Hereās a mildly interesting slideshow of Strange but true Cubs injuries in recent history.
ā¦brought to by none other than KPLR-11 TV based in, you guess it, St Louis.
The timing is impeccable.
Looking at the Game of Baseball from all ends of the Spectrum
Hereās a mildly interesting slideshow of Strange but true Cubs injuries in recent history.
ā¦brought to by none other than KPLR-11 TV based in, you guess it, St Louis.
The timing is impeccable.
With the upcoming Chicago St Louis series almost upon us, letās take a look at how Albert Pujols has done against the Cubs.
As it is, Pujols has played pretty much the equivalent of a near-full season against Chicago. He has 503 at-bats and 590 plate appearances versus the good guys.
G | AB | R | H | 2B | 3B | HR | RBI | SB | CS | BB | SO | BA | OBP | SLG | OPS |
138 | 503 | 92 | 147 | 25 | 1 | 39 | 104 | 6 | 4 | 72 | 59 | .292 | .385 | .579 | .963 |
A pretty solid āyearā Iād say though I will point out his averages are all down from his total career numbers. Still nothing to sneeze at. And that homerun figure of 39? Thatās the highest number heās hit against any opponent. NL Central opponents Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, Houston are all very close, though. Milwaukee, however has only surrendered 26 to Albert.
For what itās worth, his Wrigley numbers are .282/.369/.563.
Last night when Andruw Jones popped up and struck out in his last two at-bats, Ranger skipper had some nice words to say about him (emphasis mine):
"I saw Kirby Puckett do some great stuff. I saw Dave Engle do some great stuff. Matter fact, I saw Mickey Hatcher get nine hits in a row ā nine straight in three straight days,"
LOL, Whut??
Dave Engle?
Iām familiar with Engle, a backup catcher/utility man, who lasted nine years despite not really doing a whole lot. He had a couple 400+ at bat years and actually made the All-Star team in 1984 (hereās an actual scan of Toledo Blade article proving it) but after he left Minnesota in ā85, he bounced from team to team not even garnering 100 at-bats.
But I wasnāt aware of Engle doing anything newsworthy (other than being the brother-in-law of then fellow Twin Tom Brunansky)⦠something that we would remember over 20 years later. Nope, doesnāt ring a bell.
He did go on to become a hitting coach in the majors to once again prove that those cannot do, teach. Except that he didnāt do that very well either and got fired.
So if anyone knows the answer to the mystery, speak up. Iām dying to know.
Magglio Ordonez is off to a poor start this first half and his July isnāt improving (4 for 20). With only 14 extra base hits so far this year, rumor has it they are calling him āSinglioā
Now thereās talk of platooning him with callup Clete Thomas.
Seattle prospect Jamie McOwen has a hit streak going thatās starting to get national attention. McOwen, a rightfielder for the High Desert Mavericks in the Class A Advanced California League, has now hit in 45 straight games. For the season, McOwen is hitting a nifty .355, one point behind the Cal League batting leader.
The 45 games is not a record in the minors. Not by a longshot. Similar to the majors, the hit streak record seems to be the hardest to conquer. He has 24 games to go. You have to go back to 1919 when Joe Wilhoit from Wichita had a 69 game hit streak. That remains the record today.
By the way, if the name High Desert Mavericks sounds familiar to you, then you probably heard the news story about the incredible 51-run game between the Mavericks and the Lake Elsinore Storm a couple weeks ago. The Mavericks came out on the losing side on that 33-18 wild one. McOwenās 2 for 6 performance in that game contributed to his streak.
Update: The streak is over at 45. Bus Leagues Baseball live-blogged what would have been the 46th game and McOwen came up short.
I had the idea that Austin Kearns was going to be the next superstar when he came up in 2002.
I remember when he was going to be the next Adam Dunn but much better. He was going to be faster, hit for better average, would be able to field and wouldnāt strike out as much. I remember this because I drafted him as a rookie in my APBA league.
Well, I am lucky because I had the luxury of trading him. The folks in DC arenāt so lucky. I guess a few of the fans there are a little tired of him already.
The Seattle Mariners defeated the Orioles last night behind a classic one-hitter pitched by Jarrod Washburn. The good pitching by Washburn was not necessarily out of character this season. The 9-0 win was.
After a few iffy seasons, Washburn has pitched well in 2009. He sports a 3.08 allowing 7.7 hits per 9 innings and has a WHIP of 1.10. Much improved compared to the last few years. Unfortunately for the Mariners, they havenāt been able to capitalize on his success on the mound. Despite the fancy-dancy stats, Washburn only has a 5-6 record.
Some are rumoring that Washburn will be tradebait considering this is his last year of his contract. The LA Dodgers are considered high on that list.
I was doing some research on another project and ran across this gem.
Not only does Angel pitcher Darren Oliver have a career winning record (a pretty sizable one at that with a 104-82 record) but he is 17-3 in his last five years.
Year | Wins | Losses |
2006 | 4 | 1 |
2007 | 3 | 1 |
2008 | 7 | 1 |
2009 | 3 | 0 |
not what I expected on either count.
Sean Forman has implemented a new search modification to his Baseball Reference database.
For those searching on a common player name (or part thereof), you can put the word ātheā in front of the search term and the database will bring up the most popular searched player.
I just added a mod to the search box on the site. With the addition of all of the minor league pages, getting to someone like Alex Rodriguezās page via a search āA Rodā returns like 50 people. Now, if you type in āthe A Rodā it looks through our db and returns the most popular major league player who matches the search āA Rodā. Adding āthe ā to the front of any player search will send you to the most popular player matching that search.
I did my own test. I searched for āramon martinezā and got back three results including two minor leaguers. When I searched for āthe ramon martinezā, it took me directly to the page of Ramon Martinez who pitched for the LA Dodgers.
This trick works with initials too though your mileage may vary. āthe jason vā did return Jason Varitek as I intended it too. For that matter, so did āthe j vā.
Anyway, this mod might save a few mouse clicks for those of us who search Baseball Referenceās database on a frequent basis.
Iām fan about old baseball stadiums. Reading about their history, viewing what little photographs we have of them.
Chris Epting has put together a cool slideshow video of old photographs of historic baseball stadiums in their heyday and then comparing them with current photographs of the locations of where once stood. Sort of like VH1ās Where are they Now? but more depressing.
Sappy, sentimental, but poignant too for us amateur baseball historians.
Epting is the author of Roadside Baseball: The Locations of America’s Baseball Landmarks which I havenāt read yet but it is on my āto-getā list.