Friday, August 26, 2005

LaRussa for President

In case you missed it, last night Tony LaRussa won his 2,195th career game as a major league manager and moved into 3rd place all-time. What a guy. Watching his interview today he just looked so happy and thankful to be a part of this Cardinal team, something that was very encouraging. St. Louis fans are renown as the best fans in baseball and we are rewarded with such an outstanding staff of people who want to do their best every day and win--they "give a hard nine" every game, in the words of Tony. Right now we have the best manager, pitcher, and overall player in baseball and it feels good. If you can't tell, I'm just busting of red and white, and last night's milestone made me realize I can't give that man enough respect. I think LaRussa just moved up on my list of "if you could sit down and have a conversation with one person, who would it be?"

I think he still trails Steve Kerr, though.

Monday, August 08, 2005

Tetris was also Curtis Gregg's favorite

One of my magazines contained this extraordinarily brilliant clarification:

“Something with ‘universal appeal’ is held in such high regard for cutting across barriers of age, race, sex, and language. Tetris proves that all ‘universal appeal’ means is ‘simple enough for girls.’”

Wow. This is definitely For Him Magazine.

+ Flog is golF backwards +

ESPN.com is amid "The Battle of Good vs Evil," a look into sports and their relations to the seven deadly sins and virtues. I don't necessarily dislike golf--I just thought the comparison was humorous.


5. Greed vs. Charity (Playing the Game)

Golf: Let's see ... you spend $800 on your irons, another $750 on your woods. Oh, don't forget, $100 on the shoes. Throw in $20 for a glove, $50 for a shirt, $35 for some balls and you're ready to play some golf! Wait, that's just how much you paid for the equipment. Now you need to come up with about $65 in greens fees to play a round. Forget it. There's no reason to even do the math here. You've just paid a few thousand dollars to take yourself way too seriously and say things like "Man, I gotta stay in my shoes!"
OK, so you play a lot, and now you're a great golfer. Go tell your friends about your 2 handicap. You should really be proud. And one more thing before you go: You know the guy who just hit three in the water on 15? The guy whose throat is sore from yelling "Fore!" all day? That guy is tied with you on the PGA Tour's career earnings list. We know ... it's OK to cry.

Basketball: For $10 at Target, you can pick up a nice Spalding basketball. That's right: $10. Now you need a hoop, so you go pick from one of the dozen or so located in every park in every town in America ... provided free of charge. No one there? No problem. Sure, it'd be nice to get a little three-on-three going, but it doesn't mean you can't play by yourself. Try saying that about any other sport.

WINNER: Charity.

Tuesday, August 02, 2005

2008: Last Time For Our Pastime

My apologies, but this entry does contain a hint of politics—but mostly sports. For those who haven’t heard, the Olympics dropped baseball and softball from the 2012 games in London. The IOC (Int’l Olympic Committee) voted to drop the two from the 28 game schedule on grounds that they aren’t popular enough worldwide and competition is not strong.
First off, I have had a longtime suspicion that Europe has always had the largest influence in the Olympics, and this just proves it. (And yes, I do realize the modern games began in southern Europe, but the world is a completely difference place than it was in 1896.) Many consider baseball to be too American as it was founded here and is considered our ‘pastime.’ However, since its inclusion into the Olympics in 1992, how many gold medals has the old US of A taken home? One. For those who also are unawares of the new Baseball World Cup that debuts this year, we are not even the favorites. Any true baseball fan will (reluctantly) tell you that the true baseball hotspot these days is Latin America. It has also picked up drastically with Asians. I have a feeling Europeans simply consider baseball to be too bloody boring.
I had a good chat on the subject with my foreign co-worker/friend and, as usual, he took the opinion opposing America. He claimed most sports that have such strong regional ties are not included in the Olympics, for instance Taekwondo and Karate, because the rest of the world cannot compete; this was followed up with something about how the rest of the world doesn’t care about baseball and its lameness. I sat down on the internet and looked up the current games and Taekwondo and Judo were most certainly included. (I will also mention that I was proud to see the one gold medalist out of the eight that wasn’t Oriental happened to represent the U.S.) The list of five sports that would fill the two open spots for 2012: golf, rugby, roller sports, karate, and squash. Now tell me how the latter two are not extremely regional games. Squash?! You’ve got to be joking…
Lastly, ridding the Olympics of baseball because *some* view it as lacking competition is the worst thing that can be done to the international sport. Take basketball, for instance, which was also coincidentally introduced in 1992. The U.S. has always been dominant while the rest of the world tried catching up. Well, they finally did and we lost last year. No, we barely grabbed the bronze. With other countries continually gunning for us, and the fact that baseball is growing, by 2012 it would be intriguing. The latest representative to speak out against removing baseball is from Greece. See note above about birth location of Olympics…
Oh well, it’ll be back. I’m not going to defend softball because, after all, we did sweep the Athens games 9-0 while outscoring our opponents 51-1. Yeah, we gave up one run in the gold medal game. That game also happened to be our national team’s 79th win in a row. Yikes. Good luck, rest-of-the-world.