Happy Singles' Day!
Monthly Archives: November 2020
Happy Birthday–November 11
Joe Battin (1853)
Freddy Parent (1875)
Rabbit Maranville (1891)
Al Schacht (1892)
Pie Traynor (1898)
Hal Trosky (1912)
George Case (1915)
Ike Delock (1929)
Ron Musselman (1954)
John Hobbs (1955)
Cory Snyder (1962)
Roberto Hernandez (1964)
Damion Easley (1969)
Jason Grilli (1976)
Sadly, Joe Battin wasn't much good at battin'. An infielder, he batted .225/.241/.281. His career spanned ten seasons, though, so I assume he was really good at fieldin'.
Al Schacht played in the majors for three years, but was better known as "The Clown Prince of Baseball".
On this Veterans' Day, we would like to thank all current and former members of the military for their service, especially those who are part of the wgom.
Dinosaur Pile-Up – 11:11
Like he said, it's Eleven Eleven. This wasn't bad, actually.
2003 Rewind: Game Forty
KANSAS CITY 9, MINNESOTA 5 IN MINNESOTA (14 INNINGS)
Date: Thursday, May 15.
Batting stars: Cristian Guzman was 4-for-7 with a triple. Luis Rivas was 2-for-5 with two runs. Corey Koskie was 2-for-5 with two walks. A. J. Pierzynski was 2-for-6 with a triple.
Pitching stars: Juan Rincon pitched a perfect inning. LaTroy Hawkins pitched a scoreless inning, giving up a walk and striking out one. Eddie Guardado pitched a perfect inning and struck out one. Tony Fiore pitched a scoreless inning, giving up two hits.
Opposition stars: Mike Defelice was 2-for-3 with a triple and a double. Raul Ibanez was 2-for-7 with two runs. Desi Relaford was 2-for-7 with a stolen base, his sixth. Angel Berroa was 2-for-7. Carlos Beltran was 1-for-4 with a home run (his fifth) and three walks.
The game: Michael Tucker led off the game with a double and Beltran hit a one-out home run, putting the Royals up 2-0. The Twins played catch-up the rest of the day.
They got on the board in the third on two-out walks to Doug Mientkiewicz and Koskie and an RBI single by Todd Sears. Kansas City got the run back in the fourth when Ibanez singled, went to third on Ken Harvey's double, and scored on a sacrifice fly. The Twins cut the margin to 3-2 in the fifth on singles by Rivas and Guzman and a sacrifice fly. The tied it in the sixth when Torii Hunter singled and scored on Guzman's triple.
The Royals went back in front in the seventh. Relaford led off with a single and scored on Defelice's triple. A pair of walks loaded the bases with one out and a balk brought home a run to make it 5-3 Kansas City. The Twins got out of the inning with no further damage and got one of the runs back in the bottom of the seventh when Guzman tripled and scored on a ground out. With two out in the eighth Rivas and Guzman singled, Mientkiewicz walked to load the bases, and Koskie walked to bring in the tying run. Denny Hocking struck out to leave the bases loaded. Neither team scored in the ninth, so we went to extra innings.
This was back when men were men, and we didn't have any ridiculous "start the inning with a man on second" nonsense. The Royals put together a couple of threats. A hit batsman and a walk put two on with two out in the ninth. Defelice hit a one-out double in the eleventh. The Twins had men on first and third with one out in the twelfth, but a double play ended the inning. Kansas City had men on first and second with one out in the thirteenth.
The dam finally broke in the fourteenth. Joe Randa led off with a double and Beltran walked. Mike Sweeney singled to load the bases. Raul Ibanez then singled home a run. A sacrifice fly brought home a second, and RBI singles by Relaford and Berroa made it 9-5. The Twins could not rally in the bottom of the inning.
WP: D. J. Carrasco (3-1). LP: Johan Santana (2-1). S: None.
Notes: Sears was again at first base and Mientkiewicz in right field. Dustan Mohr was again in left in place of Jacque Jones. Bobby Kielty was the DH. It seems odd to me that Kielty, an outfielder, would be the DH while Mientkiewicz, a first baseman, was in right field. It's hard to second-guess a decision like that when we're this far removed from it, though, and Gardy may have had a good reason for doing it this way.
Denny Hocking pinch-ran for Sears in the seventh and stayed in the game in right field, with Mientkiewicz going to first base. Jones pinch-hit for Rivas in the twelfth. Chris Gomez came in to play second base in the thirteenth.
Jones was 0-for-1 and was batting .338. Hocking was 0-for-2 and was batting .087.
Kenny Rogers started for the Twins and pitched 6.1 innings, giving up five runs (four earned) on seven hits and a walk and striking out six. J. C. Romero did not give up a run in two-thirds of an inning to make his ERA 3.38. Rincon's ERA was 1.37. Hawkins' ERA was 1.53. Guardado's ERA was 1.72. Johan Santana was charged with all four fourteenth-inning runs in his third inning of work, making his ERA 2.56. Fiore lowered his ERA to 6.16.
Miguel Ascencio started for the Royals. He pitched 5.1 innings, giving up three runs on five hits and three walks and striking out five.
Both starting catchers hit a triple in this game. I don't know how often that's happened, but it certainly seems unusual. Pierzynski had three triples in 2003 and twenty-four for his career. It was Defelice's only triple of the season and one of nine he had in his career.
I had remembered Joe Randa as something of a Twins-killer, but he really wasn't. His career numbers against them are .275/.315/.404, not terrible but nothing special, either. Those are actually below his overall career numbers of .284/.339/.426.
The battle of the top two teams in the division was evenly split, so the Twins remained where they had been before the series.
Record: The Twins were 22-18, in second place in the American League Central, 2.5 games behind Kansas City.
November 10, 2020: Thanks, Not Going
Connected to yesterday's conversation, anyone attempting some sort of Turkey Day celebration? With the way things are trending, I'm thinking we'll stay home.
Happy Birthday–November 10
Jim Whitney (1857)
Cy Morgan (1878)
Del Gainer (1886)
Chick Fewster (1895)
Jimmie Dykes (1896)
Birdie Tebbetts (1912)
Johnny Lipon (1922)
Cal Ermer (1923)
Gene Conley (1930)
Norm Cash (1934)
Mike Vail (1951)
Larry Christenson (1953)
Larry Parrish (1953)
Paul Thormodsgard (1953)
Bob Stanley (1954)
Jack Clark (1955)
Keith Lockhart (1964)
Kenny Rogers (1964)
Butch Huskey (1971)
Shawn Green (1972)
Brian Dinkelman (1983)
Matt Magill (1989)
Alcest – Sapphire
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_i1quZMO9ls
November 9, 2020: Fun While It Lasted
Welp, back to full remote. That was a nice few weeks.
2003 Rewind: Game Thirty-nine
MINNESOTA 7, KANSAS CITY 0 IN MINNESOTA
Date: Wednesday, May 14.
Batting stars: Doug Mienkiewicz was 3-for-5 with two doubles. Dustan Mohr was 2-for-3 with a double, a stolen base, and two runs. Luis Rivas was 2-for-4. Cristian Guzman was 2-for-5 with a triple. Corey Koskie was 1-for-4 with a two-run homer, his fifth.
Pitching star: Rick Reed pitched a complete game shutout, giving up three hits and one walk and striking out two.
Opposition stars: None.
The game: Guzman led off the first with a triple and scored on a Mientkiewicz single to give the Twins a 1-0 lead. It stayed 1-0 until the fourth. Matthew LeCroy was hit by a pitch to lead off the inning and Torii Hunter and Todd Sears walked, loading the bases. A ground out scored one, a sacrifice fly scored another, and Rivas had an RBI single to make it 4-0 Twins.
The Twins continued to add on. In the fifth Mientkiewicz led off with a double and Koskie followed with a two-run homer to make it 6-0. Mohr led off the sixth with a double, went to third on Rivas' single, and scored on a ground out to bring the score to 7-0.
Reed was in complete control. The only threat the Royals had came in the fourth, and it was a mild one. Carlos Beltran drew a two-out walk and Mike Sweeney singled, putting men on first and second. Raul Ibanez flied to left to end the inning. They had only three hits and had none after the fifth inning.
WP: Reed (2-4). LP: Runelvys Hernandez (4-3). S: None.
Notes: Sears was at first base, with Mientkiewicz in right field. Mohr was in left in place of Jacque Jones.
Bobby Kielty pinch-ran for LeCroy in the fourth, after LeCroy was hit by a pitch, and stayed in the game at DH.
Mohr was batting .315. LeCroy was 0-for-1 and was batting .314. Kielty was 1-for-3 and was batting .307.
By game scores this was easily Reed's best game of the season. His game score was 82; his next best was 65, which he did twice.
Hernandez pitched five innings, allowing six runs on six hits and two walks and striking out three. Runelvys apparently left the building and went on the disabled list after this game, as he did not pitch again until July 11.
Jones was out of the lineup for the second consecutive game. He would not start again until May 17.
Record: The Twins were 22-17, in second place in the American League Central, 1.5 games behind Kansas City.
Happy Birthday–November 9
George Wood (1858)
Harvey Hendrick (1897)
Johnny Gooch (1897)
Jerry Priddy (1919)
Bob Wren (1920)
Bill Bruton (1925)
Whitey Herzog (1931)
Bob Gibson (1935)
Jim Riggleman (1952)
Teddy Higuera (1958)
Dion James (1962)
Chad Ogea (1970)
Adam Dunn (1979)
Chuck James (1981)
Joel Zumaya (1984)
Alex Kirilloff (1997)
Bob Wren was the head coach of Ohio University from 1949-1972.
Jim Riggleman has managed San Diego, the Cubs, Seattle, and Washington.