Archive for the ‘Ramblings’ Category

Oh what a night…

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010 by I Love Nerd York City

In tonight’s Mets game, Angel Pagan started a defensive triple play, AND hit an inside the park home run.

Someone get the Elias Sports Bureau on the phone.

Scott Garrelts 2.0

Thursday, May 13th, 2010 by I Love Nerd York City

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Another “repeat nerd,” Mr. Garrelts has become eligible for the lifetime achievement award.  You can check out his first appearance here.

Mr. Garrelts had several good-to-great seasons for the Giants, including 1989, in which he led the National League in ERA.

I like how the glare on his glasses makes his eyes look as if he’s “powering-up” Teen Wolf style.

Drawing a line in the sand

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010 by I Love Nerd York City

John Gonzales from the Philadelphia Inquirer published a full article today about a guy who used to love the Phillies, but now doesn’t anymore.  Sounds like just a slow sports day article, right?

Wrong.  The article is amazing, in an absurd, mind-boggling kind of way.  I’ve posted some highlights below:

It’s been an amazing ride for Phillies fans over the last few years, but not for Mike Cybularz. He got off a few stops back when the road was still bumpy and marked with potholes, and the final destination – a championship and a long-overdue parade – was still off in the distance….The 28-year-old East Norriton native grew up backing all the Philly teams, but he was most smitten with the Phils. His dad took him and his two little brothers to games when they were kids. He remembers watching a lot of bad baseball at the Vet, but he was young and confident his favorite team would become a winner, or at least a contender.

At this point the story sounds like it could be about the childhoods of about 20 different fan bases.  But don’t worry, the table is just being set.

In 2004, when he was older and had some money in his pocket, Cybularz and friends bought partial season tickets for the Phils…During the ’04 campaign, as the Phils fought to find their form, Cybularz vowed that if the Fightin’s didn’t make the postseason, he’d be done with the team forever since that would mark a decade of waiting for the club to make the playoffs.

The Phillies finished 86 – 76 in 2004.  No playoffs.  No more Phillies for Mike.  Oh, and guess what?  if my dinner isn’t ready in the next five minutes, I vow to never eat dinner again.

…Cybularz hasn’t supported the Fightin’s since. Not when the Phils went on an improbable run to steal the NL East from the Mets in ’07. Not when they did it again in ’08 and then tore through the National League and the Tampa Bay Rays to secure the city’s first championship in 25 frustrating years. Not when the Fightin’s caravanned down Broad Street and Cybularz’s loved ones left him behind and joined countless other Phillies fans in celebrating the long-awaited title.”I would have loved to go to the parade,” he said, “but I didn’t – to prove a point.”

I love this.  Mr. Gonzales’s only failing in writing this article was his failure to ask the follow-up question, “What, exactly, is that point?”  This story reminds me of a kid I knew in elementary school.  In order to convince his mother to buy him a new Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles shirt, he promised that he would “like the ninja turtles FOREVER!!!!”  If he had the resolve of Mike Cybularz, he would still be wearing that shirt.  Totally tubular.

…his brother Kevin [asked] Mike to be his best man and organize a bachelor party involving a Phillies game, followed by a trip to Atlantic City for the entire crew…Instead of seeing the Phillies and then heading to A.C., Mike planned a different getaway to an even less-exciting city.

“We’re going to Baltimore,” Mike said, “to watch the Orioles play the Indians. What a terrible game.”

I think this is where we cross over from “personality quirk” to “mental disorder.”

Kudos, Mr. Gonzales, on a job well done.

Mike Brown

Monday, April 26th, 2010 by I Love Nerd York City

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Mr. Brown seems to be in competition with Scott Garrelts and Tom Hume for the title of “largest glasses in baseball history.”

Mr. Brown appears to have played part time for 5 seasons (never more than 358 AB’s in a season).  Considering he put up average to above-average OPS+ numbers in part time work, I don’t know why he didn’t have a longer career as a 4th outfielder.

Dale Hunter Hates T-Shirts, Cheetos

Thursday, April 15th, 2010 by Nerdicus Finch

Deadspin and a lot of other outlets beat me to it, but I thought this warranted a post. There was some hullabaloo in sports today over a cellphone camera video of Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, apparently drunk in a bar, ripping Bill Parcells and Tim Tebow. I couldn’t possibly care any less about this story because I don’t care about football. I am interested, however,  in the pious handwringing of out-of-touch old people in the media who took issue with the Jones video being reported on by major news outlets.

Dale Hunter, who is apparently a prominent sportscaster in Dallas, objected to his channel’s decision to air the Jones video. He had this to say:

“Our business now, too many times, is a fat kid in a T-shirt in his mother’s basement, eating Cheetos and writing his blogs — and we make it news.”

When I watched the clip on Deadspin, I wasn’t shocked to find that Hunter is an old white guy. It’s incredible how much alternative forms of media scare the hell out of old media dinosaurs like Hunter. With newspapers closing across the country, does this guy really want to be on the wrong side of the sea change?

Nerds on Twitter

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010 by I Love Nerd York City

You can now follow Nerd Baseball on twitter.

Our handle is nerdbaseball. Check it out.

We’ll tweet every time a new nerd is posted.

Why?

Friday, January 22nd, 2010 by I Love Nerd York City

I just found out that the Mets traded for Gary Matthews Jr.

As I was halfway out of a third floor window, a co-worker shouted that the Angels were set to pay $21.5 million of the $23 million remaining on his contract. So I shimmied back off the ledge, and ran over to this computer. I had to figure out if maybe this wasn’t that horrible. I mean, $1.5 million over two years could be good, right?

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Big Mac

Monday, January 11th, 2010 by I Love Nerd York City

Hey all, sorry for the absence of a new nerd this morning. The Internet was down at work, prohibiting me from accessing the online nerd database. I was planning on posting when I got home, and then the McGwire “story” happened.

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My 2010 Hall of Fame Ballot

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009 by Nerdicus Finch

With the results of the 2010 Hall of Fame voting to be announced next week, I figured I’d try to get a discussion going here by posting my fictional ballot:

Yes: Bert Blyleven, Tim Raines, Roberto Alomar, Barry Larkin, Mark McGwire, Alan Trammell, Edgar Martinez

Close, but no: Fred McGriff, Dale Murphy, Andre Dawson, Lee Smith

Not as close as you’d think: Jack Morris, Don Mattingly, Dave Parker

Closer than you’d think: Ellis Burks, Andres Galarraga

“Unquestionably” the best?

Thursday, December 17th, 2009 by Nerdicus Finch

I like Jayson Stark and I really like Roy Halladay (I’ve spent many first round fantasy picks on Halladay over the past several years), but I think Stark really went overboard in his latest ESPN.com column.

In the column, which discusses the recent trade of Halladay to the Phillies, Stark had this to say about the former Cy Young winner:

He has been, unquestionably, the best starting pitcher in baseball for the last eight seasons.

I don’t necessarily disagree with Stark about Halladay, but to say that he’s been “unquestionably” the best is grossly overstating the case. When I read this, the first name I thought of was Johan Santana. Here are their numbers from 2002-2009:

Halladay: 130-59, 3.13 ERA, 1260 K, 1710 IP, 1.131 WHIP, 4.10 K/BB, 144 ERA+

Santana: 119-57, 2.89 ERA, 1641 K, 1580 IP, 1.064 WHIP, 4.07 K/BB, 153 ERA+

At first glance, it looks like Santana’s been the better pitcher, although it’s very close and Halladay’s extra 130 innings may be enough to put him ahead. Either way, I think it’s pretty obvious that Halladay is not “unquestionably” the best starting pitcher* of the last eight years.

*It may be possible that Stark is getting cute here, since Santana spent parts of the 2002 and 2003 seasons in the bullpen.