Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Beaver County Times, July 26, 2015

Neal Huntington pulled a rabbit out of a hat and came up with Aramis Ramirez as an emergency patch for the suddenly injury-plagued Pirates.
The cost was marginal pitching prospect Yhonathan Barrios and about half of the $6 million or so left on Ramirez's Milwaukee contract.
Given how this year's deadline market is tilted heavily toward the sellers, it may even be a remarkable deal when it's done. Ramirez has said this is his last season, and competing for a postseason berth has to be more appealing than playing out the string in the Brewers' dreary season.
After a half season of incredible good fortune with injuries, the Pirates were suddenly hit with the 1-2 punch of losing Josh Harrison and Jordy Mercer. Even when they come back, there's no guarantee they'll be ready to immediately pick up and get back in the fast lane. Help was needed.
There's still a week until the non-waiver deadline, and Huntington can't stop here. He needs to get another arm for the bullpen, a hedge against any part of the busy Jared Hughes/Tony Watson/Mark Melancon troika wearing down between now and the end of the season.
Even if those three are fine, the relievers who often precede them are too much of a crap shoot and require some reinforcement.
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--GUIDANCE COUNSELOR
Baseball-reference. com says Ramirez has made just under $147 million in his career.
He should be thankful to Lloyd McClendon that his career has turned out as well as it has.
When Ramirez was a young player with the Pirates, he was unfocused and didn't have good work habits. McClendon recognized Ramirez's talent, and that he had a chance to make some money in baseball. Ramirez didn't always seem to care that much.
McClendon would boost him sometimes, yell at him at other times. But he finally got Ramirez's attention. Ramirez worked to get in better physical condition, and he put in extra time with the coaches to become an acceptable third baseman.
The Pirates had to give Ramirez away and didn't get to reap much of the work McClendon did with him. But Ramirez turned those early lessons into a lucrative career.
By the way, when Ramirez made his major league debut with the Pirates on May 26, 1998, the outfield from left to right was Manny Martinez, Jermaine Allensworth and Jose Guillen. Kevin Polcovich was at shortstop.
That was a long time ago. With Ramirez's return, the Pirates have someone who played home games at Three Rivers Stadium.
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--BENCH BUILDING
There's been a lot of consternation about the weakness of the Pirates bench, and it's valid.
But there also needs to be an understanding that the concept of building a bench has changed. With 12-man pitching staffs, there are only five extra position players. One of them is a backup catcher, and teams try to avoid using him unless absolutely necessary.
One of the extra men had better be able to play adequate defense at shortstop in a close game, too. With three spots open, versatility becomes even more important.
Teams used to have seven players on the bench, and could afford to carry a pinch hitting specialist, the role that Manny Mota and Rusty Staub filled late in their careers. They weren't able to play in the field, and they were almost always removed for a pinch runner. So when they pinch hit, it took two players to fill the spot, either on the bases or in the field.
That luxury doesn't exist now.
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--WHO CARES?
The great thing about television is something that's been researched and planned will rarely be discarded for irrelevance. Must justify the effort.
So in the late innings of last Sunday's game at Milwaukee, Root Sports in-game reporter Robby Incmikoski was gushing about Brewers reliever Neal Cotts' comeback from injuries. He urged viewers to look up the details.
If you're a Pirates fan and your team is being swept, you're probably not really that interested in the admittedly inspirational story of a guy from the opposing team who is helping to complete the demolition.
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--'80S FLASHBACK
The headlines said WWE had fired Hulk Hogan for making racial slurs on a tape.
Which begs the question: Someone is still paying attention to Hulk Hogan?

Beaver County Times, July 19, 2015

What a weekend it was at PNC Park.
That was the kind of atmosphere everyone had in mind when the idea was conceived for an intimate, baseball-only park.
Not only did the Pirates walk off with two victories, they won the games in extra innings, and won both facing a deficit.
Taking three of four games in the weekend series against the NL Central-leading Cardinals allowed the Pirates to get within two and a half games of first place, whittling down a nine-game deficit that had looked so daunting two weeks earlier.
Those two games clearly represent highlights in the 15 seasons at PNC Park. The only comparable game is the 2013 Wild Card win over the Reds, when the Pirates reached the postseason after a 20-year losing streak.
Beyond that? For excitement and drama that stretched beyond a single game, you'd probably have to go back to Sept. 29, 1978 when the Pirates played a Friday night doubleheader against the Phillies.
The Phillies came in for the four-game, season-ending series holding a three and a half game lead.
You didn't need a calculator to figure out the scenario -- The Pirates needed to win all four games. Anything less would give the division to the Phillies (and there were no wild card consolation prizes in those days).
The rivalry between the Phillies and Pirates was white hot, with several brawls spicing the games between two excellent teams. There were fire-stoking loudmouths on both sides -- Larry Bowa for the Phillies, Dave Parker for the Pirates.
The Pirates had attendance problems then, but 45,134 people paid their way into Three Rivers Stadium that night. They saw the Pirates win both games in the bottom of the ninth inning.
In the first game, Ed Ott led off with a triple off Ron Reed, and was able to score on center fielder Garry Maddox's error.
The second game was even wilder. Steve Carlton allowed a leadoff double to Dave Parker, who went to third on another error by Maddox. By the way, Maddox was nicknamed "Secretary of Defense" and won eight Gold Glove awards.
Carlton intentionally walked Bill Robinson and Willie Stargell to load the bases. On a 1-1 pitch to Phil Garner, reliever Warren Brusstar balked in the winning run.
The sweep offered hope that the Pirates could pull of the miracle, but they lost the next day 10-8, despite taking a 4-1 lead after one inning.
So will there be carryover effect from last weekend for the last nine games between the Pirates and Cardinals? Probably not. The Cardinals devastated the Pirates with three walk-off wins in April.
If that sent a message, the Pirates didn't get it. They've won five of seven against the Cardinals since that series.
The good thing about the weekend is it preceded the All-Star break. So instead of getting swallowed in the daily grind of the schedule, it lingered so fans could savor a couple of special moments.
Plus it gave excitable announcer Greg Brown a chance to ice himself down for a few days.
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--THINKING OUT LOUD
Some quick takes on the Pirates in the second half:
--Josh Harrison's injury highlights the need for another bat, and another starter would be welcome, too. The Pirates have been fortunate with the health of their starting rotation in a season where their back-up options are limited.
But it would also be good to get some help for the bullpen. The heavy workloads on Jared Hughes, Tony Watson and Mark Melancon could be a factor in August.
--Speaking of length of season, this will soon become uncharted territory for Jung Ho Kang. He never played more than 133 games a season in Korea, and averaged 124 games a season. He played in his 73rd game on Friday.
--You can drive yourself crazy replaying drafts, but what if the Pirates had selected Buster Posey instead of Pedro Alvarez in 2008?
--There are only 90 feet between bases, yet the Pirates manage to have some incredible adventures covering those distances. Would it be legal to attach a GPS unit to each uniform sleeve?
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--LOOKING GOOD
The only significant takeaway from the All-Star game: Everyone should look as good at 79 as Sandy Koufax does.

Beaver County Times, July 12, 2015

The unwitting architects of replay in MLB are Don Denkinger, Jim Joyce and Jerry Meals.
Those three umpires blew calls so badly and conspicuously that baseball had little choice but to follow other sports in using video technology to correct errors.
Denkinger missed a simple call at first base in the 1985 World Series that wound up swinging the Series in the Royals' favor. Joyce's incorrect call at first base in 2010 cost Detroit's Armando Galarraga a chance at a perfect game.
Meals put his name on the Pittsburgh sports infamy list in 2011 when he couldn't see that the Braves' Julio Lugo was tagged out at home plate in the 19th inning.
The plays live forever on the Internet, but everyone moves on knowing the wrong call was made. Salem, Ohio's Meals was later promoted to crew chief and will work Tuesday's All-Star game.
The cumulative effect was to create demand for replay review, which started on "boundary" plays. It was a major step for baseball to acknowledge that umpires running toward the outfield might not be entirely certain if a ball a hundred feet away was fair or foul, or whether it had been affected by fan interference.
The theory was sound: Get the call right. What sense did it make to live with a result that everyone could see was wrong?
Then they expanded replay. Now it's a monster.
The spirit of replay was correct. But now it's being used to determine whether a sliding base stealer may have lost contact with the bag for a split second while the tag was being applied.
Some players over slide the base, and should be called for that. If anyone is doing the blatant over slide (the Nyjer Morgan model), he should be called out.
But if someone is sliding in and oh-so-temporarily fails to hold the base, should a safe call be overturned if it takes the most nitpicking video evidence to reverse it?
If it takes super slow motion and freeze frame to make the case, haven't we gone beyond the spirit of things? It's even worse when the game stops for several minutes while the game umpires clamp on headsets and talk to colleagues at the replay center in New York.
There's always a shakeout period on replay policies and the degrees of rule enforcement.
Once the NHL disallowed goals if replay found a player with an inch of his skate blade in the crease. It didn't matter if the breach affected the play or not.
They realized that was ridiculously petty and it's tilted totally in the other direction. Now players can pretty much have lunch in the crease with no penalty.
Baseball needs to separate the clinical from the practical. Because every second base slide is under the microscope, runners are desperately hugging the bag like it's a much-loved teddy bear. The fielders applying the tags are clutching the runners like they're getting ready to polka.
It's silly. Replay is a great tool. Part of the application is knowing when not to use it.
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--FIZZLING OUT
Gerrit Cole heads into his first All-Star appearance with a 13-3 record, and much has been made of the fact this is the best pre-All-Star performance by a Pirates pitcher since Dock Ellis and Ken Brett.
Ellis was 14-3 at the break in 1971, and Brett had a 12-6 record at the 1974 break.
Better hope that Cole doesn't duplicate the seasons they had after the hot starts.
Ellis seemed to be a lock for a 20-win season. He finished 19-9 and wasn't of much value in the postseason.
Brett only won one more game, finishing 13-9. His chronic shoulder problems flared up and he gave the Pirates two ineffective innings in the playoffs.
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--VOTING IRREGULARITY
The demise of paper ballots in All-Star voting reminds of the days when the Three Rivers Stadium ushers refused to hand them out to fans.
The union deemed that a change in work rules that hadn't been negotiated.
Did it really matter? Does anyone believe MLB actually counted the write-in votes on all those cards?
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--SORRY, NOT SAFE
The sports books in Las Vegas take action on everything. So next year you have to figure they'll establish an over/under line on how many NFL players blow up their hands over the Fourth of July weekend.

Beaver County Times, July 5, 2015

Time to get that hole in the screen door patched, and rid up the yard, too. The Super Bowl could be coming to town.
The Steelers have applied to the NFL to host Super Bowl LVII in 2023. That would be Super Bowl 57 at Heinz Field, of course, a symmetry that should appeal to the commercial-minded league.
Alas, we missed our shot on Super Bowl 33 (Rolling Rock beer) and Super Bowl 11 (the number of herbs and spices in the secret KFC recipe). We won't get caught napping this time.
The Steelers have taken the first stop in the process, which is submitting an application. That's sort of like announcing your intention to invite the class hottie to the prom. No guarantee it will ever come close to happening, but you establish interest.
A Pittsburgh Super Bowl really doesn't make much sense, but the Rooneys have some sway in the NFL in some matters. For that reason, it can't be ruled out instantly.
The Super Bowl isn't just the biggest football game, it's the NFL's combination party/trade show/convention. Companies who spend a lot of money with the NFL get a lot of the tickets and spend the week showing off their association with the No. 1 sports league.
That's why most Super Bowls are in warm weather cities with a reputation as party places, like New Orleans and Miami. Sure, they sidetrack to Detroit and Indianapolis now and then, but the game is played under a dome.
The exception was 2014 in New Jersey, the first time a Super Bowl was played outdoors in a place guaranteed to be cold on game day. The NFL lucked out there, as the weather wasn't a factor.
And besides, that was New York. Where better to spend the week of the run-up? New York has dozens of Broadway shows. Pittsburgh gets the touring company of "Kinky Boots," and it's a big deal if someone in the cast once appeared in an episode of "Seinfeld."
Pittsburgh mayor/Undercover Boss Bill Peduto is solidly behind the plan, and he ought to be. Pittsburgh's tourism bureau is an awfully lonely place when the bike lanes are snowed under.
It's too early to project an exact date, but the Super Bowl is usually around the first week of February. Considering 2023 is still eight years away, do we even know if Heinz Field will still be around? The Steelers might decide the place is outdated and start squawking that they need a new one.
But let's proceed with caution and start making some preliminary plans, just in case. People who sell funnel cakes should be put on alert because this could be one monster street fair.
Of course, we'll need those two western Pennsylvania traditions, a classic car cruise and a parade. Fireworks every time it's dark.
Obviously we need more hotel rooms, even though there's now a hotel every 15 yards between PNC Park and Heinz Field. Who knew the number of hotels would equal the number of panhandlers in that sector?
The Penguins should have some home games during that week. One should be against the Bruins, given that the Patriots are likely to be one of the Super Bowl teams. Bill Belichick and Tom Brady will probably still be in charge, too, even though they'll be 71 and 46 by then. Pure evil lasts forever.
This is a chance to show off the North Shore Connector, the boondoggle of a non-bullet train that crawls beneath the river from downtown. Not many cities have a light rail line that covers 1.2 miles at a cost of $523.4 million and -- oh yeah -- routinely passes up potential passengers because the cars are already packed.
(By the way, suspend the free ride policy for SB LVII week. If somebody has $800 for a game ticket, they can kick in the $2.50 fare).
This is a chance to promote Pittsburgh in a way that hasn't existed since people flocked to town to watch the implosion of Three Rivers Stadium.
Just imagine barons of industry going back to headquarters bragging about their week in Pittsburgh and telling astonished lackeys, "They put the fries right on the sandwich!"
The possibilities are endless. North Siders are already dreaming of gouging a tourist for the use of a parking space that's been saved with an old kitchen chair.