An Opening Act With A Bullet
April 2, 2013 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
Bryce Hapre and Stephen Strasburg made a compelling case on Opening Day to be considered the two best talents ever to play Major League Baseball in Washington, DC. Facing a depleted Miami Marlins roster, Stephen Strasburg seemed to hardly work up a sweat as he breezed through seven innings on eighty pitches without allowing a [...]
Cole Frenzel: Seeking His Opportunity with the New York Mets
March 17, 2013 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
The New York Mets face a bleak situation with their offense as the 2013 season nears. Other than third baseman David Wright and first baseman Ike Davis, they lack any above-average bats, but hope that help may be on the way courtesy of their minor league system. One player who could be in the mix [...]
Uh Oh, It’s Oh
January 1, 2013 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! Happy New Year!! Anyway, for today’s post, I will be blogging about a baseball player who never played in the states, but is one of the most popular international baseball players of all time. Sadaharu Oh played for the Yomiuri Giants from 1959-1980 in the professional Japanese baseball league. He originally was [...]
Booming Batters
December 26, 2012 by Matt Nadel · Leave a Comment
Hey baseball fans! Now that I’ve blogged about Proficient Pitchers nicknames (part one and part two), it’s time for the hitting nicknames. Here they are: The Splendid Splinter - Ted Williams Ted’s goal as a baseball player was that when he walked down a street, a dad would say to his son: ‘Son, there’s the best hitter that [...]
Jury Is Out On John Grisham’s Baseball Novel
June 25, 2012 by Gabriel Schechter · Leave a Comment
“At long last,” it says on the back cover of John Grisham’s new novel,Calico Joe, “America’s favorite storyteller takes on America’s favorite pastime.” Calico Joe is a good story, smoothly and movingly told, although after page 19 I was able to predict most of what would happen the rest of the way. A bigger tipoff appears one [...]
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 [...]
The 1983 California Angels
May 27, 2012 by Derek Bain · Leave a Comment
The Angels had captured 2 pennants in the last four seasons, and they were highly optimistic about their chances in 1983 after retaining most of the core players from their 1982 division winning squad. The team suffered a big loss in free agency, with slugger Don Baylor heading east to the Yankees. The Angels inked [...]
Clearing The Bases
May 24, 2012 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
We can’t have a surprise column without a disappointment column now can we? Earlier this week we talked about our Top 9 pleasant surprises, and now we will visit the opposite end of the spectrum. Maybe I’m a negative kind of person, but it seemed that there were quite a few players/teams I could put [...]
Jim Neidlinger: No Regrets
May 20, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
The Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers have had a string of legendary pitchers during their existence, earning accolades, World Series victories, and Hall of Fame enshrinements. Many young hurlers have imagined themselves being part of that group upon signing with the Dodgers’ organization, but few have accomplished such lofty goals. During the summer of 1990, Jim Neidlinger [...]
The Glory Days: Kaline the Selfless Star
May 6, 2012 by Thad Mumau · 2 Comments
Al Kaline never sought the spotlight. It found him at Yankee Stadium, Fenway Park, the All-Star Game and the World Series, places the light shines brightest. Otherwise, he was Everyday Al. He could have been carrying a black lunch pail, the way he went about his job. So workmanlike, so steady. Kaline was a steady [...]
How Hack Wilson’s Historic 1930 Season Avoided Knockout Punch
April 13, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
Lewis “Hack” Wilson enjoyed one of the most inspired seasons in baseball history in 1930. Playing outfield for the Chicago Cubs, he hit .356 with 56 home runs and a major league record 191 RBI. He had set the National League RBI record the year before with 159, but shattered that with his inspired play [...]
An Interview With Blue Jays’ Prospect Brad Glenn
April 5, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
Headlined by Jose Bautista, the Toronto Blue Jays have become known in recent years as a power hitting team, finishing in the top 5 in the American league in home runs in each of the past 3 seasons. With their impressive collection of hitters, there is no indication that they are going to let up [...]
The Big Hitter Of The 50′s Decade, Musial
April 2, 2012 by Andrés Pascual · 2 Comments
During the decade of the 1950s occurred what american baseball analysts named a “rise of the hitters”. Running the racial integration, joined organized baseball with all the figures of importance included the Caribbean, guaranteeing the presence in major league baseball of sluggers as Mays, Aaron, Banks, Minoso, Clemente or Frank Robinson who, along with Williams, [...]
The Impact of Prince Fielder in Washington
January 20, 2012 by Ted Leavengood · 5 Comments
Prince Fielder was always one of the impact players in this year’s free agent class, but he is still out there and according to the “industry analysts” the table continues to tilt increasingly toward Washington as his landing spot. This morning Adam Kilgore in the Washington Post summarized the case, saying he is “Washington’s to [...]
The Best Game Ever
December 1, 2011 by Joe Shrode · Leave a Comment
No, not game 6. The best game ever was played when I was eight years old on Doc Branson’s lot across the street from the house I grew up in. Excerpt from my manuscript, “Between the Lines: A Father, A Son and America’s Pastime.” Baseball is cool. It’s way cool, in fact. As a young [...]
Greensboro’s Cardinal Finally at Peace
October 31, 2011 by Ed Hardin · Leave a Comment
GOSHEN COMMUNITY – Thomas Edison Alston is buried within sight of first base, resting peacefully after the tumultuous life of a baseball player who never quite lived up to his potential. At least, that’s how the story goes now. The story is a lot more complicated than that. Edison was the first African-American to play [...]
Nick Rickles: Baseball’s Best Unknown Prospect?
October 30, 2011 by Andrew Martin · 1 Comment
The movie Moneyball has brought the Oakland A’s methods of evaluating players to the mainstream. With position players in particular, Oakland covets those who have a high rate of getting on base and are defensively efficient. Nick Rickles qualifies in both of those categories, and if his 2011 season was any indication, he is well [...]
Roy Smalley, Jr.—A Baseball Classic
October 27, 2011 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
This past week baseball lost Roy Smalley, Jr., another member of the World War II generation that has been rapidly slipping away in recent years. He was a player, a manager, an armed services veteran, and the father of Roy Smalley III, also a major leaguer. He was part of a vanishing generation that played [...]
Catching Up With Tom Shopay
October 23, 2011 by Andrew Martin · 5 Comments
Former outfielder Tom Shopay had the pleasure and the misfortune to play for either veteran or very good major league teams during his career. It allowed him to have some great teammates and experience a winning environment, but it also invariably meant that he never got much of an opportunity to establish himself as an [...]
The Declining Legacy of David Ortiz
October 19, 2011 by Andrew Martin · 4 Comments
Somewhat lost in the mire of disappointment and greasy fingers from the epic collapse of the 2011 Red Sox is the continued demise of the legacy of David Ortiz. His career in Boston represents the highest of highs, but an ongoing pattern of lows. It has not necessarily been about the way he plays on [...]
And your 2011 World Series Winner is…
October 17, 2011 by Mike Lynch · 4 Comments
About 30 years ago, Bill James introduced a prediction system that picked the World Series winner with 70% accuracy. He wrote about the system for Inside Sports magazine in 1982, then expounded on it in his 1984 Baseball Abstract. He developed the system in 1972 and it accurately predicted the World Series winner at a [...]
Hot Baseball Cards: The Postseason Edition
October 6, 2011 by Rob Bertrand · Leave a Comment
It is often said that art imitates life. That is especially true when it comes to baseball cards. Baseball’s annual Fall Classic provides an opportunity for fans to stock-up on their cardboard heroes, connecting them closer to the player, the game and the memories of October. The playoff run thus far has already seen dramatic [...]
New Look for the Astros in August
September 1, 2011 by Bill Gilbert · Leave a Comment
The month of August represents a turning point in the future performance of the Astros. Gone are Hunter Pence, Michael Bourn and Jeff Keppinger to be replaced by several promising rookies this year and some promising prospects in the years to come. So far, it has worked well. Three players promoted from AA Corpus Christi [...]
You Can Bank on It
July 28, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
In 1967, Louis Armstrong recorded “What a Wonderful World.” Do you think Armstrong naturally believed that about everything? Most likely not, but he made a decision to view life with optimism. While Armstrong dazzled the jazz circuit, Ernie Banks shared a similar view on the baseball diamond. “Let’s play two,” Banks said. A combination of [...]
Catching up with Bob Zupcic
July 21, 2011 by Andrew Martin · 2 Comments
The first professional athlete I ever met was Ted Williams, when I was about 9 years old. The experience was extremely disappointing, given how profane and cranky Williams turned out to be, even to a little kid like myself. The second professional athlete I met was Bob Zupcic, when I was about 12 or 13 [...]
The Illumination of Jose Bautista
July 18, 2011 by Andrew Martin · 7 Comments
I can’t say for certain what it was, but sometime in early September, 2009, something seemed to click for Jose Bautista that hadn’t before. Prior to that time Bautista was at best an average utility man who was rapidly approaching 30 years of age. Drafted in the 20th round of the 2000 draft, he also [...]
All Phillies…All the Time — What’s on Second?
June 18, 2011 by John Shiffert · Leave a Comment
Having previously answered the burning question, “who’s on first?” the time has come to address, “what’s on second?” The answer, unlike that given by Bud Abbott, is simple… an all-time Hall of Famer and the current best second baseman in baseball. Oh sure, there are others worth mentioning; Tony Taylor (backwards, Ynot Rolyat), Juan Samuel, [...]
The No. 8 Most Quotable Figure in Baseball History
June 14, 2011 by David Nathan · 1 Comment
There are few nicknames in all of sports better than Mr. October. The very nature of the moniker keeps Reginald Martinez Jackson in the conversation of the best Big Game performers, and his status in the lexicon of Great Yankees is assured. Coming out of Arizona State, Reggie was drafted 2nd overall by the Kansas [...]
19 to 21…Jose?
June 13, 2011 by John Shiffert · Leave a Comment
Volume 9, #15 Jose Bautista has become such a big name in baseball that, before every game, everyone in the park stands up and asks in unison how he was following the ball in BP. “Jose, can you see…?” Alright, so that’s a lousy joke. The more important issue is, what’s up with Jose Bautista, [...]
Clearing The Bases: Designated Hitters
March 25, 2011 by George Kurtz · Leave a Comment
Most players who are playing full-time at designated hitter this season we have discussed at other positions, so for this column, we will make it short and sweet, and only discuss the DHs that we haven’t gone over at any other point in this series of columns. The problem with selecting someone who is a [...]
AL East Positional Analysis And Ranking: Right Field
February 17, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · Leave a Comment
I am in the midst of a series examining the relative strengths and weaknesses of the teams in the AL East, on a position-by-position basis. The players at each position are being ranked in relation to their peers within the division, with each team being assigned points based on where their player ranks in comparison [...]
Seamheads.com Boasts Most Comprehensive Ballparks Database on the Internet
February 16, 2011 by Mike Lynch · 4 Comments
We at Seamheads.com are proud to announce the launch of the new Seamheads.com Ballparks Database, created by Seamheads.com co-founder Kevin Johnson and designed for the Internet by Dan Hirsch, fellow Seamhead and founder of TheBaseballGauge.com. This database has been a long time coming and something Kevin and I have wanted to implement since the earliest [...]
The Favorite Toy and…Tony Conigliaro
December 11, 2010 by Mike Lynch · Leave a Comment
Since I went with all-time greats, Babe Ruth and Grover Cleveland Alexander, in my first two articles in this series, I figured I’d shift gears and go with a should-have-been great in Red Sox slugger Tony Conigliaro whose potentially brilliant career was derailed on August 18, 1967 when he was struck in the face by [...]
Pride v. Power
November 26, 2010 by Jess Coleman · 1 Comment
Since 1901, only nine shortstops, age 37 or above, hit over .270 in a season. Derek Jeter will qualify to be the 10th player in that category next season, and the Yankees are well aware of that. Sure, if you are going to bet on someone entering that group – that happens to include six Hall [...]
Any Fish’ll Bite If You Got Good Bait
November 11, 2010 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
The Nationals continue to make notable progress in building their minor league organization. Â Rated consistently in the bottom tier since the move from Montreal in 2005, the system is on the rise, but an acid test awaits. GM Mike Rizzo wants to trade for a starting pitcher. The rumor mill has the Nationals looking at [...]














