This story actually starts towards the end of June. It was a grumpy morning for me, I was running late for work, was feeling pretty tired, really just wanted to go back to sleep. I walked into the BART station near my house, absentmindedly ran my Clipper card over the machine, and suddenly noticed that there was a BIG ELEPHANT IN AN OAKLAND A'S JERSEY STANDING IN FRONT OF ME!
This is one of the A's promotions with BART -- they have their mascot Stomper riding around on the trains sometimes, and even better, occasionally you'll catch the street crew in stations giving away free A's tickets and BART tickets! This had happened to one of my coworkers who lives in Oakland a few weeks ago as well, but since I live in San Francisco, which is decidedly Hipster Giants Fan Land, I figured there was no way I'd ever get that lucky. Apparently I was wrong!
You may be wondering, what did I have to do to get free A's tickets?
I had to get my picture taken with Stomper.
That was it. Really. And if you know me at all, you know I LOVE getting my photo with mascots and baseball people, and have been known to chase down mascots in Japan with my friends. Think about this one: first, I don't have to chase down Stomper for a photo. Second, they WANT me to get a photo with Stomper. Third, they're going to give me free tickets to a baseball game for getting my photo with Stomper. Does it get better than that?
Actually, it does, because the tickets they gave me were for the 4th of July game! I'd already been thinking of going on the 3rd or 4th, vaguely in the hope of seeing Bobby, but even so, just to watch baseball on July 4th. And it ALSO gets better because they gave me two $5 BART tickets, which would pay for me to get to the game! And the tickets were for 200-level seats behind the bullpens, not something crappy in the middle of the outfield! How lucky is that?
(The retarded thing is, I swear to god, there were people just saying "no thanks" and walking past the A's crew and going down to the platform. WTF? How do you turn down BART tickets and baseball tickets? San Francisco is dumb. I walked off saying "You guys made my day!" and went to work with a big smile on my face instead of a big frown.)
Anyway, as for the day of the game itself, I went with one of my coworkers who lives in Oakland, and we had a pretty good time. I mentioned that I knew Bobby Valentine from my days in Japan, and hoped to say hi to him, and I even wore my Bobby 2010 t-shirt from the Keep Bobby in Chiba campaign back during the 2009 season when the Lotte front office was stupid and decided to fire him. UNFORTUNATELY, the downside of us having seats in the 200-level for a day game with no batting practice and a crowd-drawing team like the Red Sox was that the ushers and staff were being particularly careful about letting people who didn't have appropriate tickets down to the front of the field, and I made a few attempts to get down to the dugout but completely failed. Here, however, is proof that I really did make the attempt:
And I saw a guy in the stands holding up a "In Bobby V We Trust" sign during the game, too:
Anyway, disappointment about not seeing Bobby aside, and given that I actually root for the A's in general, it was really a pretty good game. Aaron Cook, who's mostly spent his career in the Rockies system, started for the Red Sox, and AJ Griffin, who's barely older than my interns at work, started for the A's.
Because it was the 4th of July, they were theoretically giving out some kind of red, white, and blue A's hats, although we not only were too late to receive one, we didn't even SEE anyone wearing one anywhere. But, they had a whole bunch of pregame ceremonies involving the Marines and various other military things, including a bunch of fighter jets flying over the stadium after the singing of the National Anthem.
And then things got underway. Brandon Moss hit a home run right over the "400" sign in dead center in the 2nd inning to put the A's up 1-0, and then in the 4th, David Ortiz tied things up for the Red Sox by hitting a home run of his own into the corner of the right-field stands, slightly over from the A's mini-ouendan cheering section, making it 1-1.
I haven't really been paying close attention to the MLB like I used to back in the old days, so my brain started to wonder "How many career home runs is that for Big Papi now?" and before I could even look it up on my phone, someone a few rows behind us said "Hey, that was his 400th career home run!"
And sure enough, the A's announcer even called that out the next time Ortiz was up to bat, and there was a stadium-wide round of applause for him:
(Honestly, in a semi-related point, I was kinda shocked to hear what stupid shit Manny Ramirez has been up to since last I lived in the USA -- but at the same time, I'm kinda sad I never got out to a Sacramento River Cats game to see him while he was playing there this year. Apparently he was released a few weeks ago, at his own request.)
The Red Sox did go up 2-1 in the top of the 6th after Ortiz walked, Jarrod Saltalamacchia (who I pointed out as "the most annoying name to stitch on a uniform") reached on a fielding error by Jemile Weeks and Adrian Gonzalez singled in Ortiz.
But the A's tied it up in their half of the 6th when Brandon Moss hit a "double" that was really a sun ball that got lost by 3 guys in left field and just dropped, and then Brandon Inge hit a real double to bring him in ("Inge-sanity!"), and then Coco Crisp hit a triple to right to lead off the bottom of the 7th and was brought in by a single by Jemile Weeks, and that made it 3-2 and the A's won the game. Box score here.
There were a surprising number of people carrying brooms around the stadium:
But well, that's about what you can expect.
Personally, I was glad the game ended by 4pm because it was pretty hot and sunny out there. On the other hand, because BART was running on a Sunday schedule it took forever to get on a train! They actually have police holding up people at the staircase to the station and only let people through in waves, so that the platforms don't become crowded enough to be dangerous. I was surprised, since in Japan, teams would often run extra trains after games to disperse the fans (well, Seibu and Hanshin and teams that owned their own train lines at least. Nevermind...)
Still, it was a good time at the park. If I'm lucky I can try to see Bobby around Labor Day, I guess.
Showing posts with label Athletics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Athletics. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Saturday, June 23, 2012
Photopost: Darvish vs. A's, June 7th
Uh, hi. Is this thing on? Yeah, I know I don't write here much (and even left off in the middle of my January uniform-wearing thing -- if you're really curious how the rest of the month went, you can go check out the album on Facebook).
Anyway, what I've been up to the last six months baseball-wise: not much. Work has been keeping me pretty busy. I went back to Japan for 2 weeks in April and went to around 20 games and stalked the Nichidai Sanko boys (which I should photopost about), and I went to a Frederick Keys minor-league game in DC with my brother, and I'm going to watch the San Rafael Pacifics tonight to see Tomochika Tsuboi, former Fighters guy, who is now playing in the indie leagues over here. I also hope to see the Tacoma Rainiers sometime since Brian Sweeney and Luis Jimenez are playing for them, but last weekend it was 106 degrees in Sacramento and I couldn't do that.
The other game I went to was the A's vs. Rangers game on June 7th because Darvish was starting for the Rangers. Go figure, the Rangers were in the Bay Area for an entire week and the only day he started was the afternoon game where my company was having a team-building event. Of course, I skipped the event and went to the game...
I really wanted to meet Tateyama, which I didn't succeed in. But I did meet a ton of Japanese people, who were all crowding the Rangers bullpen before the game, including a lady who came here from Sapporo by herself to see him, a guy from Ibaraki who was cosplaying as Darvish, some various other people, I just chatted with them in Japanese, very fun. Even the guy who was sitting two seats to my left was from Hokkaido, though he works in San Jose now. I wore my Imanari jersey so a lot of people were saying things to me about how "Ryota got traded to Hanshin, didn't he? Too bad..." Very cool times, even if Darvish sucked (he gave up 6 runs on 6 hits and 6 walks in 5 innings, no joke) and the Rangers lost, I still had a good time at the game. (Plus in all honesty I kinda want the A's to win, they're really the underdog around here since I work with too many hipster Giants fans.)
I also brought my camera, so here are some shots from it.
See the entire photo set here with more Darvish and some Tanner Scheppers and whatnot.
Darvish in the bullpen warming up
Yoshinori Tateyama greets Mike Napoli at the bullpen
Koji Uehara goes for a walk in the late innings
Darvish cosplayer dude. He came here from Ibaraki.
You know, the photos of Darvish remind me an awful lot of another photoset I took in March 2008...
Anyway, what I've been up to the last six months baseball-wise: not much. Work has been keeping me pretty busy. I went back to Japan for 2 weeks in April and went to around 20 games and stalked the Nichidai Sanko boys (which I should photopost about), and I went to a Frederick Keys minor-league game in DC with my brother, and I'm going to watch the San Rafael Pacifics tonight to see Tomochika Tsuboi, former Fighters guy, who is now playing in the indie leagues over here. I also hope to see the Tacoma Rainiers sometime since Brian Sweeney and Luis Jimenez are playing for them, but last weekend it was 106 degrees in Sacramento and I couldn't do that.
The other game I went to was the A's vs. Rangers game on June 7th because Darvish was starting for the Rangers. Go figure, the Rangers were in the Bay Area for an entire week and the only day he started was the afternoon game where my company was having a team-building event. Of course, I skipped the event and went to the game...
I really wanted to meet Tateyama, which I didn't succeed in. But I did meet a ton of Japanese people, who were all crowding the Rangers bullpen before the game, including a lady who came here from Sapporo by herself to see him, a guy from Ibaraki who was cosplaying as Darvish, some various other people, I just chatted with them in Japanese, very fun. Even the guy who was sitting two seats to my left was from Hokkaido, though he works in San Jose now. I wore my Imanari jersey so a lot of people were saying things to me about how "Ryota got traded to Hanshin, didn't he? Too bad..." Very cool times, even if Darvish sucked (he gave up 6 runs on 6 hits and 6 walks in 5 innings, no joke) and the Rangers lost, I still had a good time at the game. (Plus in all honesty I kinda want the A's to win, they're really the underdog around here since I work with too many hipster Giants fans.)
I also brought my camera, so here are some shots from it.
See the entire photo set here with more Darvish and some Tanner Scheppers and whatnot.
Darvish in the bullpen warming up
Yoshinori Tateyama greets Mike Napoli at the bullpen
Koji Uehara goes for a walk in the late innings
Darvish cosplayer dude. He came here from Ibaraki.
You know, the photos of Darvish remind me an awful lot of another photoset I took in March 2008...
Saturday, November 24, 2007
Joe Kennedy, 1979-2007
It sounds like a bad punchline to something, but it's not: Joe Kennedy is dead. How completely shocking and sad.
I didn't even realize he had left the A's. No, seriously. It apparently happened during that month after I moved to Japan but still didn't have internet.
I'll best remember Joe as one of the easiest guys to spot in the Safeco bullpen (I could always tell he was warming up from my seat in the upper deck, because a gigantic lefty is pretty easy to recognize).
They don't know exactly how he died yet -- possibly either a heart attack or an aneurysm -- but he was only 28 years old. 28 years old! Also, he leaves behind a pregnant wife and a 1-year-old son. And to think it happened during Thanksgiving, too -- I had something similar happen during Thanksgiving 9 years ago, when my stepfather had a heart attack the night before. He lived, but we were all pretty freaked out at the time, so I can't even imagine how sad Kennedy's family must be right now. Argh.
In other losses for the A's fanbase, Marco Scutaro was traded to Toronto. Dang, that's pretty weird. I always loved seeing Marco at batting practice and he always made me laugh.
I didn't even realize he had left the A's. No, seriously. It apparently happened during that month after I moved to Japan but still didn't have internet.
I'll best remember Joe as one of the easiest guys to spot in the Safeco bullpen (I could always tell he was warming up from my seat in the upper deck, because a gigantic lefty is pretty easy to recognize).
They don't know exactly how he died yet -- possibly either a heart attack or an aneurysm -- but he was only 28 years old. 28 years old! Also, he leaves behind a pregnant wife and a 1-year-old son. And to think it happened during Thanksgiving, too -- I had something similar happen during Thanksgiving 9 years ago, when my stepfather had a heart attack the night before. He lived, but we were all pretty freaked out at the time, so I can't even imagine how sad Kennedy's family must be right now. Argh.
In other losses for the A's fanbase, Marco Scutaro was traded to Toronto. Dang, that's pretty weird. I always loved seeing Marco at batting practice and he always made me laugh.
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
Dodgers and Dragons, Part 2: Improved Unarmed Strike
Sunday, July 8th. Mariners 7, Athletics 3. Continued from part 1... kind of.
"It's really nice of you to take over running the campaign from Grover, Mac," Willie was saying as he grabbed the bag of chips. "He never let my character come along for any of the good adventure hooks."
"That's because Bloomquist of Bremerton isn't actually USEFUL for any of the good adventure hooks," muttered Richie.
"Anyway, where were we?" asked Jason. "I think I was, you know, kicking ass and taking names?"
"Sadly, Friar Feierabend fell to -10 hit points a few rounds ago," replied McLaren. "So he's out of the campaign for a few days until you find someone who can cast Raise Dead. Let's see... right, you guys are still fighting the evil demon Cupcakes, Destroyer of Worlds."
Willie giggled. "I'm so glad we've levelled up to the point that this thing isn't hard to beat anymore. Remember those sessions last year when he totally owned our party?"
Jose nodded. "Lopez Lightbringer has such a big bonus to his sneak attack damage now that he just waits for the right moment to strike big rather than trying to chip away."
"Yeah, that was a nice shot you got off against him earlier, dude," said Jason. "Was that for full damage?"
"I think so. He's probably getting low by now, a couple nice cuts should finish him off."
Jason picked up the dice and rolled. "I know I've been rolling really well today," he said, looking at the result. "Good thing I've got that +2 Mace of Demon-Slaying! I just barely hit again."
Ichiro nodded. "My wizard casts Scorching Ray and sends one out to the right."
Jose took a d20 out of his bag. "I'm going to try to sneak attack again, okay?" he said. "Hmm... I succeeded on the hit, but I rolled really horrible for damage. How's the Cupcakes Demon looking? Not dead yet? Still hurling white spheres at us?"
McLaren looked at the notes behind the screen, and grimaced. "I can't say anything," he replied, "but you have definitely pissed it off."
Raul pondered this for a minute. "Okay," he agreed, "I'm going to try a Power Attack for 3 points. That should take it out."
"Roll it."
The die landed on the table. "YES!!!!" shouted the whole party. "Nice hit, Raul!"
MacLaren rolled some dice behind his screen and scribbled a few things down. "I have good news and bad news for you guys. The good news is, you've disarmed the Cupcakes Demon's supernatural powers..."
"...the bad news is?"
"The bad news is that it's charged down in a blind rage and is attempting to engage the party in unarmed combat. He shoves Ichiro's wizard for," he paused to roll, "2 points of damage."
Jason stood up and banged his fists down on the table. "No way," he said. "No. Way. Ellison Elvenmoon does NOT take that sort of shit from anyone, even overweight puddles of green and gold goo. I shove it back."
"Nice, dude!" said Richie. "I totally back you up here!"
"Cupcakes is summoning help," said McLaren, "and a whole horde of green and gold goblins appear and come to his aid." He rolled some dice. "He also shoves back Ellison but does no significant damage."
"Bah. I'm not afraid of him. I shove his ass."
"Uh, okay, you get a bonus to hit for the size modifier when a Small creature attacks a Large creature, but you take a penalty for the unarmed attack..."
"I attack a goblin too!"
"Yeah, me too!"
"I've got improved unarmed strike! Let me smack it!"
"What do you mean I'm small?"
"When's it my turn to hit? Sexson Stormblade wants to mash!"
"Guys, guys," said McLaren, "Settle down. I can't run this game if you're all jumping all over the place at once."
"But I swung my fists at the--"
"I wanted to attack a--"
"AAAACK SHUT UP SHUT UP SHUT UP." McLaren stood up. "An Umpire Spawn materializes and casts Mass Domination on the entire melee. He points a Finger of Death at Cupcakes, who immediately falls over, and is carried off the battlefield by the green and gold goblins. Meanwhile, you all need to make a will save or also immediately start walking off the battlefield."
"What? That's so unfair."
"Will save. Now. Also, the Umpire is starting to point at Ichiro's wizard."
"Uh, crap, we can't have Ichiro die," said Richie, as the whole group failed to make their saving throws. "Can't you do something about that?"
"Well, okay, I guess it'd be really bad for the campaign storyline for that to happen. How about Batista the Brainy? He's pretty useless."
"WHAT?" said Miguel.
"Yeah, sounds good!" replied Willie.
"Okay, so Miguel dies, and the party is victorious. I'll total up your XP and give you numbers next time we play. How's Thursday for you guys? Can everyone make it?"
"Yeah, I think so," said Richie. "It's back at your house, right? Who's bringing the chips and salsa?"
"I'm pretty sure it's Felix's turn," said Jose.
"Someone tell him to bring some mild stuff to go with the hot chipotle, okay?"
"It's really nice of you to take over running the campaign from Grover, Mac," Willie was saying as he grabbed the bag of chips. "He never let my character come along for any of the good adventure hooks."
"That's because Bloomquist of Bremerton isn't actually USEFUL for any of the good adventure hooks," muttered Richie.
"Anyway, where were we?" asked Jason. "I think I was, you know, kicking ass and taking names?"
"Sadly, Friar Feierabend fell to -10 hit points a few rounds ago," replied McLaren. "So he's out of the campaign for a few days until you find someone who can cast Raise Dead. Let's see... right, you guys are still fighting the evil demon Cupcakes, Destroyer of Worlds."
Willie giggled. "I'm so glad we've levelled up to the point that this thing isn't hard to beat anymore. Remember those sessions last year when he totally owned our party?"
Jose nodded. "Lopez Lightbringer has such a big bonus to his sneak attack damage now that he just waits for the right moment to strike big rather than trying to chip away."
"Yeah, that was a nice shot you got off against him earlier, dude," said Jason. "Was that for full damage?"
"I think so. He's probably getting low by now, a couple nice cuts should finish him off."
Jason picked up the dice and rolled. "I know I've been rolling really well today," he said, looking at the result. "Good thing I've got that +2 Mace of Demon-Slaying! I just barely hit again."
Ichiro nodded. "My wizard casts Scorching Ray and sends one out to the right."
Jose took a d20 out of his bag. "I'm going to try to sneak attack again, okay?" he said. "Hmm... I succeeded on the hit, but I rolled really horrible for damage. How's the Cupcakes Demon looking? Not dead yet? Still hurling white spheres at us?"
McLaren looked at the notes behind the screen, and grimaced. "I can't say anything," he replied, "but you have definitely pissed it off."
Raul pondered this for a minute. "Okay," he agreed, "I'm going to try a Power Attack for 3 points. That should take it out."
"Roll it."
The die landed on the table. "YES!!!!" shouted the whole party. "Nice hit, Raul!"
MacLaren rolled some dice behind his screen and scribbled a few things down. "I have good news and bad news for you guys. The good news is, you've disarmed the Cupcakes Demon's supernatural powers..."
"...the bad news is?"
"The bad news is that it's charged down in a blind rage and is attempting to engage the party in unarmed combat. He shoves Ichiro's wizard for," he paused to roll, "2 points of damage."
Jason stood up and banged his fists down on the table. "No way," he said. "No. Way. Ellison Elvenmoon does NOT take that sort of shit from anyone, even overweight puddles of green and gold goo. I shove it back."
"Nice, dude!" said Richie. "I totally back you up here!"
"Cupcakes is summoning help," said McLaren, "and a whole horde of green and gold goblins appear and come to his aid." He rolled some dice. "He also shoves back Ellison but does no significant damage."
"Bah. I'm not afraid of him. I shove his ass."
"Uh, okay, you get a bonus to hit for the size modifier when a Small creature attacks a Large creature, but you take a penalty for the unarmed attack..."
"I attack a goblin too!"
"Yeah, me too!"
"I've got improved unarmed strike! Let me smack it!"
"What do you mean I'm small?"
"When's it my turn to hit? Sexson Stormblade wants to mash!"
"Guys, guys," said McLaren, "Settle down. I can't run this game if you're all jumping all over the place at once."
"But I swung my fists at the--"
"I wanted to attack a--"
"AAAACK SHUT UP SHUT UP SHUT UP." McLaren stood up. "An Umpire Spawn materializes and casts Mass Domination on the entire melee. He points a Finger of Death at Cupcakes, who immediately falls over, and is carried off the battlefield by the green and gold goblins. Meanwhile, you all need to make a will save or also immediately start walking off the battlefield."
"What? That's so unfair."
"Will save. Now. Also, the Umpire is starting to point at Ichiro's wizard."
"Uh, crap, we can't have Ichiro die," said Richie, as the whole group failed to make their saving throws. "Can't you do something about that?"
"Well, okay, I guess it'd be really bad for the campaign storyline for that to happen. How about Batista the Brainy? He's pretty useless."
"WHAT?" said Miguel.
"Yeah, sounds good!" replied Willie.
"Okay, so Miguel dies, and the party is victorious. I'll total up your XP and give you numbers next time we play. How's Thursday for you guys? Can everyone make it?"
"Yeah, I think so," said Richie. "It's back at your house, right? Who's bringing the chips and salsa?"
"I'm pretty sure it's Felix's turn," said Jose.
"Someone tell him to bring some mild stuff to go with the hot chipotle, okay?"
Friday, April 06, 2007
Game Report: Mariners vs. A's - Morrow Less The Same
This is more of a personal diary of Tuesday evening's game, which I already wrote a silly entry about. I sort of intended to make a Friday Foto out of the pictures I took, but as it turns out, this entry will serve just fine for linking them.
I think I need to first make something clear: I write a Mariners blog, I live in Seattle, I root for the Mariners, but first and foremost I'm aPhillies baseball fan, which means that I often end up with various loyalties to other individual Utleys players. Occasionally many of them will happen to be on the same team. And over the last year or two I became something of a closet A's fan; I think they're a pretty good team, I think they're a pretty interesting team, I think they're pretty fun to watch, but another element also grabbed me -- one that most bloggers around here couldn't care less about -- the personalities I observed, mostly during batting practice. Scutaro's a goofy little dude who's always smiling. Swisher used to hug just about anything in his path (and changed his facial hair daily). Chavez and Kotsay are great at talking to kids. Rich Harden's the nicest guy on the planet. Even Brandon Buckley, the A's bullpen catcher, did things like dressing up a pitching dummy as Huston Street (including a hand-drawn "longhorns" symbol. No, really. I have proof.)
So basically, I showed up on Tuesday at around 5:45pm because I wanted to watch the A's during batting practice because I find them entertaining. Also, I find them to be one of the most photogenic teams out there, and as a huge camera geek, I figured that Game 2 would be a nice empty day where I wouldn't have to fight people to get down to the field.
Sure enough, it was actually a pretty great time to just hang out and watch people. Danny Haren, the opening day pitcher, was actually chasing fly balls in the outfield. Nick Swisher was wearing high socks and pretending to play golf or croquet or something with baseballs in shallow center. There were some little kids on the field running around in the sun with the rest of the team, having the time of their lives. Everyone seemed to be in a good mood. Brandon Buckley was pitching batting practice, and I even caught a glimpse of Todd Walker trying to hit a few baseballs.
Another awesome thing about batting practice is teams like the A's, who will have several players come over and chat and sign stuff. I'm not a huge collector or anything, but I love getting ticket stubs signed in particular, and I've kept all of the ones I've gotten. To me, it's like a series of papers representing brief moments, funny little interactions with players. Things like complimenting Tim Corcoran on his handwriting, or Eric Byrnes on his hair, or thinking it was funny how Billy Wagner and Barry Zito both sign right-handed. Or thinking how pretty much everyone on the Angels except Scot Shields is a meanyhead.
I was really psyched when Milton Bradley came over first, since I'd never really seen him come by before. He was really nice to everyone, even posing for pictures and all. Next to come by was Swisher, of course -- Swish always comes by, he's a crazy man with endless energy who seems to love talking to fans.
Other fan: Hey Swish, your hair looks great!
Swisher: Thanks, so does yours!
Me: Those high socks are AWESOME, Swish, you really should wear them more.
Swisher: [laughing] What? Me? With these skinny-ass legs?
I got Milton and Swisher to sign Monday and Tuesday's tickets, and then I noticed that King Richard the Brokenharden was also holding court further down the foul line by the outfield. So, even though I didn't really have anything left to get signed, I figured I'd wander down there and say hi and take pictures or something.
A Rich Harden smile cures all ills. Really.
While walking down along the field towards where Harden was, suddenly a ball went rolling fast towards the stands, right where I was! Wow! There wasn't really anyone around me at the time, so I bent over onto the field, hands outstretched to grab the baseball...
...and when it was about half a foot from my hands, a guy about a foot taller than me with a longer armreach ran in with a glove and pushed me and swooped up the ball.
I was devastated. I'm sure there was a look on my face that was about half "I am going to KILL YOU" and about half "I am horrendously horribly sad and am about to cry".
I don't really know the exact rules of baseball snagging -- perhaps nobody except Zack Hample really does -- and I'm sure there's no way this guy could have known that the only other baseball I have is a "training ball" that was thrown to me after BP last May by Willie Bloomquist -- but I guess I guilted him into giving me the baseball with my sad face. Maybe it's because he felt bad swiping a ball from a girl.
Anyway, the cool part was that I realized I actually had an excuse to stand with the crowd asking Rich questions about his hockey preferences, because I had something (the ball) I could ostensibly get signed, rather than just standing there like a dork with my camera. So I got a signature *and* a smile from Rich Harden, and well, I could have gone home happy right then without even seeing the game.
But, fortunately I didn't.
For one, I discovered that Joe Blanton wears contacts. I never really thought about that before -- I figured one of the requirements of being a pro baseball player is having good vision, since as a hitter you need it to pick up the ball, and as a pitcher you'd need it to have good control of where you were throwing the pitches, as seen by Rick Vaughn in the Major League movies with his big thick glasses. So now I'm vaguely curious about the percentages of major leaguers with subpar vision and how they deal with it (I know various guys have LASIK and other surgery done, among other things).
Second, I got to see things like rifle-twirlers and other ceremonies for Armed Forces Night.
Third, I got to see another RICHIE SEXSON FUNK BLAST WOOOOOOO.
Fourth, I found out that Kenji Johjima has good taste in videogames.
Fifth, I got to see the major league debut of Brandon Morrow (and his first mound conference and post-game interview!)
Sixth, after a topsy-turvy game involving the M's actually giving an undeserving Jarrod Washburn a 2-run lead, Mateo choking it up, and Calero choking even worse, Morrow managed to pitch a scoreless 9th inning (despite some control issues or nerves) and thus the Mariners actually won the game!
Seventh, I got to see what life-sized bobbleheads of Johjima, Raul, Ichiro, and Felix would look like, and now I'm going to have nightmares for weeks.
Eighth, I got to see Dave Niehaus's 4600th Mariners game. Think about that one for a second -- 4600 days is over 12 years. My oh my.
Ninth, I noticed that Jose Guillen's at-bat music was a remix of In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida, and I think that's pretty silly, as In-a-Gadda-da-Vidro would make a lot more sense.
Tenth, they forewent a lot of their normal Stupid Stadium Tricks (tm) in lieu of Armed Forces Night stuff, which was good. Even the normal tricks were geared towards it -- for "Ask the Mariners" they basically said "What would you say to the folks in the military?" and they had a clip of "Moose Basic Training", and the music trivia song was American Woman, and stuff along those lines.
After the game ended I ran towards the dugout to try to see Morrow, who indeed was in an interview with Shannon Drayer, but alas, it was at a bad angle. Still neat, though. So now I've been to the pro debut of our 2005 #1 draft pick Jeff Clement, up in Everett, and to the major league debut of our 2006 #1 draft pick Brandon Morrow, here at Safeco. And I suppose I was at our 2003 #1 draft pick Adam Jones's first appearance at Safeco (the game last year where Jamie Moyer gave up 5 home runs to the Red Sox). That's pretty neat. Or maybe I just really go to way too many baseball games.
I think I need to first make something clear: I write a Mariners blog, I live in Seattle, I root for the Mariners, but first and foremost I'm a
So basically, I showed up on Tuesday at around 5:45pm because I wanted to watch the A's during batting practice because I find them entertaining. Also, I find them to be one of the most photogenic teams out there, and as a huge camera geek, I figured that Game 2 would be a nice empty day where I wouldn't have to fight people to get down to the field.
Sure enough, it was actually a pretty great time to just hang out and watch people. Danny Haren, the opening day pitcher, was actually chasing fly balls in the outfield. Nick Swisher was wearing high socks and pretending to play golf or croquet or something with baseballs in shallow center. There were some little kids on the field running around in the sun with the rest of the team, having the time of their lives. Everyone seemed to be in a good mood. Brandon Buckley was pitching batting practice, and I even caught a glimpse of Todd Walker trying to hit a few baseballs.
Another awesome thing about batting practice is teams like the A's, who will have several players come over and chat and sign stuff. I'm not a huge collector or anything, but I love getting ticket stubs signed in particular, and I've kept all of the ones I've gotten. To me, it's like a series of papers representing brief moments, funny little interactions with players. Things like complimenting Tim Corcoran on his handwriting, or Eric Byrnes on his hair, or thinking it was funny how Billy Wagner and Barry Zito both sign right-handed. Or thinking how pretty much everyone on the Angels except Scot Shields is a meanyhead.
I was really psyched when Milton Bradley came over first, since I'd never really seen him come by before. He was really nice to everyone, even posing for pictures and all. Next to come by was Swisher, of course -- Swish always comes by, he's a crazy man with endless energy who seems to love talking to fans.
Other fan: Hey Swish, your hair looks great!
Swisher: Thanks, so does yours!
Me: Those high socks are AWESOME, Swish, you really should wear them more.
Swisher: [laughing] What? Me? With these skinny-ass legs?
I got Milton and Swisher to sign Monday and Tuesday's tickets, and then I noticed that King Richard the Brokenharden was also holding court further down the foul line by the outfield. So, even though I didn't really have anything left to get signed, I figured I'd wander down there and say hi and take pictures or something.
A Rich Harden smile cures all ills. Really.
While walking down along the field towards where Harden was, suddenly a ball went rolling fast towards the stands, right where I was! Wow! There wasn't really anyone around me at the time, so I bent over onto the field, hands outstretched to grab the baseball...
...and when it was about half a foot from my hands, a guy about a foot taller than me with a longer armreach ran in with a glove and pushed me and swooped up the ball.
I was devastated. I'm sure there was a look on my face that was about half "I am going to KILL YOU" and about half "I am horrendously horribly sad and am about to cry".
I don't really know the exact rules of baseball snagging -- perhaps nobody except Zack Hample really does -- and I'm sure there's no way this guy could have known that the only other baseball I have is a "training ball" that was thrown to me after BP last May by Willie Bloomquist -- but I guess I guilted him into giving me the baseball with my sad face. Maybe it's because he felt bad swiping a ball from a girl.
Anyway, the cool part was that I realized I actually had an excuse to stand with the crowd asking Rich questions about his hockey preferences, because I had something (the ball) I could ostensibly get signed, rather than just standing there like a dork with my camera. So I got a signature *and* a smile from Rich Harden, and well, I could have gone home happy right then without even seeing the game.
But, fortunately I didn't.
For one, I discovered that Joe Blanton wears contacts. I never really thought about that before -- I figured one of the requirements of being a pro baseball player is having good vision, since as a hitter you need it to pick up the ball, and as a pitcher you'd need it to have good control of where you were throwing the pitches, as seen by Rick Vaughn in the Major League movies with his big thick glasses. So now I'm vaguely curious about the percentages of major leaguers with subpar vision and how they deal with it (I know various guys have LASIK and other surgery done, among other things).
Second, I got to see things like rifle-twirlers and other ceremonies for Armed Forces Night.
Third, I got to see another RICHIE SEXSON FUNK BLAST WOOOOOOO.
Fourth, I found out that Kenji Johjima has good taste in videogames.
Fifth, I got to see the major league debut of Brandon Morrow (and his first mound conference and post-game interview!)
Sixth, after a topsy-turvy game involving the M's actually giving an undeserving Jarrod Washburn a 2-run lead, Mateo choking it up, and Calero choking even worse, Morrow managed to pitch a scoreless 9th inning (despite some control issues or nerves) and thus the Mariners actually won the game!
Seventh, I got to see what life-sized bobbleheads of Johjima, Raul, Ichiro, and Felix would look like, and now I'm going to have nightmares for weeks.
Eighth, I got to see Dave Niehaus's 4600th Mariners game. Think about that one for a second -- 4600 days is over 12 years. My oh my.
Ninth, I noticed that Jose Guillen's at-bat music was a remix of In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida, and I think that's pretty silly, as In-a-Gadda-da-Vidro would make a lot more sense.
Tenth, they forewent a lot of their normal Stupid Stadium Tricks (tm) in lieu of Armed Forces Night stuff, which was good. Even the normal tricks were geared towards it -- for "Ask the Mariners" they basically said "What would you say to the folks in the military?" and they had a clip of "Moose Basic Training", and the music trivia song was American Woman, and stuff along those lines.
After the game ended I ran towards the dugout to try to see Morrow, who indeed was in an interview with Shannon Drayer, but alas, it was at a bad angle. Still neat, though. So now I've been to the pro debut of our 2005 #1 draft pick Jeff Clement, up in Everett, and to the major league debut of our 2006 #1 draft pick Brandon Morrow, here at Safeco. And I suppose I was at our 2003 #1 draft pick Adam Jones's first appearance at Safeco (the game last year where Jamie Moyer gave up 5 home runs to the Red Sox). That's pretty neat. Or maybe I just really go to way too many baseball games.
Wednesday, April 04, 2007
Dodgers and Dragons, Part 1: The Cupcakes Curse
I have pictures and game notes and all kinds of stuff from going to Safeco Field tonight, but I had a silly idea on the bus ride home for a new kind of "fantasy baseball", so I'm writing that now. Serious report will come later/tomorrow.
Athletics at Mariners. Mariners 8, Athletics 4.
"Hey guys, sorry I'm late," said Willie as he sat down at the end of the table.
"Did you at least remember to bring the chips and Dew?" Richie said.
Willie's face fell. "Crap," he replied. "I knew there was something I forgot... at least I remembered my character sheet."
Grover nodded. "No big deal, dude, it just means we're not going to include you in today's adventure."
Willie groaned. "What? BUT I TOTALLY NEED THE XP TO LEVEL UP MY ROGUE! You PROMISED!"
Yuniesky waved. "Sorry, I've got better skill checks than you do anyway, so I'm playing instead."
Jarrod laughed. "That's okay, Felix is sitting today's session out too, he's out of spells after blowing up a Harenculus with a couple fireballs."
Grover gathered up his notes behind the GM shield and started reading. "Okay... so, you are all journeying across a grassy field at the bottom of a valley. You can hear a low roar surrounding you, and in the distance you see several green and gold humanoid figures lurking in the shadows, wielding wooden clubs. Roll initiative."
Jarrod smiled. "Awesome, I go first. Washburn The Wise casts Bless on several spheres and hurls them at the enemies."
"Roll to hit."
He rolled a 2. "Crap! Goddamnit these dice suck, where the hell did they come from?"
"I think Gil forgot to take them when he left the campaign," said Willie.
"Well, uh, that's not helping, Ichiro, can your wizard do something?"
"What's going on? An aerial attack against us?" Ichiro looked through his character sheet. "I cast Shield."
Grover applauded. "You prevent the volley of flyballs from hitting the party. Good thinking."
Ichiro grinned. "Then I also cast Magic Missile and return their fire back upon their plate!"
Richie whined. "Is it my turn to attack yet? Sexson Stormblade wants to MASH!"
Grover said, "Yeah, but a more formidable foe has entered the fray."
"Oh?"
"It's a large beastly creature, swathed in dark green and gold robes, with a massive torso and fierce eyes glinting out from above a goatee."
"OH MY GOD," said Jose. "Guillen the Barbarian has seen this abomination before. Can it be..."
"No way," replied Yuniesky. "There's no way anyone would make a party fight one of these in only their second session."
Grover cackled. "Oh ho, that's what YOU think. The beast approaching your group is none other than the evil demon CUPCAKES, DESTROYER OF WORLDS!"
"ARGGHHH." Willie grimaced. "This is the monster that totally wiped out our last party. We couldn't dispel the curse it put on us."
Jose nodded. "I've seen this thing completely devour characters in three rounds! They barely even have a chance to react! It's inhuman!"
"I don't know what you're all afraid of," said Richie. "Now that I levelled up in the offseason I can use my new warrior skill to defeat it."
"Your what?"
"It's called Funk Blast. I basically take a penalty to my to-hit roll and automatically do full damage if I actually get a hit when I swing."
"Whoa. Awesome."
"Sweeeeet! Let's try it."
"We NEED the funk!"
Grover looked over his notes. "Sure, go ahead. Just make sure you don't roll a 1 or you'll break your club."
Richie took a deep breath and threw the d20 on the table. The icosahedron rolled around as everyone watched, and it finally landed on a 17. "YESSSSS," Richie pumped his fist. "Wait, what do I need to roll to get a hit off this guy anyway?"
"Uh, that'll hit," said Grover. "You've really wounded it. But in the meantime, the rest of its henchmen are still attacking Jarrod's cleric over there."
"Oh shit," said Jarrod, "I guess I go into a full defensive stance until the rest of the party can bail me out."
"Sure, I think we can hold off the henchmen for a while," said Jose thoughtfully. "What's your status like?"
Grover rolled a few dice. "Actually, Washburn the Wise just got bashed in the head by Milton of Bradley and fell over unconscious. Let me get you a replacement character." He shuffled around some papers. "Here's Julio the Horrible, try playing him for a bit."
After several rounds of battling against the Cupcakes demon and scoring some lucky hits, the party finally managed to tire it out, and it retreated, leaving a Kikobold slave behind to cover its exit.
"Wow, you guys are doing really impressive today," said Willie. "I just WISH MY CHARACTER WAS THERE TOO."
"Well, you're not, so shut up," said Richie.
"Hmmm, these should be a lot easier to finish off," said Jose. "I'll go around to the side so you get a +2 flanking bonus, okay, Yuni?"
"Gotcha," Yuniesky replied. "Can I sneak attack it too, then?"
"If you're flanking, yeah," said Grover. "Roll it."
Yuni threw the die.
"A NATURAL 20!!!" the entire party exclaimed.
"Dang," Grover said. "With the critical damage and your sneak attack damage, that adds up to... oh, screw it, I don't feel like doing the math. Fine, you've defeated the Gelatinous A's. Good job."
"Do we level?" said Jarrod.
"No, not yet," replied Grover. "This adventure arc isn't over. Next session I'm going to have you all infiltrate the castle of King Richard the Brokenharden."
Athletics at Mariners. Mariners 8, Athletics 4.
"Hey guys, sorry I'm late," said Willie as he sat down at the end of the table.
"Did you at least remember to bring the chips and Dew?" Richie said.
Willie's face fell. "Crap," he replied. "I knew there was something I forgot... at least I remembered my character sheet."
Grover nodded. "No big deal, dude, it just means we're not going to include you in today's adventure."
Willie groaned. "What? BUT I TOTALLY NEED THE XP TO LEVEL UP MY ROGUE! You PROMISED!"
Yuniesky waved. "Sorry, I've got better skill checks than you do anyway, so I'm playing instead."
Jarrod laughed. "That's okay, Felix is sitting today's session out too, he's out of spells after blowing up a Harenculus with a couple fireballs."
Grover gathered up his notes behind the GM shield and started reading. "Okay... so, you are all journeying across a grassy field at the bottom of a valley. You can hear a low roar surrounding you, and in the distance you see several green and gold humanoid figures lurking in the shadows, wielding wooden clubs. Roll initiative."
Jarrod smiled. "Awesome, I go first. Washburn The Wise casts Bless on several spheres and hurls them at the enemies."
"Roll to hit."
He rolled a 2. "Crap! Goddamnit these dice suck, where the hell did they come from?"
"I think Gil forgot to take them when he left the campaign," said Willie.
"Well, uh, that's not helping, Ichiro, can your wizard do something?"
"What's going on? An aerial attack against us?" Ichiro looked through his character sheet. "I cast Shield."
Grover applauded. "You prevent the volley of flyballs from hitting the party. Good thinking."
Ichiro grinned. "Then I also cast Magic Missile and return their fire back upon their plate!"
Richie whined. "Is it my turn to attack yet? Sexson Stormblade wants to MASH!"
Grover said, "Yeah, but a more formidable foe has entered the fray."
"Oh?"
"It's a large beastly creature, swathed in dark green and gold robes, with a massive torso and fierce eyes glinting out from above a goatee."
"OH MY GOD," said Jose. "Guillen the Barbarian has seen this abomination before. Can it be..."
"No way," replied Yuniesky. "There's no way anyone would make a party fight one of these in only their second session."
Grover cackled. "Oh ho, that's what YOU think. The beast approaching your group is none other than the evil demon CUPCAKES, DESTROYER OF WORLDS!"
"ARGGHHH." Willie grimaced. "This is the monster that totally wiped out our last party. We couldn't dispel the curse it put on us."
Jose nodded. "I've seen this thing completely devour characters in three rounds! They barely even have a chance to react! It's inhuman!"
"I don't know what you're all afraid of," said Richie. "Now that I levelled up in the offseason I can use my new warrior skill to defeat it."
"Your what?"
"It's called Funk Blast. I basically take a penalty to my to-hit roll and automatically do full damage if I actually get a hit when I swing."
"Whoa. Awesome."
"Sweeeeet! Let's try it."
"We NEED the funk!"
Grover looked over his notes. "Sure, go ahead. Just make sure you don't roll a 1 or you'll break your club."
Richie took a deep breath and threw the d20 on the table. The icosahedron rolled around as everyone watched, and it finally landed on a 17. "YESSSSS," Richie pumped his fist. "Wait, what do I need to roll to get a hit off this guy anyway?"
"Uh, that'll hit," said Grover. "You've really wounded it. But in the meantime, the rest of its henchmen are still attacking Jarrod's cleric over there."
"Oh shit," said Jarrod, "I guess I go into a full defensive stance until the rest of the party can bail me out."
"Sure, I think we can hold off the henchmen for a while," said Jose thoughtfully. "What's your status like?"
Grover rolled a few dice. "Actually, Washburn the Wise just got bashed in the head by Milton of Bradley and fell over unconscious. Let me get you a replacement character." He shuffled around some papers. "Here's Julio the Horrible, try playing him for a bit."
After several rounds of battling against the Cupcakes demon and scoring some lucky hits, the party finally managed to tire it out, and it retreated, leaving a Kikobold slave behind to cover its exit.
"Wow, you guys are doing really impressive today," said Willie. "I just WISH MY CHARACTER WAS THERE TOO."
"Well, you're not, so shut up," said Richie.
"Hmmm, these should be a lot easier to finish off," said Jose. "I'll go around to the side so you get a +2 flanking bonus, okay, Yuni?"
"Gotcha," Yuniesky replied. "Can I sneak attack it too, then?"
"If you're flanking, yeah," said Grover. "Roll it."
Yuni threw the die.
"A NATURAL 20!!!" the entire party exclaimed.
"Dang," Grover said. "With the critical damage and your sneak attack damage, that adds up to... oh, screw it, I don't feel like doing the math. Fine, you've defeated the Gelatinous A's. Good job."
"Do we level?" said Jarrod.
"No, not yet," replied Grover. "This adventure arc isn't over. Next session I'm going to have you all infiltrate the castle of King Richard the Brokenharden."
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
Dirt Diamond Double Dactyls, Part 1
I blame Athletics Nation's "poet" "laureate" Monkeyball for this, but every now and then I get on another Double Dactyl writing kick. Now I find myself compulsively looking through rosters for guys with dactyls for their last names.
Anyway, I wrote one in an AN comment and a second one just now for the heck of it, and though I was planning to start writing a Japan Series preview tonight, I may end up adding to these instead. Join me! It's a surprisingly addictive and fun poetry form.
1.
Higgledy-piggledy,
Ellis and Scutaro
noticed a pattern while
viewing their splits:
"Phooey on Beane and his
on-base-percentages,
Moneyball, schmoneyball,
We just get hits."
2.
Higgledy-piggledy,
Washburn and Johjima
Argued a bit in a
chat on the mound:
"Seems that our problem's not
Communicational,
Japanese, schmapanese,
Keep the ball DOWN!"
Anyway, I wrote one in an AN comment and a second one just now for the heck of it, and though I was planning to start writing a Japan Series preview tonight, I may end up adding to these instead. Join me! It's a surprisingly addictive and fun poetry form.
1.
Higgledy-piggledy,
Ellis and Scutaro
noticed a pattern while
viewing their splits:
"Phooey on Beane and his
on-base-percentages,
Moneyball, schmoneyball,
We just get hits."
2.
Higgledy-piggledy,
Washburn and Johjima
Argued a bit in a
chat on the mound:
"Seems that our problem's not
Communicational,
Japanese, schmapanese,
Keep the ball DOWN!"
Thursday, September 28, 2006
Game Report: Mariners vs. A's - Gone With The Windsor
I didn't bring a camera to the game today, and I didn't even really hang out for much of BP at all. However, let me posit a question to you: which person do you think it'd be harder to get an autograph from -- a bullpen catcher, or a star pitcher?
The answer: the bullpen catcher.
I printed out a few of the pictures from the Huston Street dummy incident a few weeks ago, and I really, really, really wanted to see if I could get Brandon Buckley to sign one, since he had instigated it all.
So I get to the park around 6:15, and some pitchers are playing catch on the field, but that's about it. Haren's tossing in the bullpen, and finishes, and Buckley comes out with him. The guy next to me yells, "DANNY! HEY DANNY, WILL YOU PLEASE SIGN?" but Haren completely ignores him and goes by. So I start yelling too:
Me: "Hey! Brandon! Buckley!"
Buckley, jogging: "What?"
Me: "Will you sign something?"
Buckley: [shakes head]
Me: "No, I'm dead serious!"
Buckley: "Yeah, I KNOW you are!"
Me: "Awww, cmon?"
Buckley, already past: "I'm not a player, I don't sign stuff."
Sigh.
The guy next to me was like, "Whoa, what is that from?" and I showed him the pictures, and some of the other people around, and they all thought it was really funny.
Well, Rich Harden was standing one section to my left, and he didn't seem to be in any hurry, so I went over to him -- I still had a Harden baseball card in my bag. When he was signing something for another guy, he was saying how awful he thought he did yesterday, so when he got up to me, it was like:
Me: "Ummm, Rich, you only gave up two hits in five innings yesterday..."
Harden: "Yeah..."
Me: "...and you're calling that bad?"
Harden: [sheepishly] "Oh man, you have no idea, I felt terrible."
Me: "You looked awesome from the stands."
Harden, looking up, smiling at me: "Well, hey, thanks!"
I must admit that a smile from Rich Harden is more than enough to cancel out any grumpiness I had over being dissed by Brandon Buckley. Harden just seems like such a sweetheart, sort of a Dan Wilson type of guy.
Anyway, I ended up sitting in Terrace Club today, and they only seem to have four kinds of mustard instead of seven, which was a letdown. I did, however, find what may be one of the best food-to-money-ratio items in Safeco, namely the sauteed pasta sold behind section 216 or so. It was $9 for a GIGANTIC bowl of sauteed pasta with chicken, vegetables, and alfredo sauce; I couldn't even finish it. I don't think there's EVER been a time that I got food at the ballpark and it was too much; usually it's more like they're charging too much for way too little.
Of course, I can't really recommend the pasta in my "ways to eat cheap at Safeco", because you have to be in Terrace Club in the first place to get it, so I think I'm still going to say that my top three food items I generally get at Safeco are:
1. Ivar's Fish'n'Chips, $7
2. BBQ Sandwich from Dixie's/Porter's/whatever, $8.75
3. Bullpen Bratwurst, $5
(The third item has mostly come about during my new camera days -- after BP ends at 6:20-6:25ish, there's at least 10-15 minutes before pitchers start warming up, and the bratwurst is relatively cheap, relatively filling, pretty tasty, and best, I can eat it with one hand and not worry about making my camera all greasy. It's more for the days when I don't expect to leave the bullpen until about 2 minutes before the first pitch and still need to get up to section 334; otherwise I duck out before the national anthem and buy one of the first two choices and am in my seat for the first pitch anyway.)
When I said at the bottom of my last game report that "maybe we'll get to see some players we wouldn't otherwise, like Jeremy Brown or Hiram Bocachica," I had no idea how accurate that prediction was going to turn out. The starting lineup for Oakland was Bocachica CF, Scutaro 2B, Kielty RF, Swisher LF, Johnson 1B, Melhuse C, Jimenez SS, Brown DH, Perez 3B. Jason Windsor got the start instead of Barry Zito, too.
And yet, the Mariners still found a way to lose the game 7-6 in the end.
I don't feel like writing a long entry, so what you need to know is:
1. On the very first play of the game, Hiram Bocachica (!) hit the ball to third base. It was a sort of difficult play to make, and Beltre got the ball and threw it to first, only it didn't quite go to first, and Richie didn't make the catch. Bocachica had already overshot the bag when the ball rolled wild, and he tripped and fell over on the ground, but managed to get up and dash to second while Jose Lopez was recovering the ball. Lopez threw to second to get Bocachica there, and the ball and the Bocachica arrived at about the same time, only Betancourt didn't make that catch either. Fortunately, in the end, Bocachica only ended up getting to second. This play should have really been indicative of the way the Mariners were going to be that evening -- nothing was going to go their way, and they were going to find some way to lose the game no matter what.
2. Meche threw 125 pitches in 6 innings. Something tells me they don't really care about whether his arm falls off or not anymore. To be fair, though, he struck out 4 of the last 6 batters he faced, all after hitting 100 pitches. The thing is, he gave up 6 hits, and 3 were doubles and 1 was a triple. And the triple was to Antonio Perez, too.
On the other hand, tonight I wore my Meche #55 shirt that I bought in early 2003 back when the Mariners didn't suck. I've worn it a lot these last few years; I've been to a lot of Meche starts, it seems. It's sort of weird to think that it might be the last time I wear it for one of his games.
3. On Monday, Ichiro tied Harold Reynolds's club record for career triples with 48. Today, after Nick Swisher couldn't quite recover a hit to left field, Ichiro ended up on third base for his 49th, which means he's now the club record-holder.
4. Dan Johnson looked like he was ACTUALLY trying to knock Kenji Johjima down when he was running home during that disastrous 9th inning. I mean, the ball was grounded to third, Beltre threw to Johjima, and Johnson just barrelled down the baseline with his arms up like he was blocking punches, and ran hard into him. I thought that was sort of uncool.
5. Yes, turnabout is fair play. It's funny that on Monday, Huston Street imploded and JJ Putz was the one to get the win in extra innings, whereas today, JJ Putz imploded and Huston Street picked up a save in extra innings. Worse, Street struck out the side, and Jay Witasick struck out two out of the three guys he faced in the 9th. Yawn.
Woo, off day tomorrow, then Fan Appreciation Night on Friday. I almost feel like I need the off day more than the team does.
The Phillies won after a long and grueling 14-inning game tonight, but I'm sort of worried for them. I don't think the Dodger juggernaut is going to slow down, and the same "must-win" situation as last year feels really precarious to me. Ironically, just like last year, a late-season game with the Astros seemed to determine their fate. Well, whatever happens, I still love those guys. Utley, Howard, Hamels, and especially Chris Coste -- who would have ever expected this year to work out this way?
The Fighters have digest movies up of the last two Hawks games, with Shinjo's retirement ceremony and the crazy beer-pouring first-place celebration. I love these guys too, of course.
The answer: the bullpen catcher.
I printed out a few of the pictures from the Huston Street dummy incident a few weeks ago, and I really, really, really wanted to see if I could get Brandon Buckley to sign one, since he had instigated it all.
So I get to the park around 6:15, and some pitchers are playing catch on the field, but that's about it. Haren's tossing in the bullpen, and finishes, and Buckley comes out with him. The guy next to me yells, "DANNY! HEY DANNY, WILL YOU PLEASE SIGN?" but Haren completely ignores him and goes by. So I start yelling too:
Me: "Hey! Brandon! Buckley!"
Buckley, jogging: "What?"
Me: "Will you sign something?"
Buckley: [shakes head]
Me: "No, I'm dead serious!"
Buckley: "Yeah, I KNOW you are!"
Me: "Awww, cmon?"
Buckley, already past: "I'm not a player, I don't sign stuff."
Sigh.
The guy next to me was like, "Whoa, what is that from?" and I showed him the pictures, and some of the other people around, and they all thought it was really funny.
Well, Rich Harden was standing one section to my left, and he didn't seem to be in any hurry, so I went over to him -- I still had a Harden baseball card in my bag. When he was signing something for another guy, he was saying how awful he thought he did yesterday, so when he got up to me, it was like:
Me: "Ummm, Rich, you only gave up two hits in five innings yesterday..."
Harden: "Yeah..."
Me: "...and you're calling that bad?"
Harden: [sheepishly] "Oh man, you have no idea, I felt terrible."
Me: "You looked awesome from the stands."
Harden, looking up, smiling at me: "Well, hey, thanks!"
I must admit that a smile from Rich Harden is more than enough to cancel out any grumpiness I had over being dissed by Brandon Buckley. Harden just seems like such a sweetheart, sort of a Dan Wilson type of guy.
Anyway, I ended up sitting in Terrace Club today, and they only seem to have four kinds of mustard instead of seven, which was a letdown. I did, however, find what may be one of the best food-to-money-ratio items in Safeco, namely the sauteed pasta sold behind section 216 or so. It was $9 for a GIGANTIC bowl of sauteed pasta with chicken, vegetables, and alfredo sauce; I couldn't even finish it. I don't think there's EVER been a time that I got food at the ballpark and it was too much; usually it's more like they're charging too much for way too little.
Of course, I can't really recommend the pasta in my "ways to eat cheap at Safeco", because you have to be in Terrace Club in the first place to get it, so I think I'm still going to say that my top three food items I generally get at Safeco are:
1. Ivar's Fish'n'Chips, $7
2. BBQ Sandwich from Dixie's/Porter's/whatever, $8.75
3. Bullpen Bratwurst, $5
(The third item has mostly come about during my new camera days -- after BP ends at 6:20-6:25ish, there's at least 10-15 minutes before pitchers start warming up, and the bratwurst is relatively cheap, relatively filling, pretty tasty, and best, I can eat it with one hand and not worry about making my camera all greasy. It's more for the days when I don't expect to leave the bullpen until about 2 minutes before the first pitch and still need to get up to section 334; otherwise I duck out before the national anthem and buy one of the first two choices and am in my seat for the first pitch anyway.)
When I said at the bottom of my last game report that "maybe we'll get to see some players we wouldn't otherwise, like Jeremy Brown or Hiram Bocachica," I had no idea how accurate that prediction was going to turn out. The starting lineup for Oakland was Bocachica CF, Scutaro 2B, Kielty RF, Swisher LF, Johnson 1B, Melhuse C, Jimenez SS, Brown DH, Perez 3B. Jason Windsor got the start instead of Barry Zito, too.
And yet, the Mariners still found a way to lose the game 7-6 in the end.
I don't feel like writing a long entry, so what you need to know is:
1. On the very first play of the game, Hiram Bocachica (!) hit the ball to third base. It was a sort of difficult play to make, and Beltre got the ball and threw it to first, only it didn't quite go to first, and Richie didn't make the catch. Bocachica had already overshot the bag when the ball rolled wild, and he tripped and fell over on the ground, but managed to get up and dash to second while Jose Lopez was recovering the ball. Lopez threw to second to get Bocachica there, and the ball and the Bocachica arrived at about the same time, only Betancourt didn't make that catch either. Fortunately, in the end, Bocachica only ended up getting to second. This play should have really been indicative of the way the Mariners were going to be that evening -- nothing was going to go their way, and they were going to find some way to lose the game no matter what.
2. Meche threw 125 pitches in 6 innings. Something tells me they don't really care about whether his arm falls off or not anymore. To be fair, though, he struck out 4 of the last 6 batters he faced, all after hitting 100 pitches. The thing is, he gave up 6 hits, and 3 were doubles and 1 was a triple. And the triple was to Antonio Perez, too.
On the other hand, tonight I wore my Meche #55 shirt that I bought in early 2003 back when the Mariners didn't suck. I've worn it a lot these last few years; I've been to a lot of Meche starts, it seems. It's sort of weird to think that it might be the last time I wear it for one of his games.
3. On Monday, Ichiro tied Harold Reynolds's club record for career triples with 48. Today, after Nick Swisher couldn't quite recover a hit to left field, Ichiro ended up on third base for his 49th, which means he's now the club record-holder.
4. Dan Johnson looked like he was ACTUALLY trying to knock Kenji Johjima down when he was running home during that disastrous 9th inning. I mean, the ball was grounded to third, Beltre threw to Johjima, and Johnson just barrelled down the baseline with his arms up like he was blocking punches, and ran hard into him. I thought that was sort of uncool.
5. Yes, turnabout is fair play. It's funny that on Monday, Huston Street imploded and JJ Putz was the one to get the win in extra innings, whereas today, JJ Putz imploded and Huston Street picked up a save in extra innings. Worse, Street struck out the side, and Jay Witasick struck out two out of the three guys he faced in the 9th. Yawn.
Woo, off day tomorrow, then Fan Appreciation Night on Friday. I almost feel like I need the off day more than the team does.
The Phillies won after a long and grueling 14-inning game tonight, but I'm sort of worried for them. I don't think the Dodger juggernaut is going to slow down, and the same "must-win" situation as last year feels really precarious to me. Ironically, just like last year, a late-season game with the Astros seemed to determine their fate. Well, whatever happens, I still love those guys. Utley, Howard, Hamels, and especially Chris Coste -- who would have ever expected this year to work out this way?
The Fighters have digest movies up of the last two Hawks games, with Shinjo's retirement ceremony and the crazy beer-pouring first-place celebration. I love these guys too, of course.
Wednesday, September 27, 2006
Game Report: Mariners vs. A's - Behold Your AL West Overlords
Tonight, along with about 20 other people at Safeco Field, I got to see the Oakland A's clinch the AL West pennant.
Beware of flying Melhuses.
I'm not sure this game really needs a recap, in all honesty. Oakland won 12-3 as the Angels lost to Texas, and that's it for the American League pennant race, as it'll be the Twins, Tigers, Yankees and A's in the postseason.
The light was terrible at Safeco tonight, but I did take a bunch of pictures nonetheless. I got Brandon Buckley and Barry Zito to make faces at me at one point, and the pictures came out all blurry. Bleh. Swisher was taking fielding practice at shortstop as a joke for a while, though he kept falling over. He had a new facial hair pattern today, with these crazy thin long sideburns. We called him over to the stands eventually, and I got him to sign a baseball card with his completely weirdo signature, and said, "Swish, you're my favorite shortstop ever," and he laughed.
At the end of BP a bunch of guys came over -- Zito, Halsey, Blanton, a few more down by the dugout that I didn't see, so I got Zito to sign a baseball card as well (boy, I'm glad I remembered to bring them to work this morning), and then got Joe Blanton to sign my ticket. Wheee!
I took pictures of Harden warming up, too, though again, I got screwed over by the lighting. I sort of like this one where you can see his face clearly but his arm is a big blur. Unfortunately, due to the "bullpen tavern buffet" promo today, it turned out I couldn't just go to my normal spot in the tavern and take pictures through the holes in the wall. Grumble. So I went over to the Mariners bullpen instead, and got Francisco Cruceta to also sign my ticket. Bonus! I didn't think the players were supposed to do that, but maybe the "no autographs" sign is more so that people don't always pester the players, not necessarily that the players don't want to sign stuff.
Anyway, what can I say? Rich Harden is really good -- despite being limited to around 75 pitches (76, to be exact) -- and despite that he sort of seemed to be relatively sucking today -- he went 5 innings of 2-hit ball, striking out 5, walking Leadoff Bloomquist, and hitting Beltre. By the time Kirk Saarloos came in from the bullpen, the A's already had a 6-0 lead, with Swisher hitting a solo homer to lead off the second and Milton Bradley hitting a 3-run homer which I thought was almost going to reach the Hit it Here Cafe. I suppose it's fitting that the first runs the Mariners scored were when Beltre and Ibanez hit back-to-back home runs in the 6th off Saarloos, Beltre's being a huge shot into the fifth row of the left field bleachers, and Raul's going a few feet past the FSN sign in center field (but somehow being called 389 feet).
I think the M's pretty much decided not to bother trying to win this one once Woods had given up 6 runs, and instead turned it into an episode of American League Idol, running a bunch of young pitchers and hitters and fielders through a bunch of auditions to see who will get a major league recording contract next year. We got to see Jorge Campillo pitch, of all people, and Emiliano Fruto, the pride of Colombia, and then Eric O'Flaherty, the only Mariners pitcher to NOT give up a run. By the end of the game, almost every starter had been replaced with a callup player.
As a side note, neither Ichiro nor Johjima played in this game, making it the first one in I-have-no-idea-how-long that I didn't write a single player name on my scorecard in Japanese. I guess Hargrove noticed that the stadium was practically empty and figured he'd play a joke on any Japanese tourists who were dumb enough to come out for the game, by playing Bloomquist and Rivera instead. But the starting lineup was Bloomquist, Lopez, Beltre, Ibanez, Sexson, Broussard, Betancourt, Snelling, Rivera, and the lineup at the end of the game was Bloomquist, Lopez, Bohn, Jones, Dobbs, Perez, Navarro (!!), Morse, Rivera.
By the end of the game, the only people left in the stadium were the A's fans, pretty much, and when Kielty caught the final out, a spontaneous party erupted down by the A's dugout, both by the players and by the fans. Up where I was sitting, there was a guy who'd brought an A's flag and was waving it every time the A's scored a run (it reminded me of being in Japan again), and a bunch of A's fans rallied up there as well before running down to join their green-and-gold compatriots.
I keep not paying attention to writing this while I listen to the Nippon Ham Fighters vs. Softbank Hawks game, and I really should be sleeping instead, so I'm going to cut this entry short. I'm a little sad that Zito isn't pitching tomorrow -- they've changed the page to say that Jason Windsor is -- but maybe we'll get to see some players we wouldn't otherwise, like Jeremy Brown or Hiram Bocachica. And maybe Eric Chavez will finally get some rest.
Congratulations to the Oakland A's. I think it's shaping up to be a fun set of playoffs, and at this point I'm not even sure who I'll root for anymore.
Beware of flying Melhuses.
I'm not sure this game really needs a recap, in all honesty. Oakland won 12-3 as the Angels lost to Texas, and that's it for the American League pennant race, as it'll be the Twins, Tigers, Yankees and A's in the postseason.
The light was terrible at Safeco tonight, but I did take a bunch of pictures nonetheless. I got Brandon Buckley and Barry Zito to make faces at me at one point, and the pictures came out all blurry. Bleh. Swisher was taking fielding practice at shortstop as a joke for a while, though he kept falling over. He had a new facial hair pattern today, with these crazy thin long sideburns. We called him over to the stands eventually, and I got him to sign a baseball card with his completely weirdo signature, and said, "Swish, you're my favorite shortstop ever," and he laughed.
At the end of BP a bunch of guys came over -- Zito, Halsey, Blanton, a few more down by the dugout that I didn't see, so I got Zito to sign a baseball card as well (boy, I'm glad I remembered to bring them to work this morning), and then got Joe Blanton to sign my ticket. Wheee!
I took pictures of Harden warming up, too, though again, I got screwed over by the lighting. I sort of like this one where you can see his face clearly but his arm is a big blur. Unfortunately, due to the "bullpen tavern buffet" promo today, it turned out I couldn't just go to my normal spot in the tavern and take pictures through the holes in the wall. Grumble. So I went over to the Mariners bullpen instead, and got Francisco Cruceta to also sign my ticket. Bonus! I didn't think the players were supposed to do that, but maybe the "no autographs" sign is more so that people don't always pester the players, not necessarily that the players don't want to sign stuff.
Anyway, what can I say? Rich Harden is really good -- despite being limited to around 75 pitches (76, to be exact) -- and despite that he sort of seemed to be relatively sucking today -- he went 5 innings of 2-hit ball, striking out 5, walking Leadoff Bloomquist, and hitting Beltre. By the time Kirk Saarloos came in from the bullpen, the A's already had a 6-0 lead, with Swisher hitting a solo homer to lead off the second and Milton Bradley hitting a 3-run homer which I thought was almost going to reach the Hit it Here Cafe. I suppose it's fitting that the first runs the Mariners scored were when Beltre and Ibanez hit back-to-back home runs in the 6th off Saarloos, Beltre's being a huge shot into the fifth row of the left field bleachers, and Raul's going a few feet past the FSN sign in center field (but somehow being called 389 feet).
I think the M's pretty much decided not to bother trying to win this one once Woods had given up 6 runs, and instead turned it into an episode of American League Idol, running a bunch of young pitchers and hitters and fielders through a bunch of auditions to see who will get a major league recording contract next year. We got to see Jorge Campillo pitch, of all people, and Emiliano Fruto, the pride of Colombia, and then Eric O'Flaherty, the only Mariners pitcher to NOT give up a run. By the end of the game, almost every starter had been replaced with a callup player.
As a side note, neither Ichiro nor Johjima played in this game, making it the first one in I-have-no-idea-how-long that I didn't write a single player name on my scorecard in Japanese. I guess Hargrove noticed that the stadium was practically empty and figured he'd play a joke on any Japanese tourists who were dumb enough to come out for the game, by playing Bloomquist and Rivera instead. But the starting lineup was Bloomquist, Lopez, Beltre, Ibanez, Sexson, Broussard, Betancourt, Snelling, Rivera, and the lineup at the end of the game was Bloomquist, Lopez, Bohn, Jones, Dobbs, Perez, Navarro (!!), Morse, Rivera.
By the end of the game, the only people left in the stadium were the A's fans, pretty much, and when Kielty caught the final out, a spontaneous party erupted down by the A's dugout, both by the players and by the fans. Up where I was sitting, there was a guy who'd brought an A's flag and was waving it every time the A's scored a run (it reminded me of being in Japan again), and a bunch of A's fans rallied up there as well before running down to join their green-and-gold compatriots.
I keep not paying attention to writing this while I listen to the Nippon Ham Fighters vs. Softbank Hawks game, and I really should be sleeping instead, so I'm going to cut this entry short. I'm a little sad that Zito isn't pitching tomorrow -- they've changed the page to say that Jason Windsor is -- but maybe we'll get to see some players we wouldn't otherwise, like Jeremy Brown or Hiram Bocachica. And maybe Eric Chavez will finally get some rest.
Congratulations to the Oakland A's. I think it's shaping up to be a fun set of playoffs, and at this point I'm not even sure who I'll root for anymore.
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
Game Report: Mariners vs. A's - Meltdown Street
I have something really important that I have to admit first, before writing the rest of this post. You may wish to skip down a few paragraphs.
I'm totally in love with Rich Harden! He's the cutest guy in the entire galaxy!
See, I went to tonight's game with Gomez for our last chance to get Cheap Monday Tickets, and we got there around the end of batting practice time. I look out on the field, and there's an A's guy down at the front of the stands signing stuff and chatting with people. From afar, I thought it was Kirk Saarloos, which would make sense since he's local and all. I've gotten him to sign stuff before, so I thought I'd skip it. But for lack of anything better to do, I ran down to at least take a picture.
Except I get up to the front, and it's not Kirk Saarloos. It's King Richard the Brokenharden! He was just chatting with some kids from Vancouver and signing things, so I got him to sign my ticket stub, and wished him luck and said it was great to see him back from the DL and kicking ass, and he looked right into my eyes and grinned, and suddenly all those crazy chicks on Athletics Nation who had voted for him as being even cuter than Swisher didn't seem quite so crazy. What eyes! What a smile!
Alright, so now that nobody's reading this except maybe Jennifer, I'll actually talk about the game.
You have to understand that I went into this game joking that I was going to break the curse of the A's -- remember, the Mariners haven't beaten the A's since April 6th, and have a 1-15 record against them. However, the Mariners also hadn't lost a game I'd attended at Safeco Field since their last game against the A's here, on August 6th. So, was my winning streak going to win out, or was their losing streak going to win out?
You also have to understand that despite this being my first time seeing Cesar Jimenez making a major league start, it was the third time this year I'd actually seen him make a start, as BOTH of the times I went down to Tacoma for games this year, he was the starter. Once was the time where he took over a next-day-start for Clint Nageotte in a doubleheader of doom where he was matched against Jered Weaver, who struck out 12 guys in 6 innings, but neither starter figured in the decision as the Bees bullpen blew up. The other time, I went down to see Justin Leone play at the end of June, but neither Jimenez nor Jared Wells could throw strikes, to the tune of Jimenez having 6 walks and 4 strikeouts in 6 innings. The starters didn't figure in that decision either as both bullpens imploded.
So it should have been no surprise to me today to see Cesar Jimenez make a start, do some mediocre pitching, and then have neither starter figure in the decision as a bullpen imploded.
Things got off to a pretty neat start as Jason Kendall hit a fly ball to right field that Chris Snelling caught barehanded, but then immediately after that, Bobby Kielty hit a double to center that Ichiro couldn't quite get his glove on. As Gomez was informing me that he expected Jimenez to get hit pretty hard, Milton Bradley launched a 374-foot home run into the left-field seats. Then, Frank Thomas hit a long fly ball to centerfield, which both Ichiro and Snelling made it to, and Ichiro caught it, but went flying in a somersault over Snelling as they almost collided. Fortunately, he held onto the ball, and then Jay Payton struck out. 2-0.
Richie Sexson struck back in the bottom of the second with a solo homer, 428 feet to right-center, to bring the score to 2-1, but then the A's chained together a bunch of singles in the top of the third to push ahead another run. 3-1.
The Mariners weren't about to take that, though, and Yuniesky Betancourt led off the bottom of the third and nearly decapitated Eric Chavez with a line drive double to left field. Ichiro, who would eventually go 5-for-6 on the evening, singled, and Betancourt scored as Beltre grounded into a really nice double play -- I say "really nice" in terms of Scutaro making a diving stop, flipping the ball to Ellis, and Ellis turning the play to first in time. Johjima wanted none of that nonsense and doubled to left, and when Ibanez singled to center, Johjima rounded third and ran home. Jay Payton's throw actually beat him home, but he somehow avoided the tag and was safe. 3-3. Sexson hit a line-drive single to right after that, but then Ben Broussard struck out, which was his theme for the night, eventually ending 0-for-5 with three strikeouts.
The A's broke the tie immediately after that. Swisher singled, and then Mark Ellis hit a ball to deep left field, and for some reason neither Betancourt nor Lopez were actually covering second base at the time, so when Ibanez threw it in, it actually almost looked like he was throwing it TO Ellis, only Ellis ducked it and ran to the base, as Richie Sexson ran in wildly to recover the throw. It was sort of bizarre. Marco Scutaro walked the bases loaded, and Kendall doubled in two runs. Whoosh. 5-3.
We'd been trying to figure out who #64 was, warming up in the Mariners bullpen, but he came out to pitch the top of the fifth, and it was Travis Chick. Gomez told me that Chick had been banged up pretty badly in his last outing, but pointed out that "no matter how badly he does, at least unlike Eddie, his arm still works." I commented that "Great, my friend's 12-year-old brother is now going to want both a Putz jersey AND a Chick shirt. Has anyone started calling his delivery a Chick Flick yet?"
Chick got off to an impressive start, striking out Frank Thomas, but that was about all he did that was impressive. After that the next six batters reached base either by walking or getting a hit, including Jason Kendall walking in a run, at which point Chick was pulled for Francisco Cruceta. Mark Kotsay came in to pinch-hit for Bobby Kielty, though the scoreboard folks and announcers didn't even notice until a few pitches later when Kotsay had singled Mark Ellis home and was standing on first base, and they were about to announce Milton Bradley, and then announced that "The last batter was pinch-hitter Mark Kotsay." Cruceta struck out Bradley and then Frank Thomas hit a long fly ball out to right, and that was it for the inning, and the A's were ahead 9-3.
At least Chick doesn't dig the long ball, I guess.
They showed a "Science Of Baseball" movie thingy narrated by Rick Rizzs, which presented the ages-old question of "What is Pine Tar?" Unfortunately, the movie didn't involve George Brett or Brendan Donnelly, but instead involved actual pine trees and stuff. Bo-ring.
Ichiro led off the Mariners' half of the fifth inning by singling for the third time in the evening, and a few batters later, Ibanez was at the plate with two outs.
"Hey, do you think Raul could--"
"Whoa. That's totally--"
"Amazing. Bradley didn't even MOVE."
Yeah, so Raul hit a home run that I almost thought was going to get to the Hit It Here Cafe, before it sailed into the back rows of the right-field seats. 9-5.
Now, er, here's the kind of cool part, see. Francisco Cruceta, who so far this year had 5 walks, no strikeouts, and 2 home runs to his name, pitched all of the 6th and 7th innings and most of the 8th, during which there were only three base runners, no runs, and a second strikeout to go with one walk. Not bad, and I'll tell you what his secret is: Cruceta was pimpin'.
Hello, ladies. I'm a major-league pitcher.
Right, so the A's actually never scored another run after the fifth inning, but in most circumstances, 9 runs is more than enough to beat the Mariners, so it shouldn't have been a big deal. However, after thehot dog hydro races ("rerish noooo!"), and after the seventh-inning stretch, the Mariners found themselves refreshed enough to hit some baseballs. Ichiro hit a long fly to right, which Milton Bradley dove for and instead slipped and fell over and by the time he recovered the ball, Ichiro was at third base, and had tied Harold Reynolds's club record for career triples with 48. Then, to add insult to injury, Johjima hit a ground ball which scored Ichiro, and then Raul Ibanez grounded out to the mound, only Joe Kennedy slipped or tripped or something while trying to field the ball at first, and Ibanez was safe, and Kennedy was out of the game.
Justin Duschshcshcshchererererer held down the fort until the 9th inning though, and so it was 9-6 when Huston Street came in. I'm sure you've all seen this before -- Huston Street comes on the mound, throws some dazzling smiles at the women in the stands, some dazzling sliders at the batters at the plate, and everyone goes home a little while later.
Only this time, it didn't happen. I was cheering, "Huuuuuston Streeeeeet!" with the hopes of him getting the save, me getting my bus home, and getting the win for Loaiza on my fantasy team. But then Beltre hit a long fly ball to center field. "It's not out..." I started to say, as it bounced past Mark Kotsay and over the centerfield wall. "...at least, not on the first bounce." Then Johjima singled to left, though it was a short enough single that Beltre was held at third. Ibanez, however, singled to left as well, and Beltre scored. 9-7, no outs. Johjima was replaced with Adam Jones at second, and then Richie Sexson also singled past a diving Scutaro to left field, loading the bases as Jones was held at third, and Willie Bloomquist was put in as a pinch-runner for Richie. Ben Broussard struck out for his fifth unproductive at-bat of the evening, and then Jose Lopez hit a loooong fly ball to right field, which was caught, but Adam Jones easily tagged up and scored, and Ibanez even made it to third.
Mike Morse had come in to pinch-hit for Chris Snelling in the 6th, and now everyone's other favorite Rainier, Greg "Dobby The Bench Elf" Dobbs, came in to pinch-hit for Morse. Here it was, 9-8 in the bottom of the ninth, two outs. "And who's going to save the day now? Greg Dobbs?" remarked Gomez, as... Dobbs singled to left and Raul Ibanez ran home, tying the game at 9-9. "Huuuuuuston Streeeeeet, what happened to yoooooou?" I sighed. Betancourt grounded into a force-out at third after that, but hey, extra innings.
At this point I realized both that Esteban Loaiza could not get me a win for my fantasy team, and that I was going to get home late no matter what, so suddenly I was like, "That's it, you Oakland bastards, the Mariners are going to win. Eat karma, losers."
JJ Putz obliged by striking out Kendall, Kotsay, and Bradley on something like ten pitches, and then the fun began. Kiko Calero came in to pitch the 10th for Oakland, and Ichiro led off by doing what he normally does -- he singled, bouncing the ball towards third, where Eric Chavez made a really nice leap and dive to snag it, but then couldn't get the throw to first in time. Calero threw a pickoff to first, and Swisher had to dive down to get the ball, and somehow he and Ichiro ended up somewhat tangled up and the ball ended up rolling towards the stands, and Ichiro subsequently ended up on second base. A trainer came out to look at him, since it seemed he'd either bruised his legs or arms, we couldn't tell which, in the tangle.
Beltre attempted to bunt but utterly failed, and ended up hitting a line drive out to center field, which unfortunately went to Mark Kotsay instead of into the stands. Rene Rivera was up next, since someone had to come in to catch after Johjima was pinch-hit for, and we couldn't pinch-hit for him because we had no other backup catcher. (What the heck -- it's September, helLO?) Rivera predictably struck out, and then they intentionally walked Raul Ibanez to get to Willie Bloomquist, which is almost always a pretty good idea, regardless of him being a lefty or a righty.
So Gomez is like, "Great, we're going to be here forever."
I was like, "Just watch, Willie is going to do something cool here and win the game and then you'll NEVER hear the end of it--"
And then Willie did something cool there to win the game so we'd never hear the end of it, as he hit the ball, it bounced over the infield towards left field. Ichiro was off and running and nearly all the way to home plate by the time Jay Payton had charged in for the ball anyway, and he dropped it as Ichiro scored the winning run and the entire team mobbed Willie Bloomquist and tried to either bash a hole through his skull or congratulate him, it was hard to tell which.
The older gentleman sitting on Gomez's right said, "Do you think he could have gotten Ichiro out if he'd thrown the ball in?"
Gomez was like, "Uhhh... no."
And that was the game.
Today was Joel Pineiro's 28th birthday, but he wasn't pitching, which was probably a good thing.
I need to talk about the Japanese baseball high school draft sometime, though the big news is that the Rakuten Golden Eagles won the lottery to draft Masahiro Tanaka. More later.
Tomorrow, the adorable and talented Rich Harden takes the mound for Oakland, as the sort of cute and not as talented Jake Woods takes the mound for Seattle. I think it's going to be an interesting game either way, and not just because of my winning-at-Safeco karma. So stay tuned!
I'm totally in love with Rich Harden! He's the cutest guy in the entire galaxy!
See, I went to tonight's game with Gomez for our last chance to get Cheap Monday Tickets, and we got there around the end of batting practice time. I look out on the field, and there's an A's guy down at the front of the stands signing stuff and chatting with people. From afar, I thought it was Kirk Saarloos, which would make sense since he's local and all. I've gotten him to sign stuff before, so I thought I'd skip it. But for lack of anything better to do, I ran down to at least take a picture.
Except I get up to the front, and it's not Kirk Saarloos. It's King Richard the Brokenharden! He was just chatting with some kids from Vancouver and signing things, so I got him to sign my ticket stub, and wished him luck and said it was great to see him back from the DL and kicking ass, and he looked right into my eyes and grinned, and suddenly all those crazy chicks on Athletics Nation who had voted for him as being even cuter than Swisher didn't seem quite so crazy. What eyes! What a smile!
Alright, so now that nobody's reading this except maybe Jennifer, I'll actually talk about the game.
You have to understand that I went into this game joking that I was going to break the curse of the A's -- remember, the Mariners haven't beaten the A's since April 6th, and have a 1-15 record against them. However, the Mariners also hadn't lost a game I'd attended at Safeco Field since their last game against the A's here, on August 6th. So, was my winning streak going to win out, or was their losing streak going to win out?
You also have to understand that despite this being my first time seeing Cesar Jimenez making a major league start, it was the third time this year I'd actually seen him make a start, as BOTH of the times I went down to Tacoma for games this year, he was the starter. Once was the time where he took over a next-day-start for Clint Nageotte in a doubleheader of doom where he was matched against Jered Weaver, who struck out 12 guys in 6 innings, but neither starter figured in the decision as the Bees bullpen blew up. The other time, I went down to see Justin Leone play at the end of June, but neither Jimenez nor Jared Wells could throw strikes, to the tune of Jimenez having 6 walks and 4 strikeouts in 6 innings. The starters didn't figure in that decision either as both bullpens imploded.
So it should have been no surprise to me today to see Cesar Jimenez make a start, do some mediocre pitching, and then have neither starter figure in the decision as a bullpen imploded.
Things got off to a pretty neat start as Jason Kendall hit a fly ball to right field that Chris Snelling caught barehanded, but then immediately after that, Bobby Kielty hit a double to center that Ichiro couldn't quite get his glove on. As Gomez was informing me that he expected Jimenez to get hit pretty hard, Milton Bradley launched a 374-foot home run into the left-field seats. Then, Frank Thomas hit a long fly ball to centerfield, which both Ichiro and Snelling made it to, and Ichiro caught it, but went flying in a somersault over Snelling as they almost collided. Fortunately, he held onto the ball, and then Jay Payton struck out. 2-0.
Richie Sexson struck back in the bottom of the second with a solo homer, 428 feet to right-center, to bring the score to 2-1, but then the A's chained together a bunch of singles in the top of the third to push ahead another run. 3-1.
The Mariners weren't about to take that, though, and Yuniesky Betancourt led off the bottom of the third and nearly decapitated Eric Chavez with a line drive double to left field. Ichiro, who would eventually go 5-for-6 on the evening, singled, and Betancourt scored as Beltre grounded into a really nice double play -- I say "really nice" in terms of Scutaro making a diving stop, flipping the ball to Ellis, and Ellis turning the play to first in time. Johjima wanted none of that nonsense and doubled to left, and when Ibanez singled to center, Johjima rounded third and ran home. Jay Payton's throw actually beat him home, but he somehow avoided the tag and was safe. 3-3. Sexson hit a line-drive single to right after that, but then Ben Broussard struck out, which was his theme for the night, eventually ending 0-for-5 with three strikeouts.
The A's broke the tie immediately after that. Swisher singled, and then Mark Ellis hit a ball to deep left field, and for some reason neither Betancourt nor Lopez were actually covering second base at the time, so when Ibanez threw it in, it actually almost looked like he was throwing it TO Ellis, only Ellis ducked it and ran to the base, as Richie Sexson ran in wildly to recover the throw. It was sort of bizarre. Marco Scutaro walked the bases loaded, and Kendall doubled in two runs. Whoosh. 5-3.
We'd been trying to figure out who #64 was, warming up in the Mariners bullpen, but he came out to pitch the top of the fifth, and it was Travis Chick. Gomez told me that Chick had been banged up pretty badly in his last outing, but pointed out that "no matter how badly he does, at least unlike Eddie, his arm still works." I commented that "Great, my friend's 12-year-old brother is now going to want both a Putz jersey AND a Chick shirt. Has anyone started calling his delivery a Chick Flick yet?"
Chick got off to an impressive start, striking out Frank Thomas, but that was about all he did that was impressive. After that the next six batters reached base either by walking or getting a hit, including Jason Kendall walking in a run, at which point Chick was pulled for Francisco Cruceta. Mark Kotsay came in to pinch-hit for Bobby Kielty, though the scoreboard folks and announcers didn't even notice until a few pitches later when Kotsay had singled Mark Ellis home and was standing on first base, and they were about to announce Milton Bradley, and then announced that "The last batter was pinch-hitter Mark Kotsay." Cruceta struck out Bradley and then Frank Thomas hit a long fly ball out to right, and that was it for the inning, and the A's were ahead 9-3.
At least Chick doesn't dig the long ball, I guess.
They showed a "Science Of Baseball" movie thingy narrated by Rick Rizzs, which presented the ages-old question of "What is Pine Tar?" Unfortunately, the movie didn't involve George Brett or Brendan Donnelly, but instead involved actual pine trees and stuff. Bo-ring.
Ichiro led off the Mariners' half of the fifth inning by singling for the third time in the evening, and a few batters later, Ibanez was at the plate with two outs.
"Hey, do you think Raul could--"
"Whoa. That's totally--"
"Amazing. Bradley didn't even MOVE."
Yeah, so Raul hit a home run that I almost thought was going to get to the Hit It Here Cafe, before it sailed into the back rows of the right-field seats. 9-5.
Now, er, here's the kind of cool part, see. Francisco Cruceta, who so far this year had 5 walks, no strikeouts, and 2 home runs to his name, pitched all of the 6th and 7th innings and most of the 8th, during which there were only three base runners, no runs, and a second strikeout to go with one walk. Not bad, and I'll tell you what his secret is: Cruceta was pimpin'.
Hello, ladies. I'm a major-league pitcher.
Right, so the A's actually never scored another run after the fifth inning, but in most circumstances, 9 runs is more than enough to beat the Mariners, so it shouldn't have been a big deal. However, after the
Justin Duschshcshcshchererererer held down the fort until the 9th inning though, and so it was 9-6 when Huston Street came in. I'm sure you've all seen this before -- Huston Street comes on the mound, throws some dazzling smiles at the women in the stands, some dazzling sliders at the batters at the plate, and everyone goes home a little while later.
Only this time, it didn't happen. I was cheering, "Huuuuuston Streeeeeet!" with the hopes of him getting the save, me getting my bus home, and getting the win for Loaiza on my fantasy team. But then Beltre hit a long fly ball to center field. "It's not out..." I started to say, as it bounced past Mark Kotsay and over the centerfield wall. "...at least, not on the first bounce." Then Johjima singled to left, though it was a short enough single that Beltre was held at third. Ibanez, however, singled to left as well, and Beltre scored. 9-7, no outs. Johjima was replaced with Adam Jones at second, and then Richie Sexson also singled past a diving Scutaro to left field, loading the bases as Jones was held at third, and Willie Bloomquist was put in as a pinch-runner for Richie. Ben Broussard struck out for his fifth unproductive at-bat of the evening, and then Jose Lopez hit a loooong fly ball to right field, which was caught, but Adam Jones easily tagged up and scored, and Ibanez even made it to third.
Mike Morse had come in to pinch-hit for Chris Snelling in the 6th, and now everyone's other favorite Rainier, Greg "Dobby The Bench Elf" Dobbs, came in to pinch-hit for Morse. Here it was, 9-8 in the bottom of the ninth, two outs. "And who's going to save the day now? Greg Dobbs?" remarked Gomez, as... Dobbs singled to left and Raul Ibanez ran home, tying the game at 9-9. "Huuuuuuston Streeeeeet, what happened to yoooooou?" I sighed. Betancourt grounded into a force-out at third after that, but hey, extra innings.
At this point I realized both that Esteban Loaiza could not get me a win for my fantasy team, and that I was going to get home late no matter what, so suddenly I was like, "That's it, you Oakland bastards, the Mariners are going to win. Eat karma, losers."
JJ Putz obliged by striking out Kendall, Kotsay, and Bradley on something like ten pitches, and then the fun began. Kiko Calero came in to pitch the 10th for Oakland, and Ichiro led off by doing what he normally does -- he singled, bouncing the ball towards third, where Eric Chavez made a really nice leap and dive to snag it, but then couldn't get the throw to first in time. Calero threw a pickoff to first, and Swisher had to dive down to get the ball, and somehow he and Ichiro ended up somewhat tangled up and the ball ended up rolling towards the stands, and Ichiro subsequently ended up on second base. A trainer came out to look at him, since it seemed he'd either bruised his legs or arms, we couldn't tell which, in the tangle.
Beltre attempted to bunt but utterly failed, and ended up hitting a line drive out to center field, which unfortunately went to Mark Kotsay instead of into the stands. Rene Rivera was up next, since someone had to come in to catch after Johjima was pinch-hit for, and we couldn't pinch-hit for him because we had no other backup catcher. (What the heck -- it's September, helLO?) Rivera predictably struck out, and then they intentionally walked Raul Ibanez to get to Willie Bloomquist, which is almost always a pretty good idea, regardless of him being a lefty or a righty.
So Gomez is like, "Great, we're going to be here forever."
I was like, "Just watch, Willie is going to do something cool here and win the game and then you'll NEVER hear the end of it--"
And then Willie did something cool there to win the game so we'd never hear the end of it, as he hit the ball, it bounced over the infield towards left field. Ichiro was off and running and nearly all the way to home plate by the time Jay Payton had charged in for the ball anyway, and he dropped it as Ichiro scored the winning run and the entire team mobbed Willie Bloomquist and tried to either bash a hole through his skull or congratulate him, it was hard to tell which.
The older gentleman sitting on Gomez's right said, "Do you think he could have gotten Ichiro out if he'd thrown the ball in?"
Gomez was like, "Uhhh... no."
And that was the game.
Today was Joel Pineiro's 28th birthday, but he wasn't pitching, which was probably a good thing.
I need to talk about the Japanese baseball high school draft sometime, though the big news is that the Rakuten Golden Eagles won the lottery to draft Masahiro Tanaka. More later.
Tomorrow, the adorable and talented Rich Harden takes the mound for Oakland, as the sort of cute and not as talented Jake Woods takes the mound for Seattle. I think it's going to be an interesting game either way, and not just because of my winning-at-Safeco karma. So stay tuned!
Monday, August 14, 2006
Bench Potatoes
Rene Rivera, Mike Morse, Greg Dobbs, and Adam Jones were all sitting on the couch in the clubhouse.
"Goddamn, TV is boring these days," said Jones.
"Seriously," said Morse. "Everything's a freaking rerun."
Dobbs grabbed the remote control and turned on the TV. "Yeah," he said, "This is ALL a bunch of reruns. I don't even know what's good on TV anymore."
Rene Rivera piped up. "I hear 'Friends' is good!"
Dobbs snorted. "Rerun. Any other ideas?"
Morse thought. "Bloomquist likes Grey's Anatomy, so let's not watch that."
Adam Jones flipped through the channels. "Hey," he said, "It's an episode of Happy A's."
Dobbs blinked. "I've seen this one before too, dude. Washburn vs. Zito? That's TOTALLY a rerun. It was on, like, last weekend."
Rene Rivera tilted his head to the side. "Is this the show with Fonzie?"
"No, but it's got Kielty and Bradley and Swishie and Chavvy, does that count?"
Morse gaped as Ben Broussard hit a home run, giving the Mariners a 2-0 lead. "Wait a minute," he said, "That didn't happen last time. Are you SURE this is a rerun?"
Dobbs nodded. "I think so... I swear, I've been watching this show all season. It's true the plots start looking alike after a while, and there's only so many ways you can find for the Mariners to lose to the A's, right?"
"Yeah, they seriously need new writers," Jones agreed. "Maybe today something idiotic can happen like Bloomtard getting a home run, I bet that'd raise the ratings in Bremerton..."
The four sat there on the bench, watching the plot unfold. The A's scored a run in their half of the inning, and then Mark Ellis hit a home run in the bottom of the 4th.
"Oh my god, this is totally not a rerun," said Morse. "I've never seen Mark Ellis hit a home run before. Or anyone from South Dakota, for that matter."
Dobbs raised his eyebrows. "I don't know. I mean, it still feels really familiar, doesn't it? False hope, and then a bunch of guys getting cut down by Zito curveballs, right?"
The next inning started and Willie Bloomquist hit a home run.
Everyone looked at Adam Jones.
"What?" he asked.
"I thought you said you hadn't seen this one before?" blinked Rivera.
"I haven't! Have ANY of us been following this show long enough to have seen Willie Bloomquist hit a home run? I know it hasn't happened since I've been watching."
Dobbs got quiet for a second. "Actually," he said, "This is proof that it IS a rerun. Because, like, Willie's LAST home run was ALSO off Barry Zito in Oakland. I remember that episode. I was TOTALLY there. I even pinch-hit for him after that."
Jones tilted his head. "Oh yeah? What did you do?"
Dobbs blushed. "I struck out."
Morse shrugged as the score went to 4-2, but then Frank Thomas hit a home run and it went to 4-3. Zito and Washburn both came out of the game, with Washburn holding the win, and it seemed impossible: Seattle vs. Oakland in a battle of the bullpens? This couldn't possibly be a rerun. The bullpens hadn't had a lead to protect yet this season.
The game went on, and the Mariners' lead held. Mark Lowe pitched a beautiful sixth and seventh innings, as did Chad Gaudin.
Morse said to Dobbs, "If this is a rerun, what's going to happen next?"
Dobbs gulped. "Grover's going to mismanage the bullpen. Just wait."
Sure enough, lefty George Sherrill pitched to lefty Eric Chavez, who singled. Then righty Rafael Soriano came in to pitch to Jay Payton, who was obviously a huge power threat. Nick Swisher came up to bat, from his favored left side of the plate.
BOOM! Soriano got a 3-1 count on Swisher, and then he swung away, belting a shot just over the wall in right-center.
All four guys on the couch were silent as Swisher ran back into the dugout and did a series of high-fives and crazy frat handshakes with every person in sight.
Dobbs said, "I'm not going to say I told you so, but I told you so."
Rivera looked confused. "Then didn't you just say you told us so?"
Dobbs shook his head with an exasperated motion. "Great, I've got to go bat against the only guy in the league whose name I can't spell. See you all later." He walked out.
"Well, then," Jones said. "Let's all make bets on how we think the game will end? I'm going with Bloomquist caught stealing."
Morse grimaced. "Dobbs tagged out at home for the third out."
Rivera almost laughed. "I say Jose Lopez pops out to Kotsay at the wall."
They watched as Dobbs grounded out, and Bloomquist flew out into a beautiful diving catch by Mark Kotsay. Then Ichiro came up to bat and did his thing, fouling off a bunch of pitches until he got one he liked and could bloop into shallow left for a single.
Rivera said, "See? You see? I win! I bet Lopez will--"
Ichiro took a step towards second, Duchscherer fired the ball to first, and Swisher got the pickoff tag. Game over. The three just stared at the TV screen with their mouths open in shock.
Dobbs came back into the clubhouse. "God, that sucked. Since when does Ichiro get picked off bases? Freaking hell."
Morse glared at him. "See? I TOLD you it wasn't a goddamn rerun, dumbass."
"Goddamn, TV is boring these days," said Jones.
"Seriously," said Morse. "Everything's a freaking rerun."
Dobbs grabbed the remote control and turned on the TV. "Yeah," he said, "This is ALL a bunch of reruns. I don't even know what's good on TV anymore."
Rene Rivera piped up. "I hear 'Friends' is good!"
Dobbs snorted. "Rerun. Any other ideas?"
Morse thought. "Bloomquist likes Grey's Anatomy, so let's not watch that."
Adam Jones flipped through the channels. "Hey," he said, "It's an episode of Happy A's."
Dobbs blinked. "I've seen this one before too, dude. Washburn vs. Zito? That's TOTALLY a rerun. It was on, like, last weekend."
Rene Rivera tilted his head to the side. "Is this the show with Fonzie?"
"No, but it's got Kielty and Bradley and Swishie and Chavvy, does that count?"
Morse gaped as Ben Broussard hit a home run, giving the Mariners a 2-0 lead. "Wait a minute," he said, "That didn't happen last time. Are you SURE this is a rerun?"
Dobbs nodded. "I think so... I swear, I've been watching this show all season. It's true the plots start looking alike after a while, and there's only so many ways you can find for the Mariners to lose to the A's, right?"
"Yeah, they seriously need new writers," Jones agreed. "Maybe today something idiotic can happen like Bloomtard getting a home run, I bet that'd raise the ratings in Bremerton..."
The four sat there on the bench, watching the plot unfold. The A's scored a run in their half of the inning, and then Mark Ellis hit a home run in the bottom of the 4th.
"Oh my god, this is totally not a rerun," said Morse. "I've never seen Mark Ellis hit a home run before. Or anyone from South Dakota, for that matter."
Dobbs raised his eyebrows. "I don't know. I mean, it still feels really familiar, doesn't it? False hope, and then a bunch of guys getting cut down by Zito curveballs, right?"
The next inning started and Willie Bloomquist hit a home run.
Everyone looked at Adam Jones.
"What?" he asked.
"I thought you said you hadn't seen this one before?" blinked Rivera.
"I haven't! Have ANY of us been following this show long enough to have seen Willie Bloomquist hit a home run? I know it hasn't happened since I've been watching."
Dobbs got quiet for a second. "Actually," he said, "This is proof that it IS a rerun. Because, like, Willie's LAST home run was ALSO off Barry Zito in Oakland. I remember that episode. I was TOTALLY there. I even pinch-hit for him after that."
Jones tilted his head. "Oh yeah? What did you do?"
Dobbs blushed. "I struck out."
Morse shrugged as the score went to 4-2, but then Frank Thomas hit a home run and it went to 4-3. Zito and Washburn both came out of the game, with Washburn holding the win, and it seemed impossible: Seattle vs. Oakland in a battle of the bullpens? This couldn't possibly be a rerun. The bullpens hadn't had a lead to protect yet this season.
The game went on, and the Mariners' lead held. Mark Lowe pitched a beautiful sixth and seventh innings, as did Chad Gaudin.
Morse said to Dobbs, "If this is a rerun, what's going to happen next?"
Dobbs gulped. "Grover's going to mismanage the bullpen. Just wait."
Sure enough, lefty George Sherrill pitched to lefty Eric Chavez, who singled. Then righty Rafael Soriano came in to pitch to Jay Payton, who was obviously a huge power threat. Nick Swisher came up to bat, from his favored left side of the plate.
BOOM! Soriano got a 3-1 count on Swisher, and then he swung away, belting a shot just over the wall in right-center.
All four guys on the couch were silent as Swisher ran back into the dugout and did a series of high-fives and crazy frat handshakes with every person in sight.
Dobbs said, "I'm not going to say I told you so, but I told you so."
Rivera looked confused. "Then didn't you just say you told us so?"
Dobbs shook his head with an exasperated motion. "Great, I've got to go bat against the only guy in the league whose name I can't spell. See you all later." He walked out.
"Well, then," Jones said. "Let's all make bets on how we think the game will end? I'm going with Bloomquist caught stealing."
Morse grimaced. "Dobbs tagged out at home for the third out."
Rivera almost laughed. "I say Jose Lopez pops out to Kotsay at the wall."
They watched as Dobbs grounded out, and Bloomquist flew out into a beautiful diving catch by Mark Kotsay. Then Ichiro came up to bat and did his thing, fouling off a bunch of pitches until he got one he liked and could bloop into shallow left for a single.
Rivera said, "See? You see? I win! I bet Lopez will--"
Ichiro took a step towards second, Duchscherer fired the ball to first, and Swisher got the pickoff tag. Game over. The three just stared at the TV screen with their mouths open in shock.
Dobbs came back into the clubhouse. "God, that sucked. Since when does Ichiro get picked off bases? Freaking hell."
Morse glared at him. "See? I TOLD you it wasn't a goddamn rerun, dumbass."
Monday, August 07, 2006
Photo Post
I haven't added captions yet, but here's some of the pictures I took today:
Mariners vs. A's, Aug 6 2006
I think my top ten favorites are, in no particular order,
10. A Call To The Bullpen
9. What Should I Do With This Dummy?
8. Justin Duchscherer
7. Pouty Sean Green
6. Sweet Huston Street
5. Sherrill and Mateo
4. Swisher Takes A Fall
3. Swingin' Richie
2. Ichi-throw
1. EverQuist
and of course ones like "CUPCAKES, DESTROYER OF WORLDS", but I used that one in the last entry.
You know, I'm not nearly as obsessed with Huston Street or Brandon Buckley as this photo set would have you believe, though. It's just that the dummy escapade completely cracked me up. (You can see most of it on page 2 of the pictures.)
Mariners vs. A's, Aug 6 2006
I think my top ten favorites are, in no particular order,
10. A Call To The Bullpen
9. What Should I Do With This Dummy?
8. Justin Duchscherer
7. Pouty Sean Green
6. Sweet Huston Street
5. Sherrill and Mateo
4. Swisher Takes A Fall
3. Swingin' Richie
2. Ichi-throw
1. EverQuist
and of course ones like "CUPCAKES, DESTROYER OF WORLDS", but I used that one in the last entry.
You know, I'm not nearly as obsessed with Huston Street or Brandon Buckley as this photo set would have you believe, though. It's just that the dummy escapade completely cracked me up. (You can see most of it on page 2 of the pictures.)
Sunday, August 06, 2006
Game Report: Mariners vs. A's - Cupcakes, Destroyer of Worlds
I went to today's game, but I didn't bring my scorecard book for the first time in years.
Every time Joe "Cupcakes" Blanton comes
to Seattle, he becomes "Cake Walk".
I bought a 70-300mm lens this morning before going to the game, so all I did was wander around for 4 hours taking pictures. I took over 500 pictures. No joke.
The A's won, 7-6. I'd say it was a close game, but I honestly couldn't tell. I spent about half of my time behind the bullpens taking pictures of pitchers. I spent the rest of the time walking around the stadium taking shots of the game from various angles.
The above Blanton picture was actually taken through one of those little holes in the wall in the Bullpen Tavern; somehow the green against green just made Blanton look totally evil in a way I hadn't anticipated.
At one point, an usher told me I couldn't use my lens and that they might take it away from me if I didn't switch to a smaller one. Oddly, about 15 feet to my right was a guy shooting with a lens twice as big as mine, so I'm not sure I get it; maybe only some ushers are strict about it and others aren't, or maybe some of them can actually tell good lenses from crappy lenses. I know some places have rules about using pro lenses if you're not with the press, but my lens is pretty much the cheapest zoom lens I could get for my camera, and I almost shudder to think what it's going to be like trying to use it in night games.
Your closer's a dummy.
Immediately after the game started, Brandon Buckley took out that hitting dummy from the bullpen and put an A's hat and sunglasses on it. I couldn't figure out what he was doing, except then he added a Huston Street jersey and a towel with a hand drawn on it. Then he set it up behind the bullpen bench... and Huston came out and was like "WTF?!" It was really funny. I've got more pictures of the entire process, but again, need time to actually crop/etc them.
About halfway through the game I just planted myself in the bullpen area. I got to watch Sean Green warm up, and then Kiko Calero, and Brad Halsey, and Justin Duchscherer, and Rafael Soriano, and even George Sherrill! Only problem with Sherrill was -- he and Mateo were warming up at the same time, and Sherrill was actually TOO CLOSE FOR MY LENS. So I went down to the far end of the bullpen to take pictures of him and J.J.Putz. Which was COOL. Except that in the midst of those guys warming up, Huston Street had warmed up and gone onto the field, so I missed him. Grumble. (I had forgotten that unlike Mike Hargrove, Ken Macha might actually put his closer in for the 8th inning if it was important to.)
This picture is for Paul.
I ended up going back to the infield for the ninth inning, so I could capture things like Willie Bloomquist striking out to end the game, because that's certainly exciting! I missed Saarloos and Flores warming up, but oh well. I've got plenty of pictures of Los Kirk and his spiky hair anyway, so it's all good.
For the record, all of the pictures in that set were taken from the concourses; I didn't sit down at all during the game, or at least, not in actual seats. By about halfway through the game I was starting to figure out how to keep my right eye in the viewfinder and my left eye on the game, so I could see when the pitcher was throwing the ball and would know when to click the shutter at the plate for a swinging shot. It was really easy to do that from the third-base side since the mound was to the left of the plate from that angle, but from the first-base side it was nearly impossible. Guess it's a good thing a lot of the batters I like are left-handed.
You know, I think being an actual professional sports photographer might be pretty awesome, although I'm sure they would just have one spot on the field and take shots from that angle, and not run around so much like I did today to get different angles. I personally literally circled the stadium at least three or four times today and ran up and down the stairs to the bullpen area about five or six times. It was actually pretty neat, and a totally different experience than I usually have at a game (I'm the sort that plants themselves in a seat for the first pitch and doesn't move until the end of the ninth inning).
And really, I could watch pitchers warm up forever. It's really fascinating to me, getting to see them close up, seeing how they throw the ball and how it travels. I suck at throwing, so it's neat to watch people who are good at it and try to figure out their mechanics and whatnot.
Every time Joe "Cupcakes" Blanton comes
to Seattle, he becomes "Cake Walk".
I bought a 70-300mm lens this morning before going to the game, so all I did was wander around for 4 hours taking pictures. I took over 500 pictures. No joke.
The A's won, 7-6. I'd say it was a close game, but I honestly couldn't tell. I spent about half of my time behind the bullpens taking pictures of pitchers. I spent the rest of the time walking around the stadium taking shots of the game from various angles.
The above Blanton picture was actually taken through one of those little holes in the wall in the Bullpen Tavern; somehow the green against green just made Blanton look totally evil in a way I hadn't anticipated.
At one point, an usher told me I couldn't use my lens and that they might take it away from me if I didn't switch to a smaller one. Oddly, about 15 feet to my right was a guy shooting with a lens twice as big as mine, so I'm not sure I get it; maybe only some ushers are strict about it and others aren't, or maybe some of them can actually tell good lenses from crappy lenses. I know some places have rules about using pro lenses if you're not with the press, but my lens is pretty much the cheapest zoom lens I could get for my camera, and I almost shudder to think what it's going to be like trying to use it in night games.
Your closer's a dummy.
Immediately after the game started, Brandon Buckley took out that hitting dummy from the bullpen and put an A's hat and sunglasses on it. I couldn't figure out what he was doing, except then he added a Huston Street jersey and a towel with a hand drawn on it. Then he set it up behind the bullpen bench... and Huston came out and was like "WTF?!" It was really funny. I've got more pictures of the entire process, but again, need time to actually crop/etc them.
About halfway through the game I just planted myself in the bullpen area. I got to watch Sean Green warm up, and then Kiko Calero, and Brad Halsey, and Justin Duchscherer, and Rafael Soriano, and even George Sherrill! Only problem with Sherrill was -- he and Mateo were warming up at the same time, and Sherrill was actually TOO CLOSE FOR MY LENS. So I went down to the far end of the bullpen to take pictures of him and J.J.Putz. Which was COOL. Except that in the midst of those guys warming up, Huston Street had warmed up and gone onto the field, so I missed him. Grumble. (I had forgotten that unlike Mike Hargrove, Ken Macha might actually put his closer in for the 8th inning if it was important to.)
This picture is for Paul.
I ended up going back to the infield for the ninth inning, so I could capture things like Willie Bloomquist striking out to end the game, because that's certainly exciting! I missed Saarloos and Flores warming up, but oh well. I've got plenty of pictures of Los Kirk and his spiky hair anyway, so it's all good.
For the record, all of the pictures in that set were taken from the concourses; I didn't sit down at all during the game, or at least, not in actual seats. By about halfway through the game I was starting to figure out how to keep my right eye in the viewfinder and my left eye on the game, so I could see when the pitcher was throwing the ball and would know when to click the shutter at the plate for a swinging shot. It was really easy to do that from the third-base side since the mound was to the left of the plate from that angle, but from the first-base side it was nearly impossible. Guess it's a good thing a lot of the batters I like are left-handed.
You know, I think being an actual professional sports photographer might be pretty awesome, although I'm sure they would just have one spot on the field and take shots from that angle, and not run around so much like I did today to get different angles. I personally literally circled the stadium at least three or four times today and ran up and down the stairs to the bullpen area about five or six times. It was actually pretty neat, and a totally different experience than I usually have at a game (I'm the sort that plants themselves in a seat for the first pitch and doesn't move until the end of the ninth inning).
And really, I could watch pitchers warm up forever. It's really fascinating to me, getting to see them close up, seeing how they throw the ball and how it travels. I suck at throwing, so it's neat to watch people who are good at it and try to figure out their mechanics and whatnot.
Game Report: Mariners vs. A's - Swish'n'Chips
Whee. Long day.
First, important announcement: the next book club will be on September 9th. A bunch of people showed up today and we had a great discussion about Fantasyland (unanimous opinion: it rules, it's absolutely hilarious, go read it) and fantasy baseball (unanimous opinion: since Conor was lucky enough to GET David Wright and Miguel Cabrera on his fantasy team, he better freakin' keep them both), and for next month, the book club book is going to be The Ticket Out: Darryl Strawberry and the Boys of Crenshaw, by Michael Sokolove (unanimous opinion: book club is fun, and y'all should show up!), suggested by Zach.
I'll write an actual review of Fantasyland sometime -- I should probably also review the book I finished reading last week, "The Chrysanthemum And The Bat", but that'll also have to wait until I have some time.
Anyway, on to the game report!
I didn't get there as early as I'd like, but batting practice was still going on, and I took more pictures of players, almost all A's. I think Joe Blanton thinks I'm stalking him now. After most of the pitchers had left the field, Barry Zito was still out there running sprints, and I was standing there with Conor Glassey, and I was like, "I'd love to go watch Komine and Loaiza throw in the bullpen... or go chase down Halsey for a signature over there... but... it's BARRY ZITO GODDAMNIT AND I'M NOT MOVING BECAUSE IF HE COMES OVER TO SIGN STUFF AND I'M NOT HERE I'LL CRY."
Soon enough, Zito came over and signed stuff, and was immediately swamped with people getting stuff signed and getting pictures with him. We were in the front row but not really poised to move over ten feet to where he was, but eventually he finally got over to us, and I got him to sign my ticket stub. It's legible, although, Conor noticed that Barry was signing stuff with his right hand -- that's kind of odd, isn't it? I mean, Billy Wagner throws lefty and writes righty, but he's got a good excuse. Conor didn't have anything to get signed, but he was like, "Hey Barry, you wanna hear some good music? My friend's band..." and offered up his headphones, but Barry was a little too busy and smiled and ran off.
We ran over to the bullpen after that. I shot a ton of pictures of Danny Haren warming up (which, amazingly, came out well), and then a few of the rest of the A's bullpen guys and a few of the Mariners bullpen guys. After Haren's warmup was done, Justin Duschcherer, who was being goofy in general, yelled something out to the crowd like "Hey everyone, that's our great bullpen catcher! Brandon Buckley!" and started applauding.
Hairy Haren Hurls Heat.
I ran up to my seat in the upper deck just in time to get there for Jason Kendall's leadoff at-bat. There was an older-ish guy sitting behind me who REALLY had it in him for Kendall -- and I was wearing a Pirates Kendall shirt. This guy wouldn't shut up about what an overpaid scrub he thought Kendall was, and how lousy the A's were with someone like him on the team. He later started ranting about Scutaro and Ellis as well ("stupid little skinny twits"), and Frank Thomas ("what a gimp, he's more like the Big Pain"), and so on. After the third inning when Adrian Beltre hit a home run, the guy actually punched me on the shoulder -- not hard or anything, but still -- so after that inning break, I got up and walked three sections over to where Conor and his dad were sitting and sat with them for the rest of the game instead, which was a lot more fun. Conor has Danny Haren on his fantasy team, and I have Nick Swisher, which made for some pretty funny moments ("Why couldn't they have tagged out freaking Payton instead?!?!").
Anyway.
"Scutaro-sized" Version: First, the Mariners were playing the A's. Second, the A's had Danny Haren starting and we had Joel Pineiro starting. Third, the Blue Angels were performing over I-90 as part of Seafair. So, why the heck did anyone bother coming to the park today? It's almost like rewatching Titanic and hoping that maybe, maybe, this time they won't hit the iceberg and sink. Right.
Yes, Kendall started off the game by striking out and making the dude behind me really happy, but two batters later, Milton Bradley doubled to left, and right after him, Frank Thomas singled to right. Ichiro's throw was actually pretty dead on as Bradley came running home, but today Rene Rivera was catching, and he couldn't hold on to the ball as Bradley collided with him. The Mariners accomplished very little in their half of the first beyond a Beltre walk, and then Pineiro just let the A's walk all over him in the second inning. Payton led off with a single, and then Swisher walked. Scutaro hit a low blooper fly ball a bit past shortstop, but everyone knows that there's no such thing as "out of Betancourt's territory", and he ran back and caught it. Ellis almost hit a home run which was instead caught at the wall, and then with two outs, the A's reeled off three straight hits -- Kendall singled, scoring Payton; Kotsay singled, scoring Swisher as the throw home was way off, and then Bradley doubled yet again, scoring Kendall. Frank Thomas walked, loading the bases, and then, with me beginning to panic that I'd have to rewrite my scorecard if the team batted around, Eric Chavez struck out.
Payton led off the top of the third by grounding to shortstop, and Betancourt threw the ball but it sailed over Richie and hit the wall of the stands; they ruled it an error on the throw, though in all honesty, Richie was sort of poised low to get the catch and may not have missed it if he'd stood up. Scutaro doubled after that, much to the chagrin of the guy sitting behind me. They intentionally walked Ellis to load the bases; Kendall popped out on a high fly ball to second, and they decided to take Joel out after 2.2 innings and 76 pitches, which is just embarrassing.
Ellis pulled a Betancourt to catch Ichiro's leadoff fly ball in the bottom of the third, but then Lopez hit a clean double to left, and then Adrian Beltre hit a ball that cleared the scoreboard by a few rows in left field for a home run. That brought the score to 4-2 as Swisher almost fumbled a grounder by Ibanez, and Chavez was charged with an error on a Sexson grounder, though in all fairness, it looked like the ball hit Chavez really hard and flew off him.
Things coasted for a while, mostly. Haren struck out the side in the 6th, which was pretty funny. Jake Woods did pretty well for three innings after coming in for Pineiro, until the 7th. Payton reached base on a Sexson error which I actually didn't see, but it must have been pretty good, because Hargrove came out to argue for a bit. After that, Swisher walked again, and Hargrove came out to replace Woods with Mark Lowe (yay!). Scutaro, for whatever inexplicable reason, sac bunted; I originally wrote it down as 1-3 for some reason, until Conor pointed out that Beltre had charged it and actually thrown to Lopez, who was covering first as Sexson also charged in. Ellis walked again after that, loading the bases again. With Kendall up, Mark Lowe threw a wild pitch (or a pitch got away from Rivera, whatever), and Payton scored as Lowe covered the plate and didn't get the tagout. Then Kendall grounded to third, and the throw home got Swisher (which evoked my earlier quote about Payton). Lowe struck out Kotsay after that, preserving his perfect ERA, and Payton wasn't an earned run for Woods either, so I guess it was okay.
Kiko Calero pitched a perfect eighth and Huston Street pitched a perfect ninth, though, and that was it as the A's completely and unexpectedly managed to beat the Mariners 5-2.
Well, at least this guy got his wish.
You know, I'm not sure I have a lot to add to that. There was a really funny moment to me in the sixth inning when Frank Thomas had been on first base, and Eric Chavez grounded into a double play, and as Thomas ran to second, he saw that he was going to be out. He immediately not only stopped running, but he also ducked down to get out of the way of the play.
Mark Lowe is fantastic. He really is. You know, I can't remember where it was, but recently I had read some article about the Mariners' lousy drafts, especially 2004 when they paid Tuiasosopo first-round money in the third round of a draft that included guys like Huston Street in the first round. But here's the thing -- Mark Lowe was drafted in the fifth round that year. Mark Lowe is from Houston; Huston Street is from Austin. Lowe pitched for the UT Arlington Mavericks; Street pitched for the UT Austin Longhorns. They're two months apart in age and both throw devastating sliders. So maybe we don't have Huston Street on the Mariners, but so what? We may have our very own version of him, only a little bit taller and without all the hype.
Today was Bobby Kielty's birthday, and I guess his present was getting a day off. I feel bad for the nice A's fans I met in the stands before the game that had a bunch of birthday signs for him, though. It was also John Olerud's birthday (and many others, including Carl Crawford, Eric Hinske, and Mark Mulder. Crazy day).
I may or may not go to tomorrow's game, depending on when I wake up and whether I decide to go ahead and buy that zoom lens I'm thinking about. We'll see. I'll also finish putting up this game's pictures sometime tomorrow, I think.
First, important announcement: the next book club will be on September 9th. A bunch of people showed up today and we had a great discussion about Fantasyland (unanimous opinion: it rules, it's absolutely hilarious, go read it) and fantasy baseball (unanimous opinion: since Conor was lucky enough to GET David Wright and Miguel Cabrera on his fantasy team, he better freakin' keep them both), and for next month, the book club book is going to be The Ticket Out: Darryl Strawberry and the Boys of Crenshaw, by Michael Sokolove (unanimous opinion: book club is fun, and y'all should show up!), suggested by Zach.
I'll write an actual review of Fantasyland sometime -- I should probably also review the book I finished reading last week, "The Chrysanthemum And The Bat", but that'll also have to wait until I have some time.
Anyway, on to the game report!
I didn't get there as early as I'd like, but batting practice was still going on, and I took more pictures of players, almost all A's. I think Joe Blanton thinks I'm stalking him now. After most of the pitchers had left the field, Barry Zito was still out there running sprints, and I was standing there with Conor Glassey, and I was like, "I'd love to go watch Komine and Loaiza throw in the bullpen... or go chase down Halsey for a signature over there... but... it's BARRY ZITO GODDAMNIT AND I'M NOT MOVING BECAUSE IF HE COMES OVER TO SIGN STUFF AND I'M NOT HERE I'LL CRY."
Soon enough, Zito came over and signed stuff, and was immediately swamped with people getting stuff signed and getting pictures with him. We were in the front row but not really poised to move over ten feet to where he was, but eventually he finally got over to us, and I got him to sign my ticket stub. It's legible, although, Conor noticed that Barry was signing stuff with his right hand -- that's kind of odd, isn't it? I mean, Billy Wagner throws lefty and writes righty, but he's got a good excuse. Conor didn't have anything to get signed, but he was like, "Hey Barry, you wanna hear some good music? My friend's band..." and offered up his headphones, but Barry was a little too busy and smiled and ran off.
We ran over to the bullpen after that. I shot a ton of pictures of Danny Haren warming up (which, amazingly, came out well), and then a few of the rest of the A's bullpen guys and a few of the Mariners bullpen guys. After Haren's warmup was done, Justin Duschcherer, who was being goofy in general, yelled something out to the crowd like "Hey everyone, that's our great bullpen catcher! Brandon Buckley!" and started applauding.
Hairy Haren Hurls Heat.
I ran up to my seat in the upper deck just in time to get there for Jason Kendall's leadoff at-bat. There was an older-ish guy sitting behind me who REALLY had it in him for Kendall -- and I was wearing a Pirates Kendall shirt. This guy wouldn't shut up about what an overpaid scrub he thought Kendall was, and how lousy the A's were with someone like him on the team. He later started ranting about Scutaro and Ellis as well ("stupid little skinny twits"), and Frank Thomas ("what a gimp, he's more like the Big Pain"), and so on. After the third inning when Adrian Beltre hit a home run, the guy actually punched me on the shoulder -- not hard or anything, but still -- so after that inning break, I got up and walked three sections over to where Conor and his dad were sitting and sat with them for the rest of the game instead, which was a lot more fun. Conor has Danny Haren on his fantasy team, and I have Nick Swisher, which made for some pretty funny moments ("Why couldn't they have tagged out freaking Payton instead?!?!").
Anyway.
"Scutaro-sized" Version: First, the Mariners were playing the A's. Second, the A's had Danny Haren starting and we had Joel Pineiro starting. Third, the Blue Angels were performing over I-90 as part of Seafair. So, why the heck did anyone bother coming to the park today? It's almost like rewatching Titanic and hoping that maybe, maybe, this time they won't hit the iceberg and sink. Right.
Yes, Kendall started off the game by striking out and making the dude behind me really happy, but two batters later, Milton Bradley doubled to left, and right after him, Frank Thomas singled to right. Ichiro's throw was actually pretty dead on as Bradley came running home, but today Rene Rivera was catching, and he couldn't hold on to the ball as Bradley collided with him. The Mariners accomplished very little in their half of the first beyond a Beltre walk, and then Pineiro just let the A's walk all over him in the second inning. Payton led off with a single, and then Swisher walked. Scutaro hit a low blooper fly ball a bit past shortstop, but everyone knows that there's no such thing as "out of Betancourt's territory", and he ran back and caught it. Ellis almost hit a home run which was instead caught at the wall, and then with two outs, the A's reeled off three straight hits -- Kendall singled, scoring Payton; Kotsay singled, scoring Swisher as the throw home was way off, and then Bradley doubled yet again, scoring Kendall. Frank Thomas walked, loading the bases, and then, with me beginning to panic that I'd have to rewrite my scorecard if the team batted around, Eric Chavez struck out.
Payton led off the top of the third by grounding to shortstop, and Betancourt threw the ball but it sailed over Richie and hit the wall of the stands; they ruled it an error on the throw, though in all honesty, Richie was sort of poised low to get the catch and may not have missed it if he'd stood up. Scutaro doubled after that, much to the chagrin of the guy sitting behind me. They intentionally walked Ellis to load the bases; Kendall popped out on a high fly ball to second, and they decided to take Joel out after 2.2 innings and 76 pitches, which is just embarrassing.
Ellis pulled a Betancourt to catch Ichiro's leadoff fly ball in the bottom of the third, but then Lopez hit a clean double to left, and then Adrian Beltre hit a ball that cleared the scoreboard by a few rows in left field for a home run. That brought the score to 4-2 as Swisher almost fumbled a grounder by Ibanez, and Chavez was charged with an error on a Sexson grounder, though in all fairness, it looked like the ball hit Chavez really hard and flew off him.
Things coasted for a while, mostly. Haren struck out the side in the 6th, which was pretty funny. Jake Woods did pretty well for three innings after coming in for Pineiro, until the 7th. Payton reached base on a Sexson error which I actually didn't see, but it must have been pretty good, because Hargrove came out to argue for a bit. After that, Swisher walked again, and Hargrove came out to replace Woods with Mark Lowe (yay!). Scutaro, for whatever inexplicable reason, sac bunted; I originally wrote it down as 1-3 for some reason, until Conor pointed out that Beltre had charged it and actually thrown to Lopez, who was covering first as Sexson also charged in. Ellis walked again after that, loading the bases again. With Kendall up, Mark Lowe threw a wild pitch (or a pitch got away from Rivera, whatever), and Payton scored as Lowe covered the plate and didn't get the tagout. Then Kendall grounded to third, and the throw home got Swisher (which evoked my earlier quote about Payton). Lowe struck out Kotsay after that, preserving his perfect ERA, and Payton wasn't an earned run for Woods either, so I guess it was okay.
Kiko Calero pitched a perfect eighth and Huston Street pitched a perfect ninth, though, and that was it as the A's completely and unexpectedly managed to beat the Mariners 5-2.
Well, at least this guy got his wish.
You know, I'm not sure I have a lot to add to that. There was a really funny moment to me in the sixth inning when Frank Thomas had been on first base, and Eric Chavez grounded into a double play, and as Thomas ran to second, he saw that he was going to be out. He immediately not only stopped running, but he also ducked down to get out of the way of the play.
Mark Lowe is fantastic. He really is. You know, I can't remember where it was, but recently I had read some article about the Mariners' lousy drafts, especially 2004 when they paid Tuiasosopo first-round money in the third round of a draft that included guys like Huston Street in the first round. But here's the thing -- Mark Lowe was drafted in the fifth round that year. Mark Lowe is from Houston; Huston Street is from Austin. Lowe pitched for the UT Arlington Mavericks; Street pitched for the UT Austin Longhorns. They're two months apart in age and both throw devastating sliders. So maybe we don't have Huston Street on the Mariners, but so what? We may have our very own version of him, only a little bit taller and without all the hype.
Today was Bobby Kielty's birthday, and I guess his present was getting a day off. I feel bad for the nice A's fans I met in the stands before the game that had a bunch of birthday signs for him, though. It was also John Olerud's birthday (and many others, including Carl Crawford, Eric Hinske, and Mark Mulder. Crazy day).
I may or may not go to tomorrow's game, depending on when I wake up and whether I decide to go ahead and buy that zoom lens I'm thinking about. We'll see. I'll also finish putting up this game's pictures sometime tomorrow, I think.
Saturday, August 05, 2006
Game Report: Mariners vs. A's - Scutaroni and Cheese
PSA: If you are coming to book club and want to see the game beforehand, it may actually sell out! There were 44,277 people there tonight, and by the time I went to buy a ticket for the Saturday game, they had already sold out all the bleachers and big sections of the rest of the park! So order online or get there early, if possible -- and don't forget the I-90 closings for Seafair! If you're at the game, keep an eye out for me; I'll be stalking around with a big camera and wearing a Pirates #18 Kendall shirt.
I got home from the game at 10:30pm and sat there playing with the 300 pictures I took for the last three hours. You know, the funny part is, the up-close shots are a lot higher quality, but the far shots still suck, and so I don't really have any game action shots to show for my effort; I think I definitely need a different lens to do that. On the other hand, shooting pictures in the bullpen is actually a lot easier with this new one, and I got some reasonably good shots of Washburn and of Blanton, who was throwing for the hell of it before the game. I also got several good ones of Shane Komine, who is short, but friendly. Here's a couple of the pictures, cropped/etc.
I'm tired and I actually didn't take that many notes during the game because I was trying to take pictures instead, so this entry may be a little bit scatterbrained.
J-Rod says, "Airplanes in the sky sound like home runs."
I got to the game super-early to play with my camera, but the light sort of sucked because of the whole sundown thing. Watching BP and the pitchers warming up is always fun just for the hell of it though. They were all sort of being silly, and at one point Huston Street even jumped on Justin Duchscherer's back and rode piggyback for a while. Then there were a whole bunch of A's fans yelling things like "DON'T GO TO THE YANKEES, ZITO!!" when he was warming up, and then this one extremely drunk guy kept harrassing Brandon Buckley, and I kept telling him to shut up.
Thomas and Chavez signed stuff in the dugout for a little bit, and then Swisher came out and literally just went from one end to the other signing anything thrown at him, for like 5-10 minutes. Most people threw baseballs or shirts or such, though one person threw their mini-hydroplane at him, and he was just like "Uhhh, dude, what the hell do you want me to do with this?" Originally I just wanted to take a few pictures of him, but eventually he got down to my end and nobody was throwing anything; I smiled at him and he pointed at me, so I passed him my ticket stub and he signed it (though somewhat illegibly, you can see the "33"). So, I'm glad I finally got a Swisher signature, but sad that it's illegible and that I didn't actually really get that close to him. On the other hand, this makes me even madder that the A's didn't have any Swisher shirts in stock when I was down in Oakland, because then I would have been able to get him to sign that!
Okay, I promise, I'm done crushing on Swisher for this entry now, because he didn't play in 90% of the game. Of vague lineup weirdness, Mark Kotsay started at first base instead, and Marco Scutaro started at shortstop in place of the now-DL'ed Bobby Crosby. The former change didn't make such a difference, but oh, did the latter!
"Short" version: In all honesty, Barry Zito wasn't at his best, and from my vantage point it looked like he and Washburn were struggling about the same amount, but the Mariners didn't take advantage of it. The A's drew first blood with a run in the second after Willie Bloomquist (why was he playing CF instead of Adam Jones? This isn't a platoon here, AJ's a righty) first didn't get to a Payton fly ball, and then the throw drew Betancourt away from the bag so he couldn't get Payton at second. With two outs, Scutaro walked, and Ellis singled in Payton. Kendall also walked, loading the bases, but Kotsay grounded out. The Mariners would even it up in their half of the third when Willie Bloomquist ran out a grounder that Scutaro couldn't retrieve from the hole fast enough, advanced on an Ichiro single and a Lopez double play, and Ibanez eventally singled him in.
The A's immediately started attacking again after that with three straight hits. Chavez singled, Kielty singled, and then Scutaro almost hit a home run that bounced off the back wall for a double, scoring Chavez. Ellis was hit by a pitch, loading the bases. Jason Kendall did ground into a double play at that point, but Kielty still scored.
Jose Lopez led off the bottom of the 5th with an infield single that was really a very nice stop by Mark Ellis that just wasn't in time to be fielded. And since Lopez immediately went and got himself thrown out by a mile stealing second, it was a moot point anyway.
With Washburn nearing 100 pitches, Kendall was hit by one (from my vantage point, I didn't think he was actually hit, but god knows, you don't argue with Jason Kendall about that sort of thing), and advanced on a wild pitch before Kotsay flew out to left and Bradley grounded out. Then the Big Hurt came up and hit the ball out to left, which may have been a double for a non-gimp but was a single for him; still, Kendall scored. Zito and Washburn both came out after 7 innings with the score 4-1 A's.
Jake Woods took over pitching for Washburn in the top of the 8th, and he was doing just dandy, and for whatever unknown reason, Hargrove brought in Mateo to pitch to Marco Scutaro, and you know, earlier today I bet that Scutaro was going to hit a home run in tonight's game -- and sure enough, Scutaro took the second pitch he saw and launched the ball 373 feet into the A's bullpen. BLAM. Duchschchcherererer pitched the 8th and 9th for Oakland, without much difficulty. Lopez led off the 8th yet again by singling, and this time getting tagged out by Mark Ellis wasn't his fault so much as it was Beltre's, in a tagout 4-3 double play. Richie Sexson did hit a home run in the 9th that barely cleared the A's bullpen wall and got Huston Street to start warming up, but Dukes struck out Broussard and Johjima and then Betancourt hit a high pop fly which Mark Ellis caught to end the game as the A's won it 5-2.
"Now, Scooter, just look into the camera like it's a Julio Mateo pitch."
A while back, I joked on Lookout Landing that I find A's-Mariners games a lot more tolerable if I become a temporary A's fan. (Apparently somebody at Athletics Nation thought that was funny enough to pick it up as their signature, and I'm honored.) The thing is, this game was entirely indicative of why that's so true. The Mariners were struggling to get anything together -- and it's not like they weren't getting on base, what with 9 hits, one less than the A's got -- and with 2 walks, one less than the A's got -- but they just weren't putting those hits together, and with the exception of Sexson's home run, none of their hits were for extra bases.
I seriously think Marco Scutaro has some insanely high batting average in games that I've attended. It always seems like he's kicking ass, either hitting triples or batting in a ton of runs or basically doing whatever sort of stuff you don't expect a funny little dude like him to do, which is why I even wrote a song about him last fall. Today he was 3-for-3 with a walk, a double, that home run, and 2 RBI. And that home run was just plain awesome. Scutaroni Power, scutards!
There were a whole bunch of funny things that came about from the people sitting around in my section, such as "Where does Joh-jee-moe come from?" or "So do you like the Angels?" (from the girl next to me, who was unaware for the first 3 innings that Oakland is the A's, not the Angels), but the one that stuck in my mind was this exchange with a slightly older couple sitting behind me:
Guy behind me: Look at that guy with that red hair! It is so red!
Guy's wife: Do you think it's natural? I mean, I could never make my hair that color.
Guy: He looks so young, doesn't he? Look at him run! These players these days are so young.
Me, turning around: Actually, Kielty's birthday is tomorrow. He's turning 30.
Wife, excitedly: Oh! Wow! It is? How did you know, are you friends with him?
Me: No, but, um, [pointing] they list the players' birthdays on your scorecard.
Wife: Oh.
They then went on to ask how old I was and then excitedly exclaim that they would have thought I was at least five years younger as well. At least they didn't ask whether my dull brown hair is natural or not.
The "Baffle the Broadcaster" trivia question was undoubtedly one of the best ones I've heard this year so far (especially given that the broadcaster doesn't get the multiple choices to choose from):
Q: Which baseball player is the only one in history to get caught stealing twice in the same inning?
A: Don Baylor
B: Ty Cobb
C: Rafael Furcal
It did completely baffle Rick Rizzs, and even for a minute there I wondered if Baylor was supposed to be the "gimme" answer or a clever decoy. My first instinct was correct, though, and he was the right answer, even though those circumstances are bizarre -- caught stealing with an error and then caught stealing home, same out, not part of a rally.
Also, despite that I spent the last few weeks not saying or typing Chase Utley's name or the word "streak", apparently with my veiled anagrammatical reference to him in my last post I DID jinx him -- and I feel terrible for it. Because if there's a baseball player out there that I love more than Nick Swisher, it'd be Chase Utley. I knew it was unlikely he'd go much longer, but I'm still sad to see it end.
Anyway, I suppose I'm heading back to Safeco in a few hours. Hopefully I'll have more opportunities to play with my camera in better light.
I got home from the game at 10:30pm and sat there playing with the 300 pictures I took for the last three hours. You know, the funny part is, the up-close shots are a lot higher quality, but the far shots still suck, and so I don't really have any game action shots to show for my effort; I think I definitely need a different lens to do that. On the other hand, shooting pictures in the bullpen is actually a lot easier with this new one, and I got some reasonably good shots of Washburn and of Blanton, who was throwing for the hell of it before the game. I also got several good ones of Shane Komine, who is short, but friendly. Here's a couple of the pictures, cropped/etc.
I'm tired and I actually didn't take that many notes during the game because I was trying to take pictures instead, so this entry may be a little bit scatterbrained.
J-Rod says, "Airplanes in the sky sound like home runs."
I got to the game super-early to play with my camera, but the light sort of sucked because of the whole sundown thing. Watching BP and the pitchers warming up is always fun just for the hell of it though. They were all sort of being silly, and at one point Huston Street even jumped on Justin Duchscherer's back and rode piggyback for a while. Then there were a whole bunch of A's fans yelling things like "DON'T GO TO THE YANKEES, ZITO!!" when he was warming up, and then this one extremely drunk guy kept harrassing Brandon Buckley, and I kept telling him to shut up.
Thomas and Chavez signed stuff in the dugout for a little bit, and then Swisher came out and literally just went from one end to the other signing anything thrown at him, for like 5-10 minutes. Most people threw baseballs or shirts or such, though one person threw their mini-hydroplane at him, and he was just like "Uhhh, dude, what the hell do you want me to do with this?" Originally I just wanted to take a few pictures of him, but eventually he got down to my end and nobody was throwing anything; I smiled at him and he pointed at me, so I passed him my ticket stub and he signed it (though somewhat illegibly, you can see the "33"). So, I'm glad I finally got a Swisher signature, but sad that it's illegible and that I didn't actually really get that close to him. On the other hand, this makes me even madder that the A's didn't have any Swisher shirts in stock when I was down in Oakland, because then I would have been able to get him to sign that!
Okay, I promise, I'm done crushing on Swisher for this entry now, because he didn't play in 90% of the game. Of vague lineup weirdness, Mark Kotsay started at first base instead, and Marco Scutaro started at shortstop in place of the now-DL'ed Bobby Crosby. The former change didn't make such a difference, but oh, did the latter!
"Short" version: In all honesty, Barry Zito wasn't at his best, and from my vantage point it looked like he and Washburn were struggling about the same amount, but the Mariners didn't take advantage of it. The A's drew first blood with a run in the second after Willie Bloomquist (why was he playing CF instead of Adam Jones? This isn't a platoon here, AJ's a righty) first didn't get to a Payton fly ball, and then the throw drew Betancourt away from the bag so he couldn't get Payton at second. With two outs, Scutaro walked, and Ellis singled in Payton. Kendall also walked, loading the bases, but Kotsay grounded out. The Mariners would even it up in their half of the third when Willie Bloomquist ran out a grounder that Scutaro couldn't retrieve from the hole fast enough, advanced on an Ichiro single and a Lopez double play, and Ibanez eventally singled him in.
The A's immediately started attacking again after that with three straight hits. Chavez singled, Kielty singled, and then Scutaro almost hit a home run that bounced off the back wall for a double, scoring Chavez. Ellis was hit by a pitch, loading the bases. Jason Kendall did ground into a double play at that point, but Kielty still scored.
Jose Lopez led off the bottom of the 5th with an infield single that was really a very nice stop by Mark Ellis that just wasn't in time to be fielded. And since Lopez immediately went and got himself thrown out by a mile stealing second, it was a moot point anyway.
With Washburn nearing 100 pitches, Kendall was hit by one (from my vantage point, I didn't think he was actually hit, but god knows, you don't argue with Jason Kendall about that sort of thing), and advanced on a wild pitch before Kotsay flew out to left and Bradley grounded out. Then the Big Hurt came up and hit the ball out to left, which may have been a double for a non-gimp but was a single for him; still, Kendall scored. Zito and Washburn both came out after 7 innings with the score 4-1 A's.
Jake Woods took over pitching for Washburn in the top of the 8th, and he was doing just dandy, and for whatever unknown reason, Hargrove brought in Mateo to pitch to Marco Scutaro, and you know, earlier today I bet that Scutaro was going to hit a home run in tonight's game -- and sure enough, Scutaro took the second pitch he saw and launched the ball 373 feet into the A's bullpen. BLAM. Duchschchcherererer pitched the 8th and 9th for Oakland, without much difficulty. Lopez led off the 8th yet again by singling, and this time getting tagged out by Mark Ellis wasn't his fault so much as it was Beltre's, in a tagout 4-3 double play. Richie Sexson did hit a home run in the 9th that barely cleared the A's bullpen wall and got Huston Street to start warming up, but Dukes struck out Broussard and Johjima and then Betancourt hit a high pop fly which Mark Ellis caught to end the game as the A's won it 5-2.
"Now, Scooter, just look into the camera like it's a Julio Mateo pitch."
A while back, I joked on Lookout Landing that I find A's-Mariners games a lot more tolerable if I become a temporary A's fan. (Apparently somebody at Athletics Nation thought that was funny enough to pick it up as their signature, and I'm honored.) The thing is, this game was entirely indicative of why that's so true. The Mariners were struggling to get anything together -- and it's not like they weren't getting on base, what with 9 hits, one less than the A's got -- and with 2 walks, one less than the A's got -- but they just weren't putting those hits together, and with the exception of Sexson's home run, none of their hits were for extra bases.
I seriously think Marco Scutaro has some insanely high batting average in games that I've attended. It always seems like he's kicking ass, either hitting triples or batting in a ton of runs or basically doing whatever sort of stuff you don't expect a funny little dude like him to do, which is why I even wrote a song about him last fall. Today he was 3-for-3 with a walk, a double, that home run, and 2 RBI. And that home run was just plain awesome. Scutaroni Power, scutards!
There were a whole bunch of funny things that came about from the people sitting around in my section, such as "Where does Joh-jee-moe come from?" or "So do you like the Angels?" (from the girl next to me, who was unaware for the first 3 innings that Oakland is the A's, not the Angels), but the one that stuck in my mind was this exchange with a slightly older couple sitting behind me:
Guy behind me: Look at that guy with that red hair! It is so red!
Guy's wife: Do you think it's natural? I mean, I could never make my hair that color.
Guy: He looks so young, doesn't he? Look at him run! These players these days are so young.
Me, turning around: Actually, Kielty's birthday is tomorrow. He's turning 30.
Wife, excitedly: Oh! Wow! It is? How did you know, are you friends with him?
Me: No, but, um, [pointing] they list the players' birthdays on your scorecard.
Wife: Oh.
They then went on to ask how old I was and then excitedly exclaim that they would have thought I was at least five years younger as well. At least they didn't ask whether my dull brown hair is natural or not.
The "Baffle the Broadcaster" trivia question was undoubtedly one of the best ones I've heard this year so far (especially given that the broadcaster doesn't get the multiple choices to choose from):
Q: Which baseball player is the only one in history to get caught stealing twice in the same inning?
A: Don Baylor
B: Ty Cobb
C: Rafael Furcal
It did completely baffle Rick Rizzs, and even for a minute there I wondered if Baylor was supposed to be the "gimme" answer or a clever decoy. My first instinct was correct, though, and he was the right answer, even though those circumstances are bizarre -- caught stealing with an error and then caught stealing home, same out, not part of a rally.
Also, despite that I spent the last few weeks not saying or typing Chase Utley's name or the word "streak", apparently with my veiled anagrammatical reference to him in my last post I DID jinx him -- and I feel terrible for it. Because if there's a baseball player out there that I love more than Nick Swisher, it'd be Chase Utley. I knew it was unlikely he'd go much longer, but I'm still sad to see it end.
Anyway, I suppose I'm heading back to Safeco in a few hours. Hopefully I'll have more opportunities to play with my camera in better light.
Thursday, June 15, 2006
Song Parody: Haren Tonight
Oakland 7, Mariners 2
When you can't find anything nice to say about your own team, might as well not say anything at all. I think my favorite moments of tonight's game were:
1) Seeing Frank Thomas turn a double into a single (and subsequently the announcers calling him Frank Robinson by accident)
2) Kendall catching a foul ball right out of the hands of the cameraman, who was hamming it up for like five minutes afterwards
3) Swisher's leaping ballet catch off Beltre, not just because it was a great catch but because his grin afterwards was the cutest thing I've ever seen in my entire life.
I just found out Jill Sobule's playing at the Tractor Tavern this Saturday at 7pm, and if I survive the Race for the Cure that morning and the Giants-Mariners game in the afternoon, and am still awake, I'm totally going. On that note, I wrote a song parody about tonight's game to the tune of a Jill Sobule song. No, I still have never been to the Coliseum (though I will be down there over July 4th weekend), so just pretend I'm writing this from the viewpoint of an A's fan who was actually there:
Haren Tonight
To the tune of "Karen by Night" by Jill Sobule
Haren, he's a pitcher for Oakland
He plays for the crowd on 66th Avenue
We come in late from Berkeley on the BART train
Haren's in warmup, right before game time
But we like him, he's fun but approachable
Really cool hair, sort of like Eckersley
We ask him, "Hey, come sign my new baseball hat,"
And Haren, he never declines
So we came to see
Haren tonight
Imagine he must give the batters a fright
With just a ball and a glove by his side
He's starting today, so let's cheer for
Haren tonight
Seventh inning, sitting near the dugout,
I overheard Ken Macha talking on the phone
He said, "Is Halsey there?
Make sure he's warming up
I'm not letting Dan go on alone"
Well, I didn't know what to think
Was he done for the night?
Was the pitch count for Haren a little high?
I sat right there
On the edge of my chair
As he retired the side
And we all saw
Haren tonight
His slider breaks out under the moonlight
It crosses the plate and is called for a strike
Beating out Joel Pineiro,
Haren tonight
Saw him run into the trouble in the top of the first,
He had the bases loaded with nobody out.
But he got a double play and a strikeout,
He was doing all right.
Then he went for six more innings
And surrendered no more runs
He missed a couple bats
And was backed by great defense
He passed a hundred pitches
And they took him out, but all night all we could talk about was
Haren tonight
The next morning, I blog as usual
Haren's start fresh in my memory
I sing with a smile, "Why, that game was swell,
I hope you watched last night."
Haren tonight
Imagine he must give the batters a fright
With just a glove and a ball by his side
We love when he plays so we're cheering
Haren tonight
The slider breaks out under the moonlight
It crosses the plate and is called for a strike
Beating out Joel Pineiro
Cooler than Kiko Calero
I wish they could all be like
Haren tonight
Beating out Joel Pineiro
Not that it's hard to beat Pineiro with the way he sucks now...
Haren tonight
When you can't find anything nice to say about your own team, might as well not say anything at all. I think my favorite moments of tonight's game were:
1) Seeing Frank Thomas turn a double into a single (and subsequently the announcers calling him Frank Robinson by accident)
2) Kendall catching a foul ball right out of the hands of the cameraman, who was hamming it up for like five minutes afterwards
3) Swisher's leaping ballet catch off Beltre, not just because it was a great catch but because his grin afterwards was the cutest thing I've ever seen in my entire life.
I just found out Jill Sobule's playing at the Tractor Tavern this Saturday at 7pm, and if I survive the Race for the Cure that morning and the Giants-Mariners game in the afternoon, and am still awake, I'm totally going. On that note, I wrote a song parody about tonight's game to the tune of a Jill Sobule song. No, I still have never been to the Coliseum (though I will be down there over July 4th weekend), so just pretend I'm writing this from the viewpoint of an A's fan who was actually there:
Haren Tonight
To the tune of "Karen by Night" by Jill Sobule
Haren, he's a pitcher for Oakland
He plays for the crowd on 66th Avenue
We come in late from Berkeley on the BART train
Haren's in warmup, right before game time
But we like him, he's fun but approachable
Really cool hair, sort of like Eckersley
We ask him, "Hey, come sign my new baseball hat,"
And Haren, he never declines
So we came to see
Haren tonight
Imagine he must give the batters a fright
With just a ball and a glove by his side
He's starting today, so let's cheer for
Haren tonight
Seventh inning, sitting near the dugout,
I overheard Ken Macha talking on the phone
He said, "Is Halsey there?
Make sure he's warming up
I'm not letting Dan go on alone"
Well, I didn't know what to think
Was he done for the night?
Was the pitch count for Haren a little high?
I sat right there
On the edge of my chair
As he retired the side
And we all saw
Haren tonight
His slider breaks out under the moonlight
It crosses the plate and is called for a strike
Beating out Joel Pineiro,
Haren tonight
Saw him run into the trouble in the top of the first,
He had the bases loaded with nobody out.
But he got a double play and a strikeout,
He was doing all right.
Then he went for six more innings
And surrendered no more runs
He missed a couple bats
And was backed by great defense
He passed a hundred pitches
And they took him out, but all night all we could talk about was
Haren tonight
The next morning, I blog as usual
Haren's start fresh in my memory
I sing with a smile, "Why, that game was swell,
I hope you watched last night."
Haren tonight
Imagine he must give the batters a fright
With just a glove and a ball by his side
We love when he plays so we're cheering
Haren tonight
The slider breaks out under the moonlight
It crosses the plate and is called for a strike
Beating out Joel Pineiro
Cooler than Kiko Calero
I wish they could all be like
Haren tonight
Beating out Joel Pineiro
Not that it's hard to beat Pineiro with the way he sucks now...
Haren tonight
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