Six in a row for LA of A.
I didn't actually see the game. I missed the beginning because I was
watching Jiri Tlusty, Robbie Earl and Justin Pogge get their kicks in
at the Maple Leafs' rookie tournament at the Coliseum. In a wildly
entertaining and penalty-filled affair, the Leafs' rookies defeated the
Habs' rookies, 6-5 in overtime. Tlusty was really impressive. If you're
not a football fan and you're really strapped for something to do this
weekend, I'd encourage you to check this tournament out. It's grand
inexpensive fun - $8 for a GA ticket - and you get to catch a glimpse of hockey's
future from the front row.
I got home at about 11 to find snow on my TV for a couple of hours during
the storm that
swept through last night. So please forgive the lack of focus on last
night's game. I hear it was forgettable. The Halos won 4-1 behind Joe
Saunders. Garret Anderson doubled and homered to earn himself Player of
the Game honors and a picture in today's TDIB.
1. Ryan Howard is streaking. He hit homers #55 and #56
off lefty(!) Scott Olsen of the Marlins last night in a 3-2 victory to
help bring the Phillies within 1.5 games of the Wild Card-leading
Padres. Tom Verducci has a take on Howard's dash to 62: "There is room in your head
to hold what Maris and Howard did at the
same time as you do what Bonds, McGwire and Sosa did. I believe that
Howard has more in common with Maris than Bonds, McGwire and Sosa did,
and given changes in the game since the Steroid Era, I welcome his run
at 62. But will it be a record? It will be a record in this postmodern
era, and overall it will be something of a default record no matter
what Selig does or doesn't say."
Howard himself puts it simply to Paul Hagen
of the Philly Daily News: "People are entitled to their opinions. But
it does bother me. It casts a shadow on the game. I know I'm not using
steroids. This barrel right here [pointing to
his stomach] is proof enough. People are going to say what they want to
say. I thought about it once and then it was like, 'Well, whatever.'
I'm not doing it. If they want to test me, they can test me. I just
think it sucks. The thing about it is, if you're going to
make those kinds of comments, have proof. Otherwise, you can ruin
people's reputations."
In this era, what historical significance does #62 hold? I mean, I think it
means "You reached the pre-90s record without the blatant juicery of
the last group of players who did it. It's cool, and if the media like
you, you will get your due for having one hell of a season. However,
your accomplishments will always be asterisked and therefore
diminished, and if you're clean, you will never get the Clean Home Run
King Crown to which you are justly entitled because of the media's
automatic skepticism. No, it's not fair. That'll probably be the case
for the poor sucker who hits 74, who might very well be you next year."
But I could be underestimating the media's willingness to genuinely celebrate every player passing Maris' 61. I hope I am.
2. The Tigers face the Twins today. It's Nate Robertson against
Boof Bonser. From there, the pitching matchups just get worse for
Detroit: they run into Johan tomorrow and Vicente Padilla and Kevin
Millwood against Texas.
Detroit leads Minnesota by 4 and the White Sox by 4.5. BP's playoff
odds report had the Tigers winning the division 92.7% of the time and
the wild card 6.6, missing the playoffs only 0.8% of the time, prior to
today's games. Maybe I'm just still in denial about how good the Tigers
are, but they're only 8 games above .500 against AL teams that aren't
the Royals. If Bonser comes up big for the Twins today, the Tigers
can very easily be in big trouble as soon as Wednesday.
3. Win-loss differential by division:
AL East -4
AL Central +31
AL West +29
Note that the AL West only has four teams. Personally, I'd be shocked if this happened again next year.
4. At 10:05 today, 1200 miles on I-10 away from the real
sporting attraction of the day, it's Gustavo Chacin and Kelvim Escobar
in a battle of Venezuelans at the big A.
Escobar has a 2.00 ERA in 27 career innings against the Jays, though he
is only 2-2. Chacin has a 2.37 ERA in 19 career innings against the
Angels, and he's 2-0. Both pitchers are coming off excellent outings,
Esco against Detroit and Chacin against Boston. A strong September from
Chacin should be high on the Jays' wish list right now.
Let the duel
begin!
https://www.battersbox.ca/article.php?story=20060909013054731