among the 30 teams two years in a row. Â But Baseball America’s new rankings put the Washington development pipeline at number 13 among MLB organizations. Â That climb from the bottom may […]
Take Me Back to Texas, Please!
October 29, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
Josh Hamilton said he could smell the early voting on Proposition 19 wafting in from the San Francisco bleachers all night long. What was I thinking? Juan Uribe hasn’t played like this in years. Edgar Renteria looks like he is 19 again and Cody Ross is playing like he is on something. Â The explanation was […]
They Are Two Stepping in Texas
October 22, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
There is dancing in Texas tonight. Â The Texas Rangers played the best two teams in the American League and beat them both in convincing fashion to win the first American League Championship for the franchise after fifty years of frustration. Â The anticipation of history in the making gave drama to a game that was decided […]
Cliff Lee Builds Drama With Every Pitch
October 18, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
When Cliff Lee poured three fastballs past Brett Gardner to end the eighth inning, it marked 122 of the best post-season pitches since Roy Halladay threw his no-hitter against the Cincinnati Reds. Lee did not have to finish this most recent of his numerous post-season gems. The Rangers busted the game open in the ninth […]
Burnett Does Not Fit on Yanks ALDS Roster
October 5, 2010 by Jess Coleman · Leave a Comment
With the postseason set to begin on Wednesday, the Yankees announced their roster for the American League Division series against the Twins. As expected, AJ Burnett is on the roster––although he is not in the starting rotation––while Ivan Nova and Javier Vazquez has been left out. Now, it would seem to be a ridiculous decision to […]