After a few false starts, I think we’re finally settling into autumn weather around here.
Monthly Archives: October 2019
1991 Rewind: Game Seven
SEATTLE 8, MINNESOTA 4 IN SEATTLE
Date: Monday, April 15.
Batting stars: Brian Harper was 3-for-4. Kirby Puckett was 2-for-3 with a walk. Shane Mack was 1-for-4 with a two-run homer.
Pitching stars: Larry Casian pitched 4.1 innings of relief, giving up two runs (one earned) on three hits and two walks and striking out two. Terry Leach pitched a scoreless inning, giving up a hit and a walk and striking out one.
Opposition stars: Harold Reynolds was 2-for-3 with a double, two walks, and two RBIs. Edgar Martinez was 2-for-4 with a home run (his second), a walk, two runs, and three RBIs. Tracy Jones was 2-for-4 with a home run and two runs. Dave Valle was 2-for-4. Randy Johnson pitched a complete game, giving up four runs on seven hits and four walks and striking out six. He threw 126 pitches.
The game: The Mariners jumped on Twins starter Allan Anderson right away. Reynolds and Jones led off with singles and Martinez followed with a three-run homer to give Seattle a 3-0 lead after the first three batters of the game. The Twins got on the board in the third. Chuck Knoblauch doubled and Mack homered to cut the margin to 3-2.
The Mariners regained control in the bottom of the third. Jones led off with a home run. Martinez singled and Ken Griffey walked. The next two batters went out, but RBI singles by Pete O'Brien and Valley made the score 6-2.
The Twins again tried to come back. In the fourth, Chili Davis led off with a walk and Harper singled, putting men on first and third. A run scored on a ground out, there was a balk, and a sacrifice fly brought the lead down to two at 6-4.
That was as good as it would get, though. With one out in the sixth, Valle and Jeff Schaefer singled and Reynolds delivered a two-run double to make the score 8-4. The Twins never really threatened after that, never getting a man past second base.
WP: Johnson (1-1). LP: Anderson (1-1). S: None.
Notes: Mack remained in center, with Puckett in right. Dan Gladden was dropped to the seventh spot in the batting order, with Knoblauch leading off and Mack batting second.
Puckett raised his average to .407. Knoblauch was 1-for-4 and was batting .375. Harper raised his average to .375. Greg Gagne was 0-for-5 and was batting .353.
Gladden was 0-for-2 with a walk and was batting .043. Kent Hrbek was 0-for-3 and was batting .115. Mack raised his average to .118.
Anderson pitched just 2.2 innings, allowing six runs on eight hits and a walk and striking out one. His ERA was 6.30.
I suspect the attitude of most Twins fans at this point of the season was "same old Twins". They were scoring runs, but couldn't score as many as their pitchers could give up. They'd try to come back, but no sooner would they get back into a game than their pitchers would take them out of it again. This, of course, would change.
Another guy I have no memory of is Tracy Jones. A corner outfielder, he came up with Cincinnati in 1986. Unfortunately for him, the Reds had Eric Davis and Dave Parker manning their corner outfield spots, so he only got 92 plate appearances. He made the most of them, batting .349 with an OPS of .860. In 1987 the Reds moved Davis to center, but Jones had to split time with Kal Daniels in left. He again hit well, batting .290 with an OPS of .771. He was again a reserve in 1988 when he was traded to Montreal. That didn't do him much good, either, as the Expos had Tim Raines and Hubie Brooks at corner outfield positions. He bounced around the rest of his career, playing for San Francisco, Detroit, and Seattle. 1991 would be his last major league season. For his career, he batted .273/.329/.388 in 1434 plate appearances over six seasons. Not a bad career, really. Had he been able to play center he might have had a much better career, but as he only played fifty-two games there it's clear that teams didn't think he was good enough to do that. He had a radio talk show for a while--his b-r.com biography says that his approach was "if you haven't played the game then you don't understand it enough to talk about it", which would've made it hard for him to have conversations with callers. He apparently lost that gig in 2017 and is now the owner of Tracy Jones Financial, a financial planning firm. I don't know whether he tells people that if they haven't played the markets then they don't understand them enough to talk about them. His brother Terry was a minor league infielder for California and Kansas City. His son Hunter has been in the minors since 2010 and spent last season with AA Harrisburg in the Washington organization.
Record: The Twins were 2-5, fifth in the American League West, four games behind the White Sox.
Happy Birthday–October 15
Charley O'Leary (1882)
Dolly Gray (1897)
Mule Haas (1903)
Mel Harder (1909)
Bill Henry (1927)
Lou Klimchock (1939)
Dick Such (1944)
Jim Palmer (1945)
Mitchell Page (1951)
Carlos Garcia (1967)
Juan Cruz (1978)
Josh Rabe (1978)
We would also like to wish a very happy birthday to New Guy.
Big Thief – Not
I know somebody around here is a big Big Thief fan
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pWW-eKX8uSo
2019 NLCS Game 3
Stephen Strasburg
vs
Jack Flaherty
I opined to someone that I'm not sure if this series will make it back to St. Louis. I doubt there will be a sweep but winning two games against Strasburg, Corbin, and Sánchez seems unlikely.
Redbone – The Witch Queen Of New Orleans
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7jUii4gFGZQ
Games 5-7: Minnesota Wild vs. Entire Nation of Canada
Oh hey, just what the Wild needed, another road trip.
This time we get three games in four days against the Eastern Conference Canadian Contingent.
You read that right - 12 noon start time today. Happy Canadian Thanksgiving!
Ottawa might be the best chance on this road trip to catch that elusive first win. But you'll excuse me if I'm less than optimistic. All the HockeyStats in the world can't cover up the fact that the Wild are mixing in some atrociously bad stretches that are costing them games. When those awful 5-minute breakdowns go away, then we'll get to see some wins. Does it happen this week? Part of me wants to see them go 0-10, just to see what Russo writes about at that point.
The Maple Leafs are really good. A road game against Toronto isn't fun for anyone, let alone a team that is allowing more than 5 goals a game. Be sure to tune in for that one, because that'll be the one that the Wild inexplicably pull together and dominate (see last season's decimation of the Lightning in the midst of a truly lackluster second half).
The Canadiens are ... good, I think? I don't know, it's the Eastern Conference, I don't pay attention to these teams. Let's assume that they have been playing better hockey than the Wild. Fair?
GAME 4 RECAP - PITTSBURGH 7, MINNESOTA 4
Four Wild goals!
Yay.
The Wild continued their highly amusing streak of allowing an empty net goal in every game this season. These are the little details that can drive a goal differential past "sad" and into "ludicrous".
October 14, 2019: “Holiday”
It’s nice to have today off, though I wish we had Arbor Day or something off instead.
1991 Rewind: Game Six
CALIFORNIA 9, MINNESOTA 4 IN MINNESOTA
Date: Sunday, April 14.
Batting stars: Chuck Knoblauch was 2-for-3 with a double, a walk, and two runs. Kirby Puckett was 2-for-4 with a double.
Pitching stars: Gary Wayne pitched a scoreless inning. Rick Aguilera pitched a perfect inning and struck out one.
Opposition stars: Luis Polonia was 3-for-4 with a walk, three stolen bases (his second, third, and fourth), three runs, and two RBIs. Dick Schofield was 2-for-3 with a walk and a stolen base. Ex-Twin Gary Gaetti was 2-for-4 with four RBIs. Lance Parrish was 2-for-5 with a home run (his second) and two RBIs.
The game: The Angels got on the board in the first inning when Polonia singled, stolso-ce second, went to third on a ground out, and scored on Gaetti's sacrifice fly. In the second Jack Howell doubled, went to third on a wild pitch, and scored on a ground out to make it 2-0. California added two more in the third when Polonia walked and stole second, Donnie Hill got an infield hit, and Gaetti and Parris had RBI singles. In the fourth, Junior Felix got an infield hit, stole second, and scored on Polonia's single to make it 5-0.
The Twins finally got on the board in the fifth on back-to-back doubles by Knoblauch and Puckett. The got back into the game in the sixth. Shane Mack led off with a triple and scored on a ground out. Scott Leius and Greg Gagne walked. With two out, Knoblauch singled to cut the lead to 5-3.
And just like yesterday, they were quickly back out of the game again. In the sixth, Max Venable doubled, Schofield got an infield hit, and Polonia delivered an RBI single. With two out, a double steal put men on second and third and Gaetti drove them both home with a single. It was 8-3 and the game was gone. Parrish homered leading off the seventh to make it 9-3 and the Twins added one in the eighth when Knoblauch walked, went to second on Puckett's single, and scored on a pair of ground outs. And that was it.
WP: Chuck Finley (2-0). LP; Jack Morris (0-2). S: None.
Notes: Puckett was back in right field with Mack in center. Puckett moved to center in the ninth after Randy Bush pinch-hit for Mack. Junior Ortiz caught in place of Brian Harper.
Gagne was 1-for-2 with a walk to raise his average to .429. Knoblauch went up to .400 and Puckett improved to .375. Chili Davis was 0-for-4 to drop below .300 at .286.
Dan Gladden was 0-for-4 and dropped his average to .048. Mack got his first hit of the season, a triple, going 1-for-2 with a walk to make his average .077. Ortiz was still batting zero (0-for-7). Kent Hrbek was 0-for-4 and was batting .130.
Morris pitched 5.2 innings, giving up eight runs on thirteen hits and two walks. He did strike out six. Five of the hits were infield singles, which indicates some bad luck. Still, in his first two starts as a Twin, Morris had an ERA of 9.58. Twins fans must have wondered what was going on with their so-called ace, who had been signed with much ballyhoo over the off-season. It's doubtful too many people were upset about the 2-4 start, though. The team had finished in last place the year before, and Morris or not, very little was expected of them this season.
People have forgotten what a fine pitcher Chuck Finley was. Not Hall of Fame worthy, but a solid starter for many years. His best years were 1989-1990, when he went 34-18, 2.48 in 435.2 innings. He made the all-star team in both of those years and finished seventh in Cy Young voting in 1990. He didn't keep that up, but he was a steady contributor from 1991-2000. He had double-digit wins each of those years except 1992 and posted an ERA between 3.80 and 4.43 in each year but two, when he did considerably better (3.15 in 1993 and 3.39 in 1998). He was with the Angels through 1999, then went to Cleveland through July of 2002, when he finished the season (and his career) with St. Louis. He was still effective over those last couple of months, going 7-4, 3.80, 1.16 WHIP in fourteen starts. For his career, he was 200-173, 3.85, 1.38 WHIP. He pitched 3197.1 innings and appeared in 524 major league games, 467 of them starts. That's a career to be proud of. He is a member of the Angels Hall of Fame, and he certainly should be.
Record: The Twins were 2-4, fifth in the American League West, three games behind the White Sox.
Happy Birthday–October 14
Joe Start (1842)
Paul Radford (1861)
Ivy Olson (1885)
Oscar Charleston (1896)
Harry Brecheen (1914)
Ken Heintzelman (1915)
Tom Cheney (1934)
Tommy Harper (1940)
Frank Duffy (1946)
Al Oliver (1946)
Ed Figueroa (1948)
Kiko Garcia (1953)
Willie Aikens (1954)
Jesus Vega (1955)
Joe Girardi (1964)
Midre Cummings (1971)
Ryan Church (1978)
Boof Bonser (1981)
Carlos Marmol (1982)
Willians Astudillo (1991)
Outfielder Oscar Charleston is considered by some to have been the greatest player in Negro League history.