Happy Birthday–January 8

Walker Cooper (1915)
Jim Busby (1927)
Gene Freese (1934)
Reno Bertoia (1935)
Bruce Sutter (1953)
Ramon Romero (1959)
Randy Ready (1960)
Brian Boehringer (1969)
Jason Giambi (1971)
Mike Cameron (1973)
Carl Pavano (1976)
Jeff Francis (1981)
Jeff Francoeur (1984)

Three players named Jeff were born on this day.  In addition to the two listed above, this is also the birthday of Jeff Hoffman of the Colorado Rockies.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–January 8

Nate Mercereau – Start With You (Duet with the Golden Gate Bridge)

Nate Mercereau has played sessions with Jay-Z, but I think this one-ups his list of famous collaborators.

The sounds Bay Area residents have described as nuisance noise equivalent to sonic torture are produced by the a new set of railing slats installed on the Golden Gate to retrofit it to withstand sustained winds above 70 mph. The sounds struck Mercereau differently, as Nature itself playing “the largest wind instrument in the world.” Adding an interesting natural wrinkle to a musical controversy, the Golden Gate often sounds an A440 (Hz) concert pitch.

Armed with field recorders, Mercereau & a couple friends captured the sounds from the Marin Highlands, which make up the other half of his album Duets | Golden Gate Bridge. The song performed in this video is a track from Mercereau’s other 2021 album, Sundays.

In response to complaints, the Golden Gate Bridge District is developing engineering adjustments to silence the bridge.

3 votes, average: 8.00 out of 103 votes, average: 8.00 out of 103 votes, average: 8.00 out of 103 votes, average: 8.00 out of 103 votes, average: 8.00 out of 103 votes, average: 8.00 out of 103 votes, average: 8.00 out of 103 votes, average: 8.00 out of 103 votes, average: 8.00 out of 103 votes, average: 8.00 out of 10 (3 votes, average: 8.00 out of 10)
You must be a WGOM Citizen to rate WGOM Videos.
Loading...

1970 Rewind: Game Ninety-one

MINNESOTA 8, BALTIMORE 0 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Friday, July 24.

Batting stars:  Frank Quilici was 2-for-3 with a walk.  Rick Renick was 2-for-4 with a home run, his seventh.  Leo Cardenas was 2-for-4 with a triple and a double.  Cesar Tovar was 2-for-5 with a double and two runs.  Rich Reese was 2-for-5.  Harmon Killebrew was 1-for-3 with a home run (his thirtieth), a walk, and two runs.  Tony Oliva was 1-for-4 with a three-run homer (his fourteenth) and two runs.

Pitching stars:  Jim Kaat pitched a complete game shutout, giving up seven hits and a walk and striking out five.

Opposition star:  Andy Etchebarren was 2-for-4.

The game:  Tovar led off the bottom of the first with a double and scored on a Reese single to give the Twins a 1-0 lead.  Renick led off the second with a homer to make it 2-0.

Neither team threatened again until the fifth, when Quilici singled, was bunted to second, and scored on a Tovar single.  Killebrew walked and Oliva followed with a three-run homer to make the score 6-0 Twins.  The Twins added two more in the seventh.  Killebrew led off with a home run.  Oliva reached on an error, Renick singled, and George Mitterwald singled to bring the score to 8-0.

Despite getting seven hits and a walk, the Orioles only once had a man in scoring position.  That was in the eighth, when Don Buford hit a one-out single and Paul Blair followed with a walk.  But the next two batters went out and it remained 8-0.

WP:  Kaat (9-7).

LP:  Mike Cuellar (13-6).

S:  None.

Notes:  Renick was in left field in place of Brant Alyea.  Quilici was at second base in place of Rod Carew.  Jim Holt pinch-ran for Renick in the seventh and stayed in the game in left field.  Danny Thompson replaced Killebrew at third base in the eighth.

Oliva was batting .319.  Tovar was batting .316.  Killebrew was batting .315.

The Twins continued to have success against Cuellar.  He had pitched a complete game victory against them eight days earlier.  Other than that game, though, he had posted game scores of fifty-one and forty-five, and in this game his score was twenty-seven.  For the season against the Twins he was 2-2, 4.88, 1.41 WHIP.  Against the entire league, Cuellar was 24-8, 3.48, 1.15 WHIP.

This was the only shutout for Kaat in 1970.

The Twins scored more runs in this game than they had in their previous three.

Record:  The Twins were 60-31, in first place in the American League West, six games ahead of California.  That's the biggest lead the Twins have had so far--they were also six games up on July 11.

Happy Birthday–January 7

Kitty Bransfield (1875)
Al Todd (1902)
Johnny McCarthy (1910)
Johnny Mize (1913)
Alvin Dark (1922)
Dick Schofield (1935)
Jim Hannan (1940)
Jim Lefebvre (1942)
Tony Conigliaro (1945)
Joe Keough (1946)
Ross Grimsley (1950)
Bob Gorinski (1952)
Jeff Montgomery (1962)
Craig Shipley (1963)
Allan Anderson (1964)
Rob Radlosky (1974)
Alfonso Soriano (1976)
Eric Gagne (1976)
Brayan Pena (1982)
Francisco Rodriguez (1982)
Edwin Encarnacion (1983)
Jon Lester (1984)
Jhoulys Chacin (1988)

Continue reading Happy Birthday–January 7

1970 Rewind: Game Ninety

MINNESOTA 2, DETROIT 1 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Thursday, July 23.

Batting stars:  George Mitterwald was 3-for-3 with a home run, his eighth.  Rich Reese was 3-for-4.

Pitching star:  Bert Blyleven pitched a complete game, giving up one run on four hits and three walks and striking out eight.

Opposition stars:  Jim Northrup was 1-for-4 with a home run, his eighteenth.  Joe Niekro pitched six innings, giving up two runs (one earned) on six hits and no walks and striking out one.

The game:  In the second the Tigers got a pair of one-out walks and a two-out single, loading the bases, but did not score.  The Twins got a pair of one-out singles in the fifth but did not score.  So, it was 0-0 until the sixth, when Northrup homered with one out.  The Twins got the run back in the bottom of the sixth.  With one out Reese reached third on a single-plus-error and scored on a grounder to first.

Detroit again loaded the bases in the seventh but did not score.  Mitterwald led off the bottom of the eighth in a home run to put the Twins up 2-1.  The Tigers did not get a baserunner in the eighth or ninth, and the Twins' lead held up.

WP:  Blyleven (4-3).

LP:  Niekro (10-8).

S:  None.

Notes:  Jim Holt was in left in place of Brant Alyea.  Frank Quilici was at second in place of Rod Carew.  Paul Ratliff pinch-hit for Quilici in the seventh, with Danny Thompson going to second base.

Tony Oliva was 1-for-4 and was batting .319.  Harmon Killebrew was 0-for-4 and was batting .315.  Cesar Tovar was 0-for-4 and was batting .314.  Blyleven had an ERA of 2.44.

Quilici was 0-for-1 and was batting .195.

The Twins once again did not score much for Blyleven, but he managed to make two runs be enough.  The Tigers stranded eight men, six of them in two innings when they left the bases full.

Niekro had not yet become a knuckleball pitcher in 1970, relying mostly on fastballs and sliders at this point in his career.

The Twins had scored exactly two runs in each of their last three games, winning two of them 2-1.  They were now 3-2 on their nine-game homestand, with four against Baltimore coming up.

Record:  The Twins were 59-31, in first place in the American League West, five games ahead of California.