NJBM Kids’ Hot Korner: Phil Niekro
April 25, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! I just put up my latest post in the Kids’ Hot Korner section of New Jersey Baseball Magazine. This one is about Phil Niekro, the Hall of Fame pitcher with the famous knuckleball pitch. If you want to read more about Phil, just click here. Check back in a couple of days for more of [...]
Clearing The Bases
April 24, 2013 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
Arizona Diamondbacks: Starting pitcher Randall Delgado, you know, one of the key pieces in the OF Justin Upton trade, is off to a rough at AAA and may not be the first call up once the Dbacks need help in the rotation, that may go to Tyler Skaggs. Good thing that Upton fellow isn’t off [...]
Clearing The Bases
April 17, 2013 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
Arizona Diamondbacks: Pretty tough week for the DBacks as they lose 2B Aaron Hill until June with a broken hand. Hill suffered the injury when he was hit by an Edwin Jackson pitch. Tried to play with it over the weekend but just couldn’t do it. Outfielder Jason Kubel was also placed on the DL [...]
Giving Away Outs to the Braves
April 14, 2013 by Ted Leavengood · 4 Comments
It wasn’t the newly arrived Upton brothers that crushed the spirits of 120,000 fans that flocked to Nationals Park this weekend. No, it was a team effort. The Atlanta Braves beat the Nationals in every aspect of the game. They outscored Washington 18-5 for the three game series. After Friday night it never really seemed [...]
Teammates Sharing Birthdays
April 14, 2013 by Daniel Hirsch · Leave a Comment
If you are like me, then you are a child of the 90′s and you rooted for America’s Team, the Atlanta Braves. And you probably know that today, April 14th, is Greg Maddux, David Justice, and Steve Avery’s birthday. Alright, you don’t need to be a child of the 90′s OR have rooted for the [...]
Clearing The Bases
April 10, 2013 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
Arizona Diamondbacks: Centerfielder A.J. Pollock had a big game Wednesday, hitting two HRs and driving in four runs. Pollock may not have even begun the season with the team except for the injuries suffered by Adam Eaton an Cody Ross, problem is when those two return from the DL there may be no room for [...]
Clearing The Bases
April 3, 2013 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
Arizona Diamondbacks: Funny how things work out. During the off-season the DBacks were making deals because they thought they had a stockpile of outfielders, but after trading Justin Upton and Chris Young, and with the elbow injury suffered by Adam Eaton , that depth has been severely depleted…..Speaking of Upton, he just hit his second [...]
Clearing The Bases
March 28, 2013 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
Well all of the fantasy rankings have been completed, it’s time to talk about real life baseball. There will be very little fantasy talk in this column as I will be making predictions on how the divisions will end. Predictions are never all that easy and in some cases completely useless once the season begins [...]
Chipper Is an Old Braves Chap
February 25, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans!Today, you are about to hear about one of the greatest players in Braves history. He recently retired and is one of the greatest switch-hitting power hitters of all time. I think you can all guess who I’m talking about: Chipper Jones! Jones played his entire 19-year career with the Atlanta Braves from 1993-2012 [...]
Early Thoughts On the 2012 National League Rookie of the Year Race
June 22, 2012 by Andrew Martin · 7 Comments
Last week I outlined how the American League Rookie of the Year race is shaping up and now it’s the National League’s turn. While the NL has also introduced a strong crop of rookies this year, the level of production has not been quite as high as their AL counterparts. Bryce Harper has gotten the [...]
Clearing The Bases
June 19, 2012 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
I was supposed to write this column last week, but ended up spending way to much time on another project, so I apologize, but here we are with news and notes from the National League. New York Mets: Well, 1B Ike Davis may have awoken from his season long slump. His average is close [...]
Clearing The Bases
May 8, 2012 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
On April 10 I wrote at column detailing the closer situation for each team because there had been a few injuries during spring training that took a couple of closers out for the season. Well a month later half of baseball no longer has the same pitcher closing for them that they planned on to [...]
Clearing The Bases
April 10, 2012 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
We always say at draft time don’t overpay for saves, and that piece of advice seems to be especially important this season. Closers normally take a beating as it is the one spot on a baseball team that is sure to have the biggest turnover year after year. Not every relief pitcher is capable of [...]
This Ain’t Your Uncle’s Slide Show
April 1, 2012 by Austin Gisriel · 1 Comment
When I was a boy, the latest in home entertainment technology was not a 60″, HD, surround-sound television, but the Kodak Carousel slide projector. This bit of click-clacking wizardry was hardly entertaining, however, because invariably, Uncle Bob and Aunt Sally would invite you and your family over to view the slides from their latest vacation [...]
Off the Beaten Basepaths: Spring Training 2012
March 19, 2012 by Austin Gisriel · 1 Comment
It wasn’t easy going to Florida for a Spring Training sojourn because it was up to us to have as much fun as possible on behalf of all our friends who couldn’t go. Our motto was We’re having fun because you can’t. It took us 15 days and we drove almost 2,900 miles down, around, [...]
A Book as “Terrific” as Its Subject
January 19, 2012 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
Like the “The Little Engine that Could,” Tom Seaver began a steep climb saying “I think I can. I think I can.” Seaver’s mom, Betty, grafted the story into her son’s DNA by reading it to him as a child. Seaver always thought he could do whatever he set out to do, and usually he [...]
BBA Selects Kimbrel, Valverde For Goose Gossage Award
In earlier voting this postseason by the Baseball Bloggers Alliance, Atlanta Braves closer Craig Kimbrel won the Willie Mays Award for top rookie handily while the American League race for that award was much tighter. With the Goose Gossage Award, handed out to the best reliever, Kimbrel got to see how the other half lives, [...]
Kimbrel, Hosmer, Hellickson Selected Top Rookies By BBA
October 14, 2011 by Seamheads · Leave a Comment
Craig Kimbrel of the Atlanta Braves easily won the Baseball Bloggers Alliance‘s Willie Mays Award for top rookie in the National League. The American League award, though, was a much different story. Kansas City first baseman Eric Hosmer and Tampa Bay pitcher Jeremy Hellickson both received 67 points in American League voting, creating the first [...]
What Sunk the Braves
October 2, 2011 by Dan Schlossberg · 2 Comments
Good teams don’t fold for no apparent reason. Though buried by the publicity piled onto the Boston Red Sox, who also slipped out of the playoff picture in September, the Atlanta Braves should have seen their slide coming. Plagued all season by an inability to score runs, the Braves plodded through the 2011 season by [...]
The Top 10 Reasons For The Red Sox EPIC September Collapse
September 29, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · 3 Comments
In spite of blowing last night’s contest, closer Jonathan Papelbon is not on my list of the Top 10 Reasons the club fell apart in September… this debacle was about more than one game. Pundits across the baseball universe are characterizing the twin September collapses by the Red Sox and Atlanta Braves as the worst [...]
Something Stirring Beneath the Surface
September 1, 2011 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
The younger set cannot remember one of the iconic pictures of my youth: Nikita Kruschev, Russian Premier and head of the original Axis of Evil in Moscow, angrily banging his shoe on the desk at the United Nations, screaming to the US envoy to the UN, “We Will Bury You!” It was the headline in [...]
Two and Half Hours with Chip Caray
August 28, 2011 by Chris Mascaro · Leave a Comment
I recently had the pleasure of sitting down with Atlanta Braves play-by-play announcer Chip Caray to talk about his career, his life experiences and how he goes about making the excitement of Atlanta Braves baseball come alive for millions of fans across the country. Over a 7 day period I had the privilege of interviewing [...]
Clearing The Bases
June 16, 2011 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
Last week we discussed the most disappointing players at each position, this week we’ll go with the most surprising, players who are playing well and above what we thought they might in spring training. Some of the players listed are no longer playing at that position but that is where they qualified at coming into [...]
Clearing The Bases
June 11, 2011 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
The baseball season is more than 1/3 completed, the weather is warming up, and pennant races are starting to shape up. We are in mid-June; no longer can any player state that they are in a slump. Slumps don’t last two plus months. With that in mind we are going to take a look at [...]
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL AND MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PLAYERS ASSOCIATION REACH AGREEMENT REGARDING PAYMENTS FOR PRE-1980 PLAYERS
April 21, 2011 by Mike Lynch · Leave a Comment
My friend Doug Gladstone, author of A Bitter Cup of Coffee: How MLB and The Players Association Threw 874 Retirees a Curve, has been championing the cause of MLB players who retired between 1947 and 1980 and who didn’t qualify for a pension if they had less than four years of service time. It looks [...]
REO Speedwagon to Open Rays Summer Concert Series
April 19, 2011 by Andrew Tuttle · Leave a Comment
Iconic classic rockers REO Speedwagon are kicking off the Tampa Bay Rays summer concert series this year on April 30th immediately after the game against the Los Angeles Angels. This is the fourth year Tampa Bay has had post-game concerts and considering the Rays are under .500 it couldn’t come at a better time since [...]
Lessons from a Legend
April 14, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
One of the most compelling aspects of sports or reality television is that while they are simply games, life lessons are readily available. That is the premise of Lang Whitaker’s “In the Time of Bobby Cox.” A native Georgian turned New Yorker, Whitaker gives Cox credit for shaping many of his views. Read this book [...]
2011 Pre-Season Preview: NL East – Atlanta Braves
March 21, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · Leave a Comment
Braves 3B Chipper Jones The Braves begin the new season without long-time manager, Bobby Cox, who stewarded the team to a succession of fourteen consecutive division titles (from 1991-2005, absent the strike-shortened 1994 season), five World Series appearances and a world championship in his 20+ years at the help. The 2011 season will usher in [...]
Clearing The Bases
March 8, 2011 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
It’s that time of year again where all of us fantasy players are gearing up for our fantasy draft. Some of us may have already had a draft or two as some leagues like to get it out of the way early. Personally I prefer drafting as late in spring training as possible so that [...]
Fantasy Baseball Outlook: Top Five (Starting) Pitching Prospects For 2011
February 13, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · Leave a Comment
Tampa Bay’s Jeremy Hellickson is targeted for stardom. By the end of 2012 he will slide into the #2 spot in the rotation to create a dynamic duo, along with David Price. In articles such as this, many websites give readers a list of the best overall prospects at a given position, but the intention [...]
Fantasy Baseball Outlook: Top Five 1B Prospects For 2011
January 9, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · 1 Comment
  In articles like this, many websites provide readers with the best overall prospects at any given position, but the intention here is to focus on those prospects that are likely to provide the greatest fantasy impact in the 2011 season; thus, while Oakland 1B prospect Chris Carter may have some long-term potential, he [...]
2011 MLB Power Rankings, The Ides of January Edition (Part III, #1 – #10)
January 8, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · 1 Comment
With most of the top free agents now signed and teams starting to take shape as we approach spring training, I thought I would share my pre-pre-season perspective on the relative strengths (and weaknesses) of all 30 major league teams. I have broken the article down into three installments, and will publish one of the [...]
Atlanta Acquires Uggla, Florida’s Return Unimpressive
November 18, 2010 by Aaron Somers · Leave a Comment
Lost amongst a multitude of trades, award announcements, and rumors was a relatively significant trade that was completed just two nights ago. The timing was slightly ironic as just a few days prior I had taken a look at what teams could potentially be the most likely suitors if the Florida Marlins decided to deal [...]
The Ultimate Seven-Game Fall Classic: Game Seven
November 13, 2010 by Mike Lynch · Leave a Comment
In part one of my Ultimate Seven-Game Fall Classic series, I featured Game One of the 1988 World Series between the Oakland A’s and Los Angeles Dodgers, won by the latter on Kirk Gibson’s walk-off two-run homer off Dennis Eckersley, ironic because it was Eck who coined the phrase “walk-off piece.” Part two featured an [...]
Buster Posey, Neftali Feliz Win Two-Man Races For Willie Mays Award
October 18, 2010 by Seamheads · Leave a Comment
The battle for the Willie Mays Award, given by the Baseball Bloggers Alliance to the top rookie in each division, turned out to be a two-man affair in both leagues, with Texas Rangers closer Neftali Feliz and San Francisco Giants catcher Buster Posey finishing solidly ahead of their closest competition, Detroit Tigers outfielder Austin Jackson [...]













