Mike Schur had an interesting idea in comparing Wordle to golf. Basically, each game is a par 4. Get a good first word? Hey, great shot off the tee. 2 is an Eagle, 3 a Birdie. Makes sense.
Monthly Archives: March 2022
1970 Rewind: League Batting Leaders
AVERAGE
- Alex Johnson, .329
3. Tony Oliva, .325
OBP
- Carl Yastrzemski, .452
4. Harmon Killebrew, .411
SLUGGING
- Yastrzemski, .592
3. Killebrew, .546
7. Oliva, .514
OPS
- Yastrzemski, 1.044
4. Killebrew, .957
7. Oliva, .878
WAR
- Yastrzemski, 9.5
5. Oliva, 7.0
GAMES
- Sandy Alomar, Roy White, 162
3. Cesar Tovar, 161
6, Leo Cardenas, 160
AT BATS
- Horace Clarke, 686
3. Tovar, 650
4. Oliva, 628
PLATE APPEARANCES
- Alomar, 735
3. Tovar, 726
RUNS
- Yastrzemski, 125
- Tovar, 120
8 (tie). Killebrew, Oliva 96
HITS
- Oliva, 204
3. Tovar, 195
TOTAL BASES
- Yastrzemski, 335
- Oliva, 323
6. Killebrew, 288
8. Tovar, 287
DOUBLES
- Tovar, Oliva, Amos Otis, 36
5. Cardenas, 34
TRIPLES
- Tovar,13
4. Oliva, 7
HOME RUNS
- Frank Howard, 44
- Killebrew, 41
RBIs
- Howard, 126
4. Killebrew, 113.
5. Oliva, 107
WALKS
- Howard, 132
- Killebrew, 128
STRIKEOUTS
- Reggie Jackson, 135
10. Cardenas, 101
STOLEN BASES
- Bert Campaneris, 42
6. Tovar, 30
SINGLES
- Johnson, 156
5. Oliva, 128
7. Tovar, 126
ADJUSTED OPS+
- Yastrzemski, 177
4. Killebrew, 159
8. Oliva, 137
RUNS CREATED
- Yastrzemski, 157
5. Killebrew, 116
7. Oliva, 112
8. Tovar, 103
EXTRA BASE HITS
- Tommy Harper, 70
3. Oliva, 66
6. Killebrew, 62
10. Tovar, 59
TIMES ON BASE
- Yastrzemski, 315
4. Killebrew, 273
10. Oliva, 245
HIT BY PITCH
- Roy Foster, 12
5. Tovar, 8
10. Paul Ratliff, Rich Reese, and others, 7
SACRIFICE HITS
- Eddie Leon, 23
4. Cardenas, 13
8. Jim Perry and Tovar, 10
SACRIFICE FLIES
- Rico Petrocelli and Jack Heidemann, 10
4. Killebrew, 8
INTENTIONAL WALKS
- Howard, 29
- Killebrew, 23
5. Oliva, 12
GIDP
- Killebrew, 28
CAUGHT STEALING
- Jackson, 17
4. Tovar, 15
WPA
- Howard, 7.5
5. Killebrew, 5.5
7. Oliva, 4.5
Happy Birthday–March 23
Mike Smith (1868)
Gavvy Cravath (1881)
Cy Slapnicka (1886)
Ray Kremer (1893)
Johnny Moore (1902)
Johnny Logan (1927)
Jim Lemon (1928)
Lee May (1943)
George Scott (1944)
Pat Bourque (1947)
Lanny Frattare (1948)
Bo Diaz (1953)
Mrs. A (1954)
Mike Remlinger (1966)
Chris Turner (1969)
Joel Peralta (1976)
Mark Buehrle (1979)
Dellin Betances (1988)
Isiah Kiner-Falefa (1995)
Cy Slapnicka was a long-time scout. Players he is credited with signing include Bob Feller, Lou Boudreau, and Herb Score. Somehow, "Cy Slapnicka" just sounds like a name a baseball scout should have.
Lanny Frattare was a radio broadcaster for the Pirates from 1976-2008.
Happy birthday to my Hall of Fame wife.
March 22, 2022: 5,000
That's the number of exoplanets that have now been discovered. Man, I can't wait for the JWST to be up and running.
Red Sun Rising – Deathwish
I have been trying to do a little better listening to suggestions and recommendations on Spotify and flagging songs to expand my playlists. Not trying to make a statement with these guys; just enjoyed the track.
1970 Rewind: ALCS Game Three
BALTIMORE 6, MINNESOTA 1 IN BALTIMORE
Date: Monday, October 5.
Batting stars: Cesar Tovar was 2-for-4 with a triple. Tony Oliva was 2-for-4.
Pitching stars: Bert Blyleven pitched two innings, giving up an unearned run on two hits and no walks and striking out two. Tom Hall struck out two in two shutout innings, giving up a walk.
Opposition stars: Brooks Robinson was 3-for-4 with a double. Dave Johnson was 2-for-3 with a home run (his second), a walk, and two runs. Don Buford was 2-for-4 with two RBIs. Jim Palmer struck out twelve in a complete game, giving up one run on seven hits and three walks.
The game: The Orioles took the lead in the first inning, as Buford singled, was bunted to second, and scored on Boog Powell's single. In the second, Palmer reached on a two-base error and scored on Buford's single, making it 2-0. In the third Robinson doubled and went to third on Johnson's single. An error brought home a run, a force out put men on first and third, Palmer hit an RBI double, and a sacrifice fly made the score 5-0.
The Twins put two on with none out in the fourth but did not score. They got on the board in the fifth when Tovar hit a two-out triple and scored on a Leo Cardenas single. But they only got two baserunners after that, and did not get a man past first base. The Orioles added a run in the seventh on Johnson's homer. They won they game 6-1 and took the series 3-0.
WP: Palmer (1-0).
LP: Jim Kaat (0-1).
S: None.
Notes: Jim Holt was in center field, with Tovar moving to left and Brant Alyea out of the lineup. Paul Ratliff was behind the plate in place of George Mitterwald. Danny Thompson was at second base in place of Rod Carew.
Charlie Manuel pinch-hit for Blyleven in the fifth. Bob Allison pinch-hit for Thompson in the sixth, with Frank Quilici going to second base. Carew pinch-hit for Hall in the seventh. Alyea pinch-hit for Quilici in the ninth. Luis Tiant pinch-ran for Rich Reese in the ninth. Rick Renick pinch-hit for Jim Perry in the ninth.
Kaat started but pitched just two innings, allowing four runs (two earned) on six hits and two walks and striking out one.
This was the first playoff appearance for Blyleven. He would not appear in another playoff game until 1979 with Pittsburgh.
The pinch-hit appearance by Allison was the last at-bat of his career.
Oriole pitchers went 5-for-13 with a grand slam, two doubles, four runs, and six RBIs. None of their pitchers were particularly good batters--the highest batting average on the staff was by Tom Phoebus, who did not pitch in this series, and his average was a mere .163. The best OPS among Oriole pitchers (not counting Dave Leonhard's 1-for-2) was .461 by McNally. They had no one else over .350.
Oriole pitchers were just too much for the Twins in this series. They scored only ten runs, and six of them came in the first five innings of the first game.
So another quick, frustrating exit for the Twins. But it was still a fun season, and I still remember it fondly. I hope you do, too, and I hope this was a fun series for anyone who was reading it. We'll put up a couple of season wrap-up posts before the series ends. And, God willing, we'll pick another season to rewind next off-season.
Record: The Twins lost the best-of-five series, 0-3.
Happy Birthday–March 22
Jack Boyle (1866)
Ernie Quigley (1880)
Goldie Holt (1902)
Bob Elson (1904)
Marv Owen (1906)
Billy Goodman (1926)
Al Schroll (1932)
Gene Oliver (1935)
Frank Pulli (1935)
Dick Ellsworth (1940)
Ron Wojciak (1943)
Jake Brown (1948)
Eddie Bane (1952)
Bob Costas (1952)
Eric Rasmussen (1952)
Scott Bradley (1960)
Matt Sinatro (1960)
Rich Monteleone (1963)
Glenallen Hill (1965)
Sean Berry (1966)
Ramon Martinez (1968)
Cory Lidle (1972)
Juan Uribe (1979)
Mike Morse (1982)
Joe Smith (1984)
Dexter Fowler (1986)
Ike Davis (1987)
Ernie Quigley was a National League umpire for twenty-six years and then became the NL supervisor of umpires.
Goldie Holt is credited with teaching Charlie Hough to throw the knuckleball.
Bob Elson was a baseball broadcaster for over thirty years, mostly in Chicago.
Frank Pulli was a National League umpire from 1972-1999.
Ron Wojciak helped the Minnesota Golden Gophers win the College World Series in 1964 and played in the Twins’ farm system in 1965. He passed away from lung cancer in 1966.
Jake Brown was drafted by Minnesota in the thirty-third round in 1967, but he did not sign.
Scott Bradley was drafted by Minnesota in the twelfth round in 1978, but he did not sign.
W(once in a while) Wild Whangdoodle – Trade Deadline
They've gone and done something haven't they?
Wild had a whole bunch of deals this week, and I think they pretty much all point to what Bill Guerin thinks the team needs to contend.
- Nico Sturm for Tyson Jost
Well, so much for the Whangdoodle-crush on Nico Sturm. Sturm was the kind of player that was easy to like, direct and fast and a very no-frills kind of game. The kind of player that has value on the fourth line, and scores just enough for you to wonder if maybe he could be good enough for second line minutes? But no, he isn't. And the Wild weren't going to resign him after this year when they have Dewar and Duhaime that play almost exactly this role. Getting something for Sturm before he walks is good business.
Sturm was third among Wild forwards in time-on-ice shorthanded this season, where he was slightly below replacement level according to Evolving Hockey's GAR model. This is a theme we'll come back to.
Tyson Jost is pretty similar to Sturm except he's got a longer track record and he's under contract through the next season. Comparing their GAR defensive numbers over the past four years drives home that this trade was switching out players in the same role more or less.
Player | Minutes | Even Strength dGAR | SH Minutes | Shorthanded dGAR |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sturm 2018-2021 | 638 | +3.1 | 65 | +1.9 |
Sturm 2021-2022 | 627 | -0.9 | 90 | -0.4 |
Jost 2018-2021 | 2527 | +3.7 | 128 | +0.2 |
Jost 2021-2022 | 780 | -0.2 | 112 | -3.5 |
- 2023 3rd round pick for Nicolas Deslauriers
I mean, OK? Deslauriers isn't a great player as far as creating offense, but he's been a consistently adequate defensive forward who is willing to punch people when called upon. In the last four seasons he has contributed -0.4 defGAR and a -5.3 offGAR.
He's seen some penalty kill time on the Ducks this year, and been an adequate defender there.
- Kaapo Kahkonen and a 5th round pick for Jacob Middleton
Minnesota had a surplus goalie (more on that in a minute) and Kahkonen was going to need a new contract after this season. I'm not a believer that Kahkonen was ever going to be a starting caliber goalie, but he has shown that he could fill in capably sometimes, and has actually outperformed Talbot this year in limited chances. Still, I think it's understandable that the Wild decided to move on from Kahkonen and look elsewhere for backup help next season.
Jacob Middleton is in his first year of consistent playing time and has acquitted himself pretty well. He has solid defensive numbers and the underlying numbers on offense look respectable (although the results so far haven't matched the analytics). He'll be an RFA next year, and should probably be a cheaper option than Goligoski if the Wild need to fill more spaces on the blue line.
I probably like Middleton the best of any of the skaters that the Wild acquired this week. Once again, he has played the penalty kill consistently, and has good numbers and results there.
- Jack McBain for a 2022 second round pick (from Vancouver)
Vancouver should pick somewhere in the middle of the second round, and McBain said he wouldn't sign in Minnesota, so this is a good get for the front office. I don't think that McBain is going to be a star in the NHL, but could become a third/fourth line player and contribute.
- 2022 Conditional 1st-round pick for Marc-Andre Fleury (50% salary retained by Chicago)
Here's the big one. Fleury hasn't had a great year and even if you adjust for the defense in front of him, it doesn't look anything like his truly spectacular season last year. Still, if the goal is to take a swing at a deep playoff run this year (which seems pretty reasonable for the Wild) then you absolutely add Fleury if you can get him.
How Talbot and Fleury share time is a question. Whether Fleury can improve to anything close to what he did last year in Minnesota's system is a question.
What's not a question is whether Guerin is pushing in on success this year. Adding Fleury is as much a signal as anything else. This is a year where Minnesota is going for it. Coming into the final 20 or so games of the season the team has been consistently good on the offensive side of the puck.
There have been a couple of swoons in their defense at 5 on 5, that you can see on the graph below that charts the team's even strength expected goals for and against.
But more recently, two problems have become obvious.
1. Penalty Killing
Woof, that got ugly right around game 30 and really hasn't gotten any better since then (the median penalty GA/60 in the NHL is 7.45).
2. Goaltending
The league median save percentage at 5 on 5 is .919, a number the Wild tandem hasn't topped in a five-game sample in the last month and a half.
And so Bill Guerin set out to address these two issues. Deslauriers, Middleton, Jost all have some experience as penalty killers. (Jost's numbers this year are a little suspect, but has a better track record). League-average goaltending doesn't seem like an unreasonable expectation from Fleury going forward. It will be pretty easy to assess these moves at the end of the year and see if they had the intended effect, because the intended effect is so clear.
Credit where it's due to the Wild front office, they identified the problem and tried to address it, now there's 20 games to see whether it worked.
1970 Rewind: ALCS Game Two
BALTIMORE 11, MINNESOTA 3 IN MINNESOTA
Date: Sunday, October 4.
Batting stars: Harmon Killebrew was 1-for-3 with a two-run homer (his second) and a walk. Tony Oliva was 1-for-4 with a home run.
Pitching star: Stan Williams pitched three perfect innings and struck out one.
Opposition stars: Mark Belanger was 3-for-4 with a walk and three runs. Boog Powell was 3-for-5 with two doubles and three RBIs. Dave McNally was 2-for-5 with a double. Frank Robinson was 1-for-3 with a two-run homer, two walks, and two runs. Dave Johnson was 1-for-5 with a three-run homer. McNally also pitched a complete game, giving up three runs on six hits and five walks and striking out five.
The game: Belanger and Paul Blair opened the game by drawing walks. With one out Powell hit an RBI double, giving the Orioles a 1-0 lead. It went to 3-0 in the third when Belanger singled and Robinson hit a two-run homer. In the fourth Andy Etchebarren reached second on a single-plus-error and scored on McNally's single, making it 4-0 Baltimore.
The Twins got back into the game in the bottom of the fourth. Leo Cardenas walked and Killebrew hit a two-run homer followed by a solo homer by Oliva, cutting the margin to 4-3. But there it stayed until the ninth. The Twins missed a chance in the fifth. Williams drew a one-out walk and went to second on a Cesar Tovar single. Cardenas followed with another single, but Williams was thrown out at the plate. They had another chance in the sixth when George Mitterwald hit a two-out double, but an infield out ended the inning.
The Orioles broke it open in the ninth, scoring seven runs. McNally led off with a double and Belanger singled him to third. A one-out walk to Robinson loaded the bases. Powell then hit a two-run double, Merv Rettenmund followed with an RBI single, an error brought home a fourth run, and Johnson capped the inning with a three-run homer. It was 11-3, and that would be the final score.
WP: McNally (1-0).
LP: Tom Hall (0-1).
S: None.
Notes: Rick Renick was at third base, with Killebrew moving to first and Rich Reese out of the lineup. Danny Thompson was at second base in place of Rod Carew. Bob Allison pinch-hit for Williams in the seventh. Jim Holt pinch-ran for Brant Alyea in the eighth inning and stayed in the game in center field, with Tovar moving to left. Frank Quilici pinch-hit for Luis Tiant in the ninth.
Hall pitched 3.1 innings, allowing four runs on six hits and three walks and striking out four.
Hall had pitched very well down the stretch, but the fact that he was the number two starter showed how injuries hurt the Twins starting rotation. Dave Boswell was unavailable and Tiant might as well have been, being used in mop-up relief. Bert Blyleven would not have been a bad choice, but he was even younger than Hall (age 20 versus age 22) and Hall had really pitched better. Jim Kaat would've been another choice, but perhaps Bill Rigney wanted to start Hall at home, where he might be less nervous, then to make him deal with a road crowd. I haven't looked ahead, and don't remember, who started game three. We'll see tomorrow.
I guess I didn't need to worry about Williams being overused in game one, as he threw three more perfect innings in game two. The ninth-inning runs came mostly off of Ron Perranoski, who was in his second inning of work after pitching a perfect inning the day before.
The Twins had now played five ALCS games against Baltimore and lost all five. They were now facing an elimination game in Baltimore.
Record: The Twins trailed the best-of-five series, 0-2.
Rare Americans – Rhythm Kitchen
I picked Rare Americans for my “Best of 2021.” I guess I’ll start here while I figure out what the rest of the week looks like.