Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Billy Beane Got Greedy



Given that I spent much of my baseball-loving years in Fenway Park, I am safe in saying that I believed in the Curse of the Bambino.  Since I weathered that curse, I am now certain that Oakland now must live with the Curse of Yoenis Cespedes. Seriously.

Billy Beane is cool.  He is cooler than way he is portrayed in the movie, “Moneyball.”  Since Brad Pitt portrayed him in the movie, that is saying a lot.  He is more handsome.  (I think that is mostly because Pitt is a smoker, and it shows.)  Billy Beane knows a lot about baseball; he’s been putting together winning teams for a long time.  Never quite good enough to win the big prize, but he makes it to the post season a lot. 

Since I could never be for a team that plays the Boston Red Sox, I am not rooting for the A’s.  I am not against the A’s either.  I say this to establish myself as being basically non-biased about what is happening to the team from the East Bay.

Billy got greedy.  He went out and bought a bunch of top-notch players.  And he wound up trading away the guy who really made the franchise.  Yoenis Cespedes. He sent Yoenis Cespedis to Boston, Massachusetts.  Ever since Cespedes went to New England, the A’s have been losing.  The Red Sox were already losing, so that did not matter.  There is something oxymoronical about the idea of Cespedes in Boston. 


If he gets used to the place, and learns how to honor the history of Fenway Park, it might work for the Red Sox.  But the spirit of the Oakland A’s is not going to settle for the fact that Oakland traded away its spark.  If I were Billy Beane, I would do every thing in my power to return the Magic to the Coleseum. 

Saturday, August 30, 2014

Time for a SF Giants Blast Off Oh Boy!! Amen!!

With fewer than 30 games left, the Giants are fighting their way back.  Right now they have the home field advantage in the Wild Card race and are 3.5 games behind LA in the NL West race.  Oh boy!


This morning, Saturday August 30, there are 27 games left for the Giants in the regular season. Their win last night, 13-2 over the Brewers, proves to everybody that they are capable of beating a team with a better record at home.

The task now is:

Panik in the two hole
Pence in the middle of the list
Duff Man can fill in when Craw can’t
Blanco in left field
Posey and Morse at first until Belt gets back


The confidence of each player makes true team. Then, let Pence loose in the club house.  The Rev. Pence will show up. He’ll say, “I believe we will win”  And so will everybody else. Amen.

Friday, August 29, 2014

Tim Lincecum

I have to confess that I was one of the people who were appalled when the San Francisco Giants signed Tim Lincecum to his last contract.  He had not been performing, and I could not understand. Why would keep him around?  I did not get it.  At the time, I was mainly a Boston Red Sox fan.  In Boston, Baseball was mostly about the team and winning.  In San Francisco, the fans also love the players.  In particular, they love Tim Lincecum and Buster Posey. 

It was only in the last few years that I paid any attention to the Giants.  I watched them in their victorious post seasons in 2010 and 12. They really caught my interest in 2013 when they finished 16 games behind, tied for third place in the NL West.  I began watching every game when they seemed to start winning in the last part of the season.  By the time 2014 spring training came around, I was ready to be a Giants fan.  When the middle of June came around and they started to lose, it was too late.  My heart broke right along with everyone else’s.


By the end of 2015, Tim Lincecum will have earned around $100 million.  Lets face it, by the time someone has about $50 million, it stops mattering how much money a person has. When the contract was signed, Tim was already not as productive has he had been.  Except for one thing.  No matter what the score might be, Tim Lincecum sells tickets.  I can be in grocery store, and I will hear strangers talking about the fact they have to get home because it is “Timmy Day” and the game's about to start.

Today, when Yusmeiro Petit replaced Timmy on the hill and led the team to a 4-1 win over the Colorado Rockies, Bruce Bochy hesitated when asked if the Petit victory meant that Petit would be replacing Tim in the rotation.

Timmy is a local hero. You know the litany:  Two Cys.  Two no-nos. Two rings. Two dogs. 
He’s funny.  He is smart.  And he has an amazing amount of integrity.  He credits his teammates for helping him win. He makes no excuses when he loses. He loves his dad. He tells it like it is.  Pick any three of those and he can be your hero, too. Timmy will always be special in this city, just like Willie Mays and Willie McCovey.  There is a good chance Tim will make it to the Hall of Fame and that, one day, there will be a statue of the Freak on the grounds of AT&T Park.

This season, it looked like Timmy was fighting his way back. That second no-no gave him a new confidence and he started getting some nice wins. And then it fell apart again.  He could not see the plate. I was guessing ADD with some anxiety disorder thrown in.  People were aching for him more than for a losing team. And let's not forget how hard the man works. He doesn't just walk away and say, "Oh, I lost my stuff, I'll take my millions and go home." He works. He's fit, and he is always considering the game.  On the day of his second no-no he was more psyched that he had two hits and a walk than he had the no-no. Where did those hits come from? How can a man whom people think is finished come up with a no hitter?  The talent is still in there, and he has to find a way to let it out.

In the same season where he pitched his second no-hitter, he has arrived at a place where he can’t seem to find the way to the plate. “Its about me,” he told the press after losing 6-2 to the Nationals.  Like I said, no excuses.

Now here’s the thing nobody wants to talk about.  Baseball is huge business.  Tim Lincecum sells tickets.  He sells tickets when he starts.  He sells tickets when they give away t-shirts, bobble heads, and baseball cards. That's what makes a franchise. Timmy sells, but he doesn't sell out. Because of this I suspect we'll see him back in the rotation before the season ends. 




Monday, July 28, 2014

Thinking About the Sluggers


Here is a look at the home run stats for the major sluggers on the San Francisco Giants.


MAR
APR
MAY
JUNE
JULY
TOTALS


Belt
1
6
2
0
1
10
9 away
dl 2 x
Posey
1
5
1
2
3
12
5 away

Sandoval
0
2
6
1
3
12
10 away

Pence
0
2
5
4
2
13
9 away

Morse
0
6
5
2
1
14
10 away

TOTALS
2
21
19
9
10
61
43 away


Points of interest:


  1. They hit much better in “away” game fields.  70% - 43 of 61.
  2. Percentage of away games each month not computed.
  3. Tables include only sluggers with 10 or more homers.
  4. Morse has hit only 3 home runs in June and July, but he still leads the team with 14.
d



Stats from Baseball-Reference.com. Thank you.

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Mike Krukow

Last night a wrote most of a blog post about the San Francisco Giants’ 7-4 win over the Philadelphia Phillies. It was a fun game, wasn’t it? I loved the way the two teams traded one-run leads for a while. I was nervous when the Phillies pulled ahead. Finally,  in the sixth inning, Hunter Pence got on base, stole second, and waited for someone to come along and send him home.  That someone was Adam Duvall, the rookie called up from Fresno to fill in at first base while Brandon Belt heals from his concussion.  He made a shot well past the center field fence to give the Giants a solid lead.  Pitcher George Kontos, who also came up from Fresno, stepped in to relieve Ryan Vogelsong. He pitched two scoreless innings allowing one hit and striking out three.  The guys from Fresno really saved us. 

I was going to post the story this morning.  But a quick check of what was happening in baseball land this morning, I learned that Mike Kruko has been living with a degenerative muscle disease called inclusion-body myositis. That was a blow.  Mike Kruko is a 6-5, 20- pound pitcher with a 14-year career in his past. He played for Chicago, Philadelphia, and San Francisco. He won 124 games – 20 of them in 1986. 

Now he does the color for the CSN-Bay Area, working with his former teammate and friend, Duane Kuiper.  The two of them make a really good team.  Watching the two of them call a game is fun and informative.

Kruk, who was known as the “The Polish Prince” in his playing days, has taught me more about pitching than anyone.  While I an only imaging what it must feel to worry about falling, rely on a cane and an electric scooter.  He is only a year older than me. Lucky for the us, his IBM is not fatal, and he plans to stick around the broadcast booth until he is 80.  Lucky us.

There are a lot of us here in television and who watch a lot of TV Baseball. Kruk and Kuip, along with Amy G, become our friends, more than the players in some weird way.  I am a life-long baseball fan, Giants and Red Sox.

Last spring (2014) I was diagnosed with Uterine Cancer. No fun there.  The thing that really helped me stay grounded was watching the G-men climb to a large lead in the NL West.  And for a while, they were the best team in baseball.  Kruk and Kuip made that really fun.  I believe that the winning Giants infused me with some lovely winning joy.  It was healing.  It was fun. The biggest lesson in baseball is Kruk and Kuip carry the message.

C.W. Nevius broke in The San Francisco Chronicle this morning, but Kruk has been dealing with his “condition” for a number of years. He worries that he will lose his ability to play golf and music. Apparently he can play any stringed instrument out there.

But the real reason for this post is to say thanks to Kruk, who will never see this. When your days are hard, remember that there are many many of us out there who for one reason or another, cannot make it to the yard. You and Kuip bring us to the game every time. We see the game. We see the dugout. We see the food and the gamer babes. We see kids and a lot of the color of the game experience at ATT Park.
Some of us are just to far away. Some are sick; some are tired. Some are at work.  There are more people watching on television than in the park.  And you guys bring us the game.

Certainly you have a great family and a huge set of friends.  This is such a blessing, especially when you are having problems.  I know your problems with IBM are not going to go away. You said you will be here until you are 80. Please remember that the viewers aren’t going anywhere either.  When you bring baseball to the people of the bay area and the rest of the world, you set yourself up for all kinds of unconditional love.  For how you have enhanced my life, I thank you from the bottom of my heart.

Sincerely,
Fanne Fernow

GirlsLoveBaseball

Monday, July 21, 2014

Stay Positive or Just Ponder On


Monday, July 21.
Before the San Francisco Giants at Miami Marlins 
4 p.m. PT

Here we are, not even a week into the second half, and the Giants are back to falling apart.

 Cain’s elbow. Sounds like he is facing Tommy John surgery, but Cain has not said that. Rest can heal these things, and that is what he is hoping for. I wish him a good recovery so he can come back and be the pitcher he used to be. You know, the guy who earned the right to make his $25.5 million a year until 2018. 

Belt’s concussion. He’s been put on the 7-day concussion DL. Oh, this is bad.  I am not talking about the impact on the team, but I am talking about the impact on a human being.  I am really hoping that  Belt will be okay. He and his wife, Haylee, are expecting a baby boy in September.  Kudos to the MLB and the Giants for taking this situation very seriously. 

The Giants have called up Adam Duvall (I like this kid) and George Kontos from Fresno.  They have been in the Big Show a few times, so I am hoping they will be able to help out.

Giants, please do not let these injuries ruin your game.  Like Duane Kuiper said on KNBR on Saturday morning, "you have to learn to win with what you have."










Here is today’s lineup:

Hunter Pence rf
Marco Scutaro 2b
Buster Posey c
Pablo Sandoval 3b
Michael Morse lf
Adam Duvall 1b
Brandon Crawford ss
Gregor Blanco cf
Ryan Vogelsong p

Giants offense, you must get your bats going for Vogelsong.  Being shut out is due to a malfunctioning offenxe.  Every part of the btting order is responsible for getting on base. Please don’t let this guy down again.

I’m glad they brought Duvall up and left Mike Morse in left field. He is a very effective fielder.




Tuesday, July 15, 2014

RE2PECT



My first interest in baseball was in 1961 when Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle were having a big slugfest in Yankee Stadium. I was eight. But my first real team was the Boston Red Sox.  I don’t like the Yankees at all.  Even worse than the Yankees are Yankees fans. 

But I love Derek Jeter.  What’s not to love about him. My favorite place in the infield is second base/short stop. He is a great Short Stop. He is a great hitter.  In 20 years, he’s never given us a scandal. Thank you Derek Jeter for what you bring to baseball.  You will be missed.

I am not one to give plugs for corporate monsters like Nike.  But their Re2pect video is the best tribute to Jeter I have ever seen.  Check it out. It is a Nike collection to honor the Captain.