Weird music I haven't had a chance to listen to since I'm at work? Sure! Why not?
1988
Weird music I haven't had a chance to listen to since I'm at work? Sure! Why not?
1988
Date: Wednesday, June 16.
Batting stars: Zoilo Versalles was 3-for-4 with an RBI. Frank Kostro was 1-for-4 with a run.
Pitching stars: Dick Stigman pitched two shutout innings, giving up two hits with one strikeout. Johnny Klippstein struck out two in two perfect innings, giving up one hit.
Opposition stars: John Buzhardt pitched 7.2 innings, giving up one run on six hits and no walks with two strikeouts. Pete Ward was 2-for-4 with a double and a run. J. C. Martin was 2-for-3 with an RBI.
The game: Versalles got a two-out RBI single in the second to give the Twins a 1-0 lead. Camilo Pascual had sailed through the first three innings, giving up only one hit, but four of the first five White Sox batters got hits to start the fourth, and the other batter reached on a fielder's choice on which no out was recorded. RBI singles by Martin and Ron Hansen gave the White Sox a 2-1 lead and a bases-loaded walk to Smoky Burgess made it 3-1 and led to Pascual's exit from the game. Jerry Fosnow got the Twins out of the inning with no further damage, but they could not catch up. In fact, they did not threaten again until the ninth, when a single and a walk put men on first and second with none out. Three consecutive fly outs ended the game.
Of note: Rich Rollins was 0-for-2 and was hit by a pitch. Tony Oliva was 1-for-4. Harmon Killebrew was 0-for-4. Jimmie Hall was 1-for-4, dropping his average to .325. Pascual pitched 3.1 innings, giving up three runs on five hits and two walks with two strikeouts.
Record: The loss made the Twins 35-21, still in first place, but only by a half game over Chicago.
Notes: Kostro replaced Jerry Kindall at second base. The Twins were looking for a second baseman all season. Kindall got the majority of starts there, but other who played second in 1965 were Kostro, Bernie Allen, Frank Quilici, Rollins, and Cesar Tovar. Burgess was nominally a catcher, but at this point in his career was almost exclusively a pinch-hitter. He would appear in eighty games in 1965 but catch in only five of them.
I got an email about how my grandpa's doing in his new assisted living home, as well as an update on his failing health and how things are now.
I didn't know that his health was failing, nor that he had moved out of his lifelong home. My dad...could be better at dealing with bad news.
Mordecai Davidson (1845)
Frank Killen (1870)
Josh Billings (1891)
Firpo Marberry (1898)
Clyde Sukeforth (1901)
Steve Hamilton (1935)
Craig Swan (1950)
Juan Berenguer (1954)
Dave Engle (1956)
Steve Shields (1958)
Bob Tewksbury (1960)
Gary Wayne (1962)
Bo Jackson (1962)
Mark Lewis (1969)
Matt Lawton (1971)
Ray Durham (1971)
Shane Victorino (1980)
Rich Harden (1981)
Mordecai Davidson was the owner of the Louisville Colonels in the late 1880s. Under financial pressure, he tried to save money in a variety of ways, including fining players each time the team lost. As a result, he is credited with inspiring the first baseball players' strike.
The pie is gone. The stuffing is gone. The sweet potatoes, gone. Today will see the last of the mashed potatoes and turkey.
Date: Tuesday, June 15.
Batting stars: Rich Rollins was 1-for-3 with a home run (his third) and a walk. Tony Oliva was 1-for-4 with a home run, his eleventh. Bob Allison was 1-for-4 with a home run, his eleventh.
Pitching star: Mudcat Grant pitched a complete game shutout, giving up five hits and no walks with three strikeouts.
Opposition stars: Eddie Fisher struck out two in two perfect innings. Bob Locker pitched 2.2 scoreless innings, allowing one walk with one strikeout. Pete Ward was 2-for-4.
The game: Oliva homered in the first and Allison homered in the second to give the Twins a 2-0 lead. Jerry Kindall drove in a run with a sacrifice fly in the fourth. Meanwhile, Grant pitched four perfect innings before giving up a single to Ward leading off the fifth. Moose Skowron followed with a single, but a strikeout/throw out double play ended the threat. The White Sox again put two on in the sixth but did not threaten after that. Rollins hit a home run in the ninth.
Of note: Zoilo Versalles was 0-for-4. Joe Nossek, again replacing Jimmie Hall, was 1-for-4. Harmon Killebrew was 1-for-4 with a run.
Record: The win made the Twins 35-20 and kept them in first place, 1.5 games ahead of Chicago.
Tom Hughes (1878)
Irv Noren (1924)
Minnie Minoso (1925)
Vin Scully (1927)
George Thomas (1937)
Dick McAuliffe (1939)
Bill Freehan (1941)
Otto Velez (1950)
Mike Easler (1950)
Rick Anderson (1956)
Joe Price (1956)
Dennis Burtt (1957)
Howard Johnson (1960)
Bob Hamelin (1967)
Mariano Rivera (1969)
Brian Wolfe (1980)
Guillermo Quiroz (1981)
Yeesh, November sure flew by fast.
1971
Citizen NBB is Moustaching this morning. Raise a cuppa!
So this is just weird enough to get my attention on youtube.