The Sunday Notes: 2015 Awards Edition
November 22, 2015 by Ron Juckett · 2 Comments
The 2015 award season has come and gone, ending the year. For the twelfth straight year, average attendance per game topped 30,000 and overall gate went up, barely, over last year. All told, 73,760,020 purchased tickets to Major League Baseball games in 2015. Would you believe the first year the average topped 20,000 was 1979 […]
Ernie Banks Leaves A Powerful Legacy
January 27, 2015 by Ron Juckett · Leave a Comment
Ernie Banks, one of the brightest personalities in Major League Baseball history, passed away Saturday, January 26 at the age of 83 from a heart attack. Best known for his sunny optimism and the catch phrase “Let’s play two,” the Chicago Cubs icon is hardly remembered outside of Chicago for his graceful glove at short […]
The Big Rude
March 8, 2014 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! The team that represented the American League in my favorite World Series (1993: Toronto Blue Jays vs. Philadelphia Phillies) was filled to the brim with All Stars like Joe Carter and Jack Morris and Hall of Famers like Rickey Henderson and Paul Molitor. However, perhaps the most important player on the team that season was the AL batting champion […]
The Phillies Only Bright Spot in the 1930s
February 26, 2014 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! Fun fact: all of the players who won the batting Triple Crown in the 20th century have been inducted into the Hall of Fame. However, before I knew this fun fact, there was one person who won the Triple Crown who I had never heard of. I researched this player and it turns […]
The Best Tigers Team There Was
February 22, 2014 by Matt Nadel · 1 Comment
Hey baseball fans! Yesterday, it was my birthday! In honor of my birthday last year, I blogged about Alan Trammell, the only player born on my birthday who I think should be in the Hall of Fame. In honor of my birthday this year, I’m going to talk about the team that Trammell played for that […]
The AL Counterpart to Ralph Kiner
January 1, 2014 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans and happy new year! When the name “Hank” is said in a conversation about baseball, many times the name is followed by the surname “Aaron.” However, there is another Hank who played baseball and is enshrined in Cooperstown. This Hank could be compared to Ralph Kiner: both players had pretty short Hall of […]
Cha-Cha Cha-Chas Into the Hall of Fame
January 1, 2014 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! As some of you know, there are three Puerto Rican-born Hall of Famers in Cooperstown: Roberto Clemente, Roberto Alomar, and one other person. There are also three Hall of Fame position players who played for the 1962 San Francisco Giants pennant-winning squad: Willie Mays, Willie McCovey, and one other person. The “one other person” on both […]
Matt Nadel’s 2013 MLB Awards Predictions
October 13, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! As you all know, I’ve started doing some vlog posts where I make different predictions. Well, since the MLB regular season is now over, I have to make my predictions on who will win all the major MLB awards. So, without further ado, please click here for a link to my latest vlog post, where […]
My Top Five Most Notorious Records in Baseball History
September 24, 2013 by Matt Nadel · 1 Comment
Hey baseball fans! There are some records in baseball history that everyone strives to break: Rickey Henderson‘s stolen bases and runs scored records, Nolan Ryan‘s strikeout record, or Cy Young‘s wins record. However, there are some records that no one would ever want to break. With that, I give you my top five most notorious records in baseball […]
The King of Baseball
September 17, 2013 by Matt Nadel · 1 Comment
Hey baseball fans! As some of you know, Masahiro Tanaka won his 25th consecutive game pitched a couple days ago for the Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles of the Japanese professional baseball league, breaking the 75-year-old record that was held by Carl Hubbell, the Hall of Fame pitcher for the New York Giants. Some of you might be asking […]
NJBM Kids’ Hot Korner: Ryne Sandberg
August 17, 2013 by Matt Nadel · 1 Comment
Hey baseball fans! I just put up my latest post in the Kids’ Hot Korner section of New Jersey Baseball Magazine. This one is about Ryne Sandberg, the Cubs Hall of Famer. If you want to read more about Ryne, just click here. I hope you enjoy that article and thanks for reading it. Check back in a […]
Kid Blogger’s Live Interview with Rickey Henderson
July 23, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! Here’s the last video in my series of Baseball Hall of Fame Classic live interviews. If you don’t know who it is, here’s a hint: this outfielder played in four decades and is most remembered for his ability to steal bases and score runs. If you haven’t guessed who he is, I’m […]
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 […]
Chris Davis is the real Home Run King
July 13, 2013 by Andy Greenberg · 4 Comments
After hitting his 36th home run on Saturday Davis has reached a pace to put him at 61 by the end of the season. This continues to be the number by which baseball fans use to denote a record setting campaign. We brush aside Bonds, McGwire and Sosa because of the steroid allegations (and admittance) […]
A Bird in the Hall of Fame?
May 8, 2013 by Matt Nadel · 4 Comments
Hey baseball fans! Remember in my Gary Carter post where I said to stalk my blog like a hawk for new posts? Well, the reason I said that was because I was making a reference to another Expo Hall of Famer,Andre Dawson! Andre “The Hawk” (got his nickname because his uncle said that he attacked ground balls […]
NJBM Kids’ Hot Korner: Ichiro Suzuki
March 9, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! I just put up my latest post in the Kids’ Hot Korner section of New Jersey Baseball Magazine. This one is in honor of my aunt Rie Suzuki’s favorite player. Can you guess who it is? If you want to read more about my aunt’s favorite MLB player from Japan, just click here. And […]
NJBM Kids’ Hot Korner: Mike Schmidt
March 3, 2013 by Matt Nadel · 2 Comments
Hey baseball fans! I just put up my latest post in the Kids’ Hot Korner section of New Jersey Baseball Magazine. This one is extra special, since it’s about my all time favorite player, Mike Schmidt. If you’d like to read the article, just click here. And tune in again real soon for more of “all the buzz […]
Clearing The Bases
June 26, 2012 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
With the season being a little less than 50% over we’ve decided to take a look at players who have played above expectations so far this season. Now I’m looking at players who have the best value. I know Joey Votto is having an MVP like season, but he was selected in the 1st or […]
Chatting with the Royals’ Christian Colon
June 8, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
A long spate of losing seasons has put the Kansas City Royals in the position of drafting high in the MLB drafts over the past two-plus decades. However, it has only been recently that the organization has been recognized for accumulating one of the best collections of prospects in the game, with the hope that […]
Touring the Bases With Buddy Biancalana
May 10, 2012 by Bob Lazzari · Leave a Comment
Buddy Biancalana was a first round draft pick of the Kansas City Royals in 1978 who went on to have a major league career as a middle infielder. Used primarily as a utility player, Buddy had his greatest success was in the 1985 World Series when he played in all seven games and hit .278, […]
¿Verlander, Cabrera O Ellsbury Para Mvp (Cabrera, Verlander, Ellsbury for MVP)
September 30, 2011 by Andrés Pascual · Leave a Comment
Va estar candente la votación por el MVP este año, yo creo que se lo deben dar a Jacoby Ellsbury, pero esa es mi opinión que, como la del muerto, “no cuenta”. Por ejemplo, ahí está Justin Verlander, un tipo que su única temporada perdedora fue la del 2008 con 11-17 durante 7 campañas que […]
The Most Egregious Cy Young Award Snubs of All Time (at Least on Paper)
July 26, 2011 by Mike Lynch · 10 Comments
I recently listed the most egregious MVP snubs of all time and thought it was time to give the pitchers a little love (although not the ones who were awarded a Cy Young they didn’t deserve based on my WA2RB formula). Rather than plagiarize myself and explain my thoughts and formula, you should head over […]
The Most Egregious MVP Snubs of All Time (at Least on Paper)
July 6, 2011 by Mike Lynch · 10 Comments
Not long ago I was watching an episode of “Prime 9” on the MLB Network about the nine biggest MVP snubs of all time. Before the show even began, I knew what would be ranked number one because it’s always mentioned as the biggest injustice in the history of MVP voting: Yankees second baseman Joe […]
“That’s the Way Baseball Go” On
November 4, 2010 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
The San Francisco Giants and the Texas Rangers held their season-ending rallies on Wednesday. What’s a baseball fan to do? How about reading about one of the two World Series participants? After an MVP-caliber regular season, Rangers center fielder Josh Hamilton returned from injury to lead his team to the Fall Classic. So what if […]
Can Dan Haren be the game-changer the Angels need?
July 25, 2010 by Jess Coleman · Leave a Comment
The Angels swooped in to acquire one of MLB’s best in Dan Haren. Seamheads writer Jess K. Coleman wonders if he can he the season-changer that the Angels need.