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Monthly Archives: January 2020
January 11th, 2020: The Thundering Herd and then the Vikings
No CoC, so here one is. Good luck to both teams.
Any predictions?
1991 Rewind: Game Ninety-five
DETROIT 6, MINNESOTA 3 IN DETROIT
Date: Wednesday, July 24.
Batting star: Chili Davis was 3-for-4 with a three-run homer (his twenty-first) and a double.
Pitching stars: None.
Opposition stars: Bill Gullickson pitched 7.2 innings, giving up three runs on seven hits and three walks and striking out two. Tony Phillips was 3-for-4 with a walk. Lou Whitaker was 2-for-2. Travis Fryman was 2-for-3 with a triple, a double, a stolen base (his seventh), a walk, and three runs.
The game: Each team squandered an early threat. The Tigers opened the first with two singles and did nothing with them. Davis doubled to lead off the second, and with one out Shane Mack singled and Mike Pagliarulo walked, but Greg Gagne hit into a double play to end the inning. Detroit broke through in the second inning. Walks to Fryman and Milt Cuyler put two on with two out and a double steal moved them to second and third. Phillips then got an infield single to give the Tigers a 1-0 lead.
It stayed 1-0 until the sixth. Rob Deer led off with a double. He was still on second with two out, but Fryman doubled him home and scored on John Shelby's RBI single to make it 3-0 Detroit. It went to 4-0 in the seventh when Cuyler walked and Phillips and Whitaker singled.
The Twins got back into the game in the eighth. Randy Bush led off with a walk. With two out Kent Hrbek singled and Davis followed with a three-run homer, cutting the Tigers lead to one run. But just as quickly, they were back out of it. In the bottom of the eighth, Fryman circled the bases on a triple-plus-error. With two out Cuyler doubled and Whitaker singled, making the score 6-3. The Twins got a one-out double in the ninth from Pagliarulo, but nothing more.
WP: Gullickson (13-5). LP: David West (1-2). S: Mike Henneman (15).
Notes: Mack was again in left in place of Dan Gladden, with Bush in right. Bush batted leadoff. The only substitution was that Gene Larkin pinch-hit for Gagne in the ninth.
Puckett was 1-for-3 and was batting .331. Harper was 0-for-4 and was batting .320. Terry Leach gave up a run in a third of an inning to make his ERA 3.44. Steve Bedrosian retired the only man he faced and had an ERA of 3.33.
David West started and struck out eight in 5.2 innings, but allowed three runs on six hits and two walks.
The Tigers starting third baseman in this game was Skeeter Barnes. 1991 was the best year of his career--.289/.325/.491 in 171 plate appearances. He was thirty-four years old, and before this season had a total of 122 plate appearances in seventy-five games spread over five seasons. He was a utility player for the Tigers from 1991-1994 and actually did pretty well, at least at bat: .281/.319/.420 in 553 plate appearances. You'll take that from a utility player any time. He retired after the 1994 season and was a minor league coach for many years.
The White Sox lost, Texas did not play, and Oakland won, leaving those three teams in a three-way tie for second.
Record: The Twins were 55-40, in first place in the American League West, four games ahead of Chicago, Texas, and Oakland.
Happy Birthday–January 11
George Pinkney (1859)
Silver King (1868)
Elmer Flick (1876)
Max Carey (1890)
George Trautman (1890)
General Crowder (1899)
Schoolboy Rowe (1910)
Don Mossi (1929)
Gene Cook (1932)
Jim McAndrew (1944)
Jack Zduriencik (1951)
Rocket Wheeler (1955)
Lloyd McClendon (1959)
Donn Pall (1962)
Warren Morris (1974)
George Trautman was the president of the National Association of Professional Baseball Clubs from 1947 until his death in 1963.
Gene Cook was the general manager of the Toledo Mud Hens from 1978-1998. He is credited with convincing Jamie Farr to wear a Mud Hens cap on M*A*S*H.
Jack Zduriencik was the general manager of the Seattle Mariners from 2008-2015.
Rocket Wheeler has been a manager in the low minors for twenty-six seasons. He was the manager of the Rome Braves in 2018.
Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band – Equestrian Statue
Well, I declare -- belated RIP Neil Innes, frequent Monty Python collaborator
FMD 1/10/20: Best of the Decade Part 2: Make a List?
Alright, as promised (or threatened?), here's part 2 of the best of the decade. Let's have those lists, eh?
Here's my first pass, to get things started (in no order):
1. "Royals" - Lorde
2. "No Roots" - Alice Merton
3. "Shake it Off" - Taylor Swift
4. "Get Lucky" - Daft Punk
5. "Hold On" - Alabama Shakes
6. "Life Ain't Fair & The World Is Mean" - Sturgill Simpson
7. "S.O.B." - Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats
8. "Feel It Still" - Portugal The Man
9. "Where the Night Goes" - Josh Ritter
10. "Word Crimes" - Weird Al Yankovic
1991 Rewind: Game Ninety-four
DETROIT 6, MINNESOTA 3 IN DETROIT
Date: Tuesday, July 23.
Batting stars: Kirby Puckett was 2-for-3. Chili Davis was 2-for-4 with a double and two RBIs.
Pitching star: Carl Willis pitched 2.2 scoreless innings, giving up a hit and a walk and striking out one.
Opposition stars: Frank Tanana pitched six innings, giving up two runs on four hits and no walks and striking out two. Lou Whitaker was 2-for-3 with two runs. Cecil Fielder was 2-for-4 with two home runs (his twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth) and five RBIs. Tony Phillips was 2-for-4 with a double.
The game: Scott Leius and Chuck Knoblauch opened the game with singles. Puckett bunted them up and a ground out scored a run, putting the Twins up 1-0. That lead didn't last long. In the bottom of the first, Whitaker singled and Fielder hit a two-run homer, putting the Tigers ahead 2-1.
The Twins tied it in the fourth, but could've had more. Puckett singled and Davis doubled, putting men on second and third with none out. Brian Harper hit a sacrifice fly to make it 2-2, but a strikeout and a fly out ended the inning. Once again, the Tigers went right back in front. In the bottom of the fourth, Rob Deer walked and scored from first on a Travis Fryman double to give Detroit a 3-2 advantage.
The Tigers took control in the fifth. Phillips and Whitaker singled and Fielder hit a three-run homer, making the score 6-2. The Twins got one back in the eighth. Chuck Knoblauch walked, Puckett singled, and Davis had an RBI single. The tying run was at bat with one out, but Harper and Shane Mack each grounded out to end the threat.
WP: Tanana (7-6). LP: Allan Anderson (4-8). SL Mike Henneman (14).
Notes: Mack remained in left field in place of Dan Gladden. Gene Larkin was in right. Leius batted first.
In the seventh, Randy Bush pinch-hit for Greg Gagne, but due to a pitching change Al Newman pinch-hit for Bush. He stayed in the game at shortstop. Mike Pagliarulo pinch-hit for Leius in the ninth.
Puckett raised his average to .331. Harper was 0-for-3 and fell to .321. Willis lowered his ERA to 2.44. Rick Aguilera pitched a third of an inning to drop his ERA to 2.93.
Jack Morris started, but pitched just 1.2 innings, allowing two runs on four hits and no walks and striking out one. His ERA was 3.47. I assume he came out due to injury. The play-by-play on the play before he came out says "Single (line drive to P's right). I don't know if it went off him or if perhaps he tweaked something trying to field it. At any rate, he did not miss a start. Anderson came in and pitched the next 3.1 innings, doing well until the three-run homer in the fifth.
It seems strange that, after starting the game with two singles, Puckett would then bunt. My guess is that he did that on his own, but it still doesn't make a lot of sense to me. They had a chance for a big inning, and he was at least arguably their best batter. Bunting, even if he was bunting for a hit, does not seem like a good strategy at that point.
Willis came in to start the sixth. He had gotten into some trouble int he seventh, but a double play ended the inning. He then retired the first two batters in the eighth, and was removed for no obvious reason in favor of Aguilera. Aguilera hadn't pitched since July 19, so I could understand the idea that he might need some work. But then, why not give him an inning, rather than bringing him in with two out and none on in the last inning? He threw six pitches, and could very well have just thrown one. That's getting him some work? It really seems strange.
The Twins did pretty well against Frank Tanana for his career. His record against them was 19-20, 4.49, 1.37 WHIP. For his career he was 240-236, 3.66, 1.27 WHIP. In 1991, however, Tanana did well against the Twins in two starts: 1-1, 3.86, 1.07 WHIP. His season in 1991 was 13-12, 3.77, 1.36 WHIP.
Texas and Chicago each won, so they remained tied for second and each gained a game on the Twins.
Record: The Twins were 55-39, in first place in the American League West, four games ahead of Chicago and Texas.
Happy Birthday–January 10
Harry Wright (1835)
Chick Stahl (1873)
Del Pratt (1888)
Ziggy Sears (1892)
Max Patkin (1920)
George Strickland (1926)
Jim O'Toole (1937)
Willie McCovey (1938)
Chuck Dobson (1944)
Wilfredo Sanchez (1948)
Richard Dotson (1959)
Kelvin Torve (1960)
Wally Bell (1965)
Kevin Baez (1967)
Gary Rath (1973)
Adam Kennedy (1976)
Outfielder Ziggy Sears played in the minors for sixteen years, mostly in the Texas League. He once drove in eleven runs in a game. He was a National League umpire from 1934-1945.
Max Patkin was a well-known baseball clown from 1944-1995.
Wilfredo Sanchez was a star in Cuba from 1968-1986, winning five batting titles.
Wally Bell was a major league umpire from 1992-2013, when he passed away from a heart attack.
January 10, 2020: The Source
For some strange reason, sushi is way tastier and much cheaper here than smack-dab in the middle of the North American continent. Who knew?
Toro y Moi – Still Sound
In case anyone was wondering, gonna skip songs in this pilfered countdown that were played any time (including last week...by me) in The Basement before...so FKA twigs' "Two Weeks" would've gone between Best Coast and Snail Mail and Sharon Van Etten's "Seventeen" went between Parquet Courts and this, I'll try to remember to note anything else I skipped if I get through this whole thing