Happy Birthday–February 18

Ray Ryan (1883)
George Mogridge (1889)
Sherry Smith (1891)
Jake Kline (1895)
Huck Betts (1897)
Joe Gordon (1915)
Herm Wehmeier (1927)
Frank House (1930)
Manny Mota (1938)
Dal Maxvill (1939)
Bob Miller (1939)
Jerry Morales (1949)
John Mayberry (1949)
Bruce Kison (1950)
Marc Hill (1952)
Rafael Ramirez (1958)
Kevin Tapani (1964)
John Valentin (1967)
Shawn Estes (1973)
Jamey Carroll (1974)
Chad Moeller (1975)
Alex Rios (1981)

Ray Ryan was involved in minor league baseball for six decades.  He had one baseball card, a part of the T206 tobacco series.  This is the series that produced the famous Honus Wagner card.

Jake Kline was the baseball coach at Notre Dame from 1934-1975.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–February 18

2003 Rewind: Game One Hundred Thirty-nine

MINNESOTA 6, ANAHEIM 5 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Wednesday, September 3.

Batting stars:  Shannon Stewart was 3-for-5 with a double and three runs.  Luis Rivas was 2-for-4 with a stolen base, his fifteenth.

Pitching stars:  Carlos Pulido pitched 3.2 innings of relief, giving up an unearned run on one hit and no walks and striking out two.  LaTroy Hawkins struck out two in 1.2 scoreless innings, giving up two hits.

Opposition stars:  Chone Figgins was 2-for-4 with a walk.  Shawn Wooten was 1-for-4 with a two-run homer, his sixth.

The game:  The Angels drew three walks in the first inning, loading the bases with one out, but did not score.  In the second, walks to Adam Kennedy and Wilson Delgado put men on first and second with one out.  This time, Figgins delivered an RBi single to put Anaheim up 1-0.  In the third, Scott Spiezio doubled, Bengie Molina hit an RBI single and Wooten blasted a two-run homer, giving the Angels a 4-0 lead.

The Twins got on the board in the fourth.  Stewart singled, went to third on a Rivas single, and scored on a ground out to make it 4-1.  The Twins really got back into the game in the sixth.  Cristian Guzman and Stewart started with singles and Rivas followed with an RBI single.  A walk to Corey Koskie loaded the bases and a pair of infield outs brought home two more runs, tying the score 4-4.

The tie lasted until the seventh.  DaVanan doubled with one out.  With two out he went to third on a passed ball, and he scored on a strikeout-plus-wild pitch, putting Anaheim up 5-4.

It was still 5-4 going to the bottom of the ninth.  The first two Twins went out.  Justin Morneau walked and Dustan Mohr pinch-ran for him.  Stewart then doubled down the left-field line and Mohr tried to score from first.  The throw beat him, but Mohr's slide knocked the ball from the catcher's glove.  Before it could be retrieved, Stewart had also scored and the Twins had an improbable 6-5 win.

WP:  Eddie Guardado (2-5).  LP:  Troy Percival (0-5).  S:  None.

Notes:  Matthew LeCroy was again at first base in the absence of Doug Mientkiewicz.  Stewart was in left, Michael Ryan in right, and Jacque Jones at DH.  Denny Hocking pinch-ran for LeCroy in the eighth and stayed in the game at first base.  Morneau pinch-hit for Guzman in the ninth and, as mentioned above, Mohr pinch-ran for him.

Ryan was 0-for-4 and was batting .350.  Stewart was batting .311.  Jones was 0-for-4 and was batting .304.  A. J. Pierzynski was 1-for-3 and was batting .302.

Grant Balfour started but lasted just 2.2 innings, allowing four runs on four hits and five walks and striking out three.  This was the only start of his major league career.  He had not started in the minors since 2000.  While he didn't pitch well, it must be admitted that he was put into a difficult position--a pitcher with little major league experience pressed into an unfamiliar position during a pennant race.  At least he can say his team was unbeaten in games he started in the major leagues.

Pulido's ERA remained at zero through 8.1 innings.  Hawkins lowered his ERA to 2.04.

Ramon Ortiz started for the Angels.  He pitched 5.1 innings, giving up four runs on six hits and one walk and striking out two.

I remember listening to the end of this game on the radio.  As I recall it, the Twins had never scored a run off Troy Percival in his nine-year career.  Third base coach Al Newman was asked during the post-game show why he had sent Mohr home when it looked like he had little chance to score.  He said something like "I thought there was probably less than a ten percent chance that he'd score, but I thought our chances of getting another hit off Percival were less than that, so I sent him."  The logic may be questionable, but you have to admit it worked, and it was a big win for the Twins in the pennant race.

Kansas City won, but the White Sox lost in ten innings, so the Twins moved up.

Record:  The Twins were 73-66, tied for first with Chicago, one game ahead of third-place Kansas City.

Happy Birthday–February 17

Pat Pieper (1886)
Nemo Leibold (1892)
Wally Pipp (1893)
Ed Brandt (1905)
Red Barber (1908)
Rod Dedeaux (1914)
Roger Craig (1930)
Cliff Gustafson (1931)
Dick Bosman (1944)
Dave Roberts (1951)
Jamie Easterly (1953)
Mike Hart (1958)
Michael Jordan (1963)
Scott Williamson (1976)
Cody Ransom (1976)
Juan Padilla (1977)
Josh Willingham (1979)

Pat Pieper was the public address announcer for the Chicago Cubs from 1916-1974.  For the first sixteen of those years, he made the announcements with a megaphone.

Rod Dedeaux and Cliff Gustafson were highly successful college baseball coaches, Dedeaux with USC and Gustafson with Texas.

Already known as a basketball star, Michael Jordan played one year of minor league baseball for AA Birmingham in the White Sox organization before returning to the less-challenging sport.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–February 17

Weekly Wild Whangdoodle: Week ??

Hockey?

There's hockey again?

Well then, it's time to whang that doodle.

Remember last time I wrote one of these and I threw in this little note?

  • Foligno had a positive Covid test on Sunday, so now we enter the seriously not fun part where we wait and wonder if this is a single case or the start of an outbreak through the team.

It was the second one.  The Wild haven't played in two weeks and it feels like about half the roster has been on the Covid list in that time.

So now they're back, and they get to cobble together the rest of the season without really knowing who will be available or how many games they will play or when they will play them ... here we go!

This week's schedule:

Oh hey, we're back in California!

So many teams in this division are right around the 1 point/game record. Any kind of hot streak would do wonders to separate from this group.

Arizona - 16 points in 15 games
Minnesota - 12 points in 11 games
Anaheim - 15 points in 16 games
San Jose - 13 points in 14 games
LA - 11 points in 13 games

===================================================

The Kirill Kaprizov Corner

Kaprizov leads all NHL rookies in assists and is second in total points. (3G - 6A - 9Pts)

There's not a lot of analysis to do here, except to say it's really fun to have an exciting player like this on the team.

Players not Named Kirill

  • Joel Eriksson Ek has not scored a goal in February.
  • Lots of NHL debuts coming up as the roster gets juggled. Calen Addison will be one of them tonight - He's the prospect the Wild got back in the Zucker trade, so it's exciting to see him getting  his debut.
  • Zuccarello is back. I considered ending that sentence with an exclamation point, but thought that was maybe a bit much.

Leaderboards

PlayerGPlayerAPlayerPts
Eriksson Ek5Greenway8Greenway10
Fiala3Suter6Eriksson Ek9
Rask3Kaprizov6Kaprizov9
Dumba3Brodin4Suter6
Kaprizov3Eriksson Ek4Brodin6

2003 Rewind: Game One Hundred Thirty-eight

MINNESOTA 12, ANAHEIM 6 IN MINNESOTA

Date:  Tuesday, September 2.

Batting stars:  Corey Koskie was 3-for-5 with a triple and two runs.  Matthew LeCroy was 2-for-3 with a double and two walks.  Torii Hunter was 2-for-3 with a double and three runs.  Michael Ryan was 1-for-3 with a three-run homer (his second) and a walk.

Pitching star:  Jesse Orosco pitched a scoreless inning, giving up two hits.

Opposition stars:  Jeff DaVanon was 3-for-4 with three walks.  Wilson Delgado was 3-for-4.  Shawn Wooten was 2-for-3 with two runs.  Chone Figgins was 2-for-4 with two doubles and two RBIs.  Greg Jones struck out two in two shutout innings, giving up two hits and three walks.

The game:  The Twins took control early.  In the second LeCroy doubled, A. J. Pierzynski was hit by a pitch, and Ryan delivered a two-out three-run homer to give the Twins a 3-0 lead.  A pair of singles, a bunt, and a sacrifice fly put the Angels on the board in the third, cutting the lead to 3-1.

The Twins responded with six in the bottom of the third.  Singles by Shannon StewartKoskie, and LeCroy plated the first run.  Jacque Jones had a run-scoring double and Hunter hit an RBI single.  Ryan walked to load the bases and Cristian Guzman hit a three-run triple to put the Twins up 9-1.  The Twins kept it going in the fourth.  Luis Rivas singled and scored on a Koskie triple.  LeCroy walked and a double play scored a run.  Hunter then walked and scored on Pierzynski's single to make the score 12-1.

Anaheim got a few back in the fifth.  Wooten and Delgado singled, Figgins had an RBI double, and DaVanon had a two-run single to cut the lead to 12-4.  It stayed there until the eighth, when Trent Durrington walked and RBI doubles by Adam Riggs and Figgins made it 12-6.  That was as close as the Angels would come.

WP:  Kyle Lohse (12-10).  LP:  Aaron Sele (7-10).  S:  None.

Notes:  LeCroy was at first base in place of Doug Mientkiewicz.  Stewart was in left, Ryan in right, and Jones at DH.

With a blowout game, there were numerous substitutions.  Dustan Mohr replaced Hunter in center field in the fifth.  Lew Ford replaced Stewart in left in the seventh, his first appearance with the Twins since July 13.  Chris Gomez pinch-hit for Rivas in the seventh and stayed in the game at second base.  Rob Bowen replaced Pierzynski behind the plate in the eighth.  Michael Cuddyer pinch-hit for Jones in the ninth, his first appearance for the Twins since May 7.

Ryan was batting .438.  Ford was 1-for-1 and was batting .327.  Stewart was 1-for-4 and was batting .308.  Jones was 1-for-4 and was batting .307.  Pierzynski was 1-for-3 and was batting .302.

Lohse pitched seven innings, giving up four runs on twelve hits and a walk, striking out one.

Brad Thomas made his first appearance as a Twin since 2001.  He allowed two runs on two hits and a walk in one inning.  He did strike out two.

Jesse Orosco made his first appearance as a Twins, twenty-five years after having been drafted by them in 1978.  As you probably know, he was traded to the Mets for Jerry Koosman in February of 1979.  The Twins got him back at the August trade deadline in 2003 for a player to be named (Juan Padilla).

Aaron Sele was not as good a pitcher as I remembered him being.  He had a couple of good seasons at the start of his career, but not much after that.  From 1996-2007 he had only one season in which he had an ERA under four (2001) and six seasons with an ERA over five.  Despite that, he made two all-star teams in that span (1998 and 2000), both times based on a high win total.  For his career, he was 148-112, despite an ERA of 4.61 and a WHIP of 1.49.  Apparently he pitched to the score a lot.

The White Sox and Royals both lost, so the Twins gained a game on both of their rivals.

Record:  The Twins were 72-66, in second place in the American League Central, one game behind Chicago.  They were one game ahead of third-place Kansas City.

 

Happy Birthday–February 16

Alex Ferguson (1897)
Parnell Woods (1912)
Creepy Crespi (1918)
Atsushi Aramaki (1926)
Bobby Darwin (1943)
Terry Crowley (1947)
Bob Didier (1949)
Glenn Abbott (1951)
Jerry Hairston (1952)
Barry Foote (1952)
Bill Pecota (1960)
Eric Bullock (1960)
Dwayne Henry (1962)
Jerome Bettis (1972)
Eric Byrnes (1976)
Tommy Milone (1987)

Parnell Woods was an infielder in the Negro Leagues for fourteen years.  He later became the business manager for the Harlem Globetrotters.

Atsushi Aramaki was a dominant pitcher in Japan in the 1950s and is a member of the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame.

Better known as an NFL running back, Jerome Bettis is a part-owner of the Altoona Curve and the State College Spikes.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–February 16

Remodeled basement. Same half-baked taste.