Friday, September 29, 2006
Something to play for
Not since 1999 have the Reds been in contention for anything beyond postseason hunting and fishing trips this late in September.
The glass half-empty approach makes it easy to credit the Cardinals for allowing the Reds and Astros to remain in the race and the Reds themselves for refusing to unwrap the many gifts St. Louis has sent their way this summer.
Sure, the NL Central is anything but a powerhouse division in a league that is mediocre at best. But, Reds fans wanted a pennant race and they've got one. While the Reds' chances of winning the division border a miracle, the fact is that they are still not eliminated with three games to play.
FSN Ohio has added Sunday's telecast in the event the season finale means something. The rotation couldn't have set up any better with Aaron Harang and Bronson Arroyo starting the first two games in Pittsburgh.
With the Astros ahead of them as well, it's not likely the Reds, who were picked to finish fifth in the division, will achieve the unthinkable.
On second thought, haven't they already?
Thursday, September 28, 2006
ESPN: The Evil Empire
The top annual sports event in Cincinnati is going to be televised on a cable station not available in Cincinnati.
Who could be behind this? You guessed it, our pals at ESPN.
http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060928/SPT0101/609280360/1078
I'm sure Time Warner Cable has received its ransom note by now, the one which reads 'Buy our station or else. Signed, ESPN'.
Wednesday, September 27, 2006
Is collapse in the Cards?
"Just recognize that's the reality of our pennant race and we kept busting our ass. In the end, our ass gets busted. I like a lot of things I see except the score."
And, in all likelihood, the standings.
Five games to go in the season. Reds still not eliminated from postseason consideration.
The Astros, meanwhile, are on the brink of achieving what was once seemingly impossible.
NL Central standings
Cardinals 80-76
Astros 79-78 1.5
Reds 78-79 2.5
Monday, September 25, 2006
Not a drastic change, but ...
Nothing to it
Of course it isn't, but future Hall of Famers often make it seem so.
After missing 17 games with a dislocated right toe, Griffey made his first plate appearance in the eighth inning of Monday's home finale at Great American Ball Park and promptly delivered a pinch-hit three-run home run to help lift the Reds to a 5-4 victory.
The home run was the 563rd of Griffey's career tying him with Reggie Jackson for 10th on the all-time list.
"I'd like to have the title of Mr. October too," said Griffey. "I was really just trying not to embarrass myself. I just got a pitch up in the zone."
Turnstile tales
Average attendance at Great American Ball Park was 26,352 this season, just slightly behind the Brewers for 11th in the National League.
Not a morning person
The Reds right-hander dislikes them so much that he's volunteered to start on short rest just to avoid them.
In the first inning of today's 12:35 p.m. home finale, Arroyo allowed four unearned runs on two hits and a walk.
His worst pitch of the inning was one intended to force Cubs left-fielder Matt Murton at home plate. Catcher David Ross bobbled, then dropped Arroyo's low and outside toss for an error, one of two committed by the Reds in the inning.
Hey, Bronson, there's this thing called coffee ...
UPDATE: Arroyo recovered to toss seven innings, allowing just four hits, no earned runs, two walks and five strikeouts. He's slated to start on Saturday in Pittsburgh where he'll attempt to match Aaron Harang with 15 wins.
Sunday, September 24, 2006
Who Dey (?)
Now that I've had a chance to comb over the statistics, I'm beginning to doubt that reality.
Let me sort this through:
Chad Johnson had one catch for 11 yards.
Willie Parker had 133 rushing yards to Rudi Johnson's 47.
Carson Palmer threw two interceptions and was sacked six times.
The Steelers had 365 total yards and 27 first downs. The Bengals had 246 and 15.
And, the Bengals won?
Bottom line:
The Steelers had five turnovers. The Bengals take advantage of other team's mistakes as well as any team in the NFL, and they did so today.
Bad timing
Oh well ... priorities.
Said Narron of Aaron Harang who notched his 15th win via Royce Clayton's game-winning RBI single in the bottom of the ninth:
"At the major league level, you have to continue to make adjustments. The past three years, he's done that. I think, by far, he's the most underrated pitcher in baseball."
We learned upon emerging from Narron's office that a Bengals' interception had preserved a 28-20 victory over Pittsburgh.
A good day all around.
Football Sunday spent working ...
Writing a Reds season wrap-up column while keeping a watchful eye on the Bengals/Steelers on my TV monitor.
It's a beautifully sunny afternoon at the ballpark. All things considered, I always hate to see the home portion of the baseball season come to a close.
Interesting tidbit in today's Reds game notes:
The Reds' six errors (I hear there should have been seven) committed last night were the most since April 5, 1971 when Bernie Carbo, Frank Duffy, Woody Woodward and Don Gullett combined for six miscues.
Woodward committed three errors at third base during that game, the first Opening Day contest played at Riverfront Stadium which opened mid-season 1970.
One Red has displayed some nifty glovework:
Scott Hatteberg's error in the fifth inning Sunday was his first since May 5, a 100-game stretch.
Thursday, September 21, 2006
Some Reds news ...
Left-hander Eric Milton will have arthroscopic surgery tomorrow to clean out his left elbow. He'll finish the season at 8-8 with a 5.19 ERA in 26 starts.
Outfielder Ryan Freel will miss the remainder of the season with a hairline fracture of his left thumb. Freel suffered the injury Tuesday in Houston while diving for Luke Scott’s triple in the first inning.
Freel hit .271 with 30 doubles and tied a career-high with 37 stolen bases to go along with several highlight-reel worthy defensive plays.
Nice year for Freelie.
Wednesday, September 20, 2006
Gammons' first concern: Austin Kearns
Gammons has a wonderful piece on ESPN.com this morning detailing his ordeal and recovery.
In it Gammons says his first realization he was on the road to recovery was when he asked how in the world Austin Kearns ended up with the Nationals.
It's good stuff. Here's the link:
http://insider.espn.go.com/mlb/insider/columns/story?columnist=gammons_peter&id=2594637&action=upsell&appRedirect=http%3a%2f%2finsider.espn.go.com%2fmlb%2finsider%2fcolumns%2fstory%3fcolumnist%3dgammons_peter%26id%3d2594637
Tuesday, September 19, 2006
Stop and sell the Roses
Word is, Hall of Famer Bob Feller is now offering "I'm sorry I've signed so many autographs that their value has been reduced to that of a Jerome Walton rookie card" baseballs for sale.
http://www.nydailynews.com/09-18-2006/sports/baseball/story/453587p-381614c.html
Monday, September 18, 2006
They don't write 'em like that anymore
Among the newspapers in my possession is an issue of the Washington Star from October 2, 1932 - the day after Babe Ruth's "called shot" against the Cubs in the World Series.
There's no mention of Ruth calling his shot, but Grantland Rice's description of the day's events are spine-tingling. Examples:
"The battle carried action from the start. It sparkled with rare fielding plays like sunlight on morning frost in the harvest field".
"The big Babe was exchanging quip and jibe with the Cubs bench. And after each exchange the sunny atmosphere was full of sulphur".
But, the best was Rice's lede paragraphs:
"That far, echoing rumbling roar you must of heard yesterday afternoon was the old Yankee rock crusher rolling once more across the flattened, prostrate bodies of the Cubs. In the driver's seat were those two mighty men of baseball, Ruth and Gehrig, Babe and Lou, the dynamite twins".
"In the presence of 50,000 startled Cub rooters, this dynamic pair of slugging mastodons lit the fuse to four home runs with a fusillade that drove Charley Root from the field with his ears still ringing in the wake of a bombardment he will never forget".
"It was the drum beat leading the funeral march of Cub hopes. It was the tocsin sounding the coming of destruction of any Chicago dream".
In this ESPN-instant gratification age, stories aren't stories anymore. They're just information.
That's a shame.
Last rites?
I asked Doc if he was writing an obituary for the local nine. He said, "Maybe so".
As each day passes, we become more reflective on the milestones and mishaps of an up and down season for the Reds.
When the dust settles on the 2006 campaign, I would imagine Reds fans would have more hope for the future of this franchise than they've had in many a year.
Tuesday, September 12, 2006
Willy misses the Queen City
Williamson, now a member of the San Diego Padres, lives in Guilford, IN. His wife, Lisa, owns and operates an Avalon Salon & Spa in Hyde Park.
"I definitely didn't want to leave here," Williamson told me prior to tonight's game. "Out of all the cities I've played in, I enjoyed it [in Cincinnati] the most. Boston was fun because we went to a World Series. Chicago was horrible."
Williamson, who is currently on the DL with a right elbow strain, traveled with the club for the three-game series at Great American Ball Park.
Monday, September 11, 2006
Too much of a good thing?
Six games, six days, eight different teams, four venues, two cities.
I'm covering the Reds/Padres three-game series for MLB.com, a prep football game for the Enquirer on Friday, attending UC/Ohio State on Saturday in Columbus in a non-working capacity, and covering the Browns/Bengals game on Sunday at Paul Brown Stadium for my weekly column.
Barring rain delays or overtime, that's 27 innings of baseball and 12 quarters of football on three different levels in less than a week.
If I'm lucky, I can find time to scarf down a brat and a beer at Oktoberfest.
My plan for Monday is to NOT be watching sports.
Sunday, September 10, 2006
A sad irony
Green, who suffered a devastating knee injury in 1999 while with the Rams, called Palmer to offer words of encouragement.
"It's awesome," said Palmer of Green's gesture. "It's something that has stuck with me. It just helps you being a young quarterback in this league and looking up to guys like Green who have been around a long time. He's a veteran and definitely a leader."
That just added to the shock of seeing Green lying motionless on the turf after enduring a hard hit by Bengals defensive end Robert Geathers during Cincinnati's 23-10 victory over the Chiefs.
The most recent reports are that Green had feeling in his extremities and was moving. X-rays were negative.
You can be sure that Palmer is about to return Green's favor, if he hasn't already.
Saturday, September 09, 2006
Not seeing Reds
If Jerry Narron's club makes a surprise return to the playoff chase, send me a note.
Reading played take-away from Deer Park last night. Here's my Enquirer coverage:
http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/AB/20060909/SPT030101/609090448/
On a final note: Go Buckeyes.
Friday, September 08, 2006
On the craft
But, truthfully, this isn't all glitz and glamour. We don't just go to games for free, we go to stadiums to work. We don't get to talk to famous athletes, we are required to deal with them. Press box dining rooms aren't five-star and deadline pressure isn't for the faint of heart.
For those who think we waltz into the ballpark for free, cheer for our favorite team from the comfort of the press box, mingle with the players afterwards and then leisurely tap out a story and collect our six-figure check, well, you couldn't be more wrong.
That said, this is a dream job for most of us.
For anyone who's interested, the following link is from an industry message board. It's a fairly accurate portrayal of sports journalism and the misconceptions many people have about the business:
http://www.sportsjournalists.com/forum/index.php/topic,31409.0.html
Monday, September 04, 2006
No words to express
When a beat reporter and I approached the Reds infielder, Aurilia just smiled and said, "I've got nothing".
I told Aurilia that I didn't blame him.
He said it wasn't really a "no comment", it's just that he didn't know where to begin to sum up the Reds' latest heart-wrenching defeat.
The Reds were defeated tonight. In every sense of the word.
http://cincinnati.reds.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/gameday_recap.jsp?ymd=20060904&content_id=1645481&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=cin
Bleary-eyed and beaten
Still, the unflappable Reds never let their emotions get the best of them, for better or worse.
Interesting comment from manager Jerry Narron, saying this homestand is "make or break. It might not make us, but it certainly could break us".
Here's the Reds.com notebook for today. Yes, some of us have to labor on Labor Day. I hope Mark Sheldon is enjoying his day off.
http://cincinnati.reds.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/article.jsp?ymd=20060904&content_id=1645374&vkey=news_cin&fext=.jsp&c_id=cin
Thursday, August 31, 2006
This is distasteful
They had the audacity to misspell Ken Griffey Jr.'s mother's name, and I'm certain Reds trainer Mark Mann didn't appreciate being attributed to the mock quote.
http://www.theonion.com/content/node/52040
This isn't the first line The Onion has crossed, but ...
Some good news
The Dayton Daily News is reporting that Griffey's mother, Bertie, who underwent colon surgery on August 15, is cancer-free and can resume her normal life sans chemotherapy treatment.
No word yet on the condition of Ken Griffey Sr., who was recently diagnosed with prostate cancer.
The bereft coast
The Reds, who begin a three-game series in San Diego on Friday, are 1-6 on the trip.
After beating the Giants in the first game of a three-game series at AT&T Park to move into a virtual tie with the Cardinals for first place in the NL Central Division, the Reds have dropped six consecutive games.
They are now 4 1/2 games behind in the division, 1 1/2 games back in the Wild Card, and have a .500 record (67-67) for the first time since the second game of the season.
“It's a cliche, but we’ve got to play one game at a time and not get caught up in trying to win 15 of 17 or something like that," said Reds manager Jerry Narron. "You’ve got to win one to get it started.”
Best news for the Reds:
They're still in the National League where even the most mediocre of clubs has a chance at the postseason.
Tuesday, August 29, 2006
Nice gesture
Monday, August 28, 2006
Homer Bailey
Bailey struck out eight and did not walk a batter.
Hello ... Krivsky?
Palmer pristine in first half
Carson Palmer took his first step(s) toward bringing to an end a worrisome chapter in his career tonight in a nationally-televised preseason game against the Green Bay Packers at Paul Brown Stadium.
In the first half, Palmer was 9-of-14 for 140 yards and three touchdowns. He also had an 11-yard scramble.
And, the speculation about Palmer not being ready for the season opener ...
cue the sound of crickets chirping.
Sock it to 'em
ESPN's cameras are all over Palmer's every move.
The Bengals are planning to introduce the offense prior to the game. They will introduce them as a unit, which has been their custom, rather than individually.
Regardless, the cheers will likely be deafening when No. 9 emerges from the tunnel.
Friendly chatter
Johnson is looking exceptionally dapper in his blonde mohawk, frayed black T-shirt with a silk-screened image of himself and gray sweat pants.
The trio is enjoying a laugh, although I'm certain at least a portion of the conversation relates to Johnson's assertion that Harris and Woodson will soon be denied check marks on his "Who covered 85 in 2006?" list.
For once, C.J. isn't the feature attraction for the Bengals.
The emotional return of Carson Palmer to the Paul Brown Stadium turf is approximately 90 minutes from now.
Sunday, August 27, 2006
Former Indians pick among crash victims
Both Hooker and his new bride, Scarlett, both reportedly died in the crash. The couple's wedding had taken place just hours before the accident.
“It’s just a very, very painful, tragic situation,” former UK baseball Coach Keith Madison told the Herald Leader.
Hooker was a 40th round draft choice by the Indians in 2000. It doesn't appear that he signed with Cleveland. But, he did have a brief, yet successful minor-league career in various leagues. If anyone has info on Hooker's career, please pass it along.
According to reports, Hooker was currently working as a substance abuse counselor but planned to take a new job in Lexington while his wife attended school.
Flight 5191, en route to Atlanta, crashed at 6:07 a.m. Sunday morning less than one mile from the airport killing 49 of 50 persons onboard.
Friday, August 25, 2006
Bye, bye Friday nights
Everything went off without a hitch - well, almost.
The press box at Yager Stadium was sans air conditioning, I got lost twice trying to navigate the Miami University campus and I had returned to my seat in the press box after post-game interviews before realizing I neglected to speak to the winning coach. Good thing I had plenty of time prior to deadline to rectify that oversight.
In my game, No. 6 Lakota West upset No. 4 Moeller 13-12 via a missed extra-point by the Crusaders kicker with 36 seconds left.
As I was leaving the stadium, Colerain was leading Mason 21-0 late in the first half and they were lifting Mason's starting QB into an ambulance. Not good.
First game story of the season in the books:
http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060826/SPT030101/608260418
Ahh, football is back.
Cardinals "contending"?
"Optimistically and realistically, we are in contention," La Russa said. "It hasn't been the most consistent, great baseball that our club has played ... but we are in contention."
The Cardinals who, by this point in the season, had been preparing to rest stars for the playoffs the past couple of years, find themselves in a race with the Reds for the NL Central Division title.
This territory is as unfamiliar for St. Louis as it is for the Reds.
Thursday, August 24, 2006
I didn't leave my heart in San Francisco ....
Here's a word of advice: if you travel to San Francisco during the month of August - just as the Reds have beginning today - pack a T-shirt and shorts for the afternoon and a parka for the morning and evening.
See, there's this fog.
It shows up in the Bay Area around 7 p.m. or so and completely envelopes the downtown area. The temperature drops from the mid-70's to the mid-50's on a dime. The crystal clear afternoon skies become grimy with near zero visibility.
When you take the boat to Sausalito on a bright sunny August afternoon, don't stare at the folks buying fleece sweatshirts like they're from Mars.
They know something you don't.
Game-time temperature tonight: 58 degrees with a 16 mph variable wind.
The coldest winter I ever spent was ...
Coffey's triple-screw
In fact, Coffey pretty much threw himself to the mercy of the court.
"I screwed the bullpen, I screwed Chris (Michalak), I screwed the team," said Coffey. "It was a triple-decker right there."
One reporter commented later that it made sense that the Reds' burly right-hander would be thinking about a "triple-decker" at that point in time.
Or, perhaps Coffey was craving his favorite meal - a banana and mayonnaise sandwich.
Wednesday, August 23, 2006
Steady ... Eddie?
Oh well. Young players will show their age on occasion, and Encarnacion has played beyond his years for the majority of this season.
BTW, I couldn't have picked a nicer day to be sitting in the MLB.com chair. It's a beautiful afternoon at the ballpark.
http://cincinnati.reds.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/article.jsp?ymd=20060823&content_id=1624848&vkey=news_cin&fext=.jsp&c_id=cin
Tuesday, August 22, 2006
Three's a charm
Three years ago, my wife and I said our vows at St. Stephens Church before taking a trolley to Great American Ball Park for our reception at the Riverfront Club and a few photo-ops on the field.
Who said sports writers aren't romantic? Happy anniversary to us.
Where's "Waldo"?
Rich Aurilia's nickname "Waldo" is derived from his versatility, er, daily uncertainty as to which position he's going to play.
Aurilia has played first, second, third, shortstop and even served as the club's DH once during interleague play.
"I almost don't care (where I play)," Aurilia said. "I look at the lineup ... to see if my name's on there. Then I look to the right to see where I'm playing. Then I get mentally ready."
Aurilia's best role for the Reds might be that of postseason veteran. During his career, Aurilia has played in 25 postseason games including 7 in the World Series.
His bat and leadership will be key for the Reds regardless of which glove he carries.
Sunday, August 20, 2006
Hopper makes history
"Can we get an interview over here?" Freel yelled. "The guy did get his first major league hit after all."
Hopper singled in the eighth inning to became the first Reds player to collect his first major league hit in his first career at-bat since Wily Mo Pena accomplished the feat in 2002.
"I'm still floating right now," Hopper said. "My feet haven't even touched the ground yet."
Talented but tool-less
Hopper has hit just three home runs in more than 1,100 minor-league at-bats. He doesn't walk or strikeout much.
But, Hopper does execute one tool well: he hits for average.
Hopper, who spent seven years in the Royals organization before being signed as a free-agent by the Reds in January 2005, was leading the International League and ranked second in Triple-A with a .349 batting average. He also had 10 doubles, 3 triples and 24 stolen bases. But, no home runs.
In other transactions today, Eddie Guardado was placed on the 15-day disabled list with tendonitis in his elbow, Chris Michalak was placed on the bereavement list due to the death of his grandmother, Matt Belisle was returned from his rehab assignment and reinstated from the 15-day disabled list and Mike Burns was designated for assignment.
I thought Sunday was a day of rest?
Ozzie (expletive) Guillen
Best I can figure, Ozzie believes the NL (bleepin) Central is horrible, and all of the (bleepin) managers in the league are just (bleepin) jealous that Guillen, a Mexican, won a World Series title.
Guillen is a (bleepin) reporter's dream. Here's some classic stuff from the Chicago Sun Times:
http://www.suntimes.com/output/sox/cst-spt-ssep20.html
Hey Oz, how's that sensitivity training working for ya?
Couldn't agree more
http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060820/COL09/608200427
Judging by the e-mails and comments I've received, you'd think the Reds were the clear choice to win the NL Central Division this season and the only reasons why they are not running away from the Cardinals is Jerry Narron's poor decision-making and Wayne Krivsky's poorly-executed trades.
If Narron and/or Krivsky are to blame, then who gets the credit for the Reds, picked fifth in the NL Central by most pundits, being in the pennant race to begin with?
Fay's correct. If voting for NL Manager of the Year and Executive of the Year commenced today, both Narron and Krivsky would be in the top two or three.
Saturday, August 19, 2006
He never had a chance
Not only was Stewart replacing a living legend in Joe Nuxhall, he was also dealing with a divorce and having to juggle difficult family matters along with trying to fit in alongside Hall of Famer Marty Brennaman in one of the most heralded chairs in baseball broadcasting.
It was reported today that Stewart's contract will not be extended. He has agreed to broadcast Reds games through the end of the 2006 season.
"Marty has been great to me," Stewart told MLB.com. "Joe (Nuxhall) has been great to me. I learned so much. The fans have welcomed me and been supportive. I appreciate their accepting me. You have to have thick skin in this business. I think I've been treated great here. The toughest thing was telling my son, the world's biggest Reds fan. He asked me, 'Can we still go to Reds games?'"
Under the circumstances, Stewart did a marvelous job. He never really replaced Nuxhall who was called back to broadcast Reds games on a rotating basis. But, Stewart never complained. He continually deferred to Nuxhall's schedule, the two working alongside one another on several occasions.
Stewart is one of the truest gentleman I've encountered during my time covering the Reds. I sincerely hope that the opportunity afforded him by the Reds is just one of many he'll earn in his broadcasting career.
Stewart deserves more than a wink, a smile and a wave goodbye. He deserves our respect.
I wish him the absolute best. The "Bad Boy" is anything but.
Friday, August 18, 2006
A positive trend
That pushes the Reds average attendance in their past five home games to 37,463. That's nearly 90% capacity of Great American Ball Park.
If the Reds can maintain their position in the playoff race, I'd imagine those numbers would continue on an upward trend.
Nice to see.
Believe it: Bucs are better
If developing young pitching from within is truly the key to organizational stability, then the Pirates are on the right track.
Ian Snell, the Bucs' starting pitcher tonight in the opening game of a three-game series with the Reds at Great American Ball Park, is a good example.
He's struggled with consistency. But, since May 20 Snell has gone 5-2 with a 3.66 ERA away from PNC Park while limiting opposing batters to a .227 average. He's just beginning to mature.
Zach Duke is a much-heralded prospect. Then there's Paul Maholm, Bryan Bullington and Tom Gorzelanny.
An excellent analogy posted on MLB.com today referenced the 1988 Braves who finished nearly 40 games out of first place when a 22-year-old Tom Glavine went 7-17 and 21-year-old John Smoltz went just 2-7. Steve Avery, then just 20-years old, won only three of his 20 starts the following year.
That trio matured to become the foundation of a dynasty.
Now, I'm not saying the Pirates will run off a string of consecutive NL Central Division titles on par with the Braves' dominance in the East. But, Pirates fans have reason to believe there are better days ahead.
Pittsburgh's condition isn't as dire as its record might make it appear.
Paul Lo Dumped
The 34-year old Mets catcher reportedly had an affair with two 19-year old women. His wife filed for divorce a couple of months ago citing infidelity.
The New York Post has had a field day with this story. The below Philly blog item has adult content, just so ya know.
http://willdo.philadelphiaweekly.com/archives/2006/08/philly_teen_lea.html
On page 168 of the Mets 2006 media guide, Lo Duca's bio includes this item:
Family: Wife, Sonny; Daughter, Bella.
At least he didn't try to keep his marriage a secret from Mets PR.
Thursday, August 17, 2006
A not-so perfect 10
In the end, all it took for Arroyo to earn his elusive 10th victory was a couple of high-wire acts and some good old fashioned run support.
Arroyo had to face Albert Pujols in a couple of precarious situations, but he managed to escape them both en route to a seven-inning, four-hit effort in which he allowed just one run.
Behind Arroyo, the Reds beat the Cardinals 7-2 to move back within 1 1/2 games of first place in the NL Central Division.
Arroyo proclaimed following the game that he will be removing his infamous cornrows.
Prediction: it won't take this long for Arroyo to win No. 11. If it does, the Reds right-hander might lose his hair naturally.
Wednesday, August 16, 2006
Daily rhetoric
The dialy rhetoric coming out of Bengals camp in relation to Palmer's playing status is growing tiresome for reporters, particularly those who cover the team on a daily basis.
Tuesday was a good example.
Head coach Marvin Lewis proclaimed that Palmer will no longer address questions in relation to when he expects to play in a game. Lewis then said it will be Palmer's decision as to when he's ready.
Later in the afternoon, Palmer addressed numerous questions on the subject including one response in which he stated Lewis will make the final decision as to when he plays.
Lewis said the doctors have cleared Palmer medically. Palmer said there are still some physical hurdles to overcome.
Palmer and Lewis seem to agree on one thing: if the Bengals quarterback doesn't play in a preseason game, he won't suit up for the opener in Kansas City.
Aside from that, when Palmer will play his next game for the Bengals is anyone's guess. And, a daily notebook item for Bengals beat reporters.
Tuesday, August 15, 2006
Not so fast
Despite perception to the contrary, winning the coin toss does not automatically equate to an overtime victory in the NFL.
Winning the coin toss does have its advantages - as well it should - but not to as great an extent as most fans think.
Last season, the team which won the coin toss emerged victorious 57.1% of the time. The coin-toss losers won 42.8% of those games.
In it's history, the team that won the coin toss has won the game just 52.9% of the time. More than 71% of the time, both teams have had at least one possession in overtime regardless of the coint-toss outcome.
The NFL's overtime coin toss, just as it's designed to do, provides a measurable advantage for the winning team.
But, it's no sure thing.
Monday, August 14, 2006
Player of the w "EE" k
Today, Encarnacion was named NL Player of the Week after he batted .440 with four home runs and eight RBI during the week ending August 13. He also had 24 total bases, a .960 slugging percentage and seven runs scored.
Encarnacion will likely have little comment on the subject. That's just fine with the Reds who hope he never gets shy with the bat.
Close the book on Mercker
The Reds left-hander suffered a complete tear of the ulnar collateral ligament in his left elbow on Friday in Philadelphia. The severity of the injury was revealed this morning in a MRI which also showed an 80% tear in the flexor tendon.
Mercker, who will undergo reconstructive surgery on Thursday, went 1-1 this season with a 4.13 ERA and one save in 37 appearances. Prior to the injury, Mercker had tossed 7 1/3 consecutive shutout innings.
His career record stands at 73-67 with a 4.16 ERA, 25 saves and 911 strikeouts. After beginning his career with the Braves, Mercker went on to pitch for eight more teams including three seperate stints with the Reds.
Knowing Merck, he'll make the most of his retirement.
Sunday, August 13, 2006
Palmer stand-ins pass first audition
Anthony Wright and Doug Johnson both performed well in the Bengals' 19-3 victory over the Washington Redskins. Here are the numbers:
Johnson: 11-for-14, 128 yards and one touchdown in the second half.
Wright: 9-of-16 for 101 yards and one touchdown in the first half.
Bengals head coach Marvin Lewis, as one might expect, had few definitive comments following the game about which quarterback might have vaulted himself to No. 2 status.
"I'll sit down and evaluate the tape and we'll see what we'll do," Lewis said. "I'm not going to tell you guys. Nothing personal."
Dawn of a new era
Legendary broadcasters Al Michaels and John Madden were in the house as well, along with former Bengal Cris Collinsworth, sideline reporter Andrea Kremer and a throng of NBC camermen and crew.
No, this isn't a NFL playoff game. It's not even a regular season game.
It's the opening game of the preseason in Cincinnati.
Even though Carson Palmer is still sidelined, the Bengals remain a top draw for national media types. That the Bengals' numerous off-season brushes with the law made for national comment proves that Marvin Lewis' team has the eyes and ears of NFL fans globally.
Michaels, Madden and the NBC army showed up at Paul Brown Stadium tonight to broadcast a game that doesn't matter.
Remember when the Bengals didn't count?
Friday, August 11, 2006
Party on Wayne
Wayne Krivsky has acquired 31 players since he was named Reds general manager on 2/8...19 of those players appeared in at least 1g for the Reds this season...12 of Krivsky's acquisitions are on today's active roster: RHP Bronson Arroyo, LHP Bill Bray, IF Juan Castro, SS Royce Clayton, LHP Rheal Cormier, RHP Ryan Franklin, LHP Eddie Guardado, 1B Scott Hatteberg, OF Todd Hollandsworth, RHP Kyle Lohse, IF Brandon Phillips and C David Ross...additionally, RHP Gary Majewski is on the disabled list...only 14 players from the Opening Day roster are on today's roster.
Thursday, August 10, 2006
Corn-rolled
He pitched seven innings, allowed four earned runs, 10 hits, walked just one, tied a season-high with eight strikeouts but gave up three home runs.
Arroyo failed in his 10th attempt to earn his 10th victory of the season, despite a new hairstyle designed to bring luck.
After the game, Arroyo was a bit bewildered.
"(Jim) Edmonds has seen a lot of soft stuff from me 1-0," Arroyo said. "I thought I'd get a strike on the inner-half and he hit it out of the park. I never thought in a million years he'd even swing at it. It's a head game between you and the hitter. Right now, they're getting the best of me."
So, will the cornrows stay?
"I'll leave them in for a while," Arroyo said. "I'm about at the end of my rope with superstitions. I can bring a live chicken in here, or I can just pitch. It's been frustrating for two months. I thought I had good stuff today. I just got beat, man."
"...another excuse to believe"
CINCINNATI — If the Cardinals needed another painful reminder that this season will be less forgiving than their last two, Wednesday night at Great American Ball Park provided an open-handed slap to the face.
Afforded leads of 4-0, 6-3 and 7-6, a team that closed with precision in 2004 and 2005 again fell badly.
The second-place Cincinnati Reds -- the Team That Won't Go Away -- took Chris Carpenter's start and Jason Isringhausen's finish and transformed them into something inspirational.
When catcher David Ross launched a two-run, ninth-inning home run to center field some 442 feet away, it provided the Reds an 8-7 win, a sellout crowd of 41,649 another excuse to believe and the 61-52 Cardinals further proof that this is a grinding season.
Long distance winner
The list:
Adam Dunn (twice)
Derrek Lee
Albert Pujols
Alfonso Soriano
David Ross
None of the previous occurences were as significant as Ross' dramatic walk-off winner that lifted the Reds to within 2 1/2 games of first place.
Ross said he's had three walk-off homers in his lifetime. One while with the Dodgers, one for the University of Florida, and last night's bone-chilling blast.
Audio clip of Marty's call:
http://700wlw.com/timages/page/media/David_Ross_walkoff2runHR_1080906.mp3
Wednesday, August 09, 2006
Bio hazard
Thanks to the tireless activity of Reds' GM Wayne Krivsky, the Supplemental Bios packet for the 2006 regular season has grown to more than 40 pages.
Today, the staff was scrambling to add Todd Hollandsworth's information before he arrives at Great American Ball Park tomorrow.
The Reds should think about printing the Supplemental Bios packet on recycled paper. We do have the environment to consider, of course.
Day after The Catch: Freel gives back
http://cincinnati.reds.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/article.jsp?ymd=20060809&content_id=1601091&vkey=news_cin&fext=.jsp&c_id=cin
Tuesday, August 08, 2006
A bloodied, battered hero
Freel had his usual assortment of bruises but those occured prior to his Willie Mays-esque catch that robbed Albert Pujols of a two-run double during the Reds' 10-3 victory over the Cardinals at Great American Ball Park.
With blood still oozing from his wound after the game, Freel was asked if he hurt himself making the sensational diving grab.
"Not as far as I know right now," he said. "I still have some adrenaline going. We'll know about 3 a.m. after I'm asleep. I'll probably wake up with stiffness here or there."
One word: warrior.
More Majewskigate
Their response: no chance.
The Enquirer's John Fay reports more comment from Krivsky and the Reds' top doc on the developing saga.
http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060808/SPT04/308080037
Monday, August 07, 2006
A question of ethics
Is Team A responsible for the disclosure of medical records pertaining to a player before he's traded?
Is Team B responsible for asking for those records?
How much of a burden of responsibility rests with the pitcher to tell Team B he's being treated for shoulder problems?
Before the GM of Team B (Wayne Krivsky) gets convicted in the court of public opinion, stop to consider the role of Team A's GM (Jim Bowden) and the pitcher (Gary Majewski) in this situation.
Bowden's reputation has long been soured throughout baseball. Majewski admitted his ailment to the Reds only after the urging of his fiancee. Krivsky is none too pleased with any of it.
No question, Krivsky and the Reds got fleeced. But, the question remains: was it their fault?
Sunday, August 06, 2006
ESPN: Palmer no lock
Apparently, it's breaking news that Palmer isn't a "lock" to start the season-opener in Kansas City.
The story is ill-timed because the determination of Palmer's readiness for the start of the regular season was never going to be made after the first week of August. With just one week of training camp in the books, and the first preseason game still one week away, there are still many non-guarantees in Bengals camp.
Palmer's performance thus far in training camp has given the Bengals no reason to be more or less optimistic than they were during mini-camp. Perhaps Pasquarelli will do a follow-up piece at the end of August when it matters.
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=2541293
You must be kidding
The first 6,000 kids 14 and younger in attendance at Sunday's game recieved a Reds warm-up jacket and cap for their American Girl doll.
A father, citing his open-mindedness, demanded that his son, who was clearly older than 14, be given the American Girl promotion.
Then there's the story of a woman who produced a copy of her sonogram proving she was pregnant with a child who was, at this point, younger than 14 years of age and therefore qualified for the promotion.
Instead of half-price tickets and $1 hot dogs, perhaps the Reds should offer fans free psychiatric treatment.
Thursday, August 03, 2006
Bargain baseball
Which begs the question: Are there any teams in a comparable position that feel they need to sell 1/2 price tickets to encourage fans to attend games?
Anyway, here's the Reds' latest offer. Take it or leave it.
The Reds are offering tickets for half price in 10 seating locations for games Monday, Tuesday and Thursday against the Cardinals at Great American Ball Park. The offer doesn't include Dave Concepcion bobblehead night on Wednesday.
In addition, during that entire four-game series against St. Louis, fans can purchase hot dogs for just one dollar.
Half-price tickets for the Cardinals series can be purchased at Great American Ball Park ticket windows or online at www.reds.com.
Now, if they'd just add a fifth starter, trade to get Austin Kearns and Felipe Lopez back, put Edwin Encarnacion in the lineup everyday, dump Royce Clayton ... is there anything else?
Wednesday, August 02, 2006
Tempting
The Anchorage Daily News, Alaska’s largest newspaper, is looking for an energetic sports writer to help cover a broad sports scene that ranges from hockey and basketball to dog mushing and mountain running.
I'm sure it's a lot cooler in Anchorage. But, I hear dog mushing is a tough beat.
Tuesday, August 01, 2006
Remember him?
Larson is batting .259 with 16 home runs and 55 RBI for the Zephyrs, the Triple-A affiliate of the Washington Nationals.
Guardado: Lohse will be ok
“I know he’s been bumping heads with (Twins manager Ron Gardenhire),” Guardado said. “When things aren’t going your way and you’re bumping heads with certain people, especially the manager, it’s difficult to pitch. You feel like the world’s against you. I’ve been there.”
Lohse was 2-5 with a 7.07 ERA for the Twins. He lost his starting role earlier this season. Guardado said he spoke with Lohse following the trade and was encouraged by the discussion.
“I think he’s got great stuff,” said Guardado. “He's a pitcher who's going to be around for awhile. He ran into little bumps in the road this year.”
UPDATE: Lohse allowed one run on four hits in one inning pitched tonight in his Reds debut. He also had one strikeout. Lohse will start against the Braves on Saturday in lieu of Brandon Claussen.
Attendance ... again
I particularly liked the comment from the 22-year old fan who said the recent heat wave discouraged him from going to Reds games. Of course, the cost of parking, beer and concessions continues to be a problem.
(sigh)
Reds games rank in the top ten "least" expensive in baseball. We can only hope that the weather cools off so people will feel safe venturing out of their homes.
I weep for this town.
http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060801/SPT04/608010399/1071
Monday, July 31, 2006
Brandon Claussen
The obligatory "change of scenery"
Those words might also apply to another former Twin, Kyle Lohse, who was dealt to the Reds today.
Lohse is just 2-5 with a 7.07 ERA. He has pitched better since the Twins shipped him to the bullpen, but he wasn't pleased with the move.
A source close to the Twins told me the 27-year old's struggles are mostly mental and not physical. Most scouts agree he has quality stuff.
When I mentioned the Reds have a solid clubhouse and that might help Lohse adjust, the source said the Twins clubhouse was a pretty good one too and it didn't work out.
Lohse wants to be a starting pitcher. Jerry Narron says that possibility might be dependent on Brandon Claussen's performance tonight. The Reds need a starter for Saturday.
Lohse has some ability. You've got to figure the Reds are hoping he can crack the starting rotation. The bullpen is about as deep as it can get.
Not sure about this one ...
In 172 appearances, including 152 starts, Lohse has gone 51-57 with a 4.88 ERA. He averaged 188 innings from 2002 through 2005.
Lohse was 2-5 with a 7.07 ERA in eight starts and 14 relief appearances for the Twins this season.
The 22-year old Ward, a third-round draft choice, was 7-0 with a 2.29 ERA in 18 starts and two relief appearances at Single-A Dayton.
Stay tuned.
Sean Casey to first-place Tigers
The last-place Pirates dealt the former Reds first baseman to the red-hot Tigers moments ago.
Detroit owns the best record in baseball. If this keeps up, Casey could be on his way to the World Series.
Let me be among the first to offer Casey my congratulations. This is a well-deserved opportunity for one of the game's true gentlemen.
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=2535130
Just as I was about to ...
They've acquired left-handed reliever Rheal Cormier from the Phillies in exchange for Justin Germano.
They've also agreed to a one-year contract extension with Cormier through the 2007 season, with a club option for 2008.
Brandon Watson was optioned to Triple-A Louisville to make room for Cormier who is 2-2 with a 1.59 ERA in 43 appearances this season. He owns the lowest ERA among NL relievers.
There is a 4:30 p.m. press conference scheduled to discuss the deal for Cormier and ... ?
Watson moving up
In seven games with the Mustangs, including four starts, Watson went 0-0 with a 1.52 ERA in 23 2/3 innings of work. He struck out 19 and walked five while limiting the opposition to a .190 batting average.
Watson ranked second all-time in saves at the University of Tennessee.
In other news, top pitching prospect Travis Wood has been placed on the DL with a left ankle sprain suffered in his last appearance.
Sunday, July 30, 2006
Men at work
Chris Henry arrived sans dreadlocks perhaps hoping to shed his legal troubles just as easily.
Odell Thurman was a no-show with head coach Marvin Lewis hinting that he might be lost for the season.
Carson Palmer emerged from the locker room amid cheers and chants of "Carson-Palmer" at the urging of Willie Anderson.
And, the first act of the Chad Johnson Show went off without a hitch. That is, if you chose to ignore Johnson's mohawk hairdo and bright orange pants and shoes.
Sam Adams is as big as advertised. The Bengals hope they're as good as most pundits expect them to be.
A crowd estimated at 4,200 greeted the Bengals at Georgetown College.
Of course, Palmer's rehab saga will be the running story of camp. While Lewis remains mum on the QB's progress, Palmer was more forthright.
"I have confidence in my knee as far as running with it and cutting," he said. "As far as getting hit, I don't think I'm ready for that. I don't think my knee's ready for that. I'm looking forward to getting back in there and getting bumped around. Just to get rid of any jitters."
Palmer said he appreciates all of the cards and get-well wishes he's received.
"It's been unbelievable," he said. "Elementary schools, entire junior highs. It's been funny to see the drawings on the get-well cards. I've got pictures of me lying on the field with my leg all crooked."
Friday, July 28, 2006
The Worldwide Mis-Leader
http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060728/SPT0401/607280397/1072/SPT
Good stuff.
Thursday, July 27, 2006
Steady Eddie
The Reds were struggling to find a pitcher capable of being a dependable back-end of the bullpen guy. So, they acquired the left-handed Guardado from Seattle in exchange for a minor leaguer and cash.
In his first 7 appearances with the Reds, Guardado posted a 1.35 ERA and had five saves.
“That’s me, the problem solver,” Guardado said last week with a laugh.
After being slowed by forearm stiffness, Guardado returned tonight to toss a scoreless ninth inning in the Reds' 8-4 victory in Houston.
After spending 11 seasons in Minnesota, where he led the majors with 45 saves in 2002, Steady Eddie was dealt to the Mariners. He posted 59 saves in three seasons with the Mariners before being shipped to Cincinnati.
“The deal for Eddie really set our bullpen up,” said Reds manager Jerry Narron. “He’s an experienced guy. He knows how to close games out.”
The acquisition of Guardado added a veteran arm to the Reds’ bullpen and a positive influence to the clubhouse.
“I’ve been doing this a long time,” said the gentlemanly Guardado. “I was struggling with Seattle. When you come to a team that wants you, your confidence is boosted up. You want to prove to (your new team) that you can still pitch.”
Sunday, July 23, 2006
Bengals blotter
Cincinnati police report that Askew has been charged with obstruction and resisting arrest after being approached for a parking violation at around 8 p.m. Saturday on Beekman Street in South Cumminsville.
The 24-year old Askew reportedly was tased and arrested after he refused to comply and attempted to flee the officers.
When will it end?
Highlight Freel
He hit two home runs, including the eight-inning game-clincher, and made a couple of nice catches in the outfield. But, the most lasting image of Freel will likely be of him retrieving a baseball from within his uniform shirt after being hit by a pitch.
The soon-to-be baseball blooper occured when Freel was struck by a pitch and the ball somehow snuck inside his shirt sleeve before coming to rest at his waist. As Freel walked to first base, he looked like he was giving birth to rawhide.
"It was weird," Freel said. "All of sudden I felt this ball. I thought it was my dip can."
Saturday, July 22, 2006
Cubs free Willy
Williamson was 2-2 with a 5.08 ERA in 28 1/3 innings for the fifth-place Cubs.
Nothing earth-shattering here, but Willy was a media favorite during his tenure with the Reds.
I'm sure he's pleased to be pitching for the first-place Padres and free from the mess in Chicago.
Injury free - knock, knock
Reds GM Wayne Krivsky likes the number he’s seen so far this season – zero.
“Knock on wood, we haven’t had a surgery in the minor leagues on a pitcher,” Krivsky said prior to tonight's game. “We’re doing something right there. That was the concern coming in, the number of injuries we’ve had in recent years.”
Krivsky discussed the improvements made in the Reds' farm system for next week's Downtowner Newspaper column.
Although wins often take a back seat to player development, the two often go hand in hand.
Through 450 games, the Reds' minor league affiliates have gone 233-217 with three clubs (Triple-A Louisville, Double-A Chattanooga and Rookie League Billings) residing in first place.
Friday, July 21, 2006
There's no escape
But, they had cold Balashi beer on tap, great island music and baseball on TV. As I'm sipping my Balashi and jamming to the Carribean sounds, a familiar voice catches my ear - George Grande.
Couldn't be, I thought. Could it?
Yep. As it turns out, the bar had a satellite dish and, by pure coincidence, had chosen to show the FSN Ohio feed of the Reds/Mets game.
In a random watering hole, on an island nearly 2,000 miles from home and just 15 miles off the coast of Venezuela, I hear, "It's going to stay in the park".
The next time you choose to poke fun at Grande and Welsh, please stop to consider the worldly reach of these two international icons.
Thursday, July 13, 2006
Get-away day
I asked my editor if he wanted a re-write, knowing for sure he would. I scurried out of the house, laptop bag in tow, and raced 20 minutes to the ballpark arriving just as Austin Kearns and Felipe Lopez were completing their final remarks as members of the Reds.
I wrote and recorded comments from Reds GM Wayne Krivsky and manager Jerry Narron and headed to the press box to rewrite my column. What a day.
Anyway, Krivsky's take is that bullpen help is difficult to find and costly but it's what the Reds need to contend. So, he "gulped" and made the deal while paying an admittedly steep price.
Gotta figure a move to fortify the starting rotation is in the offing.
Quote of the day:
“I gulped a lot (when agreeing to the trade),” Krivsky said. “I know there are a lot of people leaving angry messages. Other people will think the trade's great. There will probably be polls. Cincinnati leads the nation in polls.”
On that note, I'm packing for Aruba. I'll keep abreast of things from a distance. An aqua-blue watered, sandy-beached, paradise of a distance.
Gary Majewski

Majewski, 26, pitched for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic. He posted a 2.93 ERA in a team-leading 79 appearances for the Nationals last season. He is 3-2 with a 3.58 ERA and 5 saves this season. The right-hander's tied for fifth in the major leagues with 46 games pitched. He'll join the Reds on Friday.
Bill Bray
Royce Clayton
Daryl Thompson

The 20-year old right-hander is recovering from surgery performed by Reds medical director Dr. Timothy Kremchek. Ranked as the 10th-best prospect in the Nationals farm system. Krivsky likened Thompson's makeup and style to former big-league hurler Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd. Will begin Reds career with GCL Sarasota.
Brendan Harris
The Big Bopper
But, had May not been traded, the Reds might never have emerged as baseball's juggernaut in the 70's.
On November 29, 1971, May was dealt to the Astros in exchange for future Hall of Famer Joe Morgan, and other Big Red Machine stalwarts Jack Billingham, Cesar Geronimo, Ed Armbrister and Denis Menke.
During an interview yesterday at the Reds Hall of Fame for my weekly column, May spoke of the trade and what might have been:
"I have no animosity toward the Reds, they started me on my way," he said. "We had an abundance of power. That was the thing to do, go down and get some speed. And, they got Joe Morgan."
May also offered another theory about the trade, which resulted in moving his good friend Tony Perez back to first base:
"I always told Tony, 'the reason they traded me was to get you off third base', you were horrible over there'," May said laughing.
May hit .274 with 147 home runs and 449 RBI in seven seasons with the Reds.
Wednesday, July 12, 2006
The stretch run
1) Once the Yankees and Red Sox are through battering each other, the Blue Jays will emerge as AL East champs.
2) The Astros are one solid offensive acquisition away from winning the NL Central. They nabbed Aubrey Huff from the Devil Rays today. They're not done dealing.
3) Unfortunately, it'll take more than just one starting pitcher to put the Reds into the playoffs.
4) Not going out on a limb to say the Braves' postseason run has finally come to an end. Perhaps the Yankees' as well.
5) Dusty Baker won't finish the season as Cubs manager.
6) The Dodgers win the NL Wild Card; the White Sox earn that distinction in the AL.
7) Both the NL and AL West Division titles will be decided on the season's final day.
8) The Reds will fail in their bid to snare the All-Star Game. The recently-expanded convention center still falls short of adequate capacity. And, getting city leaders on the same page to effectively promote such an effort would be futile.
9) Homer Bailey will pitch for the Reds this season.
10) The Tigers win the World Series to complete one of the great turnarounds in baseball history.
Pasa un bon dia!
Monday, July 10, 2006
PNC Park's a gem
For the next 24 hours, PNC Park will be home to the stars. It boasts one of the best city views of any big-league park. My only criticism is of a professional nature - I think you can see West Virginia from the press box.
The ballparks I've visited and my impressions (in no particular order):
1) Wrigley Field - no less great than the neighborhood which surrounds it.
2) Fenway Park - claustrophobic charm.
3) Yankee Stadium - Ruth's house is awe-inspiring.
4) Camden Yards - favorite of the new era.
5) PNC Park - love it.
6) Comerica Park - Like PNC, it has charm. Unlike PNC, it now has a good team.
7) AT&T Park - the Bay setting is beautiful, but please stop changing its name.
8) Busch Stadium - every home game's a holiday in St. Louis - not just Opening Day.
9) Veteran's Stadium - where I had my first-ever $6 beer. Seems so long ago.
10) Jacobs Field - It's in Cleveland. Can I still admit I like it?
11) Great American Ball Park - Would be much better without mascots, cheerleaders and a scoreboard that tells fans when to cheer. Best "natural" view.
12) Coors Field - surrounding neighborhood rivals Wrigleyville. Great mountain views.
13) Tropicana Field - is that artifical turf, or shag carpeting?
14) Metrodome - glad they're getting a new one. Is it too late to reconsider a roof?
15) Miller Park - like it's predecessor, County Stadium, a beer drinker's paradise.
16) Riverfront Stadium/Cinergy Field - without the Big Red Machine; dormant.
17) Skydome - lids on the beer to prevent spills. Ultra polite. Oh Canada!
18) Old Comiskey - like its South Side roots - rustic, rough.
19) New Comiskey - much better post-renovations.
20) Safeco Field - one of baseball's most underrated ballparks. I was pleasantly surprised.
My excuse for ...
Hall of Fame fodder
The former Reds pitcher, who tossed the only perfect game in club history on September 16, 1988, will be afforded yet another opportunity to relive that rare achievement this weekend when he is inducted into the Reds Hall of Fame along with Lee May and Tom Seaver.
Festivities begin at 4 p.m. on Wednesday at the Reds Hall of Fame with the unveiling of the plaques for each of the inductees. Browning and May are expected to attend.
The Reds Hall of Fame will host a "meet and greet" with fans from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday and 10 a.m. to noon on Sunday. Several Reds HOF members will be on hand to pose for photographs. But, the press release says they will not be signing autographs.
Browning, May and Seaver will be officially enshrined into the Reds Hall of Fame in a pre-game ceremony prior to Sunday's game.
Festivities conclude with a gala at the Hyatt Regency downtown at 6 p.m. on Sunday.
Friday, July 07, 2006
It's never too early - Part II
From our pals at Deadspin:
http://www.deadspin.com/sports/nfl/the-ballad-of-the-bengals-fan-185477.php
Sunday, July 02, 2006
Embargo lifted ... Bronson lone Red
At around 3:30 p.m., the official All-Star rosters are released to the media with the stern directive that the information not be made public via radio, TV, print or the internet prior to 8 p.m.
The reason?
The All-Star rosters are released early so reporters can get reaction from the All-Star players following their respective games in time to meet deadline for that day.
The info is protected so that it can be released officially during ESPN's selection show at 7 p.m.
No one was surprised that Bronson Arroyo was named to the NL squad. Brandon Phillips and David Ross were deserving omissions. Ken Griffey Jr. fell just shy in the fan vote.
Saturday, July 01, 2006
This one belongs to Marty
http://700wlw.com/timages/page/media/Dunngamewinninggrandslam.mp3
From the Elias Sports Bureau ...
Dunn’s grand slam capped Cincinnati’s comeback from a 7-0 deficit in the eighth inning. The Reds were the first team to win a game after trailing by seven-or-more runs in the eighth inning or later since the Marlins rallied from a 9-2 deficit in the eighth inning to beat the Red Sox in Boston, 10-9, on June 28, 2003. It was only the third such win in Reds franchise history. The others were in 1951 against the Braves in Boston and in 1995 against the Mets in Cincinnati.
It's Dunn already
"I don't go by numbers," said Dunn following Friday night's miracle win. "I go by how I feel and if I'm giving good at-bats. The first couple of months I didn't do that. The past three or four weeks I've been feeling pretty good."
Reds Manager Jerry Narron had this to say:
"I don't understand all of the complaints. I mentioned to him in Cleveland that he had more RBI and home runs than he did at this point a year ago. I don't think he'd heard that from anybody."
If you're looking for Dunn to defend himself, think again. It's not his nature. Last night, he said his walk-0ff slam ranked second to one he hit in Little League. His demeanor is the same whether he's delivering a walk-off win or striking out three times.
What you see is what you get with Dunn. And, on Friday night, what you got from him was the most thrilling victory of the season and a tie for first place.