Hello. Just wanted to let everybody know that a very special edition of BREAKING OOTP is now available. Just not here. Oh, no, it’s in an even cooler place (hard to believe, I know): the official blog of Out Of The Park Baseball! So, if you want to see what happens when the entire field is shaped like a literal diamond and the outfield walls are 700 feet tall, GO THERE NOW!
Category Archives: Blog dealings
Over at @HOVG: Wisdom and Links and Spring Training!
Aside
Over at Hall of Very Good, the latest “Wisdom and Links” talks about watching Spring Training on TV, and also has links. Check it out.
The schedule this week….
Aside
March means the return of daily (or close to it) postings!
Tuesday: World Baseball Classic Update and a “30 Teams, 30 Days”
Wednesday: “30 Teams, 30 Days” and a new “Related To Somebody Famous For Something Else”
Thursday: World Baseball Classic Update (if necessary) and a “30 Teams, 30 Days”
Friday-Sunday: “30 Teams, 30 Days”, possibly another WBC Update and a BIZARRE BASEBALL CULTURE.
And, of course, who knows what else might come up?
Over at @HOVG: “Wisdom and Links” has Random Thoughts
Aside
Over at Hall of Very Good, I do the last installment of “Wisdom and Links” before games start and I suddenly have more material by having five random thoughts. It includes the first and probably only reference to Hamilton in “Wisdom and Links” history. Check it out.
Super-early announcement: The 2017 #Blogathon will be January 27-29
Yesterday, perhaps the last piece of Blogathon business was done, as I sent out the last giveaways from the Blogathon to the lucky folks who won.
So, I figure now is as good a time as any to announce that next year’s Blogathon will happen on the weekend of January 27-29. This could change depending on some other factors, but that likely will be the weekend. Like this year, it will be for Roswell Park Alliance Foundation, but certain other things might be different, for example I’d like to use something that allows for Paypal donations as that would allow for more people to donate.
Still, all of that is almost a year away. But I just wanted to let everyone know… and note that the countdown on the side of page has been reset!
Over at @HOVG: Wisdom and Links returns!
Aside
For the first time in several weeks, a fully original Wisdom and Links is up on Hall of Very Good! It deals with South Africa and the WBC. Check it out.
Getting back into the swing of things….
With the Blogathon now over, things are going to slowly start getting back to normal here at the Baseball Continuum. For example:
- A “real” Wisdom and Links will happen this weekend at Hall of Very Good.
- Sooner than later you will see the return of “30 Teams, 30 Posts”
- International Baseball Culture will return with more of Touch
- There’s a VERY neat Breaking OOTP coming soon.
- And, finally, there will be the VERY FIRST information on the 2017 Blogathon.
So, stay tuned…
A Thank You, a Reminder and some other things about the 2016 Blogathon
It’s now almost two days since the last post of the 2016 Blogathon went up, and we are at $610 dollars, over $110 over our $500 goal for Roswell Park Alliance Foundation and Roswell Park Cancer Institute. That is great, and I have a lot of people that I have to thank: the various people who have contributed books and other possible giveaways (I’ll be letting you know the winners once the donations are done), the people who donated, and, of course, the many people contributed pieces to the Blogathon.
However, the drive is not yet over! As I mentioned in the previous paragraph, the donations are not yet done! They are open until Super Bowl Sunday! And remember, if you donate, you have a chance to get…
- Playing With The Enemy by Gary W. Moore
- A “Living Baseball Card” mini-documentary on Andre Dawson
- 2007 AAA Baseball Heroes comic
- Signed copy of 501 Baseball Books Fans Must Read Before They Die by Ron Kaplan (contributed by Kaplan)
- Wild and Inside by Stefan Fatsis (Contributed by Kayla Thompson)
- Signed Copy of The Baseball Codes by Jason Turbow and Michael Duca (contributed by the authors)
- One of three copies of Out of the Park Baseball (Contributed by Out of the Park Developments)
- Hank Greenberg: The Hero of Heroes, by John Rosengren (Contributed by Sean Lahman)
- The Last Hero: A Life of Henry Aaron, by Howard Bryant (Contributed by Lahman)
So, please, donate!
And, what’s more, I am proud to announce that THE BASEBALL CONTINUUM BLOGATHON FOR CHARITY WILL RETURN IN 2017.
But, again, until then… DONATE!
Every Piece from the 2016 Blogathon
The Blogathon’s written portion is over. We had a great bunch of pieces from people from all across the spectrum of baseball: we had people from all over the world write pieces, and they ranged from award-winning pro writers all the way down to college students who are just getting started. And they wrote about all different kinds of things! In addition, I contributed pieces throughout Friday and pulled some pieces out of the archives to fill in those parts of the morning where nobody was awake for. And, remember, you can still donate until next Sunday.
Anyway, if you missed anything, here are links to all of the pieces from the #Blogathon (not counting “breather” posts where I posted about giveaways, who was writing, what you missed during the night, etc.), in chronological order (if you want to skip nearly all of my stuff, scroll down to Day 2):
Day 1 (all done by Dan Glickman):
Famous For Something Else: Eddy Alvarez, Silver Medal Speed Skater
A Random Musing on the Fairport Little League Money-Grabbing Promotion
Songs of October (Post-2015 update)
Related To Somebody Famous For Something Else: Tony Lupien, WWE Star John Cena’s Grandpa
2017 WBC Team USA Projections Version 0.1
2017 WBC Team Dominican Republic projections Version 0.1
Mr. Go, if adapted for American audiences
The Sliding Scale of Fictional Baseball Realism
First References to Off-The-Field Innovations and Innovators
BREAKING OOTP, Ep. 5: The No-Homers Club
The 50th BIZARRE BASEBALL CULTURE: DC’s greatest heroes and villains… PLAY BASEBALL?
Rochester Red Wings Programs of the Past: 1990
Day 2:
Jonathan Weeks: The Greatest Man I Have Known
Mets Daddy: The Highs And Lows of 1986
Seth Poho: The 2016 Nuclear Plant Team
CONTINUUM CLASSIC: The “Backyard Baseball” Kids: Where Are They Now?
CONTINUUM CLASSIC: 2007 AAA BASEBALL HEROES
Yakyu Night Owl: Dreams of Kenji-kun
Matt Wojciak: 2015 Middle Relief Report
Matt Taylor: Adam Jones Is a Difference Maker for Baltimore
Diane Firstman: Baseball Crossword Puzzle
Kayla Thompson: “Wild And Outside” Review
Dan Hirsch: The Most Average Player in Baseball History
Dan Szymborski: Doughy Nerd Gets A Job
Jason Cohen: Reminiscing about Chien-Ming Wang and What Could Have Been
Eric Stephen: On Baseball and Brothers
Jake Mintz and Jordan Shusterman: Nelly’s “Batter Up”
Sean Lahman: How Soon is Now? Reds Fans React to Rebuild Plan
Howard Cole: Thoughts on Retiring Roberto Clemente’s Number 21
Jeff Katz: Anniversaries and World Series
Mike Oz: The History of Baseball Players Rapping, Abridged
Graveyard Baseball- Your guide to adopting an NPB team Part 12: Saitama Seibu Lions (埼玉西武ライオンズ)
Nate Fish: Ezra, the Ballplayer
Day 3:
Ron Kaplan- Read All About It: Blogs That Will Keep You Up on Baseball Books
Chris Kabout: Former Red Sox farmhand gives a hand in battle against cancer
Andrew Martin: A talk with Alex George
CLASSIC CONTINUUM- Bizarre Baseball Culture’s “SHORTSTOP SQUAD”
CLASSIC CONTINUUM- BIZARRE BASEBALL CULTURE: COSMIC SLAM
Greg Gay: Victim of Circumstance
Hawkins DuBois- Searching for Baseball’s New Frontier: Examining the World of Mental Skills Training
Dan Weigel: Ranking the 15 most entertaining European baseball team names
James Attwood: Slow to Change is Not Always a Bad Thing
The Answer Key to Diane Firstman’s Crossword Puzzle
Stacey Folkemer: Baseball is more than a game, it’s part of the family
Stephanie Liscio- Forgotten Champions: The 1945 Cleveland Buckeyes
Patrick Dubuque: A Ghost Among Cardboard
Alex Skillin: Are we entering the Golden Age of Shortstops?
Jessica Quiroli- The Minor League Baseball Lawsuit: Wealth vs. the Working Class
The Author of @OldHossRadbourn: Three Catches
Kazuto Yamazaki: NPB Bat-Flip Juggernauts to Watch For
David Brown- Taters, tobacco and terror: Baseball in the Future
Marc Normandin: Bret Saberhagen’s case for the Hall of Nearly Great
Michael Clair: An (Abbreviated) People’s History of the World Through Baseball Cards
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So, thank you!
(Blogathon ’16) Jen Mac Ramos: Baseball Bonds
This guest-post is part of the 2016 Baseball Continuum Blogathon For Charity, benefiting the Roswell Park Alliance Foundation. The Roswell Park Alliance Foundation is the charitable arm of Roswell Park Cancer Institute and funds raised will be “put to immediate use to increase the pace from research trials into improved clinical care, to ensure state-of-the-art facilities, and to help improve the quality of life for patients and their families.” Please donate through the Blogathon’s GoFundMe page. Also, please note that the opinions and statements of the writer are not necessarily those of the Baseball Continuum or it’s webmaster.
I was 16 when I first took an interest in baseball. I didn’t grow up with sports and I leaned more toward art than anything else.
Something changed, though. I watched an NLDS game on a whim in 2007 and thought, “Hey, I actually like this sport.” I grew more invested as the Postseason went on and I knew this wasn’t going to be something that leaves me.
***
My father was a Mets fan when he lived in New Jersey in the 1980s. He can tell you stories about watching the 1986 Mets.
Growing up, a love of baseball was never instilled in me, though. Instead, I was the one who brought baseball into the family.
At first, my father thought that I had gotten interested in baseball because my friend at the time loved baseball.
I remember getting into a fight about it with him before my first game—Boston Red Sox at Oakland Athletics, May 24, 2008. He told me that it wasn’t something that I had ever been interested in before, but I know that I was going to be interested in it for a long time.
***
I dragged my father to more games. I was about 18 then and I didn’t have a car. After a while, I guess he realized that I truly loved the sport and everything surrounding it.
He began watching games when I wasn’t around. I had gone to college in Oakland—about two hours away from my hometown—and he would call me after the Giants game to talk about it. He would also watch A’s games, because my brother became a fan after that game in 2008.
***
2014 came around and my dad and I went to New Jersey. I had originally planned to go to Trenton alone to see the Richmond Flying Squirrels, the Giants’ Double-A affiliate, take on the Thunder. My dad wanted to come with and drive me there, so we did.
As the Flying Squirrels came out of the dugout, I started greeting the players—most of them responding with, “Hey, what are you doing here!” I had covered the team when they were in High-A the year before and most were surprised to see me in New Jersey.
Matt Duffy came out of the dugout and I said hi to him. Excitedly after, I told my dad that Duffy is one to watch.
***
August rolls around and Matt Duffy gets called up. I remember telling my dad, “Remember him?? We saw him in Trenton with the Flying Squirrels!” My dad didn’t forget. Not because he was intrigued by the way he played, though I’m sure that’s a part of it, but because he was surprised Duffy had remembered me from his short time in the California League.
From then on, whenever Matt Duffy did anything great for the Giants, we would call each other up and say, “DID YOU SEE MATT DUFFY DO THAT.”
***
The Giants made the postseason. Even year and all that. I decided to buy two tickets to Game 4 of the NLDS against the Washington Nationals. My dad had never gone to a postseason game before and I figured this would be a great father-daughter bonding moment.
This game ended up being the Hunter Pence Fence Catch game and I had never seen my dad more into baseball than at that game.
I wanted to take my dad to a World Series game, but so many factors derailed that idea. He told me to go, though, because he wanted me to go to a World Series game.
***
When the Giants won the World Series, I called my dad up immediately. I yelled, “MATT DUFFY GETS A RING.” Instantaneously, my dad started recalling how we saw him in Trenton and how he remembered me and now he’s a World Series champion.
***
It’s 2016 now. My dad still reminds me of that time in Trenton and asks me if I’m ever going to interview Matt Duffy now that he’s a fully fledged big leaguer.
Duffy placed second in National League Rookie of the Year voting in 2015, which exceeded my expectations for how well he would perform at the Major League level.
“You should interview Duffy at spring training,” my dad continues to tell me.
“I’ll try, Dad,” I say. “I’ll try.”
Jen Mac Ramos is a writer who is currently a grad student at the University of Southern California and has a bachelor’s degree in English. As a life-long resident of the Golden State, Jen grew up in Northern California and roots for most sports teams in the area. Their work can be found at Purple Row and Today’s Knuckleball. When they’re not writing, they can be found on Twitter talking about a variety of different subjects at @jenmacramos, or knitting.
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This guest-post has been part of the 2016 Baseball Continuum Blogathon For Charity, benefiting the Roswell Park Alliance Foundation. The Roswell Park Alliance Foundation is the charitable arm of Roswell Park Cancer Institute and funds raised will be “put to immediate use to increase the pace from research trials into improved clinical care, to ensure state-of-the-art facilities, and to help improve the quality of life for patients and their families.” Please donate through the Blogathon’s GoFundMe page. Also, please note that the opinions and statements of the writer were not necessarily those of the Baseball Continuum or it’s webmaster.