Thursday, February 26, 2009

Fingers crossed....

I put together Steph's new computer chair tonight, as well as posted the playoff games for Cam's VFF league (thevff.net is your friend, and so is blindsideblitz.com). I hope the chair doesn't fall apart. 

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Good times....

Not much to blog about lately. Didn't work Monday, still looking for jobs, yada yada. Side projects are taking up my time, such as my USFL league at http://www.blindsideblitz.com/usfl. Check it out, it's good stuff. In other news, I'm headed to San Diego next week, so the blog shall be silent from the 2nd through the 7th, pretty much for sure. 

Friday, February 20, 2009

So I'm employed. Sort of....

Through a job agency called Spherion, apparently I'm now "on call" if a secretary calls in sick on Monday, while they look for a more permanent placement. I have no complaints, given how hard it's been so far to find anything worthwhile out there. Apparently Madison is one of the better places to find work around here, so maybe I'm lucky. 

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Milt Says Goodbye

Speaking of legends retiring....

Bit of background, ladies and gents, yes, I'm a Wisconsinite, and yes, I've been one all my life and intend to be one until the day I die, but I'm also a big CFL fan. Even wrote a bit on scout.com when CFL writer Jack Bedell ran the place. Don't ask me why I like the league. Always have, always will, somehow. 

Anyway, in a retirement that's as big to the CFL, maybe bigger, than the retirement of Brett Favre, Milt Stegall made it official that he was hanging them up. I wish every pro athlete could see how he conducts himself on and off the field and take notes. He will be missed. I have not the words to convey how wonderful he was to watch, even in the limited amount of times I got to see him, be it on tape or in person. 

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

#22 in Action

See this post for what I mean by that. 

The Brewers signed Eric Gagne to a minor league deal today, a far cry from the $10 million deal he got last year from us. 

My reaction: He could have value, given we're not paying him much, if he makes the team.

Steph's reaction: Disbelief, "Are you kidding me?," Anger, Questioning Why?

Also had the Weeks-Hart debate again tonight. No decision rendered, although in her mind, she wins. She always wins there. 

Since I'm rambling about the Brewers, my guess as to at least April's starting rotation is as follows:

1. Dave Bush
2. Braden Looper
3. Yovani Gallardo
4. Manny Parra
5. Jeff Suppan

Reasoning? I heard somewhere (and failed to remember or find the link again) that Macha doesn't want the young guys to worry about being the top guys in the rotation, and Suppan just hasn't had a great stint here in Milwaukee. That leaves Bush and Looper, and I think the guy that's been with us for a while will get the nod on Opening Day. 

25 Random Baseball Things


Thank you, Craig Calcaterra, for making me actually want to fill out a 25 Things... uh... thing, this will actually be fun! 


1. My earliest baseball memory comes from before I moved across my small Northwestern Wisconsin city when I was 5. Panini sticker albums were what got me into the game. I had worked on a few albums of other 4 year old attention-grabbers, although I can't seem to remember anything other than the one I helped my sister do at this point, but for two years, I could expect a 25 cent sticker package any time my dad went to the store. Life was good.


Check out #3. That's what I started with. 


2. Like Craig, I fell in love with a team in 1988, the kind of love only a five year old can have. It was the year I really tuned into the world of sports, and I can tell you more about those Brewers and Packers teams than I can about the teams 3 or 4 years ago. My parents own a double lot, with the house on one part and the extra lot being the ballfield of dreams for a good 10 years for me. The garden had a tiny rabbit fence surrounding it, easy enough for a five year old to step over, and that became a home run fence. Tiny wood blocks became my bases until I got plastic bases from my uncle for my 6th birthday the next May. At that point, my yard took on the properties of the old League Park in Cleveland, or the Baker Bowl in Philadelphia, although I wouldn't realize that for another 20 years. A big maple tree sufficed as the left field "foul pole" until I grew a bit more, and the right field street was blocked by a large tree as well. The center field "flag pole" was actually the street sign. For about 10 years, our yard would have brown patches in the spring where I knew I would put the bases when things dried out.  




3. The same uncle that provided me with the bases also cleaned out his closet at the farm, and I ended up with quite a few "season preview" books, mostly football, but one baseball. My search into baseball's past started there, I was learning about the exploits of Pete Rose around the time the rest of America was learning that he was a gambler. 


4. Being from Northwestern Wisconsin, we were at the mercy of the Brewers' schedule as far as when we could see them on TV. We'd see them if they were away during the weekend, and that's about it. That, or the one game or two ESPN would care to share with us as well. If I wanted to watch baseball, the Cubs on WGN were the best option, as the Braves played quite a few west coast games in the years before geography really mattered in the divisional alignment. I fell in love all over again, since I never had to worry about the Cubs playing the Brewers, except in the spring, and I'd even get a few of the spring training games the Cubs would show on TV, even a few extra Brewers games. Day baseball, Harry Caray, the vines, the Eastern Division title run in 1989, life was good. 


5. A dice game helped me love baseball even more. It was a game where you'd take your baseball cards, check out the average and home runs, and roll on a propped up chart that told you your results. I think I still even have it, somewhere in the middle of the attic at my parents' house. I've since moved on to other baseball simulation pursuits, but for years, the results off the chart colored my perception of what was good (20 homers was the benchmark for a "power hitter," and at the time, it was right, anyway...) and what wasn't (You'd rather have a .260-.279 hitter up with runners on than a .280-.299 hitter. That seem wrong to anyone else?).


6. Random quote break: "If a woman has to choose between catching a fly ball and saving an infant's life, she will choose to save the infant's life without even considering if there are men on base."  ~Dave Barry


7. Innocence lost: The loss of Paul Molitor to Toronto after the 1992 season was the end of my baseball innocence, as it were. I wasn't knowledgable to get upset over the 1990 lockout, except that it kept spring training games from being played. I wasn't happy about that. 


8. I was never that good as a ballplayer myself. I led off when I was 10 because I was small and could draw walks, and I played first base because no one else on the team besides the pitcher could catch the ball consistently. We won one game that year. I wonder why. 


9. For 3 or 4 years in the mid 90's, we didn't get ANY Brewers games on local TV or cable, save anything national, which was very rare. Given the Packers and the Badgers had most of my attention at that point for their football prowess, that's the mark of the low point of my baseball worship. 


10. Thank God for Midwest Sports Channel. It brought the Brewers back to me, and it brought them more than I had been used to. 120 games a year is a treat when you're used to 3. This was also the first year of the Brewers' National League odyssey. At that point, I fell in love with the pitcher hitting and the strategy behind it. 


11. It was also around this point that I lost any ability to care for the Cubs. Not because they were competitors now. No, we were never in contention for the playoffs at this point anyway. It was more that I realized that the local Cubs fans (remember, northwestern Wisconsin) were frontrunners. I'd never see a Cubs hat during a losing streak. I always saw them in 1998, for some reason. Something about Slammin' Sammy chasing Maris and McGwire. I just wanted them to shut up and go away. They did for the next two years. Funny how that works. 


12. It was around this time I got heavy into baseball "literature," and I'm not talking Roger Angell and the "romance of the game." I'm talking Sparky Lyle, I'm talking Bill Lee, I'm talking about the Bronx Zoo and a deeper look into what makes baseball what it is. Funny thing, I read Ball Four a few years later, and I didn't see what the big deal was, after having started with the Bronx Zoo. I think I did that backwards. Nothing unusual for me


13. Funny thing, I've never really disliked the Twins. I tend to dislike any Minnesota sports club, but the Twins never gave me a reason to hate them. I also couldn't complain about being able to hop in my car every so often and catch a game for about 50 bucks total, accounting for gas, parking, and ballpark expenses. The Metrodome is underrated. It's not ideal for baseball at all, and probably wouldn't be in the top half of my ballpark rankings when and if I catch all the stadiums at some point, but it's comfy, at the very least. 


14. Baseball is a game that's always had its less desirable side. I wonder how today's media would have handled the Black Sox Scandal. 


15. Random Quote Break: "I don't want to play golf.  When I hit a ball, I want someone else to go chase it."  ~Rogers Hornsby


16. Local Red Sox fans did the same thing that the Cubs fans did when they were constantly losing to the Yankees in the playoffs at the turn of the century. You'd see the hats and shirts and hear the talk, until after Game 7, that is. Heck, during 04 when they finally broke through, you heard NOTHING at all from them for about three or four days after they fell behind 2-0. Also, another thing that turns me off about the Red Sox fanbase is the attempt to make the Sox look like the little guys. Sorry. Little maybe in comparison to the Yankees, but you take off the Red, and it's the same machine that spits out cash these days, and spends it just about as well as the Bronx Bombers. Small market fans can see right through that argument, believe you me. 


17. At this point, the Metrodome drapes a big banner of Twins legends across the upper deck in center and right field. I remember sitting behind that banner when I went to my first Brewers-Twins game in 1991. At one point, the Twins could pack the place like few other teams. 


18. Again, like Craig, sabermetrics brought me another level of caring for this game I love. I can't say I'll ever be one to see the game as nothing but numbers, but I'd hate to be a casual fan at this point. I like feeling like I see things in a slightly different light. Always have.


19. I got to see Turner Field on a high school music trip in 2001. The Mets were in town for one of the first series of the season, right after the Subway Series. I was slightly surprised that the place wasn't packed, especially with the reach that TBS still gave the Braves at that point. There was a group there from Jay Payton's hometown with a banner, and Payton tossed a ball or two in that general direction during the game. 


20. Rick Reed pitched in the aforementioned game. He also pitched two starts in a row that I was able to see in 2003, while a camp counselor. We'd make trips to the Dome twice a year after the day's activities were over, and I believe I had to be his good luck charm. He gave up only one run on three hits for the Mets, lost to Esteban Loaiza when Loaiza was having a career year, but only gave up two runs, and won the next game we saw, when the Twins touched up Tim Hudson for five in the first, thanks to three errors. He was done after that year, and would only win one more game in the bigs, even, but it's those kinds of little things that make this game fun. 


21. Final Random Quote Break: "This is a game to be savored, not gulped.  There's time to discuss everything between pitches or between innings."  ~Bill Veeck


22. My fiancee loves the Brewers, and is the definition of a casual fan, although a daily casual. She doesn't quite buy my argument that Rickie Weeks is a good leadoff hitter, because his batting average doesn't tell her that. She also doesn't understand why I'm so down on Corey Hart, because on-base percentage is not in her vocabulary quite yet. I have the rest of our lives to work on that, though. 


23. CC Sabathia was worth it, even if all the players we traded for him end up in the Hall of Fame. I now have a much better perspective on the Doyle Alexander-John Smoltz deal. 


24. Speaking of which, after travelling to Ann Arbor to see my football team die a brutal death in the second half, I spent five hours the next day at a Buffalo Wild Wings there seeing Sabathia win us the Wild Card. The TV was directly to my left, but over my head, so for three hours while my three Canadian buddies watched all the football games on the big screens (including the Packers, and including the Jets with Favre, still a success at that point), I watched Sabathia work his magic, and on the TV next to that one, saw the Marlins win for pride. It was a great day. Even better, I saw Michael Phelps that night after the biggest bender of my life, and no, he didn't have a bong. 


25. I start itching for baseball again in early January, play the video games, card games, and dice games incessantly, and pray for spring. It's the time of year where baseball becomes a pursuit, something to chase and find, and that makes it even more fun. The season comes and goes, but baseball's always available these days. Life is good. 

Monday, February 16, 2009

Random Baseball Quote of the Day

"Chuck Tanner used to have a bedcheck just for me every night. No problem. My bed was always there." - Jim Rooker, former pitcher

Ugh.

Job searching sucks. Job searching in this economy? *headdesk*

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Another A-Rod link

http://theyankeesrepublic.blogspot.com/2009/02/trial-of-alex-r.html

I'm not planning this to be a links-only blog, but lately, people have been expressing my opinions better than I can put them down on paper. Or on the internets. I'll find something to give full rant to soon enough. :D

Friday, February 13, 2009

The Local Paper Says It All

http://www.theonion.com/content/news_briefs/turns_out_craig_counsell

I can claim this is local, because I live where it was founded. :D

Hat tip to Craig Calcaterra at Shysterball. 

Thursday, February 12, 2009

There's a problem, but it's not the obvious one

http://www.hardballtimes.com/main/article/a-slap-at-liberty/

John Brattain hits the nail on the head. People are spending all their time looking down their nose at A-Rod (or whatever cutesy little nickname they've so cleverly given him in the last few days), and don't see the big picture, which is that the government is hell-bent at making an example out of Barry Bonds, and won't stop at anything to do it. Furthermore, someone leaked the information that shouldn't have. I find that to be more of a problem than a player doing what he has to do to be successful in a given environment. 

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Something's Brewing in Milwaukee

As a Brewers fan, I'm blessed to be able to read Al's Ramblings and Brew Crew Ball (both linked at the right of the page), as both deliver a different flavor of Brewers news than the mass media does. A lot of outside the box thinking goes on there, helping me feel like I know more about this team than Joe Average, my sworn nemesis. :D

With that, let's take a peek at this team this year. 

Catcher: Jason Kendall can do the job, and I was wrong about doubting him last year. Yes, sometimes Joe doesn't Know. Laugh it up. He does well with the pitching staff, and he's durable. We don't know what we have in Mike Rivera, really, because he never seems to get to play, but I've liked the little I've seen. 

1st Base: We have Prince there until Boras takes him away the first moment he can. Until then, settle in, and hope he doesn't get hurt, because then we're screwed. 

2nd Base: Rickie Weeks is underrated, in my book. A lot of people take a look at only the .234 batting average, and think he's not a good hitter. Not so. I've learned a few things lately, and one of them is that batting average is extremely overrated. Getting on base is the number one thing you want from a leadoff hitter, and he does it at a .342 clip, not great, but definitely worthy, especially since he's coming off a nasty wrist injury in 07 that really limited him. Another thing I've noticed is that strikeouts are overblown. Weeks is a leadoff man. Does it matter if he strikes out or flies out? Not at least one of five times he's up in a game. I think he's worthy of at least one more look. 

Shortstop: I always harass my girlfriend about JJ Hardy, because she's one of his fanboys, but really, he had a great season last year, and I expect him to get even a bit better. Hardy has the range that I think he could play any one of the infield positions at least adequately, which is important, with the supergloved Alcides Escobar waiting in the wings.

3rd Base: And I think Hardy ends up here at some point, as Bill Hall isn't able to hit righthanders, for the most part. Hall had a career year in 2006, but since then, has struggled, as he's been moved from the infield to center to back to third base, and his career on-base against righties is only .300. I can see Hardy being here by the end of July, and Escobar ranging at short. Another thing we could do is bring up a prospect named Mat Gamel, who supposedly has a big bat and a glove full of holes, from most sources I read. 

Left Field: Please, please, please, don't let Ryan Braun be hurt. Next question.

Center Field: Mike Cameron seems to bring enough intangibles into play, as well as a great glove, to make his penchant for striking out less important to me. Even at age 36, he gets on base enough, and hits with power. I hope we have something in the farm system to back him up for next year, but for now, I'm fine. 

Right Field: Corey Hart was an All-Star last year. Then September arrived. When the dust settled, he had only a .300 OBP, with somewhat decent power numbers, but that September swoon downright frightens me, because before that, Hart had been getting better every season, so far. This year is his age 27 year, generally a peak year for the average player. I think we'll find out just what we have there, if we have a long-term keeper, or if he's hit his peak already. 

Starting Pitching: Signing Braden Looper yesterday helps, as the depth is nice, but the rotation will miss both Ben Sheets and CC Sabathia. I forsee a rotation of Yovani Gallardo, Dave Bush, Manny Parra, Jeff Suppan, and Looper, with Seth McClung on the outside looking in early, waiting for an opportunity. 

Bullpen: Losing Salomon Torres hurts, as he had a very effective year as a closer last year. However, the addition of Trevor Hoffman adds a proven arm to the bullpen group, and the addition of Jorge Julio adds depth to a group including Carlos Villanueva, McClung, Mitch Stetter, Todd Coffey, and a few other arms that proved to be major league caliber, at least for last season. I'm not too worried about this, as long as the starting rotation holds up.

I predict a bit of a downturn this year, with 84 wins, but I think this team has the potential for more, especially if the young pitching is as advertised. 

Brett

I'm a Wisconsin sports fan through and through, although I pass on basketball, for the most part. Being that I am one of those people, I got to go on the fun fun ride of Brett Favre's retirement and reinstatement last year. I was one of those people on the side of the franchise, as I believe there's nothing more important than the team itself, as opposed to the individual players, who come in, play, and move on. 

On the other hand, I'm not one of those that wanted Favre to break a leg in New York, and now, today, as he's announced another potential retirement, I am fervently hoping that in a year or two, this will have all blown over, and we can properly celebrate the career accomplishments of #4 the way it was meant to be celebrated, with his name up at Lambeau Field, and with his enshrinement in the Packers Hall of Fame. 

Welcome

Hi. You've found my blog. Congratulations. Your reward is getting to hear my opinions. On stuff. Mostly sports stuff, some real world stuff, some stuff not pertinent to anything in particular. In other words, stuff. I'll be posting some of my rants and raves on things here soon, so you can get a taste of what's to come.