Thanks (uhm, I guess) to Michael Clair, who posted this (after it probably was posted elsewhere but somehow escaped my attention) over at Old Time Family Baseball.

So there you go.
Thanks (uhm, I guess) to Michael Clair, who posted this (after it probably was posted elsewhere but somehow escaped my attention) over at Old Time Family Baseball.

So there you go.
This article was initially published on Memorial Day, 2012.
On this Memorial Day, it is as good a time as any to mention some of the ballplayers who gave their lives serving in America’s armed forces. The DeadBallEra site has a list of those who died while serving America, and there is also a good site entirely about Baseball in Wartime (primarily focused on WWII), but here are some notables (although, in the end, everyone who gives the ultimate sacrifice is notable). Not all of them died in combat, but all of them died while in military service or (in the case of people like Christy Mathewson) as a result of those actions:
Of course, there were plenty of players who never made it to the big leagues who died in the line of duty, some of whom may have one day become Major Leaguers if not for the cruelty of war:
To them and all who have given the ultimate sacrifice, and to those who made it home, we salute you.
Going 4-for-4 with 3 RBIs, the Cardinals’ Pete Kozma is the MVP of Yesterday.
MVP standings, as always, after the jump:
As much as I want to put Angel Pagan and his inside-the-park walk-off homer here, the MVP of Yesterday really belongs to Braves pitcher Mike Minor, who threw 7.1 scoreless innings (striking out 10 and giving up only 3 hits) and went 2-4 with a HR and 2 RBI at the plate.
MVP standings, as usual, below the jump:
Anibal Sanchez was throwing a no-hitter, and he would’ve gotten away with it too, if it weren’t for that meddling Joe Mauer! Still, he is the MVP of Yesterday.
MVP standings after the jump.
434.2 milliseconds. That’s about how long it takes a 95 MPH fastball to reach home plate.
It’s only about 34 milliseconds more than what it takes some people blink. Only 134 more milliseconds than it takes the slowest of us to act on reflex based on visual stimuli. Only slightly less time than it takes for a satellite communications system to receive and transmit information.
In the time it took you to read this blog post up to this line, about 13 seconds had past if you are an average silent reader. In that time, you could have had 28 fastballs go past you with another one about a third of the way towards you.
That sound you hear is your mind getting blown. Or maybe it’s of a fastball hitting the catcher’s glove.
Miguel Cabrera “only” went 2-3 yesterday with a home run, 3 RBIs and two walks, but because of the smaller schedule yesterday, he still snags a MVP of Yesterday title. It also has put him ahead of Bryce Harper overall in the standings.
MVP Standings after the jump:
In a Ken Rosenthal article earlier today, a rival GM said that Dodgers Manager Don Mattingly is practically trying to get fired after his infamous ripping into of longtime RF Andre Ethier on Wednesday. However, despite that and the horrible 19-26 start for the Dodgers, he is expected to still be the skipper of Los Angeles when the sun rises on Friday.
Therefore, if we were to foolishly take the rival GM’s quotation literally, we can only guess that Mattingly has not done enough to get fired. Therefore, I have suggestions for him as he tries to escape the black hole of horrible the Dodgers’ season has been so far:
It’s over here.
Jose Bautista went 4-4 with two dingers, four RBIs and a walk as he almost single-handedly willed the Blue Jays to victory yesterday over the Rays.
MVP Standings, as always, after the jump: