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Friday, September 30, 2011

Fans scramble for Delmon Young home run, 1st inning ALDS game 1, 2011

Above Jeter beats throw to first after wild pitch, 1st inning, ALDS game 1. Jeter later scored to tie the game 1-1 v Tigers, 9/30/11, reuters ALDS game 1 rain delay in the 2nd at Yankee Stadium v Tigers, 9/30/11, USA Today

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Mariano Rivera throws ceremonial first pitch to Jorge Posada for ALDS game 1, updated 10/10/12, Mo throws first pitch at ALDS game 3

UPDATE: 10/10/12, Mariano Rivera throws first pitch at ALDS game 3, photos



Rivera throws ceremonial first pitch before ALDS game 1 v Tigers, 9/30/11, getty. "Justin Terranova, N.Y. Post, on the battery for the ceremonial first pitch: "Rivera to Posada: That's how the Yankees usually end the playoffs, not start them.""...

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ALDS game 1 at Yankee Stadium

  • Honoring the Colors at Yankee Stadium before ALDS game 1, 9/30/11, photo Newsday by J. Conrad Williams, Jr.
Above, fan in flags outside Yankee Stadium, 9/30/11, getty. Game postponed due to rain with score tied 1-1, to resume Saturday night, 10/1/11.

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XM channels and times for 2011 MLB ALDS and NLDS games

Friday, Oct. 7, 2011
  • 5:07pm
  • Home, Brewers, 186
  • Away, Diamondbacks, 187
  • National, 188
  • 8:37pm
  • Home, Phillies, 183
  • Away, Cardinals, 184
  • National, 89
Wednesday, 10/5/11
  • 6:07pm
  • Home, Cardinals, 183
  • Away, Phillies, 184
  • National, 89
  • -------------------
Thursday, 10/6/11
  • 8:07 or 8:37pm
  • Home, Yankees, 176
  • Away, Tigers, 177
  • National, 89
  • --------------------
Friday, 9/30/11
  • 5:07pm
  • Home, Texas Rangers, 179
  • Away, Tampa Bay Rays, 180
  • National MLB, 181
  • ---------------------
  • 8:37pm
  • Home, Yankees, 176
  • Away, Tigers, 177
  • National MLB, 89
  • ----------------------
Sat., 10/1/11
  • 2:07pm
  • Home, Brewers, 186
  • Away, Arizona, 187
  • National MLB, 188
  • ---------------------
  • 5:07pm
  • Home, Phillies, 183
  • Away, Cardinals, 184
  • National MLB, 89
  • ---------------------
  • 7:07pm
  • Home, Texas Rangers, 179
  • Away, Tampa Bay Rays, 180
  • National MLB, 181
  • ----------------------
  • 8:37pm
  • Home, Yankees, 176
  • Away, Tigers, 177
  • National MLB, 178
  • ----------------------
Sun., 10/2/11 (subj. to change)
  • Home, Yankees, 176
  • Away, Tigers, 177
  • National MLB, 178
  • ------------------
  • 4:37pm
  • Home, Brewers, 186
  • Away, Arizona, 187
  • National MLB, 89
  • ----------------------
  • 8:07pm
  • Home, Phillies, 183
  • Away, Cardinals, 184
  • National MLB, 185
  • ----------------------
Mon., Oct. 3, 2011
  • 5:07pm
  • Home, Tampa Bay Rays, 179
  • Away, Texas Rangers, 180
  • National MLB, 181
  • -----------------------
  • 8:37pm
  • Home, Tigers, 176
  • Away, Yankees, 177
  • National MLB, 89
  • -----------------
Above games in Spanish, Channel 175

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Thursday, September 29, 2011

James-Neyer MLB Cy Young Predictor for 2011

Verlander and Weaver are top 2 in AL, Kershaw and Kennedy top 2 in NL.

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Starting times for first 4 days of MLB 2011 playoffs

9/29/11, NY Times Bats Blog: "Here are the starting times for the first four days of games. All times are Eastern. All games will be broadcast on TBS, except one game as shown on TNT.
  • Friday:
  • Tampa Bay at Texas, 5 p.m.
  • Detroit at New York Yankees, 8 :30 p.m.
  • Saturday:
  • Arizona at Milwaukee, 2 p.m.
  • St. Louis at Philadelphia, 5 p.m.
  • Tampa Bay at Texas, 7 p.m. (broadcast on TNT)
  • Detroit at Yankees, 8:30 p.m.
  • Sunday:
  • Arizona at Milwaukee, 4:30 p.m.
  • St. Louis at Philadelphia, 8 p.m.
  • Monday:
Commenters about times on NY Times Bats Blog:
  • 1. "Those 8:30 P.M. starting times are killers, especially for kids. And, who wants to stay up past midnight for a game?"
  • 2. "I wish they would flip them, 2pm west coast is not very watchable for the Rays Rangers games."

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2011 MLB batting average lowest since 1989, 54 rainouts in 2011, only 21 in 2010

"“For a long time, parents didn’t want their kids to be pitchers. They were afraid they’d get hurt.""... "Offense dropped to a level not seen since Greg Maddux, Roger Clemens and Curt Schilling were dominating on the mound.

Nearly two decades later, Justin Verlander(notes), Roy Halladay(notes) and Clayton Kershaw(notes) have helped bring in a new era of prime power arms that’s caused scoring and home runs to drop to levels not seen in 19 years....

Teams averaged 4.28 runs per game this season, the lowest since 1992’s 4.12 and down from a Steroids Era peak of 5.14 in 2000. And the home run average was down to 0.94 each team per game, also the lowest in 19 years and a sharp drop from 1.17 in 2000....

It wasn’t just home run hitters who had a tough time, according to STATS LLC. The major league

  • batting average of .255 was the lowest since 1989.

On the flip side, the 3.94 ERA was a level last seen in 1992.

Maybe all those extra pitchers from the expansions of 1993 and 1998 finally have been absorbed.

Pitching is getting better. Teams are drafting pitching more. They started doing that a while ago and now you’re seeing what all those guys can do,” Cincinnati Reds manager Dusty Baker said. “For a long time, parents didn’t want their kids to be pitchers. They were afraid they’d get hurt. Now they see

  • some of the top draft pick money they’re getting and thinking it might be OK to pitch.”

Detroit’s Justin Verlander became the first 24-game winner since Arizona’s Randy Johnson(notes) in 2002. Tampa Bay’s James Shields(notes) had 11 complete games, the first in double digits since Johnson’s 12 in 1999. Philadelphia’s Cliff Lee(notes) became the first pitcher with six shutouts since Tim Belcher’s eight for the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1989.

And, oh, those strikeouts—a record average of 7.09 per team per game after breaking the 7 barrier for the first time a year earlier. Walks were down to 3.09, the fewest since 1968—when there were just 20 teams and pennant winners went straight to the World Series without playoffs.

“It’s not easier to be a pitcher, but it’s way more difficult to hit,San Francisco Giants pitcher Matt Cain(notes) said. “The way I think about it, when I’m pitching, I feel like I have a little more of an upper hand because they’re going to fail more than I’m going to fail, the way the numbers work out.”

Back in 1981, teams averaged 4.75 strikeouts. It’s not quite the dead ball era, but the balance has shifted more toward flame-throwers after a long period when bats ruled.

“The pendulum is switching,” New York Mets manager Terry Collins said. “Pitchers are throwing harder. Guys are throwing 94-98 (mph). Bullpen. Rotation. Years ago, 92 was a hard fastball. Now it’s an average fastball. Guys might even say it’s a tick below.”

Also throw in one factor that couldn’t be predicted: rainouts. There were 54 postponements,

  • more than double the 21 in 2010."...

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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Longtime Minnesota Twins radio voice John Gordon motors around Target Field before calling his last game

Minnesota Twins radio voice John Gordon retiring after 25 years "gets a ride in the sidecar of a motorcycle with broadcast partner and former Twins player Dan Gladden as he was honored prior to calling his last baseball game" for the Twins today in Minnesota v Royals, 9/28/11, ap

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Joe West is umpire behind the plate for Yankee-Tampa Bay Rays game #162

"Umpires: HP--Joe West. 1B--Sam Holbrook. 2B--Paul Schrieber. 3B--Chad Fairchild."

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AP World Series Style Guide says avoid using words like 'tater' and 'dinger'

9/28/11, "To help with consistent phrasing in coverage of the Major League Baseball playoffs and the World Series, The Associated Press compiled a World Series Style Guide of key baseball terms and definitions. Also included are some hackneyed terms to avoid. Some of the words are taken from the AP Stylebook. Others are standard usage for baseball stories transmitted by AP Sports. ...
  • Cliches
Better to say a player hit a home run, rather than he “walloped”‘ or “‘blasted”‘ or “cracked” it. Home runs are also homers, but avoid calling them “dingers,” “‘jacks,” “bombs,” “taters” and “four-baggers.” Pitchers can pitch two-hitters, but avoid “twirling” or “chucking” or “fireballing.” And teams try to reach the World Series instead of the “Fall Classic.” In short, avoid hackneyed words and phrases....
  • Descriptions
Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter or Yankees’ shortstop Derek Jeter? No apostrophe when describing his role: Jeter is a Yankees shortstop, Roy Halladay is a Phillies pitcher. But if club ownership is implied, use the hyphen for a possessive: the Yankees’ Jeter, the Cardinals’ Albert Pujols and the Braves’ Chipper Jones....
  • Postseason vs. playoffs
The terms aren’t interchangeable. Postseason encompasses all the games after the regular season ends _ the first round of the league playoffs, the AL and NL championship series and the World Series. It takes 11 wins for a team to go through the postseason and become champions. Playoffs refers only to the first two rounds that determine the World Series opponents.
  • RBI or RBIs?

For more than one run batted in, the abbreviation is RBIs: Granderson led the majors with 127 RBIs, Braun had five RBIs in the win. The seldom-used plural written out is runs batted in, but in AP Style the “s” is placed at the end of the abbreviation: RBIs.

  • “Take Me Out to the Ball Game”

Traditionally sung during the seventh-inning stretch as the teams change sides on the field. Even though AP Style is ballgame (one word) on all other uses of the word, it’s two words in the formal title of this baseball anthem.

  • World Series

Or the Series on second reference.

  • World Series champions.

Teams that win the championship are World Series champions, not world champions."

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Fan catches Matt Joyce 3 run home run in 7th v Yankees

Nick Swisher watches fan catch Matt Joyce 3 run homer in 7th, 9/27/11, Yankees at Tampa Bay, final score 5-3 Tampa Bay Rays.

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Country music speaks of US economic woes, 'Red, White and Pink Slip Blues,' BBC

9/26/11, BBC, "When Toby Keith hits the stage, the crowd roars its appreciation for Made In America, a tale of patriotism and productivity under threat in the heartland.

The song hits back against a sense of moral and physical decline, and the audience - white, working class and proud - loves it.

Made in America and Cost of Livin' are just two of the most successful recent songs that address the country's economic woes. The past three years have thrown up a host of others, including John Rich's Shuttin' Detroit Down and Hank Williams Jr's savage

  • Red, White and Pink Slip Blues."...
9/26/11, "9/26/11, "Country music brings home US economic woes," BBC, Connecticut, Paul Adams

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Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Tale of fans on field overheard on Red Sox radio from Camden Yards

Listening to Joe Castiglione on Red Sox radio v Orioles Tuesday, 9/27/11, top of the 7th, as I joined Joe says we have a delay, same as last night, "they don't have much security here." After a few seconds Joe says, they're catching up to him (fan on field), finally Orioles security does catch up with the fan. Above, Baltimore City Police apprehends fan on field v Red Sox, 9/27/11, ap

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'I heard Marlins are biting in Florida' Ozzie Guillen sign

"A fan holds a sign showing Manager Ozzie Guillen #13 of the Chicago White Sox in a Florida Marlins uniform during the eighth inning against the Toronto Blue Jays the Toronto Blue Jays at U. S. Cellular Field on September 26, 2011 in Chicago, Illinois. The White Sox agreed to Guillen's request to be released from his contract, allowing him to pursue other opportunities." getty. Final score 4-3

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Sunday, September 25, 2011

Cleveland Indians fan sign thanks team for great season

Indians fan sign at game in Cleveland v Minnesota Twins, 9/25/11, ap.

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20 minute power outage during Arizona Diamondbacks game v SF Giants

Diamondbacks Chase Field in Phoenix goes dark in the 7th inning for 20 minutes, 9/24/11. If evil Americans weren't so selfish insisting on playing baseball in the dark this wouldn't happen. Of course, MLB teams would go out of business playing only day games-
4/22/08, "People in high and visible places - from Robert Redford to Bud Selig - have come to understand that America's games can spur change among corporate partners and
  • even among the eco-ignorant masses.
"We're not going to get rid of night games," said Dr. Allen Hershkowitz, senior scientist at the National Resources Defense Council. "We're not going to change how the business works. This is going to take a long time. But getting baseball to embrace ecology allows us to take all politics out of the discussion of climate change, and it allows us to reach out to nontraditional allies." "...
Robert Redford ran a blaring global warming video at Yankee Stadium during the 2009 playoffs telling fans to lower their standard of living to save the planet:
10/19/09, "'Global Warming' at Yankee Stadium," Powerline blog

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Saturday, September 24, 2011

Fans scramble for Jeter 3 run home run ball in 2nd

Fans try to catch Jeter's 3 run home run, 2nd inning v Red Sox, 9/24/11, ap

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Richard, Roger Jr., and Kevin Maris at 50th Anniversary of father's 61st home run

  • Above Sal Durante with Roger Maris son Richard in Monument Park celebrating 50th Anniversary of Roger Maris 61st home run. Durante caught the ball. 9/24/11, ap
1960 Roger Maris Topps card autographed, Baseball Almanac

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JJ Putz and Kirk Gibson celebrate, Diamondbacks fans happy

Above Diamondbacks Ryan Roberts celebrates with fans after clinching the NL West in Phoenix, 9/23/11, getty.

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Friday, September 23, 2011

Most Americans continue to have little or no trust in mass media accuracy and fairness-Gallup Poll

9/22, Gallup Poll, "The majority of Americans still do not have confidence in the mass media to report the news fully, accurately, and fairly. The 44% of Americans who have a great deal or fair amount of trust and the 55% who have little or no trust remain among the most negative views Gallup has measured.
  • The majority of Americans (60%) also continue to perceive bias, with 47% saying the media are too liberal and 13% saying they are too conservative, on par with what Gallup found last year....
Americans remain largely distrusting of the news media, with 55% saying they have little or no trust in the media to report the news fully, accurately, and fairly, and 60% perceiving bias one way or the other. These views are largely steady compared with last year, even as the media landscape continues to change rapidly.
  • In a report released Thursday, the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press found record-high negativity toward the media on 9 of 12 core measures it tracks.
These measures may help explain some of the underlying negativity, though Gallup does not find sharp changes in overall views of the media this year compared with last. "...

via Lucianne

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Wilpon and Katz once offered a piece of the Mets to Madoff-NY Times

"The tiny share of the Mets that Wilpon bought in 1980 was important to his real estate business...because it gave Sterling instant credibility and celebrity in real estate circles."... "Wilpon and Katz, his brother-in-law, also own a chunk of a hedge fund that manages billions of dollars, and in recent years
  • they held their enterprise out to the public as an expert investment operation.

And in one of the more striking revelations to come to light, it was disclosed that Wilpon and Katz, who fought long and hard to make the Mets an exclusive holding of their family,

  • once offered a piece of the team to Madoff....

Wilpon and one of his senior partners say they were aware of investigations of Madoff by the Securities and Exchange Commission

  • but were always comforted that nothing seemed to come of them....

Among its best-known developments are Citi Field, the $800 million home of the Mets, and the Lipstick Building in Manhattan, where Madoff had his offices and where

  • he met Wilpon and Katz for lunch from time to time.
The tiny share of the Mets that Wilpon bought in 1980 was important to his real estate business, said John Pickett, who brought him into the ownership group, because it gave Sterling instant credibility and celebrity in real estate circles. Subsequently, Wilpon and Katz became half-owners with Nelson Doubleday in 1986,
  • then bought him out in 2002."...
Sterling also ran its own version of an in-house bank; created real estate funds and a hedge fund that manages billions of dollars... “The issue isn’t really going to turn, in my view, on whether Wilpon and Katz were sophisticated,” said Harvey Pitt, a former chairman of the S.E.C. “They surely were as to some things.”

He added: “Their claim has to be, ultimately, that they weren’t aware of the scam being perpetrated and therefore have no obligation to return funds that were paid out to them. That shouldn’t make it important whether they were sophisticated or not.”"

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Thursday, September 22, 2011

Bud Selig is excited to announce a team of MLB All Stars will play 5 games in Taiwan in November 2011

"Major League Baseball and the MLBPA will be selecting the MLB team and staff. A full roster and coaching staff will be released in October."... "Major League Baseball (MLB) and the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA) today announced that a team of Major Leaguers will travel to Taiwan this November to play against the Chinese Taipei national team in the 2011 Taiwan All-Star Series.

The 2011 Taiwan All-Star Series will consist of five games played between November 2 – 6 in three different cities – New Taipei City (XinZhuang Stadium) on November 2, Taichung (Intercontinental Stadium) on November 3 and 4 and Kaohsiung (Chengcing Lake Stadium) on November 5 and 6. Each game will feature the MLB team playing the Chinese Taipei national team and all games will be broadcast live in Taiwan by FTV, Major League Baseball’s exclusive over-the-air broadcaster for regular season and postseason games.

Major League Baseball and the MLBPA will be selecting the MLB team and staff. A full roster and coaching staff will be released in October.

Major League Baseball is excited to take another important step in showcasing our great game to Taiwan, continuing our objective to bring baseball to fans throughout the world,” said Baseball Commissioner Allan H. (Bud) Selig. “We are pleased that many fine players will represent Major League Baseball when they meet the top talents of Taiwan.”...

There are currently 28 players from Taiwan playing in Major League organizations including

  • two on Major League rosters."...
"MLB and the union also are discussing the possibility of having Oakland and Seattle play regular-season games in Japan next season. A March 2003 series between Seattle and Oakland at the Tokyo Dome was scrapped because of the threat of war in Iraq."

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Father of Jeter 3K catcher makes his own bid catching Rays foul 9/21

  • Above Raul Lopez cheers after catch, from Yahoo Sports
9/22/11, "Familiar Face Flashes the Leather in the Stands," Bats Blog, NY Times, by Ken Plutnicki
  • catch of a foul line drive by the Rays’ Sean Rodriguez in the second inning

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John Sterling call of Mariano Rivera 602nd regular season save, 9/19/11

"Strike three! He's got it! He's done it! Mariano, the greatest relief pitcher in the history of baseball is being hugged at the mound by Russell Martin and the entire Yankee ballclub. That's 602 career saves. Mariano has now saved more games than anyone else in the history of baseball.

"What an accomplishment. Every year has been a brilliant year. The best relief pitcher in the history of baseball now has the record for most saves in the history of baseball. So Mariano has saved his 602nd game.

  • Yankees win. "... The Yankees win. (Neil Best's Newsday Watchdog column is subscription)

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Newsday front and back pages after Yanks clinch 2011 AL East, NY Post back page, NYDN back page

  • Above Newsday front page with Jeter and Rivera after Yanks clinch 2011 AL East, 'They're In," 9/22/11
  • Newsday back page after Yanks clinch 2011 AL East, 'By Jorge, They Did It,' 9/22/11
  • NY Post back page with Posada and Rivera, 'Never Gets Old,' on clinching AL East, 9/22/11
  • NY Daily News back page, 'Vintage Jorge,' pictured with Rivera, 9/22/11

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Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Jorge Posada with a clutch, bottom of the 8th 2 RBI hit, this time for the AL East

Final score Yankees over Tampa Bay Rays, 4-2, Sept. 21, 2011
Then: Above right, Jorge Posada, 2003 Game 7, ALCS, 10/16/03. Bottom of the 8th, Yankees trail the Red Sox 5-3. Posada hits a 2 run double, score tied 5-5. The Yankees won 6-5 in the bottom of the 11th and went to the World Series. "He sat in the visitors' clubhouse at Comerica Park one year ago, after another Yankee postseason had ended in the first round. To the end, Jorge Posada stayed in there. He kept swinging. There was a two-out single in the seventh inning, when it was already 8-1 for the Tigers. Then came a two-run homer in the ninth, Posada making the last game of the season, 8-3.
  • To the end, he was a great Yankee.

It was quiet in front of his locker 30 minutes later. It is usually quiet there, unless Posada has something to say. Then he lets you have it.

"It's the thing people don't always see from Jorge," Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said yesterday. "How emotional he can be. It's mostly because he's always wanted to win as much as anybody we have."

That day in Comerica Park, some Yankees already were out of the shower and dressed and thinking about the bus to the airport. The first moments of next season are always the same when you lose the last game, whether you are home or on the road. They are looking to go, especially when it ends 8-3 and one of the only ones fighting is the catcher. The catcher wasn't going anywhere. He was still in uniform, sitting there in front of the locker. He had at least made that one last swing. He had not made the last out of the season. A year later, against Joe Borowski of the Indians, he just missed hitting a ninth-inning home run that would have brought the Yankees to within a run and scared the Indians half to death. At Comerica, in October of '06, one of the writers came by and told him that this might not be the time to say it, but he was going to say it anyway,
  • what a great Yankee Posada was.

Posada thanked the guy, shook his hand.

"You never think it will end this soon," he said. "Not after what we used to do."

He gets paid now by the Yankees for all of it, what he used to be and what the Yankees used to be, for being
  • one of the last members of the Class of '96 - class in all ways - who is still here."...

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