Monday, June 30, 2008

On Deck: Away With You, Interleague Play!



I don't know about most of you, but I know that I've grown tired of interleague play in baseball. When MLB implemented it, I loved it and I supported the move as a way to try and bring fans back to the game after the player's strike in 1994.

It's kind of like when you're in a new relationship with a girl and everytime you're hanging up the phone after talking to her you get into that "No I love you more!" debate. It's kind of cute and charming at first, but frankly, after a few months of it you're screaming at her "OKAY I GET IT! YOU LOVE ME MORE! SHUT THE [expletive] UP ABOUT IT ALREADY!"

I've reached that point with interleague play, and I'm ready to get back to some real baseball...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Alberto Callaspo Had a Bad Weekend

The Royals are playing their best baseball of the season right now, as they feasted on National League competition, and had won 11 of 12 before dropping their last two games against the Cardinals. So there's plenty of reason to celebrate in Kansas City right now, because for the first time in years, Royals fans have been able to watch a team that actually resembles a Major League team.

Unfortunately, the celebration made it's way to members of the team this last weekend when second baseman Alberto Callaspo was busted for a DUI on Friday night...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Aramis Ramirez to Miss Three Games

The Cubs offense has been pretty phenomenal this season. They lead the bigs in runs scored (443), batting average (.284), on-base percentage (.361), and slugging percentage (.444). Really, if there's an offensive category that's important, the Cubs are either at the top of the National League, or very close to it.

While everybody in the lineup has performed well, the straw that stirs the drink is, and always has been, Aramis Ramirez. That's why it's no surprise that the Cubs were swept by the White Sox this weekend after Ramirez went 0-for-13 in the series, a week after he nearly swept the Sox on his own. It turns out he may have had an excuse the last few days, though...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Paul Konerko Suffers a Setback

The Chicago White Sox exacted some revenge on the Cubs this weekend by handing their crosstown rivals three straight losses at U.S. Cellular Field, to even the score for what the Cubs did at Wrigley just a week before. Still, much like the Tigers with Magglio Ordonez, some of the celebration has been quelled by the fact that Paul Konerko suffered a setback in his rehab from a strained oblique muscle.

Konerko had been scheduled to join the the Sox Triple-A affiliate in Charlotte to begin a rehab assignment on Sunday before re-joining the team by next week. Then he took a live batting practice session on Saturday...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Mickey Hatcher Would Like the Angels to Start Hitting Before He Loses His Job

The Los Angeles Angels are in first place in the AL West, and are about to start a very important (okay, as important as a series can be halfway through the season) series with the Oakland Athletics in Anaheim tonight. They're only 4.5 games ahead of Oakland at the moment, and they're coming off a series against the Dodgers in which they lost two of three and couldn't hit their way out of a paper bag.

For goodness sake, Jered Weaver threw a damn no-hitter on Saturday and the Angels still lost. In the three games against the Dodgers, the Angels hit .161 and managed to score one run. That's why hitting coach Mickey Hatcher is going to be a little more assertive in today's hitters meeting....

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Not All Is Well in Tigerland

If there is any team that's incredibly sad to see interleague play end in 2008, it would be the Detroit Tigers. The Tigers feasted on their senior circuit competition, going 13-5, and have now won 17 of their last 21 games. They're finally over .500 for the first time this year at 41-40, and are within five games of the White Sox in the AL Central.

Of course, before catching the White Sox the Tigers will have to pass the Twins, and it so happens that they're starting a three game set in the Twinkiedome tonight, and play Minnesota four more times next week. It's the perfect chance to climb in to second place. If only they had Magglio Ordonez to help them out...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Hey, We Can Work Together!

Just when you thought that Cubs fans and White Sox fans couldn't unite together to achieve one common goal, one man (obviously sent from the heavens above) finally figured out how to restore my faith in humanity.

So what if he did it by getting his ass kicked.



The video comes from FanIQ, and according to the guy who shot the video, here is what happened.
The Sox fan near the pole was talking trash from the beginning, so in the 4th inning he started talking about the guy in the Thome Jersey's "family"...then an old guy stepped up and off they went... A good minute goes by with no security, the guy gets owned by a bunch of cubs and sox fans. he still fights the security...continues struggling, as his eye is black and swelling shut, they handcuff him throw his shirt over his head and get him out of there.
Seriously, the security guard pulling the guys shirt over his head is the piece de resistance of this video, though the beating is pretty nice as well.

Not seen in the video? Cubs fans and Sox fans holding hands and singing "Kumbaya."

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I'm Glad That's Finally Over

So the White Sox got their revenge this weekend and swept the Cubs at U.S. Cellular Field. My first thoughts as Alexei Ramirez threw Daryle Ward out at first base to end the game were "White Sox Winner!" followed very quickly by "Thank God it's over." Not because it means I won't have to see things like my cousin's father-in-law wearing that helmet, but for other, actual baseball reasons.

I realized this season that I'm no longer a very big fan of interleague play, or even these Sox and Cubs series. Of course, this all could just be some kind of reaction to the fact that the Sox have to play the only good team in the National League six times, while rivals like the Twins and Tigers (who are now over .500 if you aren't paying attention, thanks NL!) get to feast on the Nationals and Padres.

While the White Sox went 12-6 against the NL this year, other teams in their division did even better. Minnesota went 14-4, while Detroit and Kansas City (yes, even the Royals made the NL their personal bitch) went 13-5. So the Sox won 67% of their games, which over the course of a season would lead to a record of 109-53, and still lost ground in the division.

Still, there are other reasons, and mostly it's just the interaction between fans during these last two weeks. Fans from both sides annoy the crap out of me during these games. Last week I had to deal with Cubs fans talking smack for seven days and polishing their future World Series trophy, and then this week I had to deal with some of my fellow Sox fans texting "SWEEP" and "Cubs suck!" to me last night, as if they'd completely forgotten that last week that sucky team did the same thing to us. You all look like a bunch of idiots.

Finally, the thing that bugs me the most about all of this is how suddenly, everybody you see is a baseball fan. People that haven't watched a game all season are all of a sudden the world's greatest fan. For instance, at work the last two weeks we were allowed to wear White Sox and Cubs gear to show our allegiance and cause friction between co-workers. Well, there's a woman I work with who has never mentioned the word baseball around me unless she's asking me about this site.

All of a sudden on Friday this week she's wearing a Kosuke Fukudome shirt and telling me how the Cubs are going to sweep the Sox again this weekend. I kind of just looked at her for a second before I asked her a question.

"Hey [name redacted], that shirt your wearing? Do you know how to say the name on the back?"

"Fuk-u-dome"

"Close enough, but can you tell me the guy's first name?"

"Oh, I don't know it."

This is the kind of thing you have to deal with in Chicago during these two weeks, and it's almost enough to make me hate baseball. For a few days anyway.

It's all over now, though, and finally fans of both teams can go back to doing what they're supposed to do right now. Worry about their own teams, and their small leads in their divisions. It seems we forget that it's not even July yet, and the Sox have a 1.5 game lead while the Cubs have a healthy 2.5 game lead.

We should probably stop making those World Series plans and just start worrying about leading the division at the end of July.

We did learn some things about our teams during these games, though, and that's that both teams in this city are good. Both are far from perfect, but both have a legitimate shot at this thing. The Sox could use a little more balance offensively, while the Cubs could use a back end of the starting rotation, and maybe even a little bullpen help (Marmol has hit the wall, just like last season, and I don't know if he'll recover).

For now, though, let's just all agree to go our seperate ways. Sox fans worry about the White Sox, and Cubs fans worry about the Cubs. We can check in on each other from time to time, just to see how things are going, but that's it. If we see each other again in October (we won't), we'll talk about it then, but until then, I don't want to hear a damn word about it. I'm serious, I will punch you in the face if you start talking about it in front of me.

Worry about your own teams, and if it's meant to be, it'll be.

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Thursday, June 26, 2008

And Your Newest Bull Is....



Thank you, John Paxson, for not screwing this up.

Now let's all just hope Derrick doesn't go out and buy himself a new motorcycle with that #1 money.

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Don Cooper Is A Phenomenal Athlete

Seriously, of all the ways to pull your hamstring, this has to be the most embarrassing way I've seen it done. Though it's also a supremely entertaining way of doing it, and I only wish I could find video of the incident as it was shown on television in Chicago. The White Sox broadcast replayed it over about five times, and I don't think Hawk Harrelson or Darren Jackson ever actually said a word because they were too busy laughing hysterically.

The White Sox haven't said whether or not Cooper will have to be placed on the disabled list, or which minor league instructor they'll have to call up if he is.

See the video at FanHouse

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Deadspin Is Awesome Today

I mean, you start the day by posting pictures of me, and the average reader has to wonder, "How can today get any better?" I didn't think it could, but damn it if Deadspin hasn't proven me wrong today.

First they actually convinced Bill Simmons to write a post there today (the best thing he's written in years, by the way), and now this video from the Basketball Jones' J.E. Skeets making fun of the whole Costas Now/Buzz Bissinger fiasco.

Brilliant. (Some very NSFW language going on here, so turn the volume down a bit. Just don't do any actual work.)

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Damn I'm Good Looking

It's unfortunate that Will Leitch never figured out the best way to pull in readers to your website was by posting pictures of me before his second to last day as editor of Deadspin. Still, as long as he brings my beautiful face along with him to New York Magazine, I'm sure he'll be just fine.

I'll miss you too, buddy.

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Are the Indians Trying to Sign Sabathia?

Things have finally bottomed out in Cleveland. Thanks to the Royals dominance over the National League these last few weeks (a record of 12-3) and the continued struggles of the Tribe, even against the NL where most AL teams have been thriving, the Indians now find themselves in last place.

With every day that passes, the hope that the Indians might turn things around and get back to the top of the division where they were expected to be dwindles a bit more. A trade of C.C. Sabathia before the deadline becomes more likely with each passing day as well, but now there's word out of New York that the Indians are trying to lock Sabathia up instead of trading him...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Ron Zook Will Be a Reality Television Star

It's pretty sad when I think about it, but I have to tell you, I'm excited to know that in a few months I'll finally have the Big Ten Network. The White Sox and Cubs are in first place and play again this weekend? That's cool. The NBA Draft is tonight and the Bulls have the first pick? Neat. The Blackhawks will be playing a game at Wrigley Field? That could be fun.

I'll have the Big Ten Network on August 25th? WOOOO HOOOOO!!!

Finally, after following from afar my entire life, I'll be able to see the rivalry that is Minnesota/Wisconsin Lacrosse. My eyes are watering up just thinking about it.

Seriously, though, I'm very happy to know that I'm going to be able to see any Big Ten football or basketball game I want to this season. No longer will I have to watch Michigan or Ohio State every Saturday this season if I don't want to.

I'll be able to see every Illinois game as Ron Zook tries to keep his program on the path to becoming a Big Ten power. Of course, it's not only the games I'm going to be able to follow, but the entire path leading up to the games.

BTN officials plan to announce Thursday the Illini will be featured in Season 2. Minnesota and its first-year basketball coach, Tubby Smith, were the series' guinea pigs.

"I talked with Tubby and he was impressed with their professionalism," Zook said. "He had the same fears in the beginning as I do."

Chief among those fears?

"This will be like having someone in your bedroom," Zook said.

The first installment of "Illinois Football: The Journey" will air Sept. 2 and last an hour. The series is slated for 10 to 13 episodes, most 30 minutes long.
So it's kind of like HBO's Hard Knocks (which I love), but with Illinois football instead of the Dallas Cowboys. I don't know about you, but I'm already setting my DVR.

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Mark Ellis Would Like to Stay in Oakland

Oakland Athletics second baseman Mark Ellis is slated to become a free agent after this season since he's in the final year of a three-year deal he signed with Oakland back in 2006. He's never been the type of player to carry a team or anything, but generally, he's the type of player any GM would have as their second baseman.

I mean, he's no Chase Utley or anything, but he gives you solid offensive production and has one of the best gloves of any second sacker in the game today. Odds are that if he were to hit the market this off-season, he could pull in anywhere from $6-$10 million a season from a team that sees him as a nice alternative to Orlando Hudson...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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The Angels Like What They Have

One of the biggest criticisms by Angels fans of Bill Stoneman when he was general manager of the Angels was that he never made any big mid-season trades to help the ballclub. Whether these criticisms were fair or not, I don't know. Sure, he never made any huge deals, but it never kept the Angels from being the cream of the crop out west in the American League.

Well, Stoneman left last season and now in his first season as a replacement, new Angels GM Tony Reagins isn't planning on doing anything any differently. Don't look for the Angels to make a big move before this year's deadline either....

Continue reading at FanHouse

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On Deck: Break Up the Twins


I tried to put an end to it yesterday by mentioning it in the On Deck, but apparently the On Deck Curse is only effective when I lead the post with it. So today, now that the Minnesota Twins have climbed within a half-game of the White Sox and won their last eight games, the Twinkies are getting the star treatment.

As I've already explained in recent days, I have no idea how the Twins are winning so much this season, yet here they are. Earlier this month the Twins were three games under .500 and 6.5 games behind the White Sox, and I thought their record then was a lot more indicative of the type of team they had.

It was only a matter of time before the suddenly resurgent Tigers and maybe even the Indians passed them by, and the Twins became merely a footnote in the 2008 season. All they've done since then is win, win, and win some more...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Ben Sheets Plans on Testing the Market

The Milwaukee Brewers signed their ace Ben Sheets to a four-year $38.5 million deal before the 2005 season started, and in the years since Sheets has spent a lot of his time earning that money on the disabled list. Last season, after spending the majority of the year in first place, Milwaukee's slide down the Central coincided with a Sheets injury.

Ben's injury history is probably the main reason that the Brewers didn't want to discuss a contract extension with Sheets this spring before the season started, and because of making that decision, Sheets has every intention to test the waters when he becomes a free agent at year's end....

Continue reading at FanHouse

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On Deck: Royals Consider Switching Leagues


Remember earlier this season when the Diamondbacks started out the season something ridiculous like 20-1, Chase Utley had around 14 home runs in the first week of April, and everyone was saying that the National League had finally caught up to, and passed, the American League as the class of baseball?

You aren't hearing much about that anymore now that interleague play has started are you? That's because the AL is kicking the NL's butt so far this season. Only three teams in the American League have a losing record against the senior circuit right now (Toronto, Cleveland, Cincinnati) while only four National League teams (New York, Atlanta, Colorado, Cincinnati) have a winning record against the AL.

The biggest kick in the stomach for the National League? The Royals are 11-3 against them so far this season. The same Royals team that's 24-40 against it's own league. All of which means that if the Royals haven't contacted Bud Selig and asked about switching leagues yet, they should seriously consider it.

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Josh Hamilton Has Knee Inflammation

Tuesday didn't start out very well for the Texas Rangers on the injury front. Early in the day they found out that Hank Blalock, who they'd been hoping to bring off of the disabled list to use on Tuesday, bruised his hand while diving for a ball at Triple-A Oklahoma and his return to the team will be delayed another day or two because of it. A couple of days isn't that big of a deal though, I mean, at least Hank's not going to be out another 4-6 weeks with a pulled hamstring like catcher Gerald Laird is going to be.

Now, the Rangers could have stopped with the injuries right there, but you know how things are down in Texas. Everything has to be bigger, or they have to have more, so on Tuesday night the Rangers didn't stop hurting themselves...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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The Thing About Hawk Harrelson

The White Sox ended their nine-game losing streak on the road last night by beating the Dodgers 6-1 (oh and the Cubs ended their 14-game home win streak as well), but I don't really want to talk about anything that actually happened in the game.

No, I want to talk about Hawk Harrelson. More specifically, the one thing he does constantly that pisses me off like nothing else. Now, there are a lot of things that Hawk does or says during a broadcast t0 annoy the Sox fan, but to be completely honest about it, I don't not like Hawk.

Do I think he's a good play-by-play guy? No, not really, but I don't mind listening to him do a game that much. In my mind I tend to view him as a bad B-movie. Sure, the script includes more than it's share of horrible dialogue, at times the plot goes way off course, or just goes no where for a while, but in the end the thing is so awful that it's kind of charming. You'd actually watch it again just to laugh at it.

The truth is, when I'm watching a baseball game, there are so many thoughts running through my mind as I'm processing what I'm seeing, that I hardly hear Hawk, D.J, or anybody else who happens to be speaking within range of a microphone.

Now that doesn't mean I can completely tune it out. No, I hear all the dadgummits, the can of corns, and of course the he gones. Still, as lame as these things might be, they do not bother me.

The one thing Hawk does constantly, though, that I just can't take is his incessant complaining about balls and strikes. Shut up about it, already. Nary a game (hell, an inning) goes by without Hawk critiquing a call by the home-plate umpire. It's maddening as all hell.

Don't get me wrong, I don't mind when announcers second guess the umpire once in a while. Particularly when it's in a key situation of a game, but Hawk does it all the time, anytime.

First inning of a 0-0 game with nobody on and one out? That ball was low! What a horrible call! That could cost us the game, no, that could cost us our souls!

He does this ALL. THE. TIME. Which is weird considering that Hawk was only a .239 hitter in his career. Now, I know that the era Hawk played in was a lot different than the one we play in now, so I'm going to do the nice thing and add a full .050 points to that for him. I mean, it's not going to hurt where I'm going with this, so why the hell not?

So in his career, Hawk hit .289. Hey, that's a pretty respectable average right there. Still, this means that Hawk failed at his job 71.1% of the time he came to the plate. During his career Hawk averaged about 327 at bats per season, so that means he failed around 232 times every year.

Well, during a single baseball game, I'm guessing there's an average of five pitches that even an umpire would admit he called wrong if he reviewed them all on video afterwards. Even that number may be generous, but for argument's sake, we'll just go with it.

So the ump fails five times a game, but of course, he sees anywhere from 225-300 pitches per game. So that means he's successful around 97.7 to 98.3% of the time. Hawk was succesful 28.9% of the time.

You think the umpire was questioning why he swung at so many bad pitches?

So, Hawk, sit back, relax, strap it down, and shut it the hell up. Please. Next time instead of bitching about an umpire's call, how about you try telling the folks at home something about the White Sox. Or just tell them another story about that one time Ted Williams said that one thing to you.

Whatever you want to do, just leave the arguing of balls and strikes to the players and managers. Sure, the players today fail just as much, but at least the bad call actually affects them.

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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

On Deck: The Battle for Texas


Generally when baseball has their "rivalry" matchups during interleague play, they schedule them for the weekend. That's not the case in Texas, as the Astros and Rangers prepare to begin a three-game set tonight at Minute Maid Park. I'm not sure the reasoning behind this, but I'm just going to guess that there's probably a big high school football scrimmage on Friday night, and the Astros are worried that it will hurt attendance numbers.

Of course, it could also just be that neither the Astros or Rangers have done much the last few seasons. The Astros haven't come anywhere near the success they achieved in 2005 when they won the National League, and the Rangers have only had one winning season (89-73 in 2004, which was good enough for third place!) since we entered the new millenium.

Yet tonight the Rangers are poised to go a whopping two games over .500 for the first time since September 22, 2006. Will history be made tonight in Houston?

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Joe Morgan Insults Ernie Banks

ESPN Sunday Night Baseball analyst and baseball Hall-of-Famer Joe Morgan isn't exactly the most beloved figure in baseball or the blogosphere. I mean, the man has a blog dedicated to rooting out the idiocy in the sports media coverage of the game named after him (I live for the day I write something stupid enough for FJM to attack me).

The reason for this is that Joe says a lot of things that are poorly-informed or just outright incorrect. The latest instance took place on Sunday night while Joe was working the Cubs/White Sox game...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Gordon Beckham Is Impressive

It was pretty nice to not have a White Sox or Cubs game to worry about yesterday, as with the circus that surrounded the three games between the two over the weekend really was quite draining. Well, it was if you're a White Sox fan, anyway.

Cubs fans probably found it all pretty invigorating.

So since I had an opportunity to take a "night off" from the Sox and Cubs I chose to spend my Monday night watching game one of the College World Series between Georgia and Fresno State. The main reason for this, of course, was to get another glimpse at White Sox first round pick Gordon Beckham.

He continues to impress, both with his glove and his bat.





The home run was the start of Georgia's 8th inning rally back from a three-run deficit to take the first game of the series (game two is tonight on ESPN at 6PM if you'd Sox fans would like something to watch while waiting for the first pitch out in LA).

Hopefully we'll be seeing these types of highlights from Beckham in a White Sox jersey next season. Considering that Orlando Cabrera isn't going to be back, and that the team is always looking for a replacement for Juan Uribe, it's entirely possible.

Of course, I'm just looking for anything to smile about when it comes to the White Sox right now. Yeah, I know that losing three games to the Cubs in June probably won't mean much in the big picture (though the fact nobody else in the AL Central is capable of losing right now is worrisome), but it still hurts, damn it.

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The Twins Are More Baffling Than Ever

It seems that no matter how many times we see it, baseball fans just never learn. Every spring baseball fans and experts alike say that this is the year that the Minnesota Twins are going to finish below .500 and at the bottom of the AL Central. Then summer comes along a few months later, and there they are. Sitting on top, or near the top of the division while the rest of us scratch their heads.

Though it happens every season, it still catches us all by surprise, but this season has been the most baffling of all. There is just no way that the Twins should be sitting at 40-36, only a game and a half behind the first place White Sox. The obvious reasons for this are that the team said goodbye to both Johan Santana and Torii Hunter during the offseason, and that Francisco Liriano has spent his time on the disabled list...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Are Maple Bats on the Way Out?


Over the last few years, anybody who has spent some time watching baseball games has noticed a dangerous trend in the sport: the exploding maple bats. Where as in the past baseball bats broke all the time, the only way a fan in the ballpark or watching at home could tell it had happened was after seeing the hitter walk back to the dugout to get a new one.

These days it's pretty easy to see, as you only have to follow the shrapnel being strewn about all over the infield. Maple bats don't just break, they explode. There are about three or four instances a game these days in which we see the jagged remains of what used to be a bat flying past the pitcher's mound, or at an infielder. It's really quite amazing that nobody in baseball has suffered a serious injury from the debris.

Still, that just means it's only a matter of time before somebody does get hurt, be it a player or a fan, and Major League Baseball is meeting today to decide what they want to do about it....

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Shaun Marcum Gets Good News

As I mentioned over the weekend, the Toronto Blue Jays had to place Shaun Marcum on the disabled list due to some problems with his elbow. More specifically, the fact that it had been hurting him the past few weeks. Marcum was scheduled for a visit with the famous Dr. James Andrews on Monday to find out what exactly was wrong, and to see how long he's going to be out.

He got some good news, as it doesn't appear that Marcum is going to miss too much time...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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King Felix's Ground Breaking Approach to Hitting Home Runs

For me, one of the few things left about interleague play that I really enjoy is seeing American League pitchers step into a batter's box. There are times when I'm watching an American League pitcher hit when I can honestly say, "Man, I could do better than that," and actually be telling the truth (not saying I could make contact, just saying I can look like I know how to).

I saw Bartolo Colon hit last week, and the fat man swung so hard that his helmet fell off and his back foot was generally corkscrewed a foot into the dirt after every swing. It was hilarious. Still, just because the majority of pitchers from the junior circuit make fools of themselves at the dish, some of them actually look like big league hitters....

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Site Announcement

Dear Foul Balls readers,

This is something I've been mulling over for a while, and yesterday, I finally came to a decision. Foul Balls is going to be quite different from now on. While the subject matter is going to be the same, the regularity of posting will change, along with the posts.

The truth is, that with my duties at FanHouse expanding along with my other full time job, Foul Balls is just something I don't have the time to dedicate myself to as much. While Asshole Of The Week is going to remain as a Friday afternoon staple, everything else will change.

Morning Wood is gone. The Basketball Diaries is gone. High Five is gone.

Also, the three to five posts I write everyday (generally between 10AM and 2PM) will be gone. Don't get me wrong, I'm still going to be writing here, but the "workday scheduling" of the posts is over.

I'm going to be doing my best to try to maintain at least one post a day here, while continuing to link to my FanHouse work, but I make no promises. Also, that one post a day could be coming at anytime. It may be up in the morning or early afternoon, it may go up in the evening or overnight.

Whenever I have the time and motivation to write something here.

I appreciate the growing number of you who have made reading Foul Balls a part of your everyday lives over the last three and a half years or so (Jesus, I've been doing this blog for that long?), and I want to thank you all for it.

I hope that you'll continue to read Foul Balls in the future. I love you all.

Sincerely,
Tom Fornelli

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Monday, June 23, 2008

The Mariners Are So Horrible They're Killing Romance in Seattle

Baseball parks have long been a great place to meet somebody, whether you're a man or a woman. If you meet somebody at a game, you already know you have a common interest with them, so you've got your icebreaker right there. The seemingly never ending flow of beer doesn't hurt much either, of course.

If you're single and still looking for that special someone, or even that special person for the next few hours, I highly recommend going to a baseball game to find them. Just make sure you aren't going to SafeCo Field. Don't be fooled by the lesbian make-out sessions, because that place is a ghost town these days.

Continue reading at FanHouse

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The Oakland A's Wouldn't Mind Getting Paid

Remember all those moons ago when the baseball season kicked off in Japan? The Red Sox and Athletics played that two game series a week before the regular season started for everybody else, the Japanese crowds loved it, and the baseball players begrudgingly went along. It was all peaches and cream!

Well, not exactly. After all, the whole thing was nearly cancelled when the Red Sox refused to make the trip if their coaching staff wasn't paid the same $40,000 that every player on both the teams were supposed to get for playing in the series. Thankfully, the whole thing was resolved, and the games were played.

There's still one tiny problem, though, because according to Oakland's Huston Street, the A's still haven't gotten paid yet.

Continue reading at FanHouse

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High Five

A quick look around the interweb while trying to save your soul

  1. At least something good came out of this weekend. [The Dugout]
  2. Jay Mariotti needs protection from Rick Telander. [Deadspin]
  3. Drag racer Scott Kalitta died in a crash over the weekend. [With Leather]
  4. Dick Enberg loves him some nubian slaves. [Awful Announcing]
  5. I missed this last week, but apparently Pacman is no longer Pacman. [KSK]

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George Carlin 1937-2008

As you've probably heard by now, comedian George Carlin died of heart failure yesterday at the age of 71. Though Carlin was a comedian and had nothing to do with sports, he was one of my favorites, so I don't care.

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Meet Your Olympic Basketball Team

Well the U.S. Basketball team announced the squad that it will be taking to Beijing this summer for the Olympics, and looking at the roster, if this team doesn't manage to win the gold medal, they shouldn't be allowed back into the country.

Look at this roster.

  • Kobe Bryant
  • LeBron James
  • Dwyane Wade
  • Carmelo Anthony
  • Chris Paul
  • Dwight Howard
  • Deron Williams
  • Tayshaun Prince
  • Jason Kidd
  • Chris Bosh
  • Carlos Boozer
  • Michael Redd
I would like to see one more big on the roster (feel free to replace Kidd, the team already has four guys capable of handling the ball), but with the overall talent it probably won't matter much. I realize that the teams the U.S. will be playing against in China keep getting better, and that they've beaten us before, but there's no excuse for this team to lose.

I don't want to hear about how the other countries teams have played together longer, or about the different rules in FIBA, there is just too much talent on this team for anything but a gold medal to be the objective.

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Avert Your Ears



The only thing worse than losing three games to the Cubs this weekend? Lou Piniella and Ozzie Guillen rapping.

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Morning Wood


Chicago Cubs 7 Chicago White Sox 1

Well that sucked. I'm not going to sit here and say that I'm not bothered by the fact the Cubs swept the Sox this weekend, but at the same time, the weekend didn't go much worse than I expected it to. As I told Silvio before the series started on Friday, all I wanted was for the Sox to take one of three this weekend.

Considering the way the Cubs play at Wrigley, where they've now won 14 straight and are 32-8 on the season (32-8!), I don't see how any one could have expected anything different. I mean, we saw nothing new from either of these teams the last three days. Going into the series we all knew that the Cubs were really good at home, and the Sox are streaky.

They're either winning seven in a row, or losing three in a row. It's frustrating as hell, and it gets really annoying, but that's just how this White Sox team is this season and we might as well get used to it.

By the time these two teams meet again next weekend at U.S. Cellular, it could just as easily be the White Sox routing the Cubs in three games. At least it better go that way.

NL

  • Mets 3 Rockies 1
MLB
  • Yankees 4 Reds 1
  • Braves 8 Mariners 3
  • Red Sox 5 Cardinals 3
  • Rangers 5 Nats 3
  • Angels 3 Phillies 2
  • Jays 8 Pirates 5
  • Astros 3 Rays 2
  • Brewers 7 Orioles 3
  • Royals 11 Giants 10
  • Twins 5 DBacks 3
  • A's 7 Marlins 1
  • Tigers 5 Padres 3
  • Dodgers 4 Indians 3

Ballhype: hype it up!

Friday, June 20, 2008

High Five

A quick look around the interweb while cursing the names of Octavio Dotel and Scott Linebrink

  1. Miss the Sox wonderful choke job against the Cubs? Read all about it here! [FanHouse]
  2. Yes, I know Tommie Harris signed a new contract, and I'm very happy about it. [Chicago Sports]
  3. Jay is just trying to bring us all together! [Deadspin]
  4. Bruce Weber is quite candid about his feelings towards Indiana this season. Just don't tell anybody. [Boiled Sports]
  5. It's official: Duke sucks. [With Leather]

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Asshole Of The Week: The Des Moines Register's Kathy Hickman

Welcome to Asshole Of The Week, where every Friday your trusty Foul Balls editor picks out the one person from the previous seven days who makes him think, "Man, what an asshole." It could be anybody from an athlete, an owner, someone in the media, or just anybody who happens to catch my ire.

I know, I can already see all of you asking yourselves, "Who in the hell is Kathy Hickman?" Relax, give me time, I'll explain the entire thing to you.

When I woke up this past Sunday morning afternoon after spending the previous night at a wedding, I noticed something not quite right in my bedroom. Okay, so the first thing I actually noticed was the throbbing in my head, no doubt brought on by my extreme appreciation of an open bar at the reception.

After that, though, I looked at the clock radio next to my bed to see what time it was. The screen was blank, so I grabbed my glasses off the desk so I could see the time on the cable box across the room.

There was nothing there either. Apparently I had just slept through what was one bad ass storm during the early morning hours that had left trees strewn about the streets of my neighborhood, and thousands of people in Chicago without power. I was pretty pissed off about it, because as someone who makes a living by watching sports and then writing about them, I generally need electricity.

Still, I quickly got over it. I just said to myself, "Relax, brah (I talk to myself like a frat boy), at least you don't live in Iowa. At least your house isn't underwater. Just chill out, read a book, and hope for the best before going into work (I then went to work a few hours later only to find that the power was out there as well)."

I won't go into the devastation that hit in Iowa, Wisconsin, and other parts of the midwest last weekend, because that's not what this post is about. While I feel sorry for all those who've lost everything due to the storms, we're here today to crown an Asshole Of The Week, and I'm just not sure Mother Nature qualifies.

Besides, Mother Nature is more of a bitch than an asshole. She's not really trying to hurt you, it's just her disposition.

Anyway, on Sunday of this week, Adam Jacobi (whom I work with over at FanHouse) of Black Heart Gold Pants, a fantastically brilliant Iowa Hawkeyes blog, wrote a post about the floods in Iowa and the damage they caused. In the post he also included links to places where those who felt so inclined could make donations to help those affected by the flood, and for the cleanup.

Adam also posted a video he found that was shot by the Associated Press using a helicopter's view to show the destruction in and around Iowa. That's when he got this email from the Des Moines Register's Kathy Hickman.

It has recently come to the attention of the Des Moines Register that you have improperly posted a video, the rights to which are held by The Register. A copy of your unauthorized use can be found at www.blackheartgoldpants.com/2008/6/15/552422/the-flood.

As the copyright owner of that video, The Des Moines Register has the exclusive right to its reproduction and distribution. We therefore ask that you immediately remove the posted article from your website and cease any and all further use of the material. Any continued posting or use will be considered willful copyright infringement.

Within 24 hours of your receipt of this email, you should reply to this message by confirming that: 1) each and every posting of Des Moines Register material has been taken down and 2) you will not engage in any further unauthorized copying of Des Moines Register materials.

If you do not take the steps outlined above, this matter will be turned over to our attorneys for further action.
Wow, let's sue the poor blogger for trying to help raise money for flood relief. What kind of selfish prick would do such a thing!?

Now, while a newspaper threatening to sue a blogger over posting a video is probably enough to warrant serious AOTW consideration, it cannot win on it's own. No, there has to be a blatant amount of stupidity involved in it as well.

Thankfully, there was! Here's a picture of the video that Adam lifted from the paper's site. See if you notice anything.


Do you see it? I even enlarged it for you. There's a god damn embed code with the video. You know, the same kind of embed code you include with a video so that other websites or blogs can post it themselves? Yeah, one of those.

So the Des Moines Register was threatening to sue Black Heart Gold Pants for doing something they gave them the capability of doing. That's like going to war with a country over nuclear weapons you sold them! Who does that?

Now, as it turned out, after this story broke across the blogosphere the guys at BHGP sought out an explanation about this from the Register, and they did in fact get this response from the paper's Assistant Managing Editor Chris Snider.
This was a misunderstanding. I apologize on behalf of The Des Moines Register. Simply an employee trying to do their job but not completely understanding our new technology (we recently got embed code on our videos). I take full responsibility for not making this clear to everyone on staff.
Problem solved. Still, for being stupid enough to threaten a lawsuit against a blogger for doing something you allowed him to do, Kathy Hickman is our AOTW. Given the fact she spends her days in Des Moines searching out blogs that stole videos from the paper she works for, this is probably going to be the greatest honor she ever receives.

Congratulations, Kathy.

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I'm Live Blogging the Cubs and Sox

In case you regulars here weren't already aware, I'm going to be live-blogging the Cubs and White Sox affair at Wrigley in twenty minutes. It'll start shortly before first pitch, so if you want to join me over there, you're free to do so.

Hope to see you there.

Oh, and yes, there will still be an Asshole Of The Week later today.

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It's Official: Comcast and Big Ten Network Finalize Deal

It's been a long time coming, and after reporting that a deal was nearly complete earlier this week, it was announced on Thursday that Comcast and the Big Ten Network have finally reached a deal. That means starting August 15th of this year, I'll be able to watch all the women's lacrosse I ever dreamed of!

Oh, and of course football and basketball too. Here are the particulars.

The BTN and the Philadelphia-based cable carrier announced a multiyear agreement Thursday for programming that starts Aug. 15 on expanded basic cable in states with Big Ten schools: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

Comcast doesn't have any subscribers in Iowa, the eighth Big Ten state.

Outside these states, Comcast has the option to move the channel on its Sports Entertainment Package and other tiers. After the 2008-09 basketball season ends, Comcast has the option to shift the network to its digital service in Big Ten states. Outside of the region, Comcast has the option to not offer the channel at all after the upcoming basketball season or to put it on its sports and entertainment package or other tiers of service.
Blah blah blah, I finally get to watch what I want. The deal seems pretty simple to me, basically people that live in Big Ten country get the channel as a basic channel, and those outside of the Big Ten can pay for it if they want it.

It took them two years to figure that out? The Great Compromise this was not. Though I heard that Comcast was trying to put in a clause that said African-Americans would only count as 3/5 of a viewer in the Nielsen ratings. The racist bastards.

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Vai Sikahema Is Ready for Canseco

Man, what's it been, like nine days (scratch that, it's been about an hour) since we mentioned Jose Canseco on FanHouse? That's way too long for anybody to go without getting a fix of their favorite chemically enhanced slugger turned chemically enhanced author turned chemically enhance embarrassment boxer.

Thankfully Jose's upcoming opponent, former NFL kick returner Vai Sikahema, works for the local NBC affiliate in Philadelphia and he's allowing us all a glimpse into his preparation.

See the video at FanHouse

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Antonio Henton to Leave Ohio State

When Antonio Henton is an old man, he'll have a lot of memories of his time in Columbus, Ohio as a member of the Ohio State football team. He'll be able to tell his grandchildren about the time he offered that undercover police officer $20 for sex, and about those six passes he got to throw in Ohio Stadium, and that one touchdown pass.

Then he'll get to tell them about how the Buckeyes recruited freshman phenom quarterback Terrelle Pryor, basically ending any chance Antonio ever had of becoming a starter, and he decided to transfer to Georgia Southern...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Rays Give #1 Pick $6.15 Million Signing Bonus

While most teams around baseball had already started signing some of their draft picks following the draft a few weeks ago, most have been waiting to see what the Rays would do with Tim Beckham before negotiating with their own first round picks.

Well, let the negotiating begin, as the Rays have signed the #1 pick...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Derrick Rose Will Be a Chicago Bull

Michael Beasley visited the Bulls earlier this week, and we learned quite a few things about him while he was here. First, we learned that he's a pretty funny kid as he cracked jokes with the throng of media members questioning him. Then we learned that he has the magical ability to shrink when the Bulls measured him at 6'7 after he'd been listed at 6'10 while at Kansas State.

Well, it was Derrick Rose's turn to visit with the Bulls on Thursday, and what did we learn about him? Well, after hearing what he had to say, I think it's pretty clear the Bulls will be drafting him in a week.

Derrick, who led Simeon to two state championships, made it clear that the only team for him was the Bulls, no matter the presumptive pressures that could come with playing in Chicago.

"I would love to play here, it's a dream come true to get to bring the Bulls back to where they're supposed to be," Rose said. "I haven't thought about the [negatives]. I've just thought about the positives; like how it feels to be in the Bulls uniform, and my family would get to see me. I'm just taking it step by step."

Another indication that Rose will be coming home to Chicago? He's yet to have a visit with the owners of the second pick in the draft, the Miami Heat, and he has no plans to either.

Reggie Rose, Derrick's older brother and adviser, confirmed that no visit with the Miami Heat, the team with the second overall pick, has been scheduled.

"But we'll go to Miami if we have to," Reggie Rose said.

Seriously, why would anyone want to go to Miami? Warm weather, beaches, and beautiful women everywhere. Who wants that crap?

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On Deck: Chicago's Civil War


You know how when you're watching a game on television, whether it's football, baseball, or anything, and the game is being played by two rival teams that the announcer tells you to "throw their records out the window!" You know what I'm talking about? I hate that. That's one of the stupidest things that announcers can say.

Why should we throw the records out the window? I mean, if one of the teams is 12-1 and the other is 2-10 I don't care how long they've been rivals, I'm pretty sure that 12-1 team is going to steamroll the other one. So no, I will not throw that record out the window.

Now this afternoon, for the first time ever, the White Sox and Cubs will be meeting head-to-head in the regular season while both are currently holding down first place in their division. Still, the two teams are moving in opposite directions right now. The White Sox just scored 37 runs in a three-game sweep of the Pirates, and the Cubs are limping home after losing three in a row for the first time this season down in Tampa.

Of course, when these two teams meet, it doesn't matter who is playing well and who isn't. In fact, you can throw their records right out the window (son of a...)!

Continue reading at FanHouse

Ballhype: hype it up!

Morning Wood


Chicago White Sox 13 Pittsburgh Pirates 8

I was on the phone with Panger yesterday afternoon when Pablo Ozuna committed a throwing error with two outs in the second inning that allowed a run to score. It ticked me off a little at first, but not too much. Then the Pirates exploded for five more runs and it was 6-0 Pirates, without a single one of the runs being earned.

Then I was really pissed, but I told Panger, "You know what, I'll bet we still win this game. If there's any team you can get behind by six runs early, it's the Pirates."

Then the White Sox answered with six runs of their own in the bottom half of the inning, capped off by a three-run shot by Orlando Cabrera, and the game was tied making everything in the world right again.

The Sox would keep piling on, as Jermaine Dye would go deep twice (including a grand slam in the 7th to blow it open) and drove in six runs. By the time it was over, the Sox would score 13 runs to bring their total to 37 in the three-game sweep of the Pirates, thanks to their 44 hits and 10 homers in the series.

"Something about being here just wakes our bats up. Hopefully we can carry it over on the road," Dye said. "It was probably one of my better days. ... This ballpark is a good hitter's park, even though early and late it gets cold and the ball doesn't travel -- so when it does heat up you have to take advantage of it. The ball has been traveling for us this year."

Gavin Floyd only lasted 5.2 innings (in large part due to all the extra pitches he had to throw in the 2nd) and allowed seven runs, but as I pointed out earlier, only one of them was earned as he picked up his eighth victory of the season. The bullpen came in from there and shut the Pirates down, allowing only one run in 4.1 innings.

Tampa Bay Rays 8 Chicago Cubs 3


For the first time this season I think Cubs fans are starting to worry a little bit. Nobody is panicking yet, but with Alfonso Soriano already on the shelf, the uncertainty surrounding Carlos Zambrano's shoulder, and the fact the Cubs have now lost three in a row for the first time this season, I think folks have finally noticed that the Cubs only have a 3.5 game lead on the Cardinals. (Luckily for the Cubs, everybody else in the NL Central aside from Milwaukee has lost at least three in a row)

Before this week, the lead had never been bigger than 3.5, but the Cubs look so much better than everybody else in the division it felt like 10 games.

The Cubs took a 3-1 lead on Tampa in the 7th thanks to a couple of hits by Mike Fontenot, Kosuke Fukudome, and Ryan Theriot, but then Carlos Marmol imploded. Marmol, who has been unbelievable this season, walked the first two batters he faced in the 7th and then hit the next two to force in a run. Piniella came out to the mound to get Carlos out of there, but it was already too late.

"He's been extremely reliable. This sort of came out of nowhere," Cubs manager Lou Piniella said. "What are you going to do?"

Carl Crawford took the second pitch he saw from Scott Eyre and hit a grand slam to make it 6-3 Tampa, but the Rays weren't done there. They'd score two more times in the inning thanks to an Eric Hinske double, and a sac fly by Evan Longoria to bring Hinske in and make it 8-3.

The Cubs offense didn't look very good the last three days, but as I told Silvio yesterday, I wouldn't worry too much about it. A lot of offenses have looked horrible when playing the Rays inside Tropicana Field this season. Of course, after the White Sox outscore them 39-5 this weekend.....

NL

  • Dodgers 7 Reds 4
MLB
  • Yankees 2 Padres 1
  • Twins 9 Nats 3
  • Brewers 8 Jays 7
  • Rangers 5 Braves 4
  • Royals 4 Cardinals 1
  • DBacks 2 A's 1
  • Orioles 7 Astros 5
  • Rockies 6 Indians 3

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Thursday, June 19, 2008

High Five

A quick look around the interweb while letting you know I'll be live-blogging tomorrow's game over at FanHouse

  1. Balls Deep gets political. [Deadspin]
  2. Willie Randolph has company in the unemployment line. [FanHouse]
  3. David Beckham has balls of fire. [Awful Announcing]
  4. Jerry Manuel is gangsta. [With Leather]
  5. How those dirty "cheaters" at Northwestern nearly cost Michigan it's national title in 1997. [Wizard of Odds]

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Only 80's Hair Metal Can Truly Describe the Meaning of Cubs vs. White Sox



I know it's kind of (okay, it's totally) hypocritical of me to bitch about the overexposure of all things Cubs and White Sox in this city the last few days, only to turn around and feature two posts about it in one day, but what do you want from me?

The White Sox are playing right now, and I don't feel like actually thinking and having to write a real post. Plus, who doesn't want a little Judas Priest in their day?

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Minor League Spotlight: Running of the Sushi

As much as Americans and Canadians have in common, there are still a lot of things about our two nations that are quite different. Americans love football, Canadians love hockey (well, Canadians not named Skeets or Tas). Americans hate the French, some Canadians speak French. Americans have dollar bills, Canadians have coins called Loonies. Canadians have free universal health care, Americans have free condoms in the nurse's office in every junior high.

The biggest difference I've seen, though, is that while in America we prefer to have our baseball fans dress up as meat products or dead presidents, in Canada, they prefer raw fish.

See the video at FanHouse

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Notre Dame and NBC Sign Five-Year Extension

There are a lot of Notre Dame haters in this country. I mean, a lot. Hating the Irish is quickly becoming one of America's greatest past-times (well hating the Irish was a past time long before college football made an appearance on the scene, but I'm talking the football Irish here), and with the recent debacle of last season, combined with the annual undressings in bowl games, haters are really enjoying themselves.

Of course, one of the reasons people hate Notre Dame so much is the constant exposure given to the program. Sure, they haven't won anything of consequence in years, but that hasn't stopped them from being placed in a BCS game anytime they can muster nine wins in a season. A big reason for this is that the Irish have their own television contract with NBC and are broadcast all across the country every Saturday afternoon where fans and haters alike can tune in and judge.

Well, I'm sorry haters, but that's not going to change anytime soon.

The partnership between Notre Dame football and NBC now will be at least a quarter-century long.

A five-year extension of the deal to televise Irish home games was announced Thursday morning, good from 2011 to 2016.

In the deal, NBC will televise seven home games and the one "off-site" game on the Irish football slate.

I've no idea how much money the deal is worth, as it wasn't announced, but something tells me that NBC got the rights for less money than they paid for originally. The ratings dropped severely last season thanks to Notre Dame sucking ass, so that probably knocked quite a bit off the price tag.

Though it's not as if I care, just as long as I can still watch. National champions in 2008!* You heard it here first!

*No, I don't really believe that

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On Deck: Joba's Getting Comfortable


When Hank Steinbrenner came out earlier this season and basically demanded that Joba Chamberlain stopped being used out of the bullpen, and placed into the starting rotation, his general manager and manager kind of just ignored him. Hank was just doing anything in his power to try to be like his dad, and after dealing with George for all those years, Brian Cashman had become pretty adept at tuning his boss out.

Besides, the Yankees starters were just off to a rough start to the 2008 season, and things would turn around soon enough. Only they never did, as Phil Hughes struggled, Ian Kennedy got sent down, and Mike Mussina looked like a shell of a shell of his former self. So eventually Cashman and Joe Girardi had to cave, and move Joba into the starting rotation (and now that Chien-Ming Wang is out they're lucky they did).

His first start didn't go very well, but in the two starts since, Joba has improved each time out. This afternoon he'll be making his fourth start of the season, but will he finally pick up his first victory as a starter?

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Cubs Fans Hold Their Breath

Living in Chicago, I haven't been able to escape the constant hype in the local media surrounding the upcoming series between the Cubs and White Sox this weekend. Every time I turn on the radio or turn the page of the newspaper (yes, I'm one of the 15 people who still read the print version) I'm faced with another story about the two teams. It's suffocating. I know that it's a somewhat bigger deal this year, seeing as how both teams will be in first place for the first time since this all started in 1997, but this series gets treated as if it is the World Series.

It's not, it's just three days in June. Of course, I don't think Cubs fans care at all about the series right now after Carlos Zambrano had to leave his start last night...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Kenny Williams Sends Warm Wishes North

Many Cubs fans have long felt that White Sox fans spend more time worrying about what's going on over on the north side than they do about their own team. It's a bunch of crap, really. Trust me when I say I've never cared more about anything the Cubs are doing than I have the White Sox.

I follow the Cubs. I watch them occasionally, but what I don't do is care. If the White Sox are in the middle of a losing streak, I actually forget that the Cubs even exist, and instead center all my attention on figuring out what's wrong.

Most other Sox fans I know are the same way. Hell, most of them probably couldn't even name ten players on the Cubs roster. Unfortunately for us, the White Sox have a manager and a general manager who have never been shy about their feelings towards the north siders, and they sure as hell aren't helping kill the stereotype.

Kenny Williams fired the latest salvo when he was asked about the difference between the two organizations.

''It is so different,'' Williams said. ''You might as well build a border, a Great Wall of China on Madison, because we are so different. We might as well be in two different cities.

''The unfortunate thing for me is it's a shame that a certain segment of Chicago refused to enjoy a baseball championship being brought to their city. The only thing I can say is, 'Happy anniversary.'''

Williams is of course referring to the fact that this season marks the 100th anniversary of the Cubs last World Series title. Still, what he's saying isn't completely true. A lot of my Cubs fans friends expressed congratulations to me when the White Sox won the World Series in 2005. Silvio was even there with me, the only Cubs fan amongst our group that night, as the Sox won the thing.

He wasn't peeing his pants in delight, doing cartwheels down the street, or drinking champagne straight from the bottle, but he wasn't kicking rocks or throwing things either.

This is the one thing about these "rivalry weeks" between the Cubs and Sox that absolutely drives me crazy. Believe it or not, Chicago media, but the fans of the two teams actually get along. I don't know any Sox fan that doesn't have Cub fan friends, and I don't know any Cub fan who isn't friends with more than a few Sox fans.

Yet the only thing that's covered by the Chicago media during these weeks are features that highlight the "difference" between the two sides, and it's as though they're trying to drive a wall between us.

Listen, I have friends who are Republicans and Democrats. They get along fine. I have friends that are Muslim, and friends who are Jewish. They get along. White Sox fans and Cubs fans get along all the time, as when it comes down to the most basic fact, they're one and the same.

They're just baseball fans who happen to root for teams in different colored uniforms. That's it. Stop trying to make it into anything different.

Ballhype: hype it up!

Morning Wood


Chicago White Sox 8 Pittsburgh Pirates 2

Oh man I wish the Sox could play the Pirates everyday, it would just make the season a lot more enjoyable. After scoring a season high 16 runs against the Buccos on Tuesday night, the Sox were only able to put another 8 runs on the board on Wednesday night.

The homer parade continued thanks to Toby Hall (his two-run blast not only got the party started, but was his first in over two years), Carlos Quentin (welcome back), and Brian Anderson. Nick Swisher chipped in with a two-run double as well, and together they provided a lot more offense than Mark Buehrle needed.

Buehrle continued to pitch well, and had a no-hitter going through five innings before allowing a lead-off homer to Jose Bautista in the 6th inning. Other than that error, he was pretty much on, going 8 innings and allowing only four hits. He also had three strikeouts to give him 998 in his career.

"[The no-hitter] was in my mind out there," Buehrle said after the game. "I was throwing the ball well all game. I had good stuff, everything was working. The only concern was that I was giving up a lot of fly ball outs. When I'm throwing ground balls, I think I have better stuff."

Tampa Bay Rays 5 Chicago Cubs 4


The Cubs lost their second straight game last night in Tampa, as the....oh who am I kidding, no Cubs fan really cares about this game right now. The only thing any of you are worried about is the fact that Carlos Zambrano had to leave early, and is scheduled to undergo an MRI on his shoulder today.

I can't say I blame you, either.

''There was a funny pitch that I felt something in my arm, and then the last pitch that I threw in the game, I dropped my arm a lot because I couldn't go back over the top with my arm,'' said Zambrano.

While the loss of Alfonso Soriano is one that the Cubs can survive, I don't think the same thing can be said about the possibility of losing Zambrano. If the MRI reveals something that's going to keep him out for a while, all that World Series talk will disappear.

Of course, while I'm not happy that Zambrano is hurt, I don't really mind that the Sox might not have to face him the next two weeks. See! Every cloud has a silver lining!

NL

  • Dodgers 6 Reds 1
MLB
  • Red Sox 7 Phillies 4
  • Tigers 7 Giants 2
  • Orioles 2 Astros 1
  • Yankees 8 Padres 5
  • Brewers 5 Jays 4
  • Braves 5 Rangers 2
  • Twins 11 Nats 2
  • Royals 3 Cardinals 2
  • Rockies 4 Indians 2
  • DBacks 11 A's 1
  • Mets 5 Angels 4
  • Marlins 8 Mariners 3

Ballhype: hype it up!

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

High Five

A quick tour of the interweb while reminding Ozzie Guillen that some of us still BLEEPin love the BLEEPin White Sox, even after BLEEP BLEEPin 2007, and this BLEEP fan even BLEEPin thinks you're kinda BLEEPin sexy when you go all BLEEP BLEEP BLEEP

  1. Speaking of Ozzie, he knows where Piniella's got him beat. [We Are The Postmen]
  2. Alert: Post-championship KG interview bitch fight at Free Darko! [Free Darko]
  3. Celtics post mortem from a bard of Beantown. [Kissing Suzy Kolber]
  4. Tiger's out for the year. Phil Mickelson is on his (good) knees, crying, "Thank you, Jesus!" [ESPN.com]
  5. And my day had started so well. Damn you, Mariotti. [Jay the Joke]

Ballhype: hype it up!

Mea Culpa, Mea Idiot, Mea Sorry, Celtics

It's been a long thirteen days.

Two weeks ago, in some kind of chemically imbalanced stupor, I announced on these esteemed pages I had become a Lakers fan.

I have regretted it ever since. And no, not because of the L.A.'s putrid performance during the Finals.

Within seconds after pushing "PUBLISH POST" that night, I had a sick feeling in my stomach. Ten minutes later I was on the phone with Fornelli near tears: "Dude, what is wrong with me? I love the Celtics. I friggin' hate the Lakers!" [Editor's Note: She did. It was hysterical.]

Fornelli, ever sympathetic, called me an idiot and laughed. (And he's my best friend because....?)

I toyed with deleting the post but it was too late. The die had been cast. I had put it out there for all five of you to see.

I longed to publicly recant that silly, babbling crock of crap and ask for forgiveness from the ghosts of Red and DJ. I even had a post ready to go.

But then the Lakers went 0-2.

So I sat here for the last week, rooting for L.A. to win, not because I had the slightest desire to see them prevail but because I figured if they at least tied the series, I could publish an "I Was Blogging Under the Influence" post and no one would accuse me of being a fair-weather fan. This, I brilliantly reasoned, would allow me to preserve what was little was left of my dignity.

Thanks, Lakers. Yet another reason to hate your guts.

I've struggled to understand what prompted my temporary moment of insanity and have come up with this.

The stereotype is true: People here in Los Angeles basically don't care about anything except their tans and whether anyone notices their tans. Most especially, they don't care about sports. (Don't tell me about USC and UCLA. Yeah, there are hardcore boosters but trust me, for the most part it's about tailgating and networking than true love.)

There's a reason this town doesn't have an NFL team. NO ONE GIVES A SHIT.

But all that seemed to change a few weeks ago. For the first time since I moved to the Left Coast, you could feel some genuine excitement in the air about a sports team. L.A. turned purple and gold, glittering like one of those rare nights here after it's been drizzling. The whole city felt like it was ready for a hot date.

It was fun. It felt good.

But in truth, it was more of a drunken one-night stand, when you wake up and discover that gorgeous guy you went to bed with has a bald spot, a beer belly and bad breath.

Fortunately for me, my Catholic upbringing opens the door to forgiveness following confession.

So tonight...

... after I watched Doc Rivers embracing his son... Russell embracing Hondo... Paul Pierce joyfully hoisting the MVP trophy over his head... Tommy and Danny cheering... KG tearfully screaming, "Anything is possible, anything is possible!" up to the heavens...

... after all that, I shed a few tears of joy myself, went outside, looked up at the moonlaced sky and whispered, "I'm so sorry, Red."

Just then, I saw a plane come over the horizon. As its ruby landing lights flickered, I could have sworn it looked just like a cigar being lit.

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Michael Beasley Shrunk Three Inches

When reading a team's media guide, it's best not to trust any of the information listed about a player's height or weight. Whether it's football or basketball, teams lie about that stuff all the time. Offensive lineman are listed as 350 pounds where as anybody with the slightest hint of vision can see the guy is easily 420 on a good day.

So it's no surprise that the potential first round draft pick of the Chicago Bulls, Michael Beasley, is a bit shorter than the 6'10 he was listed as while at Kansas State.

"I don't think it's a big deal," he said of being measured at 6 feet 7 inches, three inches shorter than his listed height at Kansas State. "Other than it's a little disappointing to me that I found out I'm actually a midget."
While it's nice to see that Beasley has a sense of humor, this is just another reason why I'd prefer seeing the Bulls take Derrick Rose. While the Bulls need a big man, at 6'7 Beasley can't be the guy to bang down low against the Kevin Garnett's and Tim Duncan's of the world, so I'd much prefer Rose's court presence and leadership abilities at the point.

With an offense that relies so much on jump shooters like Ben Gordon and Luol Deng, having a guy like Rose that can penetrate the lane will lead to a lot of open looks for those guys, and will just help out the entire offense a lot more than I think Beasley's presence will. I'm not saying I don't think Beasley has all the potential to be a great player in this league, I just really think Rose is a better fit here.

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Ozzie Guillen Hasn't Changed Much

I don't know if you've heard anything about it, but the Cubs and White Sox are set to play a three-game set this weekend at Wrigley Field. I mean, I've been looking through the Sun-Times and the Trib, but I haven't seen a single mention of it.

We're going into the 11th season of games between these two actually counting, and while the initial glow of interleague play has started to fade for me, I still enjoy this series. It's especially important this season, as this is the first time both Chicago teams will be in first place when they meet.

While many things have changed over the years since it started, some things haven't changed at all. Take for instance Ozzie Guillen. He was a player on the White Sox when it started, and now he's the manager, yet his talks with the media haven't changed much at all.



Okay, maybe he didn't cuss as much.

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Morning Wood


Chicago White Sox 16 Pittsburgh Pirates 5

Maybe it was the first day off in over two weeks, or maybe it was the Pittsburgh Pirates pitching staff, but the White Sox offense looked quite refreshed on Tuesday night. Hell, maybe it was just Paul Konerko out of the lineup after being placed on the disabled list for the first time in his career. I'm more inclined to believe it was the Pirates pitching, though, as they do have that NL-worst 4.68 ERA.

Whatever the hell it was, I wouldn't mind seeing more of it in the future. Jermaine Dye, Joe Crede, Orlando Cabrera, and Jim Thome all went deep for the Sox, and only Jermaine's was a solo shot. He did manage to drive in two other runs in the first inning on a double, so I guess we'll forgive him for it.

Thome's homer was the 521st of his career and ties him with Ted Williams and Willie McCovey (they were decent) for 16th all time.

"Very, very special," Thome said Tuesday night. "You never imagine when you are thrown in with names [like] McCovey and Ted Williams. That's pretty neat. It really is. It was a nice night and we scored a lot of runs and it's even more special when you do that."

In fact, all four of them finished with three RBIs a piece while Carlos Quentin, Alexei Ramirez, and Nick Swisher drove in the rest. The only White Sox starter that didn't contribute to the team's 19 hits was CQ, but he still got on base three times via the walk.

Javier Vazquez had a shaky night, allowing all five Pirates runs in in six innings, but he managed to outperform Ian Snell. Snell was responsible for seven of the Sox runs, and managed to throw 106 pitches in only four innings of work. The six walks probably didn't help.

The Sox bullpen shut things down as usual, and Adam Russell pitched a perfect 9th inning in his Major League debut.

Tampa Bay Rays 3 Chicago Cubs 2


Scott Kazmir has been absolutely dominant for the Rays so far this season at home, and he was dominant again on Tuesday night, even if that dominance lasted only 4.2 innings. Kazmir struck out seven Cubs and allowed only 1 run, but all those Ks combined with four walks makes for a high pitch count.

Unfortunately for the Cubs, Tampa Bay's bullpen didn't make things much easier, allowing only 3 hits and a run in 4.1 innings. Evan Longoria homered in the 6th inning to break a 1-1 tie, and Neal Cotts' two-base throwing error in the 7th inning set up an insurance run the Rays would need after the Cubs scored another run in the 2nd.

Though it was that Longoria kid again who made a great play on a Reed Johnson bunt attempt with two outs in the 9th inning to end the game.

"Probably the best bunt play I have ever seen, capped off with the pick by Aybar," said Rays closer Troy Percival. "That ball right there, typically, is going to be bobbled just enough for the guy to be safe."

Oh, and Cliff Floyd loves to hit against Chicago teams, following his two home runs against the Sox a few weeks ago with one against his former team on Tuesday night. They make up for half the dingers he's hit this season.

NL

  • Dodgers 3 Reds 1
MLB
  • Orioles 6 Astros 5
  • Yankees 8 Padres 0
  • Red Sox 3 Phillies 0
  • Brewers 7 Jays 0
  • Rangers 7 Braves 5
  • Twins 2 Nats 1
  • Royals 2 Cardinals 1
  • Rockies 10 Indians 2
  • A's 15 DBacks 1
  • Angels 6 Mets 1
  • Mariners 5 Marlins 4
  • Tigers 5 Giants 1

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The Basketball Diaries


Boston Celtics 131 Los Angeles Lakers 92


Holy crap. You know, during the first quarter of this game, Kobe Bryant was on fire. He hit 3 three-pointers and scored 10 quick points, and was even seen jawing with someone sitting at courtside saying "Not tonight." I have to say, for a moment there, I totally believed him.

Then, one of the worst ass beatings I've ever seen in NBA basketball commenced, and the Celtics walked away with a 39-point victory and their 17th NBA title. Seriously, this thing was over so early that cars were burning and drunken brawls were breaking out in the city of Boston long before the end of the third quarter.

Ray Allen did the patented "Celtics player gets injured, has to go back to locker room, then reemerges in the second quarter to a standing ovation" move, yet still managed to play 32 minutes and finish with 26 points. Kevin Garnett finished with 26 points, 14 rebounds, three steals, and a whole lot of screaming after the game (top of the world!). He did manage to give Chicago a shout-out as well, so thanks for that.

It's nice to see KG get a title finally, after following him since high school. He was no different then. It really would have been nice to have seen him do it here, though honestly, I don't think the Bulls would win a title with him alone anymore. He needs help.

Which he got from guys like Rajon Rondo, who had a monster game, scoring 21 points, handing out 7 assists, grabbing 6 rebounds, and nabbing 6 steals as well. That is filling up the stat sheet something fierce.

Oddly enough, it was Paul Pierce who had the "worst" game of Boston's big three. Though that didn't stop him from walking away with the Finals MVP trophy after scoring 17 points and handing out 10 assists. Just a boring double-double. Seriously, imagine if Paul Pierce had been surrounded by good players his entire career in Boston, he would be considered one of the top five players in this league.

Of course, the greatest part of all this is that Boston finally gets one of those championships the city has been desperate for for so long. With the Patriots losing the Super Bowl and missing out on the perfect season, you guys really needed something to lift your spirits.

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

High Five

A quick look around the interweb while hiding from your sister

  1. Javon Walker got his ass kicked, is now a true Raider. [Deadspin]
  2. DeWayne Wise has been called up to replace Paul Konerko, who has officially been placed on the disabled list. [Chicago Sports]
  3. Some good news for Tyrus Thomas and Luol Deng. [Blog A Bull]
  4. Personally I think my joke of the day is funnier, but BA's is okay I guess. Anyway, what do you call a pedophile pirate? Hyarrrr Kelly!! [South Side Sox]
  5. Cal is finally getting those protesters out of the trees, but not before the protesters reminded them that they were number one. [San Francisco Chronicle]

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On Deck: The Jerry Manuel Era Begins


Now that Willie Randolph has finally be freed by the evil, classless, New York Mets, his replacement Jerry Manuel gets his first shot at pissing off Mets fans everywhere tonight. Will Jerry make it through 7AM Wednesday morning, or will he be dispatched in the middle of the night?

I mean, the Mets actually won last night, and they still fired Willie in the middle of the night. What would have happened had they lost? Would he have been publicly flogged in Times Square?

Besides, is Jerry Manuel really going to be any better? I had the "honor" of watching him manage my White Sox for five years, and although he won the manager of the year award in 2000, the rest of his tenure was basically known for being extremely boring. Though, maybe that's what Omar Minaya wants.

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Dan Haren Likes Arizona and Wouldn't Mind Staying There For a While

This last offseason was a rare one in baseball, as we saw three teams trade their aces to another team for prospects. The Twins sent Johan Santana to the Mets, Baltimore sent Erik Bedard northwest to Seattle, and the Athletics traded Dan Haren to the Diamondbacks.

To pry Haren away from the A's, Arizona basically had to send it's entire farm system to Oakland and pay for a vacation for Billy Beane to take his family to see the Grand Canyon. While the Athletics are enjoying what they've gotten in return from Arizona so far in the deal, Haren has enjoyed his time in Arizona as well. In fact, he'd like to stay there for a while...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Why God Invented Little Brothers

I have a twin sister, whom I love very much, but while I was growing up I always secretly wanted a little brother. For the most part, my time growing up with my sister was filled with torture and abuse. Things like her chasing me with a knife, cutting my basketball in half, spraying Windex in my eyes.

As a child I was pretty sure my sister was Satan. Any attempts on my part for revenge were futile because anytime I tried to get her back she'd pull out the "I'll tell dad you did (fill in anything I could get in trouble for)!"

I'd use my superior intellect to respond "But I didn't (do that thing you're going to get me in trouble for)!"

"Well who do you think dad's gonna believe?"

Yeah, she had my balls in a vice there.

So I wanted a little brother so I could have somebody of my own to torture and abuse. Someone to blackmail, to hit in the face with baseball bats...


http://view.break.com/521305 - Watch more free videos


If you're reading this dad, it's not too late. My birthday is in October!

Via With Leather

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Ichiro Is Back in Right Field, Could Be on Way Out of Lead-Off Spot

While Monday was already a great day of change in Seattle with the deserved firing of general manager Bill Bavasi, it wasn't the only thing that changed with the Mariners yesterday. For the first time since August 19th, 2006, Ichiro Suzuki started a game in right field.

Right field was where Ichiro spent his first five years in Seattle, and after the team sent Wladimir Balentien back down to Tacoma in favor of Jeff Clement, there was an opening in right and John McLaren says he'd been thinking about making the move for a month or so. Still, this may not be the last move that Ichiro makes this season, as McLaren also said he's toying with the idea of dropping him out of the lead-off spot in the Mariners lineup...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Mrs. Mendenhall May Be The Driving Force Behind Her Son's Dislike of Ron Zook

Yesterday I wrote about Rashard Mendenhall and his feelings towards his former college coach Ron Zook. Those feelings not exactly being positive, as Mendenhall said that as long as Zook is still coaching at Illinois, he won't be returning to the school or watching games from the sidelines.

This also means that when Rashard makes his debut on Monday Night Football or Sunday Night Football, he's probably going to say "Rashard Mendenhall, running back, Niles West High School."

In the post I theorized that Rashard's feelings towards Zook probably stem from the fact that his brother, Walter, never got any real playing time in Champaign, and has recently transferred to Illinois State. Rashard was often quoted saying that his brother was just as good as he is, and should get more playing time.

Well, it turns out that may be the case after all, but it may have been Rashard's mother who was stirring the pot. According to something I read on the PJStar.com forums, Rashard's mother wanted to take her kids out if Illinois before last season.

From a poster named Wholinson:

OK, you want the details of the rift between the Mendenhalls and the staff. Here is the story:

Last year, before Rashard's junior season, the players' mother came in and discussed a possible transfer to Cincinnati for both players, the impetus being that Walter wasn't being given a fair shake and that the brothers wanted to play together in the same backfield. They only would stay if Zook would adhere to certain playing conditions for both.

Zook said sorry, we think highly of both kids and Walter would be given a fair look, but there would be no conditions and no promises. And if they wanted to transfer, Zook said he would be sorry to see that because both are good students and have made significant progress toward degrees, but agreed he would sign the release papers if that really is what they wanted. At that point, the mother backed off and both players stayed. And of course, Rashard had the big season.

Before and during the season, the coaches tried to give Walter fair chances during spring, camp, etc. A chance to be the backup ahead of Dufrene and/or Pollard. You would much rather have a veteran player who knows the offense and has put in his time win the job over two new guys.

But despite that, the coaches just didn't believe he was as good as them. Didn't change directions, didn't have quick feet, didn't find the hole. A kid that worked hard and tried, but a player that just wasn't a Big Ten running back, in their opinion. And their first responsibility is to the University of Illinois to put the best players are the field.

Obviously, you are trying like crazy to win games, so if Walter would have been the second best back, why wouldn't you play him? They just didn't think he was.

During the season, the mother was upset he wasn't playing more. At least one parent of a prominent Illinois player told Zook that the Mendenhall's Mom told her that she should pull her kid out of Illinois, that he should transfer because the coaches wouldn't be fair to him. The parent was very upset about it and told Zook. The player is a very, very good player (Edit. Note: I guess that rules out Juice Williams) who starts.

That was a big red flag to Zook -- that the Mendenhall's mother would tell another mother that she should take her kid out of Illinois.

Then, at season's end, came the conversation that got very heated.

In most programs, most fifth year players who haven't played much and who have a degree (Walter is earning his this semester) and who probably aren't going to play much usually choose not to return. Whether it's Chris Pazan or Billy Garza or J.J. Simmons or Walter Mendenhall or whoever. They have their degree, they have a fully paid for education, and why go through another camp and 6 a.m.'s and all of that to not play very much for a fifth year.

So when Zook and Reggie Mitchell explained to Walter that and asked if he still wanted to come back given all of that, Walter became very upset. He believed he was the team's best running back, that he wasn't being given a chance.

Later, Walter, Rashard and the mother all came in to discuss it further. Zook reiterated that the important thing was the degree. And that he didn't think Walter would play very much if he came back. But, if given all of that, he wanted to come back and play his fifth year, he again would be on scholarship and given a fair chance.

At that point, the mother was very angry. She said why would he come back when it is clear they didn't want him. And all three of them got up and left. None of them have spoken since.
Now, obviously, this is from a post on a message board and it's entirely possible that this is just somebody making crap up. At the same time, though, it's just as possible this entire story is true. You'd be surprised how often I read things on these message boards (particularly when it comes to college sports) while researching stories at FanHouse, ignore them because of the source, and then see the same story hitting ESPN a week or so later.

Personally, I'm inclined to believe it right now because it supports my theory from yesterday, but you'll have to decide for yourself what you think.

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Bill Bavasi Had to Go

As Mr. Watson told you yesterday, the Seattle Mariners finally went ahead and did what we'd all been waiting for them to do for a few weeks now: they fired general manager Bill Bavasi. In other words, Monday was probably the best day that Seattle sports fans have had in a while, and a cause for celebration.

With the pending move of the Sonics, and the Mariners struggles this season, there hasn't been much to cheer about in the Emerald City lately. Still, while there's some debate in New York about the Mets firing Willie Randolph (was it deserved? did they go about it the right way? etc.), I don't think there's much debate amongst Mariners fans about how they feel for this move. If they're upset about anything, it's probably that Bavasi was the only one to go and that the team can't fire Richie Sexson...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Tiger Woods Is Good At Golf

As I'm sure you're all aware of by now, Tiger Woods won his 14th major title on Monday afternoon when he beat Rocco Mediate after a 19-hole playoff at Torrey Pines. Now, as anybody who reads here regularly has noticed, I don't care about golf all that much unless it's a major and Tiger Woods is involved.

The U.S. Open, of course, involved both. I didn't get to see the 4th round on Sunday when Tiger drained the long put on 18 to tie Mediate and force the playoff (Mother Nature delivered an apocalyptic storm early Sunday morning that knocked out power all over Chicago, though I slept right through it because I'm dedicated to sleeping), but I got a chance to see the playoff, and I'm happy I did.

It was one of the most compelling few hours of sports, not just golf, that I've ever seen. After the first few holes Tiger had built up a three-stroke lead, and I figured that he was going to run away with it. Then Mediate took over the next few holes and pulled into a tie with Tiger. Then Mediate capitalized on some of Tiger's mistakes, and took a two stroke lead on him going into the last few holes.

Then, much like he did on Sunday, Tiger drained a birdie putt on 18 while Mediate could only manage a par to tie it up and send the playoff into sudden death.

It was at that point where Mediate just couldn't keep up with the greatest golfer of all time anymore. Mediate's shot off the tee at the 7th hole (which served as the first hole in the sudden death playoff) landed in a bunker, and from there he hit one into the gallery. Meanwhile, Tiger was on the green in two, and shortly after that he was celebrating the 14th major of his career.

All in all, it was great television. Still, I was annoyed by a few things.

  • I know Rocco Mediate isn't the greatest golfer in the world, and that nobody expected him to be where he was, but everybody was making it sound like he was just some dude who came off the street and qualified on Monday before the tournament. The man has won five tournaments on the PGA Tour, and was in contention to win the Masters on the final day back in 2006 before blowing up on the par-3 12th hole. Had it not been for back problems earlier in his career, he'd probably have a lot more wins by now.
  • The way Tiger's knee was covered drove me insane. I know he was wincing after some shots, and that this was his first tournament since having arthroscopic knee surgery eight weeks ago, but come on people. Football players have arthroscopic knee surgery on a Tuesday and then they're playing football on Sunday. It's not as if Tiger had torn ligaments repaired or anything. Was he in discomfort? I don't doubt it for a second, but was it a crippling pain that only a superman such as Tiger could play through? No.
Other than that, though, no complaints. Can't wait for the British Open next month.

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Marcus Thames Doesn't Have Time For Singles, Doubles, and Triples

The Detroit Tigers six-game win streak came to an end last night in San Francisco when John Bowker welcomed Fernando Rodney back to the bigs with a three-run homer to give the Giants the win, but that doesn't mean every streak in Detroit died on Monday night. Marcus Thames took Tim Lincecum deep in his first two at-bats thanks to a hanging curveball and a belt-high changeup, making Monday the fourth game in a row that Thames has gone deep.

Still, that's not the streak I'm talking about. Since June 7th, Thames has gone 7-for-29 (.241) which is very much in line with his .257 average on the season. Of course, his slugging percentage since June 7th is .966...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Morning Wood


Philadelphia Phillies 8 Boston Red Sox 2

The Phillies set the tone early in this game when Jimmy Rollins hit his 28th career lead-off home run, and a couple of batters later Ryan Howard hit a two-run shot to spot the Phils an early 3-0 lead.

Neither were done for the night.

Howard would homer again in the 3rd inning, and the entire city of Philadelphia is lucky to still be standing after the big man rumbled around the bases for a triple in the 6th inning. Rollins would single home another two runs in the 6th. As for Howard, it's the fourth time he's had 4 RBIs or more in the last eight games, and since he's on my fantasy team I'd like to see that production continue.

Cole Hamels made sure that those runs would stand up, as he allowed only two runs (on back-to-back homers from Dustin Pedroia and J.D. Drew in the 5th) and seven hits in 7 innings. In yesterday's On Deck I said this game was a potential World Series preview, and apparently Cole reads On Deck and thinks I'm some sort of God.

"I believe we're destined to play each other in the World Series," Hamels said. "We can compete with them any day of the week."

San Francisco Giants 8 Detroit Tigers 6


Ha! It never fails! Whenever I feature a team in the On Deck that's on a winning streak, that team always loses. I've gone mad with power!

The Giants used a five-run 8th inning to comeback and end Detroit's win-streak, with the big blow being a three-run homer by John Bowker (who I'd never heard of before last night) off of Fernando Rodney who was making his first appearance of the year for the Tigers.

"I knew I hit it good but I didn't know if it would go over," Bowker said. "It was pretty cool."

As for the Tigers, Justin Verlander struck out seven in six innings and allowed only two runs, but was bitten by his bullpen once again. Also, Marcus Thames homered off of Tim Lincecum twice and has now homered in his last four games. Even more remarkable: Thames' last seven hits have all been home runs.

NL

  • Braves 7 Rockies 1
MLB
  • Mets 9 Angels 6
  • Marlins 6 Mariners 1

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Monday, June 16, 2008

High Five

A quick look around the interweb while enjoying all the times Tiger cusses on national television

  1. Believe it or not, there's a huge flaw in Tiger's game. [Simon on Sports]
  2. Not everybody is happy about today's U.S. Open playoff. [Kissing Suzy Kolber]
  3. So where is C.C. Sabathia going to end up? [Rumors and Rants]
  4. Doug Christie is paranoid. [FanHouse]
  5. Everybody loot Bristol on September 8th. [Awful Announcing]

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The Rangers Enjoyed Their Trip to New York

The Rangers and Mets had to play a doubleheader on Sunday (which they split, not that you really care) after Saturday night's game was washed out by thunderstorms in New York. Still, just because it's raining outside and you can't play baseball doesn't mean you can't have a little fun.

I mean, when the grounds crew puts that tarp out there, I think the same thought enters everybody's mind: I want to run and slide on that thing. Of course, if we do it, we end up in jail and probably banned for life from the stadium.

If the players do it, well, they get the opposing teams fans to start chanting "Let's Go Rangers!"



Via FanHouse

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On Deck: Here Come the Tigers


It's been a very odd year for the Detroit Tigers. After getting off to a horrible start this season, there have been times when they seem to be getting their act together and then suddenly they're horrible again in the blink of an eye. As Joe Morgan would probably say if you asked him about it, "I'm friends with Gary Sheffield." "They're consistently inconsistent."

Still, after sweeping the division-leading Chicago White Sox last week, I asked the question if this was the start of the Tigers turnaround. Was it a sign of things to come?

Well, the Tigers didn't stop there as they followed that sweep with another one against the Dodgers this weekend, and they've now won six in a row to creep back into the race.

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Could Prince Fielder Be Traded?

So far this season there have been quite a few big name players whose names have been bandied about in trade rumors. There are the Ken Griffey Jr. rumors, the C.C. Sabathia rumors, and hell, A.J. Burnett is basically trying to start his own "Burnett to Chicago" rumors.

One surprising name that was brought up today in the New York Post (and if it's in the Post, it has to be true) for the first time is that of Milwaukee Brewers first baseman Prince Fielder...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Rashard Mendenhall Is Not a Big Fan of Ron Zook

The 2007 football season was a great one for the Illini. After winning only two games the season before, none of which came against a Big Ten opponent, the Illini bounced back in 2007 and ended up playing USC in the Rose Bowl. Yeah, they got their ass kicked, but the season still had to be considered a success.

God knows it was a success for running back Rashard Mendenhall, who after spending his first two seasons in Champaign keeping the bench from getting lonely, exploded onto the scene in 07 and ended up being a first round draft pick of the Pittsburgh Steelers.

So you have to figure Rashard has very fond memories of Champaign, right? Wrong. Apparently Rashard isn't that big a fan of the coach who helped turn the program around.

"Everything always looks good on the outside," Mendenhall said. "Nobody really knows except for the people who are there and involved with it. The only thing being on the outside that you can know is what people allow you to know from talking to me or from talking to (Ron) Zook or anybody within the organization."

Bottom line for Mendenhall was that he didn't enjoy the season the way you think he might have.

"When you find things that were said, you can kind of read between the lines and see that everything wasn't as it appeared to be," Mendenhall said.

Mendenhall's current relationship with the Illinois football program can best be described as strained. You won't see him on the sidelines of Illinois games during the upcoming season. Or in future years either.

"To tell you the truth, as long as Ron Zook is there it will be hard for me to support the University of Illinois football team," Mendenhall said.

Reached Saturday afternoon, Zook said "I feel bad that he feels that way."

I've no idea where Rashard's feelings towards Zook come from, but in the article it does say that he was very close to quitting the team before the 2007 season started, but that his brother Walter convinced him to stay on the team.

The same Walter who just transferred from Illinois to Illinois State.

Maybe the reason Rashard, who has openly supported his brother in the media and said he should get more playing time, is that Zook wasn't planning on using Walter very much this season. Maybe Rashard's just bitter about having to spend all that time on the bench his first two seasons.

Whatever it is, he should probably just move on and get over it. Whatever the hell Zook did, it's ended with Rashard making millions of dollars in the NFL, and the Illini football program on the verge of becoming a Big Ten power. To me, it seems like everybody wins.

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The Hall of Fame Game Ends Today


Looking at the schedule for tonight, there's not much action going on around baseball as there are only five games on the menu tonight. What the schedule doesn't show, however, is that the Cubs and Padres will be playing in the Hall of Fame game this afternoon in Cooperstown.

Of course, since the game means nothing and the Cubs are trying to run away with the NL Central and the Padres are trying to get back into the NL West race, it's not entirely surprising that neither team is very excited about playing in the game. In fact, the Cubs have called up 16 players from their single-A team to fill out today's lineup card....

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Big Ten Network and Comcast Finally Have a Deal

There have been quite a few times over the last two years that we've all been told that the Big Ten Network and Comcast cable are close to making a deal that will allow Comcast subscribers (like yours truly) to watch the BTN from the comfort of home.

Then, that deal never comes. This did not please me, because I missed damn near an entire season of Big Ten basketball (though that may have actually been a blessing this season) and quite a few Illini games during the football season.

Well, I think I'm going to be able to see every game this fall as Comcast and the BTN have come to an agreement, and I think they mean it this time.

Comcast and the BTN are prepared to put nearly two years of bitter negotiations aside to announce a long-term partnership, the Tribune has learned.

"For all intents and purposes, it's done," one source close to the negotiations said Sunday.

Technically, it's not done. But sources expect the deal will be completed and unveiled this week.
Cross your fingers, people.

The BTN actually seems to be getting what it wants out of this deal, because as it's currently structured, the network is going to be added to the expanded basic cable instead of being added to a sports package like Comcast wanted. Still, there's a possibility it could be moved to one after a few years.

Of course, I don't really care where the channel is, just as long as I have it.

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White Sox Could Lose Paul Konerko

While the biggest reason the White Sox have been able to maintain their lead in the AL Central this season has been their pitching staff, the fact that the team has been able to stay healthy has played a large role as well. While teams like the Tigers and Indians have seemingly been forced to put somebody new on the disabled list every few days, the White Sox haven't needed to use it too often this season. When they have had to, it hasn't been anybody all that vital to the team (sorry, Juan Uribe, but you know it's true).

That could change on Tuesday, though, as there's a very distinct possibility that Paul Konerko is going to miss some time...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Morning Wood


Chicago Cubs 7 Toronto Blue Jays 4

Alfonso Soriano's broken hand hasn't done anything to slow the Cubs down, as the north siders took two out of three from the Blue Jays this weekend, and are now 20 games over .500 at 45-25. To put that in perspective, the Cubs won the division last season, but didn't pick up their 45th win of the season until July 13th.

Derrek Lee drove in three runs, Aramis Ramirez hit his first homer in three weeks, and Ted Lilly pitched six scoreless innings against his former team to help the Cubs win for the fifth time in their last six games.

"We've got a good enough team to get by," third baseman Aramis Ramirez said. "We're playing great. I thought we should have won all three games here but we left a lot of guys on base during the first game. We can get by without Soriano."

The Cubs actually led this game 7-0, but the bullpen was due for a bad game, and allowed four runs in the final three innings. Not that any of it really mattered, but I didn't want to write this whole thing without saying something negative. It's just a natural reflex.

Colorado Rockies 5 Chicago White Sox 3


Speaking of negative things, the White Sox lost for the fifth time in their last six games, as the Colorado Rockies took two out of three from the Sox over the weekend.

Jose Contreras had his second shaky outing in a row, allowing four runs in 6.1 innings, and while the White Sox were able to get their hits off of Aaron Cook they just weren't able to push enough runs across the plate.

The Sox still had a chance, though, as they loaded the bases in the 9th inning against Brian Fuentes. After Juan Uribe led the inning off with a single, Fuentes got the next two guys out before walking Jermaine Dye and Jim Thome. Then Joe Crede popped up to shallow left field and things got very interesting.

Matt Holliday was drifting in, while shortstop Carlos Quintanilla drifted back to make the catch. The two nearly collided but Holliday was able to get his glove on the ball, though he couldn't hold on to it. The ball popped out of Matt's glove and hovered in the air for what seemed like five minutes before he caught it with his bare hand to end the game.

While the loss definitely sucked for the Sox, things could get worse as there's a possibility Paul Konerko will find himself on the disabled list after hurting his ribs in BP, and don't look now but the Tigers have won their last six and are within six games.

NL

  • Cardinals 7 Phillies 6
MLB
  • Indians 7 Padres 3
  • Tigers 5 Dodgers 4
  • Rangers 8 Mets 7
  • Red Sox 9 Reds 0
  • Pirates 5 Orioles 4
  • Marlins 9 Rays 3
  • Brewers 4 Twins 2
  • Yankees 13 Astros 0
  • A's 5 Giants 3
  • Nats 6 Mariners 2
  • Royals 8 DBacks 3
  • Mets 4 Rangers 2
  • Angels 2 Braves 0

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The Basketball Diaries


Los Angeles Lakers 103 Boston Celtics 98 (Celtics lead series 3-2)


The Boston Celtics will have to wait a couple more days before they begin celebrating their latest NBA championship. For a while I thought they would be celebrating on Sunday night, as the fourth quarter of game five looked awfully familiar for a while. The Lakers had a 17-point lead after the first quarter, as Kobe scored 15 in the period, but Boston fought back to make it a three-point game at the half.

Considering that the Celtics had won every third quarter in the series, I fully expected Boston to take the game over after the half, but the Lakers came out of the locker room and built the lead back up to double digits again.

But then that fourth quarter came along, and Boston began chipping away again. Finally, with four and a half minutes left, Kevin Garnett hit a jumper from the circle to tie the game at 90. Unlike in game four, though, the Lakers kept their cool. It was back and forth from there, as the Celtics managed to stay within a basket for the next four minutes until Kobe poked the ball away from Paul Pierce as he drove to the basket (which the Lakers just can't keep him from doing) and ended up with a breakaway dunk in the final minute that put the game out of reach.

Kobe finished the game with 25 points, but it was that steal (one of the five Kobe had on Sunday) and the following dunk that counted more than anything. Pau Gasol had his best game of the series, finishing with 19 points, 13 rebounds, and 6 assists, and Lamar Odom finally showed up as well, dropping in 20 points of his own, grabbing 11 boards, and blocking four shots.

"In training camp if you told us, 'We'll give you two games that you have to win to win a world championship,' we would have taken it in a heartbeat," Bryant said. "This is a great opportunity for us."

Sorry, Kobe, but I just don't see it happening. All Sunday will prove to be is a stay of execution. Even though the Celtics lost last night, they still looked like the better team. Paul Pierce had 38 points, 6 rebounds, and 8 assists, and I'm not sure the Lakers defense is capable of stopping him.

This series will end on Tuesday night.

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Saturday, June 14, 2008

J.J.Putz Needs a Little R and R

Things just keep going along greatly for the Seattle Mariners this season. The team has the worst record in baseball, their manager and general manager could get fired any second now, and the organization is thinking about blowing the whole thing up and starting over (I wish them good luck finding anybody on the team they can trade, maybe Raul Ibanez).

To make matters worse for Seattle, they just had to place closer J.J. Putz on the disabled list for the second time this season with a bad elbow...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Scott Kazmir Gets The Party Started

One of my favorite things to do on YouTube is search for incredibly lame commercials from other local markets that star famous athletes. Whether it's Joel Zumaya shilling for Comcast Cable, or every athlete in Washington trying to sell you a car, I find them all entertaining.

So when I saw this commercial of Rays pitcher Scott Kazmir coming to the aid of two Rays fans (the Rays have fans! Who knew!?) having trouble with their grill, there was just no way I couldn't share it with you. There's no need to thank me, I do it because I love you.

See the video at FanHouse

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Junior Has His Eyes on Tampa

Now that Ken Griffey Jr. has surpassed the 600 home run milestone, and the Reds are sitting in last place in the NL Central (though they're only three games under), if there's ever going to be a time when Cincinnati would trade Junior, this is it. Griffey has already gone on record as saying that he expects to be traded this season, but since he has a no-trade clause, he's going to have a say in where he's going.

One of those places Junior would consider? According to SI's Jon Heyman, Tampa is looking nice this time of year...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Friday, June 13, 2008

High Five

A brief tour of the interweb while sensing we might have gotten an insight last night into Kobe Bryant's childhood

  1. A White Sox/Cubs World Series? The chatter begins. [Tremendous Upside Potential]
  2. Well, now we know Vinnie Del Negro ain't David Copperfield. But is he D'Antoni Lite? [We are the Postmen]
  3. The Chicago State baseball coach (Chicago State has a baseball team?!?) got caught with lipstick on his resume. [Babes Love Baseball]
  4. David Ortiz's bery special U.S. citizenship test. [The Dugout]
  5. A newspaper columnist who actually gets it about bloggers. [Sports Tribune]

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Asshole Of The Week: Cedric Benson

Welcome to Asshole Of The Week, where every Friday your trusty Foul Balls editor picks out the one person from the previous seven days who makes him think, "Man, what an asshole." It could be anybody from an athlete, an owner, someone in the media, or just anybody who happens to catch my ire.

Yeah, so unlike last week, there wasn't any trouble trying to figure out who this week's Asshole Of The Week was going to be. No, Cedric Benson basically jumped way ahead out of the pack early Saturday morning when he was pulled over in Austin, Texas and hit with a drunken driving charge, and he never looked back.

I should start this off by saying that while I'm a little angry with Benson for what he did, I'm not naming him AOTW out of that anger. No, I'm naming Cedric the AOTW because he let me down. When the news first broke about the incident on the boat, I was immediately suspicious of what had happened.

So while every columnist in Chicago came firing out with the "Cedric Benson Must Go" pieces before any actual information surrounding the case came out, I posed the question that maybe Cedric was getting screwed, and perhaps that the whole truth wasn't being told by the police.

After all, it's not exactly crazy to think that a rich black man in Texas, and one who is pretty well known in the Austin area, might get some undeserved harassment from law enforcement once in a while. It's a part of our society and culture that these types of things do happen, no matter how hard we try to pretend that they don't.

So even though Cedric sucks at what he's paid to do, play football, I didn't think it was fair to immediately ride him out of town over one shady incident.

Then the witnesses came forward, corroborating Cedric's story, but you never read any columns about those.

Now, it wasn't exactly easy for me to stick by Benson through all of this, because I am a Bears fan after all. I do watch the games, and I do know that he sucks. Hard. I know that he was a waste of a draft pick and about $14 million., but that doesn't mean we should give up on that old "innocent until proven guilty" thing that's been so popular here in America all these years.

So when Cedric's dumb ass got into that car after having a few drinks and dinner with his girlfriend, his stupidity hurt me. It made me look stupid (well, stupider than usual) for ever defending him. I mean, really, how dumb can Benson be? It had hardly been a month since the incident on the boat, and you're going to get into a car after drinking? In the same damn town where there are cops whom you've been labeling as racists the last four weeks?

How dumb can one man be?

Call a freaking cab, man!

Then to make things worse, Cedric's lawyer, Sam Bassett, comes out saying that if you see the video of Benson's arrest that it's obvious Cedric wasn't that drunk. Really Sam? Because if you read Cedric's official statement after the incident, he admits he did drink and drive.

"I apologize for making the poor decision to drink and drive," Benson said in the statement. "Given the incident last month, it was a particularly bad decision. I have no excuse for this lack of judgment. Though I strongly believe that I am not guilty of any crime, I realize that the public and the Bears organization hold me to a higher standard. Though my local attorneys will continue to work hard to prove my innocence, I confess to using poor judgment. Please accept my deepest apology."

See! He said it right there in that first sentence. He made the poor decision to drink and drive. You're defense for this is that he wasn't that drunk? Christ, I hope nobody ever hires you to defend them on a murder charge.

"Yes, your honor, my client did stab the victim in the throat but he didn't stab her that hard. It was just a glancing blow."

Whether Cedric was actually drunk by his standards or not, as I know there are many of us who can drink a lot more than the legal limit and not be effected, all that matters is that he was drunk by the law's standards. There aren't different requirements for each and every person.

So Cedric, for making another stupid decision in what's been a long line of them, for making me look stupider than usual, and for making the decision to hire a lawyer that's actually stupider than you, you've earned the honor of being this week's Asshole Of The Week. Go out and get drunk to celebrate.

Just leave the car keys (and the boat keys) at home.

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The Cubs Kick It Old School



I had no idea that the Cubs were planning on doing the old-school 1948 style broadcast on Thursday, and since I was watching the White Sox lose to the Tigers at the time, before I'd heard about it they'd switched back over to good ol' high definition and color.

Still, I'll admit that the presentation was kind of cool, though I don't know that I could have watched an entire game with just the three camera angles. Had they not invented a camera that could work behind home plate in 1948? Was the gravity so close to the earth so strong back then that it would tear the camera apart?

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Patrick Kane Is a Winner

While the Bulls can't seem to do anything right these days. They've taken any kind of goodwill they may have garnered by landing the first pick in the draft and thrown it out the window after Jerry Reinsdorf spent too much time worrying about his feelings for Doug Collins, and then hired Vinny Del African-American instead.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the United Center where they keep the guys with the funny accidents and mullets, the Blackhawks have been doing just about everything right. They missed the playoffs this season, but they stole all the winter attention away from the Bulls with their improved play and public relations.

Now next season all of their games will be televised, and they'll even be playing the Red Wings at Wrigley Field. All of which means I'm going to be spending a lot more of my time watching the Blackhawks next season, and of course, that would mean seeing a lot more of the new Calder Trophy winner, Patrick Kane.

...when 18-year-old forward Patrick Kane of the Chicago Blackhawks won the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year.

Kane led rookies with 72 points, including 21 goals. He is the first Blackhawks player to win the trophy since goalie Ed Belfour in the 1990-91 season. Kane, who had the best first month by a rookie since 1992 when he posted 16 points in October, topped Chicago linemate Jonathan Toews and Capitals center Nicklas Backstrom for the award.

As mentioned in the quote, Chicago's other kid, Jonathan Toews finished in second place, and had he not missed a month due to injury he probably would have won the award. Not to say that Patrick didn't deserve it, but he seemed to wear down toward the end of the season a bit (he is rather small), while Toews finished pretty strong. Either way, the future of Blackhawks hockey keeps looking better everyday.

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Morning Wood



Chicago Cubs 3 Atlanta Braves 2 11 inn

And with that, Cubs fans have officially gotten over their hatred for Jim Edmonds (though I keep on keepin on with it), and are welcoming him into Cubdumb with open arms, as he damn near single-handedly delivered the Cubs eleventh straight home victory and finish a sweep of the Atlanta Braves.

I say he damn near did it on his own because Carlos Zambrano deserves some credit of his own, after pitching seven innings and keeping the Cubs in the game. It wasn't Z's sharpest outing, but the only real mistake he made was the two-run homer to Jeff Francouer in the 2nd inning.

The Cubs lineup was able to get runners on base, but couldn't push anyone across the plate until Edmonds' sac fly brought Aramis Ramirez home to get the Cubs on the board, and obviously Edmonds would tie it in the 9th.

After that, Kerry Wood came on and pitched two very solid innings to pick up the win after Aramis Ramirez scored the game-winning run when Reed Johnson was hit in the leg by a pitch with the bases loaded and nobody out in the 11th inning.

Detroit Tigers 2 Chicago White Sox 1


You really have to feel bad for Mark Buehrle sometimes. He hasn't had the best season in 2008 by any standards, and has gotten roughed up on a few different occasions. Still, there have been a few times this season when he's been brilliant and gotten absolutely screwed.

Like that one time in Toronto when he pitched eight innings and allowed only five hits and no earned runs only to pick up a loss as the Sox went down 2-0. There was the start against Indians when he threw seven innings of two-hit ball but didn't factor into the decision as the Sox went on to win that game 3-1.

Yesterday was another one of those games for Mark.

Buehrle lasted eight innings on Thursday afternoon, and allowed only one run while striking out six, but got no support from his offense which continues to struggle on the road. Then in the bottom of the 9th, Miguel Cabrera hit a walk-off home run against Octavio Dotel to finish the sweep for the Tigers.

The Sox only managed to plate six runs in the series, and have now lost their last six road contests, averaging 1.67 runs a game. That's generally not going to get the job done. Thankfully, they return home to face the Rockies and Pirates for six games this week before going to Wrigley.

AL

  • Royals 6 Rangers 5
  • Red Sox 9 Orioles 2
  • Indians 12 Twins 2
  • Yankees 4 A's 1
NL
  • Pirates 7 Nats 5
  • DBacks 5 Mets 4
  • Brewers 9 Astros 6
  • Giants 10 Rockies 7
  • Padres 9 Dodgers 0
  • Reds 6 Cardinals 2
  • Phillies 3 Marlins 0

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The Basketball Diaries



Boston Celtics 97 Los Angeles Lakers 91 (Celtics lead series 3-1)

For the first three games of this series, the Lakers we were seeing were not the Lakers we had seen throughout these playoffs. Sure, they won game three on Tuesday night, but it wasn't exactly a pretty effort. Kobe had to do it all by himself (okay, with help from Sasha Vujacic), and even though Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett had off nights themselves, the Lakers were only able to manage a six-point win.

I said in the last Diaries that it wasn't a good sign for the Lakers, but then they came out on Thursday night and told me what I could do with my signs. The Lakers came out on fire, and before I knew what hit me, the score was 89-2 Lakers . Okay, so it wasn't that big as LA led 34-13 after the first, but the Lakers had a 24-point lead in the second quarter, and led by as many as 20 in the third.

Then the Celtics rallied.

Boston outscored Los Angeles 57-33 in the second half to put a choke hold on the NBA crown. Paul Pierce had 20 points and 7 assists, and KG finished with 16 and 11 boards, but it was Ray Allen who had the biggest night for the men in green. Allen finished with 19 points and 9 rebounds, played all 48 minutes, and made two big shots in the final minutes (including a blow by on Vujacic that put the game out of reach) to go along with a solid effort on the defensive end as well.

Still, while the big three had strong nights, it was Boston's bench that made the difference. While benches generally play better on their home court, the Lakers got no support from their reserves, as they only contributed 15 points. Compare that to James Posey and Eddie House who had 18 and 11 respectively for the Celtics.

It's at this point that I should mention that no team has ever come back from being down 3-1 in the NBA Finals, and going off of what we've seen in this series so far, I see no reason to think that the Lakers will be the first team to do it. They may win game six on Sunday (another damn two day break), but there's no chance they're going to go into Boston and win two games.

Beantown is only a few days away from another championship banner. Thank God the Patriots lost the Super Bowl.

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Thursday, June 12, 2008

High Five

A quick look around the interweb while hoping the White Sox can salvage the rubber game in Detroit

  1. Man I'm loving what's going on at Indiana right now. [Storming the Floor]
  2. Even his friends on PTI are giving Mike Wilbon crap for those photos of him drunk with porn stars that surfaced. All of which will no doubt help Mike get over his distaste for blogs. [Deadspin]
  3. Are you like me and incredibly good-looking? Do you go to baseball games? Do you have a camera? Well then, my friend, you can win money! [Babes Love Baseball]
  4. Why Cubs fans shouldn't be panicking. [FanHouse]
  5. This would make a ton of money. [Kissing Suzy Kolber]

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Victor Martinez to Undergo MRI on Elbow

The Cleveland Indians haven't been having much luck with elbows lately, as the team recently found out they've lost starter Jake Westbrook for the season with an elbow problem, and now elbow problems may rob them of Victor Martinez for some time.

While it initially seemed like Martinez had re-injured the hamstring that landed him on the disabled list earlier in the year when he had to leave Wednesday night's game after running out a ground ball to first, it turns out that Victor aggravated an elbow injury he's been dealing with for a while now...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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NAACP Takes Offense at Bulls Coaching Hire

While the NBA is currently doing everything it can to combat the latest allegations by former referee Tim Donaghy that the league ordered officials to alter the outcome of a playoff game between the Los Angeles Lakers and San Antonio Spurs, it's not the only controversy taking place in the sport right now.

Yesterday one of the NBA's biggest franchises, the Chicago Bulls, announced the hiring of their new head coach Vinny Del Negro. While the press conference the team held at the Berto Center in Deerfield went smoothly to those watching at home, viewers weren't aware of the protest going on outside the Berto Center's walls.

The protest was led by Reverend Jesse Jackson and members of the NAACP, as the crowd gathered to let the Bulls know they did not support the hiring of Del Negro, nor do they appreciate the message it's sending.

"It's sad really, that in this day and age we are still forced to deal with ignorance such as this," said Jackson. "When I hear the word 'negro' it immediately brings back memories of times that were not the proudest in our countries' history. I think of the dark days in America's past.

"The fact that the Chicago Bulls, the same organization responsible for bringing us African-American heroes such as Michael Jordan, would hire a man with such an ignorant last name baffles me. The audacity of such a move, the sheer atrociousness. The supercalifragilisticexpialodociousness, it's too much to handle and we demand a change."

John Paxson is the general manager of the Chicago Bulls, and thus was responsible for the hire, and says that there is no racial intent in signing Del Negro to be his next head coach.

"While I respect and sympathize with the feelings of Mr. Jackson and the NAACP, I'm not quite sure I understand what all the fuss is about. Okay, so his last name has the word 'negro' in it, it's totally different. It's not the 'negro' that was used to describe African-Americans for so long in this country, in fact, it doesn't even sound the same. It's the Spanish 'negro', which means black."

Still, that reasoning doesn't fly with the protestors. Marcus Allen, a 22-year old African American Bulls fan from nearby suburban Bellwood was one of many who weren't buying it.

"That's a bunch of bull, man," said Allen. "The dude is white. How he gonna have the name Negro? Don't give me that spanish crap, neither, because Del Negro is spanish for 'of the black.' Look at this dude, what the hell about him is 'of the black'?

"You don't see any black coaches in this league named Johnny Crackers do you? It's bull, man."

While Del Negro preferred to spend most of his time answering questions about basketball, he couldn't escape all the inquiries into his last name.

"I don't know about you, but when I was born, the doctor didn't slap me on my ass and then ask me what I wanted to be called. That was my parents name, and they passed it on to me. But whatever, I'm just happy to be here. I'll change my name to Vinny Del African-American if it will make people happy. I just want to win."

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Mike Scioscia Has Fat Fingers

You know, every year before the baseball season starts I make my predictions for the season just like every other baseball fan. While I try to mix things up and try to be the "genius" who picked that annual dark horse that surprises everybody, when it comes to the AL West I'm pretty basic. I just pick the Angels.

I've picked the Angels to win the division every season for the last four years, and have even had them going to the World Series twice. The reason for this? Well, besides the fact that they have a pretty good team year in and year out, they also have the man whom I feel is the best manager in the game sitting in their dugout: Mike Scioscia....

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Rick Sutcliffe Is In Love

It was pretty nice to have Rick Sutcliffe back in the booth covering a baseball game after his current battle with cancer, but you know what's nicer than that? Having Erin Andrews in the park with you and looking good.

Not even Rick gave a crap about his cancer last night, choosing to spend his time hitting on Erin instead.



Some people have taken offense at the way Sutcliffe acted last night, and the way people have treated Erin in general, but it's hard for me to get mad at Rick for it. God knows if I was around her I'd be trying to do the same damn thing, except I wouldn't fail because I'm so handsome. Seriously, I'm known to my friends as Handsome McGorgeousface, and while my friends are mostly a bunch of sarcastic pricks, I'm pretty sure they're being genuine when they call me that.

Via Deadspin

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On Deck: Return of the Peavy


As much of a disappointment as the 2008 season has been for the San Diego Padres, looking at the big picture, things aren't nearly as bad as they seem. They've won five of their last six games, and even though they're still nine games under .500, they play in the NL West so they're still alive.

The Diamondbacks have plummeted back to earth after starting out so hot this season, and the Friars find themselves only 6.5 games out of first place. If San Diego's offense could ever manage to consistently score some runs, the Padres could find themselves right back in the thick of things.

Of course, it's entirely possible they could do it without their offense as they get their ace back on the mound this afternoon. Will Jake Peavy's return be the spark the Pads need?

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Morning Wood


Chicago Cubs 7 Atlanta Braves 2

Okay, so let's start with the good news. The Cubs won their 10th straight on Wednesday night against the Braves behind Ryan Dempster's first complete game since 2002. Ryan allowed only four hits, walked none, and struck out eleven.

"It's hard to sit back and enjoy the victory when one of your best players, one of the leaders of your team, goes down. He's proven in the past he's a pretty darn quick healer," Dempster added. "It's up to the other guys to pick him up."

Ah yes, that's the bad news. Alfonso Soriano got hit by a pitch in the second inning and has a broken bone in his hand that could cause him to miss six weeks. Obviously, this isn't a good thing, but I also think that the Cubs offense is strong enough to survive without Soriano, so it may not be all that horrible.

The sick part is I was checking email on my phone from work last night when I saw a message from Eamonn saying he was trying his best to stifle laughter over Albert Pujols going on the disabled list. I responded to it by reminding him to never underestimate the Cubs ability to fuck things up.

It wasn't five minutes that passed before I got the email about Soriano getting hit in the hand.

Detroit Tigers 5 Chicago White Sox 1


Uh oh, the Sox have lost two in a row to the Tigers now, so Ozzie better find something to get super pissed about real quick. The game was over pretty quickly when a dropped throw by Orlando Cabrera in the second inning preceded a hanging breaking ball to Marcus Thames that he deposited in the left field seats for a three-run homer.

The way that Justin Verlander pitched for the Tigers, those were all the runs that Detroit needed. Verlander went the distance against the Sox, allowing only four hits and a run while striking out three in what was his best start of the season.

"Those guys have had my number for two years, so it's nice to be able to go out and give the team a lift when they needed it," Verlander said.

While I'm not exactly worrying or anything, it's important that the Sox walk away with at least one win in this series this afternoon. The Tigers are pretty much buried in the AL Central, and you don't want to give them any confidence by letting them complete the sweep.

AL

  • Mariners 2 Blue Jays 1
  • Angels 4 Rays 2
  • Red Sox 6 Orioles 3
  • Twins 8 Indians 5
  • Rangers 11 Royals 5
  • A's 8 Yankees 4
NL
  • Pirates 3 Nats 1
  • Cardinals 10 Reds 0
  • Mets 5 DBacks 3
  • Marlins 6 Phillies 2
  • Brewers 10 Astros 6
  • Rockies 1 Giants 0
  • Padres 4 Dodgers 1

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Wednesday, June 11, 2008

High Five

A quick look around the interweb while waiting to be introduced to Vinny Del African-American's hair

  1. Big Daddy Drew has outed himself, is a lot like Chris Berman. [FanHouse]
  2. Manny Acta should probably expect some disturbing text messages, dawg. [Deadspin]
  3. Cedric Benson has already found something to help pass the time. [Serious Sports News Network]
  4. Albert Pujols could be headed towards the disabled list. [Babes Love Baseball]
  5. Jeff Van Gundy was on fire last night. [With Leather]

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Meet Your Newest Cuban Import

Baseball just held it's amateur draft last week, and teams all around the league now have their newest prospects to over-hype before trading them away and watching them become nothing in other cities. It's a wonderful tradition in the sport of baseball, right up there doubleheaders and bench-clearing brawls.

Of course, another one of baseball's oldest most grand traditions is players escaping from Cuba and coming to America in hopes of achieving their dreams of becoming Major League Baseball players. You're newest Cuban import is 19-year old Dayan Viciedo...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Tim Donaghy Is Not Going Down Quietly

It's been a while since I mentioned former NBA referee Tim Donaghy. In case you've forgotten about him, Donaghy is the one who was betting on NBA games he was working, which is generally not the type of thing that leagues like to have happen. Neither do the authorities, since Donaghy is currently awaiting his sentencing after being convicted as part of a FBI gambling sting.

When the news first surfaced last year, NBA commissioner David Stern did a very good job of sweeping it back under the rug just as quickly as it appeared, and the story kind of faded. Well, now Donaghy has lifted that rug and is starting to kick the dirt and dust everywhere.

NBA officials allegedly told referees not to call technical fouls on star players so that ticket sales and TV ratings of the games wouldn't be affected, a disgraced former ref told the FBI according to court filings Tuesday.

The bombshell letter filed in Brooklyn federal court by the defense attorney for referee Timothy Donaghy contained claims of favoritism, improper gratuities, conflict of interest, blown foul calls and alleged interference by league officials in the work of refs in the NBA.

Donaghy also told the FBI that a couple of referees appeared to cook up foul calls in a 2002 NBA playoff game in order to have the series go a seventh game.

The only seven-game series in the entire 2002 playoffs was between the Los Angeles Lakers and Sacramento Kings in the Western Conference finals. The Lakers won Games 6 and 7 to advance to the NBA Finals.
I remember that series, and it was a great one, so if the refs had anything to do with it I'd like to thank them. Of course, rumors that the NBA refs have fixed games aren't anything new, especially amongst fans of losing teams, so none of this is all that shocking.

If it turns out that everything Donaghy is claiming is true, then I wouldn't be surprised, though there's no doubt that it could destroy the league's image. That being said, we must remember that Donaghy is currently awaiting his sentencing. People will say anything they can at that point to help authorities and hopefully lessen their punishment, whether it's true or not.

Either way, I highly doubt this is the last we'll be hearing about it.

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Firesale in Detroit?


Now that we're almost halfway through June and the Detroit Tigers still haven't shown any signs of coming to life this season, it probably isn't that crazy to think that it's just not going to happen this year. Despite all the veteran talent on the Tigers roster, there just haven't been any signs that things are going to turn around. If anything, it seems as though things are only going to start getting worse.

Jeremy Bonderman is done for the season and could miss the start of next season as well, and Dontrelle Willis has pitched so well he's been sent down to single-A in hopes that he can find home plate while he's there. It's enough to make you wonder when the Tigers are going to wave the white flag...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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The Evolution of the Fist Bump



I'm incredibly grateful for the way that the fist bump has taken over as our preferred method of acknowledging the presence of others. Frankly, the pelvic thrusts that ruled the day before it made me uncomfortable.

(Via Deadspin and FanHouse)

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On Deck: Aces Wild


Looking around today's schedule there just isn't a better matchup than the one in Los Angeles this afternoon, whether you're looking at it based on the strength of the two teams playing, or at the starting pitching matchups. The Angels and Rays will finish their three-game set in Anaheim with the rubber game this afternoon.

Neither of today's starters were available to their team to start the season, but ever since John Lackey and Scott Kazmir have rejoined their teams rotations they've both been the dominant aces their squads need to contend.

Today they square off against each other for the first time.

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Morning Wood


Detroit Tigers 6 Chicago White Sox 4

Okay, so I'll take the blame for this one. I knew when I featured the White Sox in On Deck yesterday that it was going to end the win streak. I even said so in the damn post, but I did it anyway. Why? I don't know. Maybe I just don't want to be happy, or maybe there were just no good matchups on the schedule yesterday and I couldn't find any other interesting stories.

Whatever it was, it put an end to the win streak as Jose Contreras looked awfully mediocre again last night, and the Sox couldn't find the magic. Contreras lasted 6 innings and allowed 6 runs in his worst start in a while, as the Tigers singled him to death with 13 hits.

Though, to be fair, one of those runs should have never been scored against Jose, but Ozzie sent him out to start the seventh inning for some reason after he struggled in the sixth.

As for the offense, Jim Thome homered and went 3-for-4, and Alexei Ramirez had another good night, but the Sox gave a few runs away in this game. Orlando Cabrera was thrown out foolishly trying to steal third in the first inning, ruining a scoring opportunity, and then Carlos Quentin was thrown out at the plate on a Thome single in the 7th inning on a play when Jeff Cox should have held him at third. (Which came a mere minutes after Cox held Pierzynski at third on a hit he probably could have scored rather easily on.)

"We were just one hit away from winning this game," Chicago manager Ozzie Guillen said. And a couple of dumb decisions.

Chicago Cubs 10 Atlanta Braves 5


Let's see, the Cubs are one of baseball's best teams at home, and the Braves are baseball's worst team on the road. How did you think this one was going to go?

After Ted Lilly struggled in the first inning and gave up a quick three runs, the Cubs were able to battle back with five runs in the next three innings and pick up their 41st victory of the season. Derrek Lee homered to tie the game at three, but it was Geovany Soto's three-run blast in the 8th inning that blew this game open and won it for the Cubs.

"It's something we talked about in the spring, playing better at home," said Lee. "I don't know if we expected to play this well at home, but it's been fun."

As for the Braves, Tom Glavine had to leave after three innings with a sore elbow, and was immediately placed on the disabled list after the game. This on the same day John Smoltz had shoulder surgery that will end his season, if not his career.

AL

  • Orioles 10 Red Sox 6
  • Indians 1 Twins 0
  • Jays 3 Mariners 1
  • Rangers 6 Royals 5
  • Angels 6 Rays 1
  • Yankees 3 A's 1
NL
  • Nats 7 Pirates 6
  • Cardinals 7 Reds 2
  • DBacks 9 Mets 5
  • Marlins 5 Phillies 4
  • Astros 6 Brewers 1
  • Rockies 10 Giants 5
  • Dodgers 7 Padres 2

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The Basketball Diaries


Los Angeles Lakers 87 Boston Celtics 81 (Celtics lead series 2-1)


Kobe Bryant reminded us why he is the MVP on Tuesday night, as he kept the Lakers championship hopes alive by getting the Lakers on the board for the first time this series. On a night where basically everybody in a Lakers jersey forgot to show up, Kobe took it all upon his own shoulders and held off the Celtics.

Kobe finished with 36 points and 7 rebounds, and unlike the first two games in Boston, spent his night attacking the basket instead of settling for jump shots most of the night. He only had one assist, but it wasn't because he was hogging the ball as much as it was his teammates sucked. Aside from Sasha Vujacic, who finished with 20 points and hit some big shots late, Kobe didn't get much help from anyone else. The other four Lakers starters combined for a total of 22 points between them.

"What I tried to do with my teammates is just stay calm," he said. "It wasn't the end of the world. They did a great job of defending home court. We knew we had to come here and do the same. They feed off of my confidence and I have all the confidence in the world that we can come here and win."

Ray Allen led the Celtics with 25 points, and much like Kobe, he didn't get much from his teammates either. Kevin Garnett had 12 boards, but only scored 13 points, and Paul Pierce could only manage 6 points. Together, KG and Pierce shot 8-for-35 from the field, yet somehow the Celtics were within two points late in the game. On the road.

That's not a good sign for the Lakers.

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

High Five

A quick look around the interweb while waiting for Vinny Del Negro to change his mind

  1. Yankees fans are literally booing the sun. [Lion in Oil]
  2. Those Oakland A's of old really knew how to lift weights. [Deadspin]
  3. What's the best ballpark food? [Endless Simmer]
  4. Jon Gruden hurt Chris Simms' feelings. [Kissing Suzy Kolber]
  5. Obviously he needed it for all those 15-year old girls. [Rumors and Rants]

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On Deck: All Ur Baseball R Belong 2 Chicago


It's been a pretty crazy couple of weeks to be a sports fan in Chicago, what with Cedric Benson's never-ending quest to drive every type of vehicle ever created while drunk (next week: Cedric attempts to ride a unicycle while drinking an entire bottle of Grey Goose!), and of course, the fiasco that has been the Bulls off-season (no wonder Derrick Rose and Michael Beasley are spending so much time talking about how much better a player the other one is).

Thankfully for Chicagoans, there's baseball. It's not often in June that Chicago can call itself the home of two first place teams, but that's exactly what's happening right now as the Cubs have the best record in baseball and the White Sox are currently riding a seven-game win streak to move 6.5 games in front of the Twins in the AL Central.

Will anything be able to stop the runaway train that is Chicago baseball right now, or are we destined for an all-Chicago World Series?

Continue reading at FanHouse

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The White Sox Brotherhood of Toby Hall's Traveling Pants

It's not exactly a secret that baseball players, and athletes in general, are a superstitious bunch. A player can eat a bucket of fried chicken before a game and then go 3-for-4 with a home run and 4 runs driven in that night, and you know what he'll be eating the next day. That very same bucket of chicken, from the same restaurant, and he'll probably eat each piece in precisely the same order.

After all, it wasn't those hours in the film room or the batting cage that helped the player break out of his slump, it was that delicious KFC. It's ridiculous when you look at it objectively, but at the same time, it makes a lot of sense. Success in sports for an athlete is largely dependent on that athlete's mental makeup...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Seriously, Nobody Likes Jay Mariotti

He may be psychic and all, but it's still a fact that nobody likes Jay Mariotti. I don't like him. You don't like him. Other blogs don't like him, hell, I wouldn't be surprised if his own mother didn't like him.

Now, though, now it's becoming a lot more apparent that his co-workers don't like him either. You may remember last week when I thanked the Sun-Times Chris DeLuca for calling Jay out in a column for his opinion that the White Sox should fire Ozzie Guillen, and I gave Chris credit for finally coming out and saying what most of us have thought about Jay for a while.

Well, it turns out that Chris wasn't the only Sun-Times columnist ready to take Jay to task last week, as Mariotti's long-time enemy Rick Telander wanted to say something as well. The paper just wouldn't let him.

From the Tribune's Teddy Greenstein.

Now Mariotti is taking body blows from his own colleagues at the Sun-Times. The situation heated up to the point that Editor-in-Chief Michael Cooke stepped in last week to symbolically separate Mariotti from fellow sports columnist Rick Telander, after Sun-Times editors refused to run columns Telander filed for the Wednesday and Friday papers.

The conflict started after Mariotti wrote last week of Guillen: "As you may have noticed through the years, I am the Blizzard's only critic in the Chicago media, mostly because my soft colleagues either fear Guillen's wrath, enjoy how he rips me, work for one of the Reinsdorf-controlled broadcast outlets or are afraid of getting on the chairman's bad side."

The next day, Sun-Times national baseball writer Chris De Luca led his column this way: "The same critics who avoid ever stepping into the White Sox's clubhouse are calling the Chicago media soft for not skewering manager Ozzie Guillen. They want Guillen fired yesterday. Sounds tough, but the rhetoric comes up a little, well, soft."

Telander also believed Mariotti had unfairly impugned his reputation and fired back in a Wednesday column that got spiked (edit. note: that means it got dropped), according to media insiders. The paper explained to its readers in a box that Telander was taking the day off.

"I'm a big boy and I can handle this," [Telander] said. "The people I feel sorry for are the hard-working, talented journalists at the Sun-Times like Chris De Luca, Joe Cowley, Toni Ginnetti, Gordon Wittenmyer, Carol Slezak and Greg Couch."
Gotta love that extra rip on Mariotti by Telander at the end. What I'm wondering, though, is why the Sun-Times doesn't play this feud up. God knows the paper is struggling as everyday it seems to be a few pages thinner, and playing up something like this might actually help to sell more papers. I know I'd enjoy it.

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Gil Meche Isn't Going Anywhere

Kansas City Royals starter Gil Meche hasn't exactly been living up to that $11 million price tag of his this season. Meche is 3-8 with an ERA of 5.54, a WHIP of 1.47, and nearly halfway to matching last season's walk total of 62 already.

So when a pitcher costs a lot, is struggling, and plays for a small budget team who is in last place, the rumors start to swirl that he may soon be on the move. This is the case for Meche as teams like the Cubs are interested in his services...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Jay Mariotti Is Psychic



While I'm not exactly excited by the fact that the Bears released Cedric Benson yesterday (bring on the Matt Forte Era!), it wasn't shocking news to me when I saw the email on my phone last night. Still, I had no idea that it would be Jay Mariotti who made the decision for the Bears.

It's pretty obvious that the man is getting too much power. As soon as he demands Cedric's release-BAM-it shows up on the news ticker that he's been released. Maybe I should start being nicer to Jay.

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Dontrelle Willis Continues to Suck

When the Tigers traded for both Miguel Cabrera and Dontrelle Willis in the offseason my initial reaction to the deal was about the same as everybody else: holy crap this team is going to be unstoppable. That being said, my fear of the Tigers had a lot more to do with their offense once they placed Cabrera square in the middle of that lineup, and not so much to do with the addition of Willis.

After seeing the way Dontrelle had struggled his last two seasons in Miami, going 22-27 after a 22-10 campaign in 2005, I wasn't exactly convinced he was going to revert back to his old form in Detroit...

Continue reading at FanHouse

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Morning Wood


Chicago White Sox 7 Minnesota Twins 5

What is with teams in this city dominating everybody at home? Before the Cubs took off on their west coast trip, they spent the previous seven days going undefeated at home. Now it's the White Sox who completed a seven-game homestand with a perfect record.

The Sox completed their first four-game sweep of the Minnesota Twins since 1977, and they did it by outscoring the Twins 40-15 in the four games. On the entire homestand they outscored Kansas City and Minnesota 61-26, and the team that used to be dead last in the American League in batting average at .244 has climbed up to seventh in the league and is hitting .259.

Nick Swisher seems to be coming out of his rut, as he hit two homers (one from each side of the plate) on Monday, and has now homered three times in the last two games after hitting only 1 in the entire month of May. Paul Konerko went deep as well, as his opposite field blast in the 7th inning helped the Sox complete the comeback and take the lead for good.

The offense helped out John Danks who had another rough start against the Twins, giving up five runs in six innings, but considering how many wonderful starts the offense has ruined, Danks was owed a game like this.

The Sox now have a 6.5 game lead in the Central, and though it's still only June 10th, considering the injuries the Tigers and Indians just suffered (both Jeremy Bonderman and Jake Westbrook are done for the season) and the fact they're now 20-8 against the AL Central, today is the first day when I honestly think this team is going to win the division.

Of course, now that I said that, they're going to get swept in Detroit and go on a 10-game losing streak.

AL

  • Royals 3 Yankees 2
  • Indians 8 Tigers 2