Archive for the ‘Chicago Sports’ Category

Losers Make Page One, Winners Make Page . . . Eight?

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

The Blackhawks must be wondering what they have to do to make the front page of the Sun-Times sports section.  Whipping the Wild 4-1 last night, winning their fourth in a row and 11 of their last 13, combining a young, hungry offense with the NHL’s stingiest defense, boasting the best record in the league and selling out the United Center night after night—essentially being the most dominant team Chicago’s had the past twelve months—earned them on a spot on page eight today.  Page eight.  With not even one line on page one.

What kept the Hawks off the front page?  The Bears, who aren’t even playing anymore.  The same 7 and 9 Bears who, for the last four months, have driven us to distraction with their frustrating, inept, embarrassing play.  Tuesday they called a press conference to announce they were doing just what people expected (even Richard Roeper in the Sun-Times today described the moves as “a surprise to no one”), and for that they get front page treatment.  The Bears fire six inconsequential coaches (I challenge you to name one of them besides Ron Turner) on the heels of a terrible season, and they’re given all the ink.

Chicago’s a Bears town.  I get that.  All things being equal, they should have the spotlight on them most of the time, since that’s what the fans want.  But, at the moment, all things aren’t equal.  In fact, they aren’t even close.  The Blackhawks are doing everything right, and they deserve the lion’s share of coverage.  Go Hawks!

How to Build an 81 Win Team (Out of a 97 Win Team)

Sunday, June 28th, 2009

Some quick hits as we approach the mid-season mark . . .

 

No matter who wins today, the Cubs and Sox have been amazingly evenly matched since interleague play began in 1997.  Of the 70 games that have been played:

The White Sox have 35 wins and the Cubs have 35.

The White Sox have scored 344 runs, the Cubs, 341.

Neither team can claim true bragging rights.  For that to happen, one team is going to have to dominate the series for several years in a row.

 

I had to chuckle when I read Toni Ginnetti’s column yesterday in the Sun-Times describing a Cubs’ pitcher as “young Randy Wells.”  Randy might be young compared to me or you, Toni, but he’ll be 27 in August and only a year younger than Carlos Zambrano, and I haven’t heard anyone refer to him as “young Carlos Zambrano” in a long time.

 

Between late May and mid June, in 22 games, Alfonso Soriano was 14 for 99, a .141 average.  Since Soriano bats leadoff, it’s like hitting your pitcher first in the order–for 22 games.  Worse yet, since Soriano followed the #9 hitter in the batting order each time except for the first inning, it was like having TWO pitchers hitting back to back for 22 games.  And you wonder why you’re not scoring runs?

 

Can we give Jim Hendry anything but a failing grade for the moves he made in the off-season?  Has there been a single one that’s worked out?  Let’s look at ‘em all:

 

Kevin Gregg.  Anybody out there feel confident when Gregg comes into a game?  Maybe you remember last August 15 in Florida.  The Marlins had a 5-3 lead against the Cubs going into the top of the 9th.  He came into the game for Florida, and this is what happened:

 

DeRosa led off and Gregg walked him.

Fontenot grounded out.

Johnson singled.

Daryle Ward sent one over the rightfield wall off Gregg, giving the visiting Cubs a 6-5 lead. 

 

It turned out to be Gregg’s 7th blown save of 2008.  He says he was hampered by a sore left knee at the time. Today, his knee problems are supposedly behind him. 

But look at the events that transpired that inning.  How many times have we seen him blow a lead and a save in nearly the same fashion this season—on a healthy knee?

 

Milton Bradley.  Easily the worst free agent signing in all of baseball this off-season.

 

Aaron Heilman.  “Better than Bobby Howry” is about all you can say.  Talk about damning with faint praise.

 

Aaron Miles.  The definition of a spare part, with limited versatility in the field and no pop in his bat.  His value is debatable when he’s hitting .300.  Where he is today, at .200, he’s worthless.

 

Joey Gathright.  Signed as a free agent.  Lasted a month with the team. Had an OPS of .481 (!) when he was traded.  By the way, he was traded for . . .

 

Ryan Freel, who, incredibly enough, has an even lower OPS than Gathright, .297. 

 

David Patton.  Always the last man out of the bullpen, he forces Lou to overuse everybody else.  He’s certainly not an improvement over Michael Wuertz,whom they traded this off-season.

 

Koyie Hill.  Is all we can say about him, “better than Paul Bako?”  And he isn’t by much. 

 

Luis Vizcaino.  Gone.  For nothing in return.  Garrett Olson.  Flipped for Aaron Heilman.

 

Which leaves us with the one good move he’s made since last October:

 

Micah Hoffpauir.  Replaced Daryle Ward. 

 

I’ve been a big fan of Jim Hendry’s since he took over the GM role in 2002.  I’m sure he’d be the first to tell you this hasn’t been a good nine months for him.

I’ve Learned Never to Call ‘Em “Blue!”*

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

On the bookshelf in my office sit some of the greatest books ever written on baseball:  Ball Four, The Boys of Summer, The Long Season, October 1964, Weaver on Strategy.  I can tell you right now:  none of them was any more eye-opening than As They See ‘Em, a new book written by New York Times reporter Bruce Weber (Simon & Schuster, 2009).  I definitely view the game through different eyes now.

 

As They See ‘Em is a book about umpiring which, it turns out, is a terribly difficult job.  The author spent nearly three years preparing to write the book.  First, he attended Jim Evans’ umpiring school in Florida, then hit the road with a crew of minor league umpires.  He worked Little League and major league spring training.  He interviewed dozens of current and former major league umpires.  Through it all, there was a single undeniable theme:  umpiring in an isolating, thankless, exhausting job.  And, to top it off, among those who choose to follow its career path, Weber reveals over 90% never make it to the big leagues.

 

What could make the job so hard?  After all, it’s simply a matter of memorizing the rule book, right?  Of course, learning and being able to apply the rule book are the foundations of umpiring.  But there’s also a huge physical component to the job.  Being able to station yourself in just the right position on the field to have an optimal view of a play in order to make the proper call is just as important.  I learned that every batted ball puts at least two umpires in motion, scurrying to that ideal spot to observe the play, something I can’t help noticing whenever I watch a game now.   And how about the home plate umpire, who is required to repeatedly bend over, squat and then stand up on average 400 times in a single game? 

 

Then there’s the mental aspect, which is just as grueling as the physical part.  Think of some of the most vehement arguments that you’ve seen erupt at a ballgame.  The dropped third strike in game two of the 2005 ALCS, with A.J. Pierzynski running to first.  The fan Jeffrey Maier interfering with a fly ball in the 1996 ALCS.  George Brett and the pine tar incident.  The missed call at first in game six of the 1985 World Series between the Cardinals and Royals.   You’ll get to relive each of those hotly debated situations through the umpires who were unwittingly caught in the middle of them:  Doug Eddings, Richie Garcia, Tim McClelland and Don Denkinger.

 

I had a hard time putting down As They See ‘Em.  In fact, I finished the book in one weekend.  It’s that engrossing.  And it made clear to me there really should be law against yelling out a certain phrase that, unfortunately, has been a part of the national pastime since the beginning.  You know the one.  “Kill the umpire.” 

 

*Umpires, as a rule, despise being called “Blue.”  

 

 

The Mighty Blackhawks

Sunday, June 21st, 2009

I can’t believe we’re still talking about the Blackhawks.  This is May, right?  This is easily the biggest sports story in Chicago in years, the biggest turnaround by a Chicago sports franchise in my lifetime.  I only wish my dad were around to see it.

 

Unlike my friends’ dads, mine really wasn’t into sports.  But, when it came to the Blackhawks, my dad would be the first to grab the prime spot in front of the old black and white set we had in our family room.  He’d be there, shoes off and feet up, all set for the opening face-off for every televised game (we didn’t have many of those back then, you might recall).  Whenever the Hawks would be playing at home, he’d have the radio turned up at high volume, and the magnificent play-by-play of Lloyd Pettit would reverberate throughout not only his workshop downstairs but the entire basement.

 

I became a Blackhawk fan at the same time Tony Esposito arrived on the scene in 1969.  Tony and his 15 shutouts were a sensation that year.  My father, however, never hesitated to remind me that Glenn Hall was even a better goalie, how “he was a big guy who filled the entire net,” leaving opposing shooters little room to score on him.

 

My dad and I had few common interests, it turned out.  But we had the Blackhawks.  The Bobby Hull, Stan Mikita, Pat Stapleton, Doug Jarrett, Pit Martin Blackhawks.  He and I attended only one sporting event together.  Fittingly, it was a Blackhawks game at the old Chicago Stadium, as exciting a night as I ever shared with my dad.

 

Who knows how far the Hawks will go in the playoffs this year?  It doesn’t really matter to me.  Call me a fair-weather fan if you’d like, since I haven’t rooted for them in a long time, but my interest in the Blackhawks has been rekindled this year.  And every game I watch puts me right on the couch with my dad, our emotions rising and falling with each goal scored or given up.  That’s made this season even more remarkable to me.

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