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Saturday, June 23, 2012

ANNIVERSARY of 100 POSTS!

Happy Anniversary!


Ninety-Nine posts previous to this, I began a baseball blog to share my love and passion for all things baseball at home, aboard, and on the major league level. Who could imagine HITS AND ERRORS, as I named it then, and MAJOR LEAGUE GOOFBALL, which is its current name, would survive this long? Thank you to all my faithful readers who supported this blog since its inception; if you are new to this blog, thanks go to you as well for stopping by. Hopefully, I will hearing from you very soon.

Reds Appreciation Day!


On a more serious note, one of my friends is feeling down in the dumps. There isn't a lot I can do in this situation, however I do know this friend loves the Cincinnati Reds ^_^ By love, I mean she REALLY loves the Cincinnati Reds (Headgear + Jackets + T-shirts + season tickets (?) = IN LOVE). Johnny Cueto doing things in style against the Minnesota Twins as the Reds shut them down, and shut them out 6-0.

To my friend, I hope you feel better soon ^_^ As long as they don't get in the way of my Toronto Blue Jays, go REDS!

Before I go...


Thome (25) wins another for the Phils, about to receive
an MLB modern-era record thirteenth celebratory beatdown at home plate
Congratulations to the Philadelphia Phillies' star batter, and all-around good guy Jim Thome, whose walk-off homerun at home against the Tampa Bay Rays also ties him with Sammy Sosa for seventh place in the all-time career home runs list (609), but he is also number one all-time among batters in the modern era (1900-present) with career walk-off home runs (13). Not only is baseball the most recorded, categorized, and statistical team sport, but it also records stuff hardly anyone thinks of o_O LOL ^_^ 

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Clemens: The Saga Continues?

Acquitted of all charges, "Rocket"
Roger Clemens speaks to the media
Tuesday (Maine News Daily).
After being cleared of perjury charges on Tuesday, former baseball star and suspected performance-enhancing drug user Roger Clemens stepped into the Washington streets with family in tow a free man. According to Canadian sports radio hosts Jeff Blair and Stephen Brunt that afternoon, Clemens was found "not guilty" of committing perjury to a grand jury about taking performance enhancing drugs, yet he was not found "not guilty" of taking performance enhancing drugs by his former trainer Brian McNamee.

When the Boston Red Sox said goodbye to the "Rocket" in the mid 90s, many thought the game past him by. However, with the Toronto Blue Jays in 1997, Roger Clemens responded to his critics by leading the American League in wins, lowest ERA, and strikeouts: The first real "Triple Crown" winner of the Cy Young Award that year. It was during that time in Toronto McNamee claimed Clemens used steroids to return to his old 80s form, when he fanned an MLB record twenty Mariner batters for the Boston Red Sox in Fenway Park in 1986.

McNamee's reputation and character came into question when poor medical procedures and testimony from his former wife at that time came into light, thus throwing the Clemens case into limbo. With no credible leg for the prosecution to stand on, the judge could only acquit Clemens of all six perjury charges.

What this does for Roger Clemens in the future is uncertain. His chances of getting into the Baseball Hall-of-Fame are slim, but he won 354 games, threw 4672 strikeouts over his career with the Boston Red Sox, Toronto Blue Jays, New York Yankees, and Houston Astros (Don't forget a pair of World Series championships with the Yankees in 1999 and 2000).

There is one other statistic that you will not find in any record book: When Roger Clemens flirted with retirement, he returned to Fenway Park for the last time, and left the game with another quality start and a standing ovation from the Fenway Faithful of Boston. FOX broadcasters stopped the game, and even held an on-field interview with Clemens, even broadcasting it over the speakers in the stadium. The most notable and odd thing about the interview is that Clemens was wearing a New York Yankees jersey at the time.

If you get in, Mr. Clemens, which team will you sport on your hat?
I can count on one hand the number of Yankees players honoured with standing ovations by Red Sox fans.

I don't think Clemens would make the Hall-of-Fame on the first ballot, or even in his first year of eligibility. I believe fans already moved past the witch hunt, and want to return to watching baseball games instead of sitting through baseball players testifying to grand juries, which is sad because entertainment and "safety" became more important than the values we cling to as individuals. Clemens like other players suspected of taking HGH, steroids, and other performance enhancing drugs might get into the Hall-of-Fame, but will it be under clouds of indifference and politics, or under blue skies?

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Dazed & Confuzzled

My favourite Toronto Blue Jay Jose Bautista launched his nineteenth homerun yesterday in a loss against the surging Washington Nationals at the Rogers Center. Bautista found his groove again, but at a cost the Blue Jays dropped five of their last six games since the start of this latest chapter of inter-league baseball, which I like to call "Give the Yankees easy games to win so they can make the playoffs again" baseball. Bautista sits third in the major league homerun race with nineteen HR, two behind White Sox clean up hitter Adam Dunn, and three behind the leader, Texas Ranger Josh Hamilton (According to MLB Stats, as of June 14th, 2012).

As a Blue Jays fan, I'm disappointed with this offensive slump, and with both starting pitchers Brendan Morrow and Kyle Drabek out of the lineup for fifteen days, and potentially six starts between them, our chances to build off the success of late 2010 and 2011 are beginning to slim down.

GIANTS' Matt Cain celebrates after throwing the
22nd perfect game in modern MLB history
Speaking of inter-league wackiness, how long would it take for the Major League Baseball to switch to an all-designated hitter format for both American and National leagues? I suppose when, after a very close pennant race, the losing team will complain the winning team had the luxury of using a DH in their inter-league contest while they had to suffer with their pitcher swinging and missing in the penultimate last game of the season for both teams. When the Houston Astros announced they were leaving the National League, I said professional baseball would become all-DH by the start of next season, and if not then by the start of the 2014 campaign when they realize inter-league cost one team a chance at the postseason because they did not have the luxury of inserting a designated hitter in their 162nd game lineup card.

Before I forget, I would like to congratulate San Francisco Giants' star pitcher Matt Cain, who became only the 22nd pitcher in the modern era of Major League Baseball to throw a perfect game. He tossed fourteen strikeouts against the Houston Astros last night in San Francisco to preserve a 10-0 victory, and a spot in history as the first Giant in the 130-year history of the franchise to retire all 27 batters he faced in one game ^_^ Well done, Matt Cain! Now, if only I could buy cream coloured baseball pants to wear during for city ball? For more on this game, click here to go to MLB beat writer Chris Haft's account of this historic game.

I AM NOT DEAD & I STILL LIKE BASEBALL!

There are two camps on the issue of my existence: Team "HE'S DEAD", and Team "HE HATES BASEBALL". Fortunately for both camps, any participants of said clubs are wrong for becoming members in these "illustrious?" fraternities.

Tuesday Spring League

Phil named his infield glove "Justine"! Oh yeah, Jays' pitcher Kyle Drabek (4) joins
fellow starting pitcher Brendan Morrow on the disabled list.
I had a game last Tuesday, and it turned into an epic contest at that. It was our last regular season game, and we were playing the same team we lost to at the beginning of our campaign. As an added bonus, one of my teammates handed me my infield baseball glove that I lost a couple of weeks before. Unfortunately, due to a momentary lack of poise, everyone on my team knows that "Justine" is the name of my glove -_- Sigh...

So, we played our game, and for whatever reason I played the first half of the contest at second base (Travis, stop laughing)! If there is one thing you must know about me, it is that I never play second base. I can be the shortstop, first baseman, third baseman, left fielder, center fielder, catcher, pitcher, and after what happened last year with my knee maybe right fielder, but never a second baseman. There are too many bad memories of games past where I lined up at to the left of second base, and...sigh, I can't talk about it! T_T

Anyway, we are losing the game 20-12 at the top of the seventh (last) inning, and by the fourth inning I'm back at shortstop. The second baseman experiment was a success, given the fact our opponents hit to my side once to that time, but the patient was near death o_O Most of us felt we were better than this, and that included me. Whatever the result, though, I wanted to finish the game with pride in performance, and with some respect. I was due up to bat first, and from the plate I noticed the right-fielder, who played shallow the whole game, stood too close to the action. I usually swing at the first pitch, so when it hung on the outside part of the plate I cranked it over right field for a homerun. Yes, the score was 20-13, but the homerun then didn't mean too much in the giant scheme of things; I didn't want to let the team down.

Something happened after that home run, because three batters, three hits, two homeruns, and three runs scored later we were back in the ball game. Everyone started hitting, at first into right field where the weakest link stood, and then all over the place! For all the hard work, tough running, and good hitting, we had two outs, runners on first and second, and the score was 20-19. Guess who is up to bat? o_O No, not me?! Are you serious?

It's a moment you dream about, but never expect. Why?
You live for moments like these playing in the backyard sandlot with your friends as a kid, however I doubt anyone really expects to live out that dream. In my experience with similar situations playing Division B rep ball at eleven years old, I never wanted to be the kid others counted on to extend an inning or win a game. I didn't believe I was adequate enough. Even now, I feel inadequate being thrust into those situations in baseball, and in life. "There is no life like a life under the bus" is a saying I adopted this year; it is during those moments of defeat that you find out what life is, who you are, what defines you, and why in that place of defeat you can find peace and joy whatsoever the result. That is where you start living, and where you seize opportunities, like the first pitch I faced.

I didn't hit it that well, and it flew towards left field where the best fielders on the opposition stood. At that moment, the wind picked up the ball, and the fielders went from standing still, to jittery, and then turning right around as the ball flew over their heads! As I rounded the bases with hands pointing to the sky, we retook the lead after clawing back from eight runs down; I stopped on third with what turned out to be the game-winning hit: A triple to deep left field ^_^ I thought the game was over; we won! Unfortunately, according to my teammate and third base coach Don, we were the away team, and there was another half inning left to play o_O Long story short, Misfits 23 (Us), Ball Breakers 20 (Them).

I still can't believe we won, or what happened that night. I heard and witnessed many baseball horror stories about similar reversals of fortune, yet to come out on the positive end was a tremendous blessing, and one we shall remember with great appreciation and thankfulness ^_^

So, that was my week ^_^ How was yours? LOL

Saturday, June 2, 2012

What is it about: DIVISION RIVALRIES

Diamondbacks' outfielder Chris Young reacts
after nearly being plucked by a pitch in a game versus San Diego
Since the dust settled from the Players Strike of '94, Major League Baseball aligned to a six-division baseball league with three divisions in both the American and National Leagues. Membership in each division is static save for a few instances of teams with no chance of postseason play jumping from the Yankees-Red Sox duopoly of the American League to the free-for-all National League (The ultimate exception is the Houston Astros, but I think it's all about the money).

As the saying goes, "Familiarity breeds contempt", so when division rivals such as the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox match up the eyes of the baseball world turn in their direction, in particular during weekend series culminating in Sunday Night Baseball on ESPN. The same could be true in other divisions as well, which is why genuine scenes of goodwill across battle lines are popping up all over the major leagues to quell the fires of rivalry and bad blood. Errant pitches, like the one thrown at Diamondbacks outfielder Chris Young in yesterday's game against the Padres, almost led to a benches clearing melee. Once year-round inter-league baseball rears its ugly head next season, there will not be so much time dedicated to fuelling the fires of season-long rivalries and the mixed signals of every wild pitch thrown during division matchups.

Rangers owner and former Angels great Nolan Ryan, honoured
by the  Los Angeles Angels prior to yesterday's contest,
throws the first pitch prior to the Angels-Rangers matchup
Historical rivalries such as Yankees-Red Sox, Giants-Dodgers, Brewers-NL Central, or Jim Leyland-Umpires are the most difficult to find fans mingling and getting along in the stands. Google and YouTube searches provide loads of examples of wacky behaviour of players on the field, and rival fans sitting in the wrong section of the visiting stadium off the field. I remember when Roger Clemens announced his (first) retirement from baseball as a New York Yankee. In his last game in Boston against the rival Red Sox, Clemens left the field for the last time to a standing ovation, and was even interviewed on the field while wearing YANKEES gear! So it is possible, if only for a moment, for historical rivalries to take a back seat, even if for a moment.

So then, what makes up a good rivalry? What ingredients do you need to start a rivalry between the Houston Astros and the Seattle Mariners, for example (the Astros will play in the American League West Division starting in 2013...I know, I'm upset about it, too)?