Monday, April 09, 2007
One week down, a million to go
My thoughts:
This string of relative successes for Royals starting pitchers...is it all too good to be true? Royals starters have thrown four quality starts so far, and have lasted more than 6 innings 5 times already. These kinds of numbers are, of course, odd for a KC staff. Tonight will be Odalis Perez's chance to show his stuff, as he did struggle a little bit in his start last Wednesday. Maybe it was just the cold weather that bothered him, so he can feel free to dominate in the climate-controlled Rogers Centre.
I'm kind of sad that Roy Halladay won't be pitching for the Jays in this series. Thinking about him pitching against KC at Toronto brings back fond memories of a game last year where Hallady and Runelvys Hernandez both went the distance, and the Royals ended up winning 2-0. Sadly, that game wasn't televised, but listening to it was one of my fondest baseball memories of last season. Thinking about that game got me thinking about how many long outings we could get from this year's staff. Could any of them go the distance the way Hernandez did in that game? My answer: a definite YES. Gil Meche and Zack Greinke will both have complete game wins before the All-Star break. I think that Perez could do it too, but it will take him a little longer.
As for the KC bullpen, they've really been impressive so far (knock on wood). The only slipups that come to my mind are the Boston game from last Thursday, and yesterday's 9th-inning loss to the Tigers. Give the team a few weeks -- and a healthy Octavio Dotel -- and both of those games would be wins.
Another thing I pondered this afternoon prior to sitting down to write (hey, I had a lot of time to think, as I have a boring 2-hour lecture on Monday afternoons) was how much the first week of the season affects fans' perceptions of particular players. Yankees fans' growing disdain for A-Rod has been well-documented over the last several months, but can his walk-off grand slam on Saturday and his first-pitch homer on Sunday spark some lovin' from NY fans? Does a walk-off grand slam in the first week create more excitement over a player than the same hit by the same player later in the regular season? Conversely, does a slow start by an otherwise good hitter (a la Ryan Shealy or Alex Gordon, who I'll get to in more detail in a moment) make fans think they are inferior hitters? Slumps suck for the players and their fans no matter when the hits dry up, but is an April slump more damaging to a fan's outlook on a player than a midseason dry spell? Are KC fans less excited about Gordon because he has only one hit and eight strikeouts?
Now, the Alex Gordon ponderings. So he's gotten off to kind of a slow start (detailed above). This has the Royals Nation wondering when he's going to pick up and start to live up to his tremendous hype. Oddly enough, I think the team's 9-game road trip, which starts tonight in Toronto, will be very good for him offensively. When he digs in for an at-bat in Kansas City, every fan knows exactly who he is and who he is supposed to be, and they expect the world from him at every AB. Gordo knows full well that George Brett -- to whom Alex has been compared by every sportswriter and his cat -- is probably in attendance, watching him carefully from upstairs. But on the road, he won't have all that personal pressure bearing down on him, and he might have enough breathing room to show his stuff. Your average Toronto fan will probably not know as much about Gordon as all good KC fans do, and might not have the expectations of him that a Royals home crowd does. (And that was NOT a knock on Toronto fans. It is absurd to expect everyone in the world to know all about our uprising phenom, no matter how big a deal he is to us.) When the fans in attendance aren't expecting a George Brett-esque performance every time Gordo steps up to the plate, he might be able to relax; to simply see the ball, and hit the ball.
Sunday, April 08, 2007
Pop quiz
What happens when a last-minute addition to the starting rotation pitches an absolute gem against a frightening Detroit lineup and shuts them out for 6.2 innings?
ANSWER:
This.
Oh. My. BOOOO! We need a closer, and we need him NOW!
Don't get me wrong. I like Riske. He's a good guy, and can provide some stable innings of relief. But that's just it -- relief, not closing. He's not meant for the 9th inning, not with a game like this on the line.
(As an aside, I love Ryan Lefebvre. Today the Detroit pitcher - I think it was Bobby Seay - would NOT stop throwing over to check David DeJesus at first. It was boring. On about the 498574th throw, Lefebvre says, "And a throw over to first, and David DeJesus is TERRIFIED." Love it!)
Kansas City's starters have actually been pretty solid. It's a bit confusing to us as fans. What does it mean when the starter goes more than 3 or 4 innings? Does it means that Dayton Moore is the best thing to happen to KC in at least 20 years? I think so.
Wednesday, April 04, 2007
Opening Day thoughts and pics

And how can I mention the Royals without mentioning Alex the Great? I really did feel bad for Gordon; his first big league at-bat had to be the scariest situation he's ever been in. (Seriously, I think I'd rather face an armed Randy Johnson in a dark alley than step up for this at-bat.) The bases were loaded, 42,000 were on their feet expecting a blast to the lawn of the FCA building across the interstate, and he's digging in against a future Hall of Famer in Curt Schilling. I would have struck out too. Actually, I would have peed my pants and run back into the dugout in tears. I mentioned in an earlier post that I was concerned that Gordon, even with all his amazing talent, might be in over his head with only a season at AA Wichita under his belt as a professional player. He looks completely fine defensively, but has yet to get a hit (through 6 innings on Wednesday). I will give him time, because I do love him dearly, but I will wait a while to decide if I think he belongs in The Show just yet.
I would have been okay with it if Schilling had thrown a good game; I can understand the impact he's had on the game and can appreciate the fact that he'll be in Cooperstown before I have my degrees. However, it filled me with glee to see the Royals -- MY Royals -- knock him around a bit. What was more giggle-inducing for me was seeing Manny Ramirez and David Ortiz go a combined 1-7 against Royals pitching.
Speaking of, how about that Gil Meche? We spent a bit of time in the parking lot before the game speculating on how he'd throw; whether his performance would justify the $55 million the club sunk into him in the offseason. What a risk that deal was -- he's never been an ace, and we were sinking a significant portion of our modest (but growing) payroll into him and expect him to fill that new role. I was a little nervous as he took the mound in the first, and for the first few batters he did look a little shaky. Then he settled in, and by his departure in the 8th I was convinced he was worth the risk. Tonight before the game, he said he had chills as he walked off the field and was greeted by the most sincere standing O I've seen at the K in quite a while. I had chills too, and I wasn't even the guy getting the ovation!
I had to take a picture of the scoreboard after the game to convince myself that the game had actually happened. Sure enough, the camera doesn't lie:

Here's our whole group up in my cousin's booth (by the way, I'm super proud of what my cousin Chris does, and I brag him up frequently). Aren't we handsome?

Boston has a decent-sized lead so far tonight (end of the 7th, it's 6-1 Boston). DeJesus and Gordon are still hitless; that's so hard to watch. On the positive side, Ross Gload continues to contribute a LOT of bat to the lineup. He has 2 hits already tonight.
Now, about tomorrow. I may skip class for this one, as it's easily tomorrow's biggest MLB pitching matchup. One word (well, a word, a hyphen, and a letter): Dice-K. The Royals are sending Zack Greinke to the mound, which is probably the best pitcher KC could throw in such a game (besides ace Meche). Greinke was pretty awesome in Spring Training; he showed all of the awesome command and focus we loved about him, and none of the scary personal unsteadiness that worried us last season. Dice-K has whipped the international media into an absolute frenzy; Japanese journalists have spent all week in Kansas City in large numbers. They're crammed into every corner of the upstairs region of the stadium, and Dice-K hasn't even thrown a pitch yet. I can't imagine how crazy it will be down there tomorrow; I only wish I could be there, but skipping classes once this week to go to a game ought to be enough.
I actually think Greinke has the ability to outpitch Dice-K. To be honest, when he brings his A-game, he can outpitch anybody. The dude's got good stuff, and I think we'll see the best he has to offer tomorrow. Tune in at 1:00 on the Royals Sports Television Network; this is going to be EPIC.
Saturday, March 31, 2007
Counting the hours
Two days.
Two days.
Two days.
At least there's some NCAA hoops to help pass the time. (For the record, I have Florida and OSU winning tonight, with Florida winning it all.)
Tuesday, March 27, 2007
LOTS of baseball notes
Eearlier this evening, I witnessed something spectacular for the first time in my life -- a triple play! Nebraska turned one against Northern Colorado. There were runners on first and second, and the batter hit a soft liner to right, which was caught. The runner from first didn't make it back to the bag on time, so that was two. Then, the runner who had been on second just kind of stood around near third, rather than retreating back to 2nd..maybe he wasn't aware that the ball had been caught? Anywho, a quick throw to 2nd led to the completion of a mighty rare feat at any level...and I was there to see it! Yay!
Who's starting for BoSox?
Opening Day is this Monday, which is obviously a good thing. The Royals nation has known since winter who their Opening Day starter would be -- after all, why sink $55 million into a pitcher and not give him the O-Day start? On the other hand, the Red Sox have sunk a lot more than that in Dice-K, and apparently he might not even be starting on Monday. According to Sports Illustrated's baseball preview issue, Boston sees Schilling as their #1 guy, with Dice-K clear down at 3rd in the rotation. Since I will be attending the KC-Boston game in KC on Monday, I do have a vested interest in who Boston throws. I see advantages to either Schilling or Dice-K starting.
Thoughts on Schilling: I have been told he's a total jerk. Yes, I've heard the tales of his arrogant dickery, but I also realize that he is a GREAT pitcher. I've never attended a game in which he was the starting pitcher, so it would be kind of neat to see him throw to start what could be his last good season. (And I'm also aware that people have been saying this about Schilling, and about Roger Clemens, for several years now, and it's not true yet. But I do get that feeling about Schilling, that maybe he's on the way out.)
Thoughts on Dice-K: I love the idea of seeing him make his first American big-league start. After a whole winter's worth of hype, I'd love to see him in action and relish in the media frenzy he creates (I heard that the Japanese press requested nearly 150 media passes for Kauffman Stadium for whenever Dice-K's first start actually is). Some of my favorite pitchers include tenacious workers like Nolan Ryan, so Dice-K's hardcore work ethic (described in detail in last week's SI) is exciting and refreshing in this age of coddling and babying pitchers.
Whoever the Red Sox starter is, it ought to be an exciting game and a tough matchup for the Royals.
Blanco to Omaha, other O-Royals notes
Since I was hired for my summer job with the Omaha Royals, I've been watching the Omaha roster carefully as the big-league club pares down their spring roster and moves players to the minors. Over the weekend, the Royals picked up shortstop Tony Pena, Jr., who is the son of former KC manager Tony Pena. This move spelled doom for KC's struggling shortstop Angel Berroa, who was promptly demoted to AAA and replaced at short by Pena. I think Berroa is, by all accounts, a good guy who is fun to be around, but I'm glad he'll be in Omaha. Maybe this demotion will serve as a wake-up call, the way Mark Teahen's being sent down last year sparked him. I'll be curious to see what comes of this, because the team also has another strong candidate for playing short: Andres Blanco. In games with KC last year, Blanco showed that he has soft, sure hands and a cannon for an arm. His offense was decent but not inspiring, as he's a young guy without much experience in The Show.
According to a royals.com article today, Blanco has been cut from the big-league roster and sent to the Omaha roster. With that move, where will Berroa play? I will be curious to see how the shortstop situation plays out. There have been talks of cutting Berroa from the club altogether, which might be a possibility if the addition of Pena pans out and if Blanco continues to develop. I'm excited to see Blanco play this summer; he really impressed me last year in his time in the bigs.
Another one I'm pumped to watch in Omaha is Billy Butler. From the sound of things, his bat is beyond phenominal, and his Spring Training numbers show it. If his defense were (a lot) stronger, he'd be a major contributor in KC for sure, but as it stands, fans in Omaha will get a treat. Shameless plug time: The Omaha Royals' first home game is right around the corner! Come to Rosenblatt and watch them in action on Friday, April 13! I'll be there too!
Moving on:
Sports Illustrated writer hearts my writing
Check the comments section on my previous entry. For me, this was like having Jessica Alba say, "Hey, you're kind of attractive." SI is the pinnacle of sportswriting, and one of their people says my sportswriting is good? WOW.
Grudzy's speedy recovery -- a good thing? Or is he pushing too hard?
It hasn't even been a month since Gold Glove-winning second baseman Mark Grudzielanek had knee surgery, but he is cock-sure he will be in the starting lineup on Monday. While I'll be thrilled to see him in action, because I love the way he plays, I'm a little nervous that he might be pushing himself too hard. The reason he's rushing back is the same reason he's so fun to watch: He is hardheaded, driven, and will give everything he has to make every out possible. He claims he's recovering quickly -- no pain and no swelling, which are the only two factors he acknowledges in his rehab process -- and that he'll be ready to go. But is he really? I'm a little bit afraid that his stubbornness is leading him to push this hard, and he'll re-injure his knee later in the season, when the team needs him most of all in their quest to churn out a respectable season.
I'm unsure about starting Alex Gordon in The Show
It's a sure thing now; Alex Gordon (aka The Next Big Thing) will be the starting third baseman for the Royals on Monday. While I do love the guy -- what's not to love about a player who draws so many comparisons to KC's finest, George Brett? -- I'm not sure how I feel about him being called up to the majors so soon, or how I feel about Mark Teahen being displaced to make room for Gordon.
I love Mark Teahen. I think he's a great guy with great leadership abilities, and a hell of a glove at third. And, as he showed in the 2nd half last year, his bat has a bit of pop. A lot of players lose points in their batting average when they switch positions, so will the same thing happen to Teahen? He's athletic enough to handle pretty much any position, that's for sure, but there's still a whole different mindset.
And I am excited about Alex Gordon; don't get me wrong. If it weren't for Gordon, SI would have had zero positive things to say about the Royals in their baseball preview issue. Well, that, and he's kind of the future of the ballclub. But is the front office trying to rush the future? If so, at what cost will it come? Bringing players who aren't ready up to The Show is a dangerous game, and completely meritless. I'm not saying Gordon isn't ready, I'm just saying I don't want to take the chance that he isn't.
Who knows, though? We will find out soon enough. Maybe Teahen will be able to relax a little defensively, away from the perils of the Hot Corner, and will actually get better at the plate because of it. Maybe Gordon will flash more signs of Brett-esque brilliance and bring the club into playoff contention sooner than anyone thought possible. I suppose I'm too used to erring on the side of caution, but I will now retreat into a happy place, and repeat my mantra: "In Moore we trust."
Friday, March 23, 2007
Actual writing!
Without further ado:
Argument from the Anti-Steroid Point of View
In a 2002 radio interview, sports analyst Bob Costas introduced the idea of labeling this slice of time in baseball history, from the mid-90s until the present, as the ‘Steroid Era.’ It was an ignoble label applied to a noble sport, but to critics of steroid use, it is certainly fitting.
Throughout the early 1990s, home run production increased, but steroids were still not a topic of mainstream conversation. Most of the negative buzz about the sport at that time came from the players’ strike of ’94. It took several seasons to win back many of the fans who were upset by the strike, but in 1998 baseball regained some of its popularity as a home run race raged between Mark McGwire of the St. Louis Cardinals and Sammy Sosa of the Chicago Cubs. Fans watched, enraptured, as the two hulking men fought to break Roger Maris’ 37-year-old single-season home run record. McGwire came away with the record, and baseball was once again in the good graces of the American public.
With its luster restored, one might assume that all was well within Major League Baseball. However, it soon became apparent that McGwire and Sosa, along with many other hitters whose power numbers exploded in the 90s, were aided by something foreign.
Another slugger, Barry Bonds of the San Francisco Giants, emerged as the new ‘home run king’ in 2001, but under much more scrutiny that McGwire and Sosa had faced. Sports publications started writing volumes about how this man in his late 30s seemed to defy biological norms by ballooning in size at that late stage in his career. They showed photos of the once-scrawny outfielder bulking up in just a few seasons’ time. Often, writers would put these pictures side-by-side with statistics showing how, as his body mysteriously and rapidly grew in size, so too did his home run numbers. These statistics and the photos that accompanied them were deliberately placed next to one another in publications to urge viewers to link the two ideas together.
In the early days of the steroid argument, the main task for those against the use of steroids was to prove that it was indeed a problem. As the years went by, it seemed that many came to accept that steroids were part of the game of baseball, so the arguers’ focus shifted to other things; namely, the impact steroids have on the present and future of baseball, and the long-term hazards associated with players’ abuse of the drugs.
By that time, it appeared that many players, not just Bonds, appeared to be using steroids to boost their hitting abilities, and the fallout was becoming too much to ignore. Along with home runs, the number of injuries also skyrocketed. This was widely believed to be a direct result of steroid use, as users’ muscle growth was too fast for their ligaments to handle. These examples are held up by anti-steroids arguers because they appeal to the practical side of fans. One could argue that no fan wants to see his favorite player get hurt, so any substance that appears to cause injury is bad for the players and therefore bad for the sport.
Some people also claimed there was a correlation between rising suicide rates among young athletes and the use of anabolic steroids. When the issue was raised before Congress in 2005, teary-eyed father Ray Garibaldi recounted how his son Rob, whose death by suicide was thought to be a result of his steroid addiction, was affected by the drugs. “When disabled by steroids, his character and demeanor so drastically changed that he was dismissed by the coaching staff at USC as a behavioral problem.” In highlighting tragedies that were possibly linked to steroids, Garibaldi and others in the same school of thought used pathos effectively. Also, by telling his son’s story under an oath of truth and in front of the United States Congress, Garibaldi adds credibility to the anti-steroid side of the argument.
Players who have admitted to using steroids have been haunted by those actions. Amongst a flurry of shame and finger-wagging from the media, McGwire admitted to using performance-enhancing drugs during his record-breaking 1998 season. Though the substance he used was legal in baseball at that time, critics still hounded McGwire and branded him a cheater. The allegations grew larger a few years later, as Jose Canseco named McGwire as a user of illegal steroids in his 2005 autobiography. In the hearings before Congress, McGwire refused to talk about the allegations, repeatedly stating distaste for discussing matters that were in the past. McGwire’s critics took these statements as an admission to steroid use, and also as a concession that steroid use was a bad and shameful thing.
The target audience for the anti-steroids stance seems to be older baseball fans who would be more concerned about upholding historically significant records, and the future of the purity of the sport. For the most part, younger fans are too excited about home runs to worry about what made them possible and what the consequences of the extra aid might be. Older fans, on the other hand, know enough of baseball’s history to be offended by modern cheaters overtaking the records of olden-day greats. A 2004 poll by USA Today and Gallup shows that a striking 82% of fans feel that records set by players who are known to use steroids should either be removed from the books or marked with an asterisk.
Many of the arguments being used by the anti-steroid camp are rooted in emotion. Critics of drug use call up memories of “the glory days of baseball,” and claim that steroid use is tainting or clouding America’s pastime. They point to a possible (but not yet scientifically proven) link between young athletes who use steroids and a rising suicide rate, using the tragedy of young people taking their own lives as powerful leverage in their argument against the drugs. It might be difficult to come up with compelling arguments that are not emotional when the topic being discussed is a sport, not a heavy matter like war or abortion. Either way, those who are against steroid use seem to be winning: They have the United States Congress on their side, and the highest authorities in baseball are being forced to make widespread changes by using more drug testing and enforcing stricter penalties.
Works cited
Assael, Shaun and Peter Keating. “ESPN The Magazine Special Report: Who Knew?”
ESPN The Magazine 9 November, 2005.
Canseco, Jose. Juiced : Wild Times, Rampant 'Roids, Smash Hits, and How Baseball Got
Big. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, Inc., 2005.
Costas, Bob. Interview. “Baseball, Steroids, and the Truth.” The Dan Patrick Show.
ESPN Radio. 30 May. 2002.
Jenkins, Chris. “Players Admit Steroids Changed Baseball.” USA Today 15 March,
2005.
The San Francisco Chronicle. “TESTIMONY EXCERPTS.” San Francisco Chronicle 25
August, 1998: A-17.
And
Steroids Are Not Bad for Baseball, and Might Even Be Good For It
To some in the baseball world, the reason for the rapidly growing number of home runs being hit is simple and concrete: Steroids. However, others argue that the reasons for the increase in power hitting are more numerous and complex. Many new ballparks have been built recently, and most of those are smaller than older parks. The technology behind manufacturing bats has improved greatly. The leagues have expanded, so pitchers brought in to fill the new rosters are not as good. Additionally, weight training programs are more advanced than ever, and the demands on an athlete for physical perfection are greater than ever. People who make these arguments might also say that steroid use is not necessarily a bad thing for the game of baseball, but instead is a part of its evolution, just like batting helmets and the foul pole.
The arguments regarding steroids have certainly evolved over time. For years, the tactic was denial: Many managers, team owners, and players worked to deny that steroid use was happening at all. Steroid use was a lighthearted topic of topic conversations in team locker rooms, but in the public eye, was never mentioned. When sportswriters and others started to finger steroids as the reason for increases in offensive production, players and owners pointed to ideas like smaller parks, improved weight training and equipment technology, and more watered-down pitching staffs as the reasons for the improvements to offense. A few key events, like the death of baseball player and admitted steroid user Ken Caminiti, took further denial of steroid use out of the realm of possibility. At that point, tactics shifted toward proving that steroids were not causing harm to the game of baseball or its future as ‘America’s Pastime.’ (Caminiti’s death was not caused by steroids, but his death called a lot of attention to his earlier admission to steroid use and the other drug use he said steroids led him to.)
Now that many people in the pro-steroids camp freely admit that athletes are performing with the aid of a large body of drugs, their goal is to get others to not think it is a scourge to the game of baseball. Supporters of the use of anabolic steroids point out that because Major League Baseball is expanding, the league needs more pitchers. The general managers of teams call up more minor league pitchers who would not otherwise have been considered ready for the majors, and big-league hitters have no problem hitting more home runs than ever off these less-experienced (and possibly less talented) pitchers. Therefore, these supporters claim, steroids can not be the chief cause of exploding power numbers in the league. This is a logical approach to the argument because it shows an alternative to what the anti-steroids arguers say is the only cause of increases in power hitting in recent times in baseball.
Despite the common mental image of a “juicer,” huge, hulking power hitters are not the only steroid users in pro baseball. Recently, 47 minor league players tested positive for illegal steroids in their systems, and 21 of them were pitchers. To those who support steroid use, it makes perfect sense for pitchers to use the substances, because steroids promote speedy healing in the oft-overworked muscles of pitchers. Major League pitcher Barry Zito said, “I think for pitchers, recovery is bigger than strength. It's a pretty big thing to have a pitcher who doesn't get hurt, who's available." By pointing out that pitchers also juice, pro-steroid people are showing how even though power hitters are using steroids to get an edge, pitchers are retaliating with the same edge, so nobody has an advantage, but everybody is better. This angle also appeals to emotions of fans, who might feel for pitchers who torture their throwing arms night after night and need some means of healing between performances.
Noted sports medicine expert and author Charles Yesalis says steroid use is something fans and athletes need to adjust to, for better or worse. “These drugs are far too seductive, and the rewards for using them are far too great for us to think that education will stop it,” Yesalis said. “Get used to it. Shut up and get used to kids using them.” Some may express concern about young athletes, whose bodies are not fully developed, using steroids, but many say that the drugs can be used responsibly as a supplement to regular workouts. Dr. Gary Wadler, a steroid expert and a New York University professor, said athletes can take lower doses of steroids, rather than base their whole regimen around them, and still gain benefits such as speedy recovery.
Those who oppose steroid use generally focus on the bulk it adds to muscles, but ignore other benefits athletes may enjoy from using the drugs. In his controversial 2005 memoir, former major leaguer Jose Canseco tells of other ways steroids gave him a boost during long baseball seasons, which stretch from spring training in February to the World Series in October. “The added strength isn't even the most important benefit for a baseball player," Canseco said. “What makes even more of a difference in terms of performance is the added stamina it gives you all year-round. On the last day of the season, you feel as strong as you did on the first day of spring training.”
Is using anabolic steroids to survive a season something that will corrupt baseball and take away the seemingly magical luster its most heartfelt fans feel for the sport? Many who oppose steroid use say so, but others disagree. Blogger Peter Handrinos from UnitedStatesofBaseball.com notes that fans still flock to games, buy merchandise in record numbers, and tune in to TV broadcasts. If fans were really as worked up about steroids as the media make them out to be, he wrote, would these sales figures and TV ratings be as high as they are? “There’s a disconnect between the media's party line and real public opinion among the fans,” Handrinos said. “On the one side, a baseball media has been in an absolute frenzy. On the other side, though, fans have deliver [sic] year after year of record attendance, strong ratings, and multi-billion dollar revenues.” In pointing out this apparent media bias and distortion of fact, Handrinos takes away credibility from the other side of the argument, which, in the readers’ minds, might add credibility to his own cause.
With another baseball season only a few days from opening, it is likely that the arguments over steroid use will continue on talk shows, in the blogosphere, and around dinner tables all around America. Those in favor of steroids will use logical arguments and provide alternative causes to changes in the game, like smaller parks and better bats allowing more home runs to be hit, as well as emotional tactics like pointing out how steroids provide a boost to get baseball players through their long, grueling season. Like many other hot issues, the saga of steroids will probably not find its end this season or any time soon, but arguing about steroids may become as much a part of the game as batting helmets and the foul pole.
Works cited
Canseco, Jose. Juiced : Wild Times, Rampant 'Roids, Smash Hits, and How Baseball Got
Big. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, Inc., 2005
Handrinos, Peter. The United States of Baseball. 2007. Accessed 13 Mar. 2007
< http://www.unitedstatesofbaseball.com/index.asp>
Kroichick, Ron. “Inside Pitch: Rapid Recovery is the Key for Pitchers in a Long Season.” San
Francisco Chronicle 3 May 2005: C-1.
Verducci, Tom, Don Yaeger, George Dohrmann, Luis Fernando Llosa, and Lester
Munson. “Totally Juiced.” Sports Illustrated. 3 June. 2002.
Yesalis, Charles. (Ed.). Anabolic Steroids in Sport and Exercise (2nd ed.), Human Kinetics,
Champaign, IL, 2000.
Holy wow, that was a long post! Something else new is coming soon too!
Wednesday, March 21, 2007
A sincere apology and a few other things
Votefortheworst.com is doing a really really good job this season. Sanjaya is one of the weakest, most pathetic contestants AI has ever seen. But enough about that.
Now the sincere apology:
I do have a piece in the works for this blog. An actual, well-thought-out, carefully written piece of my sports-addicted soul. I sincerely apologize for the long string of crappy, random posts that I've burdened you with recently. I am a better writer than that, and I will give you better. Thanks for hangin' on; the regular me will be back soon.
Wednesday, March 07, 2007
Dropkick Murphys and other stuffs
In other family news, my older brother is getting married in August. He's the first of my brothers to take this step, so this is a new and tremendously exciting time for my whole family. I absolutely adore my future sister-in-law. Also, I get to be a bridesmaid!
Tomorrow is when I go to Kansas City to see the Dropkick Murphys. I grew up in a tiny town that's about as far away from a major city as you can get in the Lower 48 states, so no bands ever played anywhere near me. For a myriad of reasons*, I was never allowed to travel to go see bands until this past summer, so this is fairly new to me. Seeing DKM is actually on my list of Things I Must Do Before I Die; it's definitely a big deal and I'm pumped. I'll post pics if I get any good ones.
The Royals have a winning record (4-3) in Spring Training right now. I'm telling y'all, this is their year! (At the very very least, this will be a year in which they do NOT lose 100!)
*This post could go in so many different directions here, like how scary it must be to raise a teenage girl in today's society, or the merits of young people travelling and gaining independence from those experiences, or how road trips rock but cost a shit-ton of money. Instead, my attention span will tell me to not explor any of those topics. I'll probably go play some Deal or No Deal instead.
Monday, February 26, 2007
Scorsese scores, and I get to see my favorite band!
Here's a cool bit of news: I get to go see my FAVORITE band, the Dropkick Murphys, in 9 days. I love them soooo much but I've never gotten to see them before. Somehow, I don't have any quizzes or anything that day, so yay!
The previous two items are related, by the way, since "I'm Shipping up to Boston" by DKM was used heavily in The Departed. The following item, on the other hand, is not related at all, but is much more important.
My dad is having a big, horrifically painful ankle surgery tomorrow. Please pray for a successful operation and a speedy recovery. Thanks!
Sunday, February 18, 2007
i LOVE people
Then they kept going; it was like they had a bottomless cart. They finally got their last groceries on to the counter, paid the friendly cashier and ambled away. I hoisted my five items to the counter and cast a long gaze at the couple who was walking away with their laden cart. The cashier did not say "Hello" to me. Rather, he said, "It was 44." He also told me that he's seen people buy seventy-five items in that lane.
Yes, the lane that is for 20 or fewer items. I love people.
Saturday, February 17, 2007
Spring Training is upon us!
Some Royals pitching news:
Scott Elarton is ahead of schedule. The surgery Elarton had last season was his *gasp* third labrum surgery. Same type of surgery I just had 6 weeks ago. I wouldn't recommend having it even once, but he's had three of them? That's hardcore. I hope he has a good season this year; I really like him.
Gil Meche is ridiculously confident. Not sure how I feel about this one. This seems to be some big talk for an up-and-down pitcher who's never been in the spotlight before. For $11m a year, he'd better live up to some of that talk. For the moment, I'm still "meh" on him, and that's sad. I want to put all my trust in Dayton Moore, but something about Meche's acquisition and giant contract seems...off. Time will tell.
In another royals.com article (which I can't seem to locate right now), they said that outfielder Joey Gathright reported to the Surprise, AZ training facility a few weeks early to get accustomed to the sun. I just gained some respect for Mr. Gathright, whom I normally don't like.* It's good to see a pro athlete actually making extra effort to overcome a perceived obstacle, rather than being all whiny about it.
*I really have a lot of contempt for Gathright as a player. Here's why:
He was brought in because of his tremendous speed. So in theory, he should have stolen a ton of bases, all the time, right? Nope. He's also just average defensively, yet he took over center field, displacing my main man, David DeJesus. DeJesus has much better command of center field, gets better jumps on every ball, and is a much better leader and communicator. To me, Gathright doesn't cut it and DeJesus should have stayed in center. I'm still waiting for Gathright to be the superstar baserunner he was brought to KC to be, but honestly I'm not holding my breath.
Thursday, February 08, 2007
My secret love for the entertainment world comes out
I'm a little worried about Paula Abdul's alcohol use. It's getting pretty darn bad; she can barely sit still, both on Idol and when she's doing TV interviews. Behold:
This drunken interview
And
This drunken interview
One morning, two interviews, one horribly drunken state.
Also, how about this one for mommy-government: Illegal to listen to iPod when crossing the street?
Surely this can't actually happen. How would they enforce it? Furthermore, if someone is so obsessed with their iPod that they can't look for oncoming traffic on busy NYC streets, then they might kinda have it coming. And I see this all the time on campus ... I'm amazed at how the iPod listening and phone-chattering really do detract from simpler people's ability to, say, look for cars. How have I not seen someone get splatted by a bus while rockin' out to their iTunes? I don't know.
Ahh, here's some good Royals stuff. My favorite Royals prospect this spring (besides Alex Gordon, to whom I would donate my soul if he asked) will be Billy Butler. He said some pretty cool things about gratitude for his abilities, waiting his turn for the majors, and interacting with young fans in this article. Very cool.
Lastly, Bravo's new interior design show, Top Design, has kind of been a letdown. When I watched the first episode, something was bugging me; the show just felt kind of...off. The boys who brought us Project RunGay also have a blog devoted to Top Design. They offered their opinions about TD's flaws better than I ever could.
Monday, February 05, 2007
Randoms
- This news story is near and dear to my heart, as I go by the screen name 'Chewbacca' on a number of forums. I extend my apologies to any tourists I may or may not have headbutted.
- In other news, the Super Bowl was kind of lame. I was hoping for...oh, I don't know... a good game, maybe? Instead, we got eleventy billion turnovers, boring commercials, and Adam Vinatieri missing a field goal (I didn't know that happened in the postseason). I'm guessing all the very loud and excited Bears fans I encountered in IHOP at 3 on Sunday morning are not nearly as exuberant today as they were at that time.
However, one good thing about the game was that Tony Dungy is a classy guy. I like that he throws down the G-Word (God!) in his post game speech and you can tell he actually means it. I really like both coaches involved; it's a shame that one of them had to lose.
- I have a new job, sort of. On weekends, I get assigned to various grocery stores around town and hand out free samples of new Pepsi products. It gets a little boring at times, but I still enjoy it. And by now, I could probably recite all the ingredients in Aquafina Alive Wellness Water. I can't believe the number (and variety) of questions people ask about the ingredients ... I get everything from the expected queries about calories to "My wife is allergic to [obscure substance I've never heard of]. Can she still drink this stuff?" Another thing I've noticed is that older people seem absolutely disgusted by the idea of flavored water. Parents with young kids are the best, because of course the kids see free stuff and just have to try it. One benefit is that I'm seeing parts of Lincoln I've never really known before, which is kind of neat. Also, I don't think I will ever turn down another free sample in a grocery store; it can be slightly disheartening.
- 55 days until Opening Day!
Wednesday, January 24, 2007
GRRRRRRRR :(
With .4 seconds left in the first half, Texas got the ball under their own hoop after a foul. One player whipped the ball inbounds to his teammate, who grabbed it, set his feet, then went up for the shot and made it. There is no way he could have done all of that in under .4 seconds. However, the refs counted the basket...
...and Texas ended up winning by one. I call a Texas-sized BULLSHIT.
Friday, January 12, 2007
Shoulders, mountains, crosses
Last week's operation was my first ever surgery, and this is my first major injury. For the most part, I cannot use my right hand or arm, which is a shame because I'm very right-handed. What a way to start off a new semester, eh? But I've learned a whole lot from having to deal with these newfound (but fortunately temporary) disabilities.
I've learned to be more patient in everything I do. Getting dressed is a pretty epic process, especially if I want to wear my sling on the outside of my shirt. Have you ever thought about the directional orientation of buttons and zippers on jeans? Yep, they're made under the assumption that absolutely everybody can use their right hands to fasten their pants. That one has been kind of tricky, and really isn't getting any easier with practice.
I've also had to be more resourceful.I figure that I can carry/move any everyday object as long as I have a place to set it down when I need my carrying hand for something else, like opening a door. I can still take care of myself in the cafeteria, as long as I am willing to make more trips for additional foods, and of course my 2 glasses of milk.
Bad hair days are now an everyday occurrence, and I guess I just have to either accept my inability to fix that, or just chop off all my hair. Thus far, I've been okay with the former, though I may resort to the latter if the mane is still this hideous in a few weeks. My makeup look has also suffered, but I just have to put up with that one too.
The biggest and hardest lesson I've learned from all of this is the ability to accept help. In grade school, junior high, high school, and now college, I've ever been able to ask for help with my work, even if I know I need it. Now I can. Random strangers help me on a daily basis with everything from reaching high places to tying my shoes. Were it not for the graciousness of strangers, I would be hiding in a hole somewhere, missing my college experience.
A lot of this stuff sucks. Yes, I'm in a tremendous amount of pain. No, I can't do most of the things I want to do: play guitar, take a shower, tie my shoes, hug my dad. Yes, the drugs have had some awful side affects -- have you ever puked on a bus? Neither had I, until the vicodin made me do it on my first day of classes.
Despite all the crap, I've mostly been able to grab hold of a positive in every situation. How great is my first round of golf going to feel? Or the first time I get to carry my lunch tray with both hands? Or the first time I can move enough to strum a few chords on my guitar? And without this injury, would I have realized how kind all the people around me can be?
Some of you may not know this, but I am a Catholic, and as such I see tremendous value in suffering. Without some crosses to bear, life would suck because things always worked out. I'd never be able to appreciate tying my shoelaces without having that ability taken away from me for a few months. So all I can do is thank God for the opportunity to see Him in a situation that many would see as only a shitty time in their lives.
"Walkin's easy when the road is flat......The good Lord gave us mountains so we can learn how to climb." -Lonestar
Thursday, December 28, 2006
A few thoughts that are not my own.
“Any ballplayer that don’t sign autographs for little kids ain’t an American. He’s a communist.” –
<----Angel Berroa is apparently not a communist. But wait! He's not American-born, either. Is there a third option? Either way, I suppose he's not a jerk in Hornsby's book.
“If you don’t think baseball is a big deal, don’t do it. But if you do it, do it right.” –Tom Seaver
“It ain’t bragging if you can do it.” –Dizzy Dean (Dizzy Dean, shown at right, sure could do it.)
“A hot dog at the ballpark is better than a steak at the Ritz.” –Humphrey Bogart
“Correct thinkers think that ‘baseball trivia’ is an oxymoron: nothing about baseball is trivial.” –George Will
“A man once told me to walk with the Lord. I’d rather walk with the bases loaded.” –Ken Singleton
“Just take the ball and throw it where you want to. Throw strikes. Home plate don’t move.” –Satchel Paige
“It’s not what you did last year. It’s what you’re going to do this year. That’s more important.” –Albert Pujols (and people wonder why I WORSHIP this guy, despite my hatred of the Cardinals)
“People ask me what I do in winter when there’s no baseball. I’ll tell you what I do. I stare out the window and wait for spring.” –
“All winter long, I can’t wait for baseball. It gets you back to doing the stuff you love and makes you wish the youthfulness of life could stay with you forever.” –Tommy John
“Baseball is dull only to dull minds.” –Red Smith
“I can never undertand why anybody leaves he game early to beat the traffic. The purpose of baseball is to keep you from caring if you beat the traffic.” –Bill Vaughan, columnist for the KC Star
“Baseball’s most delicious paradox: although the game never changes, you’ve never seen everything.” –Stephen King
“The losing streak is bad for the fans, no doubt, but look at it this way. We’re making a lot of people happy in other cities.” –Ted Turner
“The fans like to see home runs, and we have assembled a pitching staff for their enjoyment.” –Clark Griffith, an executive for the Twins
“They give you a round bat and they throw you a round ball, and then they tell you to hit it square.” –Willie Stargell
“The two most important things in life are good friends and a strong bullpen.” –Bob Lemon
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Ice EVERYWHERE
The ice is beautiful, but it's a sinister beauty. The fact that there's a half-inch of the stuff means it weighs a ridiculous amount. My neighbors have a grand and quite mature tree in their front yard, which is at least 70 years old and stands over 35 feet tall. Well, not so much anymore. A great number of the tallest, grandest branches are now upside-down in the yard, and missed impaling the house's roof by only a few inches.
All day long, my dad's fire department radios have been squawking about power lines down all over town -- we considered getting out a map of the city and sticking pushpins in each location where a downed line or even pole was reported. I think that by now we'd have run out of either pins or space on the map.
To step outside is to subject your ears to a frighteningly loud chorus of sirens as crews scurry from one downed line to another, and of creaks and groans of branches and their coats of ice as they sway in the breeze. We have lost a few minor limbs and a bush in the backyard, but that's all so far. It's honestly a little scary knowing that at any second, my front porch could be crushed as a heavy branch above it succumbs to the weight of the ice.
Please pray that the rest of my family -- my Dad and my three older brothers -- can make it back to McCook safely tomorrow as planned, and that my front porch can be in one piece when they get here.
Sunday, December 10, 2006
Short note for Sunday
Thursday, December 07, 2006
On Christmas
In today's fast-paced, self-centered society, it seems that most people spend at least 11 months of the year thinking about only themselves. Maybe this view is a little cynical, but it really seems that way. People stare straight ahead in stores, totally unaware of their fellow shoppers also trying to navigate the aisles. Kids in school hallways don't always take the time to hold doors or pick up things that others dropped on the floor. Moms let their kids scream and scream everywhere they go. And all that is a shame.
But then comes December. Is it just me, or does everyone really seem nicer around Christmas? Yes, I do hear the horror stories about mad shoppers who try to kill each other. But aside from those incidents, it does seem like people are willing to take a little less time for themselves, and a little more time for others. If you need proof, look at the Salvation Army's donation tree in your community, where they add more lights as people donate more money. I've been watching the one in Lincoln grow brighter. I've seen the one in Omaha too, and by the time Christmas finally arrives, the tree is so full of lights you can't even tell there's a tree under them.
On my floor, we had a "Secret Santa" with a $10 limit. Nearly every girl I've talked to has gone over that limit, because they like to give. I agree; giving is way better than receiving.
The beauty in giving is that you can keep doing it forever; there's always someone who can receive what you have to offer. And the beauty of giving in today's society is that it's easier than ever. A few mouse clicks at the Child's Play website can give a sick kid something to do while in the hospital. (While you're at the Child's Play site, read some of the stories of the struggles they've had in making room for all the donations. If you ever wonder about whethere there are good people left in the world, these stories offer plenty of hardcore evidence that the answer is a resounding YES.)
I love the way Rick Reilly of Sports Illustrated talked about charitable giving in his December 4 column:
He was talking about Nothing But Nets, a campaign started by SI last year to fight malaria by giving mosquito nets to kids in Africa. And he's right about the giving -- many of us have a ton of ways we can get rid of some expenses and add a tremendous amount of happiness to someone else's life, or even save lives directly.
It was the alltime no-brainer. Skip lunch; save a life. Buy the Top-Flites instead of the Titleists; save a life. Don't bet on the Redskins; save a life. Nothing to research. No government to topple. No warlords to fight.
And with the power to give that much, how can I help but to feel a tinge of Christmas cheer?
Sunday, December 03, 2006
A few new things
The Big XII Championship game:
The game was last night in Kansas City. As you probably already know, Nebraska lost to Oklahoma, 21-7. Talk about underachieving on the offense. Man, that was a disappointment. However, it was a heck of a fun trip, and I'd do it again in a heartbeat, if for no other reason than the pregame atmosphere.
It was a lot like a Husker home game, with Nebraska fans outnumbering Sooners at a ratio of about 6:1. We got to the parking lot at around 3:30 in the afternoon and the lots were already packed with massive RVs and people who obviously spend a lot of time tailgating. Barbecues, TVs, tents, and space heaters were everywhere, and everyone was in a pretty swell mood. I think that Husker fans were for the most part kind to the poor outnumbered Okies, because that's just how Husker fans roll.
It's funny how easy it is to get free stuff when you're a college chick. In order to be offered free beer, for example, we merely had to stand around for about 2.6 seconds. Some older folks near us actually fed us their barbecued wares for free, which was great because of course, food in the stadium costs about a million dollars.
The weather was pretty nippy, but really it wasn't bad. Some people would say we got bad seats -- only 10 rows from the top -- but I think they were absolutely awesome. We could see everything on the field very clearly...there's a good reason people put press boxes high up rather than at field-level! Our feet got pretty cold, but we survived without the loss of any toes, so it couldn't have been that severe, right?
Turns out Nebraska will take on Auburn in the Cotton Bowl on New Year's Day. I'm unbelievably psyched for that. I don't know if I ever mentioned it here, but I got sick to death of the way ESPN drooled all over Auburn all season, when they're really not all that amazing. If Nebraska brings their A-game, they can smoke 'em easily. So basically, the defense can play like they did in the 3rd quarter last night, and the offense can remember what they did all season rather than do like last night.
Other Husker happenings:
The volleyball team rollllllled in their game last night, with a 3-game sweep over Northern Iowa to get into the NCAA Sweet 16.
The Nebraska men's basketball team didn't fare so well, taking their first loss of the regular season at Rutgers, 75-73. They'll be fine, as long as they pick up a win in Oregon this week!
Happy yummy Christmas feelings!
I love the Christmas season. Now that it's finally Advent (for all ye non-Catholics, Advent is the 4 weeks before Christmas in which we prepare for His birth), I can really get into the music, the decorating, and the shopping! It's a wonder my finances ever recover from Christmas; I love to give presents, and I've never met a charity drive I didn't love. But I always bounce back somehow.
I always love the first Sunday Mass of Advent, though. We get to bust out the Christmas music, and it always makes me giddy. I can guarantee I'll be in an unflappable good mood tonight. Off I go to go put up our room lights!!