Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Steeler games, swimming pools, movie stars

According to the Richmond Times, two men have pled guilty in a tax evasion scheme.

Why would they not pay nearly $600,000 in taxes? Because:
According to the charges, they evaded paying nearly $600,000 in taxes and used the money to finance a lavish lifestyle, including rental of expensive beach homes, trips to Pittsburgh Steelers football games and the purchase of fine wines and cigars.
That's right, the next edition of the Robb Report will have ads for Steeler tix right next to mansions, beach houses and airplanes.

Blogging Bucs vs Yankees 6/25


vs.

Top of 1st
-We on with Yankee announcers Michael Kay and Ken Singleton. Kay is almost as annoying as Yankee radio guy John Sterling - two blowhards. Singleton isn't bad at all though.
-No Franco, Wannstedt or McClatchy tonight. Instead we get treated to Mayor Lukey in the front row.
No other celebs are spotted except for a Tom Murphy lookalike sitting where Franco was last night.
-Tough play by Wilson and he doesn't get Abreu. And a walk to ARod loads the bases.
-Duke looks like the scarecrow trying to reach for Wilson's relay to first on a potential double play ball and it costs the Bucs 2 runs. If Duke can move 6 inches, the inning is over and no runs score.
2-0 Yankees
Bottom of 1st
-Nothing much happens 1-2-3. Crowd seems quieter tonight than last night.

Top of 2nd Inning

-what is it with Yankee pitchers at the plate? Duke walks Chamberlain with 2 outs after Gorzo walked Rasner twice last night. Three walks to pitchers who don't hit is almost impossible to do. Duke gets Cabrera to ground out to third and Bautista makes Chamberlain run to second, maybe that will take a little out of him. Or maybe not.
2-0 Yankees

Bottom of 2nd
-Yankee announcers continue to praise PNC Park, Michael Kay says it is a perfect postcard for the city.
-Doumit singles and Bay follows with a pop up down th RF line that Abreu can't catch. He looks like the Tin Man trying to run. Not sure if he looks worse than Duke but we already have 2/3 of the Wizard of Oz rejects and we're only in the 2nd.
-LaRoche does nothing with runners on AGAIN and strikes out meekly. Time for Joey Bats...
-Who proceeds to meekly pop out to LF. At least he made contact but this inning started with promise is looking like a dud. Why no X-Man tonight? Word was he would be in the lineup. We'll have to follow up on any updates.
-JackW in the spot that makes it so tough for a #8 hitter - 2 outs and the pitcher on deck. It would be easy to pitch around him to get out of the inning. But JackW singles to right and for who knows why, Doumit is waved home, where Abreu promptly throws him out by 45 feet. Seriously, he wasn't even in the TV picture when Posada caught the ball. I know there were 2 outs with the pitcher coming up so maybe you take a chance; but against Abreu who has a gun and with slow footed Abreu? Very questionable.
2-0 Yankees

Top of 3rd
-JackW has had some shall we say interesting plays tonight. He had 3 in the first, including an error that I don't think you can blame him on on the potential DP, and a tough one on Abreu's grounder. And he ended the inning with a great stab and glove flip to Sanchez at 2nd to end it. Now he throws away Jeter's grounder after he fields the ball behind 2nd and spins. Not sure why he spins but Jeter is on 2nd base.
-Another reason to not waive Doumit: the pitcher will lead off the 3rd. If you hold Doumit, no matter what you've bypassed the pitcher in the next inning.
-Abreu does what LaRoche couldn't and grounds out but moves the runners up a base. If LaRoche had doen just that, the Bucs would have at least 1 run.
-ARod makes like Jory Bats and pops up in the infield, Jeter can't score from 3rd.
-Newly pornstached Giambi is up. I think the Stache is coming back in but it's still weird to see and Giambi's seems extra thick and bends down around the corners of his mouth. Joey Bats is playing Giambi at SS, Jeter can basically take a lead 2/3 of the way home. He could easily steal hime.
-Bautista moves over a bit and Giambi bloops one in front of a diving Morgan in RF; 3-0.
-This looks a lot like last night's game but tonight the Yankees are getting the bloops at the right time and the Bucs are giving away outs.
-Giambi runs and Posada singles on Duke's 53rd pitch. 1st & 3rd 2 outs. Duke needs to get Cano or this could turn ugly quick.
-Last night with RISP: Yankees were 2-11. Tonight they are 2-5.
-Luckily, Cano swings at pitch #54 and grounds out to Sanchez.
3-0 Yankees

Bottom of 3rd
-Duke leads off because Beasley sacrificed Doumit to end last inning for some reason. Will Chamberlain return the favor and walk Duke? He does average 5 walks per 9 innings - not good. Duke had him at 3-0 but then takes two and seings through the 3rd for a K.
-Morgan makes Chamberlain work but winds up hitting the ball 2 feet and is thrown out by Posada.
Just to fill you in on the pregame news: the Bucs made a trade today to acquire a relief pitcher from Detroit. Nothing major but maybe we won't see Osoria in any keyspots anymore. Also, there are more moves to be announced after the game - they need a starter for Friday and maybe Saturday and the new player is not an option. Here's the news from the Trib:
Making another low-risk move for a player with potentially high upside, the Pirates today traded for hard-throwing right-hander Denny Bautista.

To complete the deal, minor league reliever Kyle Pearson was sent to the Detroit Tigers.

To clear space on the 40-man roster, outfielder Kevin Thompson was given his unconditional release from Triple-A Indianapolis. Tuesday, Thompson had season-ending hand surgery.

When Bautista joins the team today, the Pirates will make a move on their 25-man roster, likely sending righty T.J. Beam back to Indy.

-Kay just calls Sanchez the most unknown batting champion of all time. We can't believe that's true. Looking it up, we found a few who we think were less well known: Ralph Garr of the Braves in 1974, Phil Cavaretta of the Cubs in 1945 (a War year), Debs Garms of your Buccos in 1940 (who is the least well known of the Pirate batting champs - and the Bucs have more of them than any other team.), and Heinie Zimmerman of the Cubs in 1912. For all we knos, Heinie may have been the Manny Ramirez of his era, but today? Not so much. So there are a few but what strikes us is that batting champs are generally pretty well known good players. We thought there would be more guys who we hadn't heard of.
-anyway, Freddy grounds out.
3-0 Yankees

Top of 4th
-Sister Christian, in his 2nd MLB game, lays down a nice bunt that Joey Bats can't field.
-For some reason Girardi doesn't let Duke walk Chamberlain and orders him to bunt, which he does well. Christian to 2nd.
-Cabrera flies out to center.
-YES Networks shows some old clips of Yankee first base coach Tony Pena. Seeing him in his crouch with his leg stretched out brings back many memories. Of mostly bad teams from 1980-86. His trade to St Louis on April 1, 1997 was stunning because he was beloved and really the only good Pirate, unless you think Joe Orsulak was good. But it paved the way for the Division Titles of the early 90s: bringing back Van Slyke and Lavalierre as well as pitcher Mike Dunne.
-2 outs and again, tonight isn't like last night: Jeter doubles off the base of the left center field wall and Christian scores. Jeter is 3-3 and has hit the ball real hard.
4-0.
-Sanchez throws out Abreu on a close play at 1st. Inning over but this game is decidedly different than last night. The Bucs better get the bats swinging soon.

4-0 Yankees

Bottom of 4th
-Make that 25 batting champions since 1900 for the Bucs, once every 4 years or so. Pretty impressive. Maybe not as impressive as the Yankees 26 World Series, but it's something to work with.
-Batting in the 3 hole tonight, McLouth grounds out.
-Trying to shake things up, Doumit ground a liner right off Chamberlain. But he doesn't appear to be hurt and throws him out. It was worth a shot.
-Bay grounds out. Yuck.
4-0 Yankees

Top of 5th
-Duke gets the Yanks 1-2-3.
-We had to get some food so were listening to the radio broadcast. Susan Waldman says "you could get mesmerized by this view" Sterling follows with his usual understated way: "I was just thinking that. It's overwhelming." then they were quiet for 2 minutes.

4-0 Yankees

Bottom of 5th
-LaRoche strikes out meekly on a ball in the dirt.
-Bautista walks.
-JackW is up with Duke on deck but a PH likely if Wilson does anything. Maybe if he doesn't. He takes one for the team and saunters to first.
-Rivas to PH for Duke. Like all but one of his previous PH appearances, Rivas makes an out. At least it's not 2, but he's now 1-14 as a PH.
-Morgan swings at 3 bad pitches to strike out. Maybe they should ahve PH for Nyjer too. Chamberlain has thrown 87 pitches through 5. No pitch count on him tonight.

4-0 Yankees

Top of 6th
-TJ Beam in on the hill.
-Paul Meyer at pg.com is blogging this as well. He feeds us this gem from Elias:
The always-working Elias Sports Bureau researched this gem about Yankee pitcher Darrell Rasner walking in his first two plate appearances Tuesday night. Rasner became the first pitcher to walk in his first two plate appearances since Baltimore's Mickey Scott in 1972 -- the season before the designated hitter rule went into effect.
-Cano beams one right out of the park; 5-0. No wonder that Beam is the guy who will likely be sent down when a starter for Friday is called up.
-Christian makes out.
-Chamberlain hits and lines out to Morgan; 2 outs.
-Cabrera walks.
-Mr. 3-3 Jeter is up. Lookout. Walk. Beam is on the edge of implosion here.
-Beam went right off the edge and into the fire - Abreu goes deep; 8-0. Bye bye TJ, your time up here was not so sweet.
-Russell keeps him in and ARod greets him with a basehit. This isn't Bronson Arroyo bad but Beam is not leaving a good impression.
-Giambi grounds out 4-1. It's over.

Yankees 8-0

Bottom of 6th
-Kay and Singleton note that the Bucs 25 batting titles have been won by 11 different players. Including one in 1966 when Matty Alou finished first and his brother Jesus was 2nd. Honus Wagner won 7 and Clemente 4, Parker 2, Madlock 2.
--Two fly outs and a double by Doumit.
-Bay leaves with more groin tightness and Michaels K's.

Yankees 8-0

Top of 7th
-Doumit for All-Star? Not going to happen but he his hitting .350, tops by far among catchers and so is his .636 slugging. His 10 HRs are 3rd most. McCann, Martin and maybe Molina are having as good or better years. Soto is doing well too. But you could argue that Doumit has been the 2nd most productive catcher in the NL behind McCann. He just hasn't played enough.
-Burnett is in and he gives up a hit to Cano but gets Christian to ground into a nicely turned DP, 6-4-3.
-Time to stretch, or pour another drink if you're a Bucs fan and still sitting through this.

Yankees 8-0

Bottom of 7th
-LaRoche is just horrible, grounding out the first meekly. Everything is meek with him. He had 3 hits yesterday, maybe starting something, but then looks horrible tonight.
-If anyone can look worse than LaRoche, Bautista just did on about as ugly a swing as you will see in striking out.
-JackW singles. Bucs have 5 hits tonight. They had 19 last night. It always seems to go that way.
-Mientkiewicz is the PH and the Yankee announcers talk about how much he wants to get back to the Yankees. He wants to win these three games but that the Yankees belong n the playoffs. So much for his great attitude, the Bucs don't need this guy, let him try to hook on again with the pinstripers. He singles anyway, moving JackW to 2nd and Chamberlain to the showers.
-Morgan K's.
-The Bucs have only been shutout once this year, fewet in the majors I believe. They have 6 outs to keep it at 1.

Yankees 8-0

Top of 8th
-Osoria is on!! This could get real ugly. Balls will be hit hard.
-Betemit singles.
-Cabrera singles. Betemit to 2nd. Seriously that just happened on 2 pitches; 2 hard hit balls.
-At least Jeter is done for the night. Some Gonzalez is hitting for him. McLouth runs down a ripper in the gap, 1 out.
-Abreu doubles; 9-0. The over/under of runs for this inning was 4 at the beginning and has gone up.
-an out!
-LaRoche snares the hardest hit ball of the inning for the 3rd out. The pitcher hit it. Yikes.

Yankees 9-0

Bottom of 8th
-Two quick outs from Sanchez and McLouth.
-Doumit hacks away but K's.
-3 more outs to avoid a shutout.

Yankees 9-0

Top of 9th
-Grabow is in for some reason. It's not as if he hasn't had work recently.
-He walks Posada.
-Cano singles, he has 3 hits.
-Basically, the Yankees are doing what the Pirates did last night, maybe even a little moreso since the Bucs haven't really mounted a threat.
-Grabow walks Christian. Again, why is Grabow in this game?
-Interesting DP: grounder to Bautista who steps on 3rd for teh force then throws home to get Posada, who was obviously running half speed either thinking Bautista would go to first or that it didn't matter in a 9-0 game.
-Cabrera singles home Christian; 10-0. Grabow hasn't pitched in 4 days and it shows.
-Little pop is the 3rd out.

Yankees 10-0

Bottom of 9th
-LET'S GET SOME RUNS!!!!
-had to do it.
-Michaels singles to keep the hope alive.
-but LaRoche is up. And of course he K's. Can we throw him in the river now?
-Attendance of 38,952. That tops last night so is now the third highest ever at PNC.
-Bautista flies out.
-JackW keeps the flame burning with a single.
-First and second, two outs and the PH will be.... Raul Chavez! And he flies out.
-That's the Yankees 6th shutout of the year and the 2nd time the Bucs have been blanked.

That was about as much fun as a hammer to my big toe.

Tomorrow is the rubber match: Mussina vs Maholm.

Let's update the ALL IMPORTANT STANDINGS (up to the minute including the Mets game tonight but not the Tigers game, which is still in progress):
Yankees 42-36 - $209M
Mets 38-39 3.5 $138M
Pirates 37-41 5.0 $49M
Tigers 36-40 5.0 $139M

Bucs Win; Up Record vs to 5-13 All-Time vs Yankees


vs.

1927: Bucs go 0-4 vs Yankees in World Series
1960: Bucs go 4-3 vs Yankees in World Series
2005: Bucs go 0-3 vs Yanks in Yankee Stadium
2007: Bucs go 0-3 vs Yanks again in Yankee Stadium
2008: Bucs are 1-0 vs Yanks at PNC Park

That makes them 5-13 vs the Yankees All-Time In Games That Matter (or don't include old comedians batting leadoff).

Where to rank last night's win? It was a great performance by the Bucs offense and Gorzo lucked into a couple DP's and got out of self-made trouble early. And Osoria's damage was forgotten 5 minutes after the game by everyone except Damaso Marte.

But let's not get too excited here: last night's win stands as the 5th all-time greatest Pirate win vs the Yankees. Out of 5. A game in June pales in importance to any game in October and so even though the crowd was the 3rd largest in PNC Park history and the Bucs cruised, let's remember that there is still a long way to go until the Bucs play in one of those October games.

Still, before we get too far, let's take a look at the ALL-IMPORTANT STANDINGS as of this morning:
Yankees 41-36 - $209M
Mets 37-39 3.5 $138M
Pirates 37-40 4.0 $49M
Tigers 36-40 4.5 $139M

Some things I found interesting:
  • In all the runup to the series, much time has been spent on the 1960 World Series (none on the '27 series BTW), and it shed a light on another of the many astounding facts and tidbits that made Game 7 of th '60 Series the greatest World Series game, and maybe the greatest baseball game, ever played:
    There was not a single strikeout in Game 7, the only time that has happened in 601 World Series games.
  • Spotted behind home plate: Dave Wannstedt in a rependant salmon colored shirt. Dave stayed through the whole game. I think if you're sitting in the first row and are a somewhat celebrity, you pretty much have to stay the whole game no matter what.
  • Kevin McClatchy!! Sitting next to Franco! After years of trying to get the Yankees to visit Pittsburgh instead of the absurdity of the Bucs visiting the Bronx, Kevin was seen enjoying the game.
  • With Franco sitting with McClatchy and Maz throwing out the first pitch, the authors of the two greatest plays/moments in Pittsburgh sports history were in attendance. I'm sure they've been in the same place before, but this wasn't an autograph signing at the Monroeville Mall.
  • Meaningful baseball in September & October in PNc Park would be a lot of fun.


  • Last night wasn't the night to get suicidal. The Bucs won! There were a lot of Yankee fans in town though, so maybe he was a pinstriper.
  • I wish I could argue with the writer of this, but 15 years of losing means you have to take whatever they throw at you. Really all I can say is that this guy has to tell people he works for the New York Post:

    They have done what was required against the dregs of Bud Selig's world, taking seven of nine from the awful Astros, putrid Padres and rancid Reds.

    And while the pitiful Pirates are on the docket for the next three games beginning tonight in Pittsburgh.

Friday, June 20, 2008

The World's Greatest Athlete? WSJ says Sid's #6

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121392004594090355.html?mod=todays_us_weekend_journal

With the Olympic Games approaching, The Wall Street Journal set out to answer this parlor-game question: If Earth had to send one man to the Intergalactic Olympics, who should go?
WSJ reporter Reed Albergotti visits with decathlete Bryan Clay to see how a mere working stiff measures up to what some consider the best all-around athlete.

Identifying the world's greatest male athlete turned out to be easy to argue but difficult to answer empirically. No matter how impressive, world-class athletes mostly excel at single tasks. Olympic gold medal weightlifter Hossein Reza Zadeh can, in two quick motions, lift 580 pounds over his head, the equivalent of a year-old heifer. Marathon world record holder Haile Gebrselassie can run a mile in an astonishing four minutes, 45 seconds, and repeat the performance 26 times in a row. Put either man on a tennis court or pitch them a 95-mile-per-hour fastball and they might whiff as badly as any weekend hacker.

Sports physiologists don't have a system to rank all athletes. University of Texas exercise physiologist Ed Coyle said doctoral students have tried in the past "only to have their professors shut them down after months of continuous work."

The Journal sought to identify the world's greatest athlete with an approach that, while not completely scientific, took a number of measures into account. A panel of five sports scientists and exercise physiologists was given a list drawn up by the Journal of 79 male athletes. Candidates had to be active in their sport and among the all-time best. (Women will be featured separately in a future article.)

The panel weighed individual performance stats, along with their subjective judgments about the relative difficulty of each sport, to give an overall grade to the athletes. (See "How We Did It" for details.) The judges graded athletes on speed, reflexes, stamina, coordination, as well as power, strength and size. The finalists, they said, exhibited a wide range of athletic skill in highly competitive environments.

There were some surprises. Tiger Woods, a dominant figure in professional sports, didn't crack the Top 10. Panelists said they didn't give golfers much weight when assessing overall athletic ability. Michael Phelps, one of the greatest U.S. swimmers of all time, also missed the top tier because, the judges said, swimmers generally don't perform well out of the water. Such endurance athletes as marathoners and Tour de France cyclists also failed to impress. Too one-dimensional, the panel said.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Trib: Malone to test free agency

Rob Rossi of the Trib reports Malone will not sign with anyone until  after July 1:
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/s_573270.html

Left wing Ryan Malone said Tuesday he plans to opt for free agency -- a significant blow to the Penguins' chances of trading him for a pick in this weekend's NHL Entry Draft.

"We will not talk to anyone until July 1," said Malone, who will become an unrestricted free agent on that date.

Talks between Malone's camp and the Penguins hit a wall last week, and the Pittsburgh-born Malone is warming to the possibility of continuing his NHL career outside of his hometown.

Penguins officials, including general manager Ray Shero, are currently preparing for the NHL Draft Friday and Saturday in Ottawa. Those preparations include conversations with several clubs about acquiring early-round picks.

Shero is not commenting on off-season dealings.

The Penguins do not pick until the fourth round. Their first-round pick was included in the package sent to the Atlanta Thrashers on Feb. 26 for right wing Marian Hossa and forward Pascal Dupuis. The acquisition that day of defenseman Hal Gill from the Toronto Maple Leafs cost the Penguins their second-round pick. And their third-round choice was shipped to the Florida Panthers on Feb. 27, 2007, as part of a deal for right wing Georges Laraque, also set to become an unrestricted free agent.

The Penguins had hoped Malone could net them a needed early-round draft choice, perhaps from the Columbus Blue Jackets, who are known to have serious interest. The Columbus Dispatch reported Tuesday the Blue Jackets could strike a deal with the Penguins to acquire Malone's rights for possibly a second- or third-round draft pick.

Those plans now appear to be dashed because the Blue Jackets will not deal a draft pick to the Penguins unless Malone provides a guarantee he will sign with Columbus.

The Dispatch reported that the Jackets are willing to offer Malone a four- or five-year deal worth at least $4.5 million annually. The Penguins are not willing to go much beyond $3 million annually for Malone, who posted a career-best 27 goals and 51 points during the regular season.