I will be away from my desk until March 11 . . .
. . . although with the infrequency of my posts, you might never have noticed.
I will be away from my desk until March 11 . . .
. . . although with the infrequency of my posts, you might never have noticed.
Bottom of the ninth. Tie game. Bases loaded. Full count. The dream scenario. And ... Cal Conley didn't get set in the batter's box with 8 seconds left on the pitch clock.
— Jeff Passan (@JeffPassan) February 25, 2023
Umpire calls an automatic strike. At-bat over. Inning over. This is the new reality. pic.twitter.com/Bv5k2xJ06j
Have you been wondering if Curt Schilling is still a vile racist transphobic boneheaded Nazi sympathizer who harrasses school shooting survivors and thinks lynching journalists would be "awesome"?
Well, you're in luck because I have the answer.
Yes! The transphobic former ESPN employee, the welfare queen who was given $75 million of Rhode Island taxpayers' money and pissed it all away because he's a incompetent businessman, and the sedition-promoting cheerleader for white supremacists continues to broadcast his stunning ignorance into any available open microphone.
And now this proud member of the QAnon Cult, who promoted Steve Bannon's plan to scam $25 million from MAGA donors, who publicly defended Trump after video surfaced of the serial rapist hitting on a 10-year-old girl (and appeared to admit to ogling his 14-year-old daughter's friends in the process), and the guy who is clueless and terrified of science and logic, is now posing as a historian and foreign policy expert on Fox.
“If Germany had invaded Italy in 1939, what would the world have done? That's exactly what has happened here in the modern sense. One really bad person has invaded another really bad person's country. We are picking sides as if there is a good…” pic.twitter.com/YB5u6rjVKw
— Acyn (@Acyn) February 24, 2023
Quoting a few comments to this tweet: "Zelensky is Mussolini seems a stretch" . . . "Did he go through a DeSantis school system?" . . . "Schilling shilling for Putin".
Outkick, which is owned by Fox Corp., has hired the guy who no longer trusts Fox's (his employer) news reporting because the network has "headed to the FAAAAAR left". He will host The Curt Schilling Baseball Show, which describes itself thusly: "Questioning the consensus and exposing the destructive nature of 'woke' activism, OutKick is the antidote to the mainstream sports media that often serves an elite, left-leaning minority instead of the American sports fan."
Maybe Aubrey Huff can be his guffawing sidekick cough-talking racial slurs in the background.
So why has Schilling agreeed to work for a "FAAAAAR left" company? Isn't he a massive hypocrite for doing that? (Again, yes.)
On Thursday, Eric Hananoki of Media Matters posted a voluminous collection of hateful and stupid postings from Schilling, who self-identifies as a Christian (although when he recently tweeted "Biden is Hitler", he was a Jew).
When I first read these, I thought they were from the teachings of Jesus. You might be mistaken, too.
Schilling's conspiracy theories: QAnon, school shooting conspiracy theorist, "the global vaccine hoax"Schilling endorsed and promoted the QAnon conspiracy theory in a 2018 Facebook post, writing of a QAnon video: "I started to research this about a month ago and was sent this today. You will not be able to stop watching once you start." He has also worn a QAnon shirt with its slogan while doing Facebook videos.Schilling repeatedly expressed dislike for Outkick's owners and corporate cousin Fox News
Schilling promoted the conspiracy theory that the mass shootings in Parkland, Florida, and Sandy Hook, Connecticut, were hoaxes. On February 26, 2018, he shared a link to a now-deleted article which embedded text that called Sandy Hook a "hoax" and purportedly included videos which "contain eyewitness testimony that prove the Parkland High School shooting did not happen as they told us." Schilling defended himself in the comments section from criticism, saying, "Tell me something doesn't seem weird?"
Schilling shared a now-deleted thread from a Parkland conspiracy theorist who claimed that "this stinks to high heavens" and "why are the interviews that do NOT agree with the one shooter or the narrative that CNN is pushing being heard?" On Twitter, he also promoted a conspiracy theory falsely claiming that Parkland mass shooting survivor David Hogg was a supposed crisis actor.
Schilling is an election denier who has defended the January 6 insurrectionists and called for the country to "Declare Martial Law, arrest the liars (Schiff, Pelosi, Shumer) the treasonous idiots (Schiff, Clinton) and put them on trial AND a complete re-vote." He has pushed the conspiracy theory that Dominion helped steal the 2020 election.
Schilling tweeted that the Democratic National Committee "murdered Seth Rich."
Schilling has promoted the conspiracy theory that the Clintons have murdered numerous people.
Schilling called the COVID-19 vaccine "the global vaccine hoax that's killing people."Schilling has frequently tweeted his dislike of the majority of Fox News and the Murdochs. Here are numerous examples from his Twitter account:Schilling's bigotry: Anti-trans and anti-Muslim posts; blaming Black people for slavery in the U.S.
"I said it before, the Murdoch sons are HARD CORE Hollywood liberals. Once dad was out of the picture the transformation began." [September 16, 2020] "Not really considering the murdoch children are hard core hollywood liberals. Only a matter of time. IMO it's time we @BreitbartNews started our own news channel." [November 27, 2018]
"Tonight put me over the hump. Fox has joined the gaggle of things I cannot trust to be objective. No worries, just disappointing." [November 6, 2018] "Fox is also a very involved member of the Fake News crowd ICYMI." [September 14, 2018]
"Think about this conceit. Rupert Murdoch thinks he matters enough that him wanting someone gone from the WH is actually news." [August 15, 2017]
"I've pretty much stopped caring what they think. Outside of Kilmeade, Carlson and Baier they are headed to the FAAAAAR left." [August 23, 2017]Schilling was fired from ESPN for promoting an anti-trans post in 2016 "which had a man in ripped women's clothes under a caption that read: 'Let him in to the restroom with your daughter or else you're a narrow minded, judgmental, unloving, racist bigot who needs to die!'"
Schilling has repeatedly demonized Muslims as killers and compared them to Nazis.
Schilling on slavery: "African slavery was created by blacks, on blacks, to blacks, for blacks. They were sold by blacks, to blacks, and to whites."
Schilling has called Jewish philanthropist George Soros "the puppeteer of the Democratic party." (There is a long and violent history related to the antisemitic puppet master trope.)
Schilling compared conservatives to Jewish people in 1930s Germany, tweeting: "Biden is Hitler mid 1930s rousing the German people on the evils of the Jewish people. With 'Jew' being the modern-day conservative American who believes in God and Country (regardless of sex, creed or color mind you)."
Schilling promoted a large collection of Nazi memorabilia on Facebook in August 2015.
[As promised, here is the "Cool Babe Ruth Facts" section from The Babe, published in 2019 by the Society for American Baseball Research.]
After years of looking at Babe Ruth's career statistics – both for research and for pleasure – I have come to the inescapable conclusion that the man considered by many as the greatest player in the history of the sport is wildly underrated. The more you learn about Ruth – his life on and off the field – the more unbelievable and improbable his story becomes. It becomes increasingly difficult to comprehend the fact that he truly existed.
What follows are some Ruth statistics and factoids I have gathered over the years, both from my own research and curiosity and from other sources, including Ryan Spaeder's "The Ace of Spaeder". All statistics are from Baseball Reference. The statistics in the yearly charts begin with 1918 because that was the first season Ruth began playing in the field every day.
Babe Ruth, 1920: .376 .532 .847.375 batting average and .750 slugging percentage
Babe Ruth, 1921: .378 .512 .846
Babe Ruth, 1923: .393 .545 .764
Babe Ruth, 1924: .378 .513 .739
Rogers Hornsby, 1924: .424 .507 .696
Ted Williams, 1941: .406 .553 .735
Ted Williams, 1957: .388 .526 .731
Babe Ruth, 1920: .376 .532 .847.500 on-base percentage and .750 slugging percentage
Babe Ruth, 1921: .378 .512 .846 Babe Ruth, 1923: .393 .545 .764 Rogers Hornsby, 1925: .403 .489 .756
Babe Ruth, 1920: .376 .532 .847Ruth had seven seasons with at least a .350 batting average, .480 on-base percentage, and .730 slugging percentage. Everyone else in baseball history – more than 22,000 players – has combined for only five such seasons.
Babe Ruth, 1921: .378 .512 .846
Babe Ruth, 1923: .393 .545 .764
Barry Bonds, 2001: .328 .515 .863
Barry Bonds, 2002: .370 .582 .799
Barry Bonds, 2004: .362 .609 .812
Babe Ruth, 1920: .376 .532 .847Note: Ted Williams did it twice, at ages 22 and 38!
Babe Ruth, 1921: .378 .512 .846
Babe Ruth, 1923: .393 .545 .764
Babe Ruth, 1924: .378 .513 .739
Babe Ruth, 1926: .372 .516 .737
Babe Ruth, 1927: .356 .486 .772
Babe Ruth, 1930: .359 .493 .732
Rogers Hornsby, 1925: .403 .489 .756
Ted Williams, 1941: .406 .553 .735
Ted Williams, 1957: .388 .526 .731
Barry Bonds, 2002: .370 .582 .799
Barry Bonds, 2004: .362 .609 .812
1920: 1.379Barry Bonds
1921: 1.359
1923: 1.309
1924: 1.252
1926: 1.253
1927: 1.258
2001: 1.379Ted Williams
2002: 1.381
2003: 1.278
2004: 1.422
1941: 1.287Ruth holds eight of the top 17 spots on the Best Single-Season OPS+ list (1901-2018). The only three players with more than one season in the Top 20:
1957: 1.257
Babe Ruth 8 (1919, 1920, 1921, 1923, 1924, 1926, 1927, 1931)Bonds's top nine seasons: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 9th, 30th, 37th, 89th, 90th, 120th.
Barry Bonds 4 (2001, 2002, 2003, 2004)
Ted Williams 2 (1941, 1957)
Babe Ruth 218 Cy Williams 109The average American League team (not including Ruth's team in each season) hit 238 home runs.
Ken Williams 108
Rogers Hornsby 97
Tillie Walker 89
Harry Heilmann 75
High Pockets Kelly 68
Babe Ruth 396Home Runs, 1920-31 (12 seasons)
Rogers Hornsby 198
Cy Williams 194
Ken Williams 185
Babe Ruth 562All-Time Home Run List, When Ruth Retired In 1935
Rogers Hornsby 268
Lou Gehrig 233
Cy Williams 202
Babe Ruth 714 1914-35In 10 World Series, Ruth batted .326, slugged .744, and hit 15 home runs. He also pitched 31 innings with a 0.87 ERA.
Lou Gehrig 378 1923-35 (Final season, HR total: 1939, 493)
Jimmie Foxx 302 1925-35 (Final season, HR total: 1945, 534)
Rogers Hornsby 300 1915-35 (Final season, HR total: 1937, 301)
Al Simmons 256 1924-35 (Final season, HR total: 1944, 307)
Cy Williams 251 1912-30
Hack Wilson 244 1923-34
Mel Ott 242 1926-35 (Final season, HR total: 1947, 511)
Chuck Klein 232 1928-35 (Final season, HR total: 1944, 300)
Goose Goslin 218 1921-35 (Final season, HR total: 1938, 248)
Jim Bottomley 206 1922-35 (Final season, HR total: 1937, 219)
Ken Williams 196 1915-29
Gabby Hartnett 189 1922-35 (Final season, HR total: 1941, 236)
Harry Heilmann 183 1914-32
September 27, 1927 off Lefty Grove (Athletics)September 29, 1927 off Paul Hopkins (Senators)August 6, 1929 (G2) off Bobby Burke (Senators)August 7, 1929 (G1) off Howard Ehmke (Athletics)
Babe Ruth 1923 379Ruth holds the all-time record for games with two home runs (70).
Barry Bonds 2004 376
Billy Hamilton 1894 362
Ted Williams 1949 358
Barry Bonds 2002 356
Babe Ruth 1921 353
Babe Ruth 1924 346
Ted Williams 1947 345
Tom Seaver 127
Juan Marichal 123
Zack Greinke 123
Madison Bumgarner 122
Babe Ruth 122
Bob Feller 122
Don Drysdale 121
Warren Spahn 119
Nolan Ryan 112
Spring Training vibes for the timeline. pic.twitter.com/JA301xiRtz
— Red Sox (@RedSox) February 20, 2023
2023 team meeting to kick things off.
— Red Sox (@RedSox) February 20, 2023
It’s go time. pic.twitter.com/7Tu5GLPdO1
Swinging it. pic.twitter.com/WwpYeL2j5a
— Red Sox (@RedSox) February 21, 2023
Bullpen views. pic.twitter.com/zJgXBQsn7U
— Red Sox (@RedSox) February 21, 2023
"It's go time."Blue skies.
— Red Sox (@RedSox) February 21, 2023
Red Sox. pic.twitter.com/dwp57pkgQw
One night I was doing Mick Jagger and I didn't know he was in the audience — that was in the '70s. So I went backstage and the owner of the club said, "Mick Jagger wants to meet you." And I was like, "Humana humana." I went out and sat with him and we just hit it off. He was really gracious . . .
Cardinals (1959-61, 1963-69)
Phillies (1970-72)
Expos (1972)
Cardinals (1973-74)
Red Sox (1974-75)
Phillies (1975-80)
McCarver debuted with the Cardinals at the age of 17 in 1959. Over three seasons, he struggled, going 22-for-101 (.218/.233/.297) in 40 games. After spending 1962 in the minors, he returned to the bigs to stay in 1963. McCarver played in three World Series in five years with the Cardinals (1964, 67, 68), and was on the winning side in the first two. His only "black ink" was leading MLB with 13 triples in 1966.
In 1967, McCarver finished #2 in the NL MVP voting, posting a 136 OPS+ and a WAR of 6.0, his only season over 3.4. Orlando Cepeda, his St. Louis teammate, was the unanimous choice. McCarver surpassed that OPS+ mark in consecutive seasons a decade later (in his mid-30s), with 137 in 1976 and a career-best 145 in 1977.
His broadcasting career lasted more than 40 years and he called 23 World Series and 20 All-Star Games. From the New York Times obituary:
Known for his shrewd analysis of strategy, his literate use of metaphor and his penchant for predicting what was about to unfold on the field, often correctly, McCarver was sometimes a play-by-play announcer but most often a color man, a role that better suited his gift of gab.
His career spanned more than 30 years, from his start in Philadelphia in 1980, to his famous pairing with the former slugger Ralph Kiner in the Mets’ booth, to his national appearances on four different networks, to stints with the Yankees and the San Francisco Giants.
Throughout, his informed, perceptive and articulate observations of the game were widely admired, and his gravelly tenor with a hint of his Tennessee upbringing in it became one of the game’s most familiar voices.
Like all long-serving talking heads, McCarver had his detractors. Some said he talked too much, belabored the obvious, too often tangled his grammar and was overly thrilled by his own cleverness; examples abounded on a now-defunct web page, shutuptimmccarver.com, and he was mocked on "Family Guy." . . .
But more numerous were those who appreciated his independence of mind and his alertness to situational nuances in the game.
In defiance of a broadcasting norm, McCarver was not averse to criticizing the play of a team that employed him; when he was fired from the Mets job in 1999, after 16 seasons, it was reportedly because of just such candor. . . .
McCarver certainly had his detractors. I was often one of them and the JoS archives are littered with rants against the bizarre, biased, and completely incorrect things McCarver said over the years. Here are some of them:
September 30, 2007: Tim McCarver And Conventional Thinking
October 9, 2008: The Origins Of "Manny Forgot Which Knee Hurt
November 15, 2010: Do Leadoff Walks Lead To More Runs?
July 16, 2011: Is BJ Upton A .300 Hitter? McCarver: "Yes"; Facts: "No"
October 27, 2017: Smoltz: When You Absolutely Need To Score A Run, A Single Is Better Than A Home Run
October 11, 2018: As Tim McCarver Once Said, "Baseball Is A Game Of Inch"
The Times' obituary, written by Bruce Weber, gives the impression that McCarver's "informed, perceptive and articulate observations" were concurrent with the complaints about tangled grammar and banging on about the obvious. That is not completely untrue, but my memories of McCarver split the good and the bad into different time periods.
When he was in the Mets' booth (1983-98), McCarver was the best in the business. No one was remotely as talented. Vin Scully was the only announcer for whom I would watch a game simply to hear him talk (not caring at all about what the teams were doing), but if anyone told me they used to do that for McCarver in the '80s, it would make sense. As I wrote on June 19, 2010:
There was a time when Tim McCarver was the best baseball analyst in the world. He was doing Mets games in the late 80s and he was absolutely brilliant. You tuned in happily, and with the certainty that you would be a smarter fan when the game was over.
Some younger fans no doubt think the previous paragraph is some kind of joke, since McCarver is little more than a punch line at this point, growing weirder and more incoherent as the years go by.
By the time I reconnected with Ol' Second Inning on national broadcasts, he annoyed me, probably because by that time, I knew everything about baseball. I admit that he always had his moments, but his nonsense always stood out for me because: (1) announcers should make a actual effort to not say stupid shit and (2) his percentage of stupid shit steadily increased as time went on. That was before I factored in his poorly concealed anti-Red Sox bias and his longtime crush on Mr. 27.
Tim McCarver's Baseball for Brain Surgeons and Other Fans: Understanding and Interpreting the Game So You Can Watch It Like a Pro, written with Danny Peary and published in 1998, is an extremely solid book, though I have not opened it up in close to 20 years.
While gathering old McCarver posts, I saw this and smiled. From January 25, 2012:
Tim McCarver And Madame Khokhlakov
"I've looked at you a hundred times as you walked by, saying to myself: here is an energetic man who must go to the mines. I even studied your gait and decided: this man will find many mines."
"From my gait, madame?" Mitya smiled.
"And why not from your gait? What, do you deny that it's possible to tell a man's character from his gait, Dmitri Fyodorovich? Natural science confirms it."
Fyodor Dostoevsky, The Brothers Karamazov, page 385
Other than that, it's the same game you've always loved!
Christ, it's so goddamn depressing. After MLB's last-minute announcement that MLBTV subscribers would -- surprise! -- not unable to watch any postseason games (which MLB had promised they would have access to and for which they had already paid). MLB didn't even bother to explain its decision when the Manfred's shit hit the fans. (Hey, you don't like it, go watch the other major leagues!) MLB's silence spoke volumes about how little it cares about the people who support the game.
Jay Jaffe writes about the new rules at FanGraphs (my emphasis):
The 11-member Joint Competition Committee was created as part of last year's Collective Bargaining Agreement. . . . [The] committee gives the players a voice in the form of four player representatives, but they're outnumbered by the six owners on the committee; one umpire is also on the committee as well. . . . Last September, the bloc of players voted unanimously against the banning of shifts and the introduction of the pitch clock, but they were outvoted . . . and both rules will go into effect this season despite their protestations. . . .
In 2022, extra innings plate appearances accounted for 1.32% of all PA, and those against position players made up just 0.37%. The most PA by any player in extras in 2022 was 15, a lead shared by Yandy Díaz and Gleyber Torres, with Aaron Judge, Steven Kwan and José Ramírez next with 14. . . . Judge walked seven times in those 14 PA (six of which were intentional) and Ramírez six times (five intentional). MLB has ripped up up over a century and a half of playing extras under the same rules as the first innings — via Peter Morris' Game of Inches, the first game longer than the regulation nine dates to 1859, 12 years before the founding of the National Association — for this? . . .
[Th]e average extra-innings contest in the three seasons in which the runner-on-second rule has been in place has been 7.7% shorter than such games from 2018 to '19. Furthermore, the frequency of games lasting longer than 11 innings is about one-quarter of what it was in those two pre-pandemic seasons. Amid the invasion of the Manfred Men, we've had just two games go longer than 13 innings, none in 2020 and then one apiece in '21 and '22, compared to 19 in 2018 and 23 in '19. . . .
In the two years before the rule change, teams averaged four games longer than 11 innings per 162-game season. Since the rule was put into place, that's down to one game longer than 11 inning per 162 . . . or one every two months. All told, the rule change amounts to a savings of about 12 innings per team per season, or two innings a month.
MLB is making this stupid fucking rule -- that goes against 150+ years of history -- permanent to save each team one inning every two weeks!
Jaffe then shows how the rule changes affect strategy and whatnot.
Again, the Manfred Man rule has introduced a whole different ballgame from what we've spent the previous three hours watching. Your mileage may vary as to your feelings on the matter, but to these eyes, it's a jarring and ugly solution to a problem that barely exists in the first place. The players, however, have endorsed this route, and we know managers and executives are on board as well. All of which ought to tell us something about how little they value a given midseason game once nine innings have elapsed: "Win or lose, let's get this over with and go pound that Budweiser." . . .
Limiting the ghastly horror of having a position player pitch an inning to 10-run blowouts will likely -- according to Jaffe's calculations -- save the average team "a bit more than three innings" per season.
Whoop-de-damn-doo. . . .
Nobody's stats are being distorted to any noticeable degree by this [a concern of players, apparently] . . .
In all, this mostly boils down to much ado about nothing. Taken together, these two rules address what amounted to roughly 2% of all plate appearances in 2022. Somehow, these encounters — most of which occur late at night, after reasonable people have gone to bed — are keeping the commissioner up in the wee hours as he strives to find new places to stick his greasy fingerprints on the game in the name of pace of play. Lucky us.
I'd rather have games end in ties than this extra runner bullshit. Ties after # innings (12?) would be vastly preferred to this garbage. I'd be watching real baseball, at least.
I am truly unable to comprehend why some baseball fans would not be excited by a 16- or 18-inning game. Who sees a tied game in the 20th inning and gets pissed off that it's not over yet?
In recent years, we've seen incontrovertible evidence that morons walk among us. There are a lot of morons out there. But still: How has baseball convinced so many fans that less baseball is better than more?
I received an email about the possible renewal of my MLBTV subscription the other day. If this blog did not exist, would I still renew it? I have not yet come up with a definitive answer.
Truck Day was yesterday.
Next Stop: The Series!!It’s Truck Day, Red Sox fans! pic.twitter.com/tJkszVab3C
— Beyond the Monster (@BeyondtheMnstr) February 3, 2023