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. […]
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 […]
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 […]
Childhood and Wally Bunker
June 17, 2011 by Austin Gisriel · 9 Comments
The year 1964 when I was 7 years old, was a landmark for me. In February of that year, I saw the Beatles for the first time on my grandmother’s 13″ black and white television; a set so full of vacuum tubes and other hardware that it weighed as much as our big screen TV […]
DC Opening Day Always a Historic Moment
April 1, 2011 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
Opening Day in Washington today was notable for the absence of two persons, the first being President Obama. Â Starting with President Taft more than a hundred years ago in 1910, they have been there. Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower, Nixon–so many have been there throwing out the first pitch in Washington, DC and the renewal of that […]
“We Had to Pay the Price:” How the Pirates Traded for Chuck Tanner
February 15, 2011 by James Forr · Leave a Comment
Chuck Tanner’s death last Friday struck particularly close to the hearts of longtime Pirate fans. He was the down-to-earth local kid who went away, made good, and then returned to lead his hometown club to a World Series title in 1979. But as the Pittsburgh media reminisced about Tanner’s life and career last week, they […]
At Home with the Browns
January 10, 2011 by Jeff Polman · 2 Comments
Hello. My name is Jeff and I’m a certified Brownsaholic. Don’t ask me why. The star-crossed franchise hasn’t existed in its St. Louis form since 1953, when the club was sent packing to Baltimore to become birds. George Sisler may be the only Brown that your average baseball fan can name. And I’m from New […]
The Ultimate Seven-Game Fall Classic: Game Two
November 4, 2010 by Mike Lynch · 1 Comment
In part one of my Ultimate Seven-Game Fall Classic series, I featured Game One of the 1988 World Series between the Oakland A’s and Los Angeles Dodgers. This time around, I’m traveling back to the Deadball Era when pitchers still dominated the game and runs were hard to come by. It wasn’t until the “Roaring […]
Scenes and Quotes From San Francisco and the Giants Clubhouse After Winning the 1962 Playoff
October 26, 2010 by Arne Christensen · Leave a Comment
A while ago I hunted down the San Francisco Chronicle from the day after the Giants beat the Dodgers to win the 1962 N.L. pennant. It’s been overlooked by the World Series that followed, but the race was a thriller that nearly matched 1951’s, and was the start of the Giants-Dodgers rivalry in California. To […]
Yankees Can Look Forward to a Busy Offseason
October 24, 2010 by Chris Jensen · Leave a Comment
With the Yankees’ quest for a repeat championship crushed by a hungry and talented Rangers team, the Bronx Bombers face a long offseason of uncertainty. It’s amazing how many leaks can spring up in what was supposed to be a $213 million juggernaut. Unable to fend off the low-budget Rays for the division title, the […]
Joe Girardi: The Perfect Modern Manager?
September 26, 2010 by Josh Deitch · Leave a Comment
In our culture, villains are meticulous and cunning. Heroes jump off buildings and yell “yippee-kay-yay, mother-@#$%er!â€
Rattled in the Clinches: Manager Pie Traynor and the Epic Collapse of the 1938 Pirates
September 7, 2010 by James Forr · 1 Comment
On the evening of September 29, 1938, inside the funereal visitors’ clubhouse at Wrigley Field, a despondent Pie Traynor leaned back, fired up a cigarette, and prepared to lie through his teeth. His Pittsburgh Pirates had just lost three crushing games to the Chicago Cubs thanks to Gabby Hartnett’s famous “Homer in the Gloamin’†and […]
Steinbrenner’s legacy: Winning and entertainment
July 13, 2010 by Jess Coleman · Leave a Comment
George Steinbrenner passed away today at the age of 80. Although he hasn’t been running the Yankees for some time now, his legacy will always be remembered. From 1973-2010, Steinbrenner created and maintained the most successful franchise in sports, and it was never done without some entertainment. In the 37 years under Steinbrenner, the Yankees […]
Donald’s Future Looks To Be At Second
April 20, 2010 by Tony Lastoria · Leave a Comment
At this time last year, infielder Jason Donald was playing with the Philadelphia Phillies Triple-A affiliate in Lehigh Valley trying to make every impression possible to somehow crack a Phillies infield situation where he was road-blocked by All-Stars Jimmy Rollins at shortstop and Chase Utley at second base. Even though the situation in Philadelphia appeared […]
The Day “Sunny Jim” Made History
February 22, 2010 by Dave Heller · 1 Comment
One of the great things about going to a baseball game is you’ll never know what you will see. Perhaps you might witness a no-hitter or a triple play. Or, as was the case for roughly 8,000 fans in Brooklyn on Sept. 16, 1924, a record which has yet to be broken. Certainly there were […]
A Hurler Who Hit Better Than The Rest
February 19, 2010 by Brendan Macgranachan · Leave a Comment
A look at Louisville Colonels’ pitcher Guy Hecker’s 1886 season, when he became the first and only pitcher ever to lead a major league in batting. In the winter of 1885, it looked like a good bet that Guy Hecker would not be suiting up in a Louisville Colonel uniform for the 1886 season, a […]
The Looie (Aparicio) Curse
February 9, 2010 by Arne Christensen · Leave a Comment
The news that Luis Aparicio has let the White Sox unretire his jersey, number 11, to let Omar Vizquel wear it in tribute to his Venezuelan predecessor called to mind the story of the Looie Curse, said to have been pronounced on the Sox by Aparicio in revenge for being traded to Baltimore in January […]