Yearly Archives: 2008

October 12, 2008

NLC Players in the Post-Season via Boston

We all know the pain of watching talented players rot away in a sub-par organization, missing out on awards, honors, and post-season berths that they are really entitled to.

Here’s a few of those players who got out and are now chasing a ring with the Red Sox.

JD Drew

Remember this guy? He barely missed out on the Cardinals’ World Series year, leaving the team in 2003. Difficult to say whether his constant injured status was what was holding them back

Jason Bay

The poster child for talent wasted on a losing team.

David Ross
David Ross is special.
Not sure this one really commands the same nostalgia as the others.

Sean Casey

It’s nice to see people get out and succeed.

October 7, 2008

Reds Say Patterson Won’t be Back

“CINCINNATI — Corey Patterson’s return to the Reds in 2009 already seemed unlikely as this season closed. Now, it’s official,” says Mark Sheldon in this story on Reds.com.

I’m glad that the return of Patterson in 2009 seemed unlikely to someone. It seemed as likely as hell to me.

Other tidbit of interest from this story:

Expect the club to make serious efforts to bring back reliever David Weathers and utility player Jerry Hairston Jr.

Whether these are good potential moves depends on what the Reds intentions are. If they’re padding the roster with decent performers, or trying to gain future favor with Weathers’ son, then it’s cool.

October 6, 2008

Phillies 6, Brewers 2: The Central’s Last Team Standing

Team123456789RHE
Phillies (3-1)1040000106100
Brewers (1-3)000000110280
W: Blanton (1-0) L: Suppan (0-1)

Boxscore

After all the winning put up by the Cubs, the Brewers, and to a lesser extent, the Cardinals and Astros, the NLC’s showing in the playoffs was disappointingly short. (That’s what she said.)

So much for the best division in baseball.

Anyway, unlike the Cubs, the Brewers managed to show up for one game and stalled elimination until game 4 against the Phillies. The 4 runs Jeff Suppan allowed in the 3rd inning pretty much sums up the game. Suppan allowed 2 home runs in that inning, one to Pat Burrell and another to Jayson Werth. It was too much for Milwaukee to recover from.

Still, the Brewers had a successful season. It was their first post-season appearance since 1982. While the go-for-broke philosophy that got them there provides a heapin’ helpin’ of work for the club for next year, the team and its fans can take solace that they didn’t collapse as badly as the Cubs.

October 6, 2008

Cubs 1, Dodgers 3: Well, that Sucked

Team123456789RHE
Cubs (0-3)000000010181
Dodgers (3-0)20001000-360
W: Kuroda (1-0) L: Harden (0-1) S: Broxton (1)

Boxscore

I don’t usually recap games that happened over the weekend, but since these are the last ones, I’ll make an exception.

The Cubs were swept by the Dodgers over the weekend. If you heard a giant sucking sound from the Midwest or felt millions of souls crying out in anguish, now you know the source.

This game might have been the first time I’ve empathized with Cubs fans. Perhaps the perspective of following a team that hasn’t had a winning season for 8 years helps, but what Chicago put its fans through this year was brutal.

The Cubs team assembled this year was dominant, well-rounded, and perfectly poised to do well in the postseason. Which made the inexcusable disappearance of every single player not named Carlos Zambrano all the more heart-wrenching. Honestly, I was hoping they could pull out a miracle and win one game by the end of the 3rd game. But no. It was not to be.

But the Cubs achieved 100 years of futility. Somewhere, Monk is pleased. 100 is a much nicer number than 99, after all.

October 5, 2008

A Place for Tiny Casey to Stand

Boy oh boy, have the Reds and Bank of America got a deal for you. If you are among those willing to wield a credit card emblazoned with Cincinnati graphics, they’ll present you with your very own miniature base, autographed by Bronson Arroyo.

Tiny Casey before he started hitting all those tiny GIDPs.
Now, the credit card itself I can almost get behind. It can represent the emotional credit that you’ve lent the team year after year, hoping it’ll finally be enough to finance their never-ending rebuilding. Plus, you can buy stuff with it.

The miniature base has its symbolism, too. It stands for all the bases Arroyo gave up this year. But once you’re done reflecting on the highly anticipated one-two punch that failed to perform, then the squandering of the unexpected one-two punch delivered by a couple rookies, there doesn’t seem to be much to do with the thing. You can’t even set them up in the living room and pretend you’re a giant unless you open three different accounts.