A Picture Worth Almost Two Thousand Words: Ted Kluszewski and Me
September 2, 2013 by Greg Howell · 16 Comments
It was a moment that now seems almost as if I imagined it. It was the summer of 1972, I was seventeen years old, freshly graduated from high school, away from home, somewhere in Ohio, and Iron Mike was hurling baseballs at me in a batting cage. Having spent considerable time in this same situation […]
Can Washington Continue to Compete Without Major International Signings?
August 13, 2013 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
As an organization the Washington Nationals have eschewed big international signings. The few forays they have made have been disappointing at best. They announced today that they are pursuing legal options to recoup the $1.4 million that they paid to Dominican phenom Smiley Gonzalez in 2006. Smiles turned to frowns when the 16-year old Gonzalez […]
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) […]
Why Davey Johnson Is So Unhappy
May 10, 2012 by Ted Leavengood · 4 Comments
One thing about Bryce Harper’s steal of home a few days ago, it brought a smile to the face of his manager Davey Johnson. Johnson has otherwise found too little to smile about during the first month of the 2012 season, despite the overall good performance of his team. Davey was a hitter. That is […]
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 […]
The No. 8 Most Quotable Figure in Baseball History
June 14, 2011 by David Nathan · 1 Comment
There are few nicknames in all of sports better than Mr. October. The very nature of the moniker keeps Reginald Martinez Jackson in the conversation of the best Big Game performers, and his status in the lexicon of Great Yankees is assured. Coming out of Arizona State, Reggie was drafted 2nd overall by the Kansas […]
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 […]
Is This the Last the Cubs Have Seen of Derrek Lee?
August 16, 2010 by Bobby Aguilera · Leave a Comment
Chicago Tribune’s Paul Sullivan mentions in his piece from yesterday’s paper that most people believe Derrek Lee will be playing elsewhere in 2011. Sullivan cites “his age, his numbers and the fact the Cubs need a left-handed power hitter and first base is the logical position for such a player.†When we last checked Kornheiser’s […]
‘Fros, ‘Stros, ‘Spos, and Discos: Play That Funky Baseball
March 15, 2010 by Mike Lynch · Leave a Comment
When my good friend, fellow Seamhead, and self-proclaimed “Strat-O-Matic fanatic” Jeff Polman turned me on to his latest project, I was instantly enthralled and excited. I was already familiar with Jeff’s fantastic replay of the 1924 season, an era that’s right up my alley, but when I learned that he was going to be replaying […]
When Charlie Keller Tried to Come Back
February 28, 2010 by Chip Greene · Leave a Comment
In the spring of 1947, the Yankees’ Charlie Keller was at his peak as a power hitter. Now 30 years old, he’d long ago mastered the kind of left-handed swing New York management had envisioned when they signed Keller off the University of Maryland campus; he was the consummate pull-hitter, routinely muscling the ball into […]