T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
247.1 | Braves win it in 6 | MIMS::MITCHAM_A | -Andy in Alpharetta (near Atlanta) | Thu Oct 19 1995 09:49 | 3 |
| Here! Here! Thanks George.
-Andy (just visitin')
|
247.2 | Bravos all the way | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Give it to the kid! | Thu Oct 19 1995 10:05 | 15 |
| Thanks George.
I am optomisitc about the Braves chances - good pitching, clutch
hitting (won 28? games during their last at bat this season), and being
rested.
Oh yea. I turned down an opportunity to buy WS tickets about a month
ago ($120 for two) due to financial reasons. However, given my W-L
record with the Terps when I attend their games here vs GA Tech, my not
attending any games will definitly help the Braves.
Braves in 6, with this WS probably being one of the best ever.
UMDan
|
247.3 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's pancake time! | Thu Oct 19 1995 10:09 | 11 |
| Should we rename notes to be:
Seattle/Milwaukee Brewers Note
St. Louis/Baltimore Orioles Note
Brooklyn/LA Dodgers Note
NY/SF Giants Note
Washington/Texas Rangers Note
(isn't there also a Washington/Minnesota Twins tie-in here?)
LA/California Angels Note
Once we finish, we can then move on to the NFL notes...
|
247.4 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Oct 19 1995 10:25 | 33 |
| For the Braves franchise this is their 15th National League title. They have
two World Series championships, the 1st in 1914 when Boston's "Miracle Braves"
came from last place in mid summer to win the pennant and swept the Athletics
in 4, the second in 1957 when the Milwaukee Braves behind two shutouts and a
third win pitched by Lew Burdette beat the Yankees.
In 1948, 1958, 1991, and 1992 they won the Pennant but lost the Series to the
Indians, the Yanks, the Twins, and Jays respectively. The other 8 National
League pennants came in the 19th century before the "Modern World Series" in
years when winning the N.L. pennant meant you were the baseball champion.
This team has gone by several names. When the N.L. reorganized in 1876 the
Harry Wright's National Association team joined the National League as the
Boston Red Caps. Around 1880 they became known as the Boston Bean eaters, a
name they kept through 1906. From 1907 to 1910 they were known as the Doves,
they were the Rustlers in 1911, and in 1912, the year Fenway Park was built and
the cross town A.L. Red Sox beat the N.Y. Giants in the World Series, this team
became known as the Boston Braves. The name was taken from the Boston social
club to which the new owner, James Gaffney, belonged.
In 1952 with attendance sagging despite a trip to the World Series 4 years
earlier the Braves left Boston for Milwaukee. Bill Veck Jr was threatening to
move his St. Louis Browns club back to Milwaukee to take advantage of their new
stadium but the Braves beat him to the punch becoming the 1st major league team
to move to another city in 50 years. After 12 year in Milwaukee the team moved
once again to Atlanta and for the last 30 years have been the only major league
baseball team in the South.
In just 2.5 days another big chapter will start to get written in this club's
120 year history and fans are hoping for a happy ending.
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.5 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Oct 19 1995 10:34 | 21 |
| RE <<< Note 247.3 by IMBETR::DUPREZ "It's pancake time!" >>>
> Seattle/Milwaukee Brewers Note
> St. Louis/Baltimore Orioles Note
> Brooklyn/LA Dodgers Note
> NY/SF Giants Note
> Washington/Texas Rangers Note
> (isn't there also a Washington/Minnesota Twins tie-in here?)
> LA/California Angels Note
That's
Milwaukee(Brewers)/St.Louis(browns)/Baltimore Orioles
Washington(Senators)/Minnesota Twins
and you forgot
Philadelphia/K.C./Oakland Athletics
Baltimore(Orioles)/N.Y.(Manhattan Highlanders) (Bronx) Yankees
George
|
247.6 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Thu Oct 19 1995 10:37 | 15 |
| I know that at the HoF the teams are listed by "franchise" -- In other words,
the Minnesota Twins have the Washington Senators championships listed on their
placard in the "locker room" exhibit.
We don't need to change note names, but I see no problem with listing the
Braves history.
My father used to watch the Braves players come up through their farm club
in Hartford -- the Hartford Chiefs, and saw Preacher Roe pitch. (I think it
was Preacher -- the was also a Schoolboy Rowe and one was a pitcher and one was
an infielder, but I think Preacher was the pitcher....)
'Saw
|
247.7 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Thu Oct 19 1995 10:41 | 23 |
| |> Washington/Texas Rangers Note
|> (isn't there also a Washington/Minnesota Twins tie-in here?)
|
| Washington(Senators)/Minnesota Twins
The Washington Senators left sometime in the 60s to become the Minnesota
Twins. They were the Washington Senators of
"First in War, First in Peach, Last in the American League"
fame.
Sometime later, a new Washington Senators club was formed. This club moved out
of Washington and became the Texas Rangers.
I miss some of the old clubs, especially the Senators...Loved watching Frank
Howard play. He was one of the biggest men I'd ever seen in sports....
'Saw
|
247.8 | Impossible Journeys | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu Oct 19 1995 10:45 | 9 |
| Well George beat me on the A's and his other additions are before my
time. George has anyone chronicled the Boston Braves - I'm actually
interested in the 1946-52 period and somewhat interested in the
succeeding National League years '53-60 afterwhich they stopped
contending.
And Roland, baseball is easy - if you try tracking the movements of the
nba and nfl you'll go crazy (eg Arizona nee St Louis nee Chicago nee
??? Cardinals/?Staleys).
|
247.9 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu Oct 19 1995 10:53 | 7 |
| Schoolboy Rowe was a pitcher for the Tigers and held the record for
consectutive wins at one time (16).
And that's first in peace. Peach?? - he was first in hitting.
Howard played for the second coming of the Senators, the first version
had a lot of good players (Killebrew,Camilio Pascual, Pedro Ramos).
|
247.10 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Oct 19 1995 11:00 | 20 |
| RE <<< Note 247.8 by AKOCOA::BREEN >>>
> George has anyone chronicled the Boston Braves - I'm actually
> interested in the 1946-52 period and somewhat interested in the
> succeeding National League years '53-60 afterwhich they stopped
> contending.
Most Baseball Encyclopedias have all the stats through that period. There's a
book called the Baseball Chronicle that lists major league baseball highlights
from 1845 until the time it was published a few years ago.
Other than that I don't know but you might look, or have a friend look, in
the "Braves Store" in Atlanta's Omni center. As with everything else in that
building including CNN it's something of a tribute to Ted Turner but there is
some neat Braves stuff. If they don't have stuff about the pre-Atlanta years
it's only because they are trying to forget the Braves past. Of course there
are those of us who won't let that happen :*)}
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.11 | Braves sold their roots to the Devil Down in Georgia | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Oct 19 1995 11:17 | 20 |
|
> Braves in 6, with this WS probably being one of the best ever.
Better make it 7, then.
The Atlanta Braves were one of the very first teams to go bigtime
corporate. In spirit they bear as little resemblance to the Boston
or Milwaukee Braves as to the Memphis Chickashas. On top of that,
Atlanta is the yuppie capital of the New South. Tommy has regaled
us with his description of Indians' fans but for sheer bandwagoning
ability Atlanta fans make Cleveland's look like weekend-only pikers
(Chris Knorr confirmed this for us). Cleveland fans have been
desperate for a winner but at least have appreciated _that_; in
Atlanta attendance plummeted when mere pennants weren't enough. And
we haven't even gotten to The Chop. The whole thing is just one big
nauseating Ted and Jane love-in. Go Tribe.
glenn (still bitter over 1991, 1992)
|
247.12 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Thu Oct 19 1995 11:36 | 7 |
| > And that's first in peace. Peach?? - he was first in hitting.
Typo.
Fingers got hungry I guess....
|
247.13 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Thu Oct 19 1995 11:42 | 3 |
247.14 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Thu Oct 19 1995 11:49 | 1 |
| I'm sure that's what they were saying in 1954 too....8^)
|
247.15 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Oct 19 1995 11:49 | 27 |
| RE <<< Note 247.11 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN >>>
> -< Braves sold their roots to the Devil Down in Georgia >-
The Atlanta Braves were one of the very first teams to go bigtime
corporate. In spirit they bear as little resemblance to the Boston
or Milwaukee Braves as to the Memphis Chickashas.
You are right, they were one of the 1st teams to go big time corporate, but
they did that back in 1876 when they jumped from the amateur National
Association to the professional National League. And as for yupies, what can be
more yupie than a social club (except perhaps the y for young)? The very name
"Braves" comes from a club that was a beehive of the rich elite of the day.
The Braves were one of the 1st teams to go pro, they are named after a
social club, they were the 1st team to leave town and break the 50 years of
stability in Major League baseball, and they were the 1st team to seek their
fortune in the South. Being an aggressive cooperate entity is a Braves tradition
and to me that's a whole lot better than teams like the Pirates and Brewers
who simply cry about their financial fate rather than doing something about
it.
I'll take Barberella and the Sea Captain over Bud "save us from ourselves"
Selieg any day. They are a competitive team, they are a competitive company,
and have been so for much of their 120 year history.
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.16 | "Seek their fortune in the South" == Carpetbagging | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Oct 19 1995 11:55 | 12 |
|
> I'll take Barberella and the Sea Captain over Bud "save us from ourselves"
> Selieg any day. They are a competitive team, they are a competitive company,
> and have been so for much of their 120 year history.
Is this a Braves-Brewers all ex-Milwaukee Series? I didn't think so.
Cleveland's is a small-market Success Story to all Success Stories.
And they didn't have to punk out of town in the middle of night to
do so...
glenn
|
247.17 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Oct 19 1995 12:04 | 17 |
| Unlike the Braves, The Indians never had to compete financially with another
major league club and they have always played in a proven major league market.
When the American League was formed in 1901 they effectively had exclusive
access to their market handed to them. The National League shut down their
Cleveland franchise in 1899 just before the Indians started so there was no
competition for the Indians financially.
Going where the market tells you to go is good business and it's a lot more
of the American Spirit than Bud Selig crying in his beer and threatening to
take his ball and go home because everyone refuses to play his way.
The Braves have been on the leading edge as a Cooperate entity since they 1st
joined the National League in 1876 and they continue that tradition today. They
are my kind of team.
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.18 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Thu Oct 19 1995 12:05 | 13 |
| >> Tommy has regaled us with his description of Indians' fans but
>> for sheer bandwagoning ability Atlanta fans make Cleveland's look
>> like weekend-only pikers
It's really a shame that someone has to win. One of the biggest
lowlights in recent sports history was phony-assed Jane Fonda
peering skyward with hands clasped seeking divine intervention
during the '92 World Series. If that didn't trigger your gag
reflex nothing will. Toss in the moronic tomahawk chop, the
fact that for the longest baseball in Atlanta was as unpopular
as baseball in Cleveland and it's almost enough to make you
root for the Indians inspite of Groiner.
|
247.20 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Oct 19 1995 12:42 | 7 |
|
Another strike against Atlanta: "Hootie" is singing the national
anthem before Game 1. Ugh.
glenn
|
247.21 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Thu Oct 19 1995 12:49 | 1 |
| Cal Ripken, Jr., is throwing out the opening pitch in game 1.
|
247.22 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Oct 19 1995 13:23 | 21 |
| RE <<< Note 247.19 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Plan 9 From Outer Space" >>>
> If anybody ever had exclusive access to a market it was the Braves
> and their hold on the entire South. The team that Ted Turner bought
> just for cheap tv programming was *it* in pretty much the entire region
> south of Virginia and the only thing that kept them from cementing a
> hold on it was college football and their own ineptness.
What are you talking about? The Braves are not complaining about financial
problems, they seem to be doing fine.
> Toss in the moronic tomahawk chop,
Funny you should be complaining about that Tommy. The Braves tomahawk chop
is an infestation that comes straight from College Football. It was a disease
that was passed on to Dieon Sanders by the Semino fans and he gave it to
the Braves fans. It's a wonder they aren't doing it in San Francisco.
BOOM boom boom boom BOOM boom boom boom
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.23 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Thu Oct 19 1995 13:41 | 27 |
|
>> What are you talking about? The Braves are not complaining about
>> financial problems, they seem to be doing fine.
A better question is, what are *you* talking about? No one said the
Braves were complaining about financial problems. You're confused. The
WS is between the Braves and the Indians. You may want to write that
down. You keep dragging in the Brewers and Bud Selig and every one but
the Indians to justify your rooting for the Braves. If you want to
talk about having an exclusive hold on a market/region (and you were)
then you're talking about the Braves and the South.
>> Funny you should be complaining about that Tommy. The Braves tomahawk
>> chop is an infestation that comes straight from College Football. It was
>> a disease that was passed on to Dieon Sanders by the Semino fans and he
>> gave it to the Braves fans.
I'm an FSU fan. I know where the Chop comes from. It's still idiotic.
>> It's a wonder they aren't doing it in San Francisco.
I'm sure you know of some historic connection between the goldminers for
whom the 49ers are named and the tomahawk so give us your best Cliff
Claven imitation and tell us all about it.
|
247.24 | | MIMS::MITCHAM_A | -Andy in Alpharetta (near Atlanta) | Thu Oct 19 1995 13:44 | 3 |
| Boy, you guys are hilarious! Keep 'em coming...
-Andy (just visitin')
|
247.25 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Oct 19 1995 13:52 | 42 |
| RE <<< Note 247.23 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Plan 9 From Outer Space" >>>
> A better question is, what are *you* talking about? No one said the
> Braves were complaining about financial problems. You're confused. The
> WS is between the Braves and the Indians. You may want to write that
> down. You keep dragging in the Brewers and Bud Selig and every one but
> the Indians to justify your rooting for the Braves.
Tommy, Tommy, Tommy, no it is not me that's confused, as usual you are the
one that is confused. Check the title of this topic. It's not the 1995 World
Series note, it's the Braves note.
The conversation about Selig had nothing to do with the World Series. It was
in response to Glenn saying that he didn't like the Braves in general because
they were a bunch of yuppies that had gone Corporate.
I was just responding that in general they have always been financially
motivated, since the beginning, and that this is nothing new. And I went on
to say that to me taking your future in your own hands and doing something
about it is better than whining and crying like Bud Selig.
>If you want to
> talk about having an exclusive hold on a market/region (and you were)
> then you're talking about the Braves and the South.
Again you are quoting me out of context because you jumped into the middle
of the debate without reading what had been said before. The gist of that
discussion was that Glenn was bashing the Braves because they had to move
and the Indians did not. I was saying that it is not a good comparison because
the Braves had to share the Boston market with another baseball team where as
the Indians did not have to share the Cleveland market with another team since
the NL Cleveland team had folded in 1899.
> I'm sure you know of some historic connection between the goldminers for
> whom the 49ers are named and the tomahawk so give us your best Cliff
> Claven imitation and tell us all about it.
Actually it is you that is giving us a Gilda Radner imitation and now that
you have been filled in on what we are really talking about you can slip in
a "Never Mind".
George
|
247.26 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Thu Oct 19 1995 14:08 | 6 |
| After reading the latest string in here, does anyone
else visualize Point-Counterpoint with Sununu and that
skinny fella thouwing verbal jabs at each other?
billl
|
247.27 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Thu Oct 19 1995 14:10 | 1 |
| That skinny fellow reminds me of Mike Emerick, the weenis hockey announcer.
|
247.28 | Augie, Nestor and the crews | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu Oct 19 1995 14:22 | 12 |
| Trying to keep up with the bantering of sprot's version of the Kramdens
is pretty tricky. It took me a second when George said "funny you
[Tommy] should complain about the chop then I remembered tb is a Fla.
state fan and was surprised that George would have picked that up.
But then George carried the Deion - chop analogy to San Fran forgetting
that Deion and the 49ers are history - but wait, he's still a Giant so
the analogy still holds. So I rebate the point I had deducted George.
This is your Sprots umbrage umpire saying "Later fans" and remember
Have indicator, Will arbit
|
247.29 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Thu Oct 19 1995 14:42 | 26 |
|
>> It was in response to Glenn saying that he didn't like the Braves
>> in general because they were a bunch of yuppies that had gone Corporate.
Yes, you are confused. Yuppies don't 'go corporate'. They are by def-
inition corporate. Yuppy meaning Young Urban Professional. The ref-
erence to yuppies was about Atlanta being the yuppie capital of the
New South.
>> The gist of that discussion was that Glenn was bashing the Braves
>> because they had to move and the Indians did not. I was saying that
>> it is not a good comparison because the Braves had to share the Boston
>> market with another baseball team where as the Indians did not have to
>> share the Cleveland market with another team since the NL Cleveland
>> team had folded in 1899.
The Braves were sharing Milwaukee with whom? If any team ever had a
reason to move it was the Indians what with their park and their woeful
attendance for much of the last 30 years. That they didn't is a bit of
testimony of the loyalty of the owners to their fans and their city.
Franchises moving is a fact of life in sports in the '90s. It's where
the really big money is. But it does my heart good when I see owners
who don't resort to blackmail or cities that don't cave into it.
It's funny though that you back Kraft when he begs for a new stadium
but rag all over Selig when he does the same thing.
|
247.30 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Thu Oct 19 1995 14:44 | 27 |
|
>> After reading the latest string in here, does anyone
>> else visualize Point-Counterpoint with Sununu and that
>> skinny fella thouwing verbal jabs at each other?
Please delete if deemed inappropriate:
Jane, you ignorant slut. Bagged out, dried up, skunk meat like you
and Michelle Triolla know the rules. If you want a contract, sign on the
dotted line. Oh, but let's all shed a tear for poor Michelle Triolla.
There was only testimony that she had sexual intercourse over 40 times with
another man while living with actor Lee Marvin. But I suppose that sort of
fashionable promiscuity means nothing to you. Someone like you, Jane, who
hops from bed to bed with the frequency of a cheap ham-radio. But hell hath
no fury like a woman scorned, and Michelle Triolla like a screeching,
squealing, rapacious swamp sow is after actor Lee Marvin's last three million
dollars. I guess what you and Michelle are saying is, that when you're on you
backs, the meter is running. Well please spare us gals, and tell us the rates
at the top. Then we can choose which two-bit tarts and bargain basement sluts
to shack up with.
|
247.31 | Rollward, Thomas! | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Oct 19 1995 14:47 | 1 |
|
|
247.32 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Thu Oct 19 1995 15:00 | 7 |
|
I think ole George will have Tommy rooting for the Indians before the
day's out......
;^)
|
247.33 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Thu Oct 19 1995 15:02 | 3 |
247.34 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Thu Oct 19 1995 15:15 | 3 |
| Tommy, I'm ROLLING!
That made my afternoon....
|
247.35 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Oct 19 1995 16:02 | 37 |
| RE <<< Note 247.29 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Plan 9 From Outer Space" >>>
you have a remarkable ability to argue hard against things I never said with
the appearance that you are arguing with me. Two cases in point:
> Yes, you are confused. Yuppies don't 'go corporate'. They are by def-
> inition corporate. Yuppy meaning Young Urban Professional. The ref-
> erence to yuppies was about Atlanta being the yuppie capital of the
> New South.
I never said anything about Yuppies going corporate.
> The Braves were sharing Milwaukee with whom?
I never said anything about the Braves sharing Milwaukee with anyone.
>If any team ever had a
> reason to move it was the Indians what with their park and their woeful
> attendance for much of the last 30 years.
Maybe so I'm not arguing about that either. But by comparison the Braves had
it much worse. In Cleveland it appears that just winning was enough to bring
the fans to the park. In Boston the fans didn't come to see the Braves even
though they had just been in the 1948 World Series. So they moved to Milwaukee
where the city had just built a bran new 28,000 seat stadium and there were
no other baseball teams with whom they needed to compete as they had in
<cup hands> B-O-S-T-O-N, not Milwaukee <cup hands> B-O-S-T-O-N.
> It's funny though that you back Kraft when he begs for a new stadium
> but rag all over Selig when he does the same thing.
Again big difference. When Selig didn't get his way he shut down all of
baseball canceling the end of the season in an unprecedented move. Kraft
is making no where near that type of threat.
George
|
247.36 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Oct 19 1995 16:16 | 21 |
| RE <<< Note 247.28 by AKOCOA::BREEN >>>
> But then George carried the Deion - chop analogy to San Fran forgetting
> that Deion and the 49ers are history - but wait, he's still a Giant so
> the analogy still holds. So I rebate the point I had deducted George.
No I didn't forget about Deion and the Cowboys. I was referring to the fact
that last year with the football season in full swing and Deion in S.F. we
didn't see the Chop.
Deion just got to Dallas so it's not clear if they will chop or not. Most
likely they will not. As I recall the reason the Chop started in Atlanta was
that actual Semino fans who had chopped for Deion in college were at the
Braves games chopping for Deion. Then other Braves fans started chopping for
Deion, then other Braves fans started chopping all the time.
Most likely the Dallas / Fort Worth area doesn't have a lot of Semino fans
or if they do they know better than to chop. If they did they'd probably get
scalped by a former Aggie fan.
George
|
247.38 | never saw a cowboys' shirt in 91 | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Thu Oct 19 1995 16:34 | 3 |
|
there is no such thing as a Cowboy fan. there are only fair weather/
good time charlie type fans who root for the Cowboys.......
|
247.39 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Thu Oct 19 1995 16:38 | 10 |
|
>> As I recall the reason the Chop started in Atlanta was
>> that actual Semino fans who had chopped for Deion in college
>> were at the Braves games chopping for Deion.
You recall wrong. Football allegiances in the South run deep.
Especially in Atlanta, Ga. You're either a G Tech fan or a
Georgia Bulldogs fan. There ain't no FSU fans. Deion may have
started it with the Braves fans but it probably caught on
because they are the *Braves* and a tomohawk is their logo.
|
247.40 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Thu Oct 19 1995 16:40 | 40 |
|
> Yes, you are confused. Yuppies don't 'go corporate'. They are by def-
> inition corporate. Yuppy meaning Young Urban Professional. The ref-
> erence to yuppies was about Atlanta being the yuppie capital of the
> New South.
>> I never said anything about Yuppies going corporate.
Yes, you did. In note 247.35 you said,"The conversation about Selig had
nothing to do with the World Series. It was in response to Glenn saying
that he didn't like the Braves in general because they were a bunch of
yuppies that had gone Corporate." Glen never said that, you did.
> The Braves were sharing Milwaukee with whom?
>> I never said anything about the Braves sharing Milwaukee with anyone.
No, you said that it wasn't fair to compare the Braves to the Indians
because the Braves had to compete with the Red Sox and that's why they
moved. My questions is and was, "Yeah, so why did they leave Milwaukee?"
> It's funny though that you back Kraft when he begs for a new stadium
> but rag all over Selig when he does the same thing.
>> Again big difference. When Selig didn't get his way he shut down all of
>> baseball canceling the end of the season in an unprecedented move. Kraft
>> is making no where near that type of threat.
Nice try but in 247.17 you said, " Going where the market tells you to
go is good business and it's a lot more of the American Spirit than Bud
Selig crying in his beer and threatening to take his ball and go home
because everyone refuses to play his way. " Note the present tense
"crying" and "threatening". An obvious reference to Selig's threat
to move his team if he doesn't get his way. Either practice your
lawyerspeak a little more , George because you ain't very good at it
yet or take a stand and stick to it.
|
247.41 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's pancake time! | Thu Oct 19 1995 16:43 | 9 |
| T>> It's funny though that you back Kraft when he begs for a new stadium
T>> but rag all over Selig when he does the same thing.
G>> Again big difference. When Selig didn't get his way he shut down all of
G>>baseball canceling the end of the season in an unprecedented move. Kraft
G>>is making no where near that type of threat.
George, Selig didn't shut down all of baseball because he didn't get a
new stadium in Milwaukee...
|
247.42 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Oct 19 1995 16:45 | 11 |
| RE <<< Note 247.39 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Plan 9 From Outer Space" >>>
> You recall wrong. Football allegiances in the South run deep.
> Especially in Atlanta, Ga. You're either a G Tech fan or a
> Georgia Bulldogs fan. There ain't no FSU fans. Deion may have
> started it with the Braves fans but it probably caught on
> because they are the *Braves* and a tomohawk is their logo.
No, you are wrong. The Semino chop came to the Braves with Deion.
George
|
247.43 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Oct 19 1995 16:54 | 24 |
| RE <<< Note 247.40 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Plan 9 From Outer Space" >>>
Tommy, I no longer have any idea what you are talking about. The way you have
twisted my words around and taken them out of context is ridiculous. I'm not
going to try to chase your ideas down to try to see which one is a distortion
of which thing I said.
My points are that
1). The Braves did not just start acting like an aggressive company from a
financial point of view when Ted Turner bought them, it's been
something they've been doing since 1876.
2). I favor that method of running a team over Bud Selig's style of crying
poor, taking his ball, and going home.
That's it, that's all I'm saying. All this stuff about the Brewers being in
the World Series, two teams at once in Milwaukee, and the rest is a result
words being taken out of context.
Now if you want to debate one of those points fine. If you want to debate
something else, then find someone else to fight with, I'm not interested.
George
|
247.44 | an attempt to clarify | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu Oct 19 1995 16:54 | 29 |
| No Selig shutdown baseball because his kind of market (it was believed)
could not compete with the big market teams under the system baseball
was being played under 1981-1993. This of course is patent nonsense
but at least is the consensus (I'd hope) of what the 1994
shutdown/strike was all about.
Selig has also manipulated Milwaukee into financing a new stadium; a
move (again consensus(again I'd hope)) unrelated to shutting down
baseball.
Now George has 1 clear position and one I'm not sure about.
1. George M. clearly says if Milwaukee/Pitt/Seattle can't support big
time baseball the team should get out and go elsewhere.
2. Clear. George wants an indoor stadium in Boston where he can take
the tee, watch the game in January in a tee shirt and after the game
take a short walk to ???(sorry I'm out of touch but if you're up in
Lancaster NH try Ol' Susannahs and interject a lot of ahyaps to fool
the locals) after the game.
Not clear. If Flaherty won't build it, George should Kraft take his
football elsewhere?
Tommy is that your question to George?
Your friendly arbiter
b'ar bumpin billte
|
247.45 | I refuse to be pigeonholed, George... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Oct 19 1995 16:57 | 16 |
|
> Yes, you did. In note 247.35 you said,"The conversation about Selig had
> nothing to do with the World Series. It was in response to Glenn saying
> that he didn't like the Braves in general because they were a bunch of
> yuppies that had gone Corporate." Glen never said that, you did.
That's true, I never said that. After George said that I had, I
thought I did, but then I went back and checked, and no, I hadn't
said that.
"Glenn doesn't like the Braves in general" would suffice. There's
a whole bunch of reasons. A once upright Vegas boy like Greg
Maddux turning into a yuppie gone corporate is only one of them.
glenn
|
247.46 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Thu Oct 19 1995 17:05 | 18 |
|
> You recall wrong. Football allegiances in the South run deep.
> Especially in Atlanta, Ga. You're either a G Tech fan or a
> Georgia Bulldogs fan. There ain't no FSU fans. Deion may have
> started it with the Braves fans but it probably caught on
> because they are the *Braves* and a tomohawk is their logo.
>> No, you are wrong. The Semino chop came to the Braves with Deion.
After you get done crying in your Bosco about your words being
taken out of context (they weren't unless using direct quotes
can be considered "twisting". I'll just take it as your little way
of crying, "Uncle!") read my last sentence. Reading comprehension
ain't your strong suit, George.
|
247.47 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Thu Oct 19 1995 17:33 | 6 |
| Actually, as an Atlanta resident at the time, I can tell you that
the Atlanta Journal-Constitution did some research into the "chop"
during/after the 1991 and concluded that the Atlanta fans use of the
chop had nothing to do with Deion Sanders; it was not introduced by
him, nor by FSU fans/alums. In fact, it may have (to some degree)
preceeded him to Atlanta.
|
247.48 | Or Deion's Hot Dog strut | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Rocky Mountain Ichthyologist | Thu Oct 19 1995 17:58 | 13 |
|
re.38
MikeyC, Stick that fair weather s*&t in your ear. This fans been there
since Eddie Lebaron got beat out by Mt. Vernon's favorite son Dandy Don,
35 years and seven Super Bowls ago.
George. It's Seminole not semino
OBTW!! Cowboy fans don't need no stinking chop!!!
|
247.49 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Oct 19 1995 18:22 | 50 |
| RE <<< Note 247.11 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN >>>
Let's try again. In this note Glenn said:
> The Atlanta Braves were one of the very first teams to go bigtime
> corporate. In spirit they bear as little resemblance to the Boston
> or Milwaukee Braves as to the Memphis Chickashas.
This is the statement with which I disagree. The Atlanta Braves bear a
strong resemblance to the Boston and Milwaukee Braves for "go[ing] bigtime
corporate". The Boston/Milwaukee Braves "went bigtime corporate"
- when they jumped from the National Association to the National League
and started paying their players in 1876.
- when they broke 50 years of major league stability and moved to Milwaukee
in 1952.
- when they left Milwaukee to go find their fortune in the South in 1965.
That's it.
Glen then said:
>On top of that,
> Atlanta is the yuppie capital of the New South.
To which I pointed out that the name "Braves" was taken from a boston social
club which was the yuppie equivalent of the day.
Glenn then said:
>The whole thing is just one big
> nauseating Ted and Jane love-in.
To which I said that I liked Ted and Jane's aggressive corporate attitude
better than Bud Selig's cry in his beer take my ball and go home approach.
Notice I said nothing about the Brewers in the World Series, nothing about
two teams at once in Milwaukee, nothing about Kraft and the Patriots. Nothing
about the nature of Yuppies.
Glenn then said:
>Go Tribe.
TO which I say
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.50 | This could be the new junk note | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Oct 19 1995 18:53 | 14 |
|
> - when they jumped from the National Association to the National League
> and started paying their players in 1876.
I'll bet _that_ made the front page of the Wall Street Journal. The
Boston Braves were smalltime non-corporate, inception to rejection.
Unchallenged in that regard, by everyone but the St Louis Browns.
Good Time Charlie the Cowboys Fan... I like it. Is that the idiot
in 'boys' garb who burns the other team's pennants? Didn't see too
much of that clown during the 1-15 season, either.
glenn
|
247.51 | | MIMS::MITCHAM_A | -Andy in Alpharetta (near Atlanta) | Fri Oct 20 1995 08:35 | 36 |
| >>> As I recall the reason the Chop started in Atlanta was
>>> that actual Semino fans who had chopped for Deion in college
>>> were at the Braves games chopping for Deion.
>>
>> You recall wrong. Football allegiances in the South run deep.
>> Especially in Atlanta, Ga. You're either a G Tech fan or a
>> Georgia Bulldogs fan. There ain't no FSU fans. Deion may have
>> started it with the Braves fans but it probably caught on
>> because they are the *Braves* and a tomohawk is their logo.
True, football allegiances do run deep in Atlanta, but not nearly so deep
for the "local" teams as in the past. Alot of Atlanta's residents are
transients; many attended nearby educational institutions such as Alabama,
FSU, Clemson, Georgia Southern, etc. You are sorely mistaken when you
state "You're either a G Tech fan or a Georgia Bulldogs fan." Granted,
they do have the highest percentage of fans here, but not nearly as high
as once was.
>> "Glenn doesn't like the Braves in general" would suffice. There's
>> a whole bunch of reasons. A once upright Vegas boy like Greg
>> Maddux turning into a yuppie gone corporate is only one of them.
I have never regularly followed this conference and, until recently, have
visited only a few times, so I cannot say I have followed past strings
Glenn may have posted about the Braves in general or Greg Maddux
specifically. That said, I am somewhat taken aback by the above statement
and would like to ask for perhaps some clarification.
Of all I have read and heard by, and about, Greg Maddux, I can only say
I believe him to be one of the (if not *the*) most "upright" member on
the team. The guy's probably a shoe-in for his 4th Cy Young award, and
yet is so low key and un-assuming it is ridiculous. I realize that he
may not be liked by everyone (who is?) but, IMO, he's probably one of
the most likeable guys on. I guess I just don't get it...
-Andy
|
247.52 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Fri Oct 20 1995 08:43 | 8 |
|
Hang in there Andy, you'll get it...... ;^)
Glenn, that bozo's name is Gay Ray...........
A little touchy there Cad????
mike
|
247.53 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Oct 20 1995 09:07 | 35 |
| RE <<< Note 247.50 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN >>>
> -< This could be the new junk note >-
>> - when they jumped from the National Association to the National League
>> and started paying their players in 1876.
>
> I'll bet _that_ made the front page of the Wall Street Journal. The
> Boston Braves were smalltime non-corporate, inception to rejection.
> Unchallenged in that regard, by everyone but the St Louis Browns.
In fact the controversy over paying players was a major part of baseball in
the 1870's. There was a large faction supporting the National Association who
felt that baseball should remain an amateur event. When the Cincinnati
Redstockings c. 1869 started paying players they were able to skim off the
cream of the crop and they built a team that was practically unbeatable. It was
the major sports controversy of the day.
Over the next few years the National League of professional players emerged
and it was the end for the National Association. Some National Association
teams like the Knickabockers decided not to go pro and folded, others like the
Boston Red Caps (the Braves), took the plunge and jumped over to the National
League.
As for being small time, the Braves practically owned the National League
from 1876 to 1899 winning the pennant 8 times so that was hardly small time.
The Braves Franchise was there at the start when professional baseball was
founded. They took a leadership position, dominated the league, and have been a
major trend setter throughout the 120 year history of Professional Major League
Baseball.
They are America's team,
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.54 | Just replace that comma with a period... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Oct 20 1995 10:21 | 9 |
|
> They are America's team,
And you've just summarized the "anti" argument better than I could
have ever hoped to...
glenn
|
247.55 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Rocky Mountain Ichthyologist | Fri Oct 20 1995 11:20 | 15 |
|
Why does someone always seem touchy when they reply to the insults of
others? Mikey stick that touchy up there too. Being probably the only
lifelong Cowboy fan in here I get a little tired of that BS. But what
can you expect when so many of you have been cheering for losers for so
long you have nothing better to do than belittle those rooting for
winning teams.
The mans name is Whistling Ray, and for my money he can go home and
take his whistle with him.
Super Bowl trip #8 to Pheonix just around the corner.
|
247.56 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Fri Oct 20 1995 11:24 | 16 |
| So Cad, let's talk about how long you've been a Cowboy fan....
What year did you start liking them? "All my life" is a very relative
term. Lots of folks I know who like the Cowboys have liked them "all their
life", but the funny part is that the started liking them when it was the
fashionable thing to do.
I'm not putting you down or insulting you or anything, but when I started
watching Football, the Cowboys were not America's Team and I was wondering if
you were watching them then too.....
Just tryin' to get the fax....8^)
'Saw
|
247.57 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Oct 20 1995 11:38 | 9 |
| What are the Cowboy's doing in the Braves notes file?
I suppose we should qualify this and say the Braves are America's Baseball
Team to keep those cowpolks in their own file.
One day 9 hours to go:
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.58 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Rocky Mountain Ichthyologist | Fri Oct 20 1995 11:40 | 11 |
|
I started in 1960 in the Cotton Bowl 1-13 I was 11 at the time. Eddie
Lebaron ( Atlanta's GM) the 5ft 6in QB was at the helm. They had drafted
Dandy Don from SMU and Bob Lily from TCU. They had there best draft in 65
when Staubach and Morton came along. Starting in 65 they went to the
playoffs for straight 20 years. No team has ever matched that record.
I do consider that a lifelong fan, since I've been there for the
life of the team. I was a Giants fan before the Cowboys.
|
247.59 | Cowboys and Indians!!! | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Rocky Mountain Ichthyologist | Fri Oct 20 1995 11:42 | 1 |
|
|
247.60 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Fri Oct 20 1995 11:45 | 33 |
| >
>
> I started in 1960 in the Cotton Bowl 1-13 I was 11 at the time. Eddie
> Lebaron ( Atlanta's GM) the 5ft 6in QB was at the helm. They had drafted
> Dandy Don from SMU and Bob Lily from TCU. They had there best draft in 65
> when Staubach and Morton came along. Starting in 65 they went to the
> playoffs for straight 20 years. No team has ever matched that record.
>
You know, Cad, up through this point I was startin' to like you. You're older
than me, you've known some LEAN times with the Boys, which puts you head and
shoulders above all the Johnny_Come_Lately_Cowboy_Faux_Fans..... You know
football from when Men played it.... (I started watching football in 1965/66
or so)
> I do consider that a lifelong fan, since I've been there for the
> life of the team. I was a Giants fan before the Cowboys.
This is the part that kilt me though. 8^)
I can almost see it, wherein Landry left the Giants coaching staff to
coach the Cowboys, and let's face it, Landry was brilliant and is just a notch
below the exalted Lombardi in my personal Pantheon of Football Gods.....
Well, I'll tell you what Cad, you've earned my respect......
'Saw
|
247.61 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Rocky Mountain Ichthyologist | Fri Oct 20 1995 12:19 | 2 |
|
Thanks Frank, It's appreciated.
|
247.62 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Fri Oct 20 1995 12:25 | 10 |
| If'n there's any single reason why I abhore the Braves
and the Cowboys, it would be the self-appointed titles
of "America's Team" they've bestowed upon themselves.
I figure there's more Americans who refuse to jump on
their respective bandwagons than there are those who've
been sucked in.
billl
|
247.63 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Oct 20 1995 12:35 | 10 |
| Are you sure they are self appointed?
Nick-names come from all sorts of places.
In the case of Atlanta the name may come from the fact that many American
League regions see the Braves as their 2nd team due to Turners TBS "Super
Station". They are America's team because that's the area in which they are
seen.
George
|
247.64 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Rocky Mountain Ichthyologist | Fri Oct 20 1995 12:38 | 7 |
|
Bill,
How many times do we have to go through this BS. NFL properites gave
the Cowboys that name, not the Cowboy orginization. Americans love
winners. When your in the playoff's 25 of 35 years you gain fans from
all areas. You also gain people that can't stand the sight of you.
|
247.65 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Cleveland Indians a great team from a great city | Fri Oct 20 1995 12:40 | 6 |
|
Isn't there a commercial on TBS that states watch America's team
play vs ??????? this thursday night?
Sounds pretty self appointed to me.
|
247.66 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's pancake time! | Fri Oct 20 1995 12:51 | 4 |
| > Sounds pretty self appointed to me.
It is. They've been doing it since TBS became a superstation. The
Braves were losing 90 games a year and calling themselves America's Team.
|
247.67 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Fri Oct 20 1995 12:55 | 8 |
|
Yes, TBS has advertised the Braves as 'America's Team' since I
first got cable. And that was back when their only bright spot
was Dale Murphy and they were about as much America's team as
they were Bolivia's. It was a little marketing ploy that prob-
ably played well down South where they were the only baseball
game in town but it came off a little hokey up here in Red Sox
country.
|
247.68 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Oct 20 1995 13:09 | 7 |
| If you can't stand marketing, tell me you always eat generic cereal. This is
a team that knows how to make money and has been doing things to make money
since 1876. If other teams worked as hard at thinking of ways to bring in cash
they probably wouldn't be such a mess.
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.69 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Fri Oct 20 1995 13:18 | 13 |
|
>> If you can't stand marketing, tell me you always eat generic cereal.
>> This is a team that knows how to make money and has been doing things
>> to make money since 1876. If other teams worked as hard at thinking of
>> ways to bring in cash they probably wouldn't be such a mess.
I don't see where anyone said that they 'can't stand marketing' just
the self-appointed title 'America's Team'. They weren't. Aren't. And
won't ever be. As for knowing how to make money. That ain't the Braves.
Turner made his money in cable TV not in baseball. You may have heard
of CNN, TNT, TBS, etc. The Braves are just cheap programing like
Andy Griffith reruns.
|
247.70 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's pancake time! | Fri Oct 20 1995 13:35 | 5 |
| > If you can't stand marketing, tell me you always eat generic cereal.
Correct on both counts. Well, not exactly - I eat generic cereal about 70%
of the time. I'm not awake anyway, and am just trying to shovel something
into my stomach...
|
247.71 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Fri Oct 20 1995 13:35 | 17 |
| >
> If you can't stand marketing, tell me you always eat generic cereal. This is
>a team that knows how to make money and has been doing things to make money
Believe it or not, I do.
I figure why pay more then $4 a box for General Mills Honey Nut Cheerios when
I can buy America's Choice (fergit what they call them) for $2.50. Same thing
with Oatmeal. Quaker is $3.50, America's Choice is $1.99.
Now, of course, I don't know if America's Choice is a self appointed name or
whether The Grocery Consortium gave the name to Waldbaum's....
'Saw
|
247.72 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's pancake time! | Fri Oct 20 1995 13:39 | 2 |
|
So, George, what's your answer to this wave of generic cereal eaters??? :-)
|
247.73 | Will George defend history's great propaganda machines? | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Oct 20 1995 13:46 | 14 |
|
> Now, of course, I don't know if America's Choice is a self appointed name or
> whether The Grocery Consortium gave the name to Waldbaum's....
My guess is that Waldbaum's is just being very pretentious in speaking
for all of America (we don't have no stinkin' Waldbaum's up here),
but like the Dallas Cowboys they'll cop a plea and blame it on the
Consortium.
Funny how the Cowboys are part of NFL Properties when they want to
be, and have no use for them when they don't...
glenn
|
247.74 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Oct 20 1995 13:47 | 16 |
| I'm having a real hard time seeing what's the big deal with giving yourself
a nick-name. So big deal some P.R. guy came up with a name and they stuck it on
their program. So what? Somehow I feel there's something else that's getting
people pissed off about the Braves, there's too much heat here for it to be
nothing more than some marketing gimmick.
Marketing aside, this team was born and raised in Boston, lived in Boston for
76 years, and as far as I'm concerned they are still as much a Boston team as
the Red Sox who have only played here about 20 more years than the Braves.
But then if others want to root for Groner's team, that's fine. Makes for
more excitement.
Only 1 day 6.5 hours to go,
GO BRAVES!!!!
George
|
247.75 | So you don't like a team for what some people calls 'em, eh? | MIMS::MITCHAM_A | -Andy in Alpharetta (near Atlanta) | Fri Oct 20 1995 13:49 | 5 |
| I don't like the Boston Redsocks because they have a self-appointed name
of the "Bo Socks". Good team but they weren't, aren't and never will be
Bo's Socks. :-)
-Andy
|
247.76 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Oct 20 1995 13:50 | 8 |
| RE <<< Note 247.72 by IMBETR::DUPREZ "It's pancake time!" >>>
>So, George, what's your answer to this wave of generic cereal eaters??? :-)
Personally I like my Kellog's Frosted Flakes. The Tiger is right, they are
Grrrrrrrrrrrrate!. Worth the 50c or what ever.
George
|
247.77 | da scoop | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Fri Oct 20 1995 13:51 | 8 |
247.78 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Fri Oct 20 1995 13:53 | 7 |
| > Marketing aside, this team was born and raised in Boston, lived in Boston for
>76 years, and as far as I'm concerned they are still as much a Boston team as
>the Red Sox who have only played here about 20 more years than the Braves.
Yabbut, George, you actually grew up, raised a family, and retired from your
first job back when the Braves were in Boston. Most of us weren't yet born
when they moved to Milwaukee.
|
247.79 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Oct 20 1995 13:58 | 7 |
| Actually I was born the year the Boston Braves were in the World Series.
But was it 1914, or 1948? You'll only know by sawing me down and counting
the rings.
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.80 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's pancake time! | Fri Oct 20 1995 14:21 | 4 |
| > But was it 1914, or 1948? You'll only know by sawing me down and counting
>the rings.
I'd enjoy the opportunity... :-)
|
247.81 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Fri Oct 20 1995 14:33 | 10 |
| America's Choice used to be something different until very recently, but I
can't remember what. Basically it's the store brand.
I think Waldbaum's (Food Marts, and Edwards Food Warehouses) are local to this
area.
Just like we don't have Safeway, or Star Markets.
'Saw
|
247.82 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Fri Oct 20 1995 14:48 | 4 |
| or my favorite...Piggly Wiggly
billl
|
247.83 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Oct 23 1995 09:44 | 25 |
| What a weekend for the Braves!!!!!
Maddux pitched a gem Saturday going all the way for a complete game. Huge
home run by the "Crime Dog" Fred McGriff.
Sunday Glavine pitched well enough, coming up with big strikeouts at key
times and keeping the Indians off their timing. He and the bullpen kept the
Braves in the game long enough for the offense to generate a few runs and for
Wolhers to slam the door in the 9th for the save. This time it was the young
guys, Chipper Jones and Javy Lopez who drove in the runs when they were needed.
It was fun listening to Bob Costas fail miserably at trying to bury the
Braves past in Boston. After going on at length about how the Braves never won
since moving to the south and using what ever skill he had to avoid mentioning
where they had moved from he got tripped up trying to talk about the Indians
past. When he came to their last championship it was "against the ... uh ...
ooops ... The uh Braves ... when they were in ... uh ... Boston".
Bummer seeing Jeff Blauser ineligible for the series.
My prediction is that this will be the series in which Chipper Jones emerges
as a house hold name.
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.84 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's pancake time! | Mon Oct 23 1995 09:54 | 12 |
| > It was fun listening to Bob Costas fail miserably at trying to bury the
>Braves past in Boston. After going on at length about how the Braves never won
>since moving to the south and using what ever skill he had to avoid mentioning
>where they had moved from he got tripped up trying to talk about the Indians
>past. When he came to their last championship it was "against the ... uh ...
>ooops ... The uh Braves ... when they were in ... uh ... Boston".
Costas emerges from behind a grassy knoll to character-assassinate the
Braves - film at 11...
You're too funny, George. If he trips over his tongue while doing a promo,
does he hate the product?
|
247.85 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Oct 23 1995 10:09 | 15 |
| It wasn't a promo, it was at the beginning when they were talking about the
history of the two teams. The way Costas was talking about the Braves you would
have thought they were an expansion team until he stuck his foot in his mouth.
He had just talked about how the Braves had never won and how the Indians had
gotten swept in '54. He then went back and tried talking about how "of course
the Indians had won a couple times earlier, once in '20 and once in '48 when
they beat" ... who? You mean this isn't an expansion team?
No mention of the Braves wins in 1914 and 1957 or word one of how they owned
the National League in the 19th century, so it was fun to see him trip over
his own words.
2 down, 2 to go, GO BRAVES!!!!!
George
|
247.86 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Oct 23 1995 11:32 | 13 |
| That was quite a pickoff play engineered by Javy Lopez. The network did a
pretty good job of catching his signal to Pena for a high inside fastball and
his throw down to 1st. And what a throw, right on the money.
That was a boost for Lopez, he'd been having problems with guys running on
him all night, sometimes not even attempting a throw.
Lofton continued his aggressive running throughout both games. Seems he's
a bit too aggressive. He's gotten away with it so far, wonder if his luck will
hold or if he'll run them out of a big inning at some point? Either way, he's
an amazing player.
George
|
247.87 | Braves flat out-executing Indians | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Oct 23 1995 11:40 | 24 |
|
Costas has a better knowledge of baseball history than almost all
other national broadcasters put together. He just correctly
recognizes Boston's influence on this Braves' franchise, as, uh,
negligible.
Good to hear Joe Morgan in the booth. Even with Uecker's occasional
histrionics ("oh, that's plenty of horse there, Bob, he can carry
you" ;-), these guys are all over Michaels/Palmer/McCarver. Must
be something about ABC, because like with the MNF team, these guys
suffer from the "just won't shut up" disease with the trivia and
stats. A lot of people like Tim McCarver for some reason, but with
all the bad puns, jokes and meaningless asides he's just got to have
one of the poorest senses of humor ever heard in a broadcast booth.
Javy Lopez impresses the hell out of me. Everyone knew he could
hit, but the defense was supposed to be a question mark. Give
Bobby Cox the nod so far for managerial decision of the Series on
that called pickoff play in last night's game. Someone in that
dugout was paying attention to Ramirez' "cheating", and they
caught him.
glenn
|
247.88 | Any bets on if Baerga pops to third to end it agian | AD::HEATH | Tribe Roooools Sox;Sox commit biggest choke in sports | Mon Oct 23 1995 11:42 | 12 |
|
First of all Chipper Jones has been a hosehold name for about
two years. Watched him hammer Clemens in a rehab start last year.
If nobody knew about him prior to the series everyone knows about
him and his herpes now. (For Imus listeners). Secondly don't count
out the Tribe yet. Yea they have Smoltz going in game 3 but he can
be on the wild side and if he has an off night forget it. I also
guessing that Cox goes with Avery in game 4, he hasn't pitched well
all year and could get lit up.
Jerry
|
247.89 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Mon Oct 23 1995 11:45 | 6 |
| >> He just correctly recognizes Boston's influence on this Braves'
>> franchise, as, uh, negligible.
No kidding. Other than George, no one cares what the Braves did
in the 19th century. In Boston, damn few care what they've done
in the latter part of the 20th.
|
247.90 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Oct 23 1995 12:06 | 18 |
| Well you can't have it both ways. Sure, the 1914 Boston Braves that swept the
Athletics in 4 and the 1957 Milwaukee Braves that beat the Yankees have nothing
to do with todays Braves. Likewise the 1920 Indians who beat the Dodgers don't
have anything to do with this Indians team either. For that matter, the 1948
and 1954 Indians don't have anything to do with this team but people talk about
them all the time.
All sports is frivolous. By definition it is frivolous. So implying that
I'm being frivolous for taking about the "Boston" Braves is meaningless.
I'm a Boston Braves fan! I'm a RABID Boston Braves fan!! And the fact that
they pack their trunks and move once in a while means nothing!!
They are the BOSTON BRAVES and they'll always be the BOSTON BRAVES!!. And
I want to see them WIN THE WORLD SERIES!!!!!!!
GO BRAVES!!!!!!
George
|
247.91 | Hello..McMaiewski! | GENRAL::WADE | Ah'm Yo Huckleberry... | Mon Oct 23 1995 12:47 | 5 |
|
You'll need a time machine to watch the "Boston Braves" win
a world series.........
Claybone
|
247.92 | | MIMS::MITCHAM_A | -Andy in Alpharetta (near Atlanta) | Mon Oct 23 1995 12:48 | 6 |
| In his post-game discussion last evening, Costas said it was an almost
certainty that Cox will pitch Avery in the 4th game. Personally, I
believe that, while Cox may indeed start Avery game 4, I do not believe
he will if they loose game 3 (JMO).
-Andy
|
247.93 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Oct 23 1995 13:00 | 15 |
| Cox said he'll wait until they get to Cleveland to decide. Today will
be Maddux's day to work and they'll watch him and see how it goes.
One thing going for Maddux is that in spite of pitching a complete game
his pitch count was low. He only needed something like 96 pitches to get
27 outs on Saturday.
Regarding Avery, it's true he had a bad year but he seems to have come
around. He pitched well his last few times out this year. Also he's done
well in post season in the past.
Of course he's more of a fast ball pitcher and it's the junk that Maddux
and Glavine throw that seems to be causing more problems for the Indians.
George
|
247.94 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Rocky Mountain Ichthyologist | Mon Oct 23 1995 14:20 | 5 |
|
Maddux is a lock for game 4 having faced only 29 batters in game 1
he should be rested enough to hold the Indians again. I would not give
the tribe a chance to get back into it by pitching Avery after the
difficult year he's had up to this point.
|
247.95 | To differ | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Mon Oct 23 1995 14:34 | 12 |
| I disagree. I would give Maddox his normal rest which I assume is four
days. To move him up would be a mistake and if that game was lost it
would put unnatural pressure on the entire rotation. If the Braves
simply didn't have a pitcher nearly of Avery's caliber I'd consider it
or if Avery was right handed. Perhaps I just like Avery. I'd go with
him period at this point, certainly in a 3-0 situation.
In fact at 3-0 I think the only way to blow the series would be moving
Maddox up.
But that's the beauty of sports, especially baseball. Entirely
different points of view.
|
247.96 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Oct 23 1995 15:49 | 14 |
| If they are up 3 zip it probably doesn't matter much what they do. They could
pitch Avery on Wednesday and if he wins fine, sweep. If not they have the top 3
pitchers in their normal rotation.
The question is what happens if Smoltz loses and the series is at 2-1. Then
Wednesday becomes more important. The temptation would be to use Maddux but if
they do and he loses because he's not ready, that leaves them all tied up
having to decide if Glavine and Smoltz should go on short rest.
Of course I'll bet that Kennedy and Penella would love to have been in
Cox's shoes 2 games up on the Indians wondering if they should bring back
Maddux on 3 or 4 days rest with Glavine and Smoltz in the wings.
George
|
247.97 | Maddux, Maddux, Maddux | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Oct 23 1995 16:41 | 15 |
|
> The question is what happens if Smoltz loses and the series is at 2-1. Then
> Wednesday becomes more important. The temptation would be to use Maddux but if
> they do and he loses because he's not ready, that leaves them all tied up
> having to decide if Glavine and Smoltz should go on short rest.
At 2-1, this should be a no-brainer, go with Maddux. The guy has
not been stressed a bit over the entire postseason, and as pointed
out his effort in Game 1 was light. He's one of the best pitchers
in baseball history and he literally toyed with the mighty Indians
in Game 1. Maddux in 4, Maddux in 7 on three days' rest again if
necessary.
glenn
|
247.98 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Mon Oct 23 1995 16:43 | 4 |
247.99 | Course if they were real I'd a used body english | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Mon Oct 23 1995 16:50 | 8 |
| Well in 1964 Mauch needed one more victory to clinch the pennant (or so
he thought) and brought Bunning back with short rest and lost. He then
did the same with Bennett, another loss and the rest is history.
I have a feeling like I did with the crazy met and the rangers - devils
series. Therefore I predict... if he pitches Maddox out of turn,
disaster. Just like my world series bets (which fortunately are
imaginary).
|
247.100 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Oct 23 1995 16:53 | 10 |
| Both pitchers were getting generous calls in Game 1.
Didn't Maddux pitch game 4 in both rounds of playoffs on 3 days rest?
At any rate, Glenn is right, unless he's got some physical problem if the
series is 2-1 they should go with Maddux.
If it's 3-0 any strategy will do.
George
|
247.101 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Rocky Mountain Ichthyologist | Mon Oct 23 1995 17:31 | 6 |
|
Groaner
If you'll check it out. He had a AL ump in game 1. The ump last night
was NL. I cant believe this, but I agree with George, both pitchers got
a few calls in game 1.
|
247.102 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Mon Oct 23 1995 21:02 | 4 |
247.103 | | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Tue Oct 24 1995 08:12 | 19 |
| I believe the NL ump had home plate for game 1. In the past they'd
alternate each game, which is most likely what they're doing still.
Both umps were consistent for all pitchers. As a matter of fact, I saw
Martinez throw an outside fastball to David Justice in Game 2, that
wasn't even close. All you can ask is for the ump to be consistent.
I thought the biggest key of Game 1 was when Hargrove chose to play
his infield at DP depth with the bases loaded, nobody out, and a 1-1
score in the bottom of the seventh. What the hell was he thinking! It
wasn't as if they were exactly teeing off on Maddux and were about to
bust out and score a bunch of runs. As it turned out, Vizquel booted a
grounder and was the beneficiary of a bad call by the second base ump.
Now if you want to talk about bad calls there's a perfect example.
The key thing about the play besides Cleveland getting a gift, is that
one run scored and it had to give Atlanta a huge lift. If they hold
Atlanta in that situation it's a different ball game, but hey it's
always easier to make the call when sitting in your living room!
Steve
|
247.104 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Tue Oct 24 1995 08:31 | 16 |
| Whichever team is the home team has the HP umpire from their league in
game 1, then the umpires rotate positions, so:
Game 1: HP NL, 1b AL, 2b NL, 3b AL, lf(?) NL, rf(?) AL
2: AL, NL, AL, NL, AL, NL
3: NL, AL, NL, AL, NL, AL
4: AL, NL, AL, NL, AL, NL
5: NL, AL, NL, AL, NL, AL
6: AL, NL, AL, NL, AL, NL
7: NL, AL, NL, AL, NL, AL
Regarding the comments about Lopez' defense: I don't think NL
observers question whether Lopez is a good defensive catcher; he is.
But, the Braves staff is so poor at holding on runners that he rarely
gets a chance to throw out runners.
|
247.105 | pivotal | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Tue Oct 24 1995 09:50 | 15 |
| well I'm not sure if Vizquel had fielded that grounder cleanly he'd
have had a dp but a good chance - so where's the criticism of Hargrove?
Sounds like he made the right call - pulling the infield in can result
in big innings. DP depth is very common.
I saw another criticism of Lofton "almost" making the 3rd out at 3rd
base - I don't comprehend this type of critique but it was Shaughnessy
so perhaps that says it all.
The only Hargrove criticism I'd listen to is not walking Lopez to pitch
to 8 and 9 hitters. This is the more sophisticated n.l. mindset (non
dh) as opposed to 6th grade education needed for the double switch.
By the way, Avery is a definite for game four regardless of tonight's
outcome [Glenn!].
|
247.106 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Oct 24 1995 09:57 | 16 |
| RE <<< Note 247.105 by AKOCOA::BREEN >>>
> I saw another criticism of Lofton "almost" making the 3rd out at 3rd
> base - I don't comprehend this type of critique but it was Shaughnessy
> so perhaps that says it all.
I'm not sure but I think the criticism had something to do with the Indians
being down at least 2 runs. If that were true then the only way they would
catch up would be if something happened that would have brought Lofton in from
2nd anyway (i.e. at least another hit to the outfield).
In other words, his run "didn't count", which is TV announcer slang for "it
counts, but you need more offense after this guy anyway so he's better off
not taking chances and running them out of the inning".
George
|
247.107 | Tribe = 86 Mets | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Tue Oct 24 1995 10:18 | 5 |
|
these announcers and writers are so by the book it's rediculous. Don't
they realize the emotional advantage of the type of play Lofton made?
mike
|
247.108 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Rocky Mountain Ichthyologist | Tue Oct 24 1995 10:19 | 4 |
|
It's a unwritten rule. You never make the first or last out at third.
With two outs Lofton made a stupid play. Luckily the throw was off or
the game would have been over on that bonehead play.
|
247.109 | | CNTROL::CHILDS | Washing Machine | Tue Oct 24 1995 10:29 | 7 |
|
unwritten rule. Is that like double secret probation????
I'd rather see an agressive play than by the books anyday...
it's only baseball, it's not like it's basketball or football.
when it's all said and done who really cares?????
mike
|
247.110 | | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Tue Oct 24 1995 10:42 | 15 |
| re: Lofton
Dumb play. The meat of the order was coming up. If McGriff makes a
decent throw, the game's over.
re: Hargrove
Let's just say if that were my decision, I'd try to cut the run down
at the plate when you're facing a pitcher like Maddux.
I was also cursing Hargrove for pulling Hershiser, only to find out
the following day that he asked out. That's why baseball's the
toughest game to manage, everyone thinks they're an expert!
Steve
|
247.111 | Thought it was the right decision... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Oct 24 1995 10:45 | 14 |
|
> I thought the biggest key of Game 1 was when Hargrove chose to play
> his infield at DP depth with the bases loaded, nobody out, and a 1-1
> score in the bottom of the seventh. What the hell was he thinking! It
Tough call there, Steve. Nobody out it's very tough to play the
infield in and think you're going to dodge the bullet _twice_, when
the hit brings in multiple runs (1st-and-3rd would be a little
different). As it turned out, they got exactly the play they wanted,
but Vizquel booted the ball. And the Indians did pick up that 2nd
run they would have needed...
glenn
|
247.112 | At least there's no spread so that's not a factor | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Tue Oct 24 1995 10:46 | 6 |
| And he wasn't out, that's the point.
Once teams get throwing the ball around anything can happen.
The opposite of this is having the pitcher pitch from a full windup
with two out and a man on second and a two run lead.
|
247.113 | Breen-collision on the DP-depth thing too | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Oct 24 1995 10:46 | 9 |
|
> By the way, Avery is a definite for game four regardless of tonight's
> outcome [Glenn!].
Wow. Since I'm pulling for the Indians, I'm all for it...
glenn
|
247.114 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Oct 24 1995 10:50 | 14 |
|
> Once teams get throwing the ball around anything can happen.
Well, they can throw the ball around all they want, they're still
not going to give up the tying run. ;-)
There's no "emotional advantage" to having that run score.
Statistically, believe it or not, it's been shown that you're
better off having that guy still on third dancing around while
the next batter is up. With a guy like Maddux on the mound,
though, it doesn't make much difference.
glenn
|
247.115 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Tue Oct 24 1995 10:51 | 5 |
| I'm all for agressive baseball, but that was a
grandstand play by Lofton. He got REAL lucky.
billl
|
247.116 | | SALEM::REEVE | | Tue Oct 24 1995 15:18 | 22 |
| On Lofton's play- dumb play period. If he's safe, so what. If he
scores, so what. If he's out, game over. Upside potential = 0. Downside
= catastrophy. Stupid.
On Avery- Indians fans better not get too excited. Avery shut down the
Reds in Game 4 to close them out. He's always pitched well in the
postseason, and his last four outings were very good. The real key for
the Braves is to win at least one game in Cleveland. If Smoltz and
Avery fail, they have a fully rested Maddux whose current road winning
streak is a major league record. Avery was told before the Series that
if the Braves won both games in Atlanta, he was pitching game 4.
Like somebody else said, the worst thing to do is try to shorten the
rotation. Beating the Braves 4 out of 5 is extremely difficult if the
starters are fully rested.
As a RON usually, thanks to all for the last thirty or so replies. It's
nice to read some comments about baseball instead of the inane drivel
that occupied the vast majority of the first eighty replies to the base
note.
Chris
|
247.117 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Oct 24 1995 15:35 | 11 |
| Who ever pitches for the Braves will have to adjust to having a DH in the
lineup. No letup in the 9th slot.
The flip side is that Klesko will probably DH for the Braves with Devereaux
or Dwight Smith playing the outfield. I'm curious as to what they do with
the lineup. Lemke was moved from 8th to 2nd when Blauser went down. I wonder
if they will have Devereaux/Smith hit 2nd, move Lemke back to 8th and Belliard
to 9th. Devereaux is a .299 hitter but strikes out twice for every time he
walks.
George
|
247.118 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Tue Oct 24 1995 15:41 | 2 |
| George,
They are starting Polonia and batting him second.
|
247.119 | | SALEM::REEVE | | Tue Oct 24 1995 15:42 | 4 |
| Klesko to DH and bat 7th, Polonia in left to bat 2nd. Cox picked
Polonia due to his recent AL experience and the fact that he has played
|
247.120 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's pancake time! | Tue Oct 24 1995 15:54 | 19 |
| There's not much to choose from between Polonia and Klesko in left. At
least Polonia gets to the ball quickly so he can wait longer before making
the error...
> Cox picked
> Polonia due to his recent AL experience and the fact that he has played
Having played the game is always helpful... :-)
On a more serious note:
I haven't gotten to see any of the Series to date - was Glavine really, really
solid, or are the Tribe really in a team slump? (I know better than to ask
if Maddux was solid.)
I'm not sure that I'd play Polonia in left over Devereaux. Devereaux is much
more solid defensively, and even though he's slower and K's a lot, he has a
lot more power, and they could hit Lemke 2nd and put Devereaux further down in
the order.
|
247.121 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Im gonna boogie till I go Blind | Tue Oct 24 1995 16:05 | 15 |
|
Glavine admitted in the postgame interview that he did not have his
good stuff. His fastball had no movement, but his changeup was working
and took him out of the any serious trouble. He had a few 3-1 counts
and go the batter to pop out or dribble an infield out.
In the early innings he let his fastball get up. Murray made him pay
for one. The rest got by the Tribe. From the third on the change was
his main pitch. In the first 15 innings of the series the Inidans had
five hits. Five hits given up by your first two starters is a managers
dream.
The Braves Bullpin will be the difference from the previous years
playoff teams. The past years they had been close only to have the
reliever's give up the winnings runs.
|
247.122 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Oct 24 1995 16:07 | 16 |
| RE <<< Note 247.120 by IMBETR::DUPREZ "It's pancake time!" >>>
>I haven't gotten to see any of the Series to date - was Glavine really, really
>solid, or are the Tribe really in a team slump? (I know better than to ask
>if Maddux was solid.)
Glavine is never really solid. He slips some junk in here, tosses some junk
in there, really winds up and FIRES, THE BATTER SWING, oops it was the circle
change ... here it comes ... here it comes ... the batter is trying to untwist
... here it comes ... fllluuuuump into Lopez's mit.
The announcers keep talking about how he's off his game but he gets the
batters timing so goofed up that no one seems to be able to take advantage of
the fact that he's "not pitching well".
George
|
247.123 | Either that or a 4-0 sweep, shades of 1954 | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Tue Oct 24 1995 16:08 | 16 |
|
> I haven't gotten to see any of the Series to date - was Glavine really, really
> solid, or are the Tribe really in a team slump? (I know better than to ask
> if Maddux was solid.)
Glavine was not that sharp. A little wild by his standards, and no,
the Indians did not take full advantage.
Ask Chappy, Polonia is a stiff in all regards. Including experience.
Edge: Indians. I think the Indians are going to win tonight, then
shell Avery, and we'll all be second-guessing Bobby Cox come Thursday
morning... ;-)
glenn
|
247.124 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's pancake time! | Tue Oct 24 1995 16:12 | 6 |
| > Ask Chappy, Polonia is a stiff in all regards.
I don't need to ask Chappy. I've got eyes... :-)
Polonia is a much better Rotisserie player than a real baseball player.
Good (yet empty) batting average, lots of steals, poor defense.
|
247.125 | Geez | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Cleveland Indians a great team from a great city | Tue Oct 24 1995 16:19 | 4 |
|
Oh yeah Polonia is definitely a Stiff. And he is not a defensive
replacement!!!
|
247.126 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Tue Oct 24 1995 16:30 | 3 |
247.127 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Oct 25 1995 11:10 | 14 |
| What a game!
The Tribe is back in it now, down 2-1 with Avery on the mound you'd have
to say they were favored to tie it up at 2 each.
Both teams should have tired closers at this point. I wish Cox would stop
using relief pitchers in the World Series who had failed in the American League
earlier in the season. First Reardon, now Pena. I had this sinking feeling
when he came in that it was all over.
Game 4 tonight, Avery v. Hill
GO BRAVES!!
George
|
247.128 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Oct 25 1995 12:28 | 13 |
| People seem down on Smoltz right now which is to be expected but I wouldn't
count him out for the series. If he came back and pitched a Gem in game 7 it
wouldn't be the 1st time he's come back and pitched well.
As for what will happen, who knows. All of these games have been extremely
close and many have been decided by balls that did or did not go over a wall,
guys diving and either making a catch or just missing.
If one thing seems obvious it's that these teams are both the best in their
league and they are evenly matched. If the Tribe wins tonight this could go
down as one of the greatest Series ever.
George
|
247.129 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Wed Oct 25 1995 14:37 | 8 |
| > People seem down on Smoltz right now which is to be expected but I wouldn't
>count him out for the series. If he came back and pitched a Gem in game 7 it
>wouldn't be the 1st time he's come back and pitched well.
That's true, Smoltz is the kind of pitcher who could throw a 4-hitter in
game 7. Then again, he might give up 5 in the first. He is not one who
will do well when he doesn't have his good stuff, unlike Maddux or Glavine
who can and do win when they don't have everything going for them.
|
247.130 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Oct 25 1995 14:47 | 12 |
| Smoltz has always had strange mental problems with regard to pitching. They
even use to have his shrink go to games back around '91.
For some reason he use to have this habit of always giving up runs after his
team had scored runs. But he had no problem in high pressure situations if the
other pitcher was getting his guys out.
I guess the problems have changed now. Hopefully it's nothing more than
getting his slider across the plate and he'll work it out before he has to go
again. That is hopefully if you are a Braves fan.
George
|
247.131 | | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Wed Oct 25 1995 15:42 | 10 |
| It appeared to me that last night's umpire wasn't calling the low
strikes or corners. He *was* calling the high strike. Smoltz looked
pissed a couple of times when he didn't get what he thought were
strikes. I don't know if this was a factor in his not being able to
throw his slider for strikes, but it could have been a mental thing,
knowing his history.
Steve
|
247.132 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Im gonna boogie till I go Blind | Wed Oct 25 1995 15:56 | 13 |
|
I like the move Bobby Cox made pulling Smoltz out for the sidewinder
Clontz. He comes in flips a few up there, nice little grounder to
second flip to short and the pitchers best friend the ole 4-6-3 DP.
At that point I thought the Braves might come back, and the did.
Hargrove leaves Nagy in to long, gets two guys on and makes his second
mistake. Assenmacher, Braves get two more runs, Traverse!sp lets
Deveraux get a single to take the lead. Wohlters amd Mesa keep it
tied for the next 5 or 6 outs.
Cox brings Pena out of the pin, Game over. You would think he would
have learned his lesson with Pens in the past.
|
247.133 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Boston Braves, 1914 Champs | Wed Oct 25 1995 16:02 | 15 |
| Well the lesson he had learned in the past was that Pena could work as a set
up man and get them to Wohlers. Same with Greg McMichael, he had a 2.800 ERA on
the season.
I think Joe Morgan (was it him) said it quite well, the numbers these guys
put up, both pitchers and hitters, are averages and they are established over a
season in which they play a lot of guys that are no where as good as these two
teams.
Any pitcher facing the Indians or Braves batters is going to get hit more and
any hitter facing the Indians or Braves pitcher is likely to get shut down
unless, of course, he's got his stuff working like Maddux or he's got a fire
light under his arss like Lofton does.
George
|
247.134 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Boston Braves, 1914 Champs | Thu Oct 26 1995 08:31 | 38 |
| Last night the Braves took a 3 games to 1 lead in the best of 7 World Series.
If they win one more they become the Champions of baseball for the 1st time
since 1957.
But as the saying goes, it ain't over yet. In 1958 the Braves had the Yankees
down 3 games to 1 with Lew Burdette scheduled to pitch game 5 and Warren Spahn
scheduled to pitch game 6. They lost both those games, Lew Burdette came back
in game 7 and the Yankees beat him to win the series.
Another more recent example was in 1979 when Baltimore had the Pirates
"fam-i-ly" down 3 games to 1 only to let it slip away. In game 7 Baltimore
coach Earl Weaver used just about his entire pitching staff in the 9th inning
including Dennis Martinez but the Pirates scored the go ahead run and won the
series in 7.
Last night's 9th was nail biting time. It looked like a done deal when they
started the bottom of the inning with a comfortable 5-1 lead and Mark Wohlers
on the mound but when Manny Ramirez homered, someone doubled (was it Paul
Sorrento?), and Alejandro Pena started warming up in the bull pen I started
getting the same feeling I had during that almost unmentionable Red Sox World
Series loss back in '86.
But then Pedro Borbon came in, struck out 2 batters and David Justice made a
great catch on a deep Kenny Lofton drive to right to end the game. What a
finish.
Maddux goes for the Braves tonight against Hershiser. I'd give the edge to
the Braves but not by a lot, this Indians team is capable of getting to anyone
if they've seen him long enough. Tonight will be the Braves best shot at
winning the championship.
It will be Glavine for the Braves if they need game 6 but I believe that
Smoltz will get the call if they go to game 7. Yes he pitched a couple bad
innings but he's had more good innings than bad throughout the year and he's
still a great pitcher. If he can get control of his slider he'll be a totally
different pitcher than we saw Tuesday.
George
|
247.135 | GO BRAVES | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Give it to the kid! | Thu Oct 26 1995 09:12 | 26 |
| Some thoughts from an Atlanta resident and fan -
- Talk shows yesterday were killin' Cox about why he was starting Avery
and not Maddux. This brilliant decision is now being universally
praised:-)
- The local paper and talk shows (and from what I can tell, even those in
Cleveland) are getting on Hargrove's case big time. From playing the
infield back, pitching to Lopez, etc., he's making Cox look like a
genius.
- I, like a lot of fans (IMO) are cautiously optimistic. It ain't over
till the last out, and any team is capable of getting to any pitcher,
but I feel good about Maddux. How's Hershiser? He pulled himself from
game one, how's his health?
- I DO NOT need to sit through another ninth inning like last nights.
Fortunately Wohlers didn't stay out too long, and Borbon came in and
looked great. Not sure if Wohlers could pitch tonight either. He had
good velocity (the paper said 97, 98 and 99 mph on the first three
balls), but just didn't "have it".
Looking forward to tonight.
UMDan
|
247.136 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Thu Oct 26 1995 09:55 | 36 |
| > - The local paper and talk shows (and from what I can tell, even those in
> Cleveland) are getting on Hargrove's case big time. From playing the
> infield back, pitching to Lopez, etc., he's making Cox look like a
> genius.
Well, the Series ain't over, but the talk on WFAN yesterday afternoon was that
Hargrove is finding out that managing in July is a little different than
managing in October.
> - I, like a lot of fans (IMO) are cautiously optimistic. It ain't over
> till the last out, and any team is capable of getting to any pitcher,
> but I feel good about Maddux. How's Hershiser? He pulled himself from
> game one, how's his health?
Well, UMDan, I agree with your statement about the last out. As a Red Sox fan,
I can only state to you four numbers: 1 - 9 - 8 - 6....
Wait till the boys are sippin' their champagne before you open yours -- that'd
be the best bet!
> - I DO NOT need to sit through another ninth inning like last nights.
> Fortunately Wohlers didn't stay out too long, and Borbon came in and
> looked great. Not sure if Wohlers could pitch tonight either. He had
> good velocity (the paper said 97, 98 and 99 mph on the first three
> balls), but just didn't "have it".
Wohlers had to be a bit tired, no?
'Saw
|
247.137 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Boston Braves, 1914 Champs | Thu Oct 26 1995 10:03 | 10 |
| You'd think Wohlers would have been tired and maybe he was. The funny part is
that he had his velocity. I think he was ok but he was just being Wohlers. It's
not at all uncommon for him to blow away several guys then give up a long ball.
The Indians have some great hitters and sooner or later 1 or 2 guys are going
to catch up with one of those 99mph fast balls and crush it. Just like George
Brett getting a hold of that Goose Gossage fast ball in the ALCS back in, what
was it, 1980? Upper deck, K.C. went on to the World Series.
George
|
247.138 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Thu Oct 26 1995 11:10 | 3 |
| Typically the Wohlers fastball has quite a bit of movement on it.
Last night, although he was in the 97-99 mph range, his pitches
did not have any movement at all.
|
247.139 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Oct 26 1995 11:13 | 17 |
|
> Well, the Series ain't over, but the talk on WFAN yesterday afternoon was that
> Hargrove is finding out that managing in July is a little different than
> managing in October.
You know, I'm getting tired of the criticisms of Grover. He's _not_
managing any differently than he did in July - he is _not_ a
brilliant in-game manager, and never has been. He still does silly
things like hit Vizquel #2 and bench Thome for Espinoza, and still
believes heavily in platooning pitchers.
Hargrove's success has always been in (1) player development, and
(2) team building. The unfortunate possibility is that the
Indians _might_ need a different manager now, though I'd rather
they stick with Hargrove.
Joe
|
247.140 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Thu Oct 26 1995 11:19 | 3 |
| Hey Joe, I was just tellin' ya what they said on the radio.
|
247.141 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Thu Oct 26 1995 11:22 | 17 |
| >> Well, the Series ain't over, but the talk on WFAN yesterday afternoon was that
>> Hargrove is finding out that managing in July is a little different than
>> managing in October.
>
> You know, I'm getting tired of the criticisms of Grover. He's _not_
> managing any differently than he did in July - he is _not_ a
> brilliant in-game manager, and never has been. He still does silly
> things like hit Vizquel #2 and bench Thome for Espinoza, and still
> believes heavily in platooning pitchers.
And that's the point. Managing in the World Series is different than
managing a team with a double-digit lead in July, but Hargrove hasn't
caught on to that fact yet. It may be great to handle a pitching staff
in July, trying to build confidence, etc., but when you are in the
World Series (and for all we know, it might be Cleveland's only series
appearance this decade), you have to do all you can to win it, and that
implies some decent managing moves.
|
247.142 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's pancake time! | Thu Oct 26 1995 11:25 | 7 |
| >He still does silly things like hit Vizquel #2
I don't think this is that silly. I say this, however, while not being
privy to his strikeout numbers. But if he's good with the bat and can
handle hitting with Lofton dancing around on the bases, I'd say he's a
pretty *good* guy to have at #2. Who would you rather have? Carlos "swing
if it's in the stadium" Baerga? He can hit, but he's not a good #2 man.
|
247.143 | Throw the bum out! ;-) | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | What's the story morning glory? | Thu Oct 26 1995 11:32 | 17 |
|
> Hargrove's success has always been in (1) player development, and
> (2) team building. The unfortunate possibility is that the
> Indians _might_ need a different manager now, though I'd rather
> they stick with Hargrove.
But seriously, Joe, how different would this ballclub be in
departments (1) and (2) if they had a different manager than
Hargrove? I know about not questioning success, but the GM
Hart is really the man. We're talking about some awesome
talent, plus the very shrewd acquisitions of veterans Hershiser
and Martinez for this season. In-game managing is what it's
all about for championship-caliber-talented teams. There isn't
much else.
glenn
|
247.144 | It should be over tonight! | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Im gonna boogie till I go Blind | Thu Oct 26 1995 11:33 | 13 |
|
The man makes the same mistake two games in a row. Left the starter in
to long and put Assenmacher in to recover. The Braves had Assenmacher
on there staff for some time. He's the last guy I would put up. Next he
follows with Traverse, this is the same guys that got spanked the night
before.
Cox went with Wohlers again, found out he had no movement and pulled
him out for Borbon. The Indians had not seen Borbon and he sealed the
win on three batters, starting with no outs and a man on.
|
247.145 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Thu Oct 26 1995 12:12 | 10 |
247.146 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Im gonna boogie till I go Blind | Thu Oct 26 1995 12:33 | 7 |
|
Groaner
Assenmacher is a stiff. He's blown the last two oportunites he's had to
keep the game in the state it was in when he entered.
|
247.147 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Oct 26 1995 12:54 | 60 |
|
>> Hargrove's success has always been in (1) player development, and
>> (2) team building. The unfortunate possibility is that the
>> Indians _might_ need a different manager now, though I'd rather
>> they stick with Hargrove.
> But seriously, Joe, how different would this ballclub be in
> departments (1) and (2) if they had a different manager than
> Hargrove?
That's a fair question; it is my belief that they would be a
_much_ different team. Without a manager who excels in
player development, I'm not convinced that Belle (in particular),
Lofton, Ramirez, or Thome would be where they are today. Heck,
I think on many teams Belle isn't just a headcase, but is out
of baseball by this point instead of the subject of MVP arguments.
> I know about not questioning success, but the GM
> Hart is really the man. We're talking about some awesome
> talent, plus the very shrewd acquisitions of veterans Hershiser
> and Martinez for this season.
Yes, Hart's done (generally) a very good job. But there are
managers who bring along young players well (like Hargrove),
and those who don't (I suspect Pinella might be one). Hart
deserves a lot of credit for setting the table...
> In-game managing is what it's
> all about for championship-caliber-talented teams. There isn't
> much else.
I disagree. Without the other aspects, you have one or two shots,
and that's it. If you aren't building a sense of teamwork, you're
going to watch some players you want to keep depart; if you aren't
developing the young players, you aren't going to cope with the
passage of time.
And, IMHO, Hargrove's in-game managing _isn't_ horrible. He's not
great - he does make mistakes - but he's not bottom of the barrel,
either. And he has a _heck_ of a record - take a look as his
minor league managing career sometime. With little talent to
speak of, he _consistently_ won in the minors.
No, Grover's not the best manager in the majors. I think Showalter's
better, LaRussa is generally excellent, and there are a few others
with more impressive accomplishments than Grover. But if I'm Hart,
Grover's my first choice to continue running the Indians.
Re: Vizquel in the #2 hole.
Put Thome there. Why put one of the best OBP players in baseball
_after_ the big RBI guys, instead of in front of them?
Re: Frank
I didn't mean to imply that you were criticizing Grover - I'm just
tired of the criticism being thrown at him by the same reporters
who were picking him as MoY just a few weeks back...
Joe
|
247.148 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's pancake time! | Thu Oct 26 1995 13:07 | 17 |
| RE: #2 hitter
> Put Thome there. Why put one of the best OBP players in baseball
> _after_ the big RBI guys, instead of in front of them?
It's entirely possible that the factors I mentioned before might bother
him tremendously. I don't know for sure, but I'd bet that Thome has a
healthy (but not exorbitant) amount of Ks in spite of the stellar OBP -
Vizquel's OBP isn't as good, but he might be better at moving Lofton, et al,
into scoring position for the big RBI guys.
I doubt Thome has had to worry too much about the distraction of Eddie Murray
trying to steal a base from his current lineup slot.
You follow the Tribe far more closely than I - I'm not trying to convince you
that you're wrong, just that there's more to life for a #2 hitter than OBP.
(Although his OBP *is* important.)
|
247.149 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Boston Braves, 1914 Champs | Thu Oct 26 1995 13:08 | 11 |
| Re <<< Note 247.146 by OLD1S::CADZILLA2 "Im gonna boogie till I go Blind" >>>
> Assenmacher is a stiff. He's blown the last two oportunites he's had to
> keep the game in the state it was in when he entered.
But in game 4 or 5 of the ALCS he came in for a pivotal situation and got the
meat of the Mariners order out with runners on base that could have blown the
game wide open. How could they have known he wouldn't be able to do the same
thing here?
George
|
247.150 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Boston Braves, 1914 Champs | Thu Oct 26 1995 13:54 | 10 |
| RE <<< Note 63.1603 by AKOCOA::BREEN >>>
> For the third or fourth time, I attended a Braves game in 1952 at old
> Braves field. My main thought at the time was "for this I missed going
> to Fenway?"
Since I was only 4 I was a bit too young to go to games back then, what
was it like going to a game at Braves Field? Why was Fenway better?
George
|
247.151 | Dank and dreary vs Sunny and lively | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Thu Oct 26 1995 14:05 | 9 |
| It's all images George. I did want to go because I'd been to Fenway
and this was new. The day was cloudy, my Fenway games were sunny.
Fenway had Ted, the Braves had Sam Jethroe. Maybe Sam went hitless
that game but I had his card and he was rookie of the year in 1950.
Of course Ted struck out in the first game I went to at Fenway; "So,
what's the big deal! DiMaggio (Dom of course) had a few hits and a
terrific catch in center, why isn't he the star?" Pitying looks from
the older fans.
|
247.152 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Boston Braves, 1914 Champs | Thu Oct 26 1995 15:44 | 8 |
| So what was the field like at Braves Stadium? Did it have any quirks like the
Fenway's wall or was it pretty symmetric?
I imagine it wasn't very big. I read once that one of the big attractions
of Milwaukee was that they had just built a bran new 28,000 seat stadium. Were
there seats all around?
George
|
247.153 | Come on Tommy G., win one for the folks back home! | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Fri Oct 27 1995 07:37 | 16 |
| Obviously, Maddox just didn't have it last night. In retrospect, it
was a good thing he didn't go in Game 4. A performance like last night
would have tied the series at 2, with Glavine going in Game 5 against
Hershiser. It could very easily have been the Braves facing
elimination instead of the Indians.
Is it likely that Cox will tinker with his lineup? I've seen quite
enough of Rafael Belliard to say the least. Talk about an anemic bat.
This Mordecai (sp?) kid can't be any worse can he? At least he has a
chance of making contact with the pitch. Belliard can't even get down
a bunt. I also wonder if we'll see Klesko and Justice switch positions
in the lineup. McGriff isn't getting much to hit with Justice hitting
behind him. It seem to me at this point that Klesko and Jones are
Atlanta's two most dangerous hitters.
Steve
|
247.154 | | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Fri Oct 27 1995 08:24 | 4 |
| One more question that needs to be asked. Will the Atlanta fans take
their thumbs out of their bums and make some noise this weekend?
Steve
|
247.155 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Give it to the kid! | Fri Oct 27 1995 08:49 | 12 |
| I gotta belive that the stadium will be rockin' Saturday night. While
the city does not apperar to be as caught up in the Series as in years
past, it's my opinion that there are a lot of fans (like myself), who
are sitting at home on the edge of our seats hoping that the Braves
win. Once they do, the place will explode.
And I agree that maybe Belliard needs to sit down. Used to be he hit
the ball once in a while, now he looks lost.
I like tommorow's matchup a lot more than Game 7's (if necessary).
UMDan
|
247.156 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Boston Braves, 1914 Champs | Fri Oct 27 1995 09:03 | 19 |
| Looks like I won't need to clip my fingernails for some time to come, this
one looks like it's headed down to the wire. So far they are right on track to
repeat 1958.
Up 3 games to 1 the Braves sent out their Ace just like they sent out Lew
Burdette against the Yankees in '58 and he got pummeled. Well OK, not pummeled
like guys get pummeled during the regular season but he obviously wasn't the
same guy who pitched Game 1.
Were those two home runs at the end of the game huge or what? Both of them
crushed, tape measure jobs. And the two line drives snagged by the pitchers
were something else as well. Both cases of sticking out a glove then finding
"lookie at what I've got here".
Right now I'd say odds are slightly in favor of there being a game 7 on
Sunday night, the Indians have started to hit.
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.157 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Fri Oct 27 1995 09:21 | 7 |
| Has anyone done a calculation of the "ex-Cubs factor"
yet?
billl
|
247.158 | | MIMS::MITCHAM_A | -Andy in Alpharetta (near Atlanta) | Fri Oct 27 1995 09:24 | 11 |
| RE: Braves fans
There were reports on this morning's radio that there were in excess of 1,000
(perhaps 2,000) people at the airport this morning to greet the Braves as
they arrived at approx. 2:30am. If I was to speculate, I would expect the
stadium to be rocking Saturday (and Sunday if they get that far).
I said early on this will go 6 games. I still feel this way; I think Saturday
will be judgement day!
-Andy
|
247.159 | Braves 2, Indians 1, I think | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | What's the story morning glory? | Fri Oct 27 1995 09:34 | 17 |
|
> Has anyone done a calculation of the "ex-Cubs factor"
> yet?
Well, we've got Greg Maddux for one, and that stiff Paul "always
walk the first batter for good measure" Assenmacher as another.
Somehow that doesn't seem a wash (although after last night the
gap has closed).
Oh yeah, the Braves also have Dwight Smith. Maybe last night _was_
the beginning of the end...
glenn
glenn
|
247.160 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Some gave all... | Fri Oct 27 1995 10:10 | 8 |
| > Braves 2, Indians 1
This explains a great deal regarding their recent
problems in the WS.
billl
|
247.161 | Avery or Smoltz, Sunday; will that be the question? | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Fri Oct 27 1995 14:09 | 10 |
| George I was very young, probably 7 when I went. Braves field had a
"jury" box in right field, held 28k and had a small but raucous, loyal
following who as you know never stopped following. I have friends and
relatives still cheering the Braves on after all these years.
I still think ol' Bobby Cox has a big decision Sunday night, I just
don't think Glavine will win Saturday. Smoltz will have the freshest
arm and the Indians if they get to Sunday will have had plenty of
lefties to get used to. It would be hard not to choose Avery to save
the bacon, though.
|
247.162 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | | Fri Oct 27 1995 16:53 | 53 |
| Congrats to the Indians fans for the Tribe victory last night.
[Haven't had a chance to get in here today yet.] Cleveland had
their most productive night of the series last night, in my mind,
making necessary adjustments and doing a good job at hitting,
with the Belle 1st-inning HR and Sandy Alomar's hits being a
good sample of that.
Keys to the Indians victory last night:
Cleveland hitters seemed to adjust after a dismal performance against
Maddux in game one.
OTOH, Maddux had probably his next-to-worst game of the season, in
terms of control. For example, I believe I heard that Maddux had not
walked two batters in the first inning as a Brave. He was constantly
behind in the count, which is extremely rare for him, and unfortunately
with the type of game he pitches, he has to be getting strikes early in
the pitch count. [Note, even the announcers remarked that he was quite
efficient when ahead in the count, even last night.] While he will
have no other opportunity to prove it in this series, I suspect that
if he made a third appearance against Cleveland, his pitching would be
more like game 1 than game 5. Even so, 4 runs on 7 hits in 7 innings
kept the Braves close, and is as good as most pitchers would do in a
7-inning stint against Cleveland.
Probably the two key plays of the game, as it turned out, were pitches
Orel might liked to have had back. Bases loaded, one out in the
sixth, tie game at 2, Polonia (already having homered), hits a shot
but right at Vizquel, who turns the DP. Top of eighth, lead runner on
for Atlanta, Grissom hits another shot (hardest hit of night for
Atlanta, except for Klesko's bomb) up the middle, and Orel happened to
catch it at the end of the webbing in his glove, and threw out Mike
Mordecai at first for the DP. Had either hit been in a slightly
different place, the Braves might have gone to extra innings, but that's
baseball.
Jose Mesa wasn't that impressive to me the other night (3 innings,
2 innings with runners in scoring position, the other had the lead
runner on but got the DP). Last night he was less impressive, giving
up a long fly ball out to Chipper Jones, the single to McGriff,
Justice's weak grounder, then a blast by Klesko to bring the Braves
within one, before Lemke fanned to end it. The lest handed bats still
seem to be getting around on Mesa.
I suspect Cox will be second guessed a lot on bringing in Clontz to
pitch the entire eighth, but who else was there ? Wohlers and Pena
weren't up to it, and McMichael had pitched 2 innings yesterday plus the
day before. Probably Cox should have had Clontz pitch to Belle, and
had Borbon come in for Murray and Thome, but after Belle whiffed, he
gave Clontz a shot at Murray, and Eddie grounded out weekly, so he
figured that Clontz had good low stuff, and gave him a chance to get
Thome. That had to have been the longest home run in a W.S. game in
a long, long time.
|
247.163 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Boston Braves, 1914 Champs | Sun Oct 29 1995 00:41 | 65 |
| 1111 99999 1111 444
11111 999 999 11111 4444
111111 999 999 111111 44444
1111111 999 999 1111111 444444
111 999 999 111 444 444
111 999 9999 111 444 444
111 999 99999 111 444 444
111 999999999999 111 44444444444444
111 999 111 444
111 999 111 444
111 999 111 444
11111111111 999 11111111111 444
11111111111 999 11111111111 444
Boston Braves, World Series Champs
1111 99999 555555555555555 7777777777777777
11111 999 999 555555555555555 7777777777777777
111111 999 999 555 777
1111111 999 999 555 777
111 999 9999 555 777
111 999 99999 55555555555 777
111 999999999999 555555555555 777
111 999 555 777
111 999 555 777
111 999 555 777
111 999 555 555 777
11111111111 999 555 555 777
11111111111 999 55555 777
Milwaukee Braves, World Series Champs
1111 99999 99999 5555555555555555
11111 999 999 999 999 5555555555555555
111111 999 999 999 999 555
1111111 999 999 999 999 555
111 999 9999 999 9999 555
111 999 99999 999 99999 55555555555
111 999999999999 999999999999 555555555555
111 999 999 555
111 999 999 555
111 999 999 555
111 999 999 555 555
11111111111 999 999 555 555
11111111111 999 999 55555
Atlanta Braves, World Series Champs
11111
111111
1111111
11111111
1111
1111
1111
1111
1111
1111
1111
1111
111111111111
George 111111111111
|
247.164 | braves smartened up and left boston | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Sun Oct 29 1995 13:32 | 9 |
247.165 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Boston Braves, 1914 Champs | Mon Oct 30 1995 09:18 | 13 |
| Hey, I'm not the 1st one to say it. Someone else said it earlier, "if you go
back to the old system", Boston wins.
NBC finally gave credit where it was due and pointed out that the Braves are
the 1st team in Baseball to win a championship in three different cities.
Thinking back I was wrong earlier, it was Al Michaels, not Bob Costas who
seemed to be implying that the Braves were an expansion team. Glenn's right,
Costas knows baseball.
Also, the South finally won, congradulations to the people in the Atlanta for
their first championship in any of the big 4 sports.
George
|
247.166 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Mon Oct 30 1995 08:30 | 6 |
247.167 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | Northwestern Wildcats Bandwagon | Mon Oct 30 1995 09:34 | 5 |
| Morris certainly wasn't as sharp in his victory as Glavine was on
Saturday. Can't say about Lew B.
The one Cleveland hit was a bloop single. There was only one really
hard hit ball, Lofton's leadoff fly ball in the first.
|
247.168 | BRAVES 1995 CHAMPS | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Give it to the kid! | Mon Oct 30 1995 08:59 | 34 |
| HOW SWEET IT IS!
An amazing combined one-hitter, along with Justice's solo HR mad for
quite the exciting night. Justice had to do something or risk getting
run out of town for the comments he made on Friday. Oh well, all is
forgiven.
Couple of points -
I think Cox's move to keep Belliard in the game was validated by the
first play of the ninth inning. Getting Lofton out was HUGE. I did
not want to see him on base at all.
Glavine pitched the finest game of his life. Vindication for him in a
way as he started the season by getting boo'ed for being the player rep
during the strike.
Cox finally gets all of the second guessers on the call in shows off
his back. I believe that his coaching decisions helped the Braves more
than Hargroves helped the Tribe's.
Good pitching will beat good hitting. Count on it.
Atlanta finally gets a World Championship in a Major Sport. The glow
of victory is always sweet to bask in. Parade starts at noon, but not
sure if I'll be able to get there. Maybe close to 1 million people
there.
Gotta go out and get my souvenirs soon. Probably scarf up some
T-shirts and hats.
It's a great Monday.
UMDan
|
247.169 | Dave justice | CSLALL::BERGERON | | Mon Oct 30 1995 11:12 | 2 |
| Dave Justice for Pres.
He would do alot better then Clinton.
|
247.170 | Atlanta Braves Cards | CSLALL::BERGERON | | Mon Oct 30 1995 11:18 | 8 |
| Baseball cards?
I am looking for Atlanta Cards and /or stuff because I have over 4K
Atlanta cards I have been collecting them since 1989. I am also
looking for other items, because I also have towels, signed baseballs,
posters, hats and autographed baseball cards of the starting pitchers
and I am looking to expand my collection. If interested in trading (
Different teams) not Atlanta or cash or questions.
Please write CSLALL::Bergeron or Scott Bergeron @WOO
|
247.171 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Boston Braves, 1914 Champs | Mon Oct 30 1995 13:07 | 9 |
| RE <<< Note 247.166 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI "the dream is always the same..." >>>
> What does
> > "if you go back to the old system", Boston wins.
> mean?
Just what it says.
George
|
247.172 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Mon Oct 30 1995 14:52 | 8 |
247.173 | Spahn and Sain and pay for Glavine | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos / Mil / Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Oct 30 1995 15:12 | 10 |
| Read the title, under the old system the Braves were in Boston.
The Braves have now evened up the score from 1948 when the Indians beat the
Boston Braves in 6. The Braves and Indians have now each beaten each other
once in the World Series and are 6-6 overall in World Series games played head
to head.
Guess they'll have to do it again to break the tie.
George
|
247.174 | Unbelievable, but highly predictable considering.... | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Mon Oct 30 1995 15:15 | 6 |
247.175 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos / Mil / Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Oct 30 1995 15:26 | 13 |
| Multiple choice:
The team that won the World Series was founded and played for 80 years in:
A) Cleveland
B) Boston
The Braves were born in Boston, played in Boston for 80 years and are named
after a Boston social club. So now they live in Atlanta, do you disown your
children just because they leave home to go seek their fortune elsewhere?
Boston / Milwaukee / Atlanta Braves, World Series Champs
George
|
247.176 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Just me'n the pygmy pony, Yippy tyo | Mon Oct 30 1995 15:39 | 9 |
|
George I would be willing to bet that most people in the US could
care less that the Braves ever played in Boston. I also doubt that most
of those people ever knew they played in Beanburg 50 years ago.
The Atlanta Braves, not the Milwaukee Braves or the Boston Braves won
the 1995 World Series. Neither of those cities had anything to do with
the Braves winning this series.
|
247.177 | Strictly a money deal for Mr. Perini, not fan suppport | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Mon Oct 30 1995 15:39 | 7 |
| The listed attendance for 1952 was 280,000 or 3000 per game for 77
home dates. There were doubleheaders on most Sundays so I'll make that
3500 per game. I can't really believe that figure, sounds like someone
was pocketing a lot of cash.
I believe the washington redskins football team also played in Boston
but I've found scarcely any of those fans in my travels, maybe one.
|
247.178 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos / Mil / Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Oct 30 1995 16:03 | 19 |
| I can see two lines of reasoning that make sense.
1). None of the teams today have much of anything to do with the past. The
only existing teams that have really won the World Series in baseball
are the Atlanta Braves and maybe the Toronto Blue Jays and Twins to some
extent. Most other teams who have won in the past have long since fallen
apart and have only a handful of players left from their championship
years if any.
2). History matters and today's team does have something to do with teams
from the past. The Indians won in 1920, and 1948 and the Braves won in
1914, 1957, and 1995.
Take your pick. If you are arguing the 1st point fine, the Red Sox, Indians,
Yankees, A's, Dodgers have never won. But if history counts and teams are
related to those that went before, then the Braves who were born in Boston,
moved to Milwaukee, and now live in Atlanta won in 1914, 1957, and 1995.
George
|
247.179 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Mon Oct 30 1995 16:55 | 2 |
247.180 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos / Mil / Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Oct 30 1995 17:00 | 13 |
| You are ducking the question. Take your pick, do you believe
1). Today's teams have nothing to do with teams that won with different
players just a few years ago or
2). Today's teams are linked by history to the past.
This is a question Groner will never answer because if he picks 1 then he
can never again make a big deal about how his team won in 1948 and the the
Sox haven't won since 1918 but if he picks 2 then Boston's team just beat
the Indians.
George
|
247.181 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | Northwestern Wildcats Bandwagon | Mon Oct 30 1995 17:10 | 10 |
| > 2). Today's teams are linked by history to the past.
The 1995 World Champion Atlanta Braves are linked to Boston in the
same degree that a person, horribly abused as y a child, then removed
from the custody of the parents for the good of the child, legally
adopted by another set of parents, is related to the original birth parents
when the "child" makes good at the age of 55 or 60.
That's the kind of relationship this is, and the one George holds dear
to his heart.
|
247.182 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Mon Oct 30 1995 17:11 | 11 |
247.183 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos / Mil / Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Oct 30 1995 17:22 | 11 |
| I think it's really nuts to put restrictions on what reasons are valid for
being a fan. If I want to think of baseball teams in historical context and if
I want to be a Braves fan because they came from Boston, where is the law that
says I can't do that?
And if it's frivolous to feel that way then fine, but answer me this, do you
really think you are any less frivolous for being a fan of a team who's owners
you never met and who's players come from all over the country just because you
grew up in the same town where they now play?
George
|
247.184 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Mon Oct 30 1995 17:26 | 3 |
247.185 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos / Mil / Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Oct 30 1995 17:34 | 7 |
| So fine, you're a Braves fan.
The only reason for being a fan is entertainment and if you're entertained
more by being a Braves fan than by being an Indians fan, why not. Welcome
to the club.
George
|
247.186 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | the dream is always the same... | Mon Oct 30 1995 18:17 | 2 |
247.187 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos / Mil / Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Oct 31 1995 07:51 | 3 |
| Ok fine, welcome to the club anyway.
George
|
247.188 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Plan 9 From Outer Space | Tue Oct 31 1995 09:02 | 7 |
| >> George I would be willing to bet that most people in the US could
>> care less that the Braves ever played in Boston. I also doubt that most
>> of those people ever knew they played in Beanburg 50 years ago.
You could change "most people in the US" to "most people in Boston"
and be on very safe ground. George's little stance is clearly a
case of consider the source.
|
247.189 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | Northwestern Wildcats Bandwagon | Tue Oct 31 1995 09:26 | 22 |
| > I think it's really nuts to put restrictions on what reasons are valid for
>being a fan. If I want to think of baseball teams in historical context and if
>I want to be a Braves fan because they came from Boston, where is the law that
>says I can't do that?
No one says you can't do that. But, you should recognize that just because
you feel it is a valid reason (and it may be valid for you), it is possible
that everyone else in the entire world thinks it is a crazy reason, and that
it is without any reason. Doesn't mean you can't hold that opinion.
And we can ask TTom, but I do think there are laws here in the south that
cover the specific circumstances you describe.
> And if it's frivolous to feel that way then fine, but answer me this, do you
>really think you are any less frivolous for being a fan of a team who's owners
>you never met and who's players come from all over the country just because you
>grew up in the same town where they now play?
Actually, I have met Ted Turner. So far as you know, maybe that is the reason
I am a Braves fan, because I pity any player who has to deal with the man.
And, yes, BTW I do think it is less frivolous, FWIW.
|
247.190 | ATLANTA Braves | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Tue Oct 31 1995 09:37 | 17 |
| And to complete this mess why doesn't someone bring up Figure Skating!
Last I heard the Braves were NOT flying up to Boston to attend the big
rally at Feniel(sp) Hall.
The tema that won is Atlanta's tema, the team that has been here for
30 years, when at times nobody watched them (a la Cleveland), and at
times when the world watched them (WS and Aaron's 715). If you want to
call them the Boston etc. Braves, fine. Your opinions are your own
treasures. No one in Atlanta thinks of them as Bostons team, just as
no one in DC thinks of the 'Skins as Bostons team.
The Braves won, they beat Cleveland (who hit .179), end of story. I'll
just have to see if Time-Warned can keep this team together, which is
highly unlikely given that the payroll would have to go to about $60M.
UMDan
|
247.191 | I'm with George | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | What's the story morning glory? | Tue Oct 31 1995 11:10 | 13 |
|
> The 1995 World Champion Atlanta Braves are linked to Boston in the
> same degree that a person, horribly abused as y a child, then removed
> from the custody of the parents for the good of the child, legally
> adopted by another set of parents, is related to the original birth parents
> when the "child" makes good at the age of 55 or 60.
So, genetically, scientifically, it can be proved that the Braves
belong to Boston. Everything else is highly subjective... ;-)
glenn
|
247.192 | They're HERE!!! | AKOCOA::BREEN | | Tue Oct 31 1995 11:11 | 16 |
| Well there's nothing that New England folks are not but stubborn. So
when all the Boston Braves fans that never went to Braves games so the
team was not actually playing in braves field anymore where they never
went to anyway, there was no reason not to continue rooting "in
absentia" which was situation normal for them anyway.
So the team they never saw in Boston nor Milwaukee moved to Atlanta -
they still rooted if they rooted for any baseball team. When they
finally showed up on tbs these "fans" finally were seeing this team on
tv after all these years minus two world series and two playoff games.
George is not the only one, I guarantee you that but I have strong
doubts about Philadelphia As fans and St Louis Browns fans existence.
In fact I fear an epidemic of lifelong "Braves fans" coming out of the
greater Boston woodwork.
|
247.193 | | SALEM::REEVE | | Tue Oct 31 1995 11:13 | 9 |
| As for feeling sorry for players that have to deal with Ted Turner,
don't. You might not like the man, but the players do. He is one of the
most generous owners (he can afford to be) when it comes to players
salaries. He is also possibly the most hands off owner of a sports
franchise in the US. Schuerholz, Aaron, etc. run the Braves. Ted is
basically a rich fan. If Steinbrenner, Schotz, etc. ran their clubs
the way Turner does, they might have more success.
Chris
|
247.194 | At some point the pod people replaced these two... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | What's the story morning glory? | Tue Oct 31 1995 11:36 | 20 |
|
> As for feeling sorry for players that have to deal with Ted Turner,
> don't. You might not like the man, but the players do. He is one of the
> most generous owners (he can afford to be) when it comes to players
> salaries. He is also possibly the most hands off owner of a sports
> franchise in the US.
Ted really learned his lesson here and has completely changed his
act. He used to be one of the most obnoxious, meddlesome owners
in sports. Notorious for getting tanked up and going down into
the dugout to harass the players. Even making himself the manager
that one time in a publicity stunt.
I just don't understand what happened to Jane. Most people didn't
like her politics, but that's no longer the issue. At some point
she was labotomized and turned into a lovesick puppy dog. All
that hanging all over Ted during the game is nauseating.
glenn
|
247.195 | | SLEEPR::MAIEWSKI | Bos / Mil / Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Oct 31 1995 12:45 | 13 |
| Considering Ted's success with his hands on approach to winning the America's
Cup it may have made sense for him to try running the team. And you can't say
for sure he wouldn't have succeeded, he was forced out of the dougout by either
the Commissioner or NL President, I forget which, before we ever found out
how well he could have done.
Say what you will, the guy's done rather well. He built a big enough fortune
starting back with his bill board company, then succeeded at defending the
America's Cup, he was the 1st guy in decades to create a major TV network that
could compete with the big three, he married a movie star and now he's won with
the Braves. I can think of guys who have done worse.
George
|
247.196 | | MIMS::ROLLINS_R | Northwestern Wildcats Bandwagon | Tue Oct 31 1995 13:16 | 18 |
| > Considering Ted's success with his hands on approach to winning the America's
>Cup it may have made sense for him to try running the team. And you can't say
>for sure he wouldn't have succeeded, he was forced out of the dougout by either
>the Commissioner or NL President, I forget which, before we ever found out
>how well he could have done.
Ted meddled very directly with the Braves until 1986, and believe me, he was
not very successful. However, he yielded the reigns to Cox and Schuerholz
(and Kasten, but he deserves no credit here) and the Braves organization has
since turned around.
The earlier comment was made somewhat tongue-in-cheek, and he does pay his
players fairly well, but he is not the kind of guy who just goes out and
acquires the biggest name free agent he can (not at this point); rather, he
has gone after lesser free agents (Bream, Belliard, Pendleton - at the time
a BIG risk) generally, although they spent to acquire Maddux. They have a
big payroll because they have quality players (as opposed to what Boston has
done in the last 10 years, prior to 1995).
|
247.197 | | CAM::WAY | Nine to the front, six to the rear | Mon Nov 06 1995 09:40 | 30 |
| Saturday's Game 6 came on the night that we'd had a party scheduled for some
time. It was pretty neat, though, because we had the party going upstair on
the drill floor in the Armory, while the game was on downstairs in the enlisted
lounge.
My dad and my mom were our guests, and we'd been getting score updates all
night long. Long about the 7th, my dad couldn't stand it any more and went
down to the lounge.
When he didn't come back for a while my mom, naturally, became concerned, kind
of along the lines of "go down there and make sure your father's not drinking
the bar dry." My dad was never a heavy drinker, and rarely drinks these days
at all, so my brother and I get quite a kick out of mom's worrying...
Well, I headed down there, and it was a bunch of old guys, sitting on bar
stools, watching the TV with an intensity that I don't usually see from old
guys. I mean, most old guys I see are pretty unflappable. These guys were
INTENSE. Turns out that most of them had actually seen the Braves play at
Braves Field at some point or other... I watched the end of the game with
them. Man, what a moment.
Needless to say, they were all pretty happy campers, and for a few moments I
felt like a kid again, when I'd used to sneak partway down the stairs at night
to listen to the big folks talk...clearly not a part of what was going on, but
experiencing that little thrill of being in the edge of it....
Dad got a nice victory drink when we got back upstairs, and Mom didn't complain
about that at all.....
'Saw
|
247.198 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Mar 29 1996 09:19 | 14 |
| In just a few days the Braves will start a World Series defense for the 3rd
time in their history and the 1st time in Atlanta.
The team will be going with pretty much the same squad that we saw in the
World Series with the exception that 3B Chipper Jones may be sidelined for a
few days due to having his knee scoped. He says he's ready to play but Bobby
Cox is saying they will be cautious. This is the other knee, not the one that
side lined him for the entire 1994 season.
Mike Mordecai and rookie Tony Graffanino are candidates to play third while
Jones is out.
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.199 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Fri Mar 29 1996 09:24 | 5 |
| George,
Have you checked out the www.fastball.com page yet?
UMDan
|
247.200 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Mar 29 1996 09:27 | 6 |
| I got an error accessing it yesterday. I'll try again today. I've had
good luck with the U.S.A. Today Braves Web Page. They are reporting that
there is still a question on Chipper Jones and that the last roster spot
will go to either RHP Mike Bielecki or RHP Joe Borowski.
George
|
247.201 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Fri Mar 29 1996 09:31 | 7 |
| Chipper's not going to start, and they won't pick a pitcher until the
last minute.
They're calling for temps in the mid 60's, clear, no rain. Perfect day
to hand out WS rings, raise a banner and watch a game!
UMDan
|
247.202 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Fri Mar 29 1996 10:41 | 8 |
| Aren't the Redsox in Atlanta tomorrow for a game, George, just like
the old Boston Redsox-Boston Braves pre-season games which they'd have
in Boston. In those days the season didn't start until about the 15th
(perhaps to take the sting out of filing date).
Belinda says he hates Florida and wants to travel with the team to
Texas, Mitchell on the other hand would just as soon hang around down
there and work in his new bats.
|
247.203 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Mar 29 1996 11:34 | 5 |
| There does seem to be a new tradition brewing where the Red Sox stop off in
Atlanta to play the Braves just before the season starts. Of course it could
look more like Pawtucket v. Richmond than Boston v. Atlanta.
George
|
247.204 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 16 1996 10:34 | 17 |
| Minor league information is beginning to trickle in. It appears that Braves
super prospect 18 year old Andruw Jones is already playing for the Braves top A
team the Durham Bulls and the good news for Braves fans is that it also appears
that he's figured out A ball pitchers. Here are his stats so far.
AVG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB
Jones, Andruw, OF ... .345 29 8 10 1 0 2 5 8 9 1
If he keeps this up he may get promoted to AA Greenville but then again maybe
not. The Braves don't like to rush prospects along but seem to like to advance
them one year at a time. At least that's what they did with Chipper Jones and
Javy Lopez.
My guess is that around the turn of the century the Braves will have Jones
and Jones batting in the number 3 and number 4 spots.
George
|
247.205 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Apr 17 1996 10:02 | 10 |
|
9 strikeouts in 29 AB?
George, you realize this means he's hitting .500 when he puts the ball
in play, don't you?
As much as I like Jones, that number worries me a bit. Not as much as
the other numbers excite me, but still...
Joe
|
247.206 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Wed Apr 17 1996 10:11 | 6 |
| Joe,
He's all of 18/19 years old, playing in single A. There's time for the plate
discipline to develop...
-R
|
247.207 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 17 1996 10:15 | 10 |
| But notice he's also had 8 walks during that same amount of time. Yes his
strike outs are high but his BB:SO ratio looks good for someone his age.
It appears he's only had one or two at bats where he was put out by someone
other than the catcher. His on base percentage is something else.
Of course the sample size is small, it will be fun to see what he does as
he comes along.
George
|
247.208 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Apr 17 1996 10:44 | 9 |
|
Don't misunderstand - I'm not knocking him. I think he's the best
prospect in baseball right now, and awfully close to ready for the
majors.
The 9 K's are just the one (potentially) worrisome note on an otherwise
incredible line - that's all.
Joe
|
247.209 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 17 1996 10:54 | 12 |
| I hear yeh. I think however we'll have to wait a while to see him play big
league ball. The Braves seem to like to have guys advance one level per year.
If they keep to that it would be
AA Greenville in 1997
AAA Richmond in 1998
Atlanta in 1999
Still he'd be 21 years old.
George
|
247.210 | Minor League stats... | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Wed Apr 17 1996 12:08 | 3 |
| How do you guys get stats for A players? I'm curious because my wife's
cousin was drafted by the Angels last year and I'd like to keep an eye
on him. Thanks, Steve.
|
247.211 | Or somewhere on the net | CSLALL::BRULE | Springtime at last | Wed Apr 17 1996 12:13 | 4 |
| BB weekly or Baseball America if you want to buy a magazine. Baseball
America covers the minors in more depth.
Mike
|
247.212 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Wed Apr 17 1996 12:13 | 3 |
| > How do you guys get stats for A players?
First, lay the entrails of a goat on your keyboard... :-)
|
247.213 | Get out your surf board | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 17 1996 12:31 | 13 |
| RE <<< Note 247.210 by PCBUOA::MORGAN >>>
> How do you guys get stats for A players?
More minor league info at:
http://web.usatoday.com/sports/baseball/sbm.htm
Or start at the top of the usatoday baseball home page at:
http://web.usatoday.com/sbfront.htm
George
|
247.214 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 10:26 | 13 |
| In spite of yesterday's extra inning loss, Boston's old team is move along
at a good clip. With Jeff Blauser on the DL a couple of new guys from AAA
Richmond are getting a chance in the big leagues, infielders Ed Giovanola
and Tony Graffanino were recalled last week.
Mark Lemke has also been bothered by a hamstring but he's continued to play.
Ed Perez has replaced Charlie O'Brien as back up catcher and Jason Schmidt
is the new 5th starter but other than that they are pretty much the same team
they were last year.
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.215 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Mon Apr 22 1996 10:29 | 7 |
|
You forgot to mention that Ryan Klesko is playing like Babe Ruth!
Chap
|
247.217 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 14:33 | 7 |
| Hey, don't blame me, I was only 4 years old.
Still, the Atlanta Braves consider their years in Boston and Milwaukee to
be an important part of their history so I don't see any reason why Boston
fans can't think of the Braves as an important part of our history.
George
|
247.218 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Mon Apr 22 1996 15:18 | 9 |
|
>> Still, the Atlanta Braves consider their years in Boston and
>> Milwaukee to be an important part of their history so I don't
>> see any reason why Boston fans can't think of the Braves as an
>> important part of our history.
A city with 360+ years of history shouldn't and doesn't even
consider the Red Sox an "important part of our history" much
less a team that hasn't played here in 40 years.
|
247.219 | How lame can you get | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Loose with rhythmic syncopations | Mon Apr 22 1996 15:23 | 5 |
|
George are you still trying to hook beantown into last years Atlanta Braves
WS championship? Do you think the people in Milwaukee are still calling
themselves Boston/Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves fans? I dooonnnn't thinnnkkk
sssooo.
|
247.220 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Mon Apr 22 1996 15:25 | 3 |
|
Betcha he can get alot Lamer!!! ;-)
|
247.221 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 16:52 | 14 |
| Re <<< Note 247.218 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> A city with 360+ years of history shouldn't and doesn't even
> consider the Red Sox an "important part of our history" much
> less a team that hasn't played here in 40 years.
You must not be from around here. People in Boston are very passionate about
the Red Sox and definitely consider them part of Boston history.
But as far as the Braves go, if the Atlanta Braves still consider their years
in Milwaukee and Boston an important of their history why should people in
Boston not feel Braves are part of our history?
George
|
247.222 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Apr 22 1996 16:57 | 13 |
|
> But as far as the Braves go, if the Atlanta Braves still consider their years
>in Milwaukee and Boston an important of their history why should people in
>Boston not feel Braves are part of our history?
Perhaps because they _weren't_ an important part of Boston's history
even when they were in Boston? Sure, they're a footnote, but who
cares?
Does St. Louis go around bragging about the Browns? Or K.C. about
the Athletics?
Joe
|
247.223 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Mon Apr 22 1996 17:01 | 8 |
|
History is relative. As soon as George gets around to writing his
tome (no I didn't misspell Jimmy, Groaner) on the history of the city
of Boston (God help us all), he can include the 1995 World Series
Championship as one of its shining moments, and declare victory.
glenn
|
247.224 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 17:11 | 8 |
| Hey, what's wrong with the 1914 World Series. That was a championship the
team won while they were playing here in town.
But you still haven't answered my question. If the Atlanta Braves still
consider their years in Boston and Milwaukee to be important, why shouldn't
people in Boston still consider the Braves to be important?
George
|
247.225 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Mon Apr 22 1996 17:16 | 25 |
|
> Hey, what's wrong with the 1914 World Series. That was a championship the
>team won while they were playing here in town.
Yeah, and the Rams won in 1945 in Cleveland, and the Browns in 1943?
in St. Loius.
> But you still haven't answered my question. If the Atlanta Braves still
>consider their years in Boston and Milwaukee to be important, why shouldn't
>people in Boston still consider the Braves to be important?
The Braves consider their years in Boston an Milwaukee to be important
because it allows them to claim additional championships, etc.
Boston has no such reason to claim the Braves; they've had plenty
of success over the years, and the Braves were an extremely small
part of that success.
Few people cared about the Braves when they were in Boston; moving
away no doubt lowered that number even further. The Braves didn't
have a particularly historic stay in Boston. It would be more
surprising if Boston pointed to the Braves as a key piece of their
history than it is that they don't.
Joe
|
247.226 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 17:25 | 14 |
| The Braves had a very successful stay in Boston. They practically owned the
National League in the 19th Century. George and Harry Wright who ran the team
from the start probably had about as much impact on professional baseball as
anyone else who has ever been involved with the game. They were instrumental
in starting professional baseball in the 1st place and played a major part
in restructuring the National League in 1876 when it was falling apart.
They are a major part of baseball history and baseball is a major part of
Boston history. I don't see how their team could fail to be seen as significant.
But as for the Atlanta Braves, no it's not just the championships, they
regard players on those teams to be a part of their history.
George
|
247.227 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Loose with rhythmic syncopations | Mon Apr 22 1996 17:32 | 4 |
|
This makes about as much sense as all the Indian tribes in America
claiming the Indian's and the Braves as their teams. Or all if the
catholic priests claimed the SD Padre's or the Mudhen's in Toledo!!
|
247.228 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 17:38 | 8 |
| No, big difference. It's more than just the name, the Braves still consider
the actual players who played in Boston and Milwaukee to be part of their
history.
For example, what would happen if some young kid came up from Richmond and
asked to wear number 21? What do you suppose they would tell him and why?
George
|
247.229 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Mon Apr 22 1996 17:45 | 9 |
| >> For example, what would happen if some young kid came up from
>> Richmond and asked to wear number 21? What do you suppose they
>> would tell him and why?
I have no idea. I've lived in Massachusetts my whole life and in
Boston and Worcester for extended periods. Maybe the Clinton public
schools failed me by teaching me about the Tea Party and the Boston
Massacre and Bunker Hill and Old Ironsides and never once mentioning
number 21 for the Boston (I'm guessing) Braves.
|
247.230 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 17:52 | 7 |
| No doubt some obscure player from the past who had no impact on the game,
right?
We sure knew about him out in Western Massachusetts. Don't they give kids
no learn'en in Boston?
George
|
247.232 | I repeat, football city without a football team... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Mon Apr 22 1996 18:54 | 14 |
|
> That should say "You must not be from around here. People in Boston
> are very passionate about the Red Sox *WHEN THEY ARE WINNING* and
> definitely consider them part of Boston history."
>
> See RED_SOX notesfile for details... sox tickets being sold at an
> alarming rate.
See Cleveland attendance, 1960-92 for details. Tribe tickets not
being sold at an alarming rate, because no one bought them in the
first place...
glenn
|
247.233 | ATLANTA Braves | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Mon Apr 22 1996 19:25 | 8 |
| The Braves consider the "other" cities only when mentioning players
from other eras. No one down here considers them the
Boston/Mil/Atlanta Braves any more than the Redskins are considered the
Boston(?)/Washington Redskins. If you are going to consider all of the
other cities that a team was a part of, be consistent and do it for all
sports/teams/cities.
UMDan
|
247.235 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Tue Apr 23 1996 07:31 | 4 |
|
This is the Braves note Paul take it elsewhere. :*)
|
247.237 | HTH's | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Apr 23 1996 08:36 | 6 |
|
Ah George. Western Mass all my life never heard of #21?
Chap
|
247.238 | 21 is lost on me too | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Apr 23 1996 09:57 | 15 |
| I think one reason why Boston doesn't claim the Braves is that when they were
in Boston, from everything I've heard, there was not a big line of demarcation
between Braves and Red Sox fans.
My dad would root for both -- partly because the Braves had a farm team down
here in Hartford -- but also because when he was in town he'd go to whichever
team was home.
In other cities, say Chicago, you're either a White Sox fan or a Cubs fan.
When the Braves left the folks just started going to Fenway.
JMHO,
'saw
|
247.239 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Apr 23 1996 09:58 | 8 |
|
> Ah George. Western Mass all my life never heard of #21?
I wear #21. Roberto Clemente (and Roger Clemens) once passed
through Western Mass, I've heard...
glenn
|
247.240 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 10:02 | 20 |
| If someone comes up to the Atlanta Braves and wants the number 21 they won't
let him have it because that number is retired. It belonged to someone who
never played for the Atlanta Braves.
Hint. He fed up two rather significant pitches to Willie Mays that went for
home runs. First back in 1951 when Mays 1st came up he was hitless in his first
15 or so at bats but he finally got his 1st hit, a home run off #21 for the
Boston Braves.
Then as the story goes near the end of his career, #21 of the Milwaukee
Braves got hooked up in a pitchers duel with Juan Marichal that went extra
innings. Again he fed up a pitch that Willie Mays hit for a home run and the
Giants beat Milwaukee 1-0.
Despite those two flaws, he had one of the most remarkable careers in
baseball history playing for the Boston and Milwaukee Braves but for some
reason another team, the Atlanta Braves seemed to have retired his number even
though he never played for a major league team in Atlanta.
George
|
247.241 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Apr 23 1996 10:04 | 1 |
| Well, I've got a woodie now.
|
247.242 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Apr 23 1996 10:06 | 16 |
| |> Ah George. Western Mass all my life never heard of #21?
|
| I wear #21. Roberto Clemente (and Roger Clemens) once passed
| through Western Mass, I've heard...
Glenn, isn't that just a bit pretentious? 8^)
Seriously, I used to wear #3. They wouldn't give me #13, and #9 was taken.
btw, how's the arm?
|
247.243 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Apr 23 1996 10:16 | 7 |
|
Sorry, Glen I knew you wear #21. Christ I got your baseball card
right in my desk. Man my memory has gone since I reached 30....
Chap
|
247.244 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Apr 23 1996 10:17 | 30 |
|
George,
While I was pointing at a specific measure (pennants) by which it's
better for the Braves to point to all of their history, it's equally
valuable for the Braves to point to other aspects of their history -
players, records, etc. Not to do so would be rather foolish of them,
though other teams do split between overall records and records in
current location.
But asking why Boston doesn't consider the Braves of historical
importance still strikes me as an inane question. Sure, they're
a piece of Boston's history - the Browns are part of St. Loius'
history - heck, the Pilots are part of Seattle's history. But they
aren't a part of Boston currently (the Red Sox not only are still
in Boston, but have been in Boston longer overall than the Braves
were), which is of foremost importance when discussing items of
such historical unimportance as sports franchises. And they weren't
particularly notable for their accomplishments while they were
here (Harry and George Wright _aren't_ famous for their association
with the Braves/Red Caps - they're famous for their association
with the Red Stockings - heck, Harry played a grand total of two
games for the Red Caps, and while the team did well the first few
years he managed, they fell apart shortly thereafter).
I'd bet there are 100 times as many people who root against the
Braves because of Jane Fonda than there are people who root for
them because they once played in Boston.
Joe
|
247.245 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Apr 23 1996 10:29 | 24 |
|
> Glenn, isn't that just a bit pretentious? 8^)
I never claimed to be a Warren Spahn (that'd be a good fit for
Breen, though).
> Seriously, I used to wear #3. They wouldn't give me #13, and #9 was taken.
Wouldn't give you #13? Who'd you play for, the Hartford Catholics? ;-)
Mazeroski's #9 usually is one of the first taken...
> btw, how's the arm?
In great shape, finally. As with most of the other previously unused
muscles. But I'm going to be moving over to 2B when our #1 pitcher
isn't hurling, because he's got the kind of arm where a little snap,
and bam, the ball's to first. I don't, not in that class. So it
should be the best of both worlds, because the 2B has much more fun
on the double play. One thing I can guarantee is that I'll be
getting dirty...
glenn
|
247.246 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Apr 23 1996 10:56 | 29 |
| |> Glenn, isn't that just a bit pretentious? 8^)
|
| I never claimed to be a Warren Spahn (that'd be a good fit for
| Breen, though).
8^)
|> Seriously, I used to wear #3. They wouldn't give me #13, and #9 was taken.
|
| Wouldn't give you #13? Who'd you play for, the Hartford Catholics? ;-)
| Mazeroski's #9 usually is one of the first taken...
No, it was a fire department team -- superstitiuos bunch. When we were given
ID numbers they were in the 500 range, but they would not issue 513. Go
figure.
> In great shape, finally. As with most of the other previously unused
> muscles. But I'm going to be moving over to 2B when our #1 pitcher
> isn't hurling, because he's got the kind of arm where a little snap,
> and bam, the ball's to first. I don't, not in that class. So it
> should be the best of both worlds, because the 2B has much more fun
> on the double play. One thing I can guarantee is that I'll be
> getting dirty...
Watch out for flying spikes. ....
|
247.247 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 10:57 | 27 |
| RE <<< Note 247.244 by ROCK::HUBER "From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls" >>>
>(Harry and George Wright _aren't_ famous for their association
> with the Braves/Red Caps - they're famous for their association
> with the Red Stockings - heck, Harry played a grand total of two
> games for the Red Caps, and while the team did well the first few
> years he managed, they fell apart shortly thereafter).
Same team. Harry and George Wright started Boston's 1st National League
franchise and used both names, Red Caps and Red Stockings. Later they became
the Beaneaters, then the Braves, B's, and Braves again. Same team. I believe
the reason Harry retired as a player after 2 games was because he was injured
right around the time the team started playing.
> I'd bet there are 100 times as many people who root against the
> Braves because of Jane Fonda than there are people who root for
> them because they once played in Boston.
That's a bet I'd take. While there are many radio call in type red necks out
in the Massachusetts burbs and in some of Boston's neighborhoods such as the
South End there are probably as many anti-war type liberals in town that would
be Braves fans because of Jane Fonda. Once they cancel out, the Braves fans
remain. In fact just this weekend I bumped into an old guy with white hair
wearing a Braves jacket who claimed to have been a Braves fan since way back
when.
George
|
247.248 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Apr 23 1996 11:12 | 9 |
|
> Watch out for flying spikes. ....
Yeah, I know. In this league you can still wear metal, and may
be one of the few holdouts this side of pro ball. Wish I still
had a pair, but they gave out some time back.
glenn
|
247.249 | ex | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Tue Apr 23 1996 11:24 | 15 |
|
>> That's a bet I'd take. While there are many radio call in type
>> red necks out in the Massachusetts burbs and in some of Boston's
>> neighborhoods such as the South End there are probably as many
As a former South End resident I can tell you that you really don't
know Boston very well if you expect to find many red necks there.
It's about as diverse a community as you're likely to find in the
entire city. It's heavily Hispanic and black on the lower Roxbury
side and yuppieville on the Back Bay side and with the largest
gay population in the city. You also don't know Boston very well
if you think that anyone under fifty years old really cares about
the Braves anymore than any other successful pro franchise. Sadly
enough the Yankees have a bigger following around here.
|
247.250 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 11:56 | 8 |
| Tell you what, George, I'll read all of the Braves reports in the local
fish wrapper for the next several weeks (I usually read them anyway).
If the words "Milwaukee" or "Boston" appear I will post them here, in
total, in context.
Did Bostonians celebrate the Redskins's Super Bowl victories?
UMDan
|
247.251 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:06 | 8 |
|
>Did Bostonians celebrate the Redskins's Super Bowl victories?
Being a Raider fan and one who hates the Donks, yes I did celebrate one
of Washington's super bowls 8^)
Marc
|
247.252 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:08 | 13 |
| RE <<< Note 247.249 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove" >>>
> You also don't know Boston very well
> if you think that anyone under fifty years old really cares about
> the Braves anymore than any other successful pro franchise. Sadly
> enough the Yankees have a bigger following around here.
Well you are wrong there. I'm under 50, I live in Boston, and I care about
the Braves. And since they've retired the number of a guy who never played
in Atlanta it appears that they feel the connection to Boston and Milwaukee
as well.
George
|
247.253 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:12 | 20 |
| RE <<< Note 247.250 by ODIXIE::ZOGRAN "Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs" >>>
> Tell you what, George, I'll read all of the Braves reports in the local
> fish wrapper for the next several weeks (I usually read them anyway).
> If the words "Milwaukee" or "Boston" appear I will post them here, in
> total, in context.
You still haven't told me why Atlanta retired Spahn's number if they
don't feel he played on their team. Every time a kid comes up from Richmond
and asks for number 21 he's told no, he can't have that number on today's
Atlanta Braves because of someone who played in Boston and Milwaukee.
> Did Bostonians celebrate the Redskins's Super Bowl victories?
As a matter of fact yes. When I was living out in Framingham there was
a huge Redskin contingent. Every time our apartment building had a superbowl
party when the Redskins were playing there were guys there with Redskin
shirts and hats cheering for the team.
George
|
247.254 | Wholly irrelevant points... George is psychotic in any case... ;-) | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:15 | 13 |
|
> You still haven't told me why Atlanta retired Spahn's number if they
> don't feel he played on their team.
You're absolutely certain that Spahn's number wasn't retired in
Milwaukee?
For what team did Spahn last throw a pitch?
glenn
|
247.255 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:19 | 10 |
| Well George's right the original, never-changed-allegiance Braves fans
do exist, I know several and yes they all surely are over 50 and of
no-account, obviously. Tommy's also right the actual support of these
rabid braves fans was never thru the turnstiles as witness the 272,000
final 1952 attendance figure.
I do think to link into this Boston Braves chain you should either be
an original or be linked by blood to one of these originals. Or simply
be a Braves fan and call it an added incentive that they once played in
Boston.
|
247.256 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:23 | 18 |
| RE <<< Note 247.254 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Hardball, good ol' country" >>>
> You're absolutely certain that Spahn's number wasn't retired in
> Milwaukee?
> For what team did Spahn last throw a pitch?
The Giants.
In spring of 1964, Warren Spahn was sold outright by the Milwaukee Braves
to the Mets. He was later released by the Mets and played for the Giants before
retiring.
About a month after Milwaukee sold Spahn to the Mets they asked permission
to move to Atlanta a year early but were turned down by the owners. They
played their final year in Milwaukee without Spahn then in 1965 moved to
Atlanta.
George
|
247.257 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:25 | 19 |
| I think that the Braves recognize the fact that it's the same franchise, not
that it was in Boston or Milwaukee.
Braves are Braves are Braves according to the folks in the front office. I'm
sure none of them are sentimental about the 19th century, Boston, Milawaukee or
anythign like that.
It's a stretch to say they are remember Boston when they retire a number that
of a player who never threw a pitch in Atlanta.
Compare and contrast it to say, the Twins, who were formerly the Washington
Senators (first in war, first in peace, last in the American League) and the
Texas Rangers, who were formerly the Washington Senators II.
Just my 2�
'Saw
|
247.258 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:25 | 17 |
| My tenure in the Braves front office was not long enough to provide
input into the retirement of numbers:-). I do not know why they
retired Spahn's, and I doubt that any minor leaguers have entered
therapy due to the fact that they didn't get to wear #21.
In the future, shall we call the 'Skins the Boston/Washington Redskins?
On another note, although I do not agree with Ted's political leanings,
as an owner he's someone who I actually respect. During the Braves 15
inning game on Sunday he and Jane were there and they sat through the whole
thing. They even led the crowd in a stirring rendition of "Take me out to
the ballgame" during the 13th inning stretch. Any owner who stick it
out that long ain't all bad. BTW, the owners "box" is not a luxury
suite, it's on the field next to the Braves dugout.
UMDan
|
247.259 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Loose with rhythmic syncopations | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:39 | 4 |
|
George
Did you learn to beat dead horses while living in western mass?
|
247.260 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:45 | 48 |
| >>(Harry and George Wright _aren't_ famous for their association
>> with the Braves/Red Caps - they're famous for their association
>> with the Red Stockings - heck, Harry played a grand total of two
>> games for the Red Caps, and while the team did well the first few
>> years he managed, they fell apart shortly thereafter).
> Same team. Harry and George Wright started Boston's 1st National League
>franchise and used both names, Red Caps and Red Stockings. Later they became
>the Beaneaters, then the Braves, B's, and Braves again. Same team. I believe
>the reason Harry retired as a player after 2 games was because he was injured
>right around the time the team started playing.
Sorry, I was unclear.
Harry and George Wright are most famous, IMHO, for their association
with the _Cincinnati_ Red Stockings.
They both went on to play with the National Association _Boston_
Red Stockings, and then the National League Boston Red Caps.
(BTW, Harry's two games for the Red Caps were in different seasons.)
The history of the Braves...
braves nl boston red caps, 1876-1882
boston beaneaters, 1883-1906
boston doves, 1907-1910
boston rustlers, 1911
boston braves, 1912-1935
boston bees, 1936-1940
boston braves, 1941-1952
milwaukee braves, 1953-1965
atlanta braves, 1966-1993
>> I'd bet there are 100 times as many people who root against the
>> Braves because of Jane Fonda than there are people who root for
>> them because they once played in Boston.
> That's a bet I'd take. While there are many radio call in type red necks out
>in the Massachusetts burbs and in some of Boston's neighborhoods such as the
>South End there are probably as many anti-war type liberals in town that would
>be Braves fans because of Jane Fonda. Once they cancel out, the Braves fans
>remain.
Why do they cancel? I was only referring to the number who root
against the Braves because of Fonda - not in any way to those who
root for them because of her...
Joe
|
247.261 | I'm all confused.. | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:50 | 8 |
|
I'm from Western Mass And I've never seen a dead horse. George
are you now from Boston or Western Mass??
Chap
|
247.262 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Apr 23 1996 12:50 | 3 |
|
And why do all the youngsters ask for #21?
|
247.263 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 13:04 | 52 |
| RE <<< Note 247.255 by AKOCOA::BREEN "You never can tell" >>>
> I do think to link into this Boston Braves chain you should either be
> an original or be linked by blood to one of these originals. Or simply
> be a Braves fan and call it an added incentive that they once played in
> Boston.
Ok how about this. My older brother was a Milwaukee Braves fan back in the
50's. We came from a rural neighborhood in a small town in Western Mass and
most of the other kids were older than he was. They were all Red Sox fans but
half were also Giants fans and half were also Braves fans. That's just the way
it was with our neighborhood, you had one AL team and one NL team.
Well my brother and I went over to the neighbors every Sunday to play
baseball. There were two brothers there and two more brothers came from up the
street. Sometimes there were others but that was our basic core. We'd divide up
into two teams of 3 (one brother each) and their father would pitch for both
sides. For the most part the guys my brother played with were Braves fans
because of the Boston Braves and Warren Spahn and the guys I played with were
Giants because they liked to go down to Pynchen Park and watch the AA
Springfield Giants and we were fans of Willie Mays.
But despite the hard fought battles in that cow pasture between the Hatfield
Giants and the Hatfield Braves, we were all behind either one of those teams
when ever they got into the World Series because as much as we loved our Red
Sox and bickered about the Giants and Braves to a man we all hated the Yankees.
So when I moved to Boston it brought back all those memories of being Giants
and Braves fans as a kid. It brought back all those memories about how "down
town" they were basketball fans but out in the real country we followed the
true sport which was Baseball and we knew there was a National League and we
knew the teams that had played around us before moving west where as the down
town kids knew only of the American League and the Red Sox.
Of course we followed the Sox but we were fans of Spahn and Sain, of Mays and
Marichel and having National League teams to cheer for set us apart from the
rabble down town. It made our rural fields and woods baseball country, true
baseball country like they never knew down in the burbs where we all went to
school.
We loved our Sox, we loved our Giants, we loved our Braves and anyone else
who could beat the Yankees and we always will, no matter how old we get no
matter where we go. It was the National league that set us apart from down
town and those Sunday afternoons were some of the best days of my life. That's
what I think of when I think of the Giants and that's what I think of when I
think of the Braves. Coming to Boston and seeing "Braves field" was like making
a pilgrimage to Mecca. Even if it's in ruins it's a link to my past and it's
something that will always mean Sunday afternoons as a kid playing ball with
the guys next door.
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.264 | I almost got goose bumps. | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Apr 23 1996 13:08 | 3 |
|
Thats OK Fenway is in Ruins too.
|
247.266 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 13:12 | 27 |
| RE <<< Note 247.260 by ROCK::HUBER "From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls" >>>
> Harry and George Wright are most famous, IMHO, for their association
> with the _Cincinnati_ Red Stockings.
Sure, they were part of the 1st professional team when they lived in
Cincinatti. But then they moved to Boston and were instrumental in helping
professional baseball and the National League get started in 1871. I believe
those were also Red Stockings years when they played in Boston with Al
Spalding.
Then they were a major part of the reorganization of the National League in
1876 after it almost fell apart. Spalding went on to Chicago to play and to
form a sports equipment company with his brother but the Wright brothers stayed
in Boston and ran the Red Caps. They had their share of success then after
a few down years the team came back as the Beaneaters to win 5 more N.L.
Pennants in the 1890's.
> Why do they cancel? I was only referring to the number who root
> against the Braves because of Fonda - not in any way to those who
> root for them because of her...
Well as far as I'm concerned they don't even count much less cancel. The old
Braves fans are fans because they love baseball. If someone wants to hate a
baseball team for political reasons then who gives a rip?
George
|
247.268 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 13:46 | 8 |
| You guys never heard of Warren Spahn?
You never heard guys talking about the days of "Spahn and Saine and a
day of rain"?
Must have been a College basketball game on that day.
George
|
247.270 | Older folk just trying to help | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Tue Apr 23 1996 14:15 | 1 |
| Spahn and Sain and pray for rain
|
247.271 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 14:17 | 4 |
|
I've heard that both ways, "pray for rain" and "a day of rain".
George
|
247.272 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Tue Apr 23 1996 14:27 | 8 |
|
The Atlanta Braves link to Boston, is exactly the same as
the Baltimore Ravens link to the Cleveland Browns. Will a
Baltimore Raven ever where Jim Browns uniform #? Paul are you now
a Baltimore Raven fan?, or are you waited for the Expansion Cleveland
Browns to start playing in X amount of years?
Ron
|
247.273 | I think it was two days of rain | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Tue Apr 23 1996 14:32 | 1 |
|
|
247.274 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Apr 23 1996 14:42 | 26 |
|
George,
The National League started in 1876; the National Association
in 1871. The former is _not_, as a rule, considered a "major
league"; stats from that league are not held in the same regard
as the American Association or even the Players League.
And I'll say this - when I hear the names Harry and George Wright,
it certainly isn't Boston I think of - it's Cincinnati, and the
great Red Stocking team on 1869. It's similar to pointing to Ruth
as a member of the Braves - sure he played for them, but his fame
is as a Red Sock and (particularly) Yankee.
w.r.t. The Modells...
I won't speak for Paul, but...
1) IMHO, the Browns tradition did not leave town with the team.
I certainly hope the expansion team to be respects the retired
numbers of days past; I expect they will.
2) I will root fervently against the Modells against anyone.
Joe
|
247.275 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 15:24 | 44 |
| RE <<< Note 247.274 by ROCK::HUBER "From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls" >>>
> The National League started in 1876; the National Association
> in 1871. The former is _not_, as a rule, considered a "major
> league"; stats from that league are not held in the same regard
> as the American Association or even the Players League.
No, I don't think that's quite right. I believe the "National Association of
Professional Players" or some such thing started in 1871. The "National
Association" was an amateur league that started much earlier with teams like
the New York Knickerbockers.
At 1st the pros were quite successful and when they bought all the best
players from the National Association, the amateur league folded up. But then
by about 1875 the pro league fell into chaos and they decided to reorganize and
start it up again as the National League.
> And I'll say this - when I hear the names Harry and George Wright,
> it certainly isn't Boston I think of - it's Cincinnati, and the
> great Red Stocking team on 1869. It's similar to pointing to Ruth
> as a member of the Braves - sure he played for them, but his fame
> is as a Red Sock and (particularly) Yankee.
Except that Ruth was in his last year and did practically nothing as a
Brave. By contrast the Wrights helped to start a league back in 1876 that
is probably the oldest and most successful professional league in existence.
As for that 1869 undefeated Red Stocking team, contrary to other claims it
left town after a year or so and has little relationship to the 1871 Cincinnati
Red Stocking team that started there the under new management.
It would probably be more accurate to say that today's Braves are the oldest
professional team in baseball. They are the team that Harry Write started back
in Cincinnati 1869, moved to Boston in 1871 to play in the National Association
of Professional Players. It was the same bunch of guys who formed the Red Caps
in 1876 and played in the 1st national league game in Philadelphia that
spring. It was then that same team that played in Boston for 76 years then
moved to Milwaukee and Atlanta as the Braves.
That Reds team in Cincinnati today was just part of the effort to form the
National Association of Professional Players back in 1871 and compared to the
Braves they are little more than yet another expansion team. :*)}
George
|
247.276 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Tue Apr 23 1996 15:46 | 3 |
|
Bill you beat me to it.
|
247.277 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 23 1996 16:06 | 3 |
| Of course today it would be Spahn, Saine, and 3 days of rain.
George
|
247.278 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Tue Apr 23 1996 17:20 | 16 |
| After seeing Johnny Sain's named spelled correctly twice why do you
insist on the E at the end. Or shouldn't I ask - I'm a leftie so
quirks are something I have a lot of patience with.
The post war braves induced a ton of passion in Boston but somehow it
was never truly reflected in the box office. Probably the small field
and no parking had something to do with it. Attendance, after a surge
in the post-war started dropping in the 50s and I don't think even the
Redsox got back to 1 million until around 1958.
Perini should have got a leg up and built a two sport stadium out in
the burbs like in Norwood. But Boston and vicinity is a sports "talk"
town not a sports "see" town. And it's gotten worse and we're now one
of the lowest rated sports areas in the country albeit with the best
coverage. Except hockey and to some extent baseball where by stopping
the slide last year Duquette saved the demand for the scarce seating.
|
247.279 | | MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::long | Beat em Bucs | Tue Apr 23 1996 18:43 | 8 |
| I think it's just a quirk, billte. Kinda like Tommy and
his insistance on dropping the h in Pittsburgh.
Who says these two don't have a good deal in common?!
billl
|
247.280 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 24 1996 09:56 | 24 |
| You know they are running out of ideas when they start picking on spelling.
Paul I can understand, he's a Rotisserie stat man and spelling errors bring
back memories of rerunning weeks of stats.
As for Boston, attendance has been outstanding lately at Fenway Park. The
reason the Braves left was that people were going to Fenway to see Ted Williams
and other AL stars of the time, not because Boston is a "talk" only town.
RE National Association
I looked it up, the original name for the National League when it was 1st
formed in 1871 was the "National Association of Professional Baseball Players".
The "National Association" was the amateur league that was started earlier
and ended around that time.
After the Cincinnati Reds of 1869 folded the people trying to start the
Boston franchise in the new pro league hired Harry Wright to come run their
team. He did and with his brother George went on to run the team through
the years of the pro association and into the start of the National League
years.
In the winter of 1875-1876 the pro league reorganized as the National League.
George
|
247.281 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Apr 24 1996 10:16 | 41 |
|
>RE National Association
>
> I looked it up, the original name for the National League when it was 1st
>formed in 1871 was the "National Association of Professional Baseball Players".
>The "National Association" was the amateur league that was started earlier
>and ended around that time.
George,
The name by which the NAoPBP is commonly known, though, is the
National Association. Check out the Baseball Encyclopedia; the
NAoPBP is commonly referred to as the National Association. When
I refer to the National Association, I'm likewise making reference
to the NAoPBP. Sorry for any confusion this caused.
> After the Cincinnati Reds of 1869 folded the people trying to start the
>Boston franchise in the new pro league hired Harry Wright to come run their
>team. He did and with his brother George went on to run the team through
>the years of the pro association and into the start of the National League
>years.
> In the winter of 1875-1876 the pro league reorganized as the National League.
I'm not arguing any of that; my arguments are:
1) Harry and George Wright are best known for their association
with the Cincinnati Reds, not for their association with the
NA Red Stockings or NL Red Caps.
BTW - for anyone interested in the beginnings of pro baseball,
"If I Never Get Back" by (I believe) Darryl Brock is a quite
enjoyable read; it's historical fiction, though, which might bother
some purists.
2) The National Assocation (by which, again, I mean NAoPBP) is not
recognized as a major league. The Braves may trace their roots
to the NA Red Stockings, but IMHO the more appropriate point for
any team to trace to is 1876 (NL) or 1901 (AL).
Joe
|
247.282 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 24 1996 10:38 | 36 |
| RE <<< Note 247.281 by ROCK::HUBER "From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls" >>>
> 2) The National Assocation (by which, again, I mean NAoPBP) is not
> recognized as a major league. The Braves may trace their roots
> to the NA Red Stockings, but IMHO the more appropriate point for
> any team to trace to is 1876 (NL) or 1901 (AL).
Joe, I think we are close but we are just arguing over semantics. It's not
that the NAoPBP was not a major league, it was. I believe the reason the
reorganization of 1876 is recognized as the beginning of the National League
for stat purposes was that the NAoPBP was so chaotic between 1871 and 1876 that
the stats would not be reliable.
As for the caliber of play, for all intents and purposes the players involved
after 1876 were the same guys that played in 1875 and in many cases there was
little change on the teams themselves. Many of the players might not even have
been aware of the importance of the reorganization.
Regarding the name National Association, that's fine if your Encyclopedia
wants to call them that because they obviously decided not to get involved with
the amateur league but that league certainly was the major league of it's day.
Again, it was not the caliber of players that was different, all that changed
was that in January of 1871 the NAoPBP changed one rule to allow players to be
paid. The rest of the rules they lifted directly from the amateur National
Association.
As for the Wrights, remember them as you will but if you look at the bigger
picture what they contributed in general was the switch from amateur to
professional baseball for the top players in the game. They started with one
team in Cincinnati that played a ton of amateur teams, then they went on to
Boston where they had a major part in helping get the 1st pro league started
and they were still major figures helping to turn the 1875 failure into the
1876 success that became the National League. To me it seems like one big
effort of which they were a major part.
George
|
247.283 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Wed Apr 24 1996 10:46 | 3 |
| > Joe, I think we are close but we are just arguing over semantics.
How are you dealing with this, George? It's new ground for you...
|
247.284 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 24 1996 11:14 | 9 |
| RE <<< Note 247.283 by IMBETR::DUPREZ "It's Baseball And You're An American" >>>
>How are you dealing with this, George? It's new ground for you...
First, what does this question have to do with sports?
Second, what are you talking about?
George
|
247.285 | Not me, I'm no spelling critic | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Wed Apr 24 1996 12:09 | 14 |
| I only mentioned the Sain vs Saine since I had replied with the correct
one. If you were going to misspell I'd have thought Spahn would have
been the tough one.
On the Boston Braves attendance. My point and I'm basically supporting
your argument that there truly are many former Boston Braves fans who
have continued to follow the team. The problem is where were they when
the Braves needed them. And the answer I suggest is that while there
were this fanatical bunch of Braves fans who still can't understand why
the Pole never canonized Tommy Holmes the Sunday fans all went to
Fenway.
And as modern entertainment dictum states: It's the casual fans that
make or break you.
|
247.286 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 24 1996 12:24 | 28 |
| Not only was attendance low, but it was low after they had just gone to the
World Series.
No doubt attendance was what got them looking around but another factor was
that Milwaukee, where the Braves had a minor league team, had just built a new
stadium and Bill Veck Jr. was chomping at the bit to move the St. Louis Browns
back to Milwaukee into that stadium. The Braves used their minor league team to
block the Browns move but then they had to "use it or lose it" so they chose to
head out west without waiting around to see if the Boston crowds would return.
Had Milwaukee not just built that stadium or if the Browns had beat them to
it, the move probably would have been delayed and Hank Aaron would have become
a major Boston sports hero. Those two World Series with the Yankees in '56 and
'57 would have made Boston fans forget about the Sox and Braves field would
have been packed.
But it wasn't to be. Now only the Right Field Pavilion and ticket office
remain and B.U. dormitories occupy the spot where the Grandstands once stood at
Braves field. Their ticket office is now the B.U. Police station. But every
now and then I go sit in the Right Field Pavilion and think about what it
would have been like to see Hammer'en Hank, Eddie Mathews, Warren Spahn and
the rest play in Boston.
Oh well, at least I got to see the Braves play in Fulton County Stadium.
Maybe once interleague play starts I'll get to see them when they return to
Fenway Park.
George
|
247.287 | After The Chop wore off, they were only left with great baseball | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Wed Apr 24 1996 12:33 | 13 |
|
Speaking of attendance, now that the Atlanta Braves have won it
all, Atlantans seemed bored by it all, staying away from games in
surprisingly high numbers. The "New Atlanta", with its hoity-toity
Olympic Games and big money (not to mention large population), may
just be one of the worst baseball cities ever, when you look at the
Braves' entire history there.
The Bravos reportedly didn't even sell out Opening Day, or maybe only
on gameday at best...
glenn
|
247.288 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 24 1996 12:40 | 8 |
| Maybe it's a one year thing. The fans might be getting caught up in the
hoop-la surrounding the Olympics.
But as my brother said last fall, after winning one each World Series in
Boston, Milwaukee, and Atlanta maybe the next Braves team to win the World
Series will be the 2040 Space-Station Alpha Braves.
George
|
247.289 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Wed Apr 24 1996 12:46 | 5 |
|
It could be that the fans don't want to deal with the traffic and
other nuisances created by the construction going on for the Olympics.
Ron
|
247.290 | Dem's fightin' words! | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Wed Apr 24 1996 12:46 | 25 |
| >Speaking of attendance, now that the Atlanta Braves have won it
>all, Atlantans seemed bored by it all, staying away from games in
>surprisingly high numbers. The "New Atlanta", with its hoity-toity
>Olympic Games and big money (not to mention large population), may
>just be one of the worst baseball cities ever, when you look at the
>Braves' entire history there.
>The Bravos reportedly didn't even sell out Opening Day, or maybe only
>on gameday at best...
...and the horse you rode in on. And describing the Olympics as
hoity-toity (?) smacks of jealousy. The worlds attention will be
focused on Atlanta in July and August, and we are damned proud of it.
Boston gets mentioned internationally when a plane skids off a runway
(maybe).
The Braves attendance is down this year (you want me to argue against
facts?), due in part to the Olympics competing for the sport dollar,
the stadium is not readily accessible by mass transit
and they have screwed up the parking with the Olympic construction.
I was at opening day and froze my ass off. It was not packed, but it
was officially "sold out".
UMDan
|
247.292 | Not right or wrong... just a question of priority | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Wed Apr 24 1996 12:50 | 15 |
|
> The Braves attendance is down this year (you want me to argue against
> facts?), due in part to the Olympics competing for the sport dollar,
> the stadium is not readily accessible by mass transit
> and they have screwed up the parking with the Olympic construction.
Attendance was down last year too, and the year before that (before
the strike).
Damned right I'm jealous. In Boston we'd kill for a baseball team
like that, and the ballclub would upstage the Olympic publicity,
I guarantee it.
glenn
|
247.293 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Wed Apr 24 1996 12:53 | 8 |
|
> Yeah, and Red Sox attendance figures are soaring...
Right there with Atlanta's, at ~30,000, despite the worst-to-first
contrast, and Atlanta's "bad" weather...
glenn
|
247.295 | Cmon, the Braves and Boston are like this.. | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Wed Apr 24 1996 12:56 | 5 |
| But aren't the Braves really a Boston team, I mean, you know,...:-)
(The equine carcass is now just dust, hooves and teeth!)
UMDan
|
247.296 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Wed Apr 24 1996 12:59 | 13 |
|
If the Braves played in Boston they could sellout every game
in a 55,000 seat stadium. No problem. It's just a great base-
ball town. A lousy football town and an even worse basketball
town but a great baseball town. Atlanta on the other hand is a
lousy baseball town. Need we drag out film of the stands in the
mid '80s to reinforce that point?
As for the Olympics being in Atlanta? It's a shame. It's a shame
that the Olympic committe sold out for the big bucks instead of
doing the right thing and staging the 100th year anniversary of
the modern Olympiad in Athens like they should have.
|
247.297 | What y'all got against Atlanta today? | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Wed Apr 24 1996 13:10 | 12 |
| And in Athens you wouldn't have a hotel room, working telephones, state
of the art venues, etc.
As for the Olympic committee selling out, everything that the IOC
Selection team seems associated with is a massive bribe receiving effort.
They get their asses kissed more than Madonna in the Bull's locker room.
Atlanta was the first city to ever get the Olympics on their first try.
If the IOC was concerned about history they would have awarded it to
Athens. They weren't so they didn't.
UMDan
|
247.298 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 24 1996 13:18 | 21 |
| RE<<< Note 247.294 by ROCK::GRONOWSKI "SPORTS 1995 NOTY & RED_SOX Most Knowledgeable Noter Award!" >>>
> Boston had a team like the Braves, they didn't support them... they
> left.
The 1952 Braves were nothing like today's Braves. If 1948 was "Spahn and Sain
and pray for rain", by 1952 it was "Spahn and Crandall can't find the handle".
Veteran Johnny Sain had gone in a trade to the Yankees for a rookie named Lew
Burdette and no one knew yet that he'd come back to be a Yankee killer half a
decade later.
They were a team with tons of potential and some amazing guys coming along
but who knew? The townies had Ted Williams playing on the other side of Kenmore
Square and they weren't about to spend time going to watch the Braves.
Bummer, if not for that minor league team that they used to get into that
new stadium in Milwaukee the 50's would have been something else in Boston.
Think about it, both Babe Ruth and Hank Aaron should have been Boston heros
but we let them both slip away.
George
|
247.299 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Wed Apr 24 1996 13:22 | 4 |
|
I find these baseball history lessons to be the most
fascinating reading there is other than the back of
a bottle of floor cleaner.
|
247.300 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 24 1996 13:47 | 5 |
|
Hey, at least when I put on my cap and gown and they handed me my degree I
moved on and put my College years behind me.
George
|
247.301 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Wed Apr 24 1996 13:55 | 4 |
|
Groaner watch day 1, in regards to the question posed in .272
Ron
|
247.303 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Wed Apr 24 1996 15:53 | 10 |
| In 1952 the Braves didn't have Ted Williams to compete with, he was
flying with the Marine Corps and John Glenn in Korea. The Redsox had
only Billy Goodman left from the good teams of 46-51 plus Parnell and
Kinder. They went to a youth movement and Dom DiMaggio said hello Tom
Umphlett good bye Sox and wasn't heard from again until he helped Billy
Sullivan buy the Patriots.
I doubt the sox drew 700,000 that year. Maybe they were saving their
money to see Harry Agannis play football or go dancing at the Totem
Pole.
|
247.304 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Apr 24 1996 16:02 | 4 |
| Well if the players weren't there because the war was on then it was hardly a
representative year. That wouldn't mean that Boston was not a baseball town.
George
|
247.305 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | You never can tell | Wed Apr 24 1996 17:00 | 7 |
| Not that many players missed because of the "police action". Pulling
Williams back into the Corps was probably partly political. Hell it
may have put some pressure on Truman to end the war earlier. One other
player involved was Johnny Antonelli who when he finally got out of the
service found he'd been traded from the Braves to the Giants.
|
247.306 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Apr 30 1996 09:58 | 13 |
|
Interesting piece of data...
Remember "Spahn and Sain and pray for rain?"
In 1948, when the Braves went to the World Series, Spahn and Sain had
a combined winning percentage of .591.
The "rain" had a winning percentage of .598.
Interesting, no?
Joe
|
247.307 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 30 1996 10:02 | 5 |
| Could be that those were the two guys most people saw as capable of having
20 win seasons. It makes sense that to win the National League pennant you'd
need more than 2 pitchers, even with only 7 other teams in the league.
George
|
247.308 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Apr 30 1996 11:16 | 8 |
|
But George, for most teams who make the world series, their best
two pitchers pitch _better_ than the rest of the team.
It's just rather ironic that a team famous for having only two starters
in fact had a better record with other pitchers.
Joe
|
247.309 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Better days are coming bye and bye. Bull... | Tue Apr 30 1996 12:26 | 5 |
| Spahn's record of 15-12 was unusual for him. The saying came in during
the pennant rush when they got all the innings out of the two. I
suspect Spahn may have had a period of arm problems that year from
which he rebounded. He also was changing over from a power fastball
pitcher to a complete pitcher.
|
247.310 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 30 1996 12:37 | 14 |
| Remember, they didn't have the same type of statistical analysis back then
that we have today. Also the Braves had been so terrible for so long most
people probably didn't know the team very well.
They probably knew that Johnny Sain was the old veteran that had been with
the team for a while the press had time to tell them about the new kid, Warren
Spahn. They were the ones capable of racking up 20 win seasons.
Even in '86 a feeling developed among some that Boston only had 2 pitchers.
Remember "Clemens and Hurst then expect the worst"? Well as it was, Oil Can
Boyd and Al Nipper had a lot to do with why that team won the division and was
able to go on to the World Series.
George
|
247.311 | George Maiewski, Cult Boston Historian... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Apr 30 1996 12:48 | 26 |
|
> Remember, they didn't have the same type of statistical analysis back then
> that we have today. Also the Braves had been so terrible for so long most
> people probably didn't know the team very well.
What kind of statistical analysis do you need to know that a guy was
15-12, or to calculate winning percentage? My guess is that a hell
of a lot more people knew what winning pct was (not to mention how to
divide) than today...
> They probably knew that Johnny Sain was the old veteran that had been with
> the team for a while the press had time to tell them about the new kid, Warren
> Spahn. They were the ones capable of racking up 20 win seasons.
The "old veteran" was in his 3rd full season...
> Even in '86 a feeling developed among some that Boston only had 2 pitchers.
> Remember "Clemens and Hurst then expect the worst"? Well as it was, Oil Can
> Boyd and Al Nipper had a lot to do with why that team won the division and was
> able to go on to the World Series.
Boyd had a good season. Nipper was sub-.500 for a very good-hitting
team, and basically sipped, especially in the World Series.
glenn
|
247.312 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 30 1996 13:13 | 29 |
| <<< Note 247.311 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Hardball, good ol' country" >>>
> What kind of statistical analysis do you need to know that a guy was
> 15-12, or to calculate winning percentage? My guess is that a hell
> of a lot more people knew what winning pct was (not to mention how to
> divide) than today...
Ok then if so many people knew about this winning percentage, why the
saying "Spahn and Sain and pray for rain"? Maybe they were not the analysts
you think them to be.
> The "old veteran" was in his 3rd full season...
To many people who had just become Braves fans after a decades long losing
spell that might as well have been an entire career.
> Boyd had a good season. Nipper was sub-.500 for a very good-hitting
> team, and basically sipped, especially in the World Series.
We were not talking about the World Series, my point was that both guys
contributed to getting the team their division title and no matter how you
slice it "Clemens and Hurst then expect the worst" was not representative
of the '86 Red Sox.
> -< George Maiewski, Cult Boston Historian... >-
Glenn Waugaman, declaring victory on a note that is weak at best.
George
|
247.313 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 30 1996 14:26 | 35 |
| RE <<< Note 247.313 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Hardball, good ol' country" >>>
> Kind of like how the last few Braves' seasons have evolved into a
> lifetime for you...
No, I've been reading about the entire history of the team, not just the
last few seasons. I've put notes in here about how the team was started by
Harry Wright back in 1871, how they won NL Pennants in the 19th century, how
the 1914 Miracle Braves came from last to beat Connie Mack's A's in 1914
as well as modern times.
>what of the Braves' glorious history in Boston,
> given this gross ignorance on the part of their fans?
What about the gross ignorance of fans who bought into "Clemens and Hurst
then expect then worst"? Just because part of the sports press plays up to
casual fans that doesn't mean there are not good fans as well.
> Spahn, InSane
> And inane George's reign
Maybe you can tell me, exactly what is your problem? All I said was that I
liked the Braves in part because they once played in Boston and that brought on
a landslide of cynicism.
Cynicism is usually a way that people who can't deal with their feelings hide
their anger. Fine I have no problem with that but what I would like to know is
what is this anger really about? All I'm asking is why would anyone get so
upset just because I said I liked the Braves for an unorthodox reason?
Abuse is not going to make me go away. The more I get the more I feel
determined to know just what sacred cow I've accidentally turned into
hamburger.
George
|
247.314 | No, I give both Braves and Sox fans more credit than this | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Tue Apr 30 1996 14:39 | 24 |
|
> What about the gross ignorance of fans who bought into "Clemens and Hurst
> then expect then worst"? Just because part of the sports press plays up to
> casual fans that doesn't mean there are not good fans as well.
That is not gross ignorance. In fact, that is a nice, tidy assessment
of the 1986 Red Sox' pitching staff, which was basically .500
when Clemens and Hurst didn't pick up a decision, in spite of the
league-leading offense. The assessment was doubly true in the
postseason (could "expect the worse" have even dared to portend the
exploits of one Calvin Schiraldi?).
As for "Spahn and Sain", billte gave a perfectly reasonable explanation
for the fans' slogan, which is basically that they were smart enough to
realize that Spahn was a great great pitcher and an innings horse who
just didn't get the support that season, and that Sain was the best
pitcher in the league that year bar none, again based on more than
straight W-L pct. No convoluted reasoning around how people didn't
know how to divide in 1948. Mr. Huber only posted the fact under the
category of "interesting trivia" in the first place (I think, at
least).
glenn
|
247.315 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 30 1996 14:53 | 26 |
| RE <<< Note 247.314 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Hardball, good ol' country" >>>
> The assessment was doubly true in the
> postseason (could "expect the worse" have even dared to portend the
> exploits of one Calvin Schiraldi?).
If one of those three batters had gotten just a bit under one of those hits
and popped it up, Calvin Schiraldi's statue would be standing in Fanuel Hall
right next to one of Johnny Mac. Schiraldi got the closer job done during the
season which helped the Sox win the division but he'll always be remembered
by Red Sox fans for that one bad inning.
Do you really think that if Ray Knight had popped up due to a bad swing on
his own part that Schiraldi would be remembered in Boston the way he is today?
> As for "Spahn and Sain", billte gave a perfectly reasonable explanation
> for the fans' slogan, which is basically that they were smart enough to
> realize that Spahn was a great great pitcher and an innings horse who
> just didn't get the support that season, and that Sain was the best
> pitcher in the league that year bar none, again based on more than
> straight W-L pct.
That explains why they liked Spahn and Sain but it doesn't explain why they
didn't like the rest of the pitching staff.
George
|
247.316 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Apr 30 1996 15:10 | 14 |
|
> Mr. Huber only posted the fact under the
> category of "interesting trivia" in the first place (I think, at
> least).
Technically, "interesting piece of data", but still.
I agree completely with the idea that the fans _knew_, logically,
that the success of the Braves was largely tied to Spahn and Sain;
the rest of the staff was clearly somewhat better than they were
given credit for, but I suspect that the largest factor was poor
run support for Spahn and Sain.
Joe
|
247.317 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Apr 30 1996 15:12 | 7 |
|
If Mookie would have hit that one up just a little more like you
say it woulda got Billy Buck in the Nads!!!
Chap
|
247.318 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 30 1996 15:20 | 11 |
| No doubt, but he would have kept it in front of him, flipped it to Bob
Stanley covering and on they would have gone to the 11th. Who knows how it
would have come out, I think the odds would have been against the Sox.
But if Ray Knight had popped up, Johnny Mac, Calvin, and Buckner would have
their likeness cast in bronze right along side Red at Quincy Market and no one
would be talking about what a terrible reliever Calvin Schiraldi turned out to
be. He'd go down in Boston history as the relief pitcher who had the most
important win in Red Sox history.
George
|
247.319 | | CSC32::MACGREGOR | Colorado: the TRUE mid-west | Tue Apr 30 1996 16:39 | 14 |
|
Food for thought:
I don't know how the pitchers of old did things, but today team A puts
their best pitcher against team B's best pitcher. Logic says that a
pitcher in this situation might only win 50% of their games. However,
if the same pitcher was put against the #4 pitcher, that individual
might win 75% of the games.
W-L alone is a useless statistic. You need to have a complete
understanding of the pitcher (ie, what was the ERA)
Marc
|
247.320 | | AWECIM::RUSSO | claimin! | Tue Apr 30 1996 17:38 | 10 |
|
>>But if Ray Knight had popped up, Johnny Mac, Calvin, and Buckner
>>would have
Now Buckner would have a statue, too? Why not Stanley as well?
Why not the entire 1986 Boston Red Sox team, standing there at Quincy
Market (Stanley closest to Boston Brownies), forever preserved in
bronze?
Dave
|
247.321 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Apr 30 1996 17:51 | 5 |
|
First World Series win since 1918? They may have just put the whole team
in bronze.
George
|
247.322 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed May 01 1996 10:10 | 12 |
| The Andruw Jones watch continues and it appears that the Braves top prospect
is doing well for the Durham Bulls in high A ball.
AVG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB
Jones, Andruw, OF ... .301 73 23 22 4 0 5 12 23 20 1
Will they move him up to AA or bring him along a level a year? Hard to
tell. The Braves seem to have some good players at both the AAA and AA level
whom they are trying to develop and the Major League club seems pretty well
set.
George
|
247.323 | The data | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Fri May 03 1996 09:00 | 31 |
| Just to follow up the discussion of the 1948 Braves (and my respect to
George for not responding in kind to the name calling), here are the
data for the most frequently used Boston pitchers, from The Baseball
Encyclopedia:
PITCHER G IP W L SV ERA
Sain 42 315 24 15 1 2.60
Spahn 36 257 15 12 1 3.71
Voiselle 37 216 13 13 2 3.63
Bickford 33 146 11 5 1 3.27
Barrett 34 128 7 8 0 3.65
Hogue 40 86 8 2 2 3.23
Shoun 36 74 5 1 4 4.01
What distinguishes Spahn from the "two days of rain" more than anything
else is innings. They all pitched in approximately the same number of
games, but only Sain and Spahn gave them innings. It suggests Billy
Southworth was doing a first rate job handling his staff.
Spahn and Sain were each in their third full season in 1948; at the time,
you'd have been forgiven for thinking Sain had the brighter future. He'd
won 20 three times (20-14, 2.21; 21-12, 3.52; 24-15, 2.60), where Spahn,
four years younger, was still figuring things out (8-5, 2.94; 21-10, 2.33;
15-12, 3.71). But Sain retired at 38 after 11 seasons (1955), after which
Spahn had another *seven* 20-win seasons. He retired at 44 in 1965 and
was elected to the Hall of Fame, but incredibly not until 1973.
As for Andruw Jones, patience. He's still fanning too often.
Steve
|
247.324 | | AKOCOA::BREEN | Better days are coming bye and bye. BS | Fri May 03 1996 16:58 | 11 |
| What name calling? Must have missed it. Steve you missed your big
chance when in Boston to go to Dorchester or even Brighton and drop
some gem like "Holmes was really out at second on that pickoff, we
really got a break there. Too bad we couldn't solve Lemon" and get an
all day discussion of the Boston Braves. 1948 for the Braves was like
the battle of Mouldon for the English they just kept talking and
replaying it for years.
Boston is probably the only nearly English city in America and it has
odd characters and odd behavior and celebrates same. George's position
on the Braves/Atlanta thing is fairly legit in those parts.
|
247.325 | Time wounds all heels | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon May 06 1996 07:30 | 29 |
| > Steve you missed your big
> chance when in Boston to go to Dorchester or even Brighton and drop
> some gem like "Holmes was really out at second on that pickoff, we
> really got a break there. Too bad we couldn't solve Lemon" and get an
> all day discussion of the Boston Braves.
Sounds like a grand time. Filed away for the next visit. Of course, I
was a pretty little fellow in 1948. The only thing I remember being aware
of was Stan Musial hitting .376 and slugging .702, with me trying to tune
in KMOX when the sunspots were right.
> Boston is probably the only nearly English city in America and it has
> odd characters and odd behavior and celebrates same. George's position
> on the Braves/Atlanta thing is fairly legit in those parts.
I've supported George's position from the beginning. After all, I'm from
a city that has seen plenty of teams move in and out: Dodgers, Angels,
Rams (both ways), Raiders (ditto), Lakers, Clippers--it's LA's only mass
transit system. Incredibly, the only indigenous team in Los Angeles is
the Kings. And they don't play within the city limits, which the late
unlamented Sharks of the WHA did.
Boston appeals to me for a lot of reasons, but I can't say that it feels
in any way English to me, despite the remnants of Colonial architecture.
The only place I've ever been in North America that felt even remotely
English was Ontario, Canada. Societies evolve with astonishing rapidity,
and we and the English have become as different as our languages.
Steve
|
247.326 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu May 30 1996 15:51 | 11 |
| Another outfielder in the Braves organization went down with a season ending
injury. According to the Richmond Braves Web page AAA prospect Damon Hollins
will need surgery to shorten the ulna bone in his wrist which healed too long
after an injury he sustained during highschool 6 years ago. It was causing him
pain when he swung the bat.
Also prospect Wonderful Mounds seems to have disappeared from the stats for
the Braves AA Greenville farm club. I can't find any word anywhere on what
happened to Mounds. Anyone have any info?
George
|
247.327 | | CSLALL::BRULE | Springtime at last | Thu May 30 1996 16:31 | 7 |
| >>Also prospect Wonderful Mounds
My mind is not thinking about baseball when I see this names. This name
should be in Demi Moores new movie!!
Mike
|
247.328 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Thu May 30 1996 21:35 | 22 |
|
>>Also prospect Wonderful Mounds
>
> My mind is not thinking about baseball when I see this names. This name
> should be in Demi Moores new movie!!
It's better than that, even. The guy's real full name is actually
Wonderful Terrific Monds (not Mounds, as in Demi's, but we've already
done the "beat up on George for his 'typos' thang"), and he's either
a WTM, Jr., or more the more stately WTM III. I believe one of his
predecessors played in the Negro Leagues or some such. The original
WTM was named as such because he was the first boy in the family after
10 tries or so, as his parents were sexist.
Couple of years ago, at least, Wonderful was regarded as a top
prospect. Maybe he's fallen from grace and is now only "Marginally
Adequate" Monds...
glenn
|
247.329 | another Pamela Anderson? | THEMAX::JACKSON | Set the drag just right! | Thu May 30 1996 23:00 | 3 |
| Aren't Demi Moore's "mounds" fake?
Tim
|
247.330 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Fri May 31 1996 07:58 | 8 |
|
> Also prospect Wonderful Mounds seems to have disappeared
And reappeared at the Fuzzy Grape last week with shows at 2, 4, and
8 daily.
|
247.331 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri May 31 1996 09:53 | 9 |
|
> Couple of years ago, at least, Wonderful was regarded as a top
> prospect. Maybe he's fallen from grace and is now only "Marginally
> Adequate" Monds...
Still looks like a _reasonable_ prospect to me; he's only 23, and
played OK in AA last year. Maybe "Reasonably Above Average" Monds...
Joe
|
247.332 | oughta be a law | HBAHBA::HAAS | more madness, less horror | Fri May 31 1996 11:16 | 18 |
| > Aren't Demi Moore's "mounds" fake?
I don't know. She's sported a pretty good set as long as she's been
around. Her earliest display was in _Blame it on Rio_ where a lot of
young ladies saunter around nekid on top.
There is a rather short list of things that I think should be banned.
Being basically a libertarian, I'd have no problem with complete anarchy.
But as long as there is a government I think they should do their job and
ban the following:
Fake Mounds
Artificial Turf
Designated Hitter
That's about it for me.
TTom
|
247.333 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 31 1996 11:22 | 13 |
| RE <<< Note 247.331 by ROCK::HUBER "From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls" >>>
> Still looks like a _reasonable_ prospect to me; he's only 23, and
> played OK in AA last year. Maybe "Reasonably Above Average" Monds...
He was hitting around .308 at AA Greenville 6 weeks into the season so I
guess he was still doing ok but then he suddenly disappeared from the stats
without showing up at AAA Richmond or single A Durham or Macon.
That would happen if he went on the DL but I didn't see anything listed
so I was wondering if anyone knew where he went?
George
|
247.334 | How about valves that don't meet NASCAR specs? | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Fri May 31 1996 11:36 | 8 |
| >But as long as there is a government I think they should do their job and
>ban the following:
>
> Fake Mounds
> Artificial Turf
> Designated Hitter
Why should you care about the DH - you don't even like baseball!
|
247.335 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri May 31 1996 11:42 | 23 |
|
>There is a rather short list of things that I think should be banned.
>Being basically a libertarian, I'd have no problem with complete anarchy.
>But as long as there is a government I think they should do their job and
>ban the following:
>
> Fake Mounds
> Artificial Turf
> Designated Hitter
Of those three, I think Artificial Turf should be the most clear cut
case. The other two have _some_ supporters, at least, but the only
good thing I've ever heard said about artificial turf is that it's
good for the marching band.
Other additions I'd make to the list:
Domed Stadiums
Neutral Site Super Bowls
Use Of Civic Funds To Lure Away Teams
Art Modell
Joe
|
247.336 | did I say that? | HBAHBA::HAAS | more madness, less horror | Fri May 31 1996 11:46 | 17 |
| I don't like MLB and am so-so on AAA but the minors I like. Hail I even
go to see 'em. There's a_outside chance that I can catch a Charleston
Alley Cats game thised weekend at beautiful Watt Powell Park, with real
grass.
I don't know if'n their mounds are fake, though.
Abolishing fake turf and the DH would really help out.
> "It's Baseball And You're An American"
One thing I do like about MLB is the ESPN commercials with Abe and that
other guy.
TTom
TTom
|
247.337 | Pitching in decline? | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Fri May 31 1996 11:54 | 10 |
| On a Braves telecast early this month, one of the announcers stated that, over
the past three seasons, only seven pitchers have managed a .500 record, 150
innings pitched, and an ERA under four in each of those seasons. Two of them
are National Leaguers, Greg Maddux and Tom Glavine. The others: Dennis
Martinez, Alex Fernandez, Jack MacDowell, Kevin Appier, and Randy Johnson.
The 150 innings looks easier than it is, given the shortened seasons of
1994-5, but even so, I find this pretty shocking.
Steve
|
247.338 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | Go GB/USA/Ken/NZ/Oz Olympic team | Fri May 31 1996 12:44 | 8 |
| .332
> Aren't Demi Moore's "mounds" fake?
Yes, she had the thre'penny bit implants a few years back.
CHARLEY
|
247.339 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | I need somebody to shove | Fri May 31 1996 12:56 | 6 |
|
>> Her earliest display was in _Blame it on Rio_ where a lot of
She wasn't in that movie. See her in St Elmo's Fore and see her
now. The difference is marked.
|
247.340 | and check out Michelle Johnson's!~ | HBAHBA::HAAS | more madness, less horror | Fri May 31 1996 13:01 | 106 |
| > >> Her earliest display was in _Blame it on Rio_ where a lot of
>
> She wasn't in that movie. See her in St Elmo's Fore and see her
> now. The difference is marked.
Oh tommy, where fore art thou.
[Internet Movie Database] Cinema check
BLAME IT ON RIO (1984)
USA 1984 Color
rating rating rating rating
4.9/10 (262 votes)
Produced by: Sherwood
Genre(s)/keyword(s): Comedy / romance / farce
Certification: Germany:16 / USA:R
_________________________________________________________________
Additional Information (click an icon)
plot-summary laserdisc rating locations business
_________________________________________________________________
Directed by
Stanley Donen
Cast (in credits order) probably complete
Michael Caine .... Matthew Hollis
Joseph Bologna .... Victor Lyons
Valerie Harper .... Karen Hollis
Michelle Johnson .... Jennifer Lyons
Demi Moore .... Nicole Hollis
Jose Lewgoy .... Eduardo Marques
Lupe Gigliotti .... Signora Botega
Michael Menaugh .... Peter
Tessy Callado .... Helaine
Ana Lucia Lima .... Macumba Lady #1
Maria Helena Velasco .... Macumba Lady #2
Zeni Pereira .... Mother of the Bride
Eduardo Conde .... Singer in the Club
Betty Von Wien .... Isabella
Nelson Dantas .... Doctor
Thomas Lee Mahon .... Lorenzo
Victor Ham .... Bernardo
Jane Duboc .... Singer in the Cafe
Romulo Arantes .... Diego
Giovanna Soore .... Astrid
Grupo Benzala .... Capomirata
Angelo Mattos .... Dancer
Written by
Larry Gelbart
Charlie Peters
Cinematography by
Reynaldo Villalobos
Music by
Ken Wannberg
Film Editing by
George Hively
Richard Marden
Produced by
Stanley Donen
Larry Gelbart (executive)
Robert E. Relyea (associate)
Other crew
Chuck Finch (gaffer)
LINKS WITH OTHER MOVIES
remake of
Moment d'Egarement, Un (1977)
_________________
Cast your vote for Blame It on Rio (1984) (1=awful, 10=excellent)
__1__2__3__4__5__6__7__8__9__10__
_________________________________________________________________
Search-Help-Index
Copyright 1990-1996 The Internet Movie Database Ltd
|
247.341 | A recurring fantasy | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | Best of luck, Marcus! | Fri May 31 1996 13:12 | 6 |
| Demi Moore was Michelle Johnson's friend in that movie, so she
naturally took a back seat, so to say, to Michelle's attributes.
BTW, whatever happened to Michelle Johnson?
NAZZ
|
247.342 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 31 1996 13:21 | 63 |
|
Michelle Johnson from the Miss State WWW
Michelle Johnson's biographical information.
There's also a combined view of the filmographies below.
The IMDb has filmographies for Michelle Johnson in the following
categories:
Actress Miscellaneous crew
Actress filmography
1. Illicit Dreams (1994) .... Melinda Ryan
2. Incident at Deception Ridge (1994) (TV)
3. Menendez: A Killing in Beverly Hills (1994) (TV) .... Lisa
4. Body Shot (1993) .... Danielle/Chelsea
5. Death Becomes Her (1992) .... Anna
6. Dr. Giggles (1992) .... Tamara
7. Driving Me Crazy (1992) .... Ricki
... aka Trabbi Goes to Hollywood (1992)
8. Far and Away (1992) .... Grace
9. Her Final Fury: Betty Broderick, The Last Chapter (1992)
(TV) .... Special Appearance
... aka Till Murder Do Us Part II (1992) (TV)
10. Woman Scorned: The Betty Broderick Story, A (1992) (TV)
.... Linda
... aka Till Murder Do Us Part (1992) (TV)
11. Blood Ties (1991) (TV) .... Celia
12. Genuine Risk (1990)
13. Jigsaw Murders, The (1988) .... Kathy DaVonzo
14. Slipping Into Darkness (1988)
15. Waxwork (1988) .... China
16. Beaks: The Movie (1987)
17. Werewolf (1987) (TV)
18. Gung Ho (1986) .... Heather
... aka Working Class Man (1986)
19. Blame It on Rio (1984) .... Jennifer Lyons
20. "Love Boat, The" (1977)TV Series
21. Journey Among Women (1977) .... Biddie
Miscellaneous crew filmography
1. Chasers (1994) (hair styles)
2. Radioland Murders (1994) (key hairstylist)
3. Super Mario Bros. (1993) (key hair styles)
4. Abyss, The (1989) (stunts)
Search-Help-Index
Copyright 1990-1996 The Internet Movie Database Ltd
|
247.343 | woulda done me a lot of good | HBAHBA::HAAS | more madness, less horror | Fri May 31 1996 13:23 | 80 |
| I think it was more of a case of Michelle standing out and front of
Demi...
Here's Michelle's bio. It looks like she shoulda stuck with taking her
clothes off.
[Internet Movie Database] Search for movies with costars
MICHELLE JOHNSON
_________________________________________________________________
Michelle Johnson's biographical information.
There's also a combined view of the filmographies below.
The IMDb has filmographies for Michelle Johnson in the following
categories:
Actress Miscellaneous crew
__________________________________________________________
Actress filmography
1. Illicit Dreams (1994) .... Melinda Ryan
2. Incident at Deception Ridge (1994) (TV)
3. Menendez: A Killing in Beverly Hills (1994) (TV) .... Lisa
4. Body Shot (1993) .... Danielle/Chelsea
5. Death Becomes Her (1992) .... Anna
6. Dr. Giggles (1992) .... Tamara
7. Driving Me Crazy (1992) .... Ricki
... aka Trabbi Goes to Hollywood (1992)
8. Far and Away (1992) .... Grace
9. Her Final Fury: Betty Broderick, The Last Chapter (1992) (TV)
.... Special Appearance
... aka Till Murder Do Us Part II (1992) (TV)
10. Woman Scorned: The Betty Broderick Story, A (1992) (TV) ....
Linda
... aka Till Murder Do Us Part (1992) (TV)
11. Blood Ties (1991) (TV) .... Celia
12. Genuine Risk (1990)
13. Jigsaw Murders, The (1988) .... Kathy DaVonzo
14. Slipping Into Darkness (1988)
15. Waxwork (1988) .... China
16. Beaks: The Movie (1987)
17. Werewolf (1987) (TV)
18. Gung Ho (1986) .... Heather
... aka Working Class Man (1986)
19. Blame It on Rio (1984) .... Jennifer Lyons
20. "Love Boat, The" (1977)TV Series
21. Journey Among Women (1977) .... Biddie
__________________________________________________________
Miscellaneous crew filmography
1. Chasers (1994) (hair styles)
2. Radioland Murders (1994) (key hairstylist)
3. Super Mario Bros. (1993) (key hair styles)
4. Abyss, The (1989) (stunts)
__________________________________________________________
Search-Help-Index
Copyright 1990-1996 The Internet Movie Database Ltd
|
247.344 | CRASH!~ | HBAHBA::HAAS | more madness, less horror | Fri May 31 1996 13:24 | 0 |
247.345 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 31 1996 13:24 | 70 |
|
Demi Moore from the Miss State WWW
Additional Information (click an icon)
Demi Moore's biographical information.
There's also a combined view of the filmographies below.
The IMDb has filmographies for Demi Moore in the following categories:
Actress Producer
Actress filmography
1. Hunchback of Notre Dame, The (1996) (voice) .... Esmeralda
2. If These Walls Could Talk (1996) (TV)
3. Juror, The (1996) .... Annie Laird
4. Striptease (1996) .... Erin Grant
5. Undisclosed (1996)
... aka G.I. Jane (1996)
6. Now and Then (1995) .... Samantha
... aka Gaslight Addition (1995)
7. Scarlet Letter, The (1995) .... Hester Prynne
8. Disclosure (1994) .... Meredith Johnson
9. Indecent Proposal (1993) .... Diana Murphy
10. Few Good Men, A (1992) .... Lt. Cmdr. JoAnne Galloway
11. Butcher's Wife, The (1991) .... Marina
12. Mortal Thoughts (1991) .... Cynthia Kellogg
13. Nothing But Trouble (1991) .... Diane Lightson
14. Ghost (1990) (C:GGN) .... Molly Jensen
15. We're No Angels (1989) .... Molly
16. Seventh Sign, The (1988) .... Abby Quinn
17. About Last Night... (1986) .... Debbie
18. One Crazy Summer (1986) .... Cassandra
19. Wisdom (1986) .... Karen
20. St. Elmo's Fire (1985) .... Jules
21. "Master, The" (1984)TV Series .... Holly Trumbull
22. Blame It on Rio (1984) .... Nicole Hollis
23. No Small Affair (1984) .... Laura Victor
24. Parasite (1982) .... Patricia Welles
25. Young Doctors in Love (1982)
26. Choices (1981)
27. "General Hospital" (1963)TV Series .... Jackie Templeton
(1983)
Producer filmography
1. If These Walls Could Talk (1996) (TV) (executive)
2. Now and Then (1995)
... aka Gaslight Addition (1995)
3. Mortal Thoughts (1991) (co-producer)
Search-Help-Index
Copyright 1990-1996 The Internet Movie Database Ltd
|
247.346 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 31 1996 13:25 | 4 |
| Well I guess we've got this technology down.
:*)}
George
|
247.347 | not another list | HBAHBA::HAAS | more madness, less horror | Fri May 31 1996 13:33 | 5 |
| And a tip o' the hat for pointing me to it, George.
Movies and titles are on the list of things that they shouldn't ban.
TTom
|
247.348 | please clarify | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Fri May 31 1996 14:21 | 4 |
| re: .340
Did you say check out Michelle's Johnson or check out Michelle
Johnson's?
|
247.349 | Monds updat | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Fri May 31 1996 17:51 | 6 |
| Wonderful Monds III update - he's on the DL, and has been for about a
month, with a broken wrist.
UMDan
(but keep up the mounds discussion!)
|
247.350 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 31 1996 18:06 | 3 |
| Any word on how long he'll be out?
George
|
247.351 | | LEXSS1::MURPHY | | Fri May 31 1996 18:08 | 5 |
| Dear Moderator,
Will you please change the lame title of this note to "Atlanta Braves".
Dan
|
247.352 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri May 31 1996 18:16 | 5 |
|
Sounds kind of restrictive. When we're talking about Wonderful Monds we're
talking about the Greenville Braves.
George
|
247.353 | | OLD1S::CADZILLA2 | Loose with rhythmic syncopations | Fri May 31 1996 18:24 | 4 |
|
yes George, but the Greeenville Braves are still in existance not a
ghost or has been team. I would ask the noting public to vote.
Do we use the correct name of George's lame name?
|
247.354 | | THEMAX::JACKSON | Set the drag just right! | Fri May 31 1996 19:39 | 1 |
| How about "the braves"?
|
247.355 | ATLANTA Braves | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Atlanta, Home of the WS Champs | Mon Jun 03 1996 10:05 | 8 |
| Re: Wonderful Monds - I believe that he is out for the season. An
article in yesterday's paper about the recent Braves drafts says he was
having a good year until the "season ending injury".
Anyone have any information regarding the expansion draft this year?
How many players you can protect, the rules, etc.?
UMDan
|
247.356 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Jun 03 1996 10:26 | 8 |
| The two new teams don't play until '98 so if they go by the same system they
used last time the expansion draft won't be held until after the '97 season.
Last time each team was allowed to protect 15 players.
Thanks for the info on Monds.
George
|
247.357 | My vote | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon Jun 03 1996 10:31 | 4 |
| As far as I'm concerned, George created the topic and that gives him the
right to name it, subject only to the general P&Ps applying to noting.
Steve
|
247.358 | | NQOS01::nqsrv344.nqo.dec.com::may_br | BRUCE MAY | Mon Jun 03 1996 12:44 | 5 |
|
THe expansion teams don't get to have the expansion draft until nexted year.
The Dbacks draft 30th thised year.
brews
|
247.359 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Jun 21 1996 10:51 | 16 |
| <<< Note 61.2230 by HBAHBA::HAAS "more madness, less horror" >>>
>Did ya notice that when Smoltz won his 14th in a row he beat a team
>record held by a guy who played for Boston? Aught-two or something like
>that.
I remember seeing something about that back when he was round 10 wins. One of
the Braves announcers said that the old record was for consecutive wins without
a loss or a no-decision. Smoltz ran off the 1st 10 of those wins in consecutive
starts but had a no-decision around the 11th start.
But still the 14 wins in a row without a loss is an impressive record for
a guy playing for a team that has been around since 1876, with 30 some odd
years in Atlanta and 80 some odd years ... somewhere.
George
|
247.360 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Jul 19 1996 15:13 | 13 |
|
The Andruw Jones watch continues. The Braves 19 year old OF prospect Andruw
Jones has been promoted to AA Greenville and he is doing there was he was doing
at lower levels.
GREENVILLE BRAVES
AVG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB
Jones, Andruw, OF ... .306 108 24 33 5 0 7 22 11 28 6
That's a Runs created per game of about 8.5. Next year he should be coming to
Pawtucket with the AAA Richmond Braves.
George
|
247.361 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Fri Jul 19 1996 15:13 | 4 |
|
Parade in October..
|
247.362 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Jul 19 1996 15:37 | 8 |
|
Well, that may happen again in Atlanta anyway but any October parade for
a major league team with Andruw Jones will be a couple years off.
Still he's moving right along, about 2 levels per year. That's pretty quick
for any team much less a championship team.
George
|
247.363 | Don't mortgage the farm, yet | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon Jul 22 1996 10:25 | 14 |
| > GREENVILLE BRAVES
> AVG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB
> Jones, Andruw, OF ... .306 108 24 33 5 0 7 22 11 28 6
** **
Very impressive, he's showing enough power that I'd overlook the strikeouts,
if it weren't for the walks. The suggestion is still that he hasn't figured
out the strike zone.
I expect to see him in Atlanta by 1998 (or September 1997), but if this
isn't corrected, major league pitchers will have him for lunch with 58-foot
breaking balls.
Steve
|
247.364 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Mon Jul 22 1996 16:54 | 3 |
|
Mortgage the farm and take it to the bank, he's as close to the real
deal as it gets...
|
247.365 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 23 1996 09:56 | 24 |
| RE <<< Note 63.2659 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!" >>>
> -< BREAKING/CRACKING.....ITS ALL EGGS TO ME >-
I'm not talking about BREAKING/CRACKING. I'm asking you where did you see me
claim that Mercker almost cracked Atlanta's *** STAFF ***.
-----
Your note:
>RE <<< Note 63.2654 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!" >>>
>
> You made the comment that he almost cracked Atlanta's staff.
-----
I never "made the comment that he almost cracked Atlanta's staff". What I
said was that Mercker almost broke into the starting ** ROTATION **.
Since Maddux was signed the Braves starting ** ROTATION ** as consisted of
Maddux, Glavine, Smoltz, and Avery. Those four guys pitch on a rotating basis
and if any one of them has his 4 days rest he goes even if it's the 5th man's
turn to pitch. The 5th starter is only a spot starter who pitches in the event
that one of the top 4 has not had his 4 days rest. He does not rotate with the
top four.
George
|
247.366 | HtH's | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Jul 23 1996 10:21 | 15 |
|
Didn't you say earlier that the top 4 had 28-29 starts with Mercker
only having 26? Yeah that sounds like spot starting to me. I meant
starting staff. Mercker was one of the 5 STARTERS last year. And no
matter what spin control you try to use.......
YOUR WRONG GEORGE.
If you wanna know who your other players were on your favorite team
last year send me mail and I'll help you out.
Chap
|
247.367 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 23 1996 10:56 | 40 |
| RE <<< Note 247.366 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!" >>>
> Didn't you say earlier that the top 4 had 28-29 starts with Mercker
> only having 26? Yeah that sounds like spot starting to me.
'95 was an unusual year. They started late and didn't get as many days off so
the spot starter was needed nearly all the time. However the fact that the top
4 were all within 1 and Mercker was 2 or 3 behind shows that he was not
strictly in the rotation and was skipped when ever one of the big guns was
ready to go.
>I meant
> starting staff. Mercker was one of the 5 STARTERS last year. And no
> matter what spin control you try to use.......
Fine that's what you mean. I'm not arguing with that. But this LDUC started
because you were complaining about what I said. What difference does it make
what you meant?
> YOUR WRONG GEORGE.
No, I was right. Mercker was not part of the Braves starting rotation. Their
starting rotation for the last few years has been Maddux, Glavine, Smoltz,
Avery and those guys have compiled a remarkable record including not skipping
any starts for several years. They rotate. Their 5th guy just did spot starts
to give them a rest.
> If you wanna know who your other players were on your favorite team
> last year send me mail and I'll help you out.
This of course is what this is really all about. You can no longer come out
and say I'm a band wagon jumper because I provided documented evidence of being
a fan back in '91 and you would look like too much of a fool advancing that
argument that "if you only put it in BASEBALL instead of SPORTS then you were
not really a fan".
Give it a rest Chap, you know I've been a Braves fan. You were even playing
against my Braves in the SNAL.
George
|
247.368 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Tue Jul 23 1996 11:28 | 1 |
| Stop wriggling, George.
|
247.369 | Mr OBVIOUSly NOT!!!! | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Jul 23 1996 11:32 | 18 |
|
You give it a rest. The Braves had 5 guys in there Starting rotation
last year. You don't pitch two less games and not be a regular starter.
Just admit you don't know as much about baseball as you lead on
that you do! In April you thought Kenny Rogers was still in Texas and
you think Dave Winfield was the 2nd coming of Mr October.
Of Course if you have 4 premier starters or three for that matter
you are gonna pitch them whenever you can, but that doesn't mean the
other two or one are not in the starting rotation.
BTW who's gonna break Babe Ruth's HR record???
Chap
|
247.370 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Tue Jul 23 1996 11:45 | 8 |
|
> BTW who's gonna break Babe Ruth's HR record???
His career HR/AB record? Can't think of anyone likely to, though
Mark McGwire might put up a fight if he hadn't played half his
career in Oakland.
Joe
|
247.371 | MoFo | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Jul 23 1996 11:47 | 7 |
|
Oh that must have been the record George was talking about in the
Spring.
Chap
|
247.372 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 23 1996 12:50 | 19 |
| Ok so let me review the latest line of logic from our own Flat Earth Society.
I made the point that Kent Mercker was an enigma because he had a tremendous
year with the Braves but is really struggling with Baltimore. My point was that
he had done so well with the Braves that some people talked about him replacing
Avery while with Baltimore he has a 7+ ERA.
As a side issue, Chappy pointed out that he and I disagree over the meaning
of the phrase "Pitching Rotation". I believe it's restricted to those guys who
the manager starts in rotation when ever they are ready, Chappy thinks it
includes spot or 5th starters. Fine, we disagree over this minor point which
by the way has almost nothing to do with this discussion.
The conclusion that the Flat Earth Society has drawn form this is that I
should fess up that I know little about the Braves or Baseball in general.
OAK KAY ... fine. That makes sense.
George
|
247.373 | HMMMMM | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Jul 23 1996 12:56 | 8 |
|
You didn't say replacing Avery. You said breaking into the
starting rotation if I recall.
Where did I ever say the Earth was flat. Or that I was in the flat
Earth society.
|
247.374 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Jul 23 1996 12:56 | 23 |
| Nope nothing about Avery????
<<< CAM::$1$DUA5:[NOTES$LIBRARY]SPORTS.NOTE;1 >>>
-< SPORTS >-
================================================================================
Note 63.2635 CLEVELAND INDIANS 2635 of 2654
CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI "Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs" 14 lines 22-JUL-1996 10:20
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mercker is really an enigma. After his no-hitter back in '94 there were
people seriously considering the possibility of him breaking into the Braves
starting rotation, probably the toughest place to land a pitching job in the
last few decades. However with Baltimore he's gone nowhere falling off last
year and racking up a 7+ ERA and giving up a home run every 5-6 innings so far
this season.
The question is, which Mercker will show up in Cleveland. He seems to be
on the decline and at best you'd have to say he's had little to no luck in
the American League.
Maybe the tribe is looking to steal pitching signals during the World Series.
George
|
247.375 | To the tune: This is the way... | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Tue Jul 23 1996 13:09 | 10 |
| Who wrote "The Village that Voted the Earth was Flat"?
Rudyard Kipling. Very funny little short story. George's reference is
pretty topical.
I had hoped to this this "rotation" debate called a tie and you all
moving on to the Olympics.
|
247.376 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 23 1996 13:09 | 22 |
| Chappy, I'm really struggling here to decide if you are really that stupid
or if you are just pretending to be dense to pull my chain. Really I'm not
going to argue with you about this much longer. Here's one more attempt:
No, I didn't say Avery. I said "Pitching rotation" implying the 4 man
rotation of Maddux, Glavine, Smoltz, and Avery. Most people understood what
I meant but you and one or two others didn't pick that up.
It appears that the reason you didn't understand is that you and I disagree
over the definition of the term "pitching rotation". You feel it refers to
all the starters, I feel it only refers to those starters who actual pitch
in rotation and go when ever they are ready.
Now if that's as far as it went, fine. We disagree over a minor point. What
I don't understand is why you are acting so dense that you can't see that we
have no major dispute over Mercker and none of this means anything about any
person's knowledge of baseball, it's simply a dispute over a minor point having
little to do with the discussion.
You are acting like a member of the Flat Earth society.
George
|
247.377 | ASS u ME | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Jul 23 1996 13:18 | 15 |
|
Again I am not a member of that Society. I hope this helps.
Secondly, Thanks I really appreciate being called stupid.
Thirdly, The reason I kept this debate up was because from what you
say you have never lost a debate yet in here. Well this time you flat
out are wrong. You say most people agree with you. Who? Where are the
notes?
Chap
|
247.378 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 23 1996 15:07 | 23 |
| Ok, let me see if I have this straight. My point is that Mercker did well
last year and is doing poorly this year which would lead one to wonder which
Mercker will show up in Cleveland.
You and I disagree over the meaning of the phrase "pitching rotation". In
Atlanta's case I believe it only applies to Maddux, Glavine, Smoltz, and
Avery since they pitch in rotation and others do spot starts. You believe
it applies to all starters. This lead to a misunderstanding where you thought
I implied Mercker was not a starter for the Braves last year while I just
meant he was a spot starter who wouldn't go if Maddux or one of the other
3 was ready.
You are angry because when I said LDUCs are caused by some people letting
emotions get in the way of logic you interpreted that as me saying I was always
right.
You believe a conclusion can be drawn from all of this is that I don't know
anything about baseball and you resent being called stupid or a member of
the flat earth society.
Is that about right? If so can we drop it now?
George
|
247.379 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Tue Jul 23 1996 15:18 | 7 |
| George, isn't there, truly, a Flat Earth Society? It does truly exist
if I'm not mistaken. And doubtlessly it's darn hard to get into.
Now that I think of it the Boers called themselves that in the sense
that they were bible literalists and felt that the bible stated the
earth was flat and therefore it was. That specifically must have been
what Kipling was referring to and his audience obviously knew that.
|
247.380 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Jul 23 1996 15:32 | 7 |
|
Yeah George you better drop it. I don't think your foot could go in
any farther w/o you needing dental work.
Chap
|
247.381 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 23 1996 15:56 | 8 |
| RE <<< Note 247.380 by WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M "Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!" >>>
> Yeah George you better drop it. I don't think your foot could go in
> any farther w/o you needing dental work.
Right Chappy, what ever you say.
George
|
247.382 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:07 | 3 |
|
Okie Dokie.
|
247.383 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:09 | 2 |
|
How can you call a guy who traded Juan Gonzalez for Dan Gladden stupid?
|
247.384 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Jul 23 1996 16:19 | 10 |
| Speaking of the Braves pitchers, for the 1st time in a long time the big four
are starting to pick up injuries. Maddux had a foot problem around the time of
the all-star game and Avery is having some pain on his left side but he hopes
to make his regular start tomorrow.
Also, when #5 starter Jason Schmidt went on the DL they called up Brad
Woodall from AAA Richmond who has struggled a bit. I saw a rumor somewhere that
if they need him Terrel Wade might get a start here or there.
George
|
247.385 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Aug 13 1996 17:49 | 20 |
| The Andruw Jones watch continues. Last year at age 18 outfielder Andruw Jones
was selected as minor league player of the year. This year he played the 1st
half of the season for the Braves high A ball Durham Bulls. Along about the
all-star break he was promoted to the Braves Double A Greenville and then a few
weeks later got promoted again to AAA Richmond. As of Sunday Jones was hitting
.378 with 4 home runs in 10 games at the AAA level.
On Friday Aug 23 the Richmond Braves arrive in Pawtucket for a 3 game series
and the big question is whether we will be able to see him or if by then he
will be playing for Atlanta.
The Braves don't usually rush players along and speculation was that next
year he'd be in AA and the following in AAA but at the pace he's going by next
year he'll be playing in the all-star game. People are already beginning to
compare him to Griffey.
Between Andruw Jones and Jermaine Dye, David Justice might have a tough fight
next year if he wants his old job back with the Braves.
George
|
247.386 | | NQOS01::nqsrv325.nqo.dec.com::Workbench | | Tue Aug 13 1996 17:55 | 2 |
|
Why would they not wait until the Sept call ups?
|
247.387 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Aug 13 1996 18:07 | 17 |
| The Braves are in a pennant race and they could use a really good right
fielder right away. Jermaine Dye is doing a decent job filling in for David
Justice by holding up his part of a platoon with Dwight Smith and others but if
this guy is ready to hit at the major league the way his AAA numbers project
then an argument could be made for calling him up today.
Most likely they will wait until September but they also might want to be
sure to call him up in enough time for him to make the playoff roster. He's
probably no worse than the 4th best outfielder the Braves have right now after
Marquis Grissom, Ryan Klesko, and Dye unless they want to play Chipper Jones
in the outfield and someone else at 3rd.
There is also talk that the Braves might make a move and trade for another
outfield. Troy O'Leary's name has come up with respect to this a few times
but if Andruw Jones is ready, that might not be necessary.
George
|
247.388 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Tue Aug 13 1996 18:25 | 10 |
|
re .386,
Players on the 25 man roster and the DL list as of midnight August
31st, are eligible for post season play. So you usually see reserve
IF and OF placed on the 15 day DL with strained hamstrings, with a
pitcher taken there place. So come playoff time, you have extra
pitching or bench help if you need it.
Ron
|
247.389 | Bravo's update | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Post-Olympics blues | Tue Aug 13 1996 18:36 | 16 |
| There is talk of bringing Jones up early, but nothing definitive.
Also, just heard on the radio that the Braves just traded a minor
leaguer (Class A) to the Marlins for Terry Pendleton.
Interesting move in that Chipper has pretty much sewn up 3rd base,
unless the Braves are gonna pull a Ripken and put Jones at SS with TP at
3rd. Blauser is on the DL (and has made tons of errors this year),
and Belliard couldn't hit it out of the infield from a tee ball stand.
I wouldn't be surprised to see them make a move for a pitcher, though,
given that Avery could only throw 4 pitches last night in a rehab
assignment at Class AA Greenville. After the 4th pitch the pain in his
side returned and he left the game.
UMDan
|
247.390 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Aug 13 1996 18:35 | 13 |
| Bobby Cox and the Braves management in general don't rush players along so I
can't think of many other reasons for bringing him up from Single A to AAA so
quick. Chipper Jones and Javy Lopez, for example, spent an entire year at AA
Greenville. That team flirted with some sort of record by being one of the few
AA teams to ever win 100 games.
So about the only reason I could see for rushing him along would be to get a
quick look at him in AAA to keep their options open for bringing him up for the
pennant race and playoffs if they can't make a trade that they like. True
Richmond was hurting for outfielders but normally the development of a guy
like Jones takes precedence over the win loss record of the AAA franchise.
George
|
247.391 | TP at 3rd | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Post-Olympics blues | Tue Aug 13 1996 18:50 | 4 |
| Rumor is that TP will play 3rd, Jones will go to right. Not a good
move in my book, but I had to give up my GM job a while ago. :-)
UMDan
|
247.392 | | SHOVE::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Aug 14 1996 09:27 | 8 |
|
Not a good move at all; Dye hasn't been great offensively (.430 SLG,
.304 OBP), but he's still quite a bit better than Pendleton (.357 SLG,
.298). And there doesn't seem to be any particular defensive gain.
Now, moving Jones to _shortstop_ - that would make sense.
Joe
|
247.393 | Jones at SS, my guess | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Post-Olympics blues | Wed Aug 14 1996 09:40 | 5 |
| Jones will probably end up playing a little at both SS and RF. If
Blauser can't come back, look for him at SS, otherwise he'll be in
right. My guess is that he starts at SS tonight in Philly.
UMDan
|
247.394 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Aug 14 1996 09:40 | 14 |
| During the game last night one of the announcers said he talked to Bobby Cox.
He quoted Cox as saying that Pendelton will be playing a lot of 3rd and that
Chipper Jones would be playing some short and some outfield.
Most likely the amount of right field Chipper plays will depend on who they
get to help out in right field. If Andruw Jones comes up and does well, if they
trade for someone, or if one of the guys there gets hot then Chipper will
probably stay at short. If Right field is a problem then we'll see a lot of
Rafael Belliard at short and Chipper in right.
Also they could be doing a lot of late inning moves when they are ahead
with Belliard coming into play short and Chipper going to right or 3rd.
George
|
247.395 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Wed Aug 14 1996 09:47 | 13 |
| > During the game last night one of the announcers said he talked to Bobby Cox.
>He quoted Cox as saying that Pendelton will be playing a lot of 3rd and that
>Chipper Jones would be playing some short and some outfield.
During the past off-season, Cox was quoted as saying that Jones was definitely
his best 3rd baseman, probably his best shortstop, and one of the best
outfielders.
The only downside I see to the trade for Pendleton is if the constant moving
from position to position somehow affects Chipper's offense. Pendleton turned
it around the last time he went to Atlanta - it may happen again. It's
amazing how much easier it can be to hit when there are good hitters around
you - the Marlins have had their offensive woes this year.
|
247.396 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Post-Olympics blues | Wed Aug 14 1996 09:52 | 9 |
| Quote from Jones in the paper, who would prefer moving to right -
"I can concentrate a lot more on my hitting if I'm playing in the
outfield. At shortstop there are a lot of things to think about."
They still may need to pick up some pitching if Avery is out for any
length of time.
UMDan
|
247.397 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Wed Aug 14 1996 09:56 | 11 |
|
> Not a good move at all; Dye hasn't been great offensively (.430 SLG,
> .304 OBP), but he's still quite a bit better than Pendleton (.357 SLG,
> .298). And there doesn't seem to be any particular defensive gain.
Look for Pendleton to hit better than those numbers with the Braves,
though...
glenn
|
247.398 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Aug 14 1996 10:00 | 13 |
| RE <<< Note 247.396 by ODIXIE::ZOGRAN "Post-Olympics blues" >>>
> They still may need to pick up some pitching if Avery is out for any
> length of time.
They may get away without a lot more pitching if Terrell Wade comes around.
The net had a story about how they worked on his mechanics and he started
pitching better. I think he goes tomorrow afternoon. We'll see how he does.
Last night the bull pen did a pretty good job of handling the 2nd game of
the double header.
George
|
247.399 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Post-Olympics blues | Wed Aug 14 1996 10:06 | 5 |
| Having Maddux go all the way in the first helped the bullpen a lot.
They have been solid of late, but I still wouldn't be surprised to see
them do something in the pitching area.
UMDan
|
247.400 | | TRIBE::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Aug 14 1996 10:38 | 12 |
|
Re: Pendleton's hitting
Not _much_ better, though; he's dropped off a great deal (though not
a surprising amount - basically what you would expect, given his age)
since his two great seasons in Atlanta.
It he slugs better than .400, or gets on base at better than a .320
clip, I'll eat my hat. If the Braves really wanted a 3B, why not
Naehring? (Unless, of course, he didn't clear waivers.)
Joe
|
247.401 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Aug 14 1996 10:55 | 4 |
| The Braves would have had to give up quite a bit more than one low A ball
outfielder for Naehring.
George
|
247.402 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Wed Aug 14 1996 11:00 | 9 |
| The Braves will make a big mistake if they move Belliard out of
shortstop. The team is based on pitching and managers will get
frustrated with a lack of offense but after watching the Braves from
afar since 1991, they always seem to do better with Belliard than any
other alternative.
Any scout can watch Pendleton from behind the plate and know what he's
capable of right now and if he's worth anything wouldn't even want to
see the stat sheet.
|
247.403 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Wed Aug 14 1996 11:10 | 8 |
| > TRIBE::HUBER
> It he slugs better than .400, or gets on base at better than a .320
> clip, I'll eat my hat.
There you have it, in writing. The only thing left to decide is the hat
in question - one of those cheapo polyester things with the adjustable
strap, or the old-timey fitted wool blends.
|
247.404 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Aug 14 1996 11:27 | 25 |
| RE <<< Note 247.402 by MKOTS3::BREEN >>>
> The Braves will make a big mistake if they move Belliard out of
> shortstop. The team is based on pitching and managers will get
> frustrated with a lack of offense but after watching the Braves from
> afar since 1991, they always seem to do better with Belliard than any
> other alternative.
Jeff Blauser has been the Braves starting short stop for several years
including last year when they ran away with their division, were undefeated in
the playoffs and won the World Series.
Except for times when the real short stop was injured, Belliard has been
little more than a defensive replacement since he joined the team.
Chipper Jones was a regular Short Stop throughout the time he was in the
Braves minor league system. The teams he played on had fantastic win loss
records with him at short.
If they have someone else to play third makes much more sense to have Chipper
Jones play Short and rotate guys like Dye, Whiten, Smith in right than it does
to have Belliard play Short every day. And if they can come up with a better
right fielder then it makes even more sense.
George
|
247.405 | | PUSH::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Aug 14 1996 11:50 | 13 |
|
> Any scout can watch Pendleton from behind the plate and know what he's
> capable of right now and if he's worth anything wouldn't even want to
> see the stat sheet.
Well, the proof's in the pudding. If Pendleton really _has_ something
left, then the scout clearly did his or her job. If, as I expect,
Pendleton continues to play like he's washed up, then the stats (with
appropriate adjustments - his stats will be somewhat better simply
for playing in Atlanta, where the air's a bit thinner) will have
been the better predictor than the scout.
Joe
|
247.406 | | PUSH::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Aug 14 1996 11:51 | 14 |
|
>> TRIBE::HUBER
>> It he slugs better than .400, or gets on base at better than a .320
>> clip, I'll eat my hat.
>There you have it, in writing. The only thing left to decide is the hat
>in question - one of those cheapo polyester things with the adjustable
>strap, or the old-timey fitted wool blends.
No, it's not left to decide - I said _my_ hat. I keep a chocolate-
coated fedora for just such ocassions...
Joe
|
247.407 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Wed Aug 14 1996 12:16 | 5 |
| > No, it's not left to decide - I said _my_ hat. I keep a chocolate-
> coated fedora for just such ocassions...
Fair enough! As long as it's just coated with chocolate, not entirely
chocolate.
|
247.408 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Wed Aug 14 1996 12:28 | 9 |
| Belliard played short for much of 1991 when the Braves pitching gained
the confidence to be the foundation for their success since. The team
never played better. Very few managers have the guts to keep a
Belliard type in the lineup for long periods (and I wouldn't play him
much more than 120-130 anyway) but I've long observed that emphasis on
defense over offense pays in the long run.
And that's surely the case in reaquiring Pendleton where defense
execution over any statistics is the key.
|
247.409 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Aug 14 1996 12:45 | 20 |
| I don't buy that argument Bill. I know you like to point to defense as the be
all end all to what makes pitching work but to say that one year of having
Belliard play behind them turned the Braves pitchers into a super rotation that
lasted half a decade is a reach.
Blauser took over as the regular short stop by about 1992 and held that job
until he started getting injuries this season. Throughout that time the Braves
dominated the National League.
Chipper Jones was a regular full time short stop as he worked his way up
the minors and his teams consistently won. The AA Greenville team he was on
back around 1992 or 1993 had 100 wins which is remarkable for a minor league
team.
He can do the job and he can do it better than Blauser. As for Belliard, if
having him play one season at short back in '91 gave the pitchers enough
momentum to dominate national league hitting for 5 years, then they can always
bring him in for an inning or two if the staff needs another nudge.
George
|
247.410 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Wed Aug 14 1996 14:41 | 11 |
| Well George the Braves loaded up quite a bit during that time with
McGriff and Maddox being two prime examples. Wasn't Belliard at short
most of the post season last year?
If the argument is "We play Blauser because he can give us 160 games at
short and Belly is only good for 120 and has to be platooned anyway and
we'd rather stay consistent and hope Jeff's bat makes up the diff" then
I'll buy that.
But it's a blessing for the Braves when Belliard is in there, per my
observation.
|
247.411 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Aug 14 1996 15:05 | 16 |
| RE <<< Note 247.410 by MKOTS3::BREEN >>>
> Well George the Braves loaded up quite a bit during that time with
> McGriff and Maddox being two prime examples. Wasn't Belliard at short
> most of the post season last year?
Belliard only plays short when Blauser is injured. It's been that way since
some time back around 1992. I believe Blauser got hurt late in the season and
missed the end of the year but the Braves never start Belliard ahead of Blauser
if Blauser is healthy.
As for Blauser, when he was playing this year the Braves seemed a lot more
concerned about his bat than his defense but even hitting .248 he plays ahead
of Belliard except maybe when they need a late inning defensive replacement.
George
|
247.412 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Wed Aug 14 1996 15:36 | 5 |
| I know what the Braves management does vis a vis the pair. My point is
they are wrong and should play Belliard much more. Part of the reason
is my observation that they win more, all other things being equal with
Belliard. You may be right that the sample size is too small since
1991 since they haven't played Belliard much since then.
|
247.413 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Aug 14 1996 15:51 | 11 |
| Oddly enough in the 115 games that Blauser played last year he only hit .211
where Belliard hit .222 in 75 games. However Blauser had 12 home runs and
generally hit for more power.
Sill Blauser seems to get the nod over Belliard when both are healthy.
One reason this would be hard to track down is that some times they both
play. Of those 75 games, Belliard had 40 at short and 32 at 2nd. Presumably
in the 32 games he played at 2nd Blauser was at short.
George
|
247.414 | Grogan, Camby, Belliard, Alicea, O'Donnell, Abdul-Rauf | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Wed Aug 14 1996 16:19 | 9 |
|
What do these men have in common?
All are the illegitimate children of Bill Breen...
Billte, I'd buy your defense of Belliard more if you were talking about an
AL team. Even with the Braves' pitchers being better hitters than other NL
pitchers, it's still almost like lining up two offensive ciphers in a row.
|
247.415 | George, you don't need vac. - I'm How'ding for you | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Wed Aug 14 1996 16:45 | 8 |
| am I the only one with a list of people that I like to watch. Grogan's
gone, Alicea is currently so far buried by LaRussa he's had to register
with a-v, Rauf would have led any other Olympic team to a silver medal,
O'Donnell will lead the Jets to more victories than both N.E. and
perhaps Pitt. Camby detractors puzzle me, on this one I should be
called a front runner; the rest, hardly.
So let's see some lists of people you turn on the tv to watch.
|
247.416 | I gots a list | HBAHBA::HAAS | more madness, less horror | Wed Aug 14 1996 16:50 | 15 |
| billte,
If'n Camby is the nexted superstar, I'll be the firsted to say I knew a
guy who knowed 'im when.
I got a list of people that I like to watch. I like 'em fine though I'd
never try to make a case for their relative merits. I'm prolly the
onliest guy in Charlotte who lists Zo a one of my main mains. But I'm not
gonna claim he's the bestest center in the league.
In football, I also follow Eric Kramer, he of Wolfpackdom. Again, I don't
think he's the top QB but it wouldn't surprise me to see 'im in the Pro
Bowl.
TTom
|
247.417 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Aug 14 1996 16:52 | 9 |
| You're doing really well.
To answer your question, since this is the Braves note I turn on the Braves.
Unfortunately I'll miss Tommy Glavine tonight because I don't get Sports South
but I should be home tomorrow afternoon to see Terrel Wade pitch on TBS.
GO BRAVES!!!
George
|
247.418 | Breaking news | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Post-Olympics blues | Wed Aug 14 1996 16:54 | 11 |
| Hot off the wire -
Atlanta traded Mark Whiten to Seatle for a minor league pitching
prospect and,
Andrews Jones has been called up from AAA. He may be in uniform
tonight on the bench.
Verrrrry Interesting
UMDan
|
247.419 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Wed Aug 14 1996 16:59 | 11 |
| Ttom I don't say any on my list except Camby are great stars. In
Alicea's case I simply said if they replace him with the likes of
Cordero they'll go right down the shoot. No one faults Belliard's
defensive ability, the argument there is they'll go for offense over
defense and I challenge that.
Grogan > Bradshaw really ain't saying that much. Even Aikman's far
less overrated than Bradshaw was. Finally Abdul-Rauf is a basketball
watcher's dream - an all time master with the ball creatively. The NBA
or at least Denver may not be the best place for him. Pistol Pete was
in the same boat.
|
247.420 | Ok by me | HBAHBA::HAAS | more madness, less horror | Wed Aug 14 1996 17:25 | 6 |
| > Ttom I don't say any on my list except Camby are great stars.
I hear ya. I guess I should put some shrubbery around the words that
indicated that I follow plays almost without regard to how good they are.
TTom
|
247.421 | | SHARE::DERRY | Color me impressed... | Thu Aug 15 1996 06:15 | 6 |
247.422 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Thu Aug 15 1996 09:10 | 1 |
| OK, Karen - now name the ugly guys on TV that you'll watch... :-)
|
247.423 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Aug 19 1996 11:08 | 21 |
| Andruw Jones was called up Thursday and has started his march toward the Hall
of Fame.
I was home watching the game Thursday afternoon. Andruw Jones started in
right field and struck out swinging on 3 pitches his 1st two times up. The guy
is definitely not a patient hitter.
Third time up he fouled out to 1st, Fourth time up he popped to Right and the
5th time up he hit a sharp single to left.
On Friday he started his 1st home game in right field and hit a lead off
triple bringing his average up to .333 then hit his 1st major league home run
later in the game. Since then he's been right around .300. He came within a
couple feet of hitting a game winning home run in extra innings yesterday but
the wind held it up. On defense he has a cannon for an arm and never misses the
cut off man.
Andruw Jones has arrived. Now with Klesko, Grissom, A.Jones and Dye the Braves
not only have a great outfield, they have depth.
George
|
247.424 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Mon Aug 19 1996 11:20 | 3 |
|
What do they do with Justice next year???
|
247.425 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Mon Aug 19 1996 11:32 | 3 |
|
Trade him. He's one of the most overrated players in the game - his
publicity far outstrips his accomplishments...
|
247.426 | Justice may be gone | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Post-Olympics blues | Mon Aug 19 1996 11:33 | 7 |
| re. -1 - Trade him? Rumors around town are that Justice has not been
spending as much time rehabbing the shoulder as the Braves would like.
With Dye, Jones et. al. I don't think the Braves would miss him that
much. Also, if he's gone, his $ could be used to sign some of the free
agent pitchers for next year.
UMDan
|
247.427 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Aug 19 1996 11:49 | 13 |
| Baring injuries about the only way I see David Justice returning to the
Braves starting lineup would be if Grissom left and A. Jones moved to center
field. It's possible that if McGriff left, Klesko would move back to 1st and
Justice could play left field but I think McGriff just signed a multi year
deal. Even then he'd have to beat out Jermaine Dye.
The Braves also have outfielders Damon Hollins and Wonderful Monds in their
minor league system. Both were out with injuries last I heard but if they come
back healthy the need for Justice will diminish that much more.
Most likely Justice will end up elsewhere.
George
|
247.428 | Trade on the horizon? | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Post-Olympics blues | Tue Aug 27 1996 17:58 | 6 |
| Hearing some interesting rumblings about a trade with the Pirates for
Neagle, maybe involving Avery, (or Justice or both) and a couple of
minor leaguers. If Neagle doesn't make his scheduled start tonight
look for him in a Braves uniform shortly.
UMDan
|
247.429 | | AD::HEATH | The albatross and whales they are my brother | Wed Aug 28 1996 07:41 | 4 |
|
Heard the same crap here. Neagle is a solid LH pitcher Sox want 'em
along with everybody else. He'll never clear waivers.
|
247.430 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Wed Aug 28 1996 09:28 | 5 |
|
I've heard the Indians are extremely interested in Neagle as well.
I'm sure the Braves are even more interested after he beat Smoltz last
night...
|
247.431 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Wed Aug 28 1996 10:52 | 9 |
|
Isn't interleague trading all done after July 31, regardless of
waiver status?
With all the talk of Neagle going to the Braves, you can be sure
that he's already cleared the waivers...
glenn
|
247.432 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Wed Aug 28 1996 10:57 | 3 |
|
Why do you think Albie Lopez is being show cased? And yesterday's game
certainly didn't hurt.
|
247.433 | Could happen today | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Post-Olympics blues | Wed Aug 28 1996 11:18 | 15 |
| As was mentioned earlier Neagle has already cleared waivers.
The trade is rumored to be Jason Schmidt, Class AA 1B Ron Wright and
Class AAA 3B/SS Robert Smith. Wright is thought to be the best
prospect behind Andruw Jones. If the Braves get Neagle they can dump
Avery who will be a free agent next year, while retaining Neagle who is
signed through next year at $3M.
According to the papers the Pirates are interested in Cleveland players
Alan Embree and Julian Tavarez. The O's are offering OF Jeffrey
Hammonds, RH Jimmy Haynes and $1M.
Stay tuned.
UMDan
|
247.434 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Aug 29 1996 10:43 | 13 |
| Well they did the trade. Here's the way it's been reported in a couple places
now.
PIT: Traded P Denny Neagle to ATL for minor league 1B Ron Wright, minor
league OF Corey Painter, and a PTBNL
The Braves gave up a lot in Wright but with Fred McGriff at 1st and Klesko
having played 1st in the minors they have that spot covered.
Now the Braves, who have the best record in baseball, are even tougher. Looks
like they have about as good shot at a repeat as you can have in baseball.
George
|
247.435 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | It's Baseball And You're An American | Thu Aug 29 1996 11:03 | 13 |
| > PIT: Traded P Denny Neagle to ATL for minor league 1B Ron Wright, minor
> league OF Corey Painter, and a PTBNL
WHO is Corey Painter?
Sounds like the Pirates just didn't want to pay Neagle what he's worth in the
future...
The Braves biggest problem now is figuring out which three starters to use in
a playoff series.
Parade down Peachtree Street in October. Richard Jewell as Grand Marshal in
a court settlement before he sues everyone in sight...
|
247.436 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Thu Aug 29 1996 11:02 | 6 |
| Well San Diego is pretty solid although I don't know about the four
all-star outfield. They're set up pretty well for a four dh game world
series though. They're getting that pitcher back soon.
Montreal and StLouis would test their defense and execution if either
get to the playoffs. No one would want to play Colorado.
|
247.437 | Such as it is for the Buccos | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Thu Aug 29 1996 11:10 | 23 |
|
>> PIT: Traded P Denny Neagle to ATL for minor league 1B Ron Wright, minor
>> league OF Corey Painter, and a PTBNL
>
> WHO is Corey Painter?
>
> Sounds like the Pirates just didn't want to pay Neagle what he's worth in the
> future...
That's part of it, but the trade still might make sense as Pittsburgh
doesn't figure to seriously contend in the seasons in which Neagle
approaches free agency. Ron Wright is supposedly a legit top
HR-hitting prospect.
Pittsburgh's been this route before; they parlayed John Smiley into
Neagle amidst much protest at the time, and that trade worked out
very well. But Neagle is a better pitcher than Smiley ever was, imo.
The bad news is that Jim Leyland is all but gone to the Marlins
next year...
glenn
|
247.438 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Aug 29 1996 11:26 | 27 |
| RE <<< Note 247.435 by IMBETR::DUPREZ "It's Baseball And You're An American" >>>
>WHO is Corey Painter?
Good question. I pulled the Braves minor league stats off the Web about a
month ago and I don't see his name at Richmond, Greenville, Durham or Macon.
Either they got him somewhere else, he was on the DL, or he was in short season
A-ball or the rookie leagues. I think he's an outfielder.
>Sounds like the Pirates just didn't want to pay Neagle what he's worth in the
>future...
They got a lot in Ron Wright. Word was that he would have gotten a lot more
press if he hadn't been playing in the shadow of Andruw Jones. Big slugging
1st base type.
>The Braves biggest problem now is figuring out which three starters to use in
>a playoff series.
They can go with a 4 man rotation of Maddux, Glavine, Smoltz, Neagle. In a
playoff that would have each guy going on 4 days rest. If Avery is available
he could go to the bullpen. Being a hard thrower with a 90mph+ fast ball he
might do OK working an inning at a time in relief. He gets in trouble when he
can't get his curve over the plate. For while I've been thinking he might have
a better future some day as a closer with some other team.
George
|
247.439 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Thu Aug 29 1996 12:15 | 5 |
|
The Red Sox were talking to Pittsburgh about Neagle. Pittsburgh
wanted Nomar Garciapara and Carl Pavano, so DD said no thanks.
Ron
|
247.440 | official announcement from the Pirates | PTOSS1::SCHRAMME | Eric Schramm (412)829-0710 | Thu Aug 29 1996 12:45 | 80 |
|
I N T E R O F F I C E M E M O R A N D U M
Date: 28-Aug-1996 03:17pm EDT
From: owner-pirateball
[email protected]@PMDF@INTERNET
Dept:
Tel No:
TO: pirateball ( [email protected]@PMDF@INTERNET )
TO: pirates ( [email protected]@PMDF@INTERNET )
TO: ALEXANDER ( [email protected]@PMDF@INTERNET )
TO: TKTOFFICE ( [email protected]@PMDF@INTERNET )
Subject: Pirates Trade Neagle
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 28, 1996
PIRATES AND BRAVES MAKE TRADE
The Pittsburgh Pirates today announced they have traded left-handed
pitcher Denny Neagle to the Atlanta Braves in exchange for minor leaguers
Ron Wright, Corey Pointer and a player to be named later. The announcement
was made by Cam Bonifay, the Pirates Senior Vice President and General
Manager.
Wright, a 20-year-old, right-handed hitting first baseman began the
1996 season with Durham (A) and batted .275 with 20 home runs and 62 RBI in
66 games. He was promoted to Greenville (AA) in late June, and batted .254
with 16 homers and 52 RBI in 63 games. In 129 minor league games this year,
Wright has hit 36 home runs and has driven in 118 runs. He was Atlanta's
7th round selection in the 1994 June Free Agent Draft.
The 20-year-old Pointer began his career as a catcher, but has since
moved to the outfield. He batted .244 with 15 homers and 41 RBI in 72
combined games with Macon (A) and Eugene (Rookie) this season. The
right-handed hitting Pointer was Atlanta's second round compensation pick in
the 1994 June Draft, received from the Boston Red Sox for the loss of Otis
Nixon.
"The Pittsburgh Pirates are very happy that we could acquire three
quality prospects for Denny Neagle," said Bonifay. "We appreciate
everything that Denny has done for our organization, and losing him will no
doubt be a tough adjustment. With these three young players, we will
continue to look at building a championship caliber club in the future. The
Pirates wish Denny all the best with his new club."
Neagle, who turns 28 on September 13, was acquired from Minnesota along
with outfielder Midre Cummings on 3/17/92 in a deal for lefthander John
Smiley. The 1995 All-Star led the Pirates in victories (13) last year and
has won a career-best 14 games this season. In his five years with
Pittsburgh, Neagle has gone 43-35 with a 4.02 ERA in 187 games (95 starts).
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|
247.441 | | PTOSS1::SCHRAMME | Eric Schramm (412)829-0710 | Thu Aug 29 1996 12:52 | 15 |
| >> Pittsburgh's been this route before; they parlayed John Smiley into
>> Neagle amidst much protest at the time, and that trade worked out
>> very well. But Neagle is a better pitcher than Smiley ever was, imo.
Actually the crown jewel of the trade was supposed to be Midre
Cummings. Neagle was thrown into the deal.
Actually the better compparison is in 1987 when the Pirates traded
all-star catcher Tony Pena to St Louis for Van Slyke, Mike Lavaier
(sp?) and Mike Dunne. That trade made the Pirates contenders in the
early 90's. Hopefully this trade will do the same. Rumour has it in
the 'burgh is the PTBNL is currently on the Brave's roster perhaps
Justice? .
|
247.442 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Hardball, good ol' country | Thu Aug 29 1996 12:57 | 11 |
|
> Actually the crown jewel of the trade was supposed to be Midre
> Cummings. Neagle was thrown into the deal.
True enough about Cummings, who has not panned out, and whose
prospects are fading at last check. But Neagle was also a
highly-regarded pitching prospect already at the AAA level, not
just a throw-in. 2-for-1 or 3-for-1 is the way to go...
glenn
|
247.443 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Post-Olympics blues | Thu Aug 29 1996 13:08 | 4 |
| The PTBNL is probably P Jason Schmidt who is currently on the DL and
has to be activated prior to being traded.
UMDan
|
247.444 | | PTOSS1::SCHRAMME | Eric Schramm (412)829-0710 | Fri Aug 30 1996 12:56 | 5 |
| >> The PTBNL is probably P Jason Schmidt who is currently on the DL and
>> has to be activated prior to being traded.
The announcement said a "position" player which I thought would be a
non-pitcher. I still think it is Justice.
|
247.445 | San Diego revisited? | CSLALL::BRULE | Almost Pigskin time!! | Fri Aug 30 1996 14:22 | 5 |
| I'd seriously doubt it would be Justice. The only reason Neagle was
traded was that the Bucs owner told the front office to cut salary for
next year. Neagle has one more year at 3 mil. Unless Justice is a free
agent at the end of the year and Pittsburgh would want the compensation
draft picks I don't think it will be Justice.
|
247.446 | According to CNN International | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Clean living and a fast outfield | Mon Sep 02 1996 06:40 | 3 |
| It's Schmidt, as you all probably know by now.
Steve
|
247.447 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Sep 09 1996 10:32 | 17 |
| The Magic number for the Braves is down to 14. Although they lost to the Mets
yesterday, the Expos lost as well so the number came down one.
The Braves have looked a bit ragged of late. Smoltz and Maddux are numbers
one and two in innings pitched so perhaps the starting rotation is a bit tired.
They also have guys they would like to rest but the feeling seems to be to get
the division clinched 1st, then take a bit of a rest.
According to the announcers of yesterday's game, just about the entire Braves
line up is in a bit of a slump. Javy Lopez just got over a really bad slump
and seems to be hitting the ball well again but with 5 or 6 guys slumping it's
hard to win ball games.
Oh well, better to get this over with now. With a bit of luck everyone will
start heating up again right around playoff time.
George
|
247.448 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Wed Sep 11 1996 22:19 | 4 |
|
My fedora looks to be fairly safe...
Joe
|
247.449 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Sep 12 1996 09:59 | 14 |
| Ouch, this hurts. The Braves have only won 2 of their last 10.
This slump is far too close to playoffs. If they don't get things turned
around pretty quick they will be a long shot to make the N.L.C.S.
If the Expos weren't playing a little ragged themselves I might be worried
about the division but the magic number has come down to 11 despite the poor
performance by the Braves.
Next Tuesday after class I'm going down to "Braves Field" to have a chat
with those ghosts.
BRING BACK WARREN SPAHN!!!
George
|
247.450 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Sep 12 1996 10:45 | 9 |
|
> This slump is far too close to playoffs. If they don't get things turned
> around pretty quick they will be a long shot to make the N.L.C.S.
Please... the Braves are still the odds-on favorite to win it all,
even if this slump continues to the last day of the season.
glenn
|
247.451 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Thu Sep 12 1996 10:53 | 5 |
|
Oh yeh, then why are my nails bitten down to the knuckles.
GO BRAVES!!!!!
George
|
247.452 | | MSBCS::BRYDIE | Violently apathetic | Thu Sep 12 1996 11:17 | 4 |
|
>> Oh yeh, then why are my nails bitten down to the knuckles.
Because you don't know how to use a knife and fork?
|
247.453 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Fri Sep 13 1996 11:23 | 5 |
247.454 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Fri Sep 13 1996 11:55 | 19 |
247.455 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Fri Sep 13 1996 12:29 | 9 |
247.456 | Let's go with the empirical... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Sep 13 1996 14:12 | 9 |
247.457 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Fri Sep 13 1996 17:04 | 2 |
247.458 | Took the year too | THEMAX::JACKSON | The time is near | Sat Sep 14 1996 16:34 | 5 |
247.459 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Sep 16 1996 09:41 | 10 |
247.460 | | NIOSS1::REEVE | | Mon Sep 16 1996 13:25 | 30 |
247.461 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Sep 16 1996 14:02 | 20 |
247.462 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Mon Sep 16 1996 18:18 | 25 |
247.463 | Pitching comes and goes, more than anything else... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Mon Sep 16 1996 18:29 | 17 |
247.464 | Frank Thomas speaks for himself/itself | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Mon Sep 16 1996 18:56 | 1 |
247.465 | | NIOSS1::REEVE | | Tue Sep 17 1996 09:29 | 9 |
247.466 | | NIOSS1::REEVE | | Tue Sep 17 1996 09:31 | 3 |
247.467 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Tue Sep 17 1996 10:18 | 19 |
247.468 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Tue Sep 17 1996 11:24 | 26 |
247.469 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Sep 18 1996 10:50 | 16 |
247.470 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Wed Sep 18 1996 11:25 | 22 |
247.471 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Wed Sep 18 1996 11:40 | 12 |
247.472 | Defense didn't lose the pennant, it was just one (bad) factor | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Sep 18 1996 11:50 | 12 |
247.473 | And btw, is Duquette even denying he blew it? | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Thu Sep 19 1996 10:50 | 13 |
247.474 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | I need a favor, Don Cornelius... | Thu Sep 19 1996 11:01 | 1 |
247.475 | Bravo's winning | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Post-Olympics blues | Thu Sep 19 1996 11:04 | 9 |
247.476 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Sep 19 1996 11:43 | 19 |
247.477 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Thu Sep 19 1996 12:05 | 7 |
247.478 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Thu Sep 19 1996 12:56 | 17 |
247.479 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Sep 19 1996 14:28 | 17 |
247.480 | I'll slip by any negative proof but still want to see it | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Thu Sep 19 1996 14:54 | 7 |
247.481 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Thu Sep 19 1996 15:54 | 14 |
247.482 | I think pitching for Cleveland makes those pitchers much better | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Thu Sep 19 1996 16:43 | 16 |
247.483 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Thu Sep 19 1996 17:32 | 6 |
247.484 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Sep 19 1996 17:48 | 12 |
247.485 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Thu Sep 19 1996 18:27 | 8 |
247.486 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Thu Sep 19 1996 21:09 | 3 |
247.487 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Bos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. Champs | Mon Sep 23 1996 10:11 | 18 |
247.488 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Mon Sep 23 1996 10:40 | 5 |
247.489 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Post-Olympics blues | Mon Sep 23 1996 10:55 | 13 |
247.490 | | 16.67.96.117::dfaust | Dennis Faust | Mon Sep 23 1996 11:11 | 10 |
247.491 | Division Titles | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Post-Olympics blues | Mon Sep 23 1996 11:15 | 3 |
247.492 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Atlanta Braves, N.L. East Champs | Fri Oct 04 1996 11:26 | 12 |
247.493 | They'll win this weekend | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Bravos all the way! | Fri Oct 04 1996 11:44 | 5 |
247.494 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | | Fri Oct 04 1996 12:14 | 6 |
247.495 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Oct 04 1996 12:17 | 12 |
247.496 | | ROCK::GRONOWSKI | | Fri Oct 04 1996 12:20 | 5 |
247.497 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Fri Oct 04 1996 12:21 | 4 |
247.498 | Go for consistency | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Bravos all the way! | Fri Oct 04 1996 13:09 | 5 |
247.499 | | SUBPAC::SKALSKI | A reclined state of mind | Thu Oct 17 1996 09:57 | 13 |
247.500 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Thu Oct 17 1996 10:02 | 7 |
247.501 | | WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_M | Donnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!! | Thu Oct 17 1996 10:05 | 7 |
247.502 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Thu Oct 17 1996 10:11 | 3 |
247.503 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Bravos all the way! | Thu Oct 17 1996 10:45 | 10 |
247.504 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Thu Oct 17 1996 11:06 | 8 |
247.505 | Go Redbirds! | OUTSRC::16.65.144.36::ALLEMANG | | Thu Oct 17 1996 11:28 | 8 |
247.506 | Go Braves! | SHARE::DERRY | Color me impressed... | Thu Oct 17 1996 11:42 | 1 |
247.507 | Happy B-day, Greg | PHXSS1::HEISER | maranatha! | Thu Oct 17 1996 11:50 | 2 |
247.508 | Happy Birthday to Yunz! | MKOTS3::taydhcp-23-144-177.tay.dec.com::LongW | | Thu Oct 17 1996 13:56 | 7 |
247.509 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Thu Oct 17 1996 14:51 | 13 |
247.510 | BRAVES WIN! BRAVES WIN! BRAVES WIN! | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Bravos all the way! | Fri Oct 18 1996 00:47 | 14 |
247.511 | | CHEFS::7A1_GRN | The Prodigal son returns | Fri Oct 18 1996 10:25 | 6 |
247.512 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Fri Oct 18 1996 10:29 | 4 |
247.513 | Congratulations | OUTSRC::16.65.144.36::ALLEMANG | | Fri Oct 18 1996 11:31 | 1 |
247.514 | Newest House Hold Name | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Andruw Jones for President | Mon Oct 21 1996 15:46 | 18 |
247.515 | | VMSNET::ROLLINS_R | | Mon Oct 21 1996 15:52 | 5 |
247.516 | | NQOS01::nqsrv128.nqo.dec.com::Workbench | | Mon Oct 21 1996 15:59 | 6 |
247.517 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Mon Oct 28 1996 08:27 | 15 |
247.518 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Mon Oct 28 1996 11:03 | 33 |
247.519 | I think you're wrong about Justice | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | On the 'Skins Bandwagon | Mon Oct 28 1996 11:09 | 11 |
247.520 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | | Mon Oct 28 1996 11:14 | 6 |
247.521 | When no one else hit, how can you lay it all on Grissom? | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | Wade Boggs makes me sick | Mon Oct 28 1996 11:22 | 14 |
247.522 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Mon Oct 28 1996 11:25 | 13 |
247.523 | | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | On the 'Skins Bandwagon | Mon Oct 28 1996 11:35 | 8 |
247.524 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Mon Oct 28 1996 11:50 | 20 |
247.525 | Smoltz remains a Bravo | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | No directions needed | Wed Nov 20 1996 14:37 | 5 |
247.526 | CAN'T BE!! | IMBETR::DUPREZ | A great face for radio... | Wed Nov 20 1996 14:49 | 4 |
247.527 | Braves moves | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | No directions needed | Mon Nov 25 1996 15:22 | 5 |
247.528 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Jan 16 1997 09:49 | 8 |
247.529 | Trade talk | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Any day now.... | Wed Mar 26 1997 09:06 | 41 |
| Re: The trade
Do you trade Grissom for Lofton - absolutely.
Do you trade Justice for Embree - the Braves would (and did).
I'm not convinced, nor do I believe that the Braves were, that Justice
"is back" and that he's healed 100%. As has been said before, it's all
about numbers. The money that was freed up may allow the Braves to
secure long term contracts with both Glavine and Maddux, both of whom
are more important than anybody just traded.
Reaction here is mixed, with most people agreeing with the trade. Both
players will be missed, especially Grissom, who is a solid citizen on
and off the field. I have heard that Lofton spends a lot of
time with kids and is active in the Cleveland community, so I'm sure
he'll continue that here. Everyone is looking forward to his speed on
the bases and in the field, and most people consider him an all around
better player than Grissom.
Justice had his share of supporters and detractors, but in general was
liked by both his teammates and fans. He'll be missed, particularly if
he puts up pre-injury numbers in Cleveland. On the other hand one bad
slide or rip of the bat and....
Interesting that the trade featured three individuals who had prominent
roles in the '95 WS. Justice hit the winning HR after ripping the fans
for their lack of support. Lofton made everyone in Atlanta bite their
nails to the quick, hoping that he would not get on base and wind up at
third on the first Wohlers wild pitch. Fortunately (for Atlanta) he popped
up. Grissom caught a deep fly for the last out.
The one aspect of the trade that should be interesting is that it will
force Cox into a different coaching style, one more of a hit and run,
advance the players type strategy as opposed to the get a 3 run dinger
type of style.
There are also strong rumors that this is not the last trade to be made
this week though no details are available.
UMDan
|
247.530 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Mar 26 1997 10:04 | 15 |
|
> I'm not convinced, nor do I believe that the Braves were, that Justice
> "is back" and that he's healed 100%. As has been said before, it's all
> about numbers. The money that was freed up may allow the Braves to
> secure long term contracts with both Glavine and Maddux, both of whom
> are more important than anybody just traded.
The fact is, you could offer Dave Justice and his remaining $10M-$12M
in guaranteed in salary all around baseball, and I don't think you'd
have many takers. The salary consideration is very important. So
while the Indians may do okay with this deal, imo they're taking on
most all the risk.
glenn
|
247.531 | The Braves are risking it all on this season | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | UMass in 1998 - Final Four! | Wed Mar 26 1997 10:27 | 11 |
| Glenn, how do you figure that the Indians are "taking on most all the
risk"??? It seems obvious to most people that Lofton will walk at the
end of the season, and that the Braves won't pursue him for the kind of
money he'll get from Arizona. If the Braves don't win it all this
year, the front office will be under extreme pressure for giving up
Grissom and Justice for nothing.
Is one year of Lofton worth it? That's a major risk, and one the
Braves are taking.
NAZZ
|
247.532 | Braves should be more certain that they got their money's worth | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Wed Mar 26 1997 10:47 | 27 |
|
> Is one year of Lofton worth it? That's a major risk, and one the
> Braves are taking.
I don't see it as a big risk, even assuming (as I am) that Lofton is
headed for Arizona at the end of this year. The Braves already wanted
Justice and his salary moved at almost any price, period, as they
don't even really need him. They've improved their chances for this
season, imo, and they've improved their payroll situation so that they
can deal with the other more important free agents in 1998. So what
did they give up, essentially? One year of Marquis Grissom in 1998.
Not too bad.
On the other hand, in a season (1997) where they also have strong hopes
to win it all, the Indians are gambling that Grissom isn't too big a
dropoff from Lofton, and that they get anywhere near their money's
worth from two years of Justice. Then there's the matter of what
the youngest, most unpredictable quantity in the deal, Embree, could
turn into (that's all upside for the Braves-- they just wanted Justice
gone).
The deal could be even, or it could even come out slightly in
Cleveland's favor, but it still seems to me that the big risk, the
potential for a crash-and-burn backfire, rests on the Indians' end.
glenn
|
247.533 | Hit the nail on the head | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Any day now.... | Wed Mar 26 1997 10:49 | 11 |
| -.1 seems to be the gist of a lot of the radio folks and fans. There
is no guarantee that Lofton will be around or that the Braves will have
the $ to sign him after this year, and if they don't win the WS and
don't re-sign him, then why the trade (other than to free up money)?
While money talks is Lofton prepared to go to a 55 - 110 team next year
(AZ)? However, there probably is no shortage of teams willing to pay 8
- 10 M for a superstar if the Braves can't re-sign him and he doesn't
want to go to AZ.
UMDan
|
247.534 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Wed Mar 26 1997 11:34 | 14 |
| The Braves outfield of the future is Andruw Jones in center and Jermaine Dye
in right. Left field is either Klesko or if they need him at 1st they have
prospects in Wonderful Monds and Damon Hollins. If they don't work out or only
partly work out they can always sign someone to platoon or play full time when
the time comes.
As for 1st base if Klesko is needed in left and McGriff leaves Randall Simon
will be coming along.
Outfield and 1st base are not problems for the Braves. For the Braves to keep
winning the trick is to resign their core starters and hope they don't get old
too soon.
George
|
247.535 | Braves are hoping to win it all this year | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | UMass in 1998 - Final Four! | Wed Mar 26 1997 13:54 | 11 |
| Embree is 27 and has never showed to be anything more than a
hard-throwing Tony Fossas.
I agree that from the Braves point of view, re-signing Glavine and
Maddux is more important than keeping Lofton, and that for one year
Lofton is a pretty good deal. So getting rid of Grissom and Justice
from that point of view makes sense. But the risk still remains that
if they do not win it all this year and they do not resign both Maddux
and Glavine, this trade becomes one-sided.
NAZZ
|
247.536 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Mar 27 1997 08:53 | 35 |
|
And people wonder why they're called mediots...
Karl Ravech writes (on ESPNet):
"Lofton's speed gives the Braves about an extra run per game and the
guy gets on base almost 15 percent more over the course of a season
than Grissom."
The difference in times on base was far smaller than that in '96;
Lofton got on base 23 additional times, in about 10 more plate
appearances. He has had a bigger edge in the past, but is showing
a clear trend downward, whereas Grissom's OBP is not so clearly
deteriorating at this point.
But the other statement - that's just incredible. Lofton is worth
162 runs/year _more_ than Grissom? Now, even crediting Lofton with
being better defensively (which, I should note, might be a stretch -
the numbers point to Grissom, particuarly since '93), _and_ tying that
whole difference to his speed, how in the _world_ is he going to be
worth 162 extra runs (or anywhere even remotely close)? And that's
supposed to be _ignoring_ his OBP advantage!
On another front - did anyone else notice the unusal stats given
for Grissom and Lofton (in particular) yesterday in the Globe?
In the WS, Lofton had 1 HR, and 0 RBI. This was my first clue
something was up.
In '92, Grissom managed an even more impressive feat - 33 HR,
and only _6_ RBI. Not bad, huh?
Of course, he's also averaged about 30 HR/year for the past 5 years...
Joe
|
247.537 | No explanation and no excuse... | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Mar 27 1997 09:51 | 21 |
|
> On another front - did anyone else notice the unusal stats given
> for Grissom and Lofton (in particular) yesterday in the Globe?
>
> In '92, Grissom managed an even more impressive feat - 33 HR,
> and only _6_ RBI. Not bad, huh?
Speculation was that they substituted doubles for HRs for Lofton
and Grissom (but not Justice), but I don't think even that matched
up exactly. Not to mention that in Grissom's case, the real HR
numbers are more interesting anyway.
The Glob is notoriously bad with stats, and should never be trusted
as a reference. A while back Bob Ryan went on and on in a column
about Tim Wakefield's "very respectable" 4.15 ERA in 1996, with
accompanying stat box, when the correct, decidedly more mediocre
number was actually 5.14. They've got dyslexic typesetters down
there or something...
glenn
|
247.538 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Mar 27 1997 09:57 | 10 |
| With regard to the Globe, the guys doing the box scores and tables of stats
seem to do a better job than the columnists.
Again remember, sports columnists are guys who are experts at knowing what
sports fans want to see and read. If they are experts on the sport they cover,
well so much the better but if not no editor is going to lose any sleep over
it.
After all, they've got a business to run,
George
|
247.539 | Glove needs to put up or get a service | MKOTS3::BREEN | From Thurs to Sunday | Thu Mar 27 1997 10:47 | 10 |
| It's the tables, precisely that we're talking about and this one was
terrible. Columnists I agree should never be trusted about facts never
mind the rest of the content.
Maybe it was someone's first trip around the block with excel and got a
couple of columns mixed up.
The other glov thing is the daily invective against Duquette using
everyone's favorite caiman-maven, Gumball Gimbel. Cafardo sub Eddes
seems to be hot on that trail.
|
247.540 | Say what? | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Any day now.... | Thu Mar 27 1997 10:53 | 8 |
| >>The other glov thing is the daily invective against Duquette using
>>everyone's favorite caiman-maven, Gumball Gimbel. Cafardo sub Eddes
>>seems to be hot on that trail.
Picked the wrong day to leave the decoder ring at home...
UMDan
|
247.541 | Hello Windy. | SHARE::DERRY | Color me impressed... | Thu Mar 27 1997 11:11 | 1 |
| Yeah, no kiddin', eh?
|
247.542 | I even had someone else try to 'splain it to me | BRLLNT::LONG | Taxation without representation | Thu Mar 27 1997 11:41 | 5 |
| I was wondering the same, but I hate to pick on other
"gray-haired blubbering idiots" too much.
billl
|
247.543 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | A great face for radio... | Thu Mar 27 1997 11:42 | 1 |
| You're different, Billl. You don't blubber.
|
247.544 | | BRLLNT::LONG | Taxation without representation | Thu Mar 27 1997 11:45 | 4 |
| thanks, I think.
billl
|
247.545 | What happened to zipperhead | MKOTS3::BREEN | From Thurs to Sunday | Thu Mar 27 1997 11:54 | 10 |
| Gumball Gimbel is a stat man hired by Duquette. He keeps pet
alligators in his Brooklyn apartment. Caimans to be exact.
Cafardo of the Glove (Boston Globe) covered the Redsox but (was)
switched to football. Possibly because of his invective against Dan
Duquette.
Gordon Eddes has taken Cafardo's place and started the Gimbel business.
Got it?
|
247.546 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | A great face for radio... | Thu Mar 27 1997 12:22 | 6 |
|
Billte, it would help the out-of-town folks a lot if you'd (tm)
"Glove". Putting initial capitalization on it might help, too.
HTH...
|
247.547 | | PECAD8::CHILDS | | Thu Mar 27 1997 12:22 | 4 |
|
I understood him perfectly. scary isn't it?
;^)
|
247.548 | | CAM::WAY | and keep me steadfast | Thu Mar 27 1997 12:42 | 9 |
|
|
| I understood him perfectly. scary isn't it?
|
| ;^)
Yeah, but then again, you've seen Moltie and the Barbarians....8^)
|
247.549 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | From Thurs to Sunday | Thu Mar 27 1997 15:18 | 5 |
| Roland, in reality I just hit the 'v' instead of the 'b' and leave it.
Dan that's "Glove" as in Bloody Glove. Our local rag wins all sorts of
awards for sports coverage but we see it slightly different around
here.
|
247.550 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Mar 27 1997 15:26 | 9 |
| As long as you stay away from the columns it's not that bad.
Of course that's probably true for other papers as well. The way I look
at it, the regular articles are for news, the columns are for entertainment,
sort of like the funnies.
As long as you think of it that way you keep things in perspective.
George
|
247.551 | Still wheelin and dealin' | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Any day now.... | Thu Mar 27 1997 15:35 | 4 |
| Braves traded Jermaine Dye and P Jamie Walker to KC for OF Michael
Tucker and Infielder Keith Lockhart.
UMDan
|
247.552 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | A great face for radio... | Thu Mar 27 1997 15:50 | 2 |
|
Why? Dye is better than Tucker, and Lockhart is virtually worthless.
|
247.553 | Who knows? | ODIXIE::ZOGRAN | Any day now.... | Thu Mar 27 1997 15:55 | 15 |
| Dunno, just saw it on the (Internet) wire.
Is Lockhart better than Blauser? This is a strange one indeed, as Dye
was supposed to be part of their future.
Looks like Klesko stays in left and McGriff at first, unless there is
another big deal coming down that involves McGriff and Blauser.
McGriff to reduce the payroll and move Klesko to first, Blauser to
reduce the payroll and basically get rid of him (not many teams
interested in him at his salary).
The call in shows will be humming!
UMDan
|
247.554 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Mar 27 1997 16:00 | 10 |
| Yuck what a terrible trade. Hope that's not real.
With Dye you have a 1st rate right fielder who can play there every day.
Maybe a future all-star. One of the best arms in the league. Tucker is strictly
left field. And since he bats left he can't platoon with Klesko.
This makes no sense at all, not one of those 3 guys is in the same league
with Dye.
George
|
247.555 | Once the gem of the Royals' system | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Thu Mar 27 1997 16:14 | 9 |
|
Michael Tucker was at one time considered a phe-nom talent as a
lefthanded hitter. I believe he started at SS in the minors, even.
Maybe the Braves haven't given up on that curse of potential...
glenn
|
247.556 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Mar 27 1997 16:15 | 30 |
| This in from WW.CNN.COM
BASEBALL CITY, Florida (AP) -- Two days after a major trade that reshaped
their outfield and payroll, the Atlanta Braves sent outfielder Jermaine Dye and
pitcher Jamie Walker to the Kansas City Royals Thursday for outfielder Michael
Tucker and infielder Keith Lockhart.
The Royals announced the trade during an afternoon game against the Cleveland
Indians, who just received Marquis Grissom and David Justice from the Braves in
a deal involving Kenny Lofton on Tuesday.
Tucker started in right field for the Royals and was taken out after the
third inning.
Atlanta saved a total of $7.714 million in its trade with Cleveland, which
allows them to try to sign potential free-agent pitchers Greg Maddux and Tom
Glavine. This trade involving all low-priced players increases the team's
payroll a marginal $215,000 and its luxury tax $325,000.
Dye, 23, batted .281 with 12 homers and 37 RBIs last season filling in for
Justice, who missed most of the season with a shoulder injury. Atlanta's trade
of two-thirds of its outfield to Cleveland appeared to make room for Dye and
another talented youngster, Andruw Jones.
The Braves acquired Walker, a 25-year-old left-hander, from Houston in the
Rule 5 draft in September. He was 5-1 with a 2.50 ERA at Double-A Jackson last
year.
Tucker, 25, batted .260 with four homers in 62 games for the Royals last
season. Lockhart, 32, hit .321 with six homers in 94 games.
|
247.557 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Mar 27 1997 16:25 | 15 |
| Here's what the "Scouting Report Note Book:1997 from STATS Inc says about
his defense and base running.
"Despite above average speed, Tucker isn't a good baserunner; he continues to
run into outs on the basepaths. He also doesn't make use of that speed in the
outfield, often getting slow jumps on fly balls. His weak arm is best suited
for left field. Manager Bob Boone gave Tucker some time at first base, where
his inexperience showed, but he wasn't a bad first baseman."
There must be a McGriff trade looming on the horizon. Otherwise the Braves
now have three 1B/LF types in Klesko, Tucker, and McGriff.
They must be dancing in the streets in K.C. What a terrible trade.
George
|
247.558 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Thu Mar 27 1997 17:24 | 12 |
|
George,
The trade's not nearly as bad as you're making it out to be. Tucker
has similar power, and gets on base _far_ more often - Dye does not
seem to believe in taking a walk. He is older, but he hasn't turned 27
yet.
Not that I'd necessarily make the deal, but in terms of the next couple
of years, I'd rather have Tucker.
Joe
|
247.559 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Thu Mar 27 1997 17:41 | 22 |
| What good's a guy who gets on base if he tends to run himself into outs all
the time? Remember they don't have Jimy Williams coaching 3rd any more.
With Dye and Andew Jones you could play which ever one was hot every day and
platoon the other with Klesko. At least that's what they did last year. Then if
anyone goes down they have every position covered with a quality player.
Now they have to hope Lofton and Andruw Jones can play center and right every
day or they end up with Danny Bautista or one of the rookies as a starter. And
where does this leave Klesko?
There must be another trade coming along. Either Tucker or Klesko must be
penciled in for playing 1st base every day. Again no platoon makes sense since
Tucker, Klesko and McGriff all hit from the left.
I don't know, to me this looks like a move the 39 computer munks in San Diago
would make. You know it was K.C. that announced it, maybe before they took the
plunge the monks hacked into K.C.'s computer system and convinced them that
they were the Braves and wanted to give away Jermaine Dye for three beans and
a cow.
George
|
247.560 | | ROCK::HUBER | From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls | Fri Mar 28 1997 08:07 | 9 |
| > What good's a guy who gets on base if he tends to run himself into outs all
>the time? Remember they don't have Jimy Williams coaching 3rd any more.
That's a correctable problem.
While he wouldn't be my first choice, I wouldn't mind having Tucker
as a starter for me...
Joe
|
247.561 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Fri Mar 28 1997 08:34 | 12 |
| I wouldn't mind Tucker as a starter either under most circumstances but if I
already have left handed left batters in left and 1st who are capable starters
there's no platoon that makes sense.
There's got to be another trade in the works, one that's a done deal except
for some i's or t's that need dotting or crossed. McGriff and someone
an AL team for a 1st rate short stop and something maybe.
McGriff and Tony Graffanino to the Red Sox for John Valintin and something?
Mo could move to DH where he belongs.
George
|
247.562 | | IMBETR::DUPREZ | A great face for radio... | Fri Mar 28 1997 08:40 | 3 |
|
WHY would the Sox want Tony G.? He doesn't give them anything they
don't already have in Jeff Frye.
|
247.563 | | EDWIN::WAUGAMAN | | Fri Mar 28 1997 09:08 | 9 |
|
> McGriff and Tony Graffanino to the Red Sox for John Valintin and something?
> Mo could move to DH where he belongs.
The Sox aren't going to tick Mo off any more than he already is. And
they still need a decent OF about ten times more than any 1B/DH...
glenn
|
247.564 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | From Thurs to Sunday | Fri Mar 28 1997 09:31 | 9 |
| How many good lefthanded pitchers are in the National League and how
often will the Braves be facing something like what Seattle and
(formerly) the Yankees would throw? I say this because it looks like
the Braves now have a set outfield of Klesko,Lofton and Jones with
Tucker as backup and McGriff now full time at first. Agreed that
they're stacked on the right side.
I'd say they were done but their contenders will now want to stock up
on lefties.
|
247.565 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Fri Mar 28 1997 09:52 | 7 |
|
Why trade Jermaine Dye for a backup? That makes no sense.
They must feel Tucker is worth playing every day. There's got to be a
McGriff trade in the works.
George
|
247.566 | | MKOTS3::BREEN | From Thurs to Sunday | Fri Mar 28 1997 11:39 | 4 |
| No, they traded a guy who would be a backup for the Braves for two
backup players which ostensibly provides depth. A good question is
whether Cox entirely approves. With Dye on the team he has the
decision to bench either Klesko or Jones to play him. No decision now.
|
247.567 | | CLUSTA::MAIEWSKI | Braves, 1914 1957 1995 WS Champs | Fri Mar 28 1997 13:05 | 18 |
| There is a position between starter and backup/bench/pinch-hitter which
results from a platoon. Last year Dye was in a platoon with Klesko at the end
of the season.
Now it wasn't a simple platoon at one position. When they needed the extra
right handed batter Dye played right field and Andruw Jones played left field.
When they needed the lefty Klesko played left field and Andruw Jones moved over
to right. However it was a platoon in that Dye or Klesko played depending on
who was pitching with Andruw Jones moving around so the Platoon guy would fit.
Now there is no platoon option. It's Lofton in center and Andruw Jones in
right every day with three lefties, Klesko, Tucker, and McGriff fighting for
left field and 1st base.
There's got to be another trade in the works. It's the only way this makes
sense.
George
|