Archive for March, 2007

Izzy’s Spring Debut

Thursday, March 15th, 2007

Today’s game is being carried by KTRS and online. Isringhausen will pitch the first inning, followed by Wainwright, who’ll be stretched out in his fourth turn through the rotation. The Dodgers start the big lefty Mark Hendrickson.

The mlb.com Gameday link is here. (And all of the links for this week are here.)

In China…

Thursday, March 15th, 2007

If the Great Firewall of China’s test actually does what it purports to do, then I’d estimate that there is effectively no internet in the PRC. Supposedly, the University of Illinois webpage is blocked. That’s hard to believe.

I tried a few websites and the only one that worked was, don’t laugh, Pravda.

Crappaoke

Wednesday, March 14th, 2007

My set list for last night’s karaoke fest:

GNFnR’s Used to Love Her.
When I Grow Up to Be a Man by the Beach Boys.
Come a Little Bit Closer by Jay and the Americans.

Good times. Gotta lotta laughs with the falsetto countertenor.

Swindled!

Tuesday, March 13th, 2007

Someone in the P-D Cardinals forum noticed that StlCardinals.com has a couple of badly broken links in the page for downloading wallpapers for your desktop—if you click the links under the “World Series” picture, you get a Derek Jeter picture.

The picture that should have been there is really pretty cool though, so until that gets fixed, here are the correct links for those who refuse to heed TLR’s advice and remain sated by last season’s outcome: 1024X768, 800X600.

Wells vs. Santana

Tuesday, March 13th, 2007

An interesting game today: our opening day infield (knock on wood) will be taking the field together for the first time as today is Eckstein’s first day in action since feeling some pain in his oblique at the start of camp. Kip Wells takes the mound against two-time AL Cy Young winner Johan Santana. The gameday link is two posts down, along with every other link for the next week. Since I’ve got an automated, near idiot-proof script for making gameday links, I’ll go ahead and publish those every Friday afternoon for the coming week until the end of Spring Training. (Near idiot proof since at least once this spring, the stringers have put the home and away team codes out of order.

Update: Goold just posted lineups and notes.

Upperdate: Hooray! Scott’s back!

I’m Impressed

Tuesday, March 13th, 2007

My nephew turns 3 on St. Patrick’s Day, this coming Saturday. I was looking around on the intertubes for a good present for him. I had in mind something like the Soccer Edge, a toy every person my age probably played with when we were kids. The idea was simple, a spike that screws into the ground, connected by a bungee cord to a net that you can put a soccer ball in. You kick the ball and it springs back to you so you can kick it again.

I found something that looks even cooler, the Kika Flik, a little springboard that you stomp on to lob a ball up at you. So kids start out catching the ball and later on they can use it to pop up wiffle balls to thwack. Sounds like fun. Little dude’s starting t-ball this season.

Spring Training Gameday Links

Monday, March 12th, 2007

I spent the last twenty minutes writing a little script to generate gameday links from ESPN’s MLB schedule webpage. The links will all start working within a few minutes of the game starting. It’s reasonable to assume that MLB uses spring training to train new stringers on how to enter play-by-play data into the gameday server, and that’s why they don’t publish the links to these little beauties. The data is incomplete, so don’t take it very seriously if it looks like a pitcher has a 3 pitch inning—these aren’t products meant for public consumption as much as they are training tools for the stringers. So don’t go writing nasty emails to MLB if the data isn’t perfect.

Here are the first set of links, through this coming Sunday:

Monday, March 12, 2007

LA Dodgers at Baltimore
Florida at Minnesota
Toronto at Cincinnati
NY Mets at Washington
Houston at Philadelphia
Cleveland at Pittsburgh
Atlanta at St. Louis
Detroit at Tampa Bay
San Diego at Chicago Sox
LA Angels at Kansas City
Texas at Milwaukee
Oakland at Seattle
Chicago Cubs at San Francisco
Arizona at Colorado
NY Yankees at Boston

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

NY Mets at Cleveland
St. Louis at Minnesota
Boston at Toronto
Detroit at LA Dodgers
Baltimore at Florida
Philadelphia at Tampa Bay
Kansas City at LA Angels
Milwaukee at Seattle
Chicago Sox at Texas
San Diego at Colorado
Chicago Cubs at Arizona
Houston at Atlanta
Cincinnati at NY Yankees
Oakland at San Francisco

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Toronto at Cleveland
Florida at Baltimore
Pittsburgh at Boston
NY Mets at Detroit
Cleveland at Toronto
Atlanta at Houston
Washington at St. Louis
San Francisco at LA Angels
Milwaukee at Chicago Sox
Colorado at Kansas City
Texas at San Diego
Tampa Bay at Cincinnati
Minnesota at NY Yankees

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Baltimore at Minnesota
Florida at Houston
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh
LA Dodgers at St. Louis
San Francisco at Kansas City
LA Angels at Milwaukee
Seattle at Chicago Cubs
Oakland at Colorado
Texas at Arizona
Tampa Bay at Cleveland
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
Washington at LA Dodgers
Detroit at Washington
Toronto at Philadelphia
Boston at NY Mets
Atlanta at NY Yankees
San Francisco at Seattle

Friday, March 16, 2007

Washington at Cleveland
Minnesota at Baltimore
Philadelphia at Detroit
Toronto at Cincinnati
NY Yankees at Houston
Boston at LA Dodgers
Pittsburgh at Tampa Bay
Milwaukee at LA Angels
Chicago Cubs at Chicago Sox
Kansas City at Seattle
Colorado at San Francisco
St. Louis at Atlanta
NY Mets at Florida
Arizona at Oakland
San Diego at Texas

Saturday, March 17, 2007

NY Mets at Baltimore
Cincinnati at Boston
Detroit at Toronto
St. Louis at Atlanta
Houston at LA Dodgers
NY Yankees at Philadelphia
Minnesota at Pittsburgh
Baltimore at Florida
Cleveland at Tampa Bay
Washington at NY Mets
LA Angels at Chicago Sox
Arizona at Kansas City
Milwaukee at Oakland
Texas at Seattle
San Diego at Chicago Cubs
San Francisco at Colorado

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Boston at Baltimore
LA Dodgers at Cleveland
Tampa Bay at Detroit
Philadelphia at Minnesota
Detroit at Atlanta
Atlanta at Cincinnati
Toronto at Houston
Florida at Washington
Tampa Bay at Philadelphia
NY Mets at St. Louis
Pittsburgh at NY Yankees
Chicago Cubs at LA Angels
Seattle at Milwaukee
LA Angels at Oakland
Colorado at Texas
Chicago Sox at San Diego
Kansas City at San Francisco
Oakland at Arizona

Illinois in the Dance

Monday, March 12th, 2007

Although dancing is banned at center court in Champaign during halftime, the University of Illinois men’s basketball team managed to squeak into the dance that really matters.

(As an aside, I’d be amused if the pro-Chief crowd put together a Footloose spoof about a town where dancing was made illegal by well-meaning, yet misguided town elders and the brash youngsters showed them that dancing can be a harmless good time by organizing an unsanctioned dance performance on the edge of town. I’ve said before that the only dog I have in this race is the one that caninifies the virtue of not bullying people into changing their ways through name-calling and getting authorities to intervene with incomplete facts. The halftime show is a necessary evil—the players need to rest and the coaches need to explain adjustments based on what they saw in the first half. At least we had something unique here, until the overgrown Holden Caulfields could stand no more phoniness. I will say that I’d be against the U of I creating a real mascot that tries to fire up the team during the game, and I’d wager I’m not alone based on this hilarious article about the last mascot the U of I introduced. Mascots are lameness of the worst kind—icons to a fanbase’s lack of knowledge and passion for the game. [Fredbird aside, since he's all about the small kids. His cheerleader crew is something of an embarassment, though.] I like the band playing during the game. I’ll admit to thinking the baton twirler at the football games is fascinating. Haven’t been to a game in forever, but Mandi Patrick could throw that thing amazingly high and accurately straight up into the air.)

Before the announcement, John Supinie put the prospect of ending up at the NIT in useful perspective.

I got the news in the locker room before my second hockey game in thirteen years tonight (the first one was last Sunday.) I played much, much better than last time. Whereas my legs turned to rubber and the contents of my stomach wanted to leap from my body after two or three shifts last Sunday, I felt surprisingly good through almost two periods this time. I wasn’t very useful for the third period, but we’d put together a substantial lead by then. We were up 7-1 after the first period and the rest of the game was pretty much a grind to a 9-3 victory (I think that was the final score). To say the least, the improvement my body made in the past week was extremely pleasing and I’m rather proud of the way I played tonight, a few serious mistakes aside.

I got my first injury, too. More a boo-boo, really. I somehow fell down, spinning, in front of the net and my legs twisted funny and my left skate slashed an exposed centimeter of my right thigh, cutting two fairly deep gashes. A squirt of ice cold water stopped the bleeding—I think I’ll have a pretty cool scar in a week. A good reminder to us aging gentleman to take your stretching seriously. A sliced thigh is far better than a torn ligament. I’d like to blame the fall on the poor quality of the ice with the suddenly warm weather, but I’ve been losing edges pretty often these past two weeks. My dad bought my skates for me when I was in ninth grade, so they’re pretty old. The blades are a little loose in the plastic carriages that hold them in, so I might have to go buy myself a new pair before the next league begins and break them in during free lunchtime skates. It’d be nice to have two pairs of skates for that purpose alone: one I keep in my office, so I can go to lunch skates whenever I feel like blowing off steam; and another pair of game skates to keep in my hockey bag at home. Or in the fragrant spare bedroom I’m using to air out the equipment between games, I should say.

Tonight’s game was the semi-final and we’ll be playing my friend Bobovski’s team, who beat the top team in the league in a shutout in the game before ours. In all my years of playing hockey, I’ve never played a game where a friend of mine was on the other team. This should be fun.

Sam Alito on the Hill

Sunday, March 11th, 2007

I’m very pleased with the most recent two supreme court justices, John Roberts and Sam Alito. Sam Alito took to the mound today to throw out the first pitch in a D-Rays vs. Yankees spring training game. Judging by the picture, I’d say that he threw a pretty good four-seam fastball, although it looks like his elbow’s flying open. Gotta yank that sucker to your side and maximize rotational velocity.

Nice article. (Hat tip to Baseball Musings)

An Old Bit

Saturday, March 10th, 2007

But I thought of it again today, now that USC is playing Oregon on the tube. (It’s my belief that Oregon’s cheerleaders are the finest-looking nationwide.)

If you didn’t enjoy this when it happened, here’s an example of why the intartubes are so darn great:

Some UT fans lassoed that picture and had a little fun with photoshop in this long, hilariously dark thread.

This one should impress Chris. Or Juan, or whatever his name is now.

Good Day Sunshine

Saturday, March 10th, 2007

It’s a warm enough Saturday that the windows are open and fresh air is blowing through the crib. I had the Cardinals game streaming on gameday audio and the Purdue-tOSU game on the boob tube earlier. Illinois vs. Wisconsin are playing now in the Big Ten Tournament semifinals. The Cards won handily with the pitching staff continuing to stifle the Grapefruit league competition. Wainwright, Dove, Rincon, Cate, and Cavazos got their work in for the shutout. Rincon has been a nice surprise so far this spring. Hot stove season talk of him was that there was a good chance his pitching career was over after missing last season to significant arm surgery. It’s looking likely that we’ll start the season with three lefties in the ‘pen, unless La Russa chooses to open the year with an 11-man pitching staff, given Edmonds’ questionable health early on and all the days off early in April—in which case TJ would start the year at AAA since he’s got options available. Randy Flores has been solid so far, although his ERA belies that claim. The spooky thing about him last season was the doubling of his walk rate. So far this Spring, he hasn’t walked any of the eleven batters he’s faced and that’s a good indicator. Flores’ high ERA results entirely from the 2 runs he gave up in the first game of Spring, in which he entered with a five run lead. That’s three solid left-handed relievers. There’s also Keisler, Cate, and Narveson in camp, all pitching well—although Narveson noticebly not so often.

Wisconsin’s got a very good team. It looks like we’ll have some serious foul problems down the stretch here.

I’m going to fire up the grill for the first time of the season tonight. First, I’ll need to replace the rubber propane line that a rogue squirrel had chewn through last Fall. Glad to see the part is less than $20. Need a new grill cover, too. The old one tore apart in some bad storms last season and there’s a few rust spots on the lid. Think I’ll go ahead and grind those spots down to bare steel and spray on some new paint tomorrow morning if the weather cooperates.

I’m Not a Good Friend

Thursday, March 8th, 2007

I last talked to Nick Vatterott around Thanksgiving, I guess, and he’d mentioned that he was considering taking a job on a cruise ship to do stand-up comedy to entertain the ship’s passengers.

According to the comments left at his myspace page, he took the gig.

Knowing him as I do, I imagine he’s having a great time and will return with some excellent stories. One of his jokes is given a home online here:

“People back home ask me what my apartment in Chicago is like. I tell them to picture the most dreary, depressing place they’ve ever been. Then subtract chairs.”

A funny thing about that article is that I’d read it before the last time I went up to visit him in Chi-Town and was describing it to him, talking about how they called him one of the “smart, young comedians” on the underground scene. I recalled his joke and another one that I thought was particularly funny—it turned out to be TJ Miller‘s joke, and he was sitting in my back seat during this conversation.

There’s a clip of the two of them performing some kind of improv/sketch bit here, which I found via the Bastion. On the same page, I found another of his stand-up bits: (with spelling fixed, but not the facts of Uecker’s playing career)

What is it? Women love looking at jewelry, it’s appealing to the eye. I like looking at baseball cards. That doesn’t mean that I’m going to hang them from my earlobes. Which probably for the best since I don’t have any good cards. I’d have to wear like a ’79 Bob Uecker and an ’88 Topps Checklist Card.

I guess he’ll have to find me when he gets back from the cruise gig, because I’m sure as hell not gonna sign up for a myspace account, and I doubt he’s keeping his old phone number from his days at Mizzou.

Bunted: Man at Third, One out

Thursday, March 8th, 2007

Woke up at 5am, drank a pot of coffee, stayed home from work, wasn’t happy with my 4pm presentation. I think this is a useful way for me to assess my academic progress.

I didn’t mention it, since Pip covered it so well (scroll down to “Chass Chafes at VORP”), but Murry Chass’ column at the New York Times was, for me, officially the moment the Grey Lady became birdcage liner—the straw that broke the camel’s back after their baseless hit piece on Ron Zook. I’ve long held the belief that the last bastion of credibility in a newspaper are in the sports and business pages, where the reporters work an actual beat on which they walk with authority born of expertise. Via Dan Agonistes, I see a piece at the Wall Street Journal rounding up the reaction from the “new-age” crowd.

In that roundup, there’s a link to something Alan Schwarz, one of Chass’ fellow columnists at the NYT, wrote back in 2004, A Middle Man’s Worth, about the efforts to better quantify the performance of middle relievers. I put together a file of inherited runner numbers after the 2005 season and was stunned by how few baserunners the typical reliever inherits. It’s good to see that smarter people than I have figured out a way to put that small amount of data to good use.

Remarkably, Pip cites a new column by Schwarz in that same post—and a few paragraphs up suggests that Josh Kinney may be the best suited bullpen pitcher to appear in high leverage situations where runners are on base and another pitcher needs to be bailed out.

I’ve been a fan of Skip Schumaker for a long time, so it was very good to hear him sock two homeruns on a 3-5 day at the plate today. At the Bird Land, DG writes: (some typos removed from quoted text)

Skip Schumaker, making a strong push to unseat one of the other outfielders written onto the major-league lineup, cracked two home runs on Wednesday in the Cardinals’ 11-1 victory against the Dodgers. One was definitely wind-aided. The other was gone out of any park. Turns out Chris Duncan was not the only Cardinal outfielder to work with Mark McGwire this offseason. Schumaker got some individual tutelage from the former slugger as well, and with just a few lessons McGwire altered Schumaker’s swing to the point that manager Tony La Russa has said Schumaker “has a better chance” at the plate now.

That means he has a better chance of making the club, too.

Don’t tell Pip about the Mark McGwire connection to Skip’s power surge.

The Big Ten Tournament starts tomorrow at noon in Chicago. Illinois plays Penn State at 5pm and John Supinie worries that Illinois will look ahead to a Friday game against Indiana. I share his worries. A loss there would likely land the Illini in the NIT. Losing out of an NCAA bid would be chum for the conspiracy theorists. (There’s a group of people who believe the Chief was retired when he was because Illinois basketball is teh sux0r, and the DIA wanted those bloody NIT dollars.

Added after: Matthew Leach wrote a full-length story about Skip, talking about the adjustments in his batting approach McGwire tried to teach him. In the article, he mentions that Skip didn’t walk much last season, which was sadly true. As a leadoff hitter, I’d hoped he would show the same kind of OBP and K:BB improvement in his second year of AAA that he’d done in his second year of AA in 2004. It didn’t happen, though. Highly detailed situational hitting figures aren’t published for minor leaguers, but in non-rigorous examinations of his gamelogs throughout last season, I recall that he struck out looking on full counts pretty often. It seemed at the time that he might be better off trying to master the Eckstein approach of shortening up to foul off close pitches with two strikes and wait for the pitcher to chuck one well away. If McGwire can turn him into the next Brian Giles, you’ll hear no complaints out of me.

Cardinals @ Dodgers: 3/7/2007

Wednesday, March 7th, 2007

The Gameday link for today will be here, the starting pitcher matchup is Looper vs. Penny. Intriguing, given the Dodgers’ dangling of Brad Penny. There won’t be any gameday audio—a shame, since I would have liked to listen to Vin Scully call the game while working on today’s talk. Who knew that Fernando Valenzuela is the color commentator for the Dodgers’ spanish language broadcast? [Update: I stand corrected—there is Gameday audio out of LA.]

Other news of the morning:
It looks like Jamey Wright has a good chance of making the Rangers starting five.

A pretty touching story at the Phillies page about Lou Brock. He’s writing a book, The Pitch, about Johnny Sain pitching to Jackie Robinson in the first ever MLB at-bat by an African-American, April 15th, 1947. He was at the Phillies camp to interview Ryan Howard for the book. The article talks about Brock’s non-verbal interview with Sain at a nursing home a few months before he passed away. I highly recommend you read the article and also click through the “Johnny Sain” link above that goes to a tribute to Sain from many of his colleagues. He was a truly great man, and I’m looking forward to reading Brock’s book. Jackie Robinson and Branch Rickey get a lot of credit for integrating baseball—rightfully so, of course—but players like Pee Wee Reese and Johnny Sain made important contributions as ballplayers and men of decency that have gone largely unnoted.

Other games of note today:

‘Stros at Gnats: Roy Oswalt vs. Shawn Hill
Braves @ Tigers: Smoltz vs. Bonderman
Giants @ Seattle: Matty Mo vs. Felix Hernandez
Pirates @ Twins: Tony Armas Jr. vs. Boofsnicker Bonser

Speaking of Penny, this sounds more like a clever joke about how much he enjoyed Europe than an example of dumb-jockery.

Long Day

Wednesday, March 7th, 2007

An encouraging sign: Jason Isringhausen threw to batters today for the first time since September and it went pretty well for such a long layoff, major surgery notwithstanding. When I hear that he threw 24 pitches and two of them sawed off bats, it’s a very good sign. I see on tonight’s Cardinals Live Report, they’re billing it as a “bad day.”

There’s no word as to who is the ninth player at major league camp to be re-assigned to minor league camp. My guess from yesterday, Mike Smith, is the most likely candidate. I wonder whether nobody followed up on that due to a belief that his re-assignment isn’t all that noteworthy or whether it’s a different player, whom I speculated on in the comments to that post. In order to better understand the consequences of that speculated player’s assignment to minor-league camp, I dug up this useful article, and found that he’d need to be placed on irrevocable waivers. It sounds like it’s going to happen sooner or later, but I’d prefer they wait until he has a few bad games (maybe) or other teams get closer to establishing their 25-man rosters. I don’t know well the effective strategies front offices use in these situations, though, so I’ll be keeping an eye out for a few days.

This kid‘s dad has a happy home life.

It’s a good thing I didn’t send a boastful email to Bobovski when the Blues were up 2-0 late in the second period. His beloved Flames just came back to win 4-2.

I got my first look at Windows Vista, running on a new HP box with 2 gig RAM. Applications pop open quick. With nothing running but an empty excel spreadsheet, 871 megs of memory was in use. With all the driver problems I’ve heard of, this looks like a great opportunity for Linux to grab a bit of the home market. All my personal computers dual-boot to XP and Slack. I’d imagine that at least some people will give at least a dual-boot setup a try, given the opportunity. I’m not sure if any distribution has tried to exploit the niche, but you’d think somebody would build a disk partitioner into their install procedures.

I stayed up until 4:30am last night preparing a talk for this morning on this paper. I was mildly annoyed by what must be a major error in example (33), where there’s a * next to Andrew in the gloss that can’t be there without making the example useless. The talk went pretty well from what classmates told me. I figure I hit myself a double. I’m safe from a double play and I’m in scoring position. I’ve got another talk tomorrow on a much longer, more complex paper and with a good presentation of that one, I’ll be circling the bases like the Gashouse Gorillas.

The plan is to set the coffee pot to kick on at 4:30am and get back to work.

Reached the End of the Internet

Tuesday, March 6th, 2007

And now I know everything.

Guessing Game

Tuesday, March 6th, 2007

In today’s Bird Land, Derrick has this bit:

The first cuts of camp came down early Monday morning with eight players moving to the minor-league clubhouse. Chris Lambert, a first-round draft pick from 2004, was among the players assigned. The other seven (with one more coming tomorrow): catchers Bryan Anderson, Michel Hernandez, Ryan Christianson and Danilo Sanchez and pitchers Mike Parisi, Mark Worrell and Mike Sillman.

So here’s a guessing game that we’ll have a solution to in about 12 hours. Who’ll be the 8th cut?

My guess is Mike Smith, the last NRI pitcher (or catcher) aside from the surprisingly effective Kelvin Jimenez. He’s been pitching behind Wainwright, who’s been efficient enough to cut Smith’s outings shorter than they need to be for a guy who’ll need to be conditioned to start for Memphis. The next time he would have pitched would be in relief of Wainwright’s third start, and the way things are going, there wouldn’t be innings left for the relievers who need to get work in after Smith.

This Old Body

Monday, March 5th, 2007

The last time I played hockey, I was probably sixteen or seventeen years old and I was pretty good at it. Since then, the hardest physical labor I’ve done is occasional construction work and playing the outfield in softball games. I played hockey tonight and thought I was going to die. My first shift, I lost my edge and fell down twice. Then I turned around in the offensive zone and found that I was about to collide with an opponent and instinctively braced for it, decking him, hard, square in the chest. I thought I hurt the guy but he was all right. Man, did I feel terrible about that.

We were rolling three defensemen to start the game and after two shifts, puke was boiling up in the innards. I got a second wind and was able to contribute minimally. I didn’t have the legs to do much, but I did manage to break up a few plays. At the end of the game, we had our goaltender pulled for an extra skater to tie the game and the Illini Hockey team’s assistant coach, who plays for the other team, had the puck in our zone. I squatted down in the goal and tried to keep my body behind my pads. He graciously shot wide of me and by pure luck, the puck hit off the butt-end of my stick and the goal was prevented. We ended up losing the game, 9-8.

I’m going to have to start jogging laps in Busey Woods or something to get myself back in shape. At least I’ll be better prepared for what I’ll be facing next weekend—this time I’ll at least eat a decent meal a few hours beforehand.

Daylight savings starts next Sunday and that pleases me greatly. This will be the first year that DST will start about two weeks earlier than usual. Instead of making jokes about the Federal Government’s arrogance in thinking they can legislate the length of a day, I’ll just say that I’ll be happy for the extra daylight after work. I don’t understand why they don’t leave it like that year-round.

Tomorrow’s Cardinals game will be Adam Wainwright’s second turn through the rotation. The gameday link is here. There won’t be a Shannon and Rooney call on KTRS or gameday audio, but you can listen in to the Houston audio if you want. I plan to.

Gonna See Some Ballgames

Saturday, March 3rd, 2007

I’m overloaded with sports this morning. Watching a nail-biter of an Illini at Iowa game, delayed by the magic of DVR due to the fact that I was consumed with buying Cardinal tickets for this season when the game started. I picked up tickets for these games:

The last two games of a mid-week Pirates series, May 23rd and 24th. The 23rd game is autograph night (sponsored by Ice Mountain) and the 24th is Bud Light t-shirt night, and I loves me some free T. I’m hoping Tom Gorzelanny both makes the rotation and pitches one of those days.

The first home game in July against the Diamondbacks. I’m going on a family vacation to Rehoboth Beach the week before then and had the choice of either seeing a Royals game before the trip or the Snakes afterwards. Big Carlos Quentin fan I am, I went for the D-Backs. It’d be a treat if Big Unit pitches that game, too. I bought Bank of America club tickets for that one… Looking forward to that.

The Braves series in August. I go to at least one full series every year since I have a bit of a drive to go to the Lou and would rather see three or four games than one. Last season, I took some friends from Atlanta to a Braves series and we had an outstanding time. Enough fun to guarantee that we’d do it again this year, although two of them are moving to Denver in a few weeks. If they can’t make it to the Lou for that weekend, it shouldn’t be too difficult to find three friends in St. Louis to take the tickets for weekend games. We didn’t get to see Smoltz make a start last season, so I’m hoping we see him and Mike Hampton, who I courageously predict to have a gigantic season.

Damn, Illinois just lost the game at Iowa. This game was pencilled in as a loss several weeks ago—Iowa is too strong at home for this Illini team.

Let the overload continue, though. The Blues are up 2-0 in a noon start against the first hockey team that I rooted for, the New York Rangers. (Guy LaFleur!)

Finally, this article about Carlos Zambrano has me laughing. Bookmark that one and whip it out come June.

Funny Crap

Friday, March 2nd, 2007

Corn chips are no place for a mighty warrior. When the gal gets “LATHE’D”in this video, I LOL’d. This one’s got a reference to buying TurboGrafx-16 games at Babbage’s. I used to have one of those consoles and bought my games at Babbage’s. I shed a solitary tear for Strong Bad.

Speaking of video games, who remembers the Sheng Long April Fool’s joke?

An mp3 file of Lee Elia’s rant about Cubs fans. Hilarious. Never heard of it until today, reading some of Alex’s comments. (I voted for the Neidhart, by the way.)

Not funny, but David Eckstein is out indefinitely with a strained oblique, the same injury that caused him to miss 26 straight games last year. It would be a shame to lose Eckstein for the start of the season. I can see a scenario where we start the year with everyone on the 40-man whose name starts with an “E” starting the season on the DL. In that case, we’d need two outfielders and a middle infielder who could backup at short. Skip Schumaker would almost certainly be one of those outfielders, the other would probably be John Rodriguez or possibly Ryan Ludwick if they insist on a right-handed batter. If Ludwick made it, they’d have to make room on the 40-man roster for him.

The question of who would fill the hole left by Eckstein’s injury is a tough one. Aaron Miles would probably play the bulk of his games at short and either he, the Gooch, or Skip would lead-off. Miles’ job would fall to either Jolbert Cabrera, who has played fewer than 50 games at shortstop in his career, and hasn’t play there at all since 2004 (although Goold reports that he’s done fine there so far this Spring); or else Brendan Ryan, who was recovering from injury last season and is expected to have a full year at Memphis before competing for Aaron Miles job of middle infield utility work for 2008. As with Ludwick, if Cabrera wins the job, he’d need to be added to the 40-man roster.

Finally, I’m excited to be playing hockey this Sunday for the first time since High School. I had to buy new shoulder pads and a new helmet to keep myself from getting killed. We’ll see how much I’ve lost.