* Going to the tape

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Is it just me, or has there been a surprisingly small amount of outcry from baseball traditionalists (aka, old folks like me), objecting to the use of instant replay in baseball? MLB instituted the practice this week, using it primarily for home runs. Seems someone high up on the food chain was tired of too […]

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* Giving back through books

2008 title

According to this piece in on Thisweeklive.com, A new children’s book about sharing what you have with those in need is paying real-life dividends for the Eagan-based nonprofit Cheerful Givers. When readers purchase the book through the publisher’s Web site (www.agloveoftheirown.com ), a pull-down menu allows them to select from a list of charity groups, […]

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* Announcement: author appearance

Annoucements

Kerry Yo Nakagawa will discuss his  book, Through a Diamond: 100 Years of Japanese American Baseball on Friday September 19, 7 pm Community Roomat the Altadena, Calif. library, located at 600 E. Mariposa.  Following his talk will be a screening of American Pastime, the award-winning film  he produced. This powerful film tells the story of […]

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* "What a day this has been…"

Birthday greetings

Aug. 30 is a red letter day for the game, so I’m combining several elements: Happy birthday: Ted Williams, aka, The Splendid Splinter (Nickname of the Day), was born this date in 1918. Welcome to the Big Leagues: Ty Cobb (1905) and Keith Hernandez (1974) began their storied careers on Aug. 30. Fare thee well: […]

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* Review: Yankee for Life

Reviews from other sources

From the Bronx Banter column of the always entertaining Basbeall Toaster, this review of the late Bobby Murcer’s autobiography.

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* Happy birthday, Sweet Lou

Birthday greetings

(Not to be confused with “Sweet Lou” Johnson of the Los Angeles Dodgers of the 1960s) Lou Pinella, now in the midst of guiding the Cubs to the promised land of the post-season, was born this date in 1943. Younger fans don’t realize what a good player he was “in the day: a .291 average […]

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* Review: Red Sox reveries

Reviews from other sources

From Wicked Locale Orleans, a Cape Cod-based outfit, this review of Nick Cafardo’s 100 Things Red Sox Fans Should Know & Do before They Die and Faithful To Fenway, by Michael Ian Borer. Upshots: There is little in Cafardo’s retelling of Red Sox history that the diehards don’t already know, but it is not Cafardo’s […]

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* ESPN The Magazine deconstructs "TMOTTBG"

Bits and Pieces

VH1 used to run a program called “Pop Up Videos,” where they would “balloon in” factoids about the hot musical numbers of the day. ESPN The Magazine does something similar in print with “Take Me Out to The Ball Game,” which celebrates its centennial this year. The piece features the two main versions, written in […]

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* Is that "blogging" or "slogging"?

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

It may surprise you to hear that I hate the post-season. Let me rephrase. I hate the post-season when the non-baseball “fans” pop out of the woodwork to get involved. Where were they in April and May? I especially despise those celebrities whose faces are shown in every other shot (“Oh, and there’s Sarah Jessica […]

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* Jay Mariotti out at Chicago Sun-Times

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Mariotti, an “the opinionated and polarizing sports columnist” who frequently made White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen the target of his antipathy, has resigned from the Sun-Times. In a city with a strong sports journalism tradition, Mariotti was regarded as one of the leading columnists and certainly the most provocative. With a style that relied on […]

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* Nickname of the day

Bits and Pieces

Baldy Louden, a .261 hitter who played in the AL, NL, and Federal Leagues, was born this date in 1883.

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* Remembering Eliot Asinof

Author Profile / interview

Asinof, author of the watershed book about the Black Sox scandal, died June 10. In this piece from BaseballLibrary.com, Gene Carney pays tribute to his friend and mentor. Carney is author of Burying the Black Sox, one of several volumes on the events surrounding the 1919 World Series and its aftermath.

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* Baseball in the End Times

Because I can...
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* Mark your calendars: Replay review starts Thursday

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

According to a press release from Major League Baseball, limited replay review begins Aug. 28 in three series: Minnesota at Oakland, Texas at Los Angeles and Phillies at Chicago. The rest of the teams will begin on Friday. The statement announces that Instant replay will apply only to home run calls — whether they are […]

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* Answering to a "higher authority"

Annoucements

The New York Mets hosted Jewish Heritage Day on Aug. 24. So how appropriate was it that Astros’ catcher Brad Ausmus, one of the few Jewish Major Leaguers, hit the go-ahead homer in the 10th inning in what ended up a 6-4 victory? Now it’s the Astros’ turn. The club will host a “Welcome Israel […]

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* Politics and baseball: Strange bedfellows

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Rev. Jesse Jackson is no stranger to the national pastime. In the past he has agitated for the hiring of more minorities for management positions, which is a good thing Nevertheless, he seems to have angered many by his comparison of Barack Obama to Jackie Robinson. According to newspaper reports “Barack Obama has the capacity […]

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* And by the way

Magazines

Left out the fact that Chuck Klosterman writes “Why We Still Watch Baseball” in the September s edition of Esquire. He compares it to other sports and finds them wanting. Imagine a 3-0 game in the bottom of the ninth inning: The leading team is clearly in control. But if the leadoff hitter gets a […]

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* But they don't shoot ballplayers, do they?

Artist profile

This piece from The Saratogian on artist Brian Fox, who, despite the name, paints horses (no, he doesn’t coat them in whitewash). He is also one of MLB’s “official artists.”

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* Les francais aiment le baseball? Qui sut?

2008 title

Someone does evidement, as per this review of Neil Leifer’s Ballet in the Dirt on this French photographic Web site.

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* Nickname of the day

Bits and Pieces

Choo Choo Coleman, born on this date in 1937, batted .197 in a four-year career spent mostly with the Mets. Interviewed by Ralph Kiner for a postgame show after a rare Mets victory in 1962, Kiner asked Coleman, “Choo Choo — that’s a unique nickname for a ball player. Why do they call you that?” […]

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