Thursday, March 26, 2009

Draft Day Manifesto.

It was a very fun draft.   More than any other year, to me the talent level after the 6th round just all blended together.  I think the greatest gap of talent of the remaining players lied in the closer position.  That was one of the reasons I went back-to-back closers in the 7th and 8th round. We'll see if it pays off or not.

Stolen from me were Figgins, Peralta, and Carmona, but that happens to everyone. Having a perfect draft would be the equivalent of a perfect NCAA tournament bracket.  It just doesn't happen.

Besides the Jeter pick which I might have quietly told a few people about, my favorite value picks were Carlos Pena at #146 by Hatherly Hitters and Nelson Cruz at #162 by Craig Who.  Those picks should pay some dividends.
Hoping for a nail-bitter this year.  Good luck to everyone.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Team Trademark


How is this for a franchise. Representing in Pearl River County, MS. 2009 will be the Year of The Macaque!

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Ken Burns' Baseball Documentary


Just thought I would recommend this excellent work on the history of baseball. A bit lengthy, but nonetheless, very enjoyable to watch. Below is a description from the website. The whole series is available on Netflix.
Synopsis:
Baseball is a nine-part series that examines nearly 200 years of American history through the prism of our national pastime. Americans have played baseball in one form or another since the early 19th century, while they conquered a continent, warred with one another and with enemies abroad, struggled over labor and civil rights and the meaning of freedom. At the game’s heart lie mythic contradictions: it is a pastoral game that was actually born in crowded cities, an exhilarating democratic sport that tolerates cheating – and has excluded as many as it has included, a profoundly conservative game that has sometimes managed to be years ahead of its time. The series celebrates the achievements of dozens of memorable Americans who, through baseball, became national icons – including Babe Ruth, Ted Williams, Sandy Koufax, Satchel Paige, Joe DiMaggio, Christy Mathewson, Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Hank Greenberg, Shoeless Joe Jackson and Jackie Robinson – and follows the fortunes of two of the most beloved teams, the Brooklyn Dodgers and the Boston Red Sox. Still, the series is much more than an accounting of games won and lost, teams rising and falling, rookies arriving and veterans saying farewell. The series celebrates the extraordinary stars of the Negro Leagues, the pioneers who paved the way for integration of the national pastime, and ultimately, America at large. The story of baseball is therefore fundamentally the story of race in America. But it is also the story of the transformation of millions of immigrants from everywhere into new generations of Americans; of the rise and fall of great American cities; of fathers and sons and of mothers and daughters; and of our insatiable need for heroes. It is an integral and compelling manifestation of the American experience itself.
A Film ByKEN BURNS