Your Offseason Baseball Viewing Listings for November 15, 2013 has Asia Series and Australian Baseball Action

The Wi-Fi apocalypse of 2013 isn’t done yet, but I’ve figured out a way to get enough Wi-Fi to jot this out quick, the return of Offseason Baseball Viewing Listings.

11:00 PM (Thursday): Asia Series, Bologna (European Cup Champion) vs. Samsung Lions (KBO Champions). Will be streamed here.

3:30 AM: Australian Baseball League, Sydney Blue Sox at Brisbane Bandits. Will likely be streamed at ABL website.

3:35 AM: Australian Baseball League, Adelaide Bite at Melbourne Aces. Will likely be streamed at ABL website.

5 AM: Asia Series, EDA Rhinos (CPBL Runner-Ups) vs. Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles (NPB champions). Will be streamed here.

11 PM: Asia Series, Canberra Cavalry (2012/13 Australian Champions) vs. EDA Rhinos (CPBL Runner-Ups). Will be streamed here.

Sorry for the lack of updates!

Sorry for the lack of updates. I’ve been having internet trouble the last few days, making it hard to do short updates, much less long ones. It took a minor miracle to type up the Turner Field thing, and I was so frustrated at one point that I just up and used the “Reblog” feature of WordPress to link a HardballTalk article (adding a quick comment) so that some content would be up today. I have never done this before and hope to never do this again.

So, hopefully I’ll get these internet problems all fixed up soon and be back up to full-strength with the eclectic and insightful posts you expect from the Continuum. Until then, I’ll try to do as much as my situation allows.

Thanks.

Yankees to play exhibition games in Panama to honor Mariano Rivera

This is both classy and, of course, plays into my fascination with International Baseball.

The only post about the Braves’ move to reference “Back to the Future”, Doctor Who and Joe Mauer in the first two paragraphs

I need a time machine. Now. Or, well, I guess later would work as well. That’s the thing with time machines, after all. Still, I need a time machine. And when I have it, I intend on going back to Las Vegas in 2010, and tell them that I wanted to place a bet that by Opening Day of 2014 the Atlanta Braves would have announced plans to move from Turner Field and Joe Mauer would become a full-time first baseman.

I then would have hopped into my DeLorean and/or TARDIS, travel to today, and cash in enough money where I could buy a small nation, because that’s what happening. And, while many could read the tea leaves about Mauer, nobody saw the death of Turner Field coming, and for a very good reason:

It goes against almost every single thing we know about stadium movement. Most teams move towards the center of their cities, the Braves are moving away from it. Most teams flee old stadiums, and while Turner Field isn’t young anymore, it’s less than two decades old. Most teams don’t keep their moving plans total secrets… but the Braves did.

Now, to be fair, the Braves do have some good points: most of their season-ticket base is from the suburbs, and their new Cobb County facility will be closer to them. That, in turn, would likely increase in-stadium attendance, a  And, yes, they are getting a good deal from Cobb County, essentially letting them get a whole new stadium for the same price (as far as the team’s own funds) as what they would have spent if they renovated Turner Field entirely out of their own fund. And, at least in theory, the new stadium would be better located logistically, near two major interstate highways.

But, well, it still goes against most conventional wisdom, especially when one takes into account various caveats about the Braves’ good points. For example, the traffic in the areas north of Atlanta is infamously bad, and I myself remember being stuck in traffic during a family trip down there back in 2008. There is no mass-transit to Cobb County, for various reasons (some of them ugly), which would presumably have helped alleviate that traffic problem.

But, most of all, there is the general bad taste that is left in people’s mouths as a post-Camden Yards stadium is replaced for the first time, even as the Athletics and Rays are stuck in fields from a bygone era. And, perhaps even more worrying: virtually every stadium opened since Camden Yards changed the landscape of baseball stadium design was built with platitudes about them being able to carry their franchises “well into the 21st century”.

And yet, come 2017, not even a fifth of the way through the century, one of them will be replaced.

While Turner Field has always been something of an oddball amongst the post-Camden Yards boom (more brought about by the 1996 Olympics than any type of real plan), one worries about what sort of precedent that might set.

Your Offseason Baseball Viewing Listings for November 10, 2013

Only one thing, and it technically isn’t even on November 10:

11:30 PM (Saturday): Australian Baseball League- Canberra Cavalry at Sydney Blue Sox. Will be streaming here.

To make up for the lack of viewing, here’s Game 7 of the 2001 World Series:

Stuff I Forgot to Post About This Week

Some things I didn’t get around to posting about this week:

Johan Santana is now a free agent, and the Twins are amongst the teams interested. You know what that means

This 30 for 30 short on the couple that used to make MLB’s schedules is well worth watching.

Kevin Long will remain the Yankees’ hitting coach, and by all accounts he’s one of the best hitting coaches in the league.

We found out what Jake Peavy is going to do with that duck boat.

RIP Astrodome.

Your Offseason Baseball Viewing Listings for November 9, 2013

Today’s games:

12:30 AM: Australian League- Perth Heat at Adelaide Bite doubleheader. Streaming here.

3:00 AM: Australian League- Canberra Cavalry at Sydney Blue Sox. Streaming here.

8 PM: Arizona Fall League, Peoria Javelinas at Salt River Rafters. On MLB Network and streaming on the Arizona Fall League website.

10 PM: JWBL, will be streamed here.

Your Offseason Baseball Viewing Listings for November 8, 2013

Baseball!

3:00 AM: Australian Baseball League. Canberra Cavalry at Sydney Blue Sox. Will be viewable here.

3:30 AM: Australian Baseball League. Perth Heat at Adelaide Bite. Will be viewable here.

9:00 PM: Arizona Fall League. Glendale Desert Dogs at Scottsdale Scorpions. Will be on MLB Network and the AFL website.

10 PM: Japan Women’s Baseball League, will be streaming here.

Know of anything I missed? Let me know!

Your Offseason Baseball Viewing Listings for November 7, 2013

Well, we have a game in Australia very, very early in the morning and an Arizona Fall League game as well.

 

3:30 AM: Australian Baseball League. Perth Heat at Adelaide Bite. Will be viewable here.

9 PM: Arizona Fall League. Salt River Rafters (Prospects from D-Backs, Rockies, Cardinals, Rays, Blue Jays) host the Scottsdale Scorpions (Braves, Mets, Yankees, Pirates, Giants). On MLB Network and the Arizona Fall League website.

 

 

Know of anything else? Let me know!

The Silver Slugger, the Forgotten Award (and why I think they are)

The Silver Sluggers were announced tonight, and so I guess now is as good a time as any to note that, to me at least, the Silver Slugger awards always seem to be the odd-man-out of the awards. I mean, everybody knows of the MVP, the Cy Young, the Gold Gloves, the Rookie of the Year, and even the Manager of the Year, but the Silver Sluggers, it seems, are always forgotten about. You never hear about how so-and-so was snubbed in the Silver Slugger vote, or how such-and-such only won the Silver Slugger two times but would have won it many more if they hadn’t been playing the same position as an all-time great.

And here’s the two reasons I think that is the case:

1) It’s young.

The Silver Slugger was first awarded in 1980. By contrast, MVPs have been awarded in some form since 1911 and in it’s current form since 1931. The Rookie of the Year Award has been given out since 1947. The Cy Young Award (named that not because of any claim that Cy Young was the greatest pitcher of all time- although he most definitely is in the discussion- so much as because Young pitched in both leagues) was first given out in 1956. The Gold Glove awards were first given out in 1957.  Only the Manager of the Year Award is younger amongst the most notable MLB awards, and even that had some precursors in various magazines and newspapers. So, basically, the Silver Slugger hasn’t had enough time to build up any sort of tradition around it, in contrast.

2) Hitting isn’t that different by position, unlike fielding.

No matter what position, ultimately a hitter is a hitter, and they all need the same qualification: being able to hit the ball. Contrast this to fielding, where a Gold Glove shortstop is vastly different from a Gold Glove catcher, who is different from a Gold Glove outfielder. Each position requires at least somewhat of a different tool-set, unlike hitting, where a great hitter is a great hitter, no matter what position it is.

Let’s take Adam Jones as an example. He won (rather controversially- by the statistics he probably didn’t deserve it as much as some others) the Gold Glove this year, and also won the Silver Slugger. Now, if Buck Showalter received a knock on the head and suddenly decided Adam Jones should play second base, it’s highly unlikely that Jones would be able to win the Gold Glove there, since he has always been an OFer and thus lacks the instincts and training to be a good 2B, at least right now. However, Adam Jones would remain a viable Silver Slugger candidate there. See what I mean?

So, in essence, the fact that the Silver Slugger doesn’t really tell you anything other than that that player is one of the best hitters and that he plays at a certain position keeps it from being as big a deal as some others.

 

So, that’s why I think the Silver Slugger Award isn’t as big a deal as other awards… what do you think?