Archive for February, 2007

Cards at Marlins

Wednesday, February 28th, 2007

El Hombre at VeB found the URL for the gameday stream for today’s game. W00t!

Votes Coming In

Wednesday, February 28th, 2007

Today was the day of the Champaign city council primaries, to cull the field down from nine candidates to six candidates for the real vote in April to elect three at-large council members. Results are starting to post at the Champaign County Clerk’s ‘site. To refresh, I’m hoping that Feinen, Glithero, Henley, and Foster are all among the six on the ballot. With 22 of 40 districts reporting amid extremely low turnout, Feinen and Foster look like they’re in great shape, Henley and Glithero are both in the bottom three, but within distance of the sixth spot. Some good news is that the top three in this primary (with 22 precincts reporting) are Feinenyay!, Brunoboo!, and Fosteryay!.

I’d like to see these guys rent some vans and haul every registered voter they can find smoking out in the street to their polling places. That would be hilarious.

Completely unrelated, but the Walmart on High Cross Road is selling “Unofficial St. Patrick’s Day” T-shirts in order to cash in on this coming Friday’s asinine festivities. That surprised me, but maybe it shouldn’t have.

The final tallies:

Deborah Frank Feinen    1,857   18.57
Thomas A. "Tom" Bruno   1,642   16.42
Karen B. Foster         1,510   15.1 
Giraldo Rosales         1,252   12.52
Patricia A. Avery       1,241   12.41
Annette B. Williams     815     8.15
Michael Henley          774     7.74
Bill Glithero           728     7.28
Freddie Gordon          157     1.57

It’s too bad we couldn’t muster up another 41 Henley supporters.

I Cooked Chili

Tuesday, February 27th, 2007

I took my new slow cooker for its maiden voyage today with a big ol’ batch of chili. This is how I did it.

  • Pour a can of chicken stock and a can of beef stock into the cooker and set it to high. It might not have been a bad idea to heat those up in a saucepan to help the slow cooker get up to heat faster.
  • Cut a large sweet onion into half inch slices. Put all but one of those slices under a broiler along with a few anaheim peppers to char a bit. If you want a lot of heat, use jalapenos or whichever pepper you like.
  • Mince up that last onion slice, a little more garlic than you’d think is enough, and a two or three inch piece of ginger root while heating up some oil in your biggest skillet.
  • Throw about half of your pile of minced onion, garlic, and ginger into the skillet and give the anaheim peppers down in the broiler a quarter turn to char their skins evenly.
  • Once the onions soften, throw a couple pounds of ground beef in the skillet and brown it evenly while breaking it up into little crumbles. I use a bamboo spatula thing for this. Shaking some paprika, salt, and a little bit of hot pepper flakes in that cooking beef is a good idea, too.
  • While that’s going on, keep turning those peppers and pull the suckers out when they’re charred all over. Toss them from the broiler into a paper bag and roll the top closed to seal in the steam. Give it a few shakes and leave it in there for a couple of minutes and the skins will fall off real easy-like. Dice the skinless peppers off and add them to the chili. Open up a couple cans of stewed tomatoes and throw them into slow-cooker with the broth. I used diced tomatoes for this batch, but next time I’ll use whole tomatoes and let them chunk up one stirring. Add a can of tomato paste or two and stir it up. That’ll ensure the chili’s base will taste unimaginably good. The onions should be carmelized down in the broiler, so pull them out and let them cool a bit.
  • The beef is browned, so drain that and throw it in the cooker pot.
  • Start up some fresh oil and throw in the rest of that minced onion/garlic/ginger. When the onions soften, throw a pound of ground pork in the skillet and brown it like you did with the beef, adding paprika and a little salt and pepper. The last time I made chili, I cubed up a pound of pork steak and used that instead of ground beef. If you do it that way, you can savor the difference in meats more easily—whatever your preference. When I was buying groceries for this batch o’ chili, I was strongly tempted to pick up a pound of tripe for a super-tasty third “meat” that would add some serious texture and flavor to the chili. I chose against that since I hope to share this batch with people who may find eating such things repulsive, but I’ll likely do it next time. I’ve never cooked tripe before, but I’d probably slice it up into small squares and sautee it with the onion/ginger/garlic mix like with the pork and beef before adding it to the cooker.
  • By now, the chili in the slow cooker is probably boiling already, or close to it. Put the skillet on the stove for the last time and heat it up with a little oil. Slice up the charred onion sliced and saute ‘em until soft, then throw them into the chili pot. Hopefully, you’ve got some crispy stuff left in the skillet from browning all that beef and pork. Crack open the oldest, skunkiest beer in your fridge and pour it into the skillet. Crack open a decent beer and take a swig, if it’s after noon. Bring the beer in the skillet to a boil and use your spatula to scrape up all the crispy bits into the brew, then pour that into the slow cooker.
  • Stir that up and give it a taste. Add some of your favorite hot sauce. I used a few shakes of el Yucateco Habanero Sauce, less than I would have if this batch was for me alone. Turn the heat down to low, add some bay leaves, and let that stuff simmer for a couple of hours, stirring occasionally.
  • There’s a good chance your wife or someone will sneak a taste of your chili and proclaim that it’s too freaking spicy for them to eat. If this happens and you want to do something about it, here’s a tip that’s worth trying—not sure where I heard it. Pour a tablespoon or two of vegetable oil into the chili and stir it in real good, then let it simmer for a while without stirring it. You see, capsaicin is oil-soluble/hydrophobic, that’s why drinking water doesn’t do a good job of getting an overpoweringly spicy taste out of your mouth, but fat-containing milk works pretty well. If you pour a little oil in there, the capsaicin will get soaked up in the oil and rise to the top of the chili. You can spoon it out and—voila—the chili will be less hot and you’ll have some really nice hot oil that you can use to stir fry a crazy spicy vegetable side later on. I’d refrigerate it, though. I’ve never been married, so I’ve never had to use that trick myself, but I don’t see any problems with the theory.
  • Whenever your patience fails, the chili is ready to eat. You can pick out the bay leaves if you want, but I leave mine in and just avoid them. Turn the slow-cooker down to warm and serve up some chili. I like mine on rice, covered with shredded cheese and a dollop of sour cream.

Now in the summertime, you can do a little better. I like to use roma tomatoes and hot peppers from the garden instead of canned tomatoes and store-bought peppers (you still need the tomato paste, though). Instead of charring the peppers and onion with the broiler, I toast them (and the tomatoes) on the backyard grill. Super tasty.

I thought I’d get into La Russa’s spirit of putting 2006 behind us and focusing on 2007 by replacing my desktop wallpaper (formerly Adam Wainwright on the mound with the team rushing out to tackle him) with the 2007 schedule image from Redbird Central. I don’t know who runs that website, but there’s some good new stuff there.

The Cardinals will have their first real game tomorrow against the Florida Marlins. Last season, MLB.com was providing the gameday data, but no links to the gameday apps for each game. After inducing the naming convention they use, I was able to post links to the gamedays that I’d put on this page and in the comments at VeB. If they only changed the obvious things, it should show up here. I expect to have it figured out by noon, if they are indeed hosting the data again. I’m hoping they beta-test the Enhanced Gameday during Spring Training games. Tangotiger discussed the new system here and Derrick Goold wrote glowingly about it here. The gameday developers have their own blog, too, with plenty of links to other mentions. Alas, no talk of rolling it out for ST that I saw.

One more thing. I find Jill Wagner so attractive that I don’t mind a bit the obnoxious mouseover ads on every webpage hosted by the Post-Dispatch. Ordinarily, they’d piss me off, but when I’m reading an article about Albert Pujols taking BP with wrassler Kurt Angle and suddenly an advertisement covers up the text, my moment of mild irritation disappears when I see that it’s just Jill popping in to say hello and to remind me to buy a Mercury Mariner. I still think it’s hilarious that the only successful advertising campaign any Ford company (not including light trucks) that I can think of can credit only a beautiful model and a boner joke. If they wish to follow up on that success, they might model their next Volvo campaign after this one you probably shouldn’t watch at work.

GAME ON!!!

Monday, February 26th, 2007

It’s sort-of Cardinal baseball, the annual ST kick-off game against Flordia Atlantic University. CSTV’s nifty gametracker is here. The baby Cards are up 1-0 in the bottom of the first, with the bags juiced and two outs.

Wii!

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

The man in this video is brilliant and talented.

Found at the wonderful Wii Have A Problem website, documenting damage done by thrown Wii controllers.

This video made by a friend of mine in the Physics department and a friend of his in Math is pretty doggone cool.

Wedding Bells

Sunday, February 18th, 2007

Rick Ankiel got married this weekend, and it’s likely that his new bride is this former Dolphins cheerleader. Way to go, Rick.

The quotations in this article sure make it sound like Brad Penny is trying to drop his trade value. It would be nice to add a legitimate power pitcher to the rotation, especially if it would reduce some of the logjam of AA-AAA outfielders. He sounds like he’d benefit from Duncan’s tutelage, too. Restoring confidence in one’s pitches is his specialty.

A Much-Needed Morale Booster

Saturday, February 17th, 2007

According to Paul Klee, N-G’s basketball beat writer, Dee Brown and Luther Head are planning to attend Sunday’s game against Northwestern. A Dee Brown pep talk would be a nice shot in the arm after a bleak week, not to mention the effect such a beloved athlete’s presence would have on the crowd. The NBA All-Star game is this weekend, so they have the time off. NBA basketball interests me not the least, but there’ll be a 24-hour Law and Order marathon on TNT afterwards that I’ll no doubt get sucked into. Luther Head and Deron Williams are on the sophomore roster for the rookie game, which went down last night.

Plucking Stars from the Firmament

Saturday, February 17th, 2007

We played a community projection game at VeB for Kip Wells. The idea is for a bunch of people to make blind guesses about how well Wells will perform in 2007 and hope that the wisdom of the masses will give you a reasonable estimate of what he’ll actually do by averaging the guesses. It’s a decent enough way to kill time while waiting for Spring Training games to begin. As is describing in excrutiating detail how I made my guess…

Here’s the line I submitted:

190IP 198H 69BB 140K 18HR 16-9 3.85

You might think that I pulled those numbers straight out of thin air, but it’s less direct than that. I assumed he’d have his first healthy season since 2003, when he pitched in 197 1/3 innings over 31 starts. I assumed that he’d pitch about the same numbers as Jeff Suppan did last season—and used the exact number as Suppan’s 2006, 190.

Once I had assumed how many innings he’d pitch, I could make what I think are pretty good guesses about the rates at which he’ll allow the hits, walks, homers, and how frequently he’ll strike out batters.

Kip Wells has allowed 9.32 hits per nine innings over his MLB career, skewed slightly higher by last season, when he was injured and pitched terribly. In 2003, he allowed 7.8 H/9, as a peak benchmark. I figured he’d be encouraged to induce groundballs—to be aggressive early in the count, to pitch low in the strikezone, to prefer the batter to put a weak ball into play rather than pussy-foot around the zone and end up walking the batter. Inducing groundballs means more hits squirting through the infield, so I made a reasonably conservative rate of 9.4 hits per nine innings, or 1.044 BB/IP. Multiply that walk per inning rate by 190 innings, and you get the 198 hits total.

Wells has historically walked far too many batters. Over his career, he’s walked 4.09 batters per nine innings, compared to Suppan’s 2.95 or Carpenter’s 2.75 BB/9. I figured that if Wells buys into Duncan’s program described in the previous paragraph—and all indications are that he chose to sign with the Cardinals to get with his program—he’ll be working ahead of the count more frequently than in the past and should trust his defense enough to avoid nibbling when he’s behind in the count. I guessed he’d walk significantly fewer batters while recognizing that Wells won’t likely have the same control as Suppan does—I gave him a rate of 3.25 BB/9 or .36 BB/IP. That’s pretty optimistic, that in an average six inning outing, he’d only walk two batters. That works out to 69 walks, given the 190 IP assumption.

Wells is a pretty good strikeout pitcher, much better than Suppan. Between 2002-2004, he struck batters out at rates of 6.08, 6.70, and 7.55 per nine. Kip Wells’ third closest comparable pitcher through age 28 is Jason Schmidt. (I used age 28 instead of 29 since Wells has been injured the last two seasons.) Schmidt’s a better pitcher than Wells, but the similarity is remarkable, in many ways. Schmidt’s peak season was 2003, his age 30 year, and I optimistically guessed that Wells would similarly have a strong year at that age. The rate I guessed was 6.65/9, approximately in the middle of those early years that I believe show his true talent level, if it’s not higher. That worked out to the 140 strikeouts.

Allowing home runs hasn’t been a serious problem for Kip—his career rate is 1.02/9 innings. If he held that rate, he’d allow 22 HR over a 190 IP season. With Busch III being a pitcher’s park and assuming that Wells looks to keep the ball on the ground, I guessed a rate of 0.85 HR/9. That’s Chris Carpenter’s 2006 rate, and in retrospect, that’s too optimistic. I’d be surprised, though, if he didn’t beat that career rate by ten points or so, a difference of 2 HR. Of course, he’ll be helped by not having to face the Cardinals lineup.

I arbitrarily made up the win-loss numbers since I don’t put much significance in pitcher wins. That’d be the same record as Jeff Suppan had in his first season with St. Louis—you may have noticed that I don’t think there’s much difference between Wells and Suppan. Soup has better control, Wells has better stuff.

For the ERA guesstimate, I used a bastardized version of Tangotiger’s FIP formula, using 3.00 as the normalizing term instead of 3.20, to arbitrarily optimistically credit the Cardinals defense.

FIP = (13HR + 3BB - 2K)/IP + 3.00 = (13*18 + 3*69 - 2*140)/190 + 3.00 = 3.847

So yes, I just made those numbers up, but I tried to make reasonably educated guesses based on clearly stated assumptions. It’ll be fun to see whether they were at all close to decent at predicting his actual performance. Hopefully, they do.

East St. Louis

Friday, February 16th, 2007

I found amazing this photographic tour of East St. Louis. It’s hard to imagine that a modern city could turn to ruins in such a short time. Especially remarkable was this adventure inside the abandoned Armour meat packing plant.

Forwards

Thursday, February 15th, 2007

Here’s a forward from my aunt that amused me:

The teacher gave her fifth grade class an assignment. They were to get their parents to tell them a story with a moral at the end of it.The next day the kids came back and one by one began to tell their stories.

“Tony, do you have a story to share?”

“Yes ma’am. My daddy told a story about my Aunt Karen. She was a pilot in Desert Storm and her plane got hit. She had to bail out over enemy territory and all she had was a flask of whiskey, a pistol and a survival knife. She drank the whiskey on the way down so it wouldn’t break and then her parachute landed right in the middle of twenty enemy troops. She shot fifteen of them with the gun until she ran out of bullets, killed four more >with the knife, till the blade broke, and then she killed the last Iraqi with her bare hands.”

“Good Heavens” said the horrified teacher. “What kind of moral did your daddy tell you from this horrible story?”

“Stay the f… away from Aunt Karen when she’s drinking.”

That joke meets the 2-of-6 requirement for a good joke: cute, naughty, and recognizable, for many families.

It’s Poop Again!

Thursday, February 15th, 2007

Watch this wonderfully shot YouTube of a Barbie doll commercial. It introduces Barbie’s pet dog, which eats its own shit. Barbie carries a box of dog shit around with her and puts it in his dog bowl, then he shits it back out. She picks it up with her pooper-scooper and feeds it to him again. I thought it was some kind of elaborate joke, but that’s a real toy.

It’s hard enough to train a dog not to eat his own shit without little girls force feeding the steamy logs to ‘em. Thanks a lot, Mattel.

Here are two idioms that need to be added to the popular lexicon:

Oh, Bob Saget! — An expletive to be used when something terrible happens.

It’s Just Like A Mini-Mart — To be used when you’re trying to convince someone it’s raining when you’re pissing on their head.

Post-Dispatch Commentary for 2/15/07

Thursday, February 15th, 2007

There are three articles of baseball interest posted to the P-D website for tomorrow.

Article #1: Dominican roots proving to be strong for Pujols

El Hombre talks about his foundation‘s trip to the DR, to provide medical care for impoverished children. He gave out his baseball cards to some of the kids. I’ll bet an enterprising collector flies to the DR to buy the cards and sells them on ebay for a substantial markup. Keep an eye out here.

He also mentions that one of his goals is to play in the Dominican Winter League in one of the offseasons ahead. It would surprise me if the Cards wouldn’t let him do it—perhaps as an incentive to signing a contract extension. (2012 will be here all too soon! How about an option year?!?!)

Article #2: Looper’s a man on a mission

Joe Strauss is a damned fine writer—he should be proud of that piece, in which he cleverly tied together two notable, but unrelated stories. The baseball related story has to do with Looper’s transition to starting pitching. I like the attitude he has coming across in these stories—he’s got a chip on his shoulder from the ubiquitous (save for Duncan) doubt that he has the ability to pitch six or seven innings every five days. He sounds stoked. This is the first spring training he’s been to in the aughts where he’s competing for a job and he sounds like he’s thriving in it. Strauss mentions Looper’s second-half split vs. lefties: (.196/.305/.255, 9:8 K:BB, 3IBB). There are two Looper quotations towards the end of the article. The first I like, referring to his historically bad performance versus left-handed batters:

“It’s not different than for a guy like Weaver last year. His numbers were the same or worse against lefties than mine, and you saw what he did. I think it’ll be fun to work with Dunc’ and Marty.

I’m sure he didn’t mean that as a diss on JeffWea, but it does complement nicely Scott Boras’ comment overreacting to the minor backlash after Weaver signed with Seattle:

The fact is, they (the World! Champion! Cardinals!) weren’t even close. Jeff gave St. Louis every opportunity. We let them know what Jeff’s market was. Their response was to make an offer literally appropriate for a relief pitcher.

It wouldn’t cause my top to turn if Looper ends up putting together a better season as a starting pitcher than JeffWea for about the same base salary, since Weaver’s problems against lefthanders were a huge problem until (my guess) Carpenter taught him how to pitch inside to the freaks. (Just kidding, to you lovely southpaws out there.) The difference, though, is that the contract offer to Weaver had a base salary comparable to Loopers with the possibility of nearly doubling it with reasonable incentives.

The next Looper quotation was a little confusing to me:

This is completely different. You have to go out there on any given day with what you’ve got as a starter, then you’ve got the days in between to improve. In the bullpen, are you going to improve in the eighth inning with a one-run lead?

I’ve got no idea what he was talking about there. It strikes me that relief pitchers are more at the mercy of having to go out on any given day with whatever you got. Starters have the luxury of four days’ worth of prep work. They get to go over the opposing lineup, putting together a plan on how they want to approach each at-bat. They get to put together a set routine—when their start comes up, they’re ready to eat the other team alive.

I thought Looper would have an exceptional year out of the bullpen this season, similar to his 2004 year before he hurt his shoulder. I’m thrilled to see how he pitches this Spring and optimistic that he’ll surprise the league as a solid fifth starter.

The other story in article #2 deals with a humanitarian/evangelical trip Looper took to Cuba this offseason. There’s a strange line in there:

Because of the United States’ trade embargo against the Communist nation, the group could transport only one 40-pound bag of belongings.

The context suggests that they were permitted to bring only that amount of baseball equipment to distribute to the kids they met with. Looper should have asked the Prez in the White House for special permission to bring more equipment. Evangelism coupled with baseball outreach hits two of the man’s soft spots.

Article #3: Attorney to admit to leaks in BALCO case

This story was picked off the AP wire and deals with attorney Troy Ellerman admitting that he was the source of the leak of sealed grand jury testimony on the BALCO case, providing the material behind Game of Shadows. Since he admitted that he’s the source, the book’s writers won’t go to jail for protecting him (obviously). Ellerman is facing a sentence of a $250,000 fine, two years in prison, and disbarment in California. Speaking of the Prez: I predict GW pardons Ellerman.

Update: Belay that last prediction… David Pinto suggests a solid theory.

745 ILCS 75

Wednesday, February 14th, 2007

The question came up at a happy hour not long ago, much like the lead up to U of I alum Anne O’Brien’s article, “Walking (With All Due Care) In A Winter Wonderland.” The question is a simple one: if you shovel the snow off your sidewalk and someone slips on the concrete and hurts themselves, can they sue you? Several years ago, a friend of mine slipped on some unshoveled steps going down into her apartment and broke several bones in her ankle, requiring pins to be inserted. The landlord was not liable for damages and the reasoning I was given was that property owners aren’t liable for slips and falls due to naturally accumulating snow and ice—thus, you’re better off not shoveling at all. Apparently, a few cities legislated that property owners were required to clear off concrete paths on their property (indentured servitude!) and so the state legislature passed 745 ILCS 75, the Snow and Ice Removal Act, which immunizes from liability any property owner who makes a good faith effort to provide pedestrians with a walkway clear of snow. The city of Champaign requires landlords to clear the walkways around properties with more than four dwelling units. Clearing our sidewalks is merely encouraged for the rest of us.

It’d be nice if the city did more encouraging and less legislating. Discounted liquor license fees for smoke-free bars, perhaps? If they processed licenses in six-month increments like so, starting in April, I bet there wouldn’t be but a handful of bars that allowed smoking in the summertime. Not to get back into that poo-sling-fest.

With a Groan

Wednesday, February 14th, 2007

Classes may have been cancelled, but it didn’t stop the DI columnists from filing their craft: Conservative Comedy: The Ultimate Oxymoron. If I ever grab the student newspaper, it’s only for the crossword puzzle. Damned thing doesn’t even have a cryptoquip. That’s the first column I’ve read in a long while and will be the last I read in at least as long. If only I were as smart and funny as my betters on the editorial staff, instead of being old, white, and Christian.

Although I think the Oprah douche thing might come from here. And Naing clearly hasn’t heard of Scrappleface. (I still miss the long-defunct Happy Fun Pundit. A clip of the show the columnist is complaining about is here. Political comedy just isn’t that funny and political comedians are generally unbearable.

On a kinder, gentler topic, it’s a pisser that I don’t have any AA batteries in my whole house. I shoveled the front walk, the driveway, and the intersection by my house and the amount of snow that fell in this blizzard is something else. It shouldn’t melt much by the time I’ll have a chance to buy some batteries, so pictures of my ginormous heap of snow will appear here soon. When I shoveled the driveway today, though, I noticed that someone or something had burrowed into the heap a bit. This snow isn’t particularly stable—it’s a fine powder that’s near useless for packing, so I’m hoping none of the neighborhood kids try to burrow out a fort in there—as tempted as I am to do it myself.

Update: Apparently that show is really, really bad. I agree that putting that show together, no matter how funny and well done it could have been, was a really bad move for the Fox News brand.

I Laughed, Out Loud

Wednesday, February 14th, 2007

In the comments to a Transaction Oracle entry on the Cubs-Rays trade of Jae-Kuk Ryu for Gregory Reinhard and Andrew Lopez comes the second SFII joke I’ve linked to today:

Is Aaron Guiel still a free agent? It would be a nice subplot for the Devil Rays if they could pick him up as a reserve OF and acquire Ken Ray from the Royals for middle relief. With Ryu, Ken, and Guiel joining forces, they could be tough to beat.

Why stop there? Pick up the slick-fielding 2B Yuichi Honda from Fukuoka and Henry Blanco to catch. Chenhao Li is a pitcher available from the PRC’s WBC team.

There are other (better) jokes following that one in the TO comments, but I didn’t play much beyond SF2 Turbo—most of the rest deal with the SF3 characters…

Dhalsim would make a rangy outfielder, I bet. Zangief might make a dangerous *spit* DH.

Illini Baseball

Wednesday, February 14th, 2007

I’m planning on checking out quite a few of the Illinois baseball team’s home games this Spring. We’ve got a very good center fielder named Kyle Hudson, who is also the best wide receiver on the football team. Beyond him, I don’t know anything about any of the players on the team.

Looking at the schedule, I see at least one road game that I might have to check out—the Braggin’ Rights game on May 15th against Mizzou. It’ll be played at lovely GCS Ballpark, home of the Frontier League Gateway Grizzlies in the famous town of Sauget. (That last link is excellent, please check it out to enjoy the next joke.) The right-field corner of GCS Ballpark features two hot tubs that can be rented out to parties of 15-20. I’ll bring my binoculars, guessing that Illini boosters and Mizzou boosters will each rent one and fill it with some of the female employees of that fine town. That game will be the Tuesday after finals week.

No School!

Wednesday, February 14th, 2007

For the second time since 1979 and since Monday, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign has canceled all classes. We did get a pretty amazing snowstorm for this area. There are three foot drifts in my yard. I piled up all the snow from shoveling my front walk and driveway and the mound’s about up to my purely decorative nips. The snow out front’s about a foot and a half deep. If I were a little kid, I’d get the AT-AT down from the attic and recreate Hoth snow battles along the sixteen inch high snow cliffs bordering the walkway. That I thought of that while shoveling the walkway is suggestive of how close to the surface that little kid I once was is.

The online Stanford parser had a hard time with that last sentence. Here’s the phrase structure tree:

(ROOT  (NP    (NP      (NP (DT That))      (SBAR        (S          (NP (PRP I))          (VP (VBD thought)            (PP (IN of)              (NP (DT that)))            (SBAR (IN while)              (S                (S                  (VP (VBG shoveling)                    (NP (DT the) (NN walkway))))                (VP (VBZ is)                  (ADJP (JJ suggestive)))))))))    (PP (IN of)      (SBAR        (WHADVP (WRB how)          (ADJP (JJ close)            (PP (TO to)              (NP                (NP (DT the) (NN surface))                (NP (DT that) (JJ little) (NN kid))))))        (S          (NP (PRP I))          (ADVP (RB once))          (VP (VBD was)            (VP (VBZ is))))))))

While studying, drinking beer, and watching the snow blow around out the window, I recommend amusing yourselves to these two videos:

A clip of Zidane’s head butt, featuring Street Fighter II battles and familiar music from the Benny Hill show.

A clip of a tech support call from a different technological era.

Derrick Goold made his first post from Jupiter today, noting to keep an eye out for Joe Strauss’ articles from Camp. The team has new practice uniforms for Spring Training and doesn’t think much of the hats. Also noted that the Molina-Wainwright piece on the last pitched ball of 2006 was meant as a fun piece—that the two aren’t in some kind of bitter dispute. Matthew Leach is almost there.

250cc Hot Cocoa! Stat!

Tuesday, February 13th, 2007

I’ve never heard of something like this happening, but the University of Illinois has canceled classes for today and ordered all non-essential personnel to stay home and make snowmen. The forecast calls for 10-14 inches of snow accumulation—there’s a bit more than half a foot out there already, although I haven’t seen the blizzard-like conditions yet. In my long years of University study, I’ve never heard of classes being canceled on account of snow. At least two of my colleagues were at work before 8:30am—the announcement was made at 8:40. I heard the news on the radio while washing my bones.

The roads last night were in bad shape, even though the salt trucks were driving around as the storm began. Basketball players Jamar Smith and Brian Carlwell were in a car accident last night when Smith’s car slipped on the road and hit a tree. Both have severe concussions, and Carlwell is still in the hospital. Prayers go out to them—concussions are serious business. Frighteningly, Carlwell is listed in critical condition, meaning that there is a high risk of death within 24 hours. He strikes me as a fantastic young man—here’s hoping that his condition improves significantly and very soon. Coach Weber and a team trainer spent the night with him at the hospital. The airport is still open now, hopefully his parents are able to fly in without incident. Jamar has been released already.

Update: Mark Tupper adds encouraging news: “Bruce Weber … said that when he left Carle at 5:30 Tuesday morning, doctors felt Carlwell, 19, was progressing but wanted to continue watching him closely.” Very good news. The “critical condition” label was damned alarming.

Update 2: Holy crap. Here are pictures purported to be of Smith’s car. They must have been sliding sideways pretty fast for that kind of damage. The same source has video of the storm today here. I’ve chosen to play Sisyphus and shovel off my front patio and stairs to get out in this nasty. Here’s an N-G article about the school closings. Apparently, the U of I is considering cancelling classes for tomorrow, too. I’ll withhold judgment about the asininity of cancelling classes today until after I shovel the driveway.

Update 3: I changed the link to the Daily Illini link above. The story’s been updated with very good news, Carlwell’s condition upgraded to “Serious”.

Update 4: Brian’s condition sounds like it’s significantly improved. His parents drove down from Chicago yesterday morning.

No Gissell, Fo’ Shizzle

Monday, February 12th, 2007

JapaneseBaseball.com lists Chris Gissell on the Seibu Lions’ roster for 2007 (and drawing a pretty doggone handsome salary). I’ll be watching how his season goes. He’ll be joined on the Lions’ pitching staff by Jason Johnson, a veteran groundballer whose career took a bad hit last season as his already ineffectively low K rate plummeted; Alex Graman, a lefty former Yankees farmhand with command issues and who had a poor season for Seibu in 2006; and $51,111,111.11 of Red Sox money.

In other news, Champaign native Matt Herges signed a minor-league contract with the Colorado Rockies. He’ll be competing with our old friend Dave Veres for a spot in the bullpen.

Knee’s a-twitchin’—Storm’s a-comin’

Monday, February 12th, 2007

We’re supposed to get a massive snowstorm tonight and into tomorrow. The hardest hit area is where I’m sitting, the I-72 corridor between Decatur and Danville. The University’s weather service is predicting 9-12 inches of total accumulation (on top of the four or so on the ground now, I expect), with blizzard-like conditions at times tomorrow and gusts of wind at 35 miles per hour. Sounds like my walk to work in the morning will be a blast. Perhaps I’ll ride a bus just to see how the roads feel. The Weather Channel’s ten-day forecast suggests that warm weather, up in the forties are on the way, though. It hit at least 35 or so today. Felt downright balmy.

If this storm hits, it’ll be the biggest snow I’ll have seen since leaving Kirksville, where I recall a thick blanket of snow on the ground all winter-round. It probably wasn’t that snowy there as I remember, though. The walk from Centennial Hall to Barnett at 7am across a snow covered field was certainly as brutal as I remember. The wind would pick ice crystals off the top of the snow and bury them into your skin. Looking at the map of Truman State’s campus, I see that field has not been developed into anything less painful.

It sounds like I’ll have a productive evening spent watching the snow fall, waiting for my roof to collapse under the snow, working, and—most importantly—enjoying Fox Sports Midwest’s best Cardinals games of 2006 that they’re replaying every Monday in February. Tonight’s game is a classic that I’ll tell my kids about some day—the April 16th game against Cincinnati in which El Hombre jacked three home runs. Follow along, if you’d like, at the VeB game thread from that amazing day.