Get your game on, go play

My thoughts about the All-Star Game, and Fox’s coverage thereof…

  • Perhaps you should not, during your pregame show that is tightly timed and controlled to the second, go live on the air and ask Ernie Harwell a question about Al Kaline, because he will of course give a long-winded answer, thus causing Jeanne Zelasko to have to cut him off and look like a jerk doing it. (I almost wrote “big jerk,” but I don’t want some pro-pregnancy group complaining about my choice of words to describe a woman who is, uh, with child.)
  • British national anthem? I know “My Country ‘Tis of Thee” when I hear it! The amount of patriotic songs played before and during baseball games is growing out of control.
  • Hey, I thought Scooter was dead! Too bad every kid who cares already knows what a change-up is because they’re faithfully rendered in video games these days, probably with better camera angles than Fox has available.
  • Hey, it’s the descendant of the glowing blue hockey puck, this time showing the path of the ball to the plate.
  • For a second, I thought they said Jim Bouton was the general manager of the Nationals, but it’s actually someone named Jim Bowden. Too bad; Jim Bouton might reach Ed Hart-ian levels of general manager-ness.
  • I should have realized the game was going to be sponsored by Chevrolet and gotten an apple Home Run Pie at the supermarket on Sunday, but no, all I had was lemon. It was slightly better than the vanilla pie I ate Sunday, but not much. I think I’m going to stick to Hostess fruit pies for my future fruit pie needs; they also do a good job of distracting comic-book villains, as I understand it.
  • Joe Buck: You can tell a lot about Dontrelle Willis by the way he wears his hat.
    Me (singing): The way he wears his hat, the way he sings off-key…
    Tim McCarver (starts babbling about how if Gershwin were alive today, he might have written that song about Dontrelle Willis)

    Oh, my God, I’m starting to think like Tim McCarver — well, sort of, since I had the sense to just start singing the damn song, instead of talking incoherently about it.

  • Those red-white-and-blue bases that were used at Tiger Stadium for the 1971 All-Star Game look pretty cool and retro, like ABA basketballs. All we get in the 21st century is “Spider-Man” advertising.
  • Doesn’t Fox realize “Bad News Bears” is not a 20th Century Fox movie? I guess they’ll take anyone’s money. And I guess no actual Fox stars wanted to go to Detroit, just noted crazy person Billy Bob Thornton.
  • No Danys Baez in the game? Poor Devil Rays. Guess I’ll have to take advantage of DirecTV’s post-All-Star-Game preview of MLB Extra Innings to watch, say, the Devil Rays-Blue Jays game on Friday. The TiVo is already set.
  • Is the National League ever going to win the All-Star Game again? I know, one might have expressed similar sentiments about the American League in, say, 1981.

Two more reasons to always read King Kaufman

1) Because he watches dreck like the Home Run Derby so you don’t have to.

2) Because if you don’t read him–or watch dreck like the Home Run Derby–you miss things like this: “‘There’s nothing better than a home run contest,’ Joe Morgan told Berman, indicating that Morgan needs to get out more.”

If I started right this second naming things that are better than a home run contest, at the rate of, say, one per second, I would still be naming things when the sun burns out or global warming sets my hair on fire or the Left Behind novels are proven spectacularly wrong. And that’s all before I even start thinking about Karl Rove going to jail, and how much better every second of his sentence would be than a home run contest.

A far better question for our legions of fans: what isn’t better than a home run contest?

Our clique is the world, the world is our clique

I find myself not caring about the international baseball tournament next March — except for the fact that the players who are going to be in it may not get their full spring training regimen of stretching exercises and appearing on “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” (I know, I know, the stretching exercises are not that big a deal). Major League Baseball is pretty international as it is anyway, and will no doubt get even more international once all the Cuban players defect during the international baseball tournament.

Also, since I never watched baseball or softball during the Olympics, I can’t get too worked up about their absence from the Games beginning in 2012. But then, I haven’t been that interested in the Olympics at all for the past couple of summers in which they’ve been held. Last summer, we were on the baseball road trip for the second half of the Olympics and I only watched a couple of bits and pieces on the CBC in motel rooms in Detroit and Canada; the first week, I watched some of the opening ceremonies, and then later that week was at a restaurant where I had a good view of a TV showing women’s beach volleyball. I didn’t care who won, but it made me happy to be heterosexual.

I heart the base mike

In last night’s Cards/Giants game, the last game before the dreaded All-Star Break, the 2nd-base mike caught a great bit of conversation among Lance (Son of Joe) Niekro, umpire Tom Hallion, and Mark Grudzielanek.

Niekro attempted a steal of second, and as Grudzielanek applied the tag, the pair got all tangled up, with legs and arms jumbled everywhere and Niekro’s head getting intimately acquainted with Grudzie’s crotch. They took several seconds to unravel (It reminded me of the way NFL refs pull guys one by one off a pile.), then Niekro said to the ump, “Was I out?”

“Yeah,” Hallion replied.

“Shit,” said Niekro.

“After all that,” said Grudzielanek.

And I’m a genius, genius

Comments are working again, thanks to me!

Well, not that I did anything myself that would have caused them to start working again — but I didn’t do anything to break them beyond repair when I was trying to figure out what was going on, and that can often be more important. It’s still a mystery to me why they stopped working, and now it’s even more of a mystery why they started working again just now. My best guess is that the host of this site, Dreamhost, twice made some behind-the-scenes changes to their PHP configuration. But I know nothing about PHP.

Anyway, in actual baseball-related news, the DirecTV e-mail newsletter that I got this morning says they’ll be having another free preview of the Extra Innings package from July 14th to 18th, so perhaps I’ll check in on some teams I don’t get to see often, such as my beloved Devil Rays, or perhaps a good team like Levi’s beloved Cardinals.

The good old days

I may be watching baseball on TV every Saturday night until I get high-speed Internet installed at my new apartment, or a date, or — ideally — both.

Tonight I watched the rematch of the 1959 World Series, Dodgers at White Sox, with the Sox wearing 1959 uniform replicas, and WGN showing plenty of film footage of that World Series, all of it with that “16-millimeter educational film” quality that made it look like I was watching it in elementary school in 1982.

For the game, although WGN was using their usual information strip across the top of the screen, all the other graphics — which mainly means the “lower thirds,” as we say in the TV business — were just plain white text, which I guess was supposed to be 1959-esque, but because they were still attempting to present 2005-esque levels of information, the effect was more like the mid-1970s. (Except, of course, for the graphics that included a Web site address and/or a cell phone text message number, two things that would have been confusing and frightening in the mid-1970s.) And to their credit, they really didn’t call attention to the fact they were doing it — I heard Hawk Harrelson mention it once, when they showed the scores of other games the old-fashioned way, as full-screen graphics with three scores per page. And to give them even more credit, because I think they really deserve it for doing this, all the graphics that normally would have involved a sponsor logo didn’t have one — just the name of the sponsor in text. Yes, even the Southwest Airlines Super-Slo-Mo Replay or whatever it was only had the text “SOUTHWEST AIRLINES” at the bottom of the screen.

Seriously, I applaud WGN for doing that, and for not being anywhere near as cute and annoying as Fox was when they did something vaguely similar with a Cubs-Dodgers game a few years ago. I also applaud the White Sox for scoring four runs in the bottom of the 9th in order to avenge the 1959 Series, at least in this game.

Well, that was queer

I was out of town for a couple days, so I just now got around to watching the “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” episode featuring the Red Sox. I’d never seen “Queer Eye” before, and I don’t think I’ll ever be watching it again, but at least some kids got a refurbished Little League field out of it, not to mention some doughnuts from a certain doughnut shop chain that isn’t as good as Krispy Kreme, but I guess underwrote part of the cost of fixing the kids’ field up after it had been destroyed by Hurricane Charley.

Historical baseball note

Since I don’t have high-speed Internet at my new apartment yet, I’ve been watching more TV than usual. That included tonight’s Dodgers game, a 2-1 win over the Brewers. I wanted to mention this piece of trivia that fascinated Vin Scully, since I’m not sure how far it will be disseminated: with this game, the Dodgers have now played more games at Dodger Stadium than they had at Ebbets Field.

Incidentally, the best Vin Scully moment of the game was him reading Jim Tracy’s lips during an argument with the home plate umpire, but not giving the exact translation: “Fertilizer, fertilizer.” The second-best was his plug for the pre-game show airing before tomorrow’s game: “I think you’ll find it somewhat interesting, as it always is.”

While I’m at it, it’s looking like the plans detailed here for me and Jason to do a 4-city baseball trip next month are not going to come to fruition, since I will have only been in my new job for a month. We may do an overnight trip just to Phoenix, for a Saturday night game. But that leaves things open for me to ask: hey, Levi, how about a Western trip in 2006?

Television programming update

The episode of “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” featuring five members of the Red Sox airs next Tuesday, June 7th, at 10:00 P.M. Eastern on Bravo (with copious repeats throughout the following week). TV Guide gives it a 9 out of 10 and includes, as a tantalizing preview, the phrase “Johnny Damon gets foil highlights.”

Also in next week’s TV Guide, Superstation WGN has a full-page ad (in the color section, although it’s a black-and-white ad) touting their Friday afternoon telecast of the Cubs vs. Red Sox as a rematch of the 1918 World Series, for all the TV Guide readers who have been waiting for that for 87 years. Presumably, the Saturday game is on Fox (although my DirecTV edition of TV Guide only lists what’s on the national Fox schedule, so it’s “teams to be announced”) — and the Sunday game is in the week-after-next’s TV Guide, so as far as I’m concerned, it’s a complete mystery where it’s going to air.

And what an Opening Day it was

10:00Kansas City Royals at Detroit Tigers (ESPN 2 and FSN Detroit)
10:26 — In the 2nd inning, the Detroit announcers mention Jeremy Bonderman’s 14-strikeout game last year for the first time.
10:30Milwaukee Brewers at Pitttsburgh Pirates (ESPN alternate feed and FSN Pittsburgh)
10:52 — The Pirates announcers call Florida “bland.” The state, that is, not the Marlins.
10:59 — Dmitri Young of the Tigers hits his second home run. Do we have a Tuffy Rhodes in the making here?
11:00New York Mets at Cincinnati Reds (ESPN and FSN Ohio)
11:08 — For some reason, Jeff Daniels is in the booth with the FSN Detroit announcers at the Tigers game.
11:12 — One of the FSN Ohio announcers makes up a new term, referring to today as “Starting Day.”
11:19 — Hey, Jon Miller and Joe Morgan, if you’re going to say “let’s listen to the Reds fans’ reactions to Griffey coming up to bat,” you should shut up for more than two seconds after you say that. I think I will eschew ESPN’s coverage of this game from here on out.
11:22 — Talking about his Tiger Stadium memories, Jeff Daniels mentions a toilet that was located out in the open in the hallway leading to the visitors’ dugout. He says he was thinking about all the greats who had used it in the past, such as Joe DiMaggio, the one time he got to use it.
11:30 — Adam Dunn of the Reds hits one to right field. It’s going, it’s going — and suddenly, my TiVo switches to GSN to record “Card Sharks” as a suggestion. This is strange for two reasons: first, it’s not supposed to try recording a suggestion if you’ve been watching live TV; second, “Card Sharks” is already being recorded on the other tuner. This isn’t something I have to deal with often because I so rarely watch live TV, so it takes me longer than it should to make sure that I’m canceling the suggestion recording, not the recording I had actually set up.
11:33 — Dmitri Young gets hit by a pitch. He’s no Tuffy, I guess, but then, who is?
11:51 — The Tigers can get Jeff Daniels, but all they can get on FSN Pittsburgh during the Pirates game is some executive from PNC Bank.
11:59 — Saltines and Easy Cheese: snack of champions!
NoonWashington Nationals at Philadelphia Phillies (not available on DirecTV, so this is the last you’re going to hear about this game)
NoonCleveland Indians at Chicago White Sox (Comcast SportsNet Chicago)
NoonOakland A’s at Baltimore Orioles (FSN Bay Area)
12:09 — Historic video from 1994 on FSN Ohio: Pedro Martinez, then of the Expos, plunking Reggie Sanders of the Reds, thus ending a perfect game, and Sanders charging the mound.
12:11 — Orioles Rodrigo Lopez and Javy Lopez’s uniforms both say just “Lopez,” no first initials.
12:22 — Sammy Sosa! What’s he doing here in Baltimore? Not hitting a home run, at this point.
12:32 — Comcast SportsNet “forgot” to take their logo off the screen during a commercial.
12:34 — Pedro Martinez records his 10th strikeout, to make this the 100th double-digit-strikeout game of his career. Who does he think he is, Jeremy Bonderman?
12:42 — Dmitri Young hits his third home run! He’s Tuffy after all!
12:49 — Comcast SportsNet’s audio level is lower than all the other channels, so I have to ride the volume on my remote when I switch to and from the Indians-White Sox game.
12:56 — The P.A. announcer at Great American Ball Park announces Pedro Martinez’s 100th pitch — that’s the first time I’ve ever heard that.
12:59 — The Royals-Tigers game seems to have ended while I wasn’t paying attention.
1:00Toronto Blue Jays at Tampa Bay Devil Rays (FSN Florida)
1:00San Diego Padres at Colorado Rockies (FSN Rocky Mountain)
1:00 — The pre-produced opening for the Devil Rays game doesn’t mention Alex Sanchez. (Although they probably talked about him ad nauseam on the pregame show. But pregame shows aren’t included in the MLB Extra Innings package.)
1:05 — Don Zimmer is introduced as the Devil Rays’ Senior Baseball Advisor, “in his 57th major league season.”
1:08 — Yes, there are other teams that wear vest-style uniform shirts (Royals, Rockies, etc.), but only the Devil Rays manage to make them look like The Uniform of the Future.
1:13 — FSN Florida, a television network that’s located in the United States, is actually showing the singing of “O Canada” on TV! Lots of Canadians in Florida at this time of year who might protest if they didn’t, I guess.
1:21 — The turf at Tropicana Field still looks awful on TV. It doesn’t help that the other games so far today are all taking place under brilliant sunshine.
1:27 — And Tropicana Field has plenty of good seats available, as usual.
1:34 — FSN Pittsburgh is showing fans streaming out of PNC Park and over the bridge, so I guess that game is over.
1:40 — The Devil Rays’ slogan this year, to try to get people to buy tickets to games, appears to be “Watch It Happen,” which I guess is slightly better than “Come In Out of the Rain.”
1:43 — I flip to FSN Ohio and see Pete Rose eating a salad in a commercial for local Cincinnati fast-food chain Gold Star Chili. For some reason, I doubt that Pete Rose has ever eaten a salad in real life.
1:50 — The A’s announcers are talking about a USA Today survey of players and coaches that rated the field at McAfee Coliseum the best in the American League. McAfee? What happened to Network Associates? I can’t keep all these corporate names straight.
1:54 — “Devil Rays baseball on FSN Florida is brought to you in part by Quikrete concrete products,” presumably because Tropicana Field is made entirely of Quikrete.
2:00Chicago Cubs at Arizona Diamondbacks (ESPN 2 and WGN)
2:00Minnesota Twins at Seattle Mariners (ESPN 2 alternate feed)
2:02 — While flipping channels, I stumble across the Padres-Rockies game, which I swear wasn’t listed in the DirecTV on-screen schedule as of 9:58 A.M. It’s already 4-3, in the bottom of the 3rd.
2:05 — Make that 6-3.
2:09 — Meanwhile, the Devil Rays are down 3-1 on back-to-back homers.
2:11 — The FSN Florida announcers, referring to Manitoba native Corey Koskie: “That ball had a lot of English on it, even though it was hit by a Canadian.”
2:20 — I switch to the Cubs-Diamondbacks game on ESPN 2 and think I see a WGN banner, so I check, and it turns out it’s on WGN, too, which I didn’t check beforehand. There’s baseball on lots of channels!
2:30 — I notice that DirecTV’s description of the Blue Jays-Devil Rays game ends with the statement “game may be subject to blackouts in Toronto and Tampa Bay.” I guarantee that anyone watching on DirecTV in Toronto is not being blacked out, since everyone watching on DirecTV in Toronto has given DirecTV a fake address somewhere in the U.S. (and since FSN Florida is what the Tampa Bay area is “supposed” to be getting, it’s not being blacked out there, either).
2:34 — Train whistles: one of the best things about watching a Mariners game.
2:46 — The ad on the rotating board behind the home plate at Tropicana Field is for the radio station that’s now carrying the games. Actually, I should put that another way: it’s for the radio station that the Devil Rays are paying to carry their games. That’s how woeful they are.
2:51 — Superstation WGN’s big Tuesday night movie this week is “Robocop.” Hasn’t everyone in the world with any interest in this movie seen it by now?
2:52 — The Cubs are up 7-0 in the 2nd inning. Sammy who?
2:56 — The facial hair configuration currently being sported by Toby Hall of the Devil Rays is described as “a small marsupial on his chin.”
2:58 — For the Cubs-Diamondbacks game, ESPN 2 has a beautiful, crisp picture. On Superstation WGN, the game looks like it’s coming through Saran Wrap coated in Vaseline.
3:03 — Guess the Touchstone Pictures marketing people decided not to try to sell “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” as a comedy in the TV ads (as opposed to the theatrical trailer I saw yesterday, which did make it look like it at least has certain comic elements).
3:07 — I’ve been forgetting about the Padres-Rockies game, which is now 8-8 in the 6th inning. In fact, just as I flip, one of the announcers calls it “another Coors Field special.”
3:15 — In honor of the Opening Day action, I drink Cherry Coke out of an old Cubs souvenir cup.
3:20 — The roof is being closed in Seattle even though it still looks sunny, which leads to a long discussion by the ESPN 2 Alternate Announcers on why they might be closing it. I change channels before the serious conspiracy theories can get started.
3:25 — I see the Mets-Reds final score; looks like the Reds came back to win 7-6 after being down 6-3. In hindsight, I guess should have watched more of that game after Pedro Martinez left.
3:34 — The Padres’ sand-colored away uniforms look weird for the second year in a row.
3:39 — The Devil Rays lose their opening game for the first time since 1999. Yes, really — it’s been the other 161 games they’ve had the most trouble with.
3:43 — On the Padres-Rockies game, a 6-year-old boy is being interviewed in the stands: “Don’t you have school today?” “No.” “Why not?” “I’m homeschooled!”
3:59 — The Diamondbacks still have those unexplained hot-air-balloon-shaped patches on their sleeves.
4:05 — The FSN Rocky Mountain announcers say they’re about to show a graphic with some startling statistics. When the graphic comes up, it’s not all that startling; it shows that, at Coors Field, since 2003, the Padres have scored a lot more runs against the Rockies from the 9th inning on (37) than the Rockies have scored against the Padres (3). Trevor Hoffman is the big reason for the disparity. This is important because it’s 10-8 in favor of the Padres in the bottom of the 8th.
4:07 — For the first time since 10:30, I can’t flip channels to avoid a commercial; all three games still going on are in a break simultaneously.
4:08 — The problem with flipping between games is that you miss things; the Cubs announcers say something about Victor Zambrano being ejected.
4:15 — And I flip back to the Cubs-Diamondbacks game just in time to see Derrek Lee hit a 3-run homer, and to finally hear the name of the WGN announcer whose voice I don’t recognize (i.e., the one who’s not Bob Brenly). It’s Len Kasper — who?
4:25 — Despite Trevor Hoffman being on the mound, the Rockies tie their game at 10 in the bottom of the 9th.
4:26 — And Trevor Hoffman is still on the mound when Clint Barmes hits a 2-run walk-off homer; Rockies win, 12-10.
4:35 — The Twins-Mariners game goes final, with Seattle winning 5-1.
4:38 — The Cubs go up 14-3 on a 2-run homer by Aramis Ramirez. Do I really have to watch the rest of this?
4:43 — Superstation WGN ends a promo with a dig at TBS’s slogan, referring to themselves as “where comedy isn’t just very funny, it’s super funny.” This would be more piquant if it weren’t a promo for “Will & Grace.”
4:50 — I take advantage of a commercial break and check my e-mail. My father informs me that at one point this afternoon, the headline on ESPN.com was “Dmitri Young, meet Tuffy Rhodes.”
4:56 — The Cubs get their 20th hit, and it’s “only” the top of the 8th, with no outs.
4:57 — Hit number 21, and it’s 15-5.
4:59 — 16-5. It’s the most runs the Cubs have ever scored in an Opening Day game. No Sammy, no Moises Alou, no Tuffy!
5:08 — Chicago to Pittsburgh for $29 each way on Southwest Airlines? That’s insane. Levi and Stacey, you should visit Stephanie Losi sometime (she’s going to be attending Carnegie Mellon starting in the fall).
5:15 — Surely by now, director Arne Harris has gotten a camera shot of every single person in the Bank One Ballpark stands who’s wearing Cubs apparel (or University of Illinois apparel)!
5:16 — I stand corrected.
5:19 — Wow, the Cubs only got one hit in the top of the 9th!
5:20 — A promo for something called “Ultimate Arena Paintball,” a Superstation WGN Original Production. Although I’ve never done it, I can see how participating in paintball yourself would be fun, but watching other people do it, as on this upcoming program, looks horribly boring.
5:24 — Oh, Shawn Green, why are you prolonging the agony by getting a hit?
5:25 — Oh, Chad Tracy, ditto.
5:26 — “This is the only big league game still under way today.” Yeah, no kidding.
5:27 — Suddenly, it’s 16-6. D-backs are coming back!
5:28 — Wait, no, they’re not. Matt Kata strikes out. Cubs win! Time for “Card Sharks.”

And that’s it. I probably won’t be watching any more baseball on TV until the All-Star Game. Actually, I probably should watch a couple of Dodgers games this year, because who knows how much longer Vin Scully will be around?

Original comments…

thatbob: Sounds like a much better Starting Day than the one I had, watching the stupid Yankees beat up the beloved Johnny Damons.

I’ve never seen Robocop*, but I guess that doesn’t answer your question.

(*all the way through)

Levi: I’m sure Pete Rose has eaten a salad . . . on a bet.