I heard from Chris Hill, one of the people behind the AAA baseball comics…

You may remember the two Marvel giveaway comics, and you may remember how Chris Eliopoulos, who wrote the first comic, had a brief Twitter conversation with me.

Well, a few days ago I heard from another person involved with the comics: Christopher Hill, who helped make the deals that got those comics made in the first place and also did some of the writing. With his permission, I’m putting up what he sent me, with only one edit (removing a link to the comic overview, which I already posted higher up):

A friend just sent me a link to your blog articles on the books we did with Marvel. Thanks for taking the time. Great article.
We had fun writing those. Tough to pack so much in to a few pages, but we had a good time doing it. The boy on Hulk’s shoulder is based on my son. My favorite thing I have written! Glad you liked them.
We are working on a few new things in MiLB and MLB so I may circle back to borrow some of your ideas for future books! – Chris
PS – For those new things you can find me quietly on twitter @mPrintComics
Thanks, Chris!

Frontier Panoramas

I went to the Rochester Red Wings game last night, and took some cool panorama photos of the game. There may be some irregularities in the photos due to the fact they are stitched-together combinations of separate ones, but they are still nice.  Click the images below to see them bigger:

From high-up behind Home Plate. the farthest you can go while still being in the fan seats.

From high-up behind Home Plate. the farthest you can go while still being in the fan seats.

Closer to Home Plate

Closer to Home Plate

From left field, during the Seventh Inning rendition of "God Bless America".

From left field, during the Seventh Inning rendition of “God Bless America”.

 

 

Famous for Something Else: Chris Siegfried

So, apparently the winner of “The Bachelorette” played baseball, or something. He’s a guy named Chris Siegfried and he played in the Cubs organization and briefly the Indys. Here are his stats:

Year Age Tm Lg Lev Aff W L W-L% ERA G GS GF SV IP H R ER HR BB SO HBP WHIP
2007 21 2 Teams 2 Lgs A–A CHC 2 1 .667 3.83 24 1 11 4 42.1 37 25 18 2 25 40 6 1.465
2007 21 Boise NORW A- CHC 0 1 .000 2.35 14 0 9 4 23.0 23 12 6 2 9 17 2 1.391
2007 21 Peoria MIDW A CHC 2 0 1.000 5.59 10 1 2 0 19.1 14 13 12 0 16 23 4 1.552
2008 22 Peoria MIDW A CHC 5 7 .417 6.30 31 14 3 0 95.2 121 72 67 14 33 47 2 1.610
2009 23 2 Teams 2 Lgs A-A+ CHC 3 4 .429 3.38 32 0 12 2 61.1 55 27 23 2 31 51 9 1.402
2009 23 Peoria MIDW A CHC 0 2 .000 3.38 20 0 8 1 45.1 37 20 17 2 26 35 8 1.390
2009 23 Daytona FLOR A+ CHC 3 2 .600 3.38 12 0 4 1 16.0 18 7 6 0 5 16 1 1.438
2010 24 Daytona FLOR A+ CHC 3 7 .300 4.26 46 4 15 1 82.1 74 41 39 4 34 77 9 1.312
2011 25 Fargo-Moorhead AA Ind 1 1 .500 3.46 9 0 3 0 13.0 12 6 5 3 2 9 0 1.077
5 Seasons 14 20 .412 4.64 142 19 44 7 294.2 299 171 152 25 125 224 26 1.439
A (3 seasons) A 7 9 .438 5.39 61 15 13 1 160.1 172 105 96 16 75 105 14 1.541
A+ (2 seasons) A+ 6 9 .400 4.12 58 4 19 2 98.1 92 48 45 4 39 93 10 1.332
A- (1 season) A- 0 1 .000 2.35 14 0 9 4 23.0 23 12 6 2 9 17 2 1.391
Ind (1 season) Ind 1 1 .500 3.46 9 0 3 0 13.0 12 6 5 3 2 9 0 1.077
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 8/7/2013.

Twitter Feeds We Need

There is a Twitter Feed that lets you know when Yasiel Puig comes up, and when Vin Scully says something cool or profound. What other Twitter feeds do we need? I have some thoughts…

  • A feed that lets you know whenever the benches clear.
  • A feed that lets you know when Mariano Rivera is entering a game.
  • A feed that tells you when a position player is pitching.
  • A feed that tells you when a expected starting pitcher is switched for somebody else
  • A feed that tells you when there is a rain delay and when the rain delay ends
  • A feed that tells you the results of mascot races
  • A feed that updates you on when guys have no-hitters or perfect games going after a certain amount of time.
  • A feed that tells you when a pitcher has had 10+ Ks.
  • A feed that updates you on long hitting streaks.
  • A feed that consists entirely of Ichiro Suzuki quotes.
  • A feed that tells you when a non-MLB baseball game is on TV or Streaming.
  • A feed that consists entirely of cool Minor or Indy League Promotions occurring on a given day.

 

Get to work, Internet!

The Art of Fiction Is Dead: AAA Baseball and a Miracle Comeback

After Bobby Thomson‘s famous “Shot Heard Round the World”, Red Smith perhaps wrote the greatest lede (or lead, for those of you who didn’t major in journalism) in history:

Now it is done. Now the story ends. And there is no way to tell it. The art of fiction is dead. Reality has strangled invention. Only the utterly impossible, the inexpressibly fantastic, can ever be plausible again.

A game in the International League in early August is a long way from the events that surrounded Thomson’s shot, of course, but last night there was another example of the can-you-believe-this nature of baseball that Smith paid tribute to in that lede, and another reminder that, as the great Yogi Berra once said, it ain’t over until it’s over.

For most of the game between the Rochester Red Wings (AAA Twins) and Syracuse Chiefs (AAA Nationals), it was a pitcher’s duel, as P.J. Walters of the Wings went 5.2 giving up only one earned run and Syracuse’s Caleb Clay doing the same for seven innings. The bullpens then brought it to extra innings. And it is there that the story truly begins. Although at the time, the crowd at Rochester’s Frontier Field must have thought it was an ending, as Luis Perdomo took the mound and then, after a quick first out, allowed Eury Perez to double, walked Jeff Kobernus and then hit Danny Espinosa with a pitch. Cody Eppley came in to replace him, but with runners already on base and no room for error, the Chiefs knocked in five runs off of him, although only two of them were earned.

And so, it headed to the bottom of the tenth, with the Wings down by five. Many of the 9,000+ in attendance were likely only still there due to the fireworks scheduled for post-game, but the fireworks would come early. The Chiefs brought in Cole Kimball, a high-ERA’d mop-up guy who they probably figured they could give some work to as they recorded the final outs of the game. Early on, it looked like maybe he’d do just that, getting two outs while allowing only two small hits, hits that everyone knew were meaningless unless something big happened.

And then, the wheels came off for Cole Kimball. A wild pitch got Eric Farris and James Beresford into scoring position, and then a single from Chris Parmelee got Farris home and left runners at the corners. However, again, that run was meaningless unless something else was going to happen.

Meanwhile, in the outfield, a group of Chinese fire-balloons from a local festival appeared on the horizon:

100_6012 copyAnd then, Kimball walked Deibinson Romero. Up to bat came Jeff Clement, a low-average but high-power hitter who has had stints with the Mariners and Pirates in the past, but who hadn’t been doing well lately, being without a homer since June. Now, though, the bases were loaded, but the tying run stood at the plate.

He worked a 3-1 count, and then, on the fifth pitch of the at-bat, he sent it deep into the night, a no-doubter. As soon as it was clear that it would be fair, the stadium erupted into a bonanza of high-fives, hugs and joyous screaming. Five runs down with one out left to survive, and the home team had still found a way to tie it up. Meanwhile, the Chinese Fire-Balloons faded over the Rochester Skyline.

But the inning was not over, although Kimball’s night was. Michael Crotta came in, only to walk Aaron Hicks and then give up a single to Josmil Pinto (Hicks wasn’t sent for home on the single, as he probably would have been dead meat at the plate). Crotta then was able to get Eric Farris- in his second AB of the inning- to ground out, ending the inning and sending it to 11.

The Chiefs threatened in the top of the 11th, only to have their would-be rally shushed by Shairon Martis, who came in to get the final out of the inning after the Chiefs got two men on. The Wings went down one-two-three in the bottom half. The Chiefs did the same in the top of the 12th.

And then, in the bottom of the 12th, after Chris Parmelee struck out against the Chiefs’ Jeff Mandel, Deibinson Romero walked. The speedy Eduardo Escobar was sent in as a pinch-runner. And to the plate came the hero of earlier in the night: Jeff Clement.

And again, he worked a 3-1 count.

And then, again, he sent a ball into right. It wasn’t a home run, it was just a good shot into the corner. It was close at the plate, but the throw was off, and Escobar came in to score the walk-off run of the miracle victory.

Down by five with one out left in the tenth to a walk-off in the 12th. Only in baseball do you see things like this. And when you see such a magical game, you think that Red Smith was right: only the utterly impossible can ever be plausible again.

100_6014 copy

(MVP of Yesterday will be written later today, for those wondering.)

Baseball Card Haiku Project #5: 1998 Topps Chrome John Patterson and Larry Rodriguez

In which I write Haiku-style poetry about a potpourri of baseball cards I found in a value pack. Because, well, it’s my blog.

1998 Topps Chrome John Patterson and Larry Rodriguez

9798ToppsDiamondbackprospectsTwo Prospects for ‘Backs

Rodriguez never made it

Patterson did, though.

Link

Another summary/picture article on the Rochester Red Wings is up at Twinkie Town.

Cool Link: Stadium Journeys

Here’s a cool site to check out: Stadium Journeys. It’s a site that does stadium reviews of many sports, including baseball, where they have the majors, minors and even college and international  fields.

 

Check it out.

Neat Article: REMADE IN TAIWAN

I found this nice article by Sam Graham-Felsen over at Buzzfeed on Manny Ramirez’s now-ended stint in the CPBL. Check it out.

Continuum Week In Review (7/1-7/7) and Week Ahead (7/8-7/14)

This past week on the Continuum:

Coming up this coming week on the Continuum:

  • The usual MVP of Yesterday features
  • Another of the ever-popular Bizarre Baseball Culture feature
  • A Review of Out of the Park Baseball 2014
  • A book review (not sure what, though)
  • And more!