Here’s something you don’t see every day

Because I can...

If these aren’t real, it’s a great editing job:

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Bit and pieces, Nov. 13

Because I can...

♦  Rob Neyer is evidently not finished with naming things. He continues on the concept here. ♦  This year’s Tigers-Giants World Series was the lowest rated ever for TV. How to fix the situation. Perhaps. ♦  Speaking of TV, The Hardball Times compiled this list of  “must-see MLB.TV” that was derived “by combining the average […]

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Spitball names CASEY Award finalists

Awards

Spitball Magazine announced the finalists for the publications annual CASEY award for best baseball book of the year. The titles include: Banzai Babe Ruth: Baseball, Espionage, and Assassination during the 1934 Tour of Japan, by Robert K. Fitts Bill Veeck: Baseball’s Greatest Maverick, by  Paul Dickson Connie Mack: The Turbulent and Triumphant Years, 1915-1931, by […]

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Authors appearance: Jewish Jocks

2012 title

Franklin Foer and Marc Tracy, co-editors of Jewish Jocks: An Unorthodox Hall of Fame will discuss their project on Thursday, Nov. 15, at the Sixth and I Synagogue in Washington, DC at 7 p.m. In addition, Jane Leavy, author of Sandy Koufax: A Lefty’s Legacy and The Last Boy, will be on hand, as will […]

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Lest we forget: Lee MacPhail

Autobiography/memoirs

The baseball “lifer” passed away on Nov. 8 at the age of 95. Here’s the NY Times obit, written by Richard Goldstein. MacPhail published his autobiography — My 9 Innings: An Autobiography of 50 Years in Baseball — in 1989. A new copy goes for about $150 on Amazon. in 2000, G. Richard McKelvey published […]

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Bits and pieces, Nov. 12

Uncategorized

♦  More on Jeff Kent’s Survivor experience from The Wall Street Journal. I don’t get it: he thinks it should be harder, yet he was “kicked off the island.” Does that mean he didn’t try harder b3ecause it wasn’t challenging enough? ♦  Mets pitcher and memoirist R.A. Dickey was named recipient of the Branch Rickey […]

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“You could look it up…” (Dickson Baseball Dictionary)

Classic title

Remember the school-yard insult, “I looked up (negative attribute) in the dictionary and there was a picture of you?” Rob Neyer over at Baseball Nation sort of does the same thing with the names of baseball players as culled from The Dickson Baseball Dictionary. Among the players who will live in infamy: John Anderson, who, […]

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Bits and pieces, Nov. 9

2010 title

♦  One of my neo-favorites books have been the Freaknomics series. Their blog included this item about the eternal question (well, eternal since 1903, with the occasional break), “Does the best team win the World Series?” By teh way, Freakonomics co-author Stephen J. Dubner contributed an essay about everybody’s favorite comeback kid,  Adam Greenberg, in […]

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You can’t even buy a pack of cards for that amount anymore

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

There’s no off-season anymore. As soon as one is done, it’s time to plan for the next. This probably isn’t anything new, but it sure gets more attention, thanks to 24/7 cable sports networks and the Internet. Jonathan Eig, author of Luckiest Man: The Life and Death of Lou Gehrig and Opening Day: The Story […]

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Kent say I’m sorry he’s gone from Survivor

Because I can...

Not that I ever watched him on the show. Or the show ever. But for what it’s worth, here.

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More “pastime” and politics

Uncategorized

Don’t hate Nate Silver because he’s beautiful accurate. With his baseball background, it’s easy to compare his philosophies/theories to the iconoclastic Billy Beane in Michael Lewis’ Moneyball as Carl Bialik does in The Wall Street Journal. Even our neighbors to the north wrote about Silver.    

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Sports Illustrated picks 100 “greatest” sports photos. Discuss.

Photography

Sports Illustrated recently came out with a list of their choices for the 100 greatest sports photos of all time. Baseball Nation’s Grant Brisbee was ambitious enough to cull the baseball shots which includes, as ranked: 99. Willie Mays, “The Catch” 94. Greg Olsen, “Ow, my head and neck!” 89. Juan Marichal, “Windup” 83. Yogi […]

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Hail to the chief / National Pastime Radio

2012 title

Not to get political here, but judging by what’s been coming down the Internet, there’s a lot of connection between presidents and baseball. For example, The Hall of Very Good published this piece on “The Bond Between Baseball and the Presidency.” In addition, Nate Silver, of FiveThirtyEight fame, still gets kudos for his baseball work, […]

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Bits and pieces

"Oddballs"

♦  I’m including this piece just because I find it amusing. I hope the Brits don’t get all their baseball info like this. ♦  Who says fiction about the national pastime has to be confined to literature? Here’s a case of fictitious baseball merchandise. ♦  Dan Epstein, author of Big Hair and Plastic Grass: A […]

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Jumping on the “prediction” bandwagon…

2012 title

First it was PunditTracker, which analyzed the proficiency of baseball experts in their preseason prognostications. Now it’s this Sam Miller article in Baseball Prospectus, which concentrates questions put to general managers over the course of nine years. Upshot: “[P]redicting baseball might just be impossible, and a team that puts too much faith in its own […]

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Redemption at last

"Oddballs"

For you movie buffs out there, from TheChive.com from a piece about The Shawshank Redemption: Andy and Red’s opening chat in the prison yard, in which Red is pitching a baseball, took 9 hours to shoot. Morgan Freeman pitched that baseball for the entire 9 hours without a single word of complaint. He showed up […]

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Back to bidness, post-Sandy

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Ok, hurication is over. Time to get back to some semblance of normalcy. I hope y’all are okay out there. We came out unscathed save for a couple of days without power; presently we have no cable/Internet service, but no complaints given what so many others are going through. Before the power went out we […]

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Review roundup, Nov. 2

2012 title

Sorry for the sporadic posts, but still trying to squeeze in a few entries as I can. ♦  The Courier-Journal of Louisville, Ky., posted this review of Bushville Wins. Upshot: “…Klima intersperses interesting details with an obsession to link the team with Miller Brewing, the Milwaukee-based company that helped finance the new enterprise. There were […]

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A meager return on the pundit dollar

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

As per pundit tracker, here’s a list of how baseball writers and pundits “scored” in their predictions.

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Is it just me? (Facebook and Twitter)

"Oddballs"

Or are there more and more athletes who are available for Facebook friendship and Twitter following? I just checked FB and saw A.J. Hinch, Joe Torre, and Dave Kingman under “People you may know…” The same applies for Twitter. Is anyone out there friends of these former ballplayers and are they the real deal? Seems […]

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