November 21, 2009
Order NowThe Hardball Times Baseball Annual 2010 is now in development and will ship in mid November! This year's book will feature articles by THT's staff as well as Bill James, Tom Tango and Craig Wright. If you use this link to purchase the Annual, you will be in the first group to receive it and you'll be supporting THT. ![]()
Rich Barbieri
John Barten Brian Borawski Craig Brown Evan Brunell David Gassko Jonathan Hale Brandon Isleib Chris Jaffe Max Marchi Bruce Markusen Harry Pavlidis Jeff Sackmann Dave Studeman Steve Treder Bryan Tsao Tuck! Dan Turkenkopf Colin Wyers Geoff Young John Brattain And here's the full roster.
Or you can search by:
Gear up for baseball season with Chicago White Sox tickets and New York Yankees tickets. LA Angels tickets, Houston Astros tickets, and Atlanta Braves tickets are hot sellers! You can get Boston Red Sox tickets, San Diego Padres tickets or Chicago Cubs tickets for your favorite baseball fan. Coast to Coast Tickets has the best MLB tickets like Minnesota Twins tickets, LA Dodgers tickets, Milwaukee Brewers tickets, New York Met tickets and St. Louis Cardinals tickets. Find premium Chicago Cubs tickets and other Chicago tickets at JustGreatTickets.com. Chicago Cubs Tickets Chicago Tickets ![]() All content on this site (including text, graphs, and any other original works), unless otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons License. |
This annotated week in baseball history: August 16-August 22, 1890by Richard BarbieriAugust 21, 2009 Richard celebrates his return to regular column work after a brief summer vacation by looking back at notables whose birthdays were his first week back. I’m much more of a summer guy than a winter guy. Summer has warm weather, baseball and—in my younger days—no school. As a result, I take far more vacations in the winter when I need the break than I do in the summer. Despite this, I spent last week in London, where coverage of cricket, baseball’s slow, confusing cousin, was extensive but baseball minimal. Since I missed two weeks worth of columns, we’ll make it up this week by doing a birthday from every day. Aug. 16, 1890: Baby Doll JacobsonAdmittedly, I don’t have a scientific way to test this kind of thing (or any way, really) but it seems to me that “Baby Doll” Jacobson (born William Chester Jacobson) must have the most mobbed-up sounding name in baseball history. For what its worth, the “Baby Doll” in the sense of the nightgown is believed to originate with the 1956 Elia Kazan film of the same name, which obviously postdates Jacobson’s career. In any case, Jacobson was a pretty good player, spending most of his career with the St. Louis Browns. Playing in a high average era, he hit .355 in 1920 and finished sixth in the batting race, Jacobson finished at .311 for his career. That’s still good enough to place him the top 100 all-time. Aug. 17, 1971: Jorge PosadaPosada is that rarely seen beast, the underrated Yankee. The best catcher of whatever we’re calling this decade (the Aughts?) Posada has received MVP votes in only two years this decade, and appeared on the All-Star team just five times. While not without his flaws—\—his defense has never been outstanding and he is a painfully bad base runner—he is probably at the cusp of a Hall of Fame career, having secured his place as an elite member of the Hall of Very Good with his outstanding 2007 season. Aug. 18, 1893: Burleigh GrimesA few weeks ago I composed an entire team of players known for only one thing. I excluded Hall of Famers on the grounds that anyone in there was inherently known for his talent and whatever else there is to say about him. But you probably could construct a team of Hall of Famers who are similarly cursed with their place in baseball history. I won’t be doing that here, if for no other reason than I might get a column out of it someday. But Burleigh Grimes, the last man to throw the spitball legally, is without a doubt a member of that club. Grimes was a pretty good pitcher at his best, and capable of throwing a huge number of innings, even by the standards of the day. No one pitched more innings in the 1920s, and only one pitcher is within 250 innings. Aug. 19, 1979: Rocky CherryThis cannot be anything other than coincidence, but certain days are just chockablock with hilariously named players. In addition to Cherry—doing pretty well in Triple-A for the Red Sox this year—today has a wide range. There’s Sap Randall, who I guess was a gullible sort. Speed Kelly earned his nickname despite having just one career major league stolen base. There’s Woody Williams and Tex Carleton, which would be great character names for a syndicated show about cowboys. There’s even the answer to a question: What does a 1950s stuffy Dad want his children to listen to? Why, Les Rock, of course. Finally, my personal favorite from the day: Rags Faircloth. He might not be the player Dave Righetti was, but he surely deserves the “Rags” nickname every bit as much. Aug. 20, 1973: Todd HeltonIn one of the first columns I ever wrote for here, I speculated on Helton’s Hall of Fame case. At the time, I wrote that I considered him a Hall of Famer, but would not be surprised to see him on the outside looking in. Not much has changed on that stance despite the passing of more than two years. Helton’s 2008 was a write-off; he played in just 83 games and put up an underwhelming .779 OPS. But he has rebounded this year, at age 35, hitting .318 and is fourth in the league in doubles. He has a good chance at being one of only 22 players with 550 or more doubles.
His salary goes to $19.1 million next season (plus a $4.6 million buyout the Rockies will almost surely exercise) so he will have to maintain that level of performance to be even close to worth the cash. But his deal has hardly been the albatross some—myself included—imagined it would be. But when election time comes he will be an interesting candidate. Still has my vote. Aug. 21, 1912: Woody WilliamsHey, there’s another Woody Williams! This one was a shortstop, not an especially great one (lifetime OPS+: 67) in the 1930s and during World War II. He was named Woodrow, which is the traditional way of being nicknamed Woody. It occurs to me that I have no idea how the modern Woody Williams got his nickname. I had thought it was for his resemblance to the similarly named Toy Story character, but that’s actually Kirk Rueter. According to Google, Williams’ nickname is something of a mystery. An unexplained nickname! I just love that.
| ||
LOL…have you watched T20 cricket? Even 5 day Cricket has more action than Golf and Baseball put together. Baseball is more closer to slow moving Golf. Get real!!!!