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 […]
Rose & Reggie: 40 Years Later
April 5, 2013 by Terry Keshner · Leave a Comment
Rose & Reggie: 40 Years Later Reggie Jackson and Pete Rose are two of baseball’s all-time iconic figures, having put together nearly unparalleled careers in the 1960s, 70s and 80s. Jackson and Rose played on piles of All-Star teams, won multiple World Series, earned millions on and off the field and were often loved and […]
All-Around Athletes
December 31, 2012 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! As I promised in my Booming Batters post, today I will be blogging about some of the greatest all-around athlete nicknames in baseball history. Hope you enjoy: Stan the Man - Stan Musial From 1942-1963 with the St. Louis Cardinals, Musial had one of the best careers of all time. With 475 homers, 3,630 hits, and […]
The Loneliness of the Game:the Manager
June 1, 2012 by Andrés Pascual · Leave a Comment
In 1989, shortly before being suspended from duties as manager, Pete Rose stated: “managing is much harder than playing, sitting there, observing everything, responsible for everything and alone, helpless…” It is true, because in baseball, when a club wins it is the players, but when they lose, 98 % of the time it is the […]
An Interview with ESPN’s Baseball Insider Jerry Crasnick
May 23, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
ESPN has grown from a cable sports news channel to a media conglomerate over the past few decades. They have been able to accomplish this by providing comprehensive analysis in the world of sport through all forms of media- print, online, television, radio, and anything else I may be forgetting. As one of the major […]
Un ganso en la barajita. (A Goose in the card)
November 24, 2011 by Alfonso L. Tusa C. · Leave a Comment
La primera vez que supe de Rich Gossage fue en las vacaciones de 1975. Aquel agosto me levantaba temprano, desayunaba y abuela me pedía que le hiciera varios mandados junto a mis primos Luis Alfredo y Luis José. Luego de comprar algunos víveres, nos deteníamos ante el kiosco de los periódicos y comprábamos varios sobres […]
Gambling at the Hall of Fame: Part Two
July 18, 2011 by Gabriel Schechter · 1 Comment
Are you ready for the bizarre story I promised you last time, about gambling AT the Hall of Fame? If you haven’t read “Part One” please do so before reading this one. In it, I told about the Hall of Fame refusing to hire me in the mid-1990s because of my background as a Las […]
Recordando al maestro Cesar Geronimo (Recalling the teacher Cesar Geronimo)
June 15, 2011 by Gustavo Hidalgo Estrada · 1 Comment
En la década de los 70 el equipo que seguÃamos los jóvenes Venezolanos en las mayores era a la “Gran maquinaria roja” de Cincinnati. David “El Rey” Concepción era el mejor campo corto del béisbol y factor fundamental de ese equipo que ha sido lo mejor que yo he podido ver en un diamante de […]
All Phillies…All the Time — Who’s on First?
June 14, 2011 by John Shiffert · Leave a Comment
The Phillies have had several outstanding first basemen over the years… it’s just that very few of them, for various reasons, bothered to hang around for very long. Most notable among this group are Jim Thome (three years), Dolph Camilli (four years), Dick Allen (three years at first), Von Hayes (ditto, three years primarily at […]
Speaker Spoke Plenty Loud
January 13, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Joe DiMaggio, Mickey Mantle. All four men bring to mind ideals you want in an outfielder. How about Tris Speaker? Speaker joined Cobb and Ruth on the membership roll when the Hall of Fame opened in 1939, yet not much is said or written about him. Speaker didn’t have Ruth’s power […]
Tim Raines – Some Stars Get No Respect
November 21, 2010 by Michael Hoban · 2 Comments
Tim Raines appeared on the BBWAA Hall of Fame ballot for the third time in 2010. In 2008, he got 24.3% of the votes, and in 2009, he got only 22.6% of the vote. In 2010, he increased to 30.4%. This would apparently indicate that he does not have a good chance of being elected […]
Al fondo de la esquina caliente (At the bottom of the hot corner)
October 8, 2010 by Alfonso L. Tusa C. · Leave a Comment
Inicios de octubre de 1970 desplegaba varias páginas de suspenso para mis 9 años de hiperkinesia desbordada. Haber seguido los juegos del Mundial de Fútbol por televisión y el Campeonato Nacional Juvenil de Béisbol en el estadio de Cumaná, encendÃa toda la fruición de mi expectativa ante la Serie Mundial de aquel año. Toda esa curiosidad galopaba en paralelo con el reto de la tabla de dividir y la regla de tres que significaba el cuarto grado. La maestra Inés llenaba el aula con su conocimiento transparente y su pedagogÃa que saltaba entre los pupitres. Cualquier asomo de miedo a las matemática me lo borró en el primer instante que escuché su voz. Me habÃa tocado el turno de la tarde, por lo cual debÃa estar atento en mis juegos y correrÃas por calles y cañaverales de regresar a casa antes de mediodÃa.
The Best of the Best Hall of Fame Outsiders
September 17, 2010 by Mike Lynch · 6 Comments
Last month Bobby Aguilera posted an article in which he listed a roster of players who he feels are the best at each position who aren’t in the Hall of Fame, including two of the biggest snubs of all time, Dick Allen and Ron Santo. Then Graham Womack responded with a roster of his own, […]
Pete Rose: Justice Delivered, But Only Temporarily And Only In Theory
September 12, 2010 by Aaron Somers · 17 Comments
Twenty five years ago today one of the most hallowed records in baseball history was broken when Pete Rose singled to left field against San Diego Padres pitcher Eric Show (who’s tumultuous life and death were chronicled by ESPN’s Outside the Lines) for career hit number 4,192, passing the legendary Ty Cobb. Fireworks instantly went off […]
El Juego de Estrellas que nunca olvidaré (The All Star game I’ll never forget).
July 13, 2010 by Alfonso L. Tusa C. · Leave a Comment
Siempre recordaré la noche del 14 de julio de 1970. Papá me habÃa enviado a la cama por enésima vez. Lo disputado del Juego de las Estrellas hizo que accediera a mis solicitudes para que me dejara otro rato más. Pero cuando el juego se empató en el noveno inning Papá me llevó personalmente al […]
The Chase-inator and his Double-edged Sword
July 1, 2010 by John Cappello · Leave a Comment
Baseball’s premier hustler, Chase Utley, has a special skill set that includes the triple-threat of hitting, baserunning, and fielding, making him the gold standard for all second basemen.
That Night, They Were Men
May 7, 2010 by Gabriel Schechter · Leave a Comment
Recently I was showing the photo album of my bar mitzvah to some long-lost cousins who only vaguely remembered attending it. Even with the help of the photos, I don’t remember all that much about it myself. I do know that it was the last time I ever spoke–much less chanted–in Hebrew. I ate, danced, […]
The 21st Century Hall of Famers
May 4, 2010 by Michael Hoban · 2 Comments
Here is an interesting question. How many of the “great baseball players†of modern times have fans of the game been able to see during the 21st century (since 2001)? Let’s first take a look at this question for position players and then for pitchers. The Position Players At the end of the 2009 season, […]
Meet the New Park Factors – Part I
March 28, 2010 by John Cappello · 1 Comment
“It’s a park that could make you a hero or a bum.” – Stan Musial on the Polo Grounds, 1957 Stan Musial was truly one of the most consistently great hitters baseball has ever seen. With a lifetime average of .331, his slumps were like comets—showing up every few years, then disappearing in a flash. […]
The Game That Brought Me Home
March 10, 2010 by Gabriel Schechter · Leave a Comment
Last night, I watched the first inning of the greatest baseball game I never saw. That’s all, just the first inning. The rest of the game can wait, because it was the baseball equivalent of the proverbial 40-pound bag of Oreos. You wouldn’t want to devour it as soon as you open it, and you […]
Roger Talks, and the Seamheads.com Team Responds
March 8, 2010 by Jon Pessah · 1 Comment
After new Seamheads.com writer Jon Pessah sat down and talked with Roger Clemens last month, he polled his fellow Seamheads for their take on the Rocket and his place in baseball. Here’s the transcript of the conversation that followed. “I used to be the biggest Roger Clemens fan alive. Then he left the Sox and I […]