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About danglickman

2012 Graduate of St. John Fisher College. Journalist, writer and sponge for information.

The Meaning of Jackie Robinson

The true meaning of Jackie Robinson (who would turn 94 today) is often forgotten.

I, like many others, have grown up in a sports world where it has not mattered what the color of a player’s skin was, only his talent. It matters not whether the player is Caucasian, African-American, Hispanic, Asian, Native American, Polynesian, or a mix of the above. All that matter is simply whether they can play. This is not just true in baseball, but in other sports as well. It is a meritocracy: If you are good, you are good, and if you stink, then you stink.

While there are, of course, still some cowards out there who continue to throw out racial epithets from the safety of anonymous accounts on the internet, they are just that- cowards. They know that what they are trying to peddle no longer is welcome in the American fan-scape.

And, although it is something of an exaggeration to say this, Jackie Robinson can be thanked for this. As not only did he show that talent knew no race, but he also showed dignity and courage doing it. He defeated those who hated and heckled him by simply ignoring them, not by giving in and returning their hatred.

A good example for any and all who have faced bullies. And something that has led to a better country, both on the field and off.

Happy Birthday, Jackie Robinson.

Image of the day: Happy Birthday

I believe Google speaks for all of us here:

Screen Shot 2013-01-31 at 11.38.37 AM

Happy Birthday, Jackie Robinson.

Picture of the day: Larry Kopf

Today, I just picked a random picture from the Library of Congress Flickr feed (meaning no copyright restrictions). I got this picture of Larry Kopf, who played with Cleveland, Philadelphia (as seen in the photo), Cincinnati and the Boston Braves during his career.

Famous for Something Else: Ricky Williams

Before he played twelve seasons of professional football, Ricky Williams played baseball in the Phillies system, reaching as high as short-season low-A Batavia. Here are his stats from his time on the diamond:

Year Age Tm Lg Lev Aff G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS TB GDP HBP SH SF IBB
1995 18 Martinsville APPY Rk PHI 36 121 113 19 27 1 0 0 11 13 2 6 32 .239 .289 .248 .537 28 1 2 0 0 0
1996 19 Piedmont SALL A PHI 84 288 266 30 50 4 3 3 20 17 8 18 87 .188 .245 .259 .504 69 2 2 2 0 1
1997 20 Piedmont SALL A PHI 37 149 136 12 28 5 0 1 6 10 4 9 44 .206 .268 .265 .533 36 0 3 0 1 0
1998 21 Batavia NYPL A- PHI 13 55 53 7 15 0 0 0 3 6 3 2 16 .283 .309 .283 .592 15 0 0 0 0 0
4 Seasons 170 613 568 68 120 10 3 4 40 46 17 35 179 .211 .265 .261 .526 148 3 7 2 1 1
A (2 seasons) A 121 437 402 42 78 9 3 4 26 27 12 27 131 .194 .253 .261 .514 105 2 5 2 1 1
Rk (1 season) Rk 36 121 113 19 27 1 0 0 11 13 2 6 32 .239 .289 .248 .537 28 1 2 0 0 0
A- (1 season) A- 13 55 53 7 15 0 0 0 3 6 3 2 16 .283 .309 .283 .592 15 0 0 0 0 0
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 1/30/2013.

The PED Double Standard

As you all definitely know, baseball was hit by a steroid scandal yesterday.

You may have also heard that such a thing struck the NFL, where news again surfaced that Ray Lewis had used a type of “deer-antler spray” that contained a type of illegal hormone for muscle growth. I say “again” because this actually isn’t news, it had first been reported in 2011.

Of course, you probably never heard that, because use of PEDs in the NFL is usually overlooked, or just dismissed, or, in some cases, openly rewarded. Yesterday, for example, Ray Lewis simply said that he’d “never tested positive” and then that was it. ESPN did cover it, but it was nowhere near the level of what would have happened if, say, the same thing had happened to a MLB player the day before the World Series were to start.

(Also, they don’t test for the PED that Lewis is accused of, since the NFL doesn’t have blood tests, so Lewis’ denial, while technically true, isn’t exactly a declaration of innocence.)

It doesn’t stop there (go below the jump):

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Picture of the day: Eddie Cicotte

After Shoeless Joe Jackson, the best player involved in the Black Sox scandal was Eddie Cicotte, an ace pitcher who was as crooked as he was successful. His career 2.38 ERA is 24th best in history and it’s likely he would have ended up in the HoF if not for his role amongst the Black Sox.

This photo, from the Library of Congress Flickr stream, has no known copyright restrictions.

Learn words through baseball news: Cacique

In the Miami New Times article, it was revealed that one of Alex Rodriguez‘s code names was “Cacique”.

So what does Cacique mean?

Well, according to Dictionary.com:

ca·cique

[kuh-seek] Show IPA

noun

1.

a chief of an Indian clan or tribe in Mexico and the West Indies.

2.

(in Spain and Latin America) a political boss on a local level.

3.

(in the Philippines) a prominent landowner.

4.

any of several black and red or black and yellow orioles of the American tropics that construct long, pendent nests.
So now you know!

The End of A-Rod

Today was the end of the Age of A-Rod. Oh, he might not realize it yet, although I suppose he might, but I would be shocked if he plays again, and if he does play, I doubt he will even be a shadow of the shadow of his old self. Because, today, he was named in a Miami New Times (a news weekly in… Miami) report on an anti-aging clinic called Biogenesis. In addition to Alex Rodriguez, the New Times noted mentions in files that indicate that Melky Cabrera, Yasmani Grandal, Bartolo Colon, Nelson Cruz, Gio Gonzalez as well as Jimmy Goins, the strength and conditioning coach of the University of Miami baseball team. Gonzalez and Cruz, to the best of my knowledge, had never been linked to PEDs before today, although Gio Gonzalez’s case is seemingly connected to things that may not be banned and they listed no specifics on Nelson Cruz.

However, make no doubt, this is a story that, at least initially, is all about Alex Rodriguez. Remember, in 2009, he had claimed that he had ceased using performance-enhancers in 2003, but this report seems to suggest otherwise. This also likely means that he was using PEDs during the 2009 postseason, the one postseason where Alex Rodriguez hit like the elite player he was during the regular season.

And so, Alex Rodriguez, who already could be out the whole season due to his injury, and who has a gigantic albatross of a contract, now has been shown to possibly be a liar and a continued cheater. The New York Yankees, no doubt, want him to just sort of disappear, and are no doubt going through his contract looking for something, anything that could provide them an out. It’s doubtful that they can.

But it’s possible they won’t need to: with his injury, Rodriguez could, maybe, decide to call it a career. While it seems unlikely that he will, it could be the only way he’ll be able to escape this on anything even remotely resembling his own terms.

Time will tell what happens.

Picture of the day: Bill Klem

Bill Klem, generally regarded as the best umpire of all time, umpired 37 years in the big leagues, worked in 18 World Series, and is said to have gained the respect of even the famously feisty John McGraw. This is what he looked like:

This picture is from the Library of Congress Flickr Steam and has no known copyright restrictions.

Bizarre Baseball Culture: The Little Wise Guys and the Absent-Minded Natural

In Bizarre Baseball Culture, I take a look at some of the more unusual places where baseball has reared it’s head in pop culture and fiction.

There is nothing new under the sun. That is one way to sum up the tale of “The Trick Baseball Bat” by Charles Biro (story) and Norman Maurer (art). It stars the comic sidekicks of a superhero named Daredevil (who’s name was later taken up by a Marvel character), it involves a magic bat (you know, like The Natural, only in this case it’s actually magic) and said magic bat is made out of a special type of wood that is incredibly bouncy (like Flubber in The Absent-Minded Professor). Oh, and that wood? It got it’s amazing powers from being nuked.

And the thing is, this story was from 1951. That was a year before Malamud’s The Natural hit bookshelves, a decade before The Absent-Minded Professor was in theaters and at the start of the 1950s, where every B-Movie ended up having some sort of monster mutated by atomic radiation, although to the best of my knowledge none of them were bouncing wood. It is a stretch to say that this story (in the public domain, originally printed in Daredevil Comics #77, found here) is the inspiration for those works (it has a significantly different ending), but it is a interesting coincidence. Too interesting to have been ignored up until now.

(more after jump)

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