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Showing posts with label Mark McGwire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark McGwire. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Things We Were Wondering

Chris’ computer ate her homework. No really – her computer crashed and today’s blog post is being held hostage by the Geek Squad somewhere. Angela and I had high expectations for a fill-in post, but unfortunately were both a little distracted by last night’s Cardinals game …and this:


So, from the minds of two very tired and slightly giddy Cardinals bloggers, we bring you a list of “Things That Make Us Go Hmmmm?”


We were wondering….

1. Why would Brendan Ryan forego the high socks when his mustache alone seemed to be bringing the luck?

2. Why does Jason LaRue only cut his hair once a year? Why now? (By the way, Jason’s new look gets a definite thumbs-up!)

3. Why bring Aaron Miles up to the big leagues now when Tyler Greene and Joe Mather are both hitting better? (and at a higher level?)

4. Who invented MLB blackout areas and why don’t they make any sense?

5. Why is Colby striking out so much lately?

6. Why did the McGwires plan to have babies in June? Mark has a baseball job!
Let’s rephrase that: Why did Mark McGwire accept a job as the Cardinals’ batting coach when his wife was having triplets in June?
PS- congratulations to the McGwire family!

7. Why bring in Ryan Franklin in the 8th inning with the Cardinals trailing and a shortage of available arms?

8. Are there actual people running baseball-reference.com? Or do computers boost statistics from somewhere? Or is it just the work of magic baseball fairies?

9. Why do people either LOVE the wave or HATE the wave? No in-betweeners?

10. Why has Angela not dedicated an entire blog post to Adam Wainwright?

11. Why do Cardinals fans love scrappy little players? How far back does this love affair go? Pepper Martin?

12. Do players that go up/down from MLB to AAA rent more than one apartment?

13. Does pay change, depending on whether the boys are playing AAA or MLB games?

14. How many tattoos does Felipe Lopez have anyway?

15. Why does the national media only care about the Yankees/Sox baseball rivalry?

16. Why doesn't anyone in baseball recognize that the Cardinals have the top three rotation guys in the majors?

17. How do we even compare team offense stats between AL and NL teams when AL teams have a DH and NL teams bat their pitchers?

18. How will Brendan Ryan survive without his sidekick while Joe Mather is with AAA Memphis?


And the biggest questions is:

How many readers will actually stick around to read all 18 things that we were wondering about?

Thanks for reading, Mom!

Today the Cardinals face the Reds to battle for the series at 7:15pm CT (on ESPN).

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Photo Thursday



Ang's note: Hope you enjoy this week's photos. I'm off to DC for a trip with my students for the next few days, but with the fantastic writing of Erika and Chris, I'm sure you all will be just fine without me. By the time I return, the Cards will have swept the Reds and will be embarrassing the Nationals, and Brendan will have his batting average above the Mendoza line. If not, I'm blaming all of you!

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Please Send Bats

Credit where due
How I long for the days when we were (complaining?) talking about how the Cardinals were hitting too many home runs. Those were good good days. This has been a very unkind road trip for our boys in red, and the men in blue (aka umps) haven't helped, to be sure, but the biggest issue? Far and away - the Cardinals bats have been lost. I'm not sure if they didn't make the plane out of St. Louis for the east coast or if the boys are holding them at the wrong end, but it's been tough to watch some of these at bats lately. In fact, I'm fairly certain some of the boys in my 8th grade class had better at bats in PE last week than I saw last night.

I've come to the conclusion (not that this is a new one by any means) that the Cardinals are indeed playing the role of guess hitters. I went out in search of the article that started this thought process in my head a few days ago. My search was exhausting, and took me to so many random and varying sites that I got a little lost in the history of the game, as well as wrapped up in the current oddities of the internet. Here are some of the examples:

  • tweets that were just a few minutes old (that are appearing on google now... and I saw twitter names I knew... sometimes google is scary)
  • Bleed Cubbie Blue game threads
  • Milwaukee Sentinel articles from 1954 about the Milwaukee Braves (pictured at right)
  • Baseball Digest articles from 1959 and 1961 (I'll get back to these)
  • Joe Strauss Live transcripts
  • a simulation to see if you can react fast enough to hit a fastball (entertaining for the first 5 seconds or so... and I recommend turning down the sound)
  • and this article from Bernie Miklasz, which (along with the Mark McGwire/Al Hrabosky conversation mentioned therein) is what started this whole thought process to begin with for me

That's right, I am admitting for the second post in a row that something Al Hrabosky said got me thinking. I'm scared too.

However, hearing that our batting coach thinks that our guys are going out there guessing, and are far too reliant on watching video scares me much more. Videos like this speak to the issue as well.

I'm not saying this problem is localized to the Cardinals by any means. One article I found (and lost - there were too many) stated that there were more guess hitters in the league now than ever before, which didn't surprise me in the least. Players from Garrett Anderson and Pat Burrell to Dustin Pedroia were being nominated as being guess hitters.

It sounds scary doesn't it? Guessing. You and I couldn't go into our daily jobs and just guess. I know I don't get paid millions of dollars to guess all day (I also don't get paid millions of dollars). That said, here are some names of guys that 'just guessed' through their whole careers and came out juuuuust fine:
Johnny Bench
Ted Williams
Tony Gywnn

That's just the short list. I would also venture my own guess here and say that these guys knew a little bit more than some of the current free swingers running around MLB clubhouses. Just a guess though.

Speaking of history, This Baseball Digest article (I miss having a subscription to this mag) from May of 1959 had a nice quote from Rogers Hornsby, AKA the second-last NL player to hit .400 in a season. He stated,
Don't be a guess hitter. Too many hitters are guess hitters. They should wait until they get a ball in the strike zone. It only takes one to hit. Instead they guess. They swing when they think they've outguessed the pitcher. But that isn't a good percentage. Every pitcher has four pitches in his repertoire, fastball, curve, change-up and one other, possibly a knuckler. If the batter guesses right once out of four he'll only hit .250. 
A coach says swing, (players) swing, even if the pitch is a foot from the plate. They're not supposed to. That's not required. A batter doesn't even have to protect a base runner if the hit-and-run signal is on. The main thing is don't do anything silly. 
Leave it to the Rajah to tell it like it is. I believe if someone pulled out this quote and showed it to Mark McGwire right now, he would look at you and say, 'Exactly.'

I will leave you with one more thought for today (I know, I'm wordy for a Sunday). This gem is another Baseball Digest find, from 1961. Legendary Cleveland skipper Jimmie Dykes had this to say on guess hitters:
There are two kinds of 'guess' hitters in baseball. A batter of one kind 'guesses,' if you would call it that; that he will get some certain pitch while at bat and looks for this particular pitch; in fact, waits for it and lets other pitches go until he has two strikes and must hit at anything. A better name would be 'waiting for your pitch,' and most of the great hitters do it. The other kind 'guesses' on each pitch. Batters of this type will 'guess' that the next pitch is to be a curve or fast ball, and if wrong, as they frequently are, try again, probably changing the guess. They are continually getting crossed up, in part because they don't stick to the original guess, but keep switching, thus can be wrong on every pitch. This is a bad hitting habit to get into and a hard one to break.
Let's all hope the Cardinals are more like the first type, but the past few games don't do much to reassure me in that regard. We need to see a beat-down of the Pirates today so the boys can at least go home on a higher note!

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