Thursday, November 8, 2012

The Doktor is in

Dr.Miraculous Election Blog

or: The Truth about winning elections

We are a republic, not a democracy. Look it up, and get back to me. Or not.

Now on to more important things, like baseball!

This week teams start making moves, a Carlos Marmol for Dan Haren trade fell apart, probably due to the fact that Haren has a glass elbow and Marmol cant be trusted to close a game with less than a five run lead. I say this is a perfect example of the best trades being the ones NOT made.
 Besides, Carlos is probably enjoying being the longest tenured Cub!
His Honor Frank Robinson, Hall of Famer and Kangaroo Court Judge



 DAVID PRICE AMONG FINAL THREE CY YOUNG CANDIDATES

Really? No shit Allan H. "Bud" Selig.
Thanks for announcing something the rest of us knew for the past two months or more.

This is just the kind of false drama the commish tries to create for the media that is killing the game. Make the announcement, not make a show of the announcement. Its insane to think that you will attract someone to the game by announcing the three finalists. I am pretty sure everyone knows its David Price or Verlander or Weaver.

No, not Weaver, its Price or Verlander or there will be an investigation!

The whole "FINALISTS" announcing thing is just the sort of annoyance we get from the streamlined MLB, and I reject the made-for-tv hype its being given. Anyone who was into baseball knows the best MLB players and reminding them in November is a rotten way to build filler for MLB network.

But those guys will do anything they can to avoid actually showing a baseball game.

David Price could be the first Cy Biscuit

WRIGLEY WATCH

Bad Henry strikes again, launching another bomb over the wall for the Leones and getting quotes in spanish.

 Henry Wrigley: “No tengo fecha para irme. Es mi primera vez en Venezuela, pero mientras me sienta sano no tengo problemas”
 “Lo más importante es ganar juegos, no lo que hace uno solo”
 “He tenido la suerte de conseguir buenos pitcheos para batear”

or in other words - "I have no time to go. It's my first time in Venezuela, but as I feel healthy I have no problems "
"The most important thing is to win games, not what makes one" 
"I was lucky enough to get good pitches to hit."

HenWrigs was given his release by the Tampa Bay Devil Rays this week,  I dont know if they tried to resign him or if Henry is happy to be a free agent, but I suspect he will have no trouble finding offers. 
Where will Henry play in 2013?


 Luna A Free Agent

Also given his release is reigning Southern League batting champ Omar Luna. The guy who started the season as the super utility man and ended up being the de-facto starter at third base was rewarded for his efforts by being cut loose from the organization.
 The soon to be twenty six year old Dominican has spent five years with the Rays, making it to triple-A in 2010 and 2011. His average during his time at Durham was a solid .300 the first year, then he struggled to hit .203 the next season which probably earned him a full year at Montgomery.
Omar is able to play a variety of positions, listed at  five foot eleven and 165 pounds (conservatively on both counts), he is large for a middle infielder but has good hands for the second base and shortstop positions as well as both corner outfield spots. His range is decent for a guy his size, another of the Rays players who are "sneaky" fast in the speed department. He was errorless in 13 games at SS/2b for the Biscuits this year and picked up 19 stolen bases.
Also, Omar pitched in games at two levels in 2011, including triple-A Durham.

I am gonna venture to predict that Omar will find a roster spot somewhere this spring.



Batting Champion for hire

More coming soon!

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Another Day, Another Post

The Montgomery Biscuits had another day to plan their 2013 campaign, but that didnt stop me from being annoyed with how the 2012 season ended.

Frankly put, the team quit.
They quit on the fans, on the season, on the playoffs and on themselves.

Doggy Daddy waves the white flag

It was flat out embarrassing to watch as they rolled over and let a lousy Mobile BayBears team walk over them. They walked over the Biscuits so badly that it gave them the momentum to win the championship. I say walked over us, but that implies our guys showed up, which they did not.

There are times I am shamed by what happens at the park, usually its hearing about how expensive our beer or concessions are, how our announcer doesnt sound southern, our funny team name etc. But this September it was what was between the lines. It was really sickening, and made me like our team less to see. Those players treated us like they were tires, owed a break. I even started to boo them, which doesnt usually happen.

BOOOOO!!! YOU STINK!

Its funny, because you hear that and worse at every other ballpark in the country. But at our park, very rarely do you hear anything but encouragement. In fact, this year at the playoff games, when we had a man on first and the opposing pitcher chased him back with a throw over, I would boo him. People were shocked!

We are so polite here, I supposed its because, as Hank Aaron would have us believe, we were the worst park in the nation for hearing insults from the fans. Now we are teddy bears, warm and fuzzy and full of "get em next time" even to the visiting team!

Heckle no Jeckle

Very sparse is the heckle at Riverwalk, but we do have some good ones.

A few years back I heard one that made me chuckle, not so much on the originality factor but the delivery was priceless.
He's a witty wisecracker


This particular day the visiting shortstop booted a ball, as infielders do. A fan behind the netting picked up on the guys number and used it in a very traditional manner, shouting "One-three aint got no glove!!" at the top of his lungs.

Then, from down the third base line, a brash female voice with a very southern drawl echoed the heckle in a high pitch. If you have ever heard Flip Wilsons character Geraldine, then you heard the voice that cried out "One three aint got no glove!!"

 And the crowd laughed out loud, it was timed perfectly, delivered just right and hit the mark. The shortstop made three more errors that night, each time hearing the call-and-return heckle.

I thought it ended there, but the following day during batting practice the shortstop watched a ball roll past him that he couldn't have caught with a fishing net on a ten foot pole when his teammates barraged him with the high pitched "One three aint got no glove!"
The DEVIL made me do it

Now thats an effective heckle, everyone enjoyed it!


GIANTS WIN PENNANT IN TWO LEAGUES

For the first time in history the Giants won their respective championships in both USA and Japan.
Manager Hara tossed in the air 11 times to celebrate victory
Nobodys tossing Bochy 


Other teams in Japan have already begun fall training camps, with players getting about a thousand swings a day. Thats an actual number not just an exaggeration! To put that in perspective, Pete Rose tells how his dad was rough on him growing up and every night before bed made Pete work on his switch hitting by taking a hundred swings from each side of the plate.

I really enjoyed my first season watching Japanese baseball, and will look forward to next year when I can see a season from start to finish. I kinda came in on the second half of this one.

Friday, November 2, 2012

The Amazing Henry Wrigley

Henry Wrigley The Caracas Crusher

Former Biscuits first baseman and Tampa Rays prospect Henry Wrigley had a good night at the plate for Caracas, hitting two homers for the Leones vs the Magellanes.
Wrigley hits two homers, only one RBI behind league leader


Wrigley was interviewed after the game, quotes from Leones twitter account:
"I'll remember this game for the rest of my life. Passion fans the team (has) is amazing"
"At first I whistled (sic), but you have to be strong mentally and I feel very comfortable."

"The energy here is electric. Sometimes we boo, but the excitement is awesome"


Its obvious he hasnt been slowed by the move south of the border, and is in the process of putting himself into the mix at the big league level by his strong play. He has consistently shown improvement at every level, bringing up his batting average each season since .236 in 2009 to a very solid .285 at Durham last season.

He has shown steady growth at the plate and in the field and I cant help but think the front office must have noticed that too - Henry is a threat at the plate and his non-prospect status likely stems from the numbers he accrued in lower levels. As his beard has come in, so has his baseball acumen increased. I look for Henry to make his big league debut with someone this April, be it the Rays or some other team wise enough to see what Wrigley has been doing for the past few years.
You've come a long way, Wrigs


He wears #81 as a Leone, but its not unusual for players there to have numbers that look like spring training roster cuts waiting to happen. I mentioned in a previous blog, but it bears repeating that these teams have a cast of thousands! I guess you never know when you might need that SEVENTH catcher.


 GAME BROADCAST

The Caracas Leones game was available via the internet, I followed the link provided on the VBL website and got to see the broadcast. It was in stark contrast to some of the other games I have been seeing the past few months.

To start with, we are getting better video quality from Mars and Saturn than we are from Caracas. I would strongly suggest that the VBL pony up for an upgrade in the video room, I made a screen capture of Wrigley watching his second homer of the game. Its like watching the game through a shower door!
Wrigley homer as seen by Mr.Magoo and viewers of VBL on the internet


Also, I was surprised to hear the announcer cough. Often. I dont hear that from big league games, and rarely in minor league games on the radio that I listen to. Never have I heard a Japanese broadcaster cough, surely it must be the height of failure to cough on the air during a broadcast over there.

 That being said, there were times Harry Caray coughed and sputtered and everyone loved Harry.
Harry doesn't need cough drops



Japan Ball - Yakyu Baka

Yakyu Baka, or field ball, is pretty popular and they have some nice games over there, as well as some very talented players from all over the world. Former Yokohama Baystar gaijin Brent Leach turned me onto a website that shows games live, and I have been enjoying it immensely.
Brent Leach, El Trotamundos

Currently the Yomiuri Giants are battling the Nippon Ham Fighers for the championship. The Ham Fighters are doing very well despite losing their ace pitcher to the Texas Rangers - Yu Darvish must have given them alot of money with his departure fee and the restocking has brought them to the brink of the title.

However the Giants have been playing great baseball after facing elimination at the end of the regular season and also in the playoffs, much like the SF Giants did in MLB. The two teams have many parallels, including star catchers who led the league in hitting, prima donna starting pitchers who have bad results when their mechanics get whacked out, and brilliant management from the field staff of coaches.

The Giants can win it all with a win in one of the last two games of the championship, both held at home in the Tokyo Dome. Im sure the crowd will be into it, the Giants fans are always a factor at their games.
Giants fans look forward to the next win



Otani Update

The Ham Fighters also will send their general manager and front office people to meet with the young pitchers parents on friday. The Fighters have exclusive rights among teams in Japan to negotiate with Otani, though there is some question as to if that also excludes foreign teams.

Last year, while Darvish was the biggest name coming from the East, the Orioles were taking a high school prospect in a similar situation as Otani. The player is not considered as much of a prospect as Shohei Otani, but with the Baltimore team linked to scouting Otani I wonder if it wasnt an effort to feel out the Nippon Professional Baseball League about how that would go over.

The NPB was not happy, and expressed it to MLB but didnt go so far as to make restrictions or ask MLB to butt out. Depending on how the Otani situation plays out, I expect they will do at least one of those, and maybe both.

As much has been made about a world draft by the media and MLB, but I think this is an example of how it can be a tough draft to organize. Surely Japan is gonna be pissed when MLB starts grabbing up its prospect players like schoolchildren desperately scraping up infield dirt at Koshien stadium after their tournament.
Are these players ready to be drafted?




BISCUITS NEWS

Since this is a Biscuits blog, I try to come up with news each time, even though it is terribly slow in the offseason. Not that things dont happen, we just dont hear about them for months if ever.
Or you have to find what they havent told anyone about yet.


BISCUITS NEW FIRST PITCH GAME TIME

No official announcement has been made that I know of, but from looking at the released schedule there has been a change in the time of games on Saturdays. This season all Saturday home games have a listed start time of 6:35.

Sunday games are at 2pm in April, then shift to 6:05 for games in May and June.
Then, in a total abuse of power and desire to make players and fans suffer, games have been scheduled for three sundays in August at 2:05.

The summertime day game, previously a noon start in July known as the "Sunburn Game" has been scheduled for May 27th. Probably wise to move it to an area of lesser heatstroke.

I think its bad business for a minor league team to have complex start times. Also, having attended games often, I can say from experience that an extra half hour of cooling makes all the difference. People wont come to sit in the hot sun for an extra thirty minutes. The heat already keeps people away, having them start when its hotter is not going to encourage more attendance.
Riverwalk Stadium clocks melt along with patrons


A Must for the Biscuits

Unless this team addresses the heat issue, there will be fewer fans in the stands and the ones that are there actually risk injury due to heat. People jokingly call it The Oven but the fact is that there isnt a hotter ballpark in the country without cooling offered to the crowd.

Hell, places that arent anywhere NEAR as hot as we get have cooling stations, give free bottled water, offer cool and air conditioned areas to escape the heat. Even letting fans bring in their own water would be a step in the right direction, I think its the minimum the team can do after Montgomery was announced to be the third hottest city in the country.

Put it another way - picture yourself next July taking in the weekend series against the Blue Wahoos. Saturday 6:35 and Sunday 6pm the average high temp is the same as the average humidity, right around 93 and usually clear and muggy. We are getting plenty of sun at that point, so it is kind of a mystery to me why the team would think it would be better off starting the game early.

Maybe they plan on setting up a sunscreen concession.
A way to make money from suffering fans?






INSANE SCHEDULE = NORMAL SOUTHERN LEAGUE

APRIL 4th we open against the Birmingham Barons. Three weeks later we host them again, and we wont see them for the rest of the year unless we meet in the playoffs in September. The Biscuits travel to B'ham in May and again in the last five games of the year. Meaning we play them in four series, three in the first six weeks and one in the last week. We dont host them the same number of times in each half of the season, the first month of the Biscuits season will open and close with games against the rival Barons.

Eight of the series in the first half of the season are against teams in the other division.
Five of the series in the first half are against teams in our division.

In the second half, we face the other division six series, our own division six times. That means we play more games against the other division than our own this coming year!

We host the Mobile BayBears only one time, but have the Pensacola Wahoos three times. Both are in our division.

WTF Southern League?

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

HAPPY HALLOWEEN!

Baseball? Gotta look for it now!

Thank the internet, there is baseball to be had, you just gotta look for it.
The Nippon Series is in full effect, Yomiuri Giants vs Nippon Ham Fighters, and if you have never seen any its worthwhile. They play a different style of game, small ball extraordinaire! More on Japanese baseball later.


Also you can dial up winter ball from the Caribbean leagues, Venezuela, Dominican Republic, Mexico and Puerto Rico. Some great games are played in the winter leagues, and some big names are involved.

Manny Ramirez, Vlad Guerrero and former Biscuit Henry Wrigley are among my winterball faves this year. Wrigs has been crushing the ball for Caracas, hitting his fourth homer tonite of the young season in the VBL. Manny and Vladdy will be playing for the Dominican league. MLB.com has the games on gameday.
Bad Henry in Venezuela


CUBS HIRE VANDY COACH

The Chicago Cubs added Vanderbilt University coach Derek Johnson as minor league pitching coordinator, and I wondered two things right away - what happens to Dennis Llewallyn who I thought was doing that job?
And also, is this an effort to make the Cubs more appealing to David Price in an effort to trade for the Rays top starter?

I wont go into it, but Price would be a nice fit for the cubs and not too expensive for a team willing to take on some payroll. LaHair would be a nice first base-outfield option for the Rays at a lower price than Carlos Pena and under team control for longer.  Price was mentioned in trade rumors last week, even tho he is a total stud for the AL East Tampa rotation.
Im just sayin.....


BISCUITS NEWS

There aint none, unless you count the bobblehead election.
I accused them of a fix, as the official team website had stopped letting me vote, but was told to clear my browsers cookies. Matt Moore will win, no matter how many cookies I clear, even tho he is probably statistically the worst on the list. Hellickson and Desmond Jennings had better years, but they didnt pitch any no hitters for our team so they got no chance!

I voted for Hellickson, I wanted to see how they would make him look, as very few bobbles look like their namesake.
Give em Hellickson!


Like the Bj Upton statue giveaway a few years ago. They were supposed to be Delmon Young but a couple months before the statue was sent here Delmon tossed a bat at an umpire in Triple-AAA (see previous postings on Delmon) and they took the heads off the statue and replaced them with BJ Upton heads! The body looks like Delmon, but with Uptons name and number on the jersey.


Giants win World Series - Panda gets MVP and Corvette

By the end of it I guess I was pulling for the Giants, they seemed to be the best of the teams in the postseason. The postseason has become a tournament style game that doesnt appeal to me, friends are surprised when I tell them I dont watch much after the regular season is over.

For me, I prefer to see the best teams over the course of the full season. I would rather see the two teams with the best records play each other as soon as the season ends so we can see the two best teams in as close to midseason form as possible. I know, its crazy but I want to see the two best teams in the World Series even tho that would often include the teams I am least fond of.

As a Cub fan, I think there should be six or more wild cards and teams in chicago start with a three game to none lead! hahaha

Astros To Introduce New Look Friday

Too bad a local sporting goods store has been selling the shirts for a week, giving the internet a look at the secret logo. Oops.


Sunday, October 28, 2012

Montgomery Biscuits Blog

Buttering them up for the offseason!

The Biscuits tweeted a picture of the trophy they won for promotions. I replied that it was NOT the trophy the fans wanted to see.
this is the one we want


Jim Morrison named Montgomery Biscuits Manager for 2013?

Not this guy

While other teams have already begun announcing the field staff for their affiliates, the Rays always wait until late in the offseason to announce assignments for coaches and managers. I speculate that there is a strong possibility that there will be a change at the helm of the Montgomery team, which would likely be in the form of a promotion for Single-A manager Jim Morrison.

This guy!



I would be happy to have Billy Gardner Jr back for the next campaign, but after the playoff defeat skipper didnt sound as optomistic as I would have expected him to. Basically it was a "we shall see" and he followed with not being sure how many years the organization would be willing to have a manager at the double AA level. The remarks may have been colored by the way the team fell flat in the postseason, but for now we just have to hang around until the parent organization feels like handing the info out.


Henry Wrigley Watch

Another day, and another couple hits, another couple Venezuelan RBI's for Wrigs. What no homer? Ho Hum.

World Series Connection

I said the other day that Delmon was the only Biscuit in the Fall Classic, but there is another member of a World Series team that was on the roster for Montgomery. Jim Leyland, of course!

Its well known that Jim managed Montgomery when they were the Rebels in 1974, and we had several players who went on to the bigs. Craig Brazell's dad Ted was on that team as was future big league pitching coach Vern Ruhle. It was Lelands first managerial job higher than single A for the Tigers organization.

1960's Jim Leland, the catcher

However most don't remember he was a catcher for the Rebels from 1967 all the way through to his appointment as the Rebels hitting coach in 1970.  By 1972 he was getting his feet wet as a manager for the single-A affiliate of the Tigers in the MidWestern League.

Yes, he smoked in our dugout during games just like he did when the Pirates faced the Braves in 1992. Im sure he has sneaked a few cigs during this series too!

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Montgomery Biscuit fan blog, offseason update

Things most fans dont know


While at the World Series party last night, I found out that some things that I had thought were common knowledge. It occured to me that such info was perfect blog-fodder and so here it comes!

The NEW Riverwalk infield.


A rumor I had heard during the season has indeed come to pass. The Biscuits infield has been completely reworked.

The first week after the playoffs ended, City of Montgomery crews razed the playing surface from dugout to dugout. This included removing the sod, taking up the red clay infield dirt, and at least partially if not completely removing and replacing the layer of rock surface below the top layer. This rock surface helps drainage and gives the top dirt a nice springy play for ground balls. It also settles over time and after about ten years had started to create small sinkholes where the gravel had settled and the dirt above caved in.

At one batting practice I was at, I heard a coach warn his guys to watch out for the divot near first base, which was a hole big enough to get your whole foot in up to the ankle! Yikes! The groundskeepers filled it in before gametime, but this is not something you want to have your multi-million dollar prospects having to watch out for.

In the past couple seasons there have been ALOT more bad hops, slower infield drainage, and the sod had taken a beating. In short the infield looked its age, or more.

When I talked with fans at the games during the season, they seemed to all fall in one of three camps as concerns the field work.

  1.     The field needs it, its about time
  2.     The city shouldnt spend taxpayer money for that
  3.     Fields need upkeep?

The outfield was left as is, although it needs as much or more work as the infield. The pitchers mound was leveled or moved, im not sure which yet, but I will ask around. I know sometimes stadiums have removed the mound for such work and replaced it later.

Another thing you might or might not know




The Monty Biscuit Bobble-Bank has a habit of having his hands fall off. As such, the team has extras and will give them away to anyone who will take them. The thing is, the hands are easily reattached, so go get you some BobbleBank!



More curious than that, new uniforms?

I have been told by more than one person connected with the team that within the next few years there may be some changes in the teams look, though a complete rebranding is probably not in the cards.
I wondered if that was the reason the Biscuit Basket hadnt restocked the hats at the team store, but I have been told that the hats have indeed been ordered and will be the same. I suspect that means no new look this year, but I am sure the idea was suggested for the tenth season coming up. There may be a slight tweak to the logo but not a rebranding this year, in other words no new uniform look now, but be warned that it could happen in the not so distant future.

I suspect the desire is there, but the budget hasnt caught up with it. Yet.

Shohei Otani Watch: Day Two

Shohei Otani - 18 yrs old and 99mph  
The kid was drafted by Nippon Ham Fighters, but NPB rules governing negotiations with highschoolers is written for teams in Japan. There are no rules covering a high school grad signing with a foreign team, so it seems that Otani could sign with any MLB team he chooses.

That could be good news for LA, the RedSox, Rangers and now the Orioles have been linked to the prospect pitcher.

 Its tough to pin down where Otani is on the development meter. While he is just out of school he is also probably miles ahead of where a western player of the same age has developed.




And there is Koshien, the amateur tournament, a prestigious invitational with a very high level of competition and a history that goes back a hundred years at that location.  

Koshien Pedigree? The Babe thought so.     
Koshien opening ceremony 
EVERYONE watches Koshien, not just baseball fans. A good showing at that tourney can mean a lifetime of notoriety and often players who stand out there are given lucrative contracts by companies who want them as representatives - to lend their name recognition to the company! It makes the little league world series look, well, like little league.  

Obits


I always check the baseball reference obituaries - idk why but I do. I find it sad that so many greats are passing, but worse than that are the fantastic stories of the players I havent heard of. They outnumber the guys I have heard of five to one, and often I learn so much more from them.

Les as a Tiger in 1945
Les Mueller passed away this week. The 6'3 right hander was an Illinois native who had only two seasons in the bigs, his career interrupted by Pearl Harbor. A reliever in 1941 who managed to sneak into just four games, his return from the wartime efforts saw him make 18 starts for the Detroit Tigers. Teammates with Hank Greenberg, Hal Newhouser and Virgil Trucks, Les was a part of the postseason roster for the American League champs and got into Game One of the 1945 World Series against the Chicago Cubs. Mueller pitched two innings while striking out one in mopup work as Hank Borowry tossed a shutout and the Cubs defeated Newhouser 9-0.


Les gave up Pete Gray's first big league hit, the one-armed outfielder for the StLouis Browns who will be the subject of a later installment of History Lesson. As a Tiger farmhand, both before and after his time in military service, Mueller was teammates with yesterdays history lesson subject Charlie Metro.

Wiki has this story about Leslie Mueller:

    On July 21, 1945, Mueller put in one of the greatest pitching performances in major league history. Mueller pitched the first 19-2/3 innings for the Tigers and left having given up only 1 unearned run. No pitcher has thrown as many innings in a major league game since Mueller's feat. The game lasted 4 hours and 48 minutes before umpire Bill Summers called the game a tie due to darkness at 7:48 p.m. (Shibe Park had lights, but the American League had a rule against using the lights during a scheduled day game.)

    When Tigers manager Steve O'Neill removed Mueller, the pitcher asked, "Gee, Steve, the game isn't over, is it?" (Source: Baseball's Unforgettable Games, by Joe Reichler and Ben Olan.)

Wait, the FIRST 19 and two thirds innings? What a game! I guess the fans got their moneys worth that afternoon.

Friday, October 26, 2012

Still thinking Biscuits

World Series Party

At Riverwalk Stadium

The Montgomery Biscuits hosted a party for season ticket holders, showing the Fall Classic on the Jumbotron in center field. There was a very nice turnout, there was complimentary snacks and drinks, a cash bar for hard stuff and a warm autumn evening to enjoy the game.

One of the first people I encountered was Greg Rauch, current team president and former GM. I think Greg is probably one of the hardest working guys at the park - I have seen him doing everything from hosting groups of dignitaries to pouring sodas to pulling the tarp. He was really friendly and we talked about the teams in the series and the Grumpy Biscuit Delmon Young was even mentioned. Its always a pleasure to talk with Greg, although he stays so busy I only get the chance to have a convo with him a few times a year.

Greg Rauch and his right hand man, Big Mo


Also there was a collection of my fave 'Skits staffers, Jonathan V, Scott Tribble, Chris Asa, Molly, Megan, Jordan - the whole cool crew! We get good blue shirt staffers, they always seem cheerful and its hard not to smile when you see them. Mike was there, idk his last name but hes one of our fave ushers -the yellow shirts.


And of course there was Bob Rabon. Bob is the man, hes like the season ticket holders best friend. I had forgotten to RSVP for the party, but one email to Bob and its no prob. Other than having scantily clad serving wenches for season ticket holders, Bob has taken care of just about all the requests of season ticket holders.

wench photo unavailable

Giants win Game Two

The SF Giants held the Tigers down again to take a two games to none lead.
It was scary to see Doug Fister wear a Gregor Blanco line drive to the noggin, but Fister seemed to have a really good game even afterwards so he must have not been affected. Rare to see a guy get hit on the mound and have zero effect, but it was a relief he wasnt hurt.

Much was made by the broadcast crew about Fielder being thrown out, but no mention was made of the fact that he would come in third in a race with a pregnant woman. It was a good send by Lamont the 3b coach, theres no blame to be had in that play. Its a big game, the team needs the run - I think he felt that it was a good gamble. The fielders had to make a perfect relay play to the plate in order to get the slow runner, and thats what the Giants did. Its just baseball, and usually a good bet that it wont be a perfect relay play. But, teams that perform the fundamentals go to the playoffs and making that play is what has SF still playing while all the other NL teams are on the couch watching their fantasy football seasons play out.

Speaking of fundamentals, the Giants have showed some great talent in doing the little things to win games. I saw a picture perfect hit and run in game seven of the LCS, and now one of the finest bunts ever put down a line.

All night I cheered for it, and finally Angel Pagan rewarded us with free tacos by stealing second base. I think thats cool, everyone loves free food.
Steal this taco

My last comment regarding game two - Dan Iassogna was a fantastic umpire last night, and helped the game of baseball have a great night. He called a good pitchers strike zone for both sides, made several big calls and got great looks at them so he got them right.

Next up is a travel day, then we see game three at Detroit. I think we will see more life from the Tigers bats, especially guys like Peralta and Jackson, Boesch or the bench could have hits at home.

History Lesson

Maybe not every day, but often I want to dedicate some time to history of baseball in Montgomery, and I thought I would stick with the World Series theme and mention Charlie Metro. Its a little long but I think you will enjoy.

Charlie Metro in 1962

Charlie was one of the most loved managers in Montgomery history, born Charles Moreskonich (yes I had to look that one up to spell it right) his immigrant fathers first name was Metro and Charlie was "Little Metro" and the name stuck. Born in 1918 he spent nearly fifty years in the game as a player, coach, manager, general manager, scout, ambassador as well as inventor.

Charlies abilities as an outfielder are the stuff of legend, once he caught a foul ball for an out while playing center field, another time he put the tag on a runner at home plate to finish a run-down play.

He debuted as a player with the Tigers, thusly our World Series theme, but 1943 was his only full season there. BaseBall Reference says the team was unhappy that Charlie tried to organize the players into a union. He also played for Connie Macks Philadelphia Athletics, winning their starting center field job in 1945, until he was traded midseason to the Oakland Oaks.

This is where our guy gets interesting. He has already spent time learning the game, charting pitches for his friend Steve O'Neil who had managed the Tiger teams he was on. Not to mention what he could have picked up from legendary Connie Mack, Charlie is well on his way to learning to manage baseball from the best minds in the business.

Oakland, in the PCL at the time, was managed by Casey Stengle and befriended the Oaks young bat-boy Billy Martin. As he was seeing his playing days come to an end, he was picking up the tricks of the trade from a host of Hall Of Fame skippers. He took a job as a player manager for the Yankees organization and began working his way up through the minor leagues. After a couple seasons of success for two different organizations, the StLouis Cardinals signed him in 1950 and sent him to Montgomery Alabama to manage the Montgomery Rebels of the Class B Southeastern League.



He would spend four seasons at the helm of the Rebels and enjoyed a bit of a resurgence as a player, hitting 18 homers for second on a team that would be 77 wins and only 54 losses the first year.

In 1951 Charlies Rebels did even better, winning 85 games although Charlie played less and hit only 4 homers. The team that year moved from Class B Southeastern to Class A South Atlantic league, and took the leagues best record into the playoffs where they won the championship.

The following year the team did one better, winning 86 games for third place in the league, thought 1952 was an odd year with the team being called the Montgomery Grays and again playing in the lesser Class-A South Atlantic league, which the third place Grays won after the dust settled on the playoffs.

The team would keep the moniker Grays for 1953, but the team would fall off badly, losing 90 games and winning only fifty in Charlies last season here.

Charlie Metro would go on to become one of the Chicago Cubs "College of Coaches" in 1962 and helped convince the team to abandon the idea! Charlie stayed at the helm of the Cubs that season and he went from there into coaching and scouting for the White Sox and other teams. Charlie was even General Manager for the KC Royals at one point, it seems there was nothing in baseball this man wasn't able to do.

One last interesting note - one that is to me, the most amazing thing Charlie Metro did even though he gets no credit for it. Charlie Metro took a piece of rubber tubing and glued it onto a spare home plate so that a hitter could set a ball on it and practice his swing - to play pepper with only one person. The batting tee was born!


Charlie didnt patent the idea, and of course now the tee is a fundamental tool in baseball instruction. Charlie didnt mind too much that it took hold, he was happy that it helped so many players develop their skills and that should tell you what kind of guy Charlie Metro was!


Biscuit Numbers

Two more hits for Henry Wrigley, who homered the other day after tweeting how it sucked to be sick in a foreign country. I think the Venezuelan pitchers will probably be happy to see Henry go at the end of the season, having seen enough of him to last a whiles.

Hak-Ju Lee had two hits in the Arizona Fall league.

Thursday, October 25, 2012