Daniel Moskos: Pitcher Recalls Journey from High Draft Pick to Lengthy Professional Career
March 10, 2019 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
There are no guarantees in baseball. Literally none. Professional players must fight and earn everything they achieve without exceptions. This includes former top draft picks like pitcher Daniel Moskos, who had a 12-year professional career and reached the majors leagues, but had nothing given to him along the way. The left-handed Moskos was highly coveted while […]
Adam Hyzdu: The Former Boston Red Sox Outfielder’s Hard Road to Success
March 9, 2019 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
When Adam Hyzdu came out of high school he was a hot shot prospect, selected in the first round of the 1990 MLB draft by the San Francisco Giants. The future looked promising for the slugging outfielder as he started his professional career. Few people, including Hyzdu, would have guessed that it would take him 10 years […]
My Top Five Favorite Uniforms in Baseball History
March 16, 2014 by Matt Nadel · 2 Comments
Hey baseball fans! When I go out onto a baseball field, I enjoy looking well-dressed. For example, I would never wear an all-pink uniform, just because I would look weird. The same thing goes for MLB uniforms. Some of the uniforms in the past are frowned upon by the players who wore them and by […]
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 […]
My Top Five Fall Classics In MLB History
February 3, 2013 by Matt Nadel · 3 Comments
Hey baseball fans! Today, I want to tell you about my favorite Fall Classics in baseball history!! My only rule is this: no World Series will be in this list that happened in the last ten years. So, let’s get it started with Number Five. Number Five: The 1954 World Series Matchup: Giants vs. Indians […]
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 […]
Spring Training, Here We Come!
February 26, 2012 by Austin Gisriel · Leave a Comment
Ah, spring. The time when a young man’s fancy turns to baseball, especially if that young man is now 55 years old. Hope is springing eternal in training camps across Arizona and Florida and fans up north are dreaming that this is the year for their favorite team. Don’t you wish you could go to […]
What To Do About Jerry Meals
July 27, 2011 by Andrew Martin · 7 Comments
I feel compelled to write a few thoughts about the controversial call made by 14 year umpire Jerry Meals in the 19th inning of the Braves and Pirates 19 inning game that concluded early in the morning on July 27th. Baseball has had an ongoing debate about the use of instant replay and the reliability […]
No Retirement in Site for Ageless Milo
July 23, 2011 by Dan Schlossberg · 2 Comments
As a broadcaster, Milo Hamilton doesn’t have to worry about his arms or legs giving out. He can still read his voluminous notes and talk about baseball with the best of them. Plus his voice still projects the dulcet tones that accompanied his call of Hank Aaron’s record 715th home run on April 8, 1974. […]
Next?
October 6, 2010 by Tim McCoy · Leave a Comment
John Russell offered a quiet presence and a patience that is either good or bad for a baseball team depending on the personnel. Three years after thinking it would be the right approach, the Bucs’ front office may have decided a different direction is needed to continue the rebuilding process letting Russell go with one […]
Bottoming Out in Baltimore’s Inner Harbor
September 2, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
They should bottle Showalter’s elixir and sell it outside Camden Yarks. Â The Baltimore Orioles are showing signs of life in response to their new manager’s tonic after flat-lining for more than half of the 2010 season. The Orioles’ record since Showalter stepped into the dugout is 17 – 10. Â That is a .630 winning percentage […]
The All-Time Pittsburgh Pirates (a draft book chapter)
June 25, 2010 by Tom Stone · 2 Comments
Who would be selected for a mythical All-Time Pirates dream team roster? And how have others answered this fun question throughout the years?
It Ain’t Easy Raising the Dead: The Labors of Pirates’ GM Neal Huntington
April 16, 2010 by James Forr · Leave a Comment
In the 1980s, Pirate general manager Syd Thrift, an old Southern gentleman with a dry wit, looked at the rebuilding task in front of him and moaned, “It ain’t easy raising the dead.†Relatively speaking, Thrift’s task was a breeze. He took over a team that had a winning record two seasons earlier, and was […]
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.