Anibal Sánchez
vs
Zack Greinke
Game in progress.
Nationals will ...
- Win in DC (50%, 2 Votes)
- Win in Houston (50%, 2 Votes)
- Lose in Houston (0%, 0 Votes)
Total Voters: 4
Anibal Sánchez
vs
Zack Greinke
Game in progress.
Nationals will ...
Total Voters: 4
I struggled to find clips for this week because I don't really know which artists I would want to see in concert right now.
Other than Julien Baker, who has probably been over-played here (8 times in 3.5 years). But what size venues does she play?
Florist's new album doesn't seem like it would translate to a live setting; it's so close and intimate.
Lana Del Rey went on a stadium tour and all I could find were audience clips. I watched a good number of her live clips early in her career and never found her performances compelling.
(As for finding cool performances in atypical settings...
Have we passed peak "Take Away Show"-like programming? Or are they just hidden under fan clips?
And how many times can I go to the BPB and HHT wells?)
I hope you like what I've offered (and will offer for a few more days), regardless.
Go ahead and drop your lists, and tell me why I'm wrong. Which touring musicians should I be excited about when they come through?
Surprise Philadelphia trip!
Date: Friday, April 26.
Batting stars: Dan Gladden was 3-for-4 with a double, a walk, and two RBIs. Kirby Puckett was 3-for-4. Chili Davis was 2-for-2 with a home run (his fourth), two walks, and two RBIs. Junior Ortiz was 2-for-3 with two walks. Chuck Knoblauch was 2-for-4 with two runs.
Pitching star: Scott Erickson pitched a complete game shutout, giving up five hits and four walks and striking out one.
Opposition star: Alvin Davis was 1-for-2 with two walks.
The game: Each team loaded the bases in the first inning but did not score. In the second, two out walks to Scott Leius and Greg Gagne were followed by Gladden's two-run double to put the Twins up 2-0. Davis homered leading off the third to make it 3-0. In the fourth, a walk to Gladden was followed by two-out singles by Puckett and Davis to make it 4-0.
With one out in the sixth, singles by Knoblauch and Puckett and a walk to Davis again loaded the bases. A force out scored one run and an Ortiz single brought home another to make it 6-0.
Other than the first inning, the biggest Mariner threat came in the eighth. Ken Griffey, Jr. led off with a double and Davis singled to put men on first and third with one out. Pete O'Brien lined back to the pitcher, who turned it into a double play to end the inning.
WP: Erickson (2-2). LP: Randy Johnson (2-2). S: None.
Notes: Gene Larkin was at first base, with Kent Hrbek getting the day off. Ortiz was in the game as Erickson's personal catcher.
Larkin was 1-for-5 and was batting .381. Puckett raised his average to .353. Knoblauch was batting .333 and was 7-for-12 in his last three games. Davis raised his average to .315. Erickson had an ERA of 2.03.
Shane Mack was back in the lineup in center field but was 0-for-4, dropping his average to .118. Randy Bush was 0-for-1 and was batting .130. Carmelo Castillo was 1-for-1 and was batting .143. Leius was 0-for-3 with two walks and was batting .150. Gladden raised his average to .155.
Erickson threw 124 pitches in his complete game. Johnson threw 111 pitches in just five innings, allowing four runs on eight hits and seven walks and striking out three. While Johnson wasn't the star he would ultimately become, he was already a good pitcher and had made the all-star team in 1990. He just hadn't found his control yet. 1991 was the second of three consecutive seasons in which he would lead the league in walks.
The Twins had played all of their first seventeen games against west coast teams. It would go to nineteen games before they played their first non-west coast team, Boston on April 30.
The Twins had won three in a row and five of six.
Record: The Twins were 7-10, in seventh (last) place in the American League West, 3.5 games behind the White Sox. They one game behind Seattle and Texas, who were tied for fifth.
Jack Doyle (1869)
Smoky Joe Wood (1889)
Jack Kent Cooke (1912)
Lee McPhail (1917)
Russ Meyer (1923)
Bobby Thomson (1923)
Bobby Brown (1924)
Roy Hartsfield (1925)
Chuck Schilling (1937)
Al Cowens (1951)
Roy Smalley (1952)
Rowland Office (1952)
Tito Landrum (1954)
Danny Darwin (1955)
Andy McGaffigan (1956)
Steve Decker (1965)
Keith Garagozzo (1969)
Pedro Martinez (1971)
Wilkin Ramirez (1985)
Jack Kent Cooke, better known as the owner of the Washington Redskins and the Los Angeles Lakers, owned the Toronto Maple Leafs baseball team in the International League from 1951-1964. He made several unsuccessful attempts to bring major league baseball to Toronto and is a member of the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.
Lee MacPhail was the general manager of the Baltimore Orioles from 1958-1965 and of the New York Yankees from 1966-1973. He was the president of the American League from 1974-1983. He is the son of Larry MacPhail and the father of Andy MacPhail.
The only song I know from her, from compilation Buried Country 1.5: The Story of Aboriginal Country Music
Continue reading Thelma Plum – Round Here
They won some games at home and looked pretty good doing it.
Their reward? A road game against Nashville.
Gross.
Injury update?
Boudreau said Greenway woke up not feeling well. Dubnyk and Eriksson Ek may be ready to return Saturday. Fiala is day to day #mnwild
— Michael Russo (@RussoHockey) October 24, 2019
Nashville is 4-1-1 at home, and the Wild are not great so far on the road (1-5). So the deck seems stacked against Minnesota.
Brad Hunt continues to lead the Wild in scoring. Which is fine and normal and expected.
Apologies for brevity. The day got away from me.
Congrats to the T-Wolves on their season opening win, accomplished in true Wigginsy fashion:
"I am coasting off the good vibes of two back to back great readings & the good vibes of getting to be home in a few hours & the good vibes of the Timberwolves being 1-0
but make no mistake, I can't stop thinking about Wiggins scoring 21 points on 27 shots without a single assist. the thing with Wiggins is that he shoots way too much and misses way too much but he makes JUST ENOUGH shots to give him the confidence to keep shooting. which is dangerous. Same energy that has kept Weezer making songs for YEARS"
-Hanif Abdurraqib
Date: Thursday, April 25.
Batting stars: Chuck Knoblauch was 2-for-4 with a walk. Gene Larkin was 2-for-4. Brian Harper was 2-for-4. Kirby Puckett was 2-for-5. Chili Davis was 1-for-2 with two walks and a hit-by-pitch.
Pitching star: Allan Anderson pitched seven innings, giving up one run on five hits and four walks and striking out three.
Opposition stars: Erik Hanson pitched seven innings, giving up one run on eight hits and three walks and striking out one. Edgar Martinez was 2-for-3 with a double, a walk, and a hit-by-pitch. Jay Buhner was 2-for-4 with a double.
The game: In the first inning, Ken Griffey, Jr. drew a two-out walk and scored on Martinez' double to give the Mariners a 1-0 lead. They got a man to third in the second and again in the third, but couldn't score him. Meanwhile, the Twins did not get a man past first base for five innings. They threatened in the sixth, putting men on first and third, but remained scoreless.
That changed in the seventh. Davis and Harper opened the inning with singles and Larkin delivered a one-out single to tie the score. The Twins would load the bases with two out, but could do no more damage. Seattle got the lead back in the eighth, as Martinez singled and Buhner had an RBI double. The Twins tied it in the eighth. Kent Hrbek singled and Davis was hit by a pitch. With two out, Mike Pagliarulo came through with an RBI single, but Davis was thrown out at third to prevent the Twins from taking the lead. It remained 2-2 through ten.
The Mariners took the lead in the tenth without getting a hit. Martinez was hit by a pitch with one out and Alvin Davis walked. A ground out moved the runners to second and third, an intentional walk to Pete O'Brien loaded the bases, and a wild pitch brought home the go-ahead run. But the Twins were not done. In the bottom of the tenth, Knoblauch singled and Al Newman doubled, putting men on second and third. An intentional walk to Davis loaded the bases with one out. A wild pitch tied the score, and when pitcher Mike Jackson missed the return throw from the catcher the winning run scored. The Twins had scored two runs on a walkoff wild pitch-plus-error to win the game.
WP: Steve Bedrosian (2-0). LP: Jackson (1-2). S: None.
Notes: Shane Mack's slow start and Larkin's hot start meant that Larkin was again in right field, with Kirby Puckett in center. Mack pinch-ran for Larkin in the ninth and stayed in the game in center, with Puckett moving to right.
Newman was in the game to hit the double in the tenth because he pinch-ran for Hrbek in the eighth. He played shortstop, with Randy Bush entering the game at first base to replace Greg Gagne.
My recollection is that Larkin was a really bad outfielder. Memory is a funny thing, of course, but I remember him playing a few steps in front of the warning track, because he couldn't go back on the ball. He also played somewhat facing the right field foul line, because he couldn't go to his left.
He was batting .438 at this point in the season, though, and .438 will make up for a lot of defensive mistakes. Harper raised his average to .359. Puckett was up to .328. Knoblauch raised his average to .321. Gagne was 1-for-3 and was batting .302.
Gladden was 0-for-4 and was batting .111. Bush was 0-for-1 and was batting .136. Newman was 1-for-1 and was batting .154. Hrbek was 1-for-4 and was batting .164.
After a 2-9 start, the Twins had won four out of five games.
Record: The Twins were 6-10, in seventh (last) place in the American League West, 4.5 games behind Chicago, two games behind Kansas City, Seattle, and Texas, who were tied for fourth.
Ned Williamson (1857)
Bill Kuehne (1858)
Lou Sockalexis (1871)
Ossie Bluege (1900)
Jack Russell (1905)
Jim Brosnan (1929)
Rawly Eastwick (1950)
Omar Moreno (1952)
Gary Serum (1956)
Ron Gardenhire (1957)
Junior Ortiz (1959)
Danny Clay (1961)
Rafael Belliard (1961)
Gene Larkin (1962)
Arthur Rhodes (1969)
Rafael Furcal (1977)
Chris Colabello (1983)
Third baseman Ossie Bluege played for the franchise in Washington for eighteen years and remained in the organization for many years after that. He is credited as being the first third baseman to guard the lines in the late innings. He is also credited as the scout who discovered Harmon Killebrew.