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  • Articles posted by Dark Star (Page 14)

Time To Flush The Royals

Posted on June 21, 2009 by Dark Star in Series Previews

Royals @ Astros, June 23-25, 2009

SEASONS IN HELL Vol. I, No. 4
Royals (29-39) @ Astros (32-35)

Tuesday 7:05 p.m. CDT FOX-Houston
Wednesday 7:05 p.m. CDT FOX-Houston
Thursday 1:05 p.m. CDT FOX-Houston

In the Battle of the Wal-Mart Titans, in this corner we have David Glass’ Kansas City Royals, a once proud franchise that has basically been run into the ground since Glass purchased them back in 2000 for a cool $96 million; and in this corner is Drayton McLane’s entry, your very own Houston Astros, who somehow or another keep winning series and, if they do not watch out, may actually find themselves on the verge of being in contention for one of the four or five wild card spots still open for the playoffs, or however it is MLB does it now.

To be fair, the Royals had been floundering for a decade before Glass bought them; but you could say nothing he has done since has turned out for the good. There is some talk that since Glass has now finally agreed to keep himself and his son out of the daily operations, and hired in Dayton Moore, a John Schuerholz protégé, to be GM, things are turning around in KC. Maybe, but there are no obvious signs of it yet.

Meantime, the Astros keep bumping along, some would say despite their management. They are still destined to finish no better than fourth in their division, but so far this month (12-8 overall) they have taken three of four from Colorado, and two of three from Pittsburgh and Chicago at home, and two of three from both Arizona and Minnesota on the road. Oh yeah, somewhere in there they allegedly played a series in Arlington and lost three of four, but I digest. Also, Fuck the Rangers.

Anyway, I am always glad when the team does better than expected, by the experts and also by me. They have enough quality parts still firing most of the time, and it may eventually carry them to a .500 finish at least, which would have been a long-shot at the beginning of the season.

Personally, I have remained strangely unmoved by the recent relative success, and I am not sure why. But really, my personal Sturm und Drang is not fodder for discussion here, in a Series Preview, after all.

PITCHING MATCHUPS

Tuesday June 23 (7:05 p.m.)
Houston — Russ Ortiz (3-2, 3.60)
Despite being 6′ 1″ and 215 lbs. (in your program, anyway), Ortiz was apparently invisible to Cecil Cooper for a good bit of this season. Ortiz to his credit pitched well in long relief, but he was signed to be a starter, he has been a starter, he is a starter. On a team having “problems” with starting pitching. Now he is in the rotation meaning, if nothing else, someone like Brandon Backe is not (hopefully).

Kansas City — Zack Grienke (8-3, 1.96)
The Royal Pain. Grienke got off to an unbelievable start, but since the end of May, he has appeared to be mortal (4 GS, 26 IP, 31 H, 0-2, 5.19 ERA). The ace of the Royals staff, by far.

Wednesday June 24 (7:05 p.m.)
Houston — Roy Oswalt (3-4, 4.48)
Who knows what’s up with Roy-O this season? I still think he will come on strong the second half. His loss against Minnesota was still encouraging. I’m grasping at straws. For the Astros to achieve anything of consequence this season, Roy has to get himself together.

Kansas City — Luke Hochevar (2-3, 6.61)
Stylish right-hander, Jesus Christ he’s tall. Sort of the Royals version of Brian Moehler – good game, bad game, good game, bad game. . . last time out he got carpet-bombed by the D-Backs, so. . .

Thursday June 25 (1:05 p.m.)
Houston — Brian Moehler (4-4, 6.43)
Not-so-stylish right-hander, he’s kinda tall, but sort of dumpy looking. Sort of the Astros version of Luke Hochevar – good game, bad game, good game, bad game. . . last time out he beat the Twins, so. . .

Kansas City — Brian Bannister (5-4, 3.89)
Big right-hander out of SoCal. He’s been on an upswing – last three starts: (21 IP, 16 H, 1-1..29)

INJURIES
Houston
– Geoff Blum (strained left hamstring), 15-day DL, returns early July, I had a football coach in high school who swore the ridiculously tall heels on the stylish shoes we sometimes wore (hey, this was the 1970s) would “shorten” our hamstrings, making them more susceptible to strains and tears; Aaron Boone (heart condition), 60-day DL, 2010, or Sept. 2009 (he says), joke all you want, I’ll bet Boone is damn glad he took that physical this spring; Doug Brocail (strained left hamstring), 15-day DL, early July maybe, He’s a good guy, and a (usually) effective reliever when healthy, but Brocail has got to be approaching the record for Most Days Spent On DL, Career; Mike Hampton (tender groin), 15-day DL, late June, First of all, everyone’s groin is tender, also, if you’ve seen pictures of some of his recent dates, you might better understand this injury; Felipé Paulino (strained right groin), 15-day DL, late June, I haven’t seen pictures of Paulino’s dates, maybe he strained his groin trying to karate kick the life size cut-out of Cecil Cooper he keeps in the corner of his apartment.

Kansas City – Mike Aviles (SS) (strained right forearm), 15-day DL, late June, maybe – He hasn’t had a date in quite awhile, thus possibly giving insight into the cause of his injury; John Buck (C) (herniation in lower back), it is unknown when he will return – Former Astros prospect is effective when he plays, not so much when he sits, Miguel Olivo’s got the job now, anyway; Coco Crisp (OF) (right rotator cuff strain), late June, maybe, could need surgery – Hurt his arm trying to heft a large spoonful of chocolaty-good breakfast cereal mouthward; Alex Gordon (3B) (labral cartilege tear in right hip), 15-day DL, mid-season – I don’t know what this injury is, exactly, but goddamn, it sounds painful; Sidney Ponson (RHP) (suet buildup, gout, sloth, rickets, scurvy) 15-day DL, early July, maybe – It’s okay, Sir Sid, drink some more grog to assuage the pain, avast; Robinson Tejeda (RHP) (right rotator cuff tendinitis) late June just activated (thx High Mileage) – Fireballing RHP who strikes ‘em out in droves and is wild as hell, one Royal I would like to have watched, why is it a tendon? but the affliction is tendinitis? I never got that; Doug Waechter (RHP) (strained left oblique), 15-day DL, unknown return – Doug Waechter/Went to see the doctor/Who said, “Not again this week/Of your fucked-up physique/The worst is your oblique”

**********

One time, a well-meaning if presumptuous friend-of-a-friend set me up on a blind date with some girl she knew. I was a still a happy, free-range bachelor back then, and I was extremely dubious about being ‘set up’ at all, I only finally agreed to it because we would be double-dating with some other friends, who were ‘connected’ and were going to get us into an exclusive political get-together thing I couldn’t have got into otherwise – I didn’t have the right sort of bonafides to get invited to that little soirée on my own. I was at the time a sort of a neophyte political operative, which is another story. I guessed my date would be homely, and/or painfully shy and introspective – that was my low opinion of blind dates – but taking her out would be my ticket into this political thing, something of a coup for me at the time. So I said OK.

I picked the girl up at her place and was pleased to see she was actually quite pretty; and on the way to the event, making small talk in the car, I gathered she was not a shrinking violet, either. Well, I figured, if nothing else I could take care of my business at the party – I touched the envelope full of cash in my inside coat pocket – and then we could just drink and talk and enjoy the evening, maybe even hit it off.

The party was a barbecue-and-beer bash, a fundraiser deal where slumming rich Republicans (and a few turncoat Demos) dressed down and acted like members of the proletariat, or tried to. . . meanwhile, deals were being made all over the place. ‘Handshake’ deals, you know? Fists full of dollars. There were several other guys in the room in the same profession I was, more or less; those guys were balling the jack, man, button-holing politicians, glad-handing judges and civil administrators, and greasing the palms of local power brokers and decision makers, county commissioners and members of the zoning board and the like. Some of those guys moved about the room with ease, they did this stuff all the time. But I was still fairly new at it, and this was a high stakes deal to me. I had $40,000 in cash in an envelope, with specific instructions on what I was to do with it. Gosh. Jefferson County politics, at least in those days. . . anyway, after an hour or so of watching and maneuvering for a position in these machinations, I got hungry and went over to sample some of the catered beef brisket and spare ribs and sausage, being served out of fancy silver steamware by guys in toques and white coats; I noticed my date was drinking beer and in an animated conversation with a few people she apparently knew. After I had disbursed the cash and otherwise had taken care of what I had gone to the party to do, the whole get-together seemed stupid and boring; a bunch of people I wouldn’t have spent five minutes with otherwise, half-lit and prattling on about their golf game or their mistress or the new addition to the mansion-ette. So my date and I decided to get out of there and retire to a little bar she knew about, a dive in a shopping strip off of the Interstate. She said it was dark, served cheap drinks, and had a decent live band. That was all I needed to hear.

When we got to the place we ran into some mutual friends right away, and settled down at a table and started ordering rounds of drinks. I was thinking my blind date was turning out a lot better than I had expected. She was getting a little loud, and tipsy, but in a good way – funny and endearing instead of irritating and obnoxious. The cover band was playing contemporary stuff, and they were okay, not great; every once in awhile they would mix in something danceable. We were having fun, I was laughing at and with my date, and noticed I was beginning to get a little bombed, as well. I was talking to another friend for a few minutes when I heard a commotion over up in front of the dance floor, and we turned around in time to see my date get up on the stage with the bar band, crawling up the riser in her heels and evening dress.

Someone had handed her a pair of maracas, those painted Mexican gourd things with seeds or something in them, and my date was dancing around on the stage, shaking her maracas, while the band played some song. It was pretty funny, not a bad performance at all. It got a great response from the audience.

By the way, this girl was reasonably well-endowed you could call it, and after that night, “shaking her maracas” became a euphemism among the smart set (okay, among me and my dumbass friends) for a woman with nice breasts on public display. Of course it did. “She’s really shaking her maracas tonight, man.” In fact, maracas was eventually added to the long lexicon of terms we used to identify parts of the female anatomy. “Lisa’s got some chop (a nice ass), man.” “Yeah, but did you see the maracas on her friend?”

By the time we left the bar, both my date and I were pretty fucking wasted, and silly happy. She was starting to say some crazy shit, though, just drunken stream-of-unconsciousness stuff, and I figured it was time to take her home. It was when we were sitting at a stoplight on Dowlen Road – the ‘main drag’ at the time – that she decided to roll down all the windows and open the moon roof of my Camaro and start singing The Cars “Dangerous Type” at the top of her vocal ran, um, lungs. The song must have come on the radio, I don’t know. Anyway, it caused a bit of a stir there at the light, because even at 2:30 in the morning there were a lot of cars at the intersection, enjoying my girl’s musical talents. Several followed us for awhile down the road after the light changed, honking and weaving around in my rear view mirror.

“She’s a lot like you, the dangerous type. . . “

Depending on the situation, an outburst like that one (and/or the maraca incident) could have been really off-putting, a deal-breaker. Speaking generally, I tend to admire reticence in drunks. But my date’s antics only made me like her more, I noticed. In fact, by that late hour, and several sheets to the wind, I realized I was starting to like her a lot, very, very much. She must have liked me, too. When we got to her townhouse, we went straight upstairs.

I am not proud of everything I did in my youth. I don’t know how many nights ended up with me in some advanced state of intoxication, driving home some girl even drunker than I was. A fair amount of them; and a few times I even found myself coming awake the next morning in some bed somewhere, trying to figure out where the fuck I was and what-all happened the night before.

One thing that made this time different was the girl woke up when I did, the both of us all tangled up in the sheets and each other; instead of an intense desire to flee, I realized I wanted to stay and lay there with her for awhile. I did, for quite awhile actually. There was not a lot of conversation. The silence was not uncomfortable, however. People worry about what to talk about with someone new, but being able to be with someone in a comfortable silence, just laying together there with our thoughts and without the need to pointlessly verbalize, I took that for a good sign. We had already established a level of unspoken communication, a closeness, maybe a trust even, that usually only comes after a time, if at all. Thinking about that gave me a warm feeling. Laying together there, me staring intently at the painted texture on the drywall ceiling; I thought maybe I had stumbled onto something.

I looked over at this pretty girl, who was looking back at me. She propped herself up on an elbow, smiled at me, and told me that she was going to marry me.

And she did.

********

I didn’t choose my favorite team anymore than I chose the woman I would marry. They chose me. Given the results of some of my choices over the years, it is just as well. In fact, all in all, I would say I have been fabulously lucky, on both counts.

When I was young, all the older, “in the know” kids in the neighborhood followed and talked about the Astros all the time, and those kids were cool and I wanted to be cool and be like them and be accepted by them, so I learned to follow the Astros, too, after a time. Thank goodness for that. My years of following the ‘Stros have not always been a lot of fun on a certain level, but always a pleasure otherwise. The team did not always win, a lot of the time it did not. That was disappointing, but then again, not really. I just love to watch the games, man; to follow the team and think about its chances and fret about its shortcomings, and to follow all of baseball and individual teams and players as an ancillary aspect of following the Astros. I love to dip back into the history of baseball, and realize what a tangled web this game does weave. I love to just get lost in it sometimes, try to make sense of it other times, I always revel in it. Such a wonderful thing to have latched onto at such an early age, and all by chance and an accident of geography.

I don’t think much about what could have been, when it comes to my favorite team, or to my luck in marriage. What if I’d followed my instinct and refused to go on a blind date that night so long ago? I might have ended up married to some promiscuous slut from out of the trailer parks of Lumberton who started gaining weight about three seconds after we said “I do” and ended up being a fat-ass cheating chain-smoking beer-swilling bitch that I hated and didn’t even want to go home to. What if I’d subconsciously followed my mother’s genetic line and somehow ended up as a Pirate fan, like many of my long-suffering aunts and uncles and cousins in Western PA? A fate nearly worse than death, that would have been; probably as agonizing as a slow death. Worse than marrying a fat chick from Lumberton, even.

Sometimes it is best to just thank one’s lucky stars, and move on.

********

I was sitting in the Liberty Lunch, pretty fucked up already, nursing a squat 12oz. bottle of Red Stripe beer that was rapidly getting tepid. I didn’t even like Red Stripe, but I was drinking one. The bottle was sweating, and every time I grabbed it I could feel the beer inside getting warmer. It was humid as hell. Back then, Liberty Lunch had no roof on it, and as I stretched out at the table, trying to un-kink some of the muscles in my back and legs, I found myself gazing up at the firmament, spread out above me like a big black tarpaulin with a bunch of little holes poked in it, letting light through. That in turn reminded me of an old Bruce Cockburn lyric about kicking the darkness “‘til it bleeds daylight.” I was very much in the darkness then, figuratively and literally; but to that point I hadn’t been doing much kicking. In truth, at times I felt as if I were sinking fast, like a stone.

As a distraction from my thoughts, I turned and watched two lesbians do the bump and grind with each other on the dance floor, just off to my right. They were moving to the music of the local reggae band up on stage, doing a lame cover of “Get Up, Stand Up”. I had been mesmerized by the band for awhile; mainly by the lead singer, who was about 5′ 7″ and had long, unkempt white-boy dreadlocks down to his knees, almost. As he sang he prowled the small stage, swinging his hair around for effect. It was interesting for about five minutes.

Anyway, these girls dancing next to me were real lesbians, not the kind one saw in R-rated movies, all soft and pretty and desirable. Like a lot of guys, I found those sort of cinematic depictions of otherwise normal hetero girls suddenly overtaken with the compulsion to do each other to be pleasantly compelling, in their way. But these girls weren’t anything like those. Nope. These were the real thing, going at it in earnest, and I realized the whole thing up close like that was the opposite of titillating to me. I eventually had to look away.

I left the bar pretty soon after that, stumbling down 2nd Street into the darkness, without much of an idea of where to go or what to do next. It would be a couple more years before I did get some kind of idea about that, but that is not really the point. The thing is, I learned something that night; or had something re-enforced I knew already. That is, sometimes things that look real good from a distance or from an obscured or distorted viewpoint, don’t look so great when you see them clearly and up close. Myself, I had been following a dream I had for years, a dream of living high and wild and more-or-less outside the rules. It was really a dream of being free, or at least what my idea of free was at the time. I had taken just about every wrong turn one could take in pursuit of my dream, and now here I was. This is what my dream had led to, up close. . . me being high and stupid drunk on a dark street in Austin, with no place I really wanted to go, nothing I really wanted to do, no one I could really go see and tell my troubles to.

I think it was around then that it occurred to me, I might want to start looking for some other dream to follow.

********

I have been going through a bit of a crisis lately. Not so much a crisis of confidence, more like a crisis of faith. I have finally admitted to myself something that has been going on for awhile – I have been losing interest in the Astros, the only team I have ever really cared about.

I cannot put my finger on exactly why this is happening. It is tempting to look for places to put blame. Baseball? The numbingly boring ‘offensive explosion’ years 1993-2004, fueled by (we now know) steroids and HGH and whatever else consumed by many of the era’s greatest players, were too much for even a long-time serious fan to recover from. The Astros?  They don’t have a farm system, Wade is an idiot, the owner is a tightwad only interested in AIS, blah, blah, blah. Society in General?  Going to hell in a hand basket, going downhill on roller skates, falling apart like a house of cards, etc.

Just because someone grows up and grows older does not necessarily mean that person learns much along the way. I am a good example of that, I make a lot of the same stupid-ass mistakes I made at 5, and 15, and 25, and so on. But one thing I have picked up along the way; anytime I am tempted to channel blame outward for some problem or difficulty, I need to think again, and search myself. I have found that often the ugliness I am so ready to project onto something or someone else is really coming from inside of me somewhere.

So the past weeks I have been soul-searching. Why don’t I watch the games as intently as I used to? Why don’t I follow the team day-to-day? Why have I been losing my grip on baseball generally, only retaining an obvious passion for the game of twenty, thirty, forty years ago?

The answers I have come up with are not all that interesting to anyone but myself.

As far as losing interest in today’s baseball in general, I will say I think all the coverage now makes it harder for me to follow along. I grew up in a pre-cable/ESPN/USA Today/internet world, where there was one game on television a week, you found out the scores by reading the next morning’s sports page (or the next morning’s, if the game was on the West Coast), found out what your favorite players did by scouring the box scores, you only saw statistics (batting average, HRs, RBIs and little else) on Sundays, and only then as much as there was room left in the columns after all the other crap about hunting and fishing was inserted. Most of my favorite players as a kid I only knew from baseball cards, from radio broadcasts, maybe from a wayward appearance on the Game of the Week or an All Star Game broadcast. It was a real effort to follow the game then, but it did not seem like one; and I feel like I saw it all more clearly than I do now. As counter-intuitive as it may seem, having anything I could want to know instantly accessible makes it more difficult for me to connect to the overall picture. I love having all these things we have now – I certainly would not want to go back – but it is just a distraction a lot of the time.

As far as losing interest in the Astros, that is a more complicated question, but one easier to solve, I think. Partly, it is the same things that have made paying attention to baseball more difficult. But I also think that somewhere along the way in the last ten years or so I lost focus and became a lazy-ass fan. Not as bad as some of the laggard fuckwads one sees at MMPUS and hears on the call-in shows, but lazy nonetheless. I have almost quit this great gig because of my inner malaise, even almost walked away from this place altogether. What saved me, what kept me from making another stupid fucking decision like so many I have made in the past, is that at my core, I am a fan. A real fan, not a come-lately or a dilettante. There is no way around it, I cannot change what I am. In order to achieve inner peace, I have to get back to the fan I used to be, my inner being compels me to. And I know now what I have to do to get myself back to where I need to be. I have realized it is time for me to find a different dream to follow.

Also, Fuck the Cubs.

********

I have tried to think how it was I became such a serious fan, a fan to the core. I cannot, really. I hoped to be able to remember a point in my early childhood when I started playing with a ball and bat or realized I really liked the game, but my memory is limited.

I am in possession of a picture, pretty valuable to me now, a snapshot in time; of my young-looking father underhanding a wiffle ball to me while I take a wild swing at it with a plastic bat. I can tell the photo was taken in the backyard of the first house we lived in; it was still new then, I can see the red orange-ish sand mixed in with the St. Augustine in the yard, and the green plank siding on the back of the house. I couldn’t have been more than three or four years old in the photo. When I tried to remember back to the origins of my interest in baseball, I could only remember – even hazily – back to about age 5 or 6, maybe. Then my memories would blur and fade into the dark place beyond the boundary of my memory, back to the time before I can remember. They faded into my own pre-historic time, as foreign and unknowable to me as the Pleistocene Era. But I have this picture, this proof that I was playing at baseball, even back before I can remember. To know what my original impressions or motivations were is impossible, but knowing I was learning to play so long ago is comforting to me now. So is the idea that my dad was part of my learning.

I do not have many heart-warming memories vis-à-vis baseball and my father.

He was a fan. A couple of summers while in college he did recreations of minor league games on radio, and he knew the players of the ‘40s and ‘50s so well, I felt I could almost see them when he would describe them to me. He took us to games in the Dome fairly regularly, and let me watch the Saturday national broadcasts with him.

But we had a less than ideal relationship, my father and I, from beginning to end. I never figured him out, and I am pretty sure he never did me, either. By the time he died a couple of years ago, we hadn’t lived in the same town in twenty years or had any kind of meaningful conversation in almost twice that.

My father grew up in an in-between generation, too young to be part of the “Greatest Generation” and too old to be a Baby Boomer. Call it the “Mad Men” generation. He had these odd values I never quite got. He would never talk about Korea, for instance, though it obviously made an impression on him. “You just don’t talk about that stuff,” he’d say. He had a really traumatic childhood that he never spoke of, either. He was usually pleasant, but always, always kept his distance. In his value system, the mom stayed home and raised the kids, the dad went to work and made the money, went out and did his drinking or gambling or womanizing or whatever, then came home and was just there. But not really there.

I don’t think my father had a lot to do with my developing a love for baseball as a child. He wasn’t the type to go play catch in the schoolyard. I was just lucky that I lived in a place and time where many parents took interest in a kid, and if you showed an inclination or some talent for the game, they were happy to help you along. That is what happened to me. I cannot remember exactly, but I am pretty sure I started hanging around the edges of some games the older kids in the neighborhood played, then maybe one day they were short a man and let me play. And maybe I showed them I could play a little, so I got to keep playing. I know in that neighborhood, that is all we did, all summer – played baseball or some variation of it, all day long, for years before we were even old enough to play Little League. I am pretty sure my baseball inspiration came somewhere in there, it may have been something as simple as being able to play in the older kids’ game and feeling like I belonged. Who knows?

While I am not sure where the germ of my lifelong fascination with and love for the game of baseball came from, I am pretty sure I know where it did not come from. On the other hand, maybe swinging wildly (a swing I still have, by the way) at a plastic ball my dad had lobbed to me as a small kid was part of my development, too. Fathers Day has just passed, and I am willing to give the benefit of the doubt. I will say, in case the old man is somewhere out there reading this. . . I am not going to bullshit you with any smarmy sentiments. It would be fake and hypocritical and he would fucking hate that. So I’ll just say I think I understand a little better now, maybe.

That’s something.

********

Astros win the series, 2-1.

“To the living we owe respect; to the dead we owe only the truth.” – Voltaire

THE WEATHER
from award-winning meteorologist Al Sleet

“Heyyy, baby, what’s happenin’? Que pasa. Que, what you call your pasa.

“Al Sleet here, your hippy dippy weatherman, with all the hippy dippy weather, man. Brought to you by Parsons Pest Control.

“Do you have termites, water bugs and roaches? Well, Parsons will help you get rid of the termites and water bugs, and help you smoke the roaches.

“The temperature at the airport is 88 degrees, which is stupid, man, ‘cos I don’t know anybody who lives at the airport. Now, if you’ll take a look at our national weather map. . . you’ll see that we don’t have one. So try to picture last night’s map in your mind. Remember all the letters and lines, and all them little numbers. The weather is dominated by a large Canadian low, which is not to be confused with a Mexican high. . .

“Tonight’s forecast – dark. Continued dark tonight, turning to partly light in the morning. . . looking ahead, the weather will continue to change, on and off, for a long, long time, man.”

 

********

Strange Days

Posted on May 31, 2009 by Dark Star in Series Previews

SEASONS IN HELL Vol. I, No. 3

June 1-4, 2009

Rockies (20-29) @ Astros (20-28)

Monday 7:05 p.m. CDT FOX-Houston
Tuesday 7:05 p.m. CDT FOX-Houston
Wednesday 7:05 p.m. CDT FOX-Houston
Thursday 7:05 p.m. CDT FOX-Houston

The cellar dwellers from the NL West and the NL Central get together this week for a four-game soirée.  If they could somehow get the Nationals into town, too, they could engage in a bizarre three-way that for some reason has me thinking of the South Park episode where all the men in town decide they are bisexual and engage in a massive man orgy. Not a nice vision to have (YTISWWT).

Bizarre homoerotic imagery aside, this will be a totally inconsequential series that will decide, well, nothing. I cannot imagine anyone outside of Denver and Houston paying any attention to it, unless it is scouts from NL contending teams, swirling around above the proceedings, riding the updrafts and deciding which Astros and Rockies veteran players to make a play for when their teams inevitably gird up their loins for a playoff run.

The only minor subplots revolve around the managers. Jim Tracy comes in as the shiny new head man for the Colorados, having replaced deposed field general Clint Hurdle last week. Tracy is a knowledgeable baseball man who has been around the block a few times managerially speaking, with minimal success. Expect the same in Rockie-land. Meanwhile, the drumbeat of calls for Astro skipper Cecil Cooper’s head have abated somewhat, with the series win in Pittsburgh. Presumably the clamor will start up again as soon as the Astros start losing again, and/or Cooper does something questionable on or off the field. Shouldn’t be long, either way.

Of course, people close to the situation don’t know shit, and should realize it takes a knowledgeable outsider like Jon Heyman to tell us what a bad idea it would be to shitcan Coop. Heyman somehow managed to do it without working himself or his wife (if he has one, I kind of wonder) or Noé or pravata ferret into the story, too.

Like a lot of other people, I have no idea where the Astros go from here. I do know I am out of the business of trying to foretell how they will fare, game-to-game. In the just completed Pittsburgh series, staff ace Wandy Rodriguez got knocked out of the box, while proles Brian Moehler and Mike Hampton twirled gems. That kind of wackiness is endearing in a way; but underneath, it signifies one fucked up team, going nowhere. I don’t know if changing managers would matter much now, no matter who was brought in, and anyway Drayton McLane has already indicated he is not firing anyone he just gave an extension to. That would make him look be stupid. As BudGirl said in the TZ, “Looks like a long season.”

 

PITCHING MATCHUPS
Monday June 1 (7:05 p.m.)
Houston
Roy Oswalt (1-2, 4.62)
Roy Oswalt’s start this season sort of mirrors his team’s, which is not to say his difficulties to date are the primary reason his team sucks for air at this point. But it doesn’t help any.

Colorado Aaron Cook (3-2, 4.82)
Cook got off to a terrible start this season, and has been slowly working his way back from it. He is tough when his sinker is working; it is a pitch that probably helps him in Coors, of course. . . it helps him in MMPUS, too – he has done quite well in Houston through his career.

Tuesday June 2 (7:05 p.m.)
Houston Felipé Paulino (1-4, 6.75)
I want to think about the Paulino who was so tough through his first few starts, not whoever it is who has been inhabiting his body since. It is irrational and unsupportable, but I blame Cooper’s lack of a cohesive pitching plan for Paulino’s troubles this season, at least part of them.

Colorado Ubaldo Jimenez (3-6, 4.37)
Erratic, throws hard, pitched well against the Astros in Denver.

Wednesday June 3 (7:05 p.m.)
Houston
Brian Moehler (2-3, 6.43)
Moehler was brilliant in Pittsburgh, pitching a complete game in leading the Astros to a 4-1 win. He has had really good outings since his return from the DL, and a few bad ones. I am going to err on the side of optimism and say he hasn’t been consistent yet because of the time he missed.

Colorado Jason Marquis (7-3, 3.93)
Marquis is putting together a nice season. Some think he will not finish it in Colorado, however. The Astros had their way with him earlier this year in Coors.

Thursday June 4 (7:05 p.m.)
Houston Wandy Rodriguez (5-4, 2.26)
Wandy has faltered lately, but that was on the road. One assumes (hopes?) in the friendly confines of MMPUS, he will return to dominating form.

Colorado Jason Hammel (1-3, 4.83)
Tall guy, not exactly a flamethrower. He didn’t do terribly in his first start against the Astros this season (7 hits, 4 R/ ER in 5.1 IP on May 14 in Coors), but he took the loss, anyway.

INJURIES
Houston
– Jose Valverde (strained calf), 15-day DL, returns this week; Doug Brocail (strained left hamstring), 15-day DL, returns late may, or he could need surgery; Geoff Geary (right biceps tendinitis), early June maybe; Kazuo Matsui (strained right hamstring), 15-day DL, mid-June.

Colorado – Whole bunch of guys with various injuries.

SHINE, SHINE, THE LIGHT OF GOOD WORKS SHINE
This past week saw the departure of TZ heartthrob Alyson Footer from regular coverage of the Astros online, as she took a front office job with the Houston team, a job with a description some of us don’t really understand, or care to. All we know is no more Alyson on astros.com, and there definitely is something wrong with that.

Some people won’t believe it when I say a good many All-American red-blooded SnS-ers love Alyson not because of her long legs and shapely figure, or those flowing, curly, luxurious red locks; rather, we love her for her mind. Really, I am not kidding.

Oh, we like all the other stuff, too, but that is lagniappe. For several years, Alyson Footer has written incisively and clearly about the Houston Astros, day to day, and she never tried to inject herself into the story line or co-opt any of her readers/critics or turn everything that happened on or off the field into some facile, self-serving psychological study. She just told us what we saw, and added in some stuff we didn’t see but she did, in order to give our mental picture of the team some depth of field, some perspective with which to try and think about what we saw going on before us. Her insights into Cecil Cooper this season, as an example, have greatly informed my own thinking about the Astros skipper and all the shenanigans surrounding him. I still jump to stupid, unsupportable conclusions, all the time; but I believe I jump to far fewer than I would otherwise, thanks mostly to Alyson Footer.

Another reason I think we took to Alyson is we sense she is something like us, that she has a sort of skewed worldview colored by natural skepticism, like we do (her response in the farewell thread only reinforced this impression.) We could see that she was in possession of a sensitive internal bullshit meter, and not hesitant to comment about whomever or whatever set it off, whenever it went off.

Personally, Alyson reminds me a lot of a female drinking buddy I had in high school and college. My friend was a girl, yes, and pretty; but she had so much depth of character and intelligence and humor that I actually managed to look at her as a compadre first, a partner in crime, sort of. Most guys will tell you, that’s a big deal, not thinking of a woman, any woman, first (at least partly) as an object of desire.

This girl friend of mine and I had great fun over the years and managed to never fall into a physical relationship, although I sure as hell wanted to sometimes, especially after a lot of drinking. But I kept it to myself, out of respect for her and the person she was, and out of respect for the unique understanding we had.

Respect. That is what we have for you, Alyson Footer. For being smart. For being funny. For not lying to us, or letting your ego take over the clear vision you had of what the hell was going on out there. Alyson, I was joking in the farewell thread, trying to out-creepy some of my fellow denizens in the TZ (a difficult thing to do, let me tell you.)

These are my real words of pizmotality.  My admiration for you is immense, and I respect you tremendously; for the reporter you are, for the person you are. Good luck in your new venture, I have no doubt you will do well. And I’ll go out drinking with you anytime, no strings attached.

THE WEATHER
Who cares? The roof’ll be closed anyway.

Astros split the series, 2-2. Cooper retains his job, for now.

You burn me up I’m a cigarette
You hold my hand I begin to sweat
You make me nervous
Ooh, I’m nervous

It must be real bad karma
For this to be my dharma
With you

********

Somnolence On A Saturday Night

Posted on May 30, 2009 by Dark Star in Game Recaps

May 30, 2009

Pirates 7, Astros 4

Astros official site
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

W: Karstens L: Wandy S: Capps

PITTSBURGH (SnS) – The hapless Astros fell to the happy-ass Pirates in pretty PNC Park here Saturday evening, 7-4. The Pirates jumped to a lead in the first, with base hits falling everywhere, and they never looked back. The Astros attempted at a dramatic ninth inning rally when the Pirates bullpen appeared to start coming apart at the seams, but at no time did the comeback seem like anything other than a perfunctory effort, and never really possible. And predictably, it fell short.

One-Game Win Streak is: Over.

Wandy was: Wild. Wafting the ball in there. He got walloped, then was wiped out.

Backe is: Back. Beat up. Bullshit.

Offense is: Off. Out to lunch. Only hitting on three cylinders. Out of gas. Asthetically offensive.

Highlights of the game came from JD. First an Iron City Light reference, reminding this reporter of some wasted nights down in the Mon Valley, out in Coal Center and Charleroi, and like that. Then the Astros color man served up a Roger Whitaker reset, which you just don’t get on many MLB telecasts. Deshaies saved me, because the game otherewise basically sucked.

And it went downhill from there.

Alyson – sweet, departed Alyson – was on the post-game show. So there was that.

Anyway, be sure and tune in to tomorrow’s series finale. Ennui will eventually ensue.

********

The Pantywaists Of North Chicago

Posted on May 15, 2009 by Dark Star in Game Recaps

Friday May 15, 2009

Astros 0, Cubs 0

W: No One L: FTCubs

chicago-radar-051520091 

CHICAGO (SnS) – The scheduled game was called this afternoon because a few raindrops were falling in Wrigleyville, and FTC management didn’t want to take a chance that female fans would get their hair messed up, or that the male fans might accidently get a bath.

They even heard there might be whitecaps out on the lake and everything.  You’d think it was a fucking hurricane.

The gaMe wIll be made up on JuLy 30 at 1:20 p.m.  Where will it be mAde Up?  OKay, the commissionEr’s office says at a site to be dEtermined.

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eCubs.  Yes.

**********

Astros vs. Rockies May 12-14, 2009

Posted on May 12, 2009 by Dark Star in Series Previews

SEASONS IN HELL Vol. I, No. 2

BUSTIN’ ROCKS IN THE HOT SUN

Astros (14-17) @ Rockies (12-18)

May 12-14, 2009

Tuesday

7:40 p.m. CDT

FOX

Wednesday

7:40 p.m. CDT

FOX

Thursday

2:10 p.m. CDT

FOX

Berkman-Cooper Overdrive, a/k/a The Houston Smashstros, roll on down the highway into Denver Tuesday after sweeping the team from St. James of Southern California over the weekend.  It was maybe the worst drubbing of a bunch of Spanish priests since ol’ Three Finger Monteczuma was still dealing that splitter of his from the Big Mound.  The Astros will be looking at taking care of business this week against Colorado.  Hey, you may think you saw the Astros at their best this past weekend, but Carlos Lee and Miguel Tejada say you ain’t seen nothin’ yet.  Berkman says he needs to get himself back in the lineup, so we should be looking out for number one (seven).

The Rockies, by the way, start their early-season evening games in Coors at 6:40 p.m. Mountian (local) Time, instead of 7:10 or 7:30 or whatever.  This is probably due to weather concerns more than altruism, but it means fans in the Central Time Zone save an hour waiting to watch the game on FSSW (Fox Sucks in the Southwest.)  It is the least the Rockies can do, playing as they do in that bizarre time-warpish crack of existence known as the Mountain Time Zone (UTC-7).

Outside of Denver, Phoenix and/or El Paso, what the fuck is in the Mountain Time Zone, anyway?  Turns out, a whole lot of places named Utah and Idaho and Wyoming (“So what country do you want to go to?”  “Wyoming.”  “Sal, Wyoming’s not a country.”)  And chunks of other non-essential states like Nebraska and Kansas and the Dakotas, North and South.  In Mexico, they call it Pacific Time.  In Canada, they say, “It’s aboot time.”

Except for the Navajo Nation, Arizona, otherwise located in the Mountain Time Zone, does not observe Daylight Savings Time.  What the fuck?  Do the backasswards sun-dried fruits out there think Daylight Savings is somehow tied to the civil rights movement?  It appears that, once again, the Native American tribes are more in tune with nature than some palefaces we could mention.  Anyway, this non-observation of the obvious is why, even though they start their weekday evening home games at literally the same time as the Rockies, the Snakes games don’t start here until 8:40, instead of 7:40, like they do from Denver, which is in the same fucking time zone.  Confusing, yes?  Where is Eric Van Däniken when you need him?

You know what?  Fuck the fucking Diamondbacks.  Fuck Eric Van Däniken, too, for that matter. What the fuck do I care about a fifth place team full of nobodies, or a fat little Dutchman yammering about ancient astronauts?  Anyway, they are some other Series Preview writer’s problem now, not mine.

PITCHING MATCHUPS
Tuesday May 12 (7:40 p.m.)
Houston
Felipé Paulino (1-2, 5.23)
This year’s receipient of the Official Cecil Cooper Mind-Fuck Award™, Michael Bourn Division.  Paulino looked really good in a couple of early starts, so naturally Skip sent him to the bullpen, where he got blowed up real good.

Colorado Ubaldo Jimenez (2-4, 5.45)
Ubaldo is a tantalizing prospect/up-and-coming talent with a really fun name to say.  He looks terrible at times, at other times terrific (his last two starts, specifically.)

Wednesday May 13 (7:40 p.m.)
Houston
Mike Hampton (1-3, 4.91)
He’s had a rough go of it the last few times out.  I am beginning to wonder how long he will last.

Colorado Jason Marquis (4-2, 3.92)
Well known as a thermonuclear hot-head on the mound, Jason Marquis has battled himself his whole career – his potential is huge, but he is his own worst enemy.  In addition, he is a world-class prick.  But someone in Colorado has got him to settle down (so far), and he has quietly emerged as the Rockies ace.

Thursday May 14 (2:10 p.m.)
Houston
Wandy Rodriguez (3-2, 1.80)
Wandy is Houston’s best pitcher, home or road, but he still carries a bit of a stigma as a hometown pitcher.  Doing well in Coors ought to drive a nail into that coffin of that notion.

Colorado Jason Hammel (0-1, 5.40)
Jason Hammel has been a spot starter for the Rockies this season, stretching out the rotation when the games start piling up.  The most notable thing about this former Rays farmhand is he is 6’ 6” and gangly.  Sometimes on his follow-thru he looks like the fucking Eiffel Tower out there.

INJURIES
Houston (Dutch) – Brandon Backe
(strained intracoastal muscle, it gives him canal vision), 15-day DL, may return mid-May (supposedly), residents of Togo and Ulan Bator care passionately about this, no one else does; Jose Van Däniken (strained calf, apparently it broke out of the corral at Lee’s ranch and El Caballo chased it down and jumped on it, causing it to strain), 15-day DL, returns mid-June; Humberto Quackenbosch (shoulder), 15-day DL, returns mid-May, J.R. Towles wishes to dispute this diagnosis; Doug Broke-Hale (strained left hamstring), 15-day DL, returns late may, Broke-Hale is starting to remind me of my wife and I in Sam’s Club. . . we have the cart piled high and teetering with essentials like a 500-pack of Totino’s Pizza Rolls and four gallons of mayonnaise and stuff like that, then we hit an unseen bump in the aisle and shit starts falling off of both sides; Lance Van Däniken (sore left wrist), day-to-day-to-day-to-day-to-day-to-day, meanwhile Gunther sits in the three spot, like a Poi Dog, pondering.

Colorado – Taylor Buchholz (strained credulity), 60-day DL, due back whenever, just another one of the family jewels Purpura foolishly traded away; Jeff Francis (torn and frayed something-or-other), 60-day DL, due back next spring, or the next, anyway in Mountain Daylight Time; Franklin Morales (dazed and confused for so long it’s not true), 15-day DL, due back late May, he’s been hurt and abused, tellin’ all his lies; Ryan Speier (crashed and burned), 15-day DL, due back sometime, when in doubt, he whips it out, he’s got himself a busted hand, it’s a free-for-all; Troy Tulowitzki (left quadriceps strain. . . quadriceps = a leg muscle), day by day, day by day, oh sweet lord. . .

A DEATH IN THE FAMILY
The season is just short of a quarter of the way over.  The season is still young, there is plenty of time left; time to regroup, to surprise, to upset the status quo, to run the startled leaders down from behind – in short, there is time to right wrongs, to fix what is broken, to tune up what isn’t broken, and to break through the walls this team has built around itself, to climb out of the hole this team has put itself in.  We all know, from recent past experience, that it is way too early to count the Astros out, to look beseechingly at the heavens and. . . what?  To throw our hands up in exasperation and anger and, needing an outlet for our rapidly backing up bile, to explode in bitter, bilious, righteous invective, aiming our enmity at anyone and/or everyone associated with the Astros who we decide is responsible for our anguish?

Well, it is too early for that, this season; there are those who will tell you it is too early for that, ever.  “Life is too short,” they will tell you.  Well, yes it is.  Yes it fucking is.

The NL Central Division, at this admittedly early point in the season, is beginning to shake out into a discernable pattern.

 

W

L

%

GB

St. Louis

20

12

.625

—

Milwaukee

18

14

.563

2.0

Chicago

17

14

.548

2.5

Cincinnati

17

14

.548

2.5

         
         

Houston

14

17

.452

5.5

Pittsburgh

12

19

.387

7.5

 

It is not likely this is how things will end up – I don’t imagine the Dickities will stay out of the second division for very long, for one thing – but in a general sense I think what we see here is pretty much what we will be seeing for some time, for this season and for several seasons after that.  The Cardinals, FTCubs, and Brewers are and will be the class of the division – “class” being a term I am using loosely here – and the Skyliners, the Gay Buccaroos, and the Astros will mostly be bringing up the rear, so to speak.  Any of the bottom three (well, except for the Pirates, maybe) might get it together and climb up into the top tier of the division for awhile, as the Reds are presently, but the stay will almost assuredly be short-lived.  This is probably the reality for awhile, get used to it.

 

Having followed the Astros for forty years, I am familiar with rooting for a team that is not going anywhere anytime soon.  For the majority of their history, the Astros have been there, done that.

 

It is not a terrible existence, pulling for a loser.  One might consider oneself lucky to have a team to pull for at all.  I remember the soul-deep, foreign, scarifying fear that suddenly crept in when John McMullen, in the midst of negotiations regarding a stadium lease or something or other back in the 1980s, suddenly and casually threatened to move the team.  God.  I think I really understood then, for the first time, what the phrase “the banality of evil” means.

 

There is always hope.  As long as the owner and/or management appear to care/be half-ass trying, there is hope.  But even when, by mid-May, or the All Star Break at least, those hopes get dashed just like, deep-down, you knew they would, even then there are so many rewards, just watching the baseball.  As a fan who, like many others, has become accustomed to pennant races and national attention over the last several years, I sometimes have to remind myself of my baseball fan roots, of where I came from.  When I can do that, when I can remind myself of who I am, baseball fan-wise, well. . . then whining about this or that move or trying to outthink the front office or tell them what they should be doing instead of what they are doing – it all just seems silly, and stupid, and pointless.

 

And then I become myself again, or, as it sometimes seems, myself for the first time; because my brand of baseball fandom is such that I often entirely forget the lessons learned previously, as a new season’s hope starts to carry me away.  I forget for a little while, anyway; until my baseball mortality creeps back in and messes up my reverie.  In the end, I simply cannot outdream what my fate is.  And my baseball fate is to follow this wonderful, wacky team that ends up disappointing me as often as not.  And I have no regrets.  No regrets at all.  And I wonder, once again, at the sweet bittersweet-ness that comes from loving this team, and this game.

 

For some reason thinking of love and baseball and the Astros in this context reminds me of Knoxville: Summer, 1915, the elegiac prose-poem chosen to preface James Agee’s last novel, A Death in the Family:

 

On the rough wet grass of the back yard my father and mother have spread quilts.  We all lie there, my father, my mother, my uncle, my aunt, and I too am lying there.  First we were sitting up, then one of us lay down, and then we all lay down, on our stomachs, or on our sides, or on our backs, and they have kept on talking. They are not talking much, and the talk is quiet, of nothing in particular, of nothing at all in particular, of nothing at all.  The stars are wide and alive, they seem each like a smile of great sweetness, and they seem very near. All my people are larger bodies than mine, quiet, with voices gentle and meaningless like the voices of sleeping birds. One is an artist, he is living at home. One is a musician, she is living at home. One is my mother who is good to me. One is my father who is good to me. By some chance, here they are, all on this earth; and who shall ever tell the sorrow of being on this earth, lying, on quilts, on the grass, in a summer evening, among the sounds of the night. May God bless my people, my uncle, my aunt, my mother, my good father, oh, remember them kindly in their time of trouble; and in the hour of their taking away.

After a little I am taken in and put to bed. Sleep, soft smiling, draws me unto her: and, those receive me, who quietly treat me, as one familiar and well-beloved, in that home: but will not, oh, will not, not now, not ever; but will not ever tell me who I am.

THE WEATHER
I see a bad moon rising, followed by four strong winds, and then a hard rain’s a-gonna fall.  It sure got cold after the rain fell, then, here comes the sun.  Sunny days, oh ye children of the sun.  But wherever I go, a black cloud’s following me.  I think it’s gonna rain down down, down on me, so I howled at my ma through the driving rain.  Here in my car I feel safest of all, windshield wipers slapping time, out on the New Jersey turnpike, ridin’ on a wet night, beneath the refineries glow is when I saw it.  The marquee moon.  Just waiting.

 

Otherwise, it will be partly cloudy and mild.

Well, I sure take it with me wherever I go
And you might like to see it but it never does show
Like a wind in the valley that never does blow
Like the grass in the back you never did mow

It’s a black sky formin’ on the ridge
It’s a woman waitin’ standin’ on the bridge
It’s the price that you pay for walkin’ on the ledge
It’s everything you do and nothin’ that you did

**********

A Real Mother For Ya

Posted on May 10, 2009 by Dark Star in Game Recaps

Sunday May 10, 2009

Astros 12, Padres 5

WP: Oswalt (1-2) LP: Geer (0-1)

Alyson Footer (in tight slacks)

San Diego Union-Tribune

HOUSTON (SnS) – After screwing around for two games, scraping together little leads against the visiting San Diego Padres and then blowing them or almost blowing them. . . two days of bullpen meltdowns and complicated managerial decisions consisting primarily of “no, no, no” and “yes, yes, yes”, the Houston Astros went out this afternoon and dropped a motherfucking soup bone on the visiting Friars of South California, winning 12-5 and securing a series sweep before a delighted crowd of Astros partisans bedecked in pink and various combinations of brick red and black. Carlos Lee, Pudge Rodriguez and Miguel Tejada were the big bats for Houston (Lance Berkman sat out his third straight game), helping starter Roy Oswalt to his first win of 2009.

A Mother’s Day crowd of 30,023 at the Juice Can saw erstwhile ace Oswalt (0-2. 4.26) take the hill against the Padres Josh Geer (0-0, 3.96), a Dallas native and Rice University alum. After the first two games of this series, when neither offense distinguished itself or even showed much in the way of vital signs, a casual observer could be forgiven for assuming this contest, too, would be a low-scoring affair.

Au contraire, ma mère. With Berkman out of commission again, middle of the order big guns Lee (3-4, 4 RBIs, HR) and Tejada (3-5, 4 RBIs, HR) wielded their mighty pink bats and picked up the slack, while Pudge-Rod chipped in big time from the 7-hole (4-4. 2 RBI, 3B, HR). This gave Oswalt some unaccustomed run support, and he made the most of it, scattering six hits – including two 2-run home runs – over a lackluster six innings to up his record this season to 1-2. Hopefully, the win will help Roy keep a grip on his sanity – he mentioned in an interview that part of his trouble this season may be that, “I’ve kind of lost my mind.” That and, from time to time, control of his curve ball.

The Astros got things going the bottom of the first, startling everyone by scoring three runs, highlighted by a two-run jack by Tejada. They threatened to score more, but left two men on when 8th place hitter and TZ demi-god Jeff Keppinger grounded out to end the inning.

After scoring two more in the second, the mighty Houstons struck again in the fourth, finally chasing SD starter Geer by adding on 4 runs, highlighted by an RBI double by super-hot El Caballo Lee and a run-scoring triple onto Tal’s Hill by Pudge-Rod. I really hope Geer’s mom wasn’t at the game today, because her son didn’t pitch very well, and got hisself keel-hauled. No una vista bonita, mi madre.

Oswalt, on the other hand, cruised through the first five innings, only hitting a bump in the 4th by surrendering a two-run dong to SD LF Chase Headley. After Scott Hairston followed up the homer by drilling a double to left, one started to get that “uh-oh” feeling one gets nowadays when Roy-o is on the mound; but the Koskiusko Konundrum killed any further spreading of negative waves by striking out Kevin Kouzmanoff and Nick Hundley in quick succession to close out the frame.

The Mississippi Mystery ran into trouble again in the sixth, however. In possession of a 9-2 lead now, Oswalt opened the inning by giving up a single to Padres SS Luis Gonzalez, followed by a monster home run to left-center by Adrian Gonzalez. He regrouped to retire the next two Padre batters, then gave up a single to PH Brian Giles, and a walk to Nick Hundley. Fighting hard now, Oswalt battled ex-Astro Chris Burke (who, by the way, made two errors at SS in a solid contribution to his former team’s victory) to a 2-2 count, before getting the former golden boy of the stathead types to pop out weakly into foul territory behind third, ending the threat of any further damage.

Oswalt was done after that, but a bullpen combination of Tim Byrdak, Alberto Arias, and (mostly) Chris Sampson held the fort, the only blemish being a quick, long home run off of Byrdak in the top of the 7th by San Diego leadoff hitter Jody Gerut. The Astros played add-on in the 8th, highlighted by a triple by Gunther Pence, a 2-run homer by Lee, and a solo shot by Rodriguez. Extraneous, yes, but fun to watch, anyway.  War es nicht, meine Mutter?

After a well-deserved day off on Monday, the Astros head to the rarified environs of Rockie-land to take on the Colorados, starting Tuesday evening, Mountain Time.

(The writer apologizes if there are any gaps or inconsistencies in this report, as he was watching the game while also a.) helping his niece take a PolySci final on-line and, b.) eating about 30 oysters on the half shell – washed down by 1 or 2 beers, approximately – during the Mother’s Day cookout/fish fry.   Talis est vita , meus matris.)

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