Minor Details: Game of September 17

ST. PAUL SAINTS 4, INDIANAPOLIS INDIANS 2 IN ST. PAUL

Indianapolis took a 2-0 lead in the top of the fifth, but St. Paul scored single runs in innings five through eight.  The go-ahead run scored on an error.

Multi-hit games:  Payton Eeles was 2-for-4 with a home run, a walk, and two runs.  Austin Martin was 2-for-4 with a walk.  DaShawn Keirsey, Jr. was 2-for-5.

Home runs:  Eeles (7).

Multi-RBI games:  None.

Stolen bases:  Helman (12).

Pitching prowess:  Caleb Boushley pitched five innings, giving up two runs on six hits and four walks and striking out three.  Jeff Brigham pitched a scoreless inning, giving up a hit and a walk and striking out one.  Kody Funderburk struck out two in two shutout innings, giving up one hit.  Steven Okert struck out three in a scoreless inning, giving up two hits and a walk.

Win:  Funderburk (1-0).

Save:  Okert (1).

Opposition standout:  Alika Williams was 3-for-4 with a double.

Record:  St. Paul is 31-39, in ninth place, 14.5 games behind Columbus.

TODAY'S TILT

6:37  Indianapolis at St. Paul (Andrew Morris, 1-0, 3.14)

Happy Birthday–September 18

Heinie Groh (1889)
George Uhle (1898)
Sam Bankhead (1910)
Harvey Haddix (1925)
Lorn Brown (1938)
Dick Dietz (1941)
Ken Brett (1948)
Tony Scott (1951)
Ray Smith (1955)
Ryne Sandberg (1959)
Jeff Bronkey (1965)
Kevin Thompson (1979)
Joe Bisenius (1982)
Taylor Motter (1989)
Juan Minaya (1990)
Beau Burrows (1996)
Marcos Diplan (1996)

Lorn Brown was a baseball broadcaster from 1966-1988, calling games for the Chicago White Sox, the Milwaukee Brewers, and the New York Mets.

Kevin Thompson was drafted by Minnesota in the eighteenth round in 1998, but did not sign.

Joe Bisenius pitched briefly for Philadelphia and Washington.  He is from Sioux City and was somewhat of a local hero when I lived in that area.

We would also like to wish a very happy birthday to nibbish and a very happy anniversary to Mr. and Mrs. Corn.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–September 18

2024 Game Log 151 – Twins at Guardians

In 1999, Guided By Voices released Do the Collapse, their 11th studio album. GBV was actually trying to get out from under their lo-fi reputation and hired The Cars' Ric Ocasek to produce. And produce he did, creating easily their glossiest sounding album. Reception was mixed as some thought it was too slick for Guided By Voices, others appreciated the new sound and the album contained one certified banger with Teenage FBI, and few GBV classics that should have been hits, but only known to the fanatics like Dragons Awake! Surgical Focus, and Picture Me Big Time.

Now in honor of the 25th anniversary of the album's release, the Minnesota Twins seem to be doing their own collapse as a once promising season is hanging on by thread with 12 games remaining. The problem is if Twins players actually listened to the dang thing, they'd find out that the songs belie the title. The album is not about collapsing but about hanging on. In fact, the song Hold on Hope was a (very) minor hit and practically addresses the Twins plight:

That nothing grows on
But time still goes on
Through each life of misery
Everybody's gotta hold on hope
It's the last thing that's holding me

Other songs talk about redemption, unleashing that inner dragon we all possess, delivering words that inspire. It's all there Twins if you want it. So embrace Do the Collapse, but not by losing to the Guardians and Reds (both Ohio teams, hmmmm) and awaiting your fate with a quick end to the season; but instead by using the message found in Do the Collapse to emerge on the other side, better, stronger, and ready to do some damage in the playoffs.

Game time 5:40. Zebby Williams v. Gavin Williams.

Minor Details: Cedar Rapids Kernels Leaders

BATTING

GAMES

Rubel Cespedes, 110
Jose Salas, 102
Misael Urbina, 101

AT BATS

Cespedes, 418
Salas, 339
Urbina, 330

RUNS

Ricardo Olivar, 59
Cespedes, 48
Urbina, 48

HITS

Cespedes, 118
Olivar, 86
Salas, 77

DOUBLES

Cespedes, 22
Gabriel Gonzalez, 19
3 tied at 17

TRIPLES

Rayne Doncon, 3
Olivar, 3
Salas, 3

HOME RUNS

Nate Baez, 12
Cespedes, 12
Olivar, 11

RBIs

Cespedes, 72
Olivar, 44
Jay Harry, 39

WALKS

Urbina, 56
Olivar, 53
Cespedes, 39

STRIKEOUTS

Salas, 104
Kevin Maitan, 103
Urbina, 97

STOLEN BASES

Salas, 16
Luke Keaschall, 14
Urbina, 14

AVERAGE

Keaschall, .335
Walker Jenkins, 290
Olivar, .287

ON-BASE

Keaschall, .457
Olivar, .393
Jenkins, .382

SLUGGING

Keaschall, .544
Jenkins, .482
Olivar, .473

OPS

Keaschall, 1.001
Olivar, .866
Jenkins, .863

PITCHING

GAMES

Gabriel Yanez, 38
Jacob Wosinski, 34
Juan Mendez, 33

WINS

John Klein, 8
Ricardo Velez, 7
Jordan Carr, 6

SAVES

Yanez, 10
Velez, 7
Wosinski, 5

INNINGS

Klein, 100.1
Carr, 90.2
Darren Bowen, 72.2

STRIKEOUTS

Klein, 90
Bowen, 71
Carr, 67

ERA

Mike Paredes, 1.80
Andrew Morris, 2.15
Yanez, 2.26

WHIP

Paredes, 0.93
C. J. Culpepper, 1.07
Velez, 1.07

AVERAGE AGAINST

Velez, .191
Kyle Bischoff, .212
Culpepper, .215

Happy Birthday–September 17

Ezra Sutton (1850)
Willie Sudhoff (1874)
Frank Schulte (1882)
Sheriff Blake (1899)
Hughie Critz (1900)
Sam Streeter (1900)
Paul Hardy (1910)
Chase Riddle (1925)
Orlando Cepeda (1937)
Bobby Wine (1938)
Thad Bosley (1956)
John Franco (1960)
Dan Haren (1980)
Casey Crosby (1988)
Marcus Semien (1990)
Zack Granite (1992)
Jose Ramirez (1992)
James Marvel (1993)
Jordan Balazovic (1998)

Chase Riddle played in the minors from 1943-1962, managed in the minors from 1951-1962, was a scout from 1963-1978, and was the baseball coach at Troy State University from 1979-1990.

James Marvel was drafted by Minnesota in the thirty-seventh round in 2012, but did not sign.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–September 17