Images of 2012: Oriole Magic

Despite claims to the contrary, the Baltimore Orioles continued to win. And win. And win. Making the playoffs for the first time since 1997, defeating the favored Texas Rangers in the Wild Card Game and then going the distance against the New York Yankees before finally falling in the fifth game.

The Orioles had a habit for the dramatic, with close victories and walk-off wins, like the one below from September 12. That’s Nate McLouth getting lifted in the air.

(Image by Keith Allison, used under a Creative Commons license)

Who’s in/out/in-between of the World Baseball Classic as of 9:43 AM of Dec. 29, 2012

The latest news on participants in the WBC:

  • Martin Maldonado of the Brewers is like to play for Puerto Rico. So I’m putting him in as possibly/likely.
  • A rumor on an Orioles message board is that Adam Jones will play for Team USA. I found it because somebody in a reply linked to here. Yeah me. However, since even by the original poster’s admission there is no tweet, link or article, I’m not going to be putting him in the list. Just thought I should mention it, though, as it would make some sense if he was going to take part.

As usual, go below the jump for the full list:

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Images of 2012: Perfection

Images from 2012…

There were three perfect games this season, a record, but perhaps the most unexpected was the first one, by Phil Humber. He no-hit the Mariners in April. He’s somewhere underneath his teammates in the picture below.

(Photo by Blake Handley, used under a Creative Commons license.)

What’s amazing about this, despite the fact that every perfect game is unexpected, was that both before this game and after it, Humber had been unexceptional. In fact, by the end of the season, he was an afterthought with a 6.44 ERA who was let go by the White Sox at season’s end. Sports Illustrated noted that this made him the pitcher with the worst ERA in the league with at least 100 IP this season.
He’ll try to resurrect his career next season in Houston. But no matter what happens, he will always have that April day against Seattle, where he saw 27 come up, and sent all 27 down.

Who’s in/out/in-between of the World Baseball Classic as of 2:51 PM of Dec. 27, 2012

The latest news on the WBC:

  • Jim Johnson has now been fully confirmed not to be playing in the Classic.
  • The latest update on the Korean roster looks like this.
  • Also, there are some reports I’ve found here and there that due to a feud between the Mexican Baseball Federation and the summer Mexican League (the LMB), the participation of some Mexican Leaguers is now in doubt- either they won’t have their contracts honored, or they won’t be covered in case of injury, or something. I’ll let you know more once I figure it out.

Go after the jump for the full list:

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Merry Rickeymas from the Baseball Continuum

You know the story of who inspired this holiday: His birth was an unusual one, but he grew up to perform amazing feats, and spoke in words that have been repeated again and again throughout history. Later in life, he became known for his ability to resurrect himself.

I speak, of course, of Rickey Henderson, born Dec. 25, 1958 in the back of an 1957 Oldsmobile.

I am not going to do the extremely easy joke that goes with that factoid of information.

Although he had hoped to play football growing up, his concerned mother and a school counselor got him onto baseball, mainly because they were worried he’d get hurt. During his Hall of Fame induction speech, in fact, he mentioned that his counselor gave him a quarter every time he did something well on the baseball field.

This is always ironic, because perhaps nobody was pulled from their baseball career kicking and screaming as Rickey Henderson had to be. After he washed up after 2002, he went to play in Newark to start 2003, for the indy-league Bears. He did well enough that he was signed by the Dodgers, which were the final team he’d play for in his big-league career.

But Rickey refused to go, and in the final years of his playing career, he was something of a joke, again returning to the Indy leagues, first for the Newark Bears again, and then the San Diego Surf Dawgs. Only then did he hang it up.

And when he hung it up, he left with one of the most distinguished careers in history. The Man of Steal was voted to 10 All-Star Games, three Silver Sluggers, a Gold Glove, the 1990 AL MVP, and won a World Series in 1993 during his brief stint with the Blue Jays. His 1406 stolen bases are well-known, but often forgotten is that Rickey also holds the record for runs-scored (2295), and is second only to the often-intentionally-walked Barry Bonds for BBs (2190). In fact, I read once that even if Rickey Henderson had never stolen a single base, he would likely have made it to the Hall of Fame, simply due to his good hitting and excellent eye.

But, of course, no discussion of Rickey Henderson is complete without some of his… unique words. Nobody knows for sure which of them are true, which of them are false, and which of them have been lost somewhere in between. Tom Verducci once noted this, writing that it made Rickey something like Johnny Appleseed or Davy Crockett, a character that could not be merely defined as fiction or nonfiction. Some of my favorite stories and quotes often attributed to Rickey:

  • Perhaps the greatest story ever attributed to Rickey is that, with the Mets (some say it was when he was with the Mariners), he approached his new teammate John Olerud and remarked that he’d played with somebody who wore a helmet on the field during his time in Toronto (and, if going by the Mariners version, New York). Olerud, of course, was that person, having worn a helmet in the field since he had an aneurysm in college. The story is, by all accounts, not true, and started as a clubhouse joke about Rickey. However, the fact that anybody would ever think that was true describes Rickey Henderson perfectly.
  • During the 1980s, the Athletics found that there was a hole in their check books. After some research they found out that Rickey hadn’t cashed a $1 million check, and had framed it instead.
  • He considered it an honor to be Nolan Ryan‘s 5,000th strikeout: “I’ll have another paragraph in all the baseball books. I’m already in the books three or four times.”
  • Professional athletes often sign in under aliases at hotels so they won’t be bothered, usually by using either outlandish names or names so ordinary nobody will notice (John Smith, for example). Rickey Henderson checked in at hotels as Richard Pryor, which would presumably get plenty of attention from fans of the comedian.
  • After the Red Sox won the fourth game of the 2006 World Series, completing the sweep, Rickey reportedly called up and asked if he could have tickets to Game 6 at Fenway Park.
  • It is said that, to pump himself before every game, Rickey would stand nude in front of a mirror and chant “Rickey’s the best” to himself.

How many of those are true? Does it really matter?

Happy Rickeymas!

Who’s in/out/in-between of the World Baseball Classic as of 11:45 AM of Dec. 22, 2012

I didn’t get the list of changes to World Baseball Classic participants last night, but here it is now:

  • Bad news for Team Canada: After having arm surgery to remove bone chips, Scott Diamond will be out of the WBC. Diamond would likely have been near the top of the Canadian rotation, especially if Scott Dempster doesn’t take part.
  • However, Regina’s Leader-Post confirms a few pitchers who are on the list for Canada, although they are all minor leaguers: Dustin Molleken, Andrew Albers (who was named COPABE’s best pitcher in international competition for 2011) and James Avery. I’m putting them in as possibly/likely, since they haven’t officially been confirmed yet.
  • Finally, @AntonioBargas sent to me a link to a Spanish-language article on players who are on possibilities for Team Mexico that were mentioned by the head of Mexico’s baseball federation. It heavily features some players of Mexican descent, and who knows if guys like Michael Young would play, but it’s an interesting look. I’ll have a bigger look at the Mexican possibilities later.

Go below the jump for the full list:

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Who’s in/out/in-between of the World Baseball Classic as of 10:15 PM of Dec. 20, 2012

Today’s news regarding players and the World Baseball Classic:

Go below the jump for the full list:

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My five best position players, pitchers, and managers- just in time for the “End of the World”

Well, here it is. One day until the end of the world, according to the Mayans. Never mind that the Mayans actually didn’t predict that 12-21-2012 was the end of the world, or that the Mayan culture didn’t see history as a straight line but rather as a series of cycles, or that they found another Mayan calendar that extends past 2012, or that the Mayans didn’t see the collapse of their own empire coming… a bunch of crazies on the internet say the world ends tomorrow, so who am I to argue?

Humanity had a good run. We mastered fire, created the wheel, spoken and written language, and invented pre-sliced bread. And remember that time we landed a man on the moon? Or when we drove smallpox into functional extinction? And we created the Internet, allowing us to watch video of a Corgi getting cleaned using a vacuum cleaner!  Good times. Good times. Heck, it’s a shame that those stupid Mayans didn’t give us time to fix that whole Global Warming thing sometime before it turned us into a wetter version of Tatooine, because that probably would have ended up there on the list of accomplishments.

Stupid Mayans.

But, hey, the end of the world gives me the perfect excuse to finally say who I think are the greatest ballplayers of all time. After all, if history ends tomorrow, I can say with certainty that this list will never have to change again!

So here we go (after the jump- because the Mayans would have wanted it that way):

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Who’s in/out/in-between of the World Baseball Classic as of 5:00 PM of Dec. 19, 2012

Today’s news on World Baseball Classic participation:

  • Alessandro Maestri, AKA Alex Mestri, an Italian who spent some time in the Cubs system and now pitches for Orix in the NPB, has received an invite from Team Italy, according to Yakyu Baka. Therefore, I’m putting him in the possibly/likely category.
  • In an article about his trade to Arizona, Grand Slam Stats & News, a site on Dutch baseball, mentioned that Didi Gregorius is eligible for Team Netherlands next March. Therefore, I guess it’s safe to say he probably is under consideration.
  • Although it happened a few days ago, Ryu Hyun-Jin (Hyun-Jin Ryu?) has opted out of the WBC.
  • In addition, an article in Mexico from a few days ago mentions Yovani Gallardo and Miguel Gonzalez as possible pitchers. So I’m putting them as under consideration.

Go below the jump for the entire list of statuses for players in the WBC.

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If I Were Commissioner: The Return of Barnstorming

In “If I Were Commissioner”, I pretend that I am in charge of all of baseball…

For years, back when ballplayers needed some extra money to hold them over during the off-season and the owners also were looking for ways to leverage some more money, there was barnstorming. Teams of ballplayers would travel the country (sometimes even the world!), playing local teams and each other, spreading the gospel of major league baseball to the cities that didn’t have it- and making a good buck while doing it (usually).

But, alas, as time went on, salaries got higher and baseball expanded west, the barnstorming traditionally slowly disappeared. Nowadays, it is almost non-existent. Beyond the occasional trip to Asia (such as the one in Taiwan in 2011), ballplayers don’t go on tours anymore.

But if I was commissioner, that would change. Because, you see, baseball is a game best seen in person (as opposed to football, which is a sport that is better on television). It would thus make sense to let as many people as possible in as many areas as possible see it in person. Since obviously it wouldn’t make sense to require, say, every MLB team to play one regular-season series in their AAA stadium, the answer is barnstorming.

It could work like this: every November, there could be a team formed from any interested players who’s teams either missed the playoffs or who were eliminated early on. They would then play a series of five to ten games in various cities, the location of which would differ by year. One year it could be in Japan or Korea playing against local teams there, the next it could be in areas of the warmer-weather part of the USA that don’t have MLB teams (New Orleans, San Antonio,  Albuquerque, etc.) against a “Washington Generals” team made up of C-list free agents, minor leaguers that need more seasoning, and interested retired players.

So you are probably wondering: what about colder cities? Well, maybe that could be done during the season, using a team of old-timers and free-agents similar to the one mentioned above. They could play a few games against minor league teams, or something. Not a perfect solution, but, hey, what can you do?