Mighty Casey

So, for the second year in a row, Mighty Casey has stuck out. Alex Rodriguez, the former Texas Rangers Captain (not the mascot, the guy with the “C” on his uniform), sent the New York Yankees home last night by striking out to end game five of the ALDS. It’s too bad he was the “only man” on the Rangers team back when he was here, because if he were still a Ranger, he’d still be in the post-season.

Of course, Mighty Casey only saw three pitches. A-Rod went down on a 1-2 pitch.

A-Rod also struck out swinging in the seventh on a 2-2 pitch with the bases loaded, which is probably even more painful. From an offensive standpoint, that’s a lot of people to leave stranded in a critical game.

If he gets a tattoo, it should just say “Offer Expires September 30th.”

I usually don’t wish ill on specific players (well, not many players, anyway), but in his case, I make an exception. (The one advantage of his moving to New York is now he can be a putz. Not as many in Texas know the term. Down here, he was just a piss-ant.)

Last night, it wasn’t wishing ill, it was more of a premonition. We weren’t actually watching the game, we were following along sporadically online while cleaning off the DVR, since the Spousal Unit is convinced watching the game on TV may jinx them. After I looked at the box score and saw he had struck out in the seventh, I said, “Well, at least he won’t be up again.” Then, she said, “No, he’s up in the ninth.”, and read me the batting order. I said “Wow. He’s going to be the final out.” Of course, that required two other people to get out ahead of him, but they complied. To their credit, at least they both hit the ball.

It’s interesting how one player can still cause so much angst years after he is gone. Last night, many of the sportswriters in Dallas were not simply tweeting that the Yankees lost (basic news reporting) but rather how they lost (A-Rod struck out. Again.) Apparently, I was not the only one he failed to charm.

So, the Yankees are done for the year which annoys the Spousal Unit no end, but the Rangers are still in, so we have a reason to watch the rest of the playoffs.

Actually, there’s a reason to watch the playoffs even if the Rangers were out – it’s freakin’ baseball.

I miss baseball

I realize that’s a silly thing to say when for most people, the baseball playoffs haven’t started, but AirHogs baseball ended a couple of weeks ago, and I’m still going through withdrawals. Three of our players were traded to the Atlantic League, and are all in the playoffs, so there is a chance I’ll know someone with two rings in a couple of weeks.

After that, I guess it will be time to relearn the Major Leaguers’ names and watch the MLB playoffs. It’s just not the same.

Update: Your Texas Rangers clinched tonight! They’ve won the AL West two years straight. So, there’s a local team in the playoffs. Of course, they have to win the World Series to match the AirHogs’ season.

We Are The Champions

2011 Grand Prairie AirHogsIt seems like a long time since the 2011 season started, but actually it’s only been four months. Four months and 109 games later, the Grand Prairie AirHogs are the 2011 American Association Champions.

After being down 0-2 in the championship series, they won three straight at home to defeat the St Paul Saints and win the championship. They dominated with pitching, they dominated with hitting and then they just dominated.

I told the coaches last night that I never knew a five-game series was two warm-up games and a sweep.

I’ve spent many painful years watching Metroplex teams come close, just to have it slip away (or get thrown away) in the end. Some teams (I’m looking at you, Jerry Jones) can’t even come that close very often any more. I’ve always consoled myself with the thought that even if the team wins, it really doesn’t have an effect on my life – I’m not on the team, after all.

Now that I’ve seen a championship won the hard way, you know what? My life does seem a bit better this morning.

On the way home from QTP last night, I thought “Wow. I’ve been hugged by sweating, champagne-soaked guys trying to move like Berney“, but then I realized that “I’ve actually stood on the field where a championship was won” probably sounds better.

I’ve actually stood on the field where a championship was won. This is actually the second time this year I can say this, since the fans were invited onto the field when the AirHogs clinched their division.  One of the special joys of watching minor-league baseball is that you can actually interact with the players and staff. They’re approachable. This lets their dedicated fans become involved with the team in ways that are simply not possible with major leagues. I learned a lot of baseball this season, because if I had a question, all I had to do was go ask the manager. He was at the bar after the game was over.

I wish more people would realize this, because it makes following the team much more enjoyable. Sure, it’s even more heart-breaking when someone you know and like gets traded, but that is tempered by the happiness when one of your favorite players gets called up to affiliated ball. Once you’ve met the players, they’re never that far away – most of them are on Facebook, after all.

The AirHogs did everything they could on the field this year. Next year, I’m hoping that being a championship team may bring more fans into the fold. This team deserve to play in front of a full park.

For all the talk of teamwork that floats around sports, from my perspective, the 2011 AirHogs actually were a team. I think even more than a team,  they were a family. They talked to each other. They stuck up for each other. They moved like Berney together (turn speakers off first at the office!) There was even a barber on the team (who apparently only knows how to do Mohawks.)

There was a different hero every night, sometimes multiple. German Duran hit over .500 against St Paul, including a home run last night and he was hurt. David Espinosa hit two 3-run home runs in one game. Stephen Douglas had 3 RBIs last night. In the Wichita series, John Alonso drew a walk to win a game and then hit the single against St Paul that won the first home game – the start of the comeback. Cesar Nicolas hit a 2-run single that drove a stake in the Saints hearts to finish the final game. The starting pitching the last three games (Josh Rainwater, John Brownell with a complete game and Jason Jennings last night) shut down the Saints.

This was the team that finally made me realize an obvious truth – you can’t have RBIs without people in front of you getting on base. They even helped each other’s stats.

I’ve gone to a playoff game before thinking “This one is ours.” (I’m looking at you, Dallas Desperados.) I was trying not to think that last night, just in case. The 2011 AirHogs were the team that didn’t let me down.

I never thought the AirHogs were invincible, it was just that a championship seemed inevitable. It was an interesting feeling.

When they clinched their division two weeks before anyone else, I was actually concerned that they had peaked too early, since everyone else that got into the playoffs had extra time for building momentum.

When they won in four games in Wichita while St Paul needed five games (and extra innings in most) to knock off Winnipeg, I hoped that St Paul would be tired – and I was concerned about the AirHogs having to wait in Wichita to see how far North they would travel for the championship series, instead of coming home. When they dropped the first two in St Paul, it should have been panic time, but I had learned this year that it was one game at a time. One game at a time three times in a row means rings.

So, in a season where manager Ricky VanAsselberg had three weeks to build a team after being transferred over from Shreveport, he can step back and say he’s now won back-to-back championships with two different teams – a multi-city dynasty of sorts. His team just beat the team that beat the Manager of the Year’s team. The Manager of the Year is pretty much Miss Congeniality at this point.

Ricky said he’d rather have a ring that a title. After last night, he’s got another one. Congratulations!

 

Stayin’ Alive

The true measure of a team is how is responds when it has its back against the wall. After dropping the first two games of the five-game championship series against the St Paul Saints, the AirHogs were in a must-win situation last night.

This was the night all the pieces came together at the same time. Josh Rainwater pitched eight great innings – including four three up, three down frames. The defense backed him up (in spite of three errors), and the bats produced just enough for the win.

It took eleven innings and it wasn’t that pretty, but it was very good baseball. In the end, as John Alonso singled and David Espinosa crossed the plate, there was a very important lesson proven – the Saints aren’t invincible.

Go AirHogs!

The Dead Zone

It’s almost time for AirHogs baseball again. Since the AirHogs clinched their division series in four games, they got a day off while St Paul finished off Winnipeg. Then, they had a travel day yesterday. Tonight, they start the finals in St Paul. Two games there, three games at home with another travel day in between. So, we can watch online tonight, but we won’t see the team in person until Saturday.

It’s been a long time since the team has been home. Because of the rather unique way the playoffs were designed (based on geography, rather than seeding, with the wild card playing the winner in its division), the AirHogs started at home (two games), went to Wichita (two games, including the series winner) and then have just stayed there to see how much further north they were headed for the finals. So, this has been the first road trip all year that had travel days built-in, and it’s also the first road trip that had a day off just because the AirHogs clinched before anyone else.

100 games didn’t seem like much at the beginning of the season, but the beginning of the season now seems like it was a long time ago. This is when you realize that those 100 games (104 with the first round playoff series) were only played so the team could get to this point. Quite a prelude.

You can tell it’s almost time for the end of the baseball season in Texas, because the weather is decent. After 100-degree evenings all summer long, we should have (slightly) cooler temperatures for the finals.

So, five games to go in the season. First team to three wins gets the rings. Go AirHogs!

Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door

The Grand Prairie AirHogs are through to the Championship round, having defeated Wichita three games to one in the division round. Much like the end of the regular season, now they wait to see who’s next, since the other Division series has it’s fifth game later today. They’re either heading to St Paul or Winnipeg later this week, and will be back at QTP to finish the season starting on the weekend.

The Wichita series was hard-fought, with a lot of heroics and even more basic baseball. The AirHogs won the first game when Wichita walked in the winning run in the bottom of the ninth (John Alonso drew a walk to bring David Espinosa home – a walk-off walk). They won the second game  n the bottom of the ninth when David Espinosa scored on a wild pitch (with John Alonso at the plate, again). The third game had rain and power failures. The final game was all pitching.

The games were all close – the AirHogs won the first game 4-3, the second game 12-11, lost the third game 5-3 and clinched with a 2-1 victory. After the first game (where Wichita scored two runs in the top of the ninth, and the AirHogs scored three in the bottom of the frame to win), I assumed the next game would be the blowout game.  I was correct. Defensively, it was very similar – the runs just arrived in clumps on both sides with 23 total runs. The third game started with a rain delay, and then had a power failure and more rain. The final was John Brownell throwing eight amazing innings and Jon Hunton slamming the door on the Wingnuts (with the tying run on third.)

So, a series that was good for the soul and bad for the heart.

The next step is the finals round – the other divisional series will go five games, so the AirHogs can actually take a day off today and watch the game to see who will be hosting the first two games of the championship. Every game so far in the St Paul – Winnipeg series has gone to extra innings, so whoever wins may be a wee bit tired.

Random notes and statistics on the Wichita series:

  • The first team to score lost the game (thanks to Josh Hirsch for that observation.)
  • Plate discipline can never be under-rated. John Alonso won the first two games by standing still and being patient – he drew a walk to force the winning run in the first game and waited until he got a wild pitch in the second.
  • Pitchers have good nights and bad nights. Josh Dew of the Wingnuts loaded the bases in the first game and was pulled after he threw the first ball of Alonso’s walk. He threw the wild pitch the second night. He then pitched a 1-2-3 inning to close the first game in Wichita.
  • This is the time of year to peak. David Espinosa hit .643 in the series, German Duran hit .571, Alonso hit two home runs (and drew four walks), Greg Porter had 5 RBIs.
  • Starting pitching is still key – the AirHogs got eight innings out of two of their starters (Brownell and Jennings) and both of them have a 1.13 ERA.

Three wins to go.

Bitch Bitch Bitch

Are sports fans ever happy?

Last year, the AirHogs had a dreadful start to the second half, and everyone was complaining – the players have given up, the manager is panicked, we’ll never win again.

This year, they clinched with almost three weeks to go, and people are finding other things wrong – management isn’t outgoing enough, the free video feeds aren’t good enough, prices are too high.

I really thought if a team was winning, all was forgiven. Apparently not.

I’m trying to figure out what sports fans want – not that I can do anything about it, I’m just interested. There are some who just like baseball, some who like the players, some who go for the community, and some who can’t afford Rangers tickets.

Me? I’d like to watch a game in relative peace with people around me that are actually interested in the game. (If you want to chat about your day, go to the bar). I’d like to be able to hear the sounds of the game, even if they’re not all child-friendly. If someone on my team does something stupid, I would like to react naturally, without being told I’m not supporting the team. I’d like my team to win, but I think I appreciate a good game.

Should a team’s winning make their fans happy? Of course. However, I did a quick study this year, and my life did not appreciably change whether the AirHogs won or lost a game. I would like the other fans to realize that. If your life sucks, 22 young men getting rings isn’t going to help you for any length of time. It’s their victory. I’m not sure it reflects on you, just because you watched them play. Lighten up.

Go AirHogs!

Magic Number? One

The AirHogs have the second game of a double-header ahead, and Shreveport dropped the second game of their double-header today, so a win will clinch the Southern Division championship for Grand Prairie.

There’s plenty of time left in the season to win, but getting it done this early would be an impressive feat. The two other divisions are still close, but the AirHogs have dominated the South.

Go AirHogs!

Update: After dropping the first game of the double-header, the AirHogs won the second in the bottom of the seventh (the virtual bottom of the ninth) when Chris McMurray laid down a bunt that passed over the pitcher’s glove, scoring Jake Taylor. Final? 6-5 AirHogs. Updated Magic Number? Zero! Grand Prairie AirHogs – 2011 Southern Division Champions!

Random (Again)

With the heat wave we’re under, the stream of consciousness is almost dry, but here’s some thoughts from the past week.

First, thank you to whomever first said “The heat hasn’t been this bad in Dallas since the NBA playoffs.” It’s not baseball, but it will annoy a few people I know from Miami.

Random fact – The starting pitcher chooses his team’s uniform for the game. We were actually told this about a month ago when my wife was sewing names on jerseys and asked which color jerseys needed to be done first. She was told, “We don’t know.” Apparently, the team doesn’t know until just before game time every day. I had just been alternating caps (red and black) at the beginning of the season, but it evidently was pure chance that I was usually wearing the same as the team. In fact, I was told most of the players don’t like the red hat. Who knew?

I asked one of the pitchers I know this week and he verified it. Since he’s not an AirHog this season (yet), it’s not just a Grand Prairie tradition. I always assumed there were home and away jerseys, but apparently, there are uniforms and the pitcher picks one (except on special jersey nights.)

The reason I brought this up is that Dallas has now had 33 days of 100+ temperatures this summer. The first pitcher who declares “shorts and t-shirts” as the uniform will be a hero for his team.

This also means Amarillo must only have one uniform because I can’t believe every one of their pitchers would choose that god-awful yellow jersey with the road-stripe pants every freakin’ night.

Random thought – I will never talk about someone’s hitting again, since it might affect the team’s won-lost record immediately after I publish it. I assumed it would have no effect, since about three people read this, and one of them is me, but I should have known. My apologies.

Random thought – I still haven’t decided when you can start talking about a magic number. I think once it’s 10 or below you can start talking about it. Of course, to know if you can talk about it, you have to calculate it, so if you figure it out [for the American Association, it’s 101 – (first place team’s wins) – (second place team’s losses)], and it’s more than ten, just keep it to yourself.

Random Thought – We had an old fart (I can say that – I’m one) umpire the other night and everyone seemed to agree with his calls at the plate, at least a much higher percentage than normal. The differences between him and other umps? He was older. He seemed more experienced. Most importantly, he made the call. You’re out. It’s a strike. Sit down. Shut up. If all the umpires had the same confidence level when making a call, there would be less hated umpires in the league. Maybe.

Random Thought – It’s 112 degrees in my back yard and almost time to head to QTP. I wonder how the players would feel about naked spectators?

Statistically Significant

Earlier this week, I mentioned the AirHogs’ second baseman, David Espinosa, had dyed his hair and beard and created a FauxHawk just to change things up. Apparently, it’s working, even if the FauxHawk has recently collapsed.

Prior to his video-documented Just for Men treatment, David had hit 2 HRs in 259 at-bats. (He is leading the league in walks, so he tends to get on base without bothering to connect – he draws a walk every fourth plate appearance.) This week, he dyed his beard and hit 3 HRs in his next thirteen at-bats, including two in one game last night. How do we determine if the beard caused the home runs?

Prior to the beard and FauxHawk, David would hit a home run on average once every 130 plate appearances, if you simply divide his at-bats by home runs. After the beard, it is every 54 at-bats. This is the AB/HR rating in Sabermetrics, so I’m not the first one to consider this statistic important enough to calculate.

Sabermetrically, his AB/HR rating was 129.5 before Black Beard, and his new rating is 54.4. (The best current AB/HR rating on the team is 28, the lowest is 227.) While he only passed one person in the team rankings, he is much closer to some of the power hitters (a rather arbitrary term) on the team, at least by this ranking.

Ironically, my degree is in computer science and applied statistics, so I should be able to compute exactly how much of a change this is and how statistically significant this should be considered. Unfortunately, my degree is from 1982, so I don’t remember squat about statistics.

Still, from one home run every 130 plate appearances to one every 54 begs the question – what else is there to dye?