Wednesday, December 31, 2014

A Year Ago


This time last year, Clare was going to the batting cages and her hitting coach as she counted down the start of softball season. Yesterday, she was out in Lincolnshire picking through Chicago sports’ memorabilia for a fundraiser the Valparaiso baseball program will be holding next month.  Guess who volunteered to be the intern in charge of setting up the event?

My father-in-law would forever have his eldest child, my wife, be ten-years old again, so the two of them could spend Sundays together doing puzzles and whatnot.  I want my only child to be forever twenty-one (or –two), batting third in the order, up with runners in scoring position and the game on the line.

The children in question do not have a say in the matter.

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Bear(s) Down


Marc Trestman, quite possibly the strangest and most delusional professional coach ever to work in Chicago, sounded like he expected to be back for a third season with the Bears after going 5-11.  “I’m putting my thoughts down,” he said fresh off the team’s fifth straight loss, this one a numbing 13-9 performance against the Vikings.  “I don’t think there is anybody in a better situation to assess it, other than myself and” Phil Emery, the general manager who made the mistake of hiring Trestman.

Why, Trestman even had a plan, “to continue to finalize my notes now that the season is over and make sure [when] that opportunity arises, I’ll be able to explain how we fix the team.”  Not to worry.  The McCaskeys have their own plan, which started with firing both Trestman and Emery, who cited a lyric from songwriter Carrie Newcomer in his exit appearance with the media:  “‘We stand breathless on the clean edge of change.’  So, it’s time to change and to move forward.  Go Bears!  Thanks for your time.”

It’s hard to tell what’s more surreal here, that an NFL G.M.. staked his job on a coach with New-Age management ideas just short of the huddle as quality circle or the amount of coverage the two firings generated.  At least one of the network stations broadcast the press conference in its 40-minute entirety, and everybody led with it on the 10 o’clock news; for once there was no video from four states over of a collapsing building, car chase or black bear wandering into an unlocked kitchen.  Nope, all we got was Chicago NFL football.
Wrigley Field could’ve collapsed and the White Sox moved out of town, and not a sports’ reporter would’ve noticed, or cared.

Sunday, December 28, 2014

Time Flies


This is how I know I’m getting old—someone on Clare’s tee-ball team got engaged this week; he was a nice kid with a real woodcutter’s swing.  And then there’s the catcher from Clare’s high school team.  Hard as nails, strong arm, good at keeping pitches in the dirt from skipping away.  She’s in Thailand now with the Peace Corps.

For three years that catcher kept our star pitcher focused, something Clare will readily admit she couldn’t by her lonesome.  Fast-forward to college, and the two of them faced off against one another every spring in the CCIW, power pitcher vs. my daughter the homerun hitter.  Well, the pitcher has now joined the ranks of the recently engaged.

Did I say “old”?  “Decrepit” is more like it.    

Friday, December 26, 2014

A Little Skin in the Game


 Two day before Christmas and we’re at the batting cages.  Clare doesn’t want to stop doing what she’s spent most of a lifetime perfecting, and I don’t want to stop watching her work at it.  Unlike the day before, this time the power stays on so the injury can happen.

Clare’s dead serious, if a little off in her timing at 70 mph.  Her swing is nothing if not vicious, especially after missing a pitch.  She goes through four tokens before getting rid of the rust.  At 75 and 80 mph, it’s like old times, all Crack! and watch the ball shoot off her bat.  This is music to the young and relatively old alike.  Only when the tokens run out does Clare show me the true cost of our visit: the skin has ripped off the top of her left thumb.
“I think I need new batting gloves,” she tells Santa.

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Steve McQueen and Don McMahon


 There are only so many times I can bike to Band of Brothers, which leads me to channel surfing.  Somewhere beyond the Turner Classic Movies on channel 501, Tuesday I settled into The Sand Pebbles, with Steve McQueen and Candice Bergen.  This is one of those movies that, no matter how many times I’ve seen it, the next time feels like the first.

Not that I’ve forgotten the first time, a Sunday afternoon in September of 1967.  My mother and I took the bus downtown to the Michael Todd, where an usher led us to our assigned seats.  I went instead of my father for two reasons: first, he was working at the firehouse on Archer and Sacramento that day, and second, he probably didn’t want to go, anyhow.  That left me to get lost in a love story about a beautiful missionary and a Navy seaman set against a backdrop of 1920s’ China in turmoil (I could’ve have written press releases in an earlier life, and did, for a time).  I’m a sucker for gunboats and B-17s, and one Southside baseball team.  I brought a transistor radio along to check on the White Sox score.
They beat the Indians, 3-1, behind a five-inning relief stint by Don McMahon, to move within one game of first place in the American League.  There were five games left in the season, but that was the last win for the Sox.  I should’ve known from the movie.  McQueen’s character  gets killed in the end.

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Reading and Writing


How did I start on the road to getting a Ph.D.?  Basically, comics and the sports’ section.  They gave me an appreciation for simple stories told well.

The comics, or “jokes” in our house, were a riot of color and humor and adventure every Sunday.  There was Prince Valiant to go with Moon Mullins, Gasoline Alley, Terry and the Pirates and Smilin’ Jack, to say nothing of the surreal Smokey Stover, featuring the fireman with a hinged hat (I think).  If you grew up on these strips, graphic novels aren’t that big a deal.

And then we have Carl Barks.  Who?  Barks was the creator of Uncle Scrooge McDuck, Gladstone Gander and Gyro Gearloose, all of whom lived with Donald Duck in the city of Duckburg; Uncle Scrooge had his Money Bin there.  Barks wasn’t afraid to use the occasional three- and four-syllable word to advance a story, which led me to pick up the dictionary outside of school.  If the folks at Wikipedia are right, Steven Spielberg and George Lucas both claim Barks as an influence.

Of course, I didn’t spend all my time reading comics; I also saved time for the sports’ section.  We were a two-paper family, the Chicago American and Tribune; later came the Sun-Times and Daily News.  The sportswriters I remember most are David Condon and Bill Gleason, though just about anyone else from 1960-1980 employed the same style as those two: subject, verb, object, keep it lively, short and to the point.  Oh, and Harry Shear, because he used the word “Quidnunc” in his column.  It means “gossip,” noun not verb.

I don’t claim to be a good writer, but I know good writing when I read it.  And I don’t know what, if anything, encourages kids to start reading today.  But I’m willing to bet the farm the following sentence will drive the young away from the printed word, unless it appears on their iPhone screen:  “[Bears’ linebacker Christian] Jones has improved his eye discipline against play action.”
A few more years of prose like that, and sports’ journalism will be dead.  No joke.

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Sugar and Spice, Contd.


 This is how Clare’s day went yesterday—workout, batting cages, date.  Taking a rest between #’s two and three, she sat in the living room while I did my Margaret Hamilton imitation on the Exercycle.

That might not seem strange until you know what was in the DVR player, not The Wizard of Oz but Band of Brothers.  It only seemed right to ride and watch on this, the 70th anniversary of Bastogne and the Ardennes.  And Clare?  You could say she held her ground quite well.  “I can’t get over how good this is,” my daughter said after the scene where Easy Company has to endure a shelling that turns trees in splinters of shrapnel.  Together, we tried to name all the other roles we’ve seen the lead actors in.  This is a Damian Lewis household, and Scott Grimes, too.

Monday, December 22, 2014

Sugar and Spice


Tell my daughter she can’t do something, and she’ll be in your face to prove you wrong.  That’s how it was with baseball.  That’s how it is with anything connected to perceived gender roles.  The big wide world isn’t just for guys anymore.  Which isn’t to say Clare despises the domestic arts.  Far from it.

Among other talents, she has a gift for baking.  Last night, she conjured forth an army of gingerbread men from out of the oven.  To top that off, she turned some of them upside down to decorate them as reindeer, and it worked.  One second I was looking at generic gingerbread, the next second it was Rudolph with a red candy nose.  Oh, and a few of the gingerbread men sported bow ties made out of glaze.

Earlier in the day, Clare went to Hancock Fabrics to get material for a blanket.  She’s already done one with a White Sox print.  It’ll either end up in Cooperstown or the Smithsonian, I’m not sure which.   

Saturday, December 20, 2014

Making Do


These really are the dog days for baseball, when indoor sports abound and the Bears implode.  In ancient times, I either waited for a trade (e.g., 1-20-65, John Romano, Tommy John and Tommie from the Indians to the White Sox for the recently acquired Rocky Colavito and Cam Carreon , or 11-29-67, Luis Aparicio and Russ Snyder from the Orioles to the Sox for Don Buford, Bruce Howard and Roger Nelson) or gutted it out to the end of January.  By then, the early baseball magazines would begin showing up at Charles Drugs on the corner of 55th and Kedzie.  I ran, slid and slipped the four icy blocks from my house.

It’s a little easier now, thanks to baseballreference.com, where the names and numbers hardly ever stop.  I can watch for transactions in the sports’ section (or cheat by going to the MLB website), then study a player in depth.  A little baseballreference makes the time pass in a most delightful way.   

Take the Sox signing of Melky Cabrera.  I can check the splits and confirm that Cabrera has been pretty much of a Sox killer, 10 homers, 38 rbi’s and 39 runs for a .316 career batting average in 244 at-bats.  Then I see the Sox have signed catcher George Kottaras to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring trainer.  Kottaras, isn’t he the guy…?  Yes, the guy who had a cup of coffee with Cleveland last year and hit two homers in a game against the Sox.  In fact, Kottaras has done quite well for himself facing my team.  Of his six career hits against the Sox, Kottaras has managed two doubles and three home runs for a .333 lifetime average (and .944 slugging percentage!).

Stats like that can keep a fan alive in this cold, dark wintertime.

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Playing with Fire


 Forgive White Sox general manager Rick Hahn if he starts channeling Rodney Dangerfield anytime soon.  Hahn just wants his team to get a little respect.

After all, the Sox have made five major player upgrades this off-season—Adam LaRoche, Zach Duke, David Robertson, Jeff Samardzija and Melky Cabrera.  The Cubs have had three, Jon Lester, Jason Hammel and Miguel Montero.  So, what’s the Tribune’s big Sunday baseball story?  Why, how Jon Lester showed major-league talent in high school.  And when I put WGN radio on in the afternoon, what was the topic of conversation?  The Cubs, even though the call-in guest wanted to talk more about the Sox.  Why, you’d think WGN and the Tribune were still in the baseball business, which they’re not.   

So, the Cubs win the battle of headlines, “A star from ‘wow’ to now” vs “Cabrera juices lineup.”  Still, the Cubs are playing with fire as they build up their expensive new free-agent signing; we did that with Adam Dunn.  If Lester works out, no one will care, outside of Sox fans like me.  If he flops a la Dunn, though, Cub fans will be holding up signs telling him to go back to Bellarmine Prep in Tacoma.  More and more, big-dollar contracts risk big-time backlash when they don’t work out.   

Right, Adam?

Monday, December 15, 2014

Forgiveness


When Clare was four or five, she took some kind of craft bauble—think five for a dollar at Michaels—from a friend.  I made her give it back, and this seems to have made an impression:  No stealing, be honest.  And that was basically it for finger-wagging lessons from Dad, outside of the time a certain someone dialed 911 at Grandma’s, and the emergency operator called back, but that’s a story for another day.

My point is that from early on Clare was aware her parents believed in doing things the right way.  Whatever failings Michele and I had, our daughter never saw us cutting corners or lying or stealing.  In this way, Clare grew up “old school,” and Catholic.

This all comes to bear with the White Sox signing outfielder Melky Cabrera to a three-year deal in the neighborhood of $42 million.  Cabrera was suspended 50 games in 2012 after testing positive for testosterone, an offense his camp made worse by trying to set up a phony website and make it appear that Cabrera had been tricked into buying the stuff.  No, the penalty by MLB doesn’t strike me as excessive even as it cost Cabrera the NL batting title, and, no, I’m not particularly happy we signed him given that transgression; neither is Clare.  But as Catholics, we believe sin is part of our nature and forgiveness an act of God which we should emulate.
So, we forgive you, Melky.  Just don’t do it again.

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Giveaways


Truth be told, I think the White Sox overpaid for starter Jeff Samardzija.  Of the four players we gave up, I like Marcus Semien, Josh Phegley and Chris Bassitt, so it was as if the Sox were probing my subconscious to see who to get rid of.  Semien proved to be a surprisingly good clutch hitter while Phegley looked like he had finally figured things out at the plate the last week of the season, which brings us to Bassitt.

A righty starter, Bassitt was brought up at the end of August to face the Tigers only to get rocked; he improved markedly in his second start, pitching six innings of one-run ball against the A’s, his new team.  Even better, he talked about pitch location and knowing what the count is and the need to keep working on all his pitches.  In other words, Chris Bassitt wasn’t taking anything for granted.  He also seems to have an idea on how to treat fans.
Clare told me Bassitt was using social media to give away his gear.  He tweeted, “Dear White Sox fans, I got traded and have a lot of White Sox stuff.  I want you guys to have it.”  Winners were determined by some sort of tweeting contest I’m too old to figure out.   But I do know how to read the box scores and will be paying more attention to Oakland than usual.   

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Appeal Denied


On Friday, an arbitrator ruled in favor of the NFL against Vikings’ running back Adrian Peterson.  Roger Goodell’s season-long suspension of Peterson stands, along with the suspicion that arbitrator Harold Henderson, a former NFL vice president, was anything but impartial.

No need to change the format, says the NFL in answer to complaints by the players’ association that the process is unfair, given that the commissioner has the best interests of the game at heart, or so the NYT reported.  Great White Father, meet Roger Goodell.  Commissioner Goodell, meet….    

Thursday, December 11, 2014

The Old Bump-and-Grind


The Old Bump-and-Grind

The NYT ran a story yesterday about the Buffalo Jills, those young women who gyrate with poms along the sidelines at Ralph Wilson Stadium.  Several cheerleaders are suing the Bills for violation of state minimum wage laws.  According to the story, one Jill received $400 while working in excess of 800 hours.  So far, the team’s response has been along the lines of “What, we have cheerleaders?”

My father-in-law told his two young daughters when they were growing up to play rather than cheer those who did.  His granddaughter heard that same message loud and clear.  Clare couldn’t care less how hard cheerleading is or how often it leads to injury.  Basically, she wants to know where the stats are.  Do they keep any for most high kicks in a career or booty-bumps?

The Bulls and Blackhawks have cheerleaders while the Bears and White Sox don’t, although the Sox have female interns in shorts on top of the dugout at times during a game.  A friend of Clare’s from travel ball did that over the summer.  My daughter was not interested in joining her.
Clare knows it’s better to be in the dugout than on top of it.  

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

In the Blink of an Eye, Maybe


 To be a Chicago baseball fan is to hope, hope that this year—or next—is different, and winning replaces the all too familiar and numbing act of losing.  Such a change is so rare as to be exhilarating when experienced.

It feels that way right now with the winter meetings in San Diego.  Going in, the White Sox had already signed first baseman/dh Adam LaRoche (who as a boy used to hang around Comiskey Park when his dad was a Sox coach) and lefty reliever Zach Duke.  On top of that, at the winter meetings they’ve signed closer David Robertson with his 39 saves away from the Yankees (oh, how sweet that) and traded for starter and ex-Cub Jeff Samardzija.  I should also note that the Cubs signed starter Jon Lester to a deal for half the gold in Fort Knox.

Maybe everything has changed overnight.  The White Sox and Cubs will now dominate their respective divisions and go deep into the playoffs.  Better yet, both teams will meet in the World Series the way the Dodgers and Yankees used to.  We get to play the Yankees, crushing dreams October after October.  I am, after all, a South Sider.

Chicago has always been a football town; I think it has something to do hardscrabble roots in factories and packing houses.  Our grandfathers took to a game nearly as violent as their work was, and they passed that rooting interest along to all their white-collar descendants.  Like Mike Ditka said, we think of ourselves as a bunch of Grabowskis.  But the McCaskey family is clueless how to run their storied football team. 

They’ve hired four coaches since Ditka, each one blander than the last.  Marc Trestman and his staff stink up Soldier Field, only to say, “The only thing that people ask me here [at team headquarters] is what they can do to help.  And that comes from all areas of this building.  ‘What can we do to help you along?’”
Because no one at Halas Hall has seen fit to help move Trestman out, there could be a sea change in these parts with baseball winning hearts and minds.  And it all will have happened in the blink of an eye, or so it will seem.  

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

HOF Vote Fraud


Voting results by the Hall of Fame’s Golden Era Committee were released yesterday.  None of the ten candidates received the necessary twelve votes necessary for election to the Hall.

According to HOF chair Jane Forbes Clark, “It’s tough on players.  Only one percent of the 18,000 players who have played in the Major Leagues is in the Hall of Fame.  The process is meant to be tough on players.”  Really?  Then explain how Rabbit Maranville got in with his .258 career batting average or Ray Schalk with his 1345 hits and .253 average. 

The two rejected players I care about are White Sox stars Billy Pierce and Minnie Minoso.  Pierce and Whitey Ford were contemporaries.  Ford managed 236 regular season wins playing for the best organization in baseball; Pierce totaled 211 (all but 25 with the Sox).  One Hall of Famer had Mickey Mantle and Yogi Berra among too many others to back him up.  Billy Pierce had the likes of Walt Dropo and Bubba Phillips.  Rule of thumb for Golden Era Committee members to use next time—if the candidate won those games despite, not because, of the players behind him, he should be in the Hall of Fame.

Yes, Pierce did have HOFers Luis Aparicio and Nellie Fox, which is to say he got help in the field and possibly won the most games ever courtesy of the stolen base and/or hit and run.  Pierce also had Minnie Minoso, the other rejected Sox candidate.  Depending which date you believe, Minoso either broke into the big leagues at the age of 25 or 28.

Go with the first, in which case Minoso played until he was 38; otherwise, until he was 41.  (Forget about the ten at-bats in 1976 and 1980.  That was a stunt by Sox owner Bill Veeck that turned Minoso into a latter-day Eddie Gaedel.)  Now consider that Minoso amassed 1963 hits, 1136 runs and 1023 rbi’s to go with a .298 batting average.  Also consider that, as a Negro Leaguer, Minoso did not reach the majors until far later than he should have.
But worry not, baseball fans.  Billy Pierce, age 87, and Minnie Minoso, age 89 or 92, should be eligible when the Golden Era Committee votes again in 2017.  What’s three years?

Monday, December 8, 2014

Clubhouse Noise


Clubhouse Noise

Clare called one day last week to ask if I’d heard about what new Twins’ manager Paul Molitor was thinking of doing.  “He wants to make rules for cell phones and music in the clubhouse.”  This is a sore subject of some standing with my daughter.

During her sophomore year at Elmhurst, Coach decided the girls were spending too much time on their phones.  There were no phones allowed at games in Florida, and no being on the phone after 10 PM.  It’s hard to judge the fallout.  While the Bluejays made the CCIW postseason tournament for the first time in fifteen years, several players threatened to quit the team.  Instead, Coach resigned at the end of the season.

Clubhouses and dugouts really can turn into a war zone.  Ban music and phones—Molitor doesn’t want an outright ban, just rules—and you’re asking for a player revolt.  Let players do what they want, and you risk ending up with Sammy Sosa.  From what I gather, Sosa pretty much ran the Cubs’ clubhouse, when he showed up, that is.  By the end of the 2004 season, he didn’t seem much interested in getting to games on time or staying around if he wasn’t playing.  Apparently, he left the clubhouse on the last game of the season after the first pitch was thrown.

That may have been the one straw too many.  Someone, probably pitcher Kerry Wood, took a bat to Sosa’s boom box.  So ended the reign of Sosa at Clark and Addison; he was traded to the Orioles in the offseason.  I mentioned all this to Clare.  If she wants to coach, there’s going to be a Sammy Sosa in her life at some point.

Sunday, December 7, 2014

The Stub of the Matter


 I have a White Sox scorecard with attached ticket stub for August 6, 1944.  The Sox lost a doubleheader to the Tigers—what new there?—by scores of 10-3 and 3-1.  Somebody who spent $1.80 on that ticket for Box 69/Tier 1/Seat 4 got to see the Tigers’ Pinky Higgins have himself a very nice day with four hits, four runs scored and three runs batted in.

All of which is to say the Sox announced Friday they will no longer issue traditional tickets to season-ticket holders; people will either have to print out the ticket themselves or use a smartphone to be scanned in.  Anyone wanting tickets the old-fashioned way can do so for an extra $20.
This is the beginning of the end.

Saturday, December 6, 2014

Punishments Fitting Crimes


Punishments Fitting Crimes       

Lest anyone think I’m for players getting away with everything short of murder, this week saw several disciplinary actions I’m all for.  Let’s start with Baltimore Ravens’ defensive lineman Haloti Ngata, suspended for the rest of the season after taking a performance-enhancing drug.

It’ll be interesting to see if there’s any legal action against Ngata, who tested positive for Adderall, which isn’t the same as, say, cocaine.  If he had a prescription and forgot to tell the NFL, then Ngata’s just dumb.  If he obtained the drug illegally, then he’s in trouble.  Separate judicial and NFL actions would be appropriate in any such case where players break the law and try to get away with cheating.  Now, let’s move on to the case of Falcons’ safety William Moore, fined $22,050 (an odd figure, that) for an excessive hit against Cardinals’ wide receiver Jaron Brown.  

Moore complained, “I don’t feel like that was a [justified] fine.  But I would like for us to be able to play real football.”  We should check in with Moore ten years from now or, better yet, twenty and see what he says—if he can say anything.  Either the NFL reduces the level of violence in the game or pro football gets eaten up by endless liability lawsuits from ex-players, whose ranks apparently won’t include William Moore.

Lastly, there is the matter of Washington Nationals’ outfielder Jason Werth, who was sentenced to ten days in jail for going in excess of 105 mile per hour on I-495 in July.  Thank you, prosecutors, for not offering a plea deal.  Let Werth serve his time and the commissioner leave him alone.  Dealing with Phillies’ fans will be punishment enough.

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Salary Caps


Salary Caps

The NBA, NFL and NHL all have salary caps because players let themselves get bullied into it.  Time after time, rosters get blown up when teams have exceeded their salary cap.  It happened to the Blackhawks after they won the Stanley Cup in 2010, and may happen again because of a weak Canadian dollar. 

The cap is solely for the benefit of owners.  None of the above sports have what you would call ticket affordability (thank you, baseball, for no cap and a 162-game schedule).  So, fans benefit from it about as much as players do.  No, we’re supposed to believe teams need the cap in order to survive.  But why isn’t there a capital gains’ cap imposed when an NBA, NFL or NHL team gets sold? Why does Donald Sterling get to walk away with $2 billion from the sale of the Los Angeles Clippers?
Players either need to demand such a thing or strike to end salary caps.   Until then, give me baseball’s luxury tax any day.   

Sunday, November 30, 2014

And Now For Something Completely Different


 The White Sox announced the signing of ex-Cub Tony Campana to a minor league contract, and I’m excited.  If Campana makes the team as a spare outfielder/pinch runner, that will give the Sox two players measuring 5’8,” counting Adam Eaton.

Despite the steroids’ era more or less over, baseball is still all about big, power hitters facing power pitchers.  This has resulted in lots of strikeouts and walks to go with arm injuries and the occasional homerun.  Little guys—and who knows, someday, girls—can alter that equation, if they have plate discipline.

All a player like Campana has to do is stand there and dare the pitcher to throw strikes; the smaller the strike zone, the harder that is.  When Campana gets on base, he is 66 for 75 in career stolen bases.  Heck, he doesn’t even have to steal, as long as he goes from first to third on a single.

That way, everything old becomes new again in the national pastime, as Albie Pearson and Freddie Patek could tell you.

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Ray Rice


An arbitrator ruled yesterday that the NFL can’t have a do-over disciplining Ray Rice of the Ravens.  Roger Goodell’s indefinite suspension of Rice—up from an initial two games—is overturned, and Rice is free to sign with any team willing to look the other way on the issue of domestic violence.  No doubt, some plucky general manager will say the star running back only hit his fiancé one time.

The arbitrator—a former federal judge and, ironically, a woman—has thrown Goodell for a considerable loss.  All that work to show the NFL as a league devoted to good works is for naught.  Instead, the league is exposed sans fig leaf.  Suddenly, that constant Sunday afternoon message of watch, indulge, enjoy and look the other way isn’t quite so mesmerizing.  A slew of former players suffering a variety of injuries don’t buy it, and neither do all female fans.

And it’s only going to get worse.  Next week, Ray Rice appears on the Today Show to rehabilitate his image (kudos to his management team in arranging that) while another arbitrator will rule on Adrian Peterson’s appeal of his suspension for using a switch on his four-year old son.  I bet Roger Goodell wishes prosecutors weren’t so willing to plea deal.  Then his job would be ever so easy.  

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Footsteps to Follow In


 Walking off the field this April after Elmhurst took two from the University of Chicago, Clare let slip a secret—this was where she wanted to play.  Why, I have no idea, though I do find it strangely neat the softball field is a foul ball away from where Enrico Fermi engineered the first self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction in 1942 under the stands of old Stagg Field.  Connect that to softball, and win a prize.

Kim Ng went to the U of C and did play softball, graduating in 1990, a year before Clare was a bun in the oven.  Ng then interned with the White Sox, who soon hired her fulltime.  From there it was assistant-GM jobs with the Yankees and Dodgers, where she worked for ten years.  Along the way Ng has also worked for MLB and interviewed four times for GM vacancies.
I’ve mentioned Ng to Clare on occasion, and it seems to have stuck.  She’s working on a paper about women in sports and will be giving Ng her due.  Maybe one of these former softball players will head a big-league front office, someday.  Maybe.

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Opportunity Knocks


The great thing about baseball is how different facets of the game can appeal to you as you age.  Growing up, all I thought about was the players.  Managers were like fathers, to be respected if not always understood, while general managers and owners were as remote to me as the Pope.  But the hot stove league has me feeling downright papal, especially with the Red Sox signing Pablo Sandoval and Hanley Ramirez for over $180 million.

That should make for an interesting clubhouse.  As Clare put it, “Big Papi does not like to share” the spotlight, which is Boston’s problem.  Of more immediate concern is the sudden glut of expendable players wearing a Red Sox uniform—Will Middlebrooks and Daniel Nava would look good on the White Sox, while the same could be said of Allen Craig and Yeonis Cespedes.  With Cespedes, we could have five Cuban players on the South Side.  Eat your heart out, Fidel.
If only my powers to trade and sign players extended beyond these basement walls.

Monday, November 24, 2014

The High Cost of Free Speech in Professional Sports


Last week, the NFL fined Seahawks’ running back Marshawn Lynch a total of $100,000 for refusing to talk with the media.  Apparently, it’s not enough to earn your keep in the NFL by playing.  Now you have to talk about it, too.

But not in the NBA, where players, coaches and owners are fined on a regular basis for saying the wrong thing (see Shaquille O’Neal, Phil Jackson and Mark Cuban, among others).  In pro sports, the policy is to see no evil, speak no evil, offer up plenty of platitudes:  As a team we really worked hard this week to…

Battery, the threat of bodily harm, is not free speech; in that regard, let the fines unfold.  Otherwise, why do I and the folks at ESPN get to say the refs stink, but not the people affected directly by their calls?  Why do I have First and Fifth Amendment rights but Marshawn Lynch doesn’t?  Because he’s an athlete rather than a suspect? 
Just for fun, Mark Cuban ought to challenge his next fine as a violation of his First Amendment rights.  That would be an interesting case to follow.  

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Multiply by Two to Get Half


Clare will be spending much of the next six weeks at Immaculate Conception, a small high school literally next door to Elmhurst College.  Back in the day, we wanted her to go there, but Clare only had eyes for the Morton Mustangs.  Better late than never, I guess.

Last fall, Clare did an internship with the IC athletic director.  He was impressed enough to ask her back to work—for pay—at IC sponsored events.  This weekend it was a basketball tournament; my daughter kept the book.  The good news is it makes the time go by, keeping track of baskets, fouls and whatnot.  The hard part is the timeouts.  Clare always says how many were used whenever she’s asked how many a team has left.

As you might expect, the athlete (I wouldn’t call her “ex-” yet) is hard on the refs, especially females.  “They have to be twice as good to be considered equals,” she said over the phone.  This shouldn’t be true, but it is.  The hitting coach on Friday sounded Clare out on the possibility of joining him in a new venture.  Somehow, I doubt she’d have many boys asking her for batting tips, or fathers thinking they should.

Saturday, November 22, 2014

Déjà vu


Clare went hitting yesterday, in part because she wanted to and in part for a class assignment on risk assessment; the hitter put down her bat long enough to take pictures of possible problem areas around the facility.  At some point she and her old hitting coach also talked philosophy.  The Valpo coach employs an approach different from her volunteer.

That discussion carried over into our kitchen, with Clare demonstrating respective approaches.  Just let’s say my daughter believes in a more fluid stance and swing.  Watching this budding coach act out her swing between the kitchen sink and the refrigerator, I thought of all the other times I’d seen her do that, in one room or another, one field or another.  And here we were again, in the start of my daughter’s 24th year.
I don’t ever want it to stop. 

Friday, November 21, 2014

Big Hurt Birthday Treat


For reasons best known to himself, ex-White Sox great Frank Thomas has opened up a place some four blocks from our house.  When people think of Berwyn, it’s more on account of the bungalows than the craft brews or nightlife.  But The Big Hurt Brewhouse was where the birthday girl wanted to go and eat.

Her boyfriend Chris proved his worth by checking on the Big Hurt’s whereabouts; yes, he would be at the restaurant when we arrived.  In fact, he didn’t even have to be asked to have his picture taken with Clare.  Thanks to Twitter and Facebook, that shot of The Hurts, Big and Little, has gone micro-viral.  Thomas is a celebrity who didn’t have to be bothered; in fact, he acted as if it were no bother at all.  With that kind of attention to his patrons, Thomas may become a restaurateur on a par with Stan Musial.  At least I hope so. 

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Happy Birthday


Twenty-three years ago this afternoon Clare came into the world at West Suburban Hospital.  I was in the delivery room, watching a miracle and Final Jeopardy.  There was a TV mounted on the wall, and I guessed right, “What is haggis?”  My daughter will tell you her dad appeared on the show when she was three.

 Clare drove home yesterday night for a long birthday/Thanksgiving holiday with news—she’s going to the spring-break tournaments with the Valpo softball team.  In fact, she’ll be with the team for all its games next year.  Not bad for a kid who walked into the coach’s office the first week of class and talked her way into being a volunteer assistant.  Now she’ll see up close how they do things Division I style.  Me, I’ll continue to think the bigger they are, the harder they fall, until shown otherwise.    

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Due Process


Growing up, I treated athletes as heroes, and maybe they were.  Or the times were different, so that police and reporters looked the other way when somebody drank too much or let loose with their fists.  Whatever the reason, I never had cause to connect a member of the White Sox to felony behavior.

How times have changed, as Vikings’ running back Adrian Peterson can attest.  Peterson pleaded guilty to charges that he hit his son with a switch.  The plea kept him out of jail but didn’t put him back on the playing field.  NFL Roger Goodell has suspended Peterson for the rest of the season, a decision Peterson is appealing.  I agree.

No, I didn’t beat Clare with a switch or anything else.  Yes, I believe in sparing the rod.  But more to the point, this is the grownup world, where due process has to apply.  If an arbitrator finds that the NFL Players Association agreed in collective bargaining to the commissioner having broad disciplinary powers, then I have no problem with Peterson going bye-bye.  MLB and its players have hammered out a disciplinary code that seems to work; just ask Alex Rodriguez.  Adrian Peterson deserves no more, no less.
Athletes aren’t heroes any more than they’re role models, but they are individuals with the right to due process.  If you’re looking for a villain here, it’s the prosecutors in Texas who signed off on no jail time for Peterson.  You can’t play behind bars, unless they’re doing a remake of “The Longest Yard.”  

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Giancarlo Stanton Strikes It (Super) Rich


Here’s my problem with the Miami Marlins signing Giancarlo Stanton, their 25-year old star right fielder, to a 13-year contract worth $325 million—taxpayers are footing a lot of that salary.

That’s because Dade County and the city of Miami financed most of the $600 million-plus Marlins’ baseball complex that opened in 2012; factor in interest payments, and the public will be on the hook for anywhere between $2.4 and $3 billion.  (Exact figures are hard to come by since no one wants to talk about it.  Public officials tend to blush when word of their gullibility breaks, just as teams don’t want to be seen for the greedy entities they are.)

Any team in any sport can sign any player it wants, as long as the same rules hold for those involved and their fans.  I can buy a new car every January, just as long as I can meet my mortgage payments.  If I can’t do both, (and trust me, I can’t), the repo man will drive away with one possession while the sheriff’s deputy evicts me from the other.  Fear of financial ruins makes for great discipline in the real world.  Professional sports teams ought to try it sometime. 
That, or taxpayers should force them to.

Sunday, November 16, 2014

Senior Day, Revisited


Michele and I earned our good parent stripes yesterday by attending the last game of the season for the football Elmhurst Bluejays.  Clare’s boyfriend Chris is a football graduate assistant for the archrival North Central Cardinals, who managed a 38-31 win.  We sat outside, Chris called plays from the press box.

God, it was a cold Senior Day, 32-33 degrees, gray sky with a breeze that crawled down my neck and up my sleeves.  I will never again complain about the mediocre weather that Clare had in April.  Not that the parents minded, I’m sure.  They walked out with their sons who had spent a young lifetime on the gridiron.  By 4PM that would all be over, because this is Division III (Wheaton College excepted, because they get the religious kids who don’t want to go to the big schools but will take a chance on the pros).  When it was over, there were floral bouquets and memories.
Just like in April.

Saturday, November 15, 2014

What, Derrick Rose Worry?


Nothing can bother Bulls’ star guard Derrick Rose, not allegations that his high school transcript was doctored and somebody else took his SAT and not the reaction to recent comments he made.  Rose is coming two seasons marred by torn ACLs.  His return so far has been slowed by several small injuries.  This week, Rose explained why he and the team weren’t going to rush things, or at least he tried to explain.

Once his playing career is over, “I don’t want to be in my [business? charity? foreign policy?] meetings all sore or be at my son’s graduation all sore  just because of something I did in the past.”  When social media lit up with criticism, Rose responded by saying “I could care  less” about criticism.  Presumably, that includes Charles Barkley calling such talk “flat-out stupid.”
Here’s what’s stupid—a 26-year old making just under $19 million a year for a team valued at $1 billion.  Priorities, people, priorities.  

Friday, November 14, 2014

The Pied Piper, a.k.a. Scott Boras


Player agent Scott Boras is proof positive of reincarnation—the man has to be the Pied Piper of Hamlin, take two.  Boras turns general managers and owners into the most adoring of children.

PPB is more than a little worried about the national pastime.  Mr. Boras doesn’t like the way teams are moving away from free agency to developing their own talent, and he wants to see changes in how MLB does the World Series.  In an interview with the Tribune this week, Boras proposed the idea of a neutral-site Series, a la the Super Bowl.

“If we continue to do this [having the home team play, literally, at home] on a regional scale, we’re going to lose something that baseball deserves, and what it deserves is world attention.  There is a sacrifice of two, three or four [home] games for a team, but the betterment it brings to baseball on the whole far exceeds the detriment.”
I wonder how much revenue such a change would cost the Piper, I mean, Scott Boras?      

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Victor Martinez


As a White Sox fan, I love Chris Sale, which is probably why I hate the Tigers’ Victor Martinez, with his career .517 batting average and .563 on-base percentage against Sale.  So, what’s the silver lining to the Tigers’ resigning Martinez to a four-year contract worth $68 million?

Basically, his age.  Martinez will be 36-39 during the course of that deal.  He’s already slow on the bases, but the Tigers don’t dare pinch run for him because for fear of losing his bat late in the game or extra innings.  At some point, you get stuck playing the contract instead of the player (See Adam Dunn and Alfonso Soriano.).  Nothing like running a .200 hitter out there game after game.  I look forward to that day with Martinez.  Maybe he won’t bother to wait to the end of the contract to start losing it.
A fan can hope, and Chris Sale, too.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Veterans Day


Twenty-six years ago today, I had planned out a lecture on what would have been the 70th anniversary of Armistice Day.  I wanted my students to understand the folly of bad foreign policy and the horror of war, but God had other plans.  Instead, I spent the day at the hospital, where my father underwent an eight-hour operation for the removal of a brain tumor.

On a Veterans Day when Clare was in sixth grade, we went to a place called Baseball Alley for a late autumn practice.  I could be a real d.i. of a coach.  Clare would get a hundred groundballs at third base, more if I thought she needed it.  Then I pitched to her, fastballs and sliders.  She liked the one more than the other, so I threw mostly sliders to break her of the habit of moving her front foot and bat in opposite directions:  Stop doing that, for chrissakes!  Maybe I should mention that my daughter sometimes tried to get out of these practices by saying she had too much homework.

Anyway, it was a warm November 11th, around 11 AM.  We were on the smaller of two fields, the one she had just aged out of, and for good reason.  The girl kept hitting my pitches over the fence.
These are the Veterans Days I remember.

Monday, November 10, 2014

Teaching Moments En Masse Courtesy Chicago Bears


Teaching Moments En Masse

The Bears-Packer game ended at 10:50 PM last night, and Clare called three minutes later with a question.  “The announcers keep saying how good a coach [Marc] Trestman is.  Then how can they lose, 55-14?”  A good question.

Basically, Cris Collinsworth was showing how not to provide color commentary.  What he saw before him was a team in total disarray, this coming off a bye.  The 3-4 Bears had an extra week to recover from their 51-23 whipping by the Patriots and this is how they respond.  Cris, a good football coach doesn’t let his team get outscored 101-37 in back-to-back games.

Clare called because her inner coach was upset.  So, I tried to turn the football apple into a softball orange.  What would you do, I asked?  I reminded her of similar situations during her years of playing, of coaches who lost their players and those who never had them.  How do you avoid that?

The simple answer is, by winning, which is the product of talent and preparation.  Clare tells me that even Division I players get confused when a coach hitting grounders shouts out “6-4-3” for a short to second to first double play.  I’m pretty sure that would be Lesson One on Day One from Coach Clare.  Old man Halas played enough baseball with the Yankees to appreciate that.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Dog Days, Part Two


In August at least, there’s still baseball, however bad.  In November all you have is a gray sky and windswept lawns.

Every morning, I look for the Transactions notices, always hidden, always somewhere different.  Clare, child of a new age, gets the same news from an app.  Poor kid, that means she has more time to think about miserable she is.  Valpo is located smack dab in the middle of a toilet bowl for weather.  Who knew there was such a thing as a “snow belt,” courtesy of Lake Michigan?

The general managers will be meeting soon; that should be good for a few stories.  And the winter meetings are next month, although it’ll be Cubs, Cubs, Cubs, free agents and Wrigley.  After that, January, and after that…

You get the idea.

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Maddon Speaks the Truth


Addressing Chicago media yesterday at a local bar, new Cubs manager Joe Maddon referred to Wrigley Field as the “cathedral across the street.”  The White Sox could never hire anyone who talks that way.

Just try and imagine the same press conference held at 35th and Shields.  What would Maddon have called the Cell—that saucer across the street?  That mall?  That perfect reflection of group think?  Maddon didn’t get the chance because Jerry Reinsdorf is done taking a chance on personalities.  Phil Jackson and Ozzie Guillen may have won championships for his basketball and baseball teams, but they also took the spotlight away from the Chairman, who always needs to be the sharpest guy in the room. 

Joe Maddon would have done the same.

Sunday, November 2, 2014

The North and the South


Chicago baseball commands a loyalty for one side or the other, North Side or South.  It really is a kind of civil war that can pit brother against brother, if not father and daughter.

The loyalties trace back generations, to when the Cubs drew from surrounding North Side neighborhoods, generally prosperous and WASP.  In contrast, the White Sox were blue collar and anything but Protestant—Catholic mostly, but also Jewish and black.  Again, it was a neighborhood thing.  Only the class differences have changed since the Sox played their first season in 1901.  Just don’t expect Sox fans to act as though they’ve got money.  Their ancestors would rise from the dead and beat the crap out of them if they did.

There is one demographic with class implications, though, that’s still relevant.  The Cubs draw younger, unmarried fans ready and willing to spend their disposable income while the Sox have more families in the stands.  Moms and dads aren’t in the habit of spending a day—or night—at the ballpark drinking away yet another home-team loss.  That as much as anything explains why the Cubs have drawn so well over the last fifteen years or so regardless of their record.

And by hiring Joe Maddon, it looks like they’ll outdraw my Sox in 2015.  The Sunday newspapers ran so much Cub stuff you would’ve thought it was the start of the season already, not early November.  Nothing like a picture of Maddon and Tampa players holding a python to send a message to the South Side—this guy is going to steal your coverage.

The best Sox fans can do is look for the silver lining.  Chicago sports media always falls for the big personality, like Mike Ditka or Ozzie Guillen.  It also falls for the new guy in town because he’s not the old guy and maybe he’ll have a fun personality, too.  Think Dusty Baker, Lou Pinella and Marc Trestman.  When things go south, it can happen incredibly fast, with sports folk leading the charge to tar and feather the latest old guy.  This I hope is Maddon’s fate.
Or not.  Before long, the Cubs will announce how great season tickets sales are going; the Sox will probably keep that a secret.  But the team isn’t so dumb as to think it can just keep chugging along.  If they don’t win, families and everyone else will avoid the Cell like the plague (which would turn it into the ideal site for an Ebola quarantine, if nothing else).  When the Cubs introduce Maddon tomorrow, the clock starts ticking for general manager Rick Hahn and manager Robin Ventura.  They ignore it at their own peril.