Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Jihadists and Hypocrisy

British Prince Harry recently returned from a military assignment in Afghanistan, serving as a gunner on a helicopter gunship. He apparently has a number of enemy kills to his credit for which the Prince has come under condemnation by the Taliban, with the usual death threats by this murderous group. An article in today's Seattle Times highlighted this aspect of the ongoing conflict. Here is my response to that article:


"What I don't get is the hypocrisy by these jihadists when it comes to killing people. They murder with impugnity anyone they claim is against Allah (God)--which of course changes as new enemies come up-- but then throw a temper tantrum in front of the international media when anyone kills even one of their fighters and call opposing military personnel sinners, pigs, dogs, a disease, etc.

At least these groups could leave religion out of the discussion and call their efforts what they really are...a power grab with repercussions for anyone who would dare oppose them.

As far as British Prince Harry is concerned, as a soldier he was doing his duty. So he killed Taliban fighters while on field duty; yeah, well how many British troops were killed by the Taliban while Harry was stationed in Afghanistan?

Wait...I'm sorry...it goes back to that same hypocrisy I was talking about earlier. It isn't how many soldiers the Taliban killed; it's all about how many of these jihadists were "martyred" by the imperialist dogs of the West.

Sorry...my bad."

Saturday, January 19, 2013

The Future of College Athletes Leaving College Early

An article today in the Seattle Times highlighted the news that a record 73 college athletes were approved for early entry into this year's NFL Draft. In other words, these athletes were leaving college early in order to play pro sports. Now, these 73 athletes will be competing against all the other graduating Seniors who completed their educations. (This number, I'm sure, probably runs into the hundreds, if not thousands--though not all college athletes apply for draft status. As to an actual statistic for this...I do not have access to that information.)
Anyhow, the responses to the article ranged from supportive [of these 73 athletes] to unsure. The following is my response:

"I once heard a young sports draftee (who played in a total of 11 college games) tell the press, "If you stay in college long enough to graduate, then you ain't talented enough to play pro sports."

What a narrow minded, self-serving, short-sighted opinion. Athletes who graduate from college usually are looking towards their post-sports life; and education is the key.

The average NFL "career" for all players entering the draft is now at about 4.5 years. That's it. So an athlete who leaves college early at say, twenty years of age, and plays for the league career average, means that by age twenty six, they will most likely be out of sports. What then?

Without the money, many of their so-called 'friends' go away, and the connections the athletes were told they have disappear. The athlete is left out in the cold, with little or no money, and no foreseeable financial future because they failed to finish the opportunity that was literally given to them..the completion of their free-ride education.

Yes, it is completely within the individual athlete's right to leave college early. However, with that choice also comes the long-term financial consequences of an unfinished education. True, there ARE athletes who will buck the stats and become successful financially despite leaving early. But these are the exceptions and certainly NOT the norm.

While it may be hard to wait, with family financial pressures, "friends" constantly whispering in their ears to leave college early, etc, completing their education is vital to their post- sports "career" life. Anyone who tells an athlete any different has their own agenda in mind."


As of writing this blog, in the time since I wrote this article response, there have been zero dissenting comments or disprovals on the newspaper site. Maybe I have a point.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Post-BBWAA HoF Vote: My Response

Yesterday, the BBWAA (Baseball Writers Assoc. of America) released their voting tally for players to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. Due to the cloud presented by notable steroid users being up for the vote, the writers collectively decided to elect NO ONE into this years class induction.  Edgar Martinez, the finest Right-handed batter of his generation, garnered just 35.9% of the vote; well short of the required 75% to gain induction. Martinez was NOT a steroid user; his biggest obstacle to overcome was that he mainly played DH (Designated Hitter) for the bulk of his career.
An article linked to the Seattle Mariners website clearly illustrated why Martinez deserves to be in the Hall. Here is my response:

"With his numbers, Martinez should have already been elected. If he had played in NY, Boston or LA, the fans and sportswriters would be clamoring for his induction.

"Martinez is one of just 10 players in Major League history to have put up 300-plus home runs, 500-plus doubles, 1,000-plus walks and post a batting average over .300 and on-base percentage over .400. The others are Hall of Famers Stan Musial, Rogers Hornsby, Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig and Ted Williams..."

And he ISN'T in the HoF? Why? Because he didn't hit hundreds more HR's? Or because he was the DH? Seriously?

Just how many HoFer's are in the Hall without hitting volumes of homers? Edgar was a contact hitter. And boy did he make contact! He is the best right-handed hitter I have seen in my 40+ years of watching baseball. Who cares about homers when you are getting singles, doubles, triples, sac flies, etc and helping your team win games? The whole notion of "power" being essential to get into the HoF is a ludicrous assertion, at best.

 As for the DH thing, this position has been entrenched since the mid-70's. Time for voters to toss the notion that it isn't a real position. DH's hit just as often as any other player on the field. As we see every year, not all DH's are created equal. Many are terrible, or over the hill. Martinez set the standard for what the DH position is.

As far as Character, show me a better man, a better teammate, a better human being than Edgar Matinez. He exemplifies the very best of what a great man is, and he's an extraordinary role model for any young player.

Baseball Commissioner Selig thought so highly of Edgar and his accomplishments as a batter that he renamed the DH award The Edgar Martinez Designated Hitter of the Year Award. How often does such a thing happen?

Martinez may yet be elected. But while he waits, the notion that he wasn't good enough, or doesn't deserve induction is a hollow argument. As a third baseman, Edgar was spectacular. When injuries forced him from being a position player, he accepted the role as DH and defined that role in superlatives that no one since has been able to match. Show me another player that has been able to define a position like Martinez did, and I will show you a Hall of Famer.

Edgar Martinez earned the right to be called one of the games very best."


I received numerous responses to my opinion, ALL of them 100% supportive of what I had written. Too bad the baseball writers won't see it. If they do, maybe...just maybe, it might sway them to go with Martinez...but I doubt it; cuz Edgar was "only" a DH.

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Edgar Martinez for the BB HoF!

A guest editorial in today's Seattle Times, written by Arne Christensen, talks about former career long Seattle Mariner player Edgar Martinez and his accomplishments that have earned him the right to be inducted into the Cooperstown Baseball Hall of Fame. Here's the article:

 "Reconsidering Edgar Martinez and the Hall of Fame"

The case that Edgar Martinez fans have cumulatively assembled to argue for him as a Baseball Hall of Famer almost exclusively mentions only his statistical accomplishments as a hitter, gauged by both traditional metrics and the advanced, sabermetric kind. But, of course, people, not assemblages of statistics, stand as candidates for the Hall of Fame, and that seems to be part of Edgar’s problem.

As an unassuming player who never reached the World Series and played far from any media hothouse, in the most remote major-league city, Edgar’s a deep underdog in the charisma category of Hall of Fame qualifications. (I think it’s obvious that personality and a résumé of myth-making material help any player make it to Cooperstown: see Dizzy Dean, Enos Slaughter, Bobby Grich, and Bob Johnson for four examples on both sides.) Even in the Seattle area, Edgar didn’t attain the heights of fame (or notoriety) that Ken Griffey Jr., Randy Johnson, Alex Rodriguez, Jay Buhner, and Ichiro did.

Mario Lanza, a friend who’s written a long story about being a Mariners fan in the 1980s and early ‘90s, saw Edgar's anonymity firsthand.

“Even in Seattle people didn’t really know who he was," Lanza said. "I saw him in Crossroads Mall (in Bellevue) with his family, just sitting there eating dinner outside of the food court. Here he was, one of the greatest players in Mariners history, and people just walked by him like he was nobody special.

“He used to go there with his family, and I’d see him reading newspapers right outside the Daily Planet newsstand. I must have seen him five times there and nobody ever recognized him. Even in Seattle he was anonymous. How are the writers in Boston or New York supposed to feel any differently about him?”

To remedy the mistaken impression that Edgar was a routinely, even boringly, efficient player, I’ve gathered some anecdotes, lore, and oddball trivia about his career, presented in chronological order. Most are taken from the Mariners’ 2002 media guide. You’ll be surprised by some of the pure heroism this compilation reveals:

Edgar began his pro career in Bellingham in 1983, hitting .173 in 32 games, which gave him some early adversity to overcome.
In 1985, he led Southern League third basemen in putouts, 94, assists, 247, double plays, 34, and chances.
In 1986, he led Southern League third basemen in fielding percentage, .960.
In 1987, The Seattle Times said “he is regarded a brilliant fielder” with the Calgary Cannons, the Mariners' Class AAA team. Edgar said: “I think I can play utility, third, second, wherever they want to play me, I try to do it.”
Edgar’s first major-league hit was a triple. It was hit off Reggie Ritter of the Cleveland Indians on Sept. 14, 1987. The Times reported that in the second inning of that game, “on consecutive plays, he dived to his left to take base hits away from Jay Bell and Andy Allanson.” The triple came in the bottom of the second.

Despite the fine glove and hitting .372 in 43 Mariner at-bats in ’87, in 1988 he was back with Calgary, was named the player of the year, and led the Pacific Coast League with a .363 average.
He spent the offseason after ’89 by hitting .424, or (56 for 132), in Puerto Rican League winter ball: it was good enough to outpace the second leading hitter by 82 points.
In 1990, Edgar stole home on August 25 as part of a double steal with Ken Griffey Jr. It was his only steal of the season, which was his first, at age 27, spent entirely with the big-league team.
Despite playing with a sore right shoulder throughout 1992, Edgar was the American League Player of Month for July and August. He was the third player to record that feat in back-to-back months: the Yankees' Don Mattingly in August and September of ‘85 and the Twins' Kirby Puckett in May and June of ’92 preceded him.

Edgar hit .343 to lead the AL in batting average in ’92. He was the first Mariner to win a batting crown, only the second AL player to do it for a last-place team, and the first right-handed hitter since Harvey Kuenn in 1959 to lead the AL in that category. Edgar also stole 14 bases in ’92, out of 18 tries.

After missing most of 1993 with three different left hamstring injuries - which helps explain his lack of mobility in later seasons - Edgar started ’94 by getting hit on the right wrist by the Indians’ Dennis Martinez in his first at bat, at the first game at Cleveland's Jacobs Field.
In 1995, Edgar became the first AL right-hander since Luke Appling to win two batting titles, and his .356 was the highest average for an AL righty since Joe DiMaggio in 1939. He was the first Latino with 100 walks, hit .433 vs. lefties, and reached base in 137 of the Mariners’ 145 games. His .479 on-base percentage (OPB) ranks 48th all-time in a season, and he's one of 12 right-handers in the top 50 for season OBP. The .479 ranks second-best for a season from 1963 to 2000.
Edgar’s AL Division Series performance against the Yankees included a playoff-record seven runs batted in in Game 4, hitting .571 for the five games, with an OBP of .667, and hitting “The Double” to win Game 5 and the series and, according to some, keep the Mariners in Seattle.

After doing all this in ‘95, he still made time to play Puerto Rican League winter ball for San Juan.
Before suffering four fractured ribs when catcher John Marzano ran into him chasing a pop-up on July 20, 1996, Edgar was on pace to hit 75 doubles, which would have been the MLB record by eight. The injury stopped his streak of 293 straight games played, a Mariners record.

Despite playing only 139 games in 1996, Edgar still hit 52 doubles for the second straight year (he’d only played 145 games in ’95 because of the strike-shortened season). He was the fifth hitter to get 50-plus doubles in back-to-back seasons.

In 1997, he had to get stitches twice within five days in September. The first time was on Sept. 8 in Kansas City, when Royals DH Chili Davis swung his bat in the sixth and it landed on Edgar’s head inside the dugout for a five-stitch cut. Edgar stayed in the game and went 2 for 4 with two singles, getting his 100th RBI along the way. A quote from Edgar: “I lost sight of it in the lights. I knew it was coming, and I ducked to the left. I must have ducked right into it. It was scary, lots worse than having a pitch come at your head.”

Then, on Sept. 12, came the coup de grace: playing Toronto at the Kingdome, Edgar slid into home, and into catcher Charlie O’Brien’s mask, trying to score in the sixth inning. He got eight more stitches on his chin. Of course, he stayed in the game, and of course, he hit the game-winning, three-run homer in the eighth, breaking up a 3-3 tie. Edgar hit it off Roger Clemens, who was 21-5 at the time, and on his way to the ’97 AL Cy Young and a 2.05 earned-run average while giving up nine homers in all of 1997. Here’s the kicker: Edgar also had two infield singles, for a 3-for-4 night, with two runs scored to go with his three RBI.

Edgar’s quote: “I never have been to a hockey game. But I’ve watched and seen the fights and the cuts. I guess you could say my week has been like a hockey game.” Lou Piniella called Martinez “a tough kid, a professional. It was his night.” Over the seven games that began with getting five stitches on the 8th, Edgar hit .400, with four walks and a .483 OBP.

After right knee surgery following the ’98 season, Edgar managed to hit .394 in 41 games at Safeco Field in 1999. His five homers in two games, on May 17 and 18 of ‘99, tied the MLB record and set a Mariners record for two straight games. The homers were capped by three in a row on the 18th vs. the Twins. Edgar’s 1,500th hit came on August 14 at Fenway, off Pedro Martinez.
On the night of July 29, 2000, Edgar was scheduled to be grand marshal of Seattle’s Seafair Torchlight Parade, but first there was a game to play. It ran late: 13 innings, and 5 hours, 4 minutes. But Edgar had a parade to catch. So he hit a walk-off single for a 6-5 win over the Blue Jays, showered, dressed, didn’t say a word to the press – too busy – and went off to the day’s second job. The Torchlight Parade’s theme: “Heroes of Our Hearts.”

His 145 RBI in 2000 was the best ever in the majors for a player 37 or older.
In 2001, Edgar reached base in 43 straight games in May and the first half of June. He was ejected on Oct. 1 in Anaheim when he charged Lou Pote after the pitcher hit him. The Seattle Times reported:
“Angels reliever Lou Pote was struggling in the sixth, with two on and one out when a fastball rode in on Martinez, hitting him in the right arm before ricocheting up and hitting him on the bill of the helmet. The DH fell hard, as if hurt or stunned.

“Then suddenly Martinez got up, seemingly much faster than he usually moves, and headed for Pote, who seemed stunned in turn. The young pitcher backed away from the angry veteran as players converged en masse.

“Anaheim catcher Bengie Molina and third baseman Glaus grabbed Martinez. Jay Buhner came out of the dugout and grabbed Pote, who had been entirely non-threatening.
“Benches and bullpens emptied, but the only one showing emotion was Martinez, who had to be held by teammates, including Javier and Piniella. ... Martinez declined to comment after the game.”
On Oct. 4, after he was suspended for two games for charging Pote, The Times added:
“‘It hit him in the chin, then the eye, then the forehead,’” trainer Rick Griffin said. ‘He was pretty upset.’
“Martinez reportedly was upset after being hit several times this year by Angels pitchers and having several other pitches just miss him.
“Asked if he wanted to talk yesterday, he smiled and shook his head and said, ‘No comment.’”

Edgar ended 2001 with 116 RBI, matching the Mariners' win total for the year. At the time, he had a .425 career OBP, second among active players with at least 2,000 at-bats, behind only Frank Thomas’ .438. For the seven years from 1995 through 2001, he never dropped below 93 walks in a season, a .306 batting average, a .423 OBP, or a .543 slugging percentage. For 2000 and 2001, he had 261 RBI in 285 games.
He was named AL Player of the Month, for the fifth and final time, for May 2003, and made the All-Star team that year for the seventh and final time. The 2003 season was the last in his nine-year streak of on-base percentages above .400.

Finally, here are a few items from his overall career:

Edgar hit .579, 11 for 19, off Mariano Rivera, with three doubles, two homers, six RBI and three walks.
He hit .444, 8 for 18, off Roy Halladay;
hit .571, 8 for 14, off Rick Sutcliffe,
.480; hit 12 for 25, off Dave Stewart;
hit .370, 20 for 54, off Andy Pettitte;
hit .429, 6 for 14, off Dennis Eckersley. ...
Edgar hit four homers each off Roger Clemens, Erik Hanson, and David Wells, and five homers and two triples off Mike Mussina.
Edgar hit at least .500 off 243 different pitchers, and 1.000 off 75 different pitchers.
He had the third most doubles in the majors in the 1990s, with 358, six behind Mark Grace, the MLB leader for the decade.
He had at least a .400 OBP in 11 of his 13 full seasons.

And here is my response to the article:

"As I have stated previously, if Edgar had played in NY, Boston or LA, with those numbers he would be a shoo-in first ballot nominee.

I have read articles by national sportswriters extolling Edgar's accomplishments, hoping to sway voters to cast him on their ballots.

Just because he doesn't have the magic 3000 hits, or 400+ homers doesn't mean he isn't worthy of being in the HoF. His career stats tell voters everything they need to justify his induction.

As the player that defined superlative at the DH position, a player who is named on the DH of the Year Award, and a player who was the very best right-handed hitter I ever saw in my 40+ years of watching ball, Edgar Martinez has earned the right to be called Hall of Famer."