Archive for February, 2007

New X factor to put MLB right in your living room

Saturday, February 24th, 2007

2007 in baseball is going to be known as the year of X. First off is the new Pitch f/x that is taking over where Questec left off. Every park in baseball will have new Pitch f/x operators, that feed information on every pitch thrown in MLB in 2007.

For starters all umpires could be graded on their ball and strike calls, and the information will be accurate, and will be available for all parks, not just the chosen ones that had Questec. Pitch f/x is a term created by Fox, but there is another X factor thrown in. According to Mike Jacob the head of Sportvision that created the Pitch f/x technology. There is the opportunity to transform video gaming. “We could send live pitch data to an Xbox 360 or a simple gaming application on a phone where the user can try to hit live pitches.” That would mean that eventually every fan in America or in Japan could take the live pitches from either Daisuke Matsuzaka or Joel Zumaya and then try to hit them on their own gaming system. With the advent of the Wii gaming system, think of what the future could hold. Eventually the wii joystick will look just like a 34 inch 31 ounce baseball bat. As you stand in your living room and watch a live MLB game, you will be able to take each pitch from the real game, and then try to hit them yourself in your own living room.

Baseball is the one sport where you can put the pitcher on your video monitor, and then watch the wind up and pitch, and then try in real time to see if you can make contact with the gyroball or just swing and miss. Everyone likes to see a 100 mile an hour fastball, but do you think if you stood in living room with a bat in hand, that you really could hit that pitch? MLB is betting that everyone will want to be part of the MLB Game day experience. F/X stands for Fox and Xbox, and if you try hard enough you might be able to hit a pitch just like old “Double X” himself, Jimmie Foxx.

I am:

The Fan’s Commish
Rick Swanson

Baseball questions the fans should answer

Monday, February 12th, 2007

MLB sends me questions and surveys, in their “Fans at Bat.”
 
Here is some questions that MLB should ask the fans of baseball.
 
1. Should the NL adopt the DH, or should the AL drop the DH?
 
2. Would baseball be better if both the DH and pitcher hit in the line up?
 
3. Should baseball bring back the idea of contraction?
 
4. If baseball did contract 2 teams,  could it be any teams other than Tampa and Florida?
 
5. If baseball had 28 teams would it be more exciting to have 7 division winners and 1 wild card for the playoffs?
 
6. Would a division made up of the Red Sox, Yankees, Mets and Braves be good for the game?
 
7. Should baseball have a salary cap similar to football and basketball?
 
8. Should World Series games start 2 hours earlier than they do now?
 
9. Would it be good for the game if there were two wild cards in each league, and then they had a one game playoff to determine which teams reaches the Divisional Series?
 
I am:

The Fan’s Commish
Rick Swanson

Hank Bauer Dies | George Steinbrenner Press Release

Saturday, February 10th, 2007

Hank Bauer is an emblem of a generation that helped shape the landscape of our country. He was a natural leader and a teammate in every sense of the word, and his contributions went well beyond the baseball field. His service to the Yankees, his country, and his family shows why I have been so privileged to call him a friend.” - George Steinbrenner (Press Release, 02/09/2007)

HOF: NFL takes greatness, MLB takes longevity

Tuesday, February 6th, 2007

What if baseball incorporated everything right that football does and put it into their sport? The prime example is the starting time of the Super Bowl. The game starts by 6:30 and is finished by 10. Baseball’s best post season moments are at 1:22 in the morning.

The other thing that football understands and baseball doesn’t, is the Hall of Fame. At the Official Site of the Pro Football HOF, you can read about the selection process.

For starters there are only 40 delegates that vote, baseball has over 500. You need 80%, or 32 votes in football. In baseball you need 75% or 375 votes. In football, each year between 3 and 6 new members will be selected.  Another sentence that stood out  was:

Any fan may nominate any qualified person who has been connected with pro football in any capacity simply by writing to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Players in football are selected more for greatness than they are for longevity. Gale Sayers only played from 1965-1971. Thurman Munson played from 1969-1979 yet never garnered HOF support, because he did not play long enough. He was rookie of the year, won an MVP, was in 7 All Star games, won 3 gold gloves, and was a member of 2 World Champion teams. He also batted .373 in 16 World Series games.

Look at Paul Horning he was fined $2000, and suspended for the entire 1963 season, for getting caught gambling on the games he was playing in, but he is in Canton. Pete Rose might have paid a higher fine, but never lost any active years. Shoeless Joe Jackson was acquitted by a jury, yet banned for life in baseball.

Now in 2007 football puts their first “crack head” in their shrine. Michael Irvin was twice arrested for cocaine, yet this week when he reaches the pinnacle of his sport, nobody mentioned his arrests in any story about the new hall of famer. What is the worse crime; cocaine or steroids? Baseball feels they are above the law, in the standards that they require for the selection process.

The Veterans committee in baseball only meets every other year now. The last time in 2006 they took a list of 200, and cut it down to 25. Of the remaining 25, none made it in. The two that finished last, from that final 25, were Thurman Munson and Smoky Joe Wood. Wood was one of the greatest pitchers of the Dead Ball era. Of the top 20 in that time he is 9th and all 8 above him are in Cooperstown. Wood critics have said he only pitched for 7 years. Nobody mentioned that after his arm went dead he became a player for 6 more years.

If this was football, me the fan, would be able to nominate both Smoky Joe Wood and Thurman Munson for the Hall of Fame. What matters is greatness, not longevity.

While we are at it, please put Roger Maris in Cooperstown as well.
 

I am             

The Fan’s Commish
Rick Swanson

Excerpt from HARVEY FROMMER’S FIVE O’CLOCK LIGHTNING: BABE RUTH, LOU GEHRIG AND THE GREATEST TEAM IN BASEBALL HISTORY, THE 1927 NEW YORK YANKEES

Sunday, February 4th, 2007

“Come along with Harvey Frommer on a jaunty stroll through baseball 80 years ago. The 1927 Yankees may or may not have been the best team ever, but surely this is the best book about that wonderful concentration of talent.” — George F. Will

“Reading Five O’clock Lightning, I felt almost as if I were on the road with the Babe, Lou and Miller Huggins. Harvey Frommer has a great eye for detail and a wonderful ability to bring his characters to life. The book is a delight.” — Jonathan Eig, “The Luckiest Man”

“An engrossing and entertaining look at a mythical baseball team. Maybe you know a little bit about Eddie Bennett, the hunch-backed, good-luck batboy of the 1927 Yankees. Maybe you don’t. You know it all now with ‘Five O ‘Clock Lighting’…plus the fact that Warren Buffet used little Eddie as part of his strategy to become a megabillionaire. Settle back with Harvey Frommer and enjoy the complicated characters who made up the best baseball team ever. Ride the trains and chew the tobacco and have fun. And don’t spit on Harvey’s shoes. — Leigh Montville, ‘The Big Bam: The Life and Times of Babe Ruth

“Baseball’s greatest team as recounted by baseball’s greatest author, Harvey Frommer. A surefire classic!” — Seth Swirsky, Author of “Baseball Letters” and “Something to Write Home About”

“Harvey Frommer hits a home run in this sweet look back at a time when baseball was the only game and the Yankees seemed to be the only team.” — Dan Shaughnessy, author of “Senior Year”

Beer baron Jake Ruppert could remember names but never addressed anyone by a first name. The Yankee owner was characterized in Ed Barrow’s memoirs as an “imperious” man, one who “in all the years I knew him, always calling me ‘Barrows,’ adding an ’s’ where none belonged.

Ruppert “was a fastidious dresser,” Barrow remembered, “who had his shoes made to order, changed his clothes several times a day, and had a valet.”

Arriving in style with his secretary Al Brennan for Spring Training in St. Petersburg in his own private railroad car, it was said that the honorary Colonel savored the comforts of his own drawing room and sleeping in a silk brocade nightshirt. Ruppert was particularly interested in and impressed with the man he had sunk all that money into.

Ruth looks great,” he announced. “Watch that boy. In fact, he may set another home run record. The team as a whole is in fine shape, shows real fighting spirit and looks like a winner, although I admit I’m not much of a prophet.”

Despite the sunny side up outlook of their owner, there was an undercoating of gloominess that pervaded spring training for the Yankees whose wrenching loss to the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1926 World Series was still close to the surface especially for the frail Miller Huggins who stayed during Spring Training with his sister Myrtle in a home he owned in St. Petersburg. A bachelor, he also lived with her in a Manhattan apartment.

There were times in his early years with the Yankees that he would come home dejected: “Ah, it’s just too frustrating. Life is too short for this kind of rotten stuff and rowdy players I have to put up with. I think I’ll chuck the whole thing.”

“Stick it out” Myrtle would prop him up. “Don’t let them be able to say that you quit when you were under fire.”

Dubbed “the unhappy little man,” Huggins was always with a short stemmed pipe in hand or mouth, a gray visage, a worrier, anguishing over his stock market investments although he played that game with great skill and enthusiasm and at times invested for players, turning a profit for them. He anguished over his real estate holdings, his players, his appetite, his real and imagined medical problems. One could never tell by the way he dressed, by the little well worn traveling bag he carried on the road that the mite manager’s salary for 1927 was $37,500.

He had all those expressions that he was fond of repeating:

“Baseball is my life. Maybe it will get me some day. But as long as I die in harness, I will be happy.”

“A manager has his cards dealt to him and he must play them.”

“Great players make great managers.”

When Colonel Ruppert and Huggins first met, the patrician owner was not at all enamored with what he called: “the worker’s clothes, the cap perched oddly on Huggins head, the smallness of the man.”

Truth be told, Miller Huggins was the most unlikely Yankee. The Cincinnati native was 5′4″, 140 pounds, aloof, superstitious. He had a law degree from the University of Cincinnati, but he never practiced law.

Initially, Ruppert balked at employing Huggins as Yankee manager. Initially, Huggins viewed managing an American League team as a step down from his time as skipper with St. Louis in the National League. Somehow, the little man at the age of 39, became the eighth manager in the franchise’s 16-year- history in 1918.

“HUGGINS IS READY TO MOLD YANKEES” was the headline in the February 2, 1918 edition of The New York Times.

Dwarfed by Babe Ruth and other Yankees in size, reputation and image, Miller Huggins bitched: “New York is a hell of a town. Everywhere I go in St. Louis or Cincinnati, it’s always ‘Hiya Hug.’ But here in New York I can walk the length of 42nd Street and not a soul knows me.”

As pilot of the Yankees, it took him a while to make things happen. There was a 1918 fourth place finish in his first year as manager, then two third place finishes. There was a 1921 pennant, the first for the Yankees. A pennant in 1922. Another pennant in 1923 and this time, finally, a World Series victory over the Giants. After a seventh place finish in 1925, the roster was re-shaped for 1926 and there was another pennant. But that was the time of the wrenching loss to his old St. Louis team in the World Series.

Now in spring training of 1927, the shuffling, scuffling, searching for any edge Huggins was more intense than ever, looking for ways to improve his Yankees. In 1926, shortstop Mark Koenig had batted leadoff. Centerfielder Earl Combs, the Kentucky rosebud, had batted second. In June Huggins flip-flopped them in the lineup; they stayed that way for the remainder of the season. That would be the way it would be in 1927, too, Huggins decided.

Now in spring training, Huggins made another far more crucial, more dramatic lineup switch. Lou Gehrig would now bat cleanup, sandwiched in between the outgoing and energetic Ruth moved to the third slot and the taciturn and unpleasant Bob Meusel, in the fifth hole.

Huggins also added a new coach, Arthur Fletcher. The Phillies manager in 1926 would now be a fixture for the Yankees at third base and a heckler without equal. A former shortstop, a clone of John McGraw, whose Giant teams he had played on for more than a decade, “Fletch” was the leader and sparkplug of one of the Deadball Era’s top infields that featured Fred Merkle at first, “Laughing LarryDoyle at second, Buck Herzog at third. Fletcher was the shortstop.

“If there be one among the gamesters of baseball who is gamer than the rest, that man be Fletcher,” wrote sportswriter Frank Graham. Everywhere the Giants went, Graham wrote, “There was fighting and Fletcher always was in the thick of it. He fought enemy players, umpires, and fans. He was fined and suspended frequently.” A friend of Huggins from their National League days, reluctant at first to take the job, Fletcher loved being a Yankee coach and being on the scene of a winning team.

Charley O’Leary, a buddy of Huggins, had been on the scene as Yankee first base coach since 1921. Skilled at and fond of getting on umpires and players, his rowdiness sharply contrasted with the muted personality of the cerebral Huggins. The slightly built Irishman, one of eleven boys in a family of sixteen children, like Fletcher, was a former shortstop and had starred for Detroit’s pennant-winners in 1907-1908. It was O’Leary who Huggins would later give credit to for the development of the kid infielders Tony Lazzeri and Mark Koenig.

Harvey Frommer is now in his 33rd consecutive year of writing sports books. He is the author of 39 sports books, including the classics: “New York City Baseball,” and “Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball.” His FIVE O’CLOCK LIGHTNING: BABE RUTH, LOU GEHRIG AND THE GREATEST TEAM IN BASEBALL HISTORY, THE 1927 NEW YORK YANKEES will be published by Wiley in the fall of 2007. Frommer is at work on REMEMBERING YANKEE STADIUM (Abrams, Stewart, Tabori and Chang) an oral/narrative history to be published in fall 2008.

Frommer sports books are available direct from the author - discounted and autographed.

FROMMER SPORTSNET (syndicated) reaches a readership in excess of 750,000 and appears on Internet search engines for extended periods of time.


Copyright 2005-2006. All Rights Reserved.
Part of the
Baseball Almanac family: 755HomeRuns | Baseball Box Scores | Baseball Fever | Today in Baseball History.

Baseball Almanac
Privacy Policy.