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  • 2013
  • August (Page 3)

Astros @ Rangers Series Preview

Posted on August 19, 2013 by Ebby Calvin in Featured, Series Previews

Seven idiots piled into three canoes and a kayak.  Three days lay before them, unmapped by design, planned specifically to be unplanned.  They brought three coolers of beer, two bottles of Jack Daniels and one flashlight.

They were drunk already, having driven all night from Austin to Arkansas, but they were determined to press on and ignore the call of sleep.  So when the final beer of the night was drained at 7am, the first beer of the next day cracked open at 7:10am.  It was a sprint, not a marathon.  And it wasn’t much of a sprint.

***

The outfitter gave them a two-sided laminated sheet of paper that was generously labeled “Map.”  It had some of the markings of a map – land was beautifully decorated by a generic flat green and water was, predictably, blue – but that’s where the information portion of the “map” ceased.  The Buffalo River elegantly weaved its way from the bottom left corner to the top right, and if you flipped it over and rotated it 90 degrees, the River continued in the same direction.  There was no legend, no North bearing and no other markings but for two small circles on the back page.  The first, he told them, was the town of Gilbert.  If they busted ass that first day they’d be there by nightfall.  But if they wanted to take it easy, as he expected, he would happily pick them up there on the third day.  The second spot was a simple Access Point, where they’d parked their cars an hour before they left.  The Access Point was where most river-goers made their final land-fall, and where these seven idiots set their sights.

After a chugging contest in which the loser took the helm of the kayak, they were off.  The map found its way into a dry bag and Mr. Daniels came out, ready to party.

***

Astros @ Rangers

Monday, 8/19/13 7:05pm

Harrell (6-13) vs Garza (8-2)

Tuesday, 8/20/13 7:05pm

Cosart (1-0) vs TBD

Wednesday, 8/21/13 7:05pm

Bedard (3-9) vs Holland (9-6)

***

I woke to gurgling and thrashing as my unmanned canoe drifted gently atop the kayak, its captain now swearing loudly and clawing at the water.  My shipmate hadn’t stirred in the commotion, but he woke up in the water a moment later after the second canoe t-boned us.

We oared over to a tiny island, poured a swig of Jack on its surface and declared it – and every island thereafter – as Shot Island.  We passed the bottle in a circle and jumped back in the boats.

And then everything was named.  Shot Islands.  Smoke Caves.  Shotgun Shores.  And dreams of reaching Gilbert by dark vanished.

***

Injuries

Rangers

Berkman – Twinkie poisoning

Feliz – sprouted another toe

Harrison – inverted penis

Kirkman – bad hair day

Lewis – cavities

Ogando – prison

Tepesch – bukkake appointment

Astros

Gonzalez – right shoulder

Martinez – left wrist

Villar – left thumb (day-to-day)

White – blah

***

Nightfall approached, so six of my closest idiots and I began searching for a place to camp.  One spot was too rocky, one spot was too close to the water, one spot was too muddy.  Some of these idiots were from Dallas, for God’s sake, and they wouldn’t camp just anywhere.

At the back-end of a hairpin turn we found The Spot.  There was just enough beach to lodge the rafts on shore, and a wooden trail off to the right led up to a grassy meadow straight out of Tolkein’s writings.  Acres of lush green spread in all directions, and as the sun set below a thick overhang of clouds we stood and watched, mouths agape at the vast expanse of Arkansas and the beauty of it all.

In the distance we saw lights of a small town and we decided we hadn’t done so bad after all, as Gilbert was but a stone’s throw away.

We broke camp in the eaves of a nearby forest and left the coolers and bottles sealed.  A fire cackled to life as the canoes were unburdened of their treasures.  We sat around it, gazing at the cloudbank overhead.  Nobody said a word.  The greys of the clouds and smoke desaturated the greens of the grass and forest, and soon it was misting.  Seven idiots sat in utter greyness looking upward.

The fire grew taller and fought away the mist.  Translucent ash spread outward as smokes of various potencies and qualities melded to create a purple plume that stretched to the heavens, threatening the clouds in an act of earthly dominance.  Rain followed, but the fire grew stronger, burning hotter, raging louder.

And then it died.  The rain stopped.  The sky divided.  Greys receded to blacks and light came down from above, as millions of stars looked down upon us.

***

Promotions

Tuesday – First 30,000 Smile Generation Texas Camo Cap, so all those people who pretend to be Rangers fans can simultaneously pretend to be hunters

Wednesday –Nolan’s Beef Sausage will only cost $1, so Bud need only bring a fiver.

***

I awoke in the same spot, one of seven idiots sitting in a circle.  The clouds were back, but the meadow was gone, the forest was gone.  There was no trace of a fire.  Just a rocky beach at the back-end of a hairpin turn.  We stared at each other aghast until somebody realized it – we’d been there two nights.

We quickly loaded up the boats and oared as fast as we could to the town we once saw in the distance.  We could make it to Gilbert, get in the cars and figure the rest out later.  But as we rowed we saw nothing.  No town, no distinguishable marks on the map.  I fished my cell phone out of my dry bag and called the outfitter.  I didn’t know where we were, but we needed help.  Two hours later he came upon us in a canoe with an outboard motor and towed us back to shore.

We’d gone 200 yards.

 

Diazepam

Posted on August 17, 2013 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Diazepam

Astrolina 8
Angel 2

contributed by NeilT

I was leaving to surf the big waves at Trestles when my assistant, Ms. Leslie, called. I was going to ignore her, but I thought it might be a client. Rent was due, and money was tight. She was calling on her own phone because Ma Bell had cut of the office phone. I was lucky I didn’t pay Leslie.

“Yeah?”

“Brad,” man her voice was sexy, “you’ve got someone here in the office. It’s a guy named Luhnow. He says he wants to talk to you about Astrolina.”

I had heard of Luhnow, but hadn’t met him. Of course back in my day Biggio and Pam Gardner ran the team, now it’s this guy Luhnow. I knew exactly what he’d look like. All these young general managers look the same: hair combed, tie tight, pants creased, earnest. They all carry slide rules and IPads, and when I got to my office on the wrong side of Petco he didn’t disappoint. Me? I had put on a shirt, for once.

“Mr. Ausmus,” his handshake felt just the right degree of strong, like he practiced, “I know your history with Astrolina, and I . . . I mean the Organization . . . we need your help.” He paused, as if he were searching for the right words. “Mr. Ausmus . . . Brad, do you mind if I call you Brad?” Suddenly I did mind, but what the hell. I wanted to get this over and go surfing. “Astrolina is missing.”

It didn’t surprise me. Last time I’d seen Astrolina was June, when Angel brought muscle to town and left me and her cut up and bleeding down on the banks of the bayou. She lost and blamed me. I said to hell with it and came home to San Diego. It was summer, and there were waves.

But I had kept up with Astrolina. It had been a rough couple of months, with a lot more losses than wins. Let me say that again, a lot more losses. Starting pitching had been pretty good, there had been some hits, but the bullpen sucked and defense had been spotty. Those months were worse than rough, the worst I’d ever seen.

Now the Stros were going back to Anaheim, that damned Disney town, and they needed Astrolina. Luhnow told me that the ‘Stros had traded WW for cash considerations, just so he could afford my fee. I was going to be able to pay the rent.

I knew where to start, and I called Boss Rat, but Rat said he hadn’t seen Astrolina since that time in Houston. He said that Angel got paid the wins Astrolina owed her, and that as far as he was concerned, they were even. There was only one other place to look: the House Next to Limey’s.

It’s the place where you go when bottom has been hit and you’re still going, still spiraling down. It was a foul place with trash and weeds in the yard and where the paint has already peeled and now the Hardy Plank is rotting. The screen door was hanging on one hinge and the windows were broken by rocks. The door was ajar—who’d bother locking the House Next to Limey’s?—so I walked right in. The outside was bad, and the inside was worse. There was no electric and I pulled out a flashlight and my .45.

I found her in a back room on a rust-stained cotton-ticking mattress. There were no sheets on the bed, and it looked like a dust mite Sandals. Astrolina was always a beautiful woman, but I had never seen her look so bad. At first I thought she was dead, but she was just out, out as far as she could go and still be breathing. There were bottles on the floor, Gatorade, Vitamin Water, Excel, all the hard stuff, even coconut water. And there were bottles of pills. I picked up a pill bottle. Diazepam. She was overdosed on anti-depressants.

A slapped her a bit to get her talking and then I made her walk, back and forth, back and forth, in that foul wreck of a tract house. She kept mumbling that I should leave her alone, that she only wanted to go back to sleep, that she wouldn’t go to Anaheim, but I finally got her to the nearest Starbucks for a triple espresso and then got her on a plane at Hobby. I called Luhnow and he said he’d be there to meet the plane at Ontario.

***
It turned out all right, the third win in a week, which hadn’t happened since mid-June. It was the fifth straight Astros win in Anaheim, but of course there had been that June sweep by Angel back home in Houston. Peacock pitched into the seventh, giving up an unearned run in the 5th after an Altuve throwing error, and another in the 7th after a Villar fielding error and some weird stuff with Dominguez that I can’t figure out. Zeid replaced Peacock in the 7th and faced one batter for a Dominguez-Altuve-Wallace double play.

Chapman came in for one out in the 8th, and Lo shut it down in the 9th. The bullpen held.

There was some ugly offense, but what do you expect? In the 3rd, Villar walked and reached third on a throwing error. Then Grossman struck out. Then Wallace struck out. Then Altuve grounded out. A runner at 3rd with no outs, and no runs score. You could probably feel the despair in the Game Zone.

But with 8 runs, there was also some good stuff. Hoes led off the 5th with a double, then moved to 3rd on a Villar single, and scored on a Grossman single. Wallace grounded out, but moved Grossman to 2nd, and the bases loaded when Altuve walked. Castro walked scoring Villar, and Grossman scored on a Carter sac fly after Angels starting pitcher, Jerome Williams, was run.

Carter had a great night. He scored Wallace in the 7th on a single. And in the 9th hit a 3-run homer, that’s number 23, to score Altuve and Castro. That’s how it’s supposed to work in the American League, right? Dominguez followed back-to-back with his 15th homer.

This could have been a Wednesday. Shoot, this could have been Christmas.

Corporan Punishment

Posted on August 15, 2013 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Astros whip A’s in extra innings

WP: Harrell (6-13)
LP: Doolittle (3-4)
SV: Fields (2)

contributed by Sphinx Drummond

For the first time in months the Astros have won two games in a row. And, since they’re currently involved in a 3 game series with the A’s, they have won a series for the first time in a long time. To push the Astros to victory, it took 11 innings, some good pitching, outstanding defense, and finally, timely hitting. Just like a real team.

Robbie Grossman pretty much saved the game, unfortunately outfielders don’t get save stats. But save Harrell’s ass he did. He robbed Chris Young of what would have been the game winning walk-off homer in the bottom of the 10th with an outstanding grab at the RF wall. Chris Young couldn’t believe it.

In the seventh inning Chris Carter got the scoring started with a solo homer, his 22nd and first against his former club, but at one for five for the game, his batting average still dipped. He’s hitting .211 currently.

The other C.C., Carlos Corporan was the big hero with his run scoring double off Sean Doolittle in the eleventh. Corporan, this year, is one of the best players on this team, I wonder what he could do playing first or outfield. He is clearly a better hitter than Carter or Wallace.

Jarred Cosart continues to impress, going six innings and allowing no runs, his ERA is currently 1.15. Phillip Humber, the second highest paid guy on the team, relieved in the 7th and allowed Oakland score a run to tie the game.

Josh Fields, the back-up closer, got his second save on the year, and Doolittle took the loss.

Thursday afternoon the Astros go for the improbable sweep in a west coast businessman’s special with Eric Bedard squaring off against Sonny Gray and a 2:35 CST start time.

Attendance – 18,278
Game Time – 3:32
Temperature – 66

Stormy Weather: Astros @ A’s Preview

Posted on August 13, 2013 by OregonStrosFan in Featured, Series Previews

Contributed by: GreatBagwellsBeard

One of the pseudo-benefits of working on a trade floor is the round-the-clock tv’s that hang from the ceiling.  When the situation warrants, they can be tuned in to something genuinely interesting that provides a brief distraction from the usual drudgery.  March Madness?  It’s on CBS.  Major golf tourney?  You bet we’re on NBC or ESPN.  But most of the time, we’re treated to two channels: The Weather Channel and MSNBC.

Daytime MSNBC is all financial crap, bottle blondes reading teleprompter tips over the hypnotic tickers forever scrolling scrolling scrolling.  For some reason, Ashton Kutcher was on last week.  Probably something about Steve Jobs.   It’s white noise with white guys in bad suits.  It’s the channel most likely to be changed when there’s a compelling reason.

And then there’s The Weather Channel.  At this particular moment, there are two shirtless dudebro types prospecting for gold somewhere hot and dusty.  The array of programming after 9am on TWC is just mind boggling: masturbatory self-promotion from the storm dummies, the thinnest possible premises for reality shows (you try making cross-country trucking compelling enough to watch for 30 minutes straight), and the commercials.  Oh, the commercials.  They’ve got their elderly retiree and agoraphobic shut-in demographic in the crosshairs, and they’ve flipped the switch to full auto fire mode.  Self-lubricating catheters?  YOU BET.  Boner pills?  EVERY HOUR.  Showers with railings?  OH INDEED.  Every day, I watch Ethel from Boca Raton testify, with complete sincerity, about how “Now, I can have a bath!”

I guess by comparison, the trucking show actually is thrilling.  But to make the most tenuous connection to our subject at hand, catching TWC out of the corner of my eye a few times a day is what the  Astros season so far feels like.  The chances that I’m going to see something that shakes my faith in humanity, encapsulating our frailty and what passes for our entertainment is about the same for Gamecast on Astros.com as it is at 2pm on The Weather channel.

I can barely bring myself to bridge the emotional distance by turning on the tv for Astros games at this point.  Seeing the bullpen implode as expressed through tiny red and blue circles on an app or a website is more impersonal, more remote.  I think I like it that way, actually.

Tuesday, August 13th
9:05 PM CT, O.co Coliseum
Jordan Lyles (4-6, 5.40) v. Bartolo Colon (14-4, 2.75)

Lyles gets his first start against the A’s.  He faced Chris Young, and Chris Young won, to the tune of .556/.556/1.000.  Ouch.  Lyles has shown some good flashes this year in a way that sort of reminds me of Norris at this point in his career.  If he settles down, he could be a nice contributor when the team is actually competitive.
The Human Dugong got out of a Biogenesis suspension since he was suspended already last year, and so he continues to deal like he’s ten years younger.  How about that?  Motherfucker looks like they decided to make a live action Grimace movie.  Altuve is hitting .444 against him, and Castro has a homer.  Everyone else is kinda weak.  Story of the year, I know.

Wednesday, August 14th
2:35 PM CT, YOUR NAME HERE Coliseum
Jarred Cosart (1-0, 1.36) v. Jarrod Parker (8-6, 4.04)

The Highlight Of The Whole Season is still looking for win number two.  I wonder who we could pin that on, hmmm?  Anyone?  Anyone?  He hasn’t faced the A’s before.
The Jarrod with the slightly dumber spelling has solved about every hitter in the lineup except Villar, who’s 2-3 with a double off him.

Thursday, August 15th
2:35 PM CT, Pets.com Coliseum
Erik Bedard (3-8, 4.28) v. Sonny Gray (0-1, 1.80)

Let’s pause for a moment and thank the BBGs for giving us two day games on the West Coast.  Some of us are conserving sleep before the baby comes, and we appreciate it.  Bedard has pulled a pretty decent second half out of his ass, and I for one am grateful.  All hail Luhnow.  Coco Crisp HATES Bedard almost as much as Nate Frieman (grumble) loves him.
Sonny Gray looks so young, he’s like one of Leonardo DiCaprio’s sperm or something.  He’s a rookie who’s never faced the Astros, so everyone please reach under your seats as there’s a vomit bag there, and your nacho tray can be used as a floatation device.

Promotions

Tuesday: Free Parking!  And your car might even be there when you get back!

Thursday: Throwback Thursdays, so here’s hoping the A’s wear their yellow alternates, the Stros wear the gawdawful Oranges, and we can give some poor highlight editor at CSN a fucking seizure.

The biggest promotion, of course, is being able to leave Oakland.

Injuries
Astros:
Pride (out for season)
Altuve – sore quad
Castro – bruised hip
Crowe – shoulder sprain (15-day DL)
EGon – shoulder sprain (15-day DL)
J.D. Martinez – sprained wrist (15-day DL)
Alex White – TJ Surgery.

A’s
Brett Anderson – foot stress fracture.  Ouch.
Coco Crisp – Sore wrist.  Kind of a serial injury.  Ahem.
John Jaso – Concussion.  Treatment: grow out mullet.
Derek Norris – Back soreness.  Join the club, buddy.
Fernando Rodriguez – TJ Surgery
Scott Sizemore – Knee surgery.

What To Watch For
The Bullpen Bloodbath
The Sweet Embrace of Death

The POCKET HOSE

Lather, Rinse, Repeat

Posted on August 13, 2013 by BudGirl in Game Recaps, News

Rangers 2, Astros 1
W:Darvish (12-5) L:Oberholtzer (2-1) SV:Nathan (35)

recap

This game started out similar to the second game of the season. Thankfully, it did not take until the 9th inning to ruin all the Rangers fans fun. Villar got his walk in the 6th, which ended the perfect game attempt. And then Mr. Carlos Corporan hit the shut-out-no-no-bid hit in the 8th. That was fun. It really was. Those Rangers fans probably wanted to strangle Mr. Carlos Corporan, but he’s too strong for them.

Lost in all the Davish crap is the fact that the Astros pitchers did a very good job on the day. 2 runs were all that were given up. 2 runs, that’s it. No more. Granted they didn’t hit the ball worth more than one run, and I didn’t view the came through a television screen so I don’t know if Darvis was pitching that great or if the Astros helped him along.

But, I’m still skeptically optimistic that the pitching is turning around. I’m trying not to let myself get to excited about the future, I’m holding onto some faith, but I just can’t trust everything yet. I truly hope the future is as bright and shiny as it is being sold.

Also, I hope the Rangers find themselves in a similar spot that the Angels seem to be headed. Would make future seasons mucho beuno.

Something funny.

Make Me Laugh

Ron White on Cincinatti Chili

C-R-U-U-U-U-Z

Posted on August 10, 2013 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Texas 9
Houston 5

contributed by NeilT

This is gonna be my last recap this year, ‘cause it’s the last time the Texas team plays the Houston team on a Friday night. That’s for the best, ‘cause I really need this time to work on my Presidential demeanor, but I got to tell you, I’m not as happy with the Texas team as I used to be. In fact, last time I was in Dallas they caused me a crisis in confidence, and that ain’t easy.

Now I happen to be in Houston for tonight’s game to encourage Houston business to move to Texas where our low taxes and balanced budget will let them do business the way God intended. Of course Anita pointed out to me that Houston was technically in Texas, but that can’t be true because they keep electing Democrats, and near-Democrats like Ed Emmett, and no business-friendly environment can elect Democrats.

But hearing that Houston was in Texas wasn’t what caused me consternation. Nossir. My crisis started last time I was in Dallas when this boy came up to bat and the crowd started booing. “Anita,” I ask Anita all the important questions, “why’s this Dallas crowd booing that boy? Is he a Democrat?”

“They’re not booing, numbskull, they’re yelling his name.” She’s always calling me little pet names like that: numbskull, crampbrain, sock-drawer . . . She’s been doing that since we were in junior high. It’s her little sign of affection.

“His name is Boo?”

“You hoof-head. Why I’m the damn blonde in this family I’ll never know. His name is Cruz, they’re yelling Cru-u-u-u-z.”

That was deeply disturbing. This boy Cruz has been giving me fits ever since Lite Governor Dewhickey failed to put him down back in 2012, and now he’s got presidential aspirations when everybody knows I’m the Texan with the presidential stuffing. He’s a loudmouth one-term senator of mixed parentage who wasn’t even born in Texas. Who would elect someone like that as President? I’m pretty sure he was born in Kenya, and I want to see his birth certificate.

Now I know the Texas team has a long tradition of Republican leadership, what with ’42 and my buddy Nolan, and that Cruz is a Republican. I know the Texas team used to be made up entirely of Senators, back when they were in Florida. But why they’re letting that upstart Cruz play gets me wound up tighter than a prom queen’s corset, so I called my bud Bud.

“Bud” says I, “I’m considering calling another special session to require that the governor appoint the designated hitter for baseball teams within my gubernatorial jurisdiction, but I figure that little blonde hussy will raise a ruckus,” which reminds me, I wonder who does her hair? That dye job is almost good as mine. Anyways, back to Bud, “so I was wondering if you’d just get rid of that fellow Cruz for me?” Of course Bud was glad to oblige, and he banned Cruz for 50 games, just ‘cause I asked. He’s still in the Senate though, and you can tell by listening to him that he’s still doin’ ‘roids.

***

‘Course in a recap I’m supposed to tell you something about the game, and since I was there I can share that Anita and I looked resplendent in our blue and red Texas jerseys, just like everybody else in the stadium. I was actually worried in the 8th and noted to Anita that the Houston team was still up 4-3. Bedard had pitched a pretty good game. That Communist Castro homered in the 2nd, Altuve scored some Hoes in the 4rth with a double, and then Castro scored Altuve with a double. Barnes homered in the 5th. Anita just looked at me with that look she gives me. “You Houston bullpen-brain,” I think that may be the worst thing she’s ever called me, and I’ve got to admit, it hurt my feelings a bit, “don’t you know we’re into the Houston bullpen?

And of course the Texas team batted around in the 8th and scored 4 runs. We got to see a whole lot of the Houston team’s bullpen, and it didn’t get much better in the 9th, with that new fellow, DeLeon.

All in all, it was satisfying for the Dallas crowd, and once again the Texas team won because of low taxes and a balanced budget. And I’m sure glad that Bud got rid of that Cruz loudmouth. He even gets on my nerves.

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