The votes are in and the winners have been chosen. The month of June has been an interesting one for the Houston Blood and Mud as individual performances led to a continued climb upwards towards the mark of average amongst the many. The infamous .500 mark, elusive as the team strived earnestly to obtain the goal. Keep working fellas, you’ll get there eventually. One can only hope.
For the June Spike Award, the candidates were Geoff Blum, Jeff Fulchino and Darin Erstad. For the June Star Award, the candidates were Michael Bourn, Miguel Tejada and Lance Berkman. Let’s see who won:
June 2009 Spike Award
This month’s Spike Award winner is a guy who stepped up for the team in many ways, one of which was in the leadership category. So much so that his influence as a manager-like came shining through when he took charge of a potential volatile situation and provided direction and proper management to a young player in order to keep a first inning mistake from escalating into a full blown mess.

The "Boss" takes time to speak to his boys around the batting cages. It's what a manager does.
Geoff Blum is his name, leadership is his game. He’s also involved himself in some memorable Cub-killer situations. In said situations, Blum delivered the death shot each time in walk-off fashion for the Chicago nine. Many wait for the Cubbie meltdown in August, but for the month of June, Blum may of provided the percursor of things to come. That he later mentioned how this sort of treatment against the Cubs was fun for his Chicago southside friends probably earned him extra points in terms of Cub hatedom. Yeah, I’d say he’s a really good Spike winner, so take a bow Mr. Blum, our June 2009 Spike Award winner.
Honorable mention: Jeff Fulchino, a pickup by GM Ed Wade that has paid off, made a run for the Spike Award with his consistent and bullpen steadying performance for June. I’m sure many would question a fan site that would give an award to a middle reliever, but that’s just how we roll.
June 2009 Star Award

Turn on an inside fastball? Check!
Hey, no Wandy Rodriquez three-peat? Hardly, he wasn’t even in the running. But in a rare situation (rare because we’ve never seen it before, nevermind our awards have been around for only three months, so there is that) our last month Spike Award winner made the leap from hard nose wall banging spectacular catch making player to all around good performer for June.
Michael Bourn, having to cringe at his manager’s MVP pronouncement, kept a cool head about him and went about his business of being the leadoff man… nay, breakout player his GM put on him early in spring. A consistent leadoff man doing his job well bodes well for the type of middle of the lineup hitters that the Astros feature. Michael has managed to keep Cecil Cooper from scratching his name off the leadoff spot in the lineup. In fact, finally Cooper is trying to manage the young player instead of just react to so-so performances with the bat as a reason to bench him in favor of a veteran. It is all so much easier for the Astros when Bourn is performing as he has. Keep it up kid!
Honorable Mention: Lance Berkman has had a steady climb upwards from well below the Mendoza line. It’s taken some consistent multi-hit games and some monster offensive nights. The month of June for 2009 will be the month that most will look back on and say “That is when Lance turned it around!” Bank on it!

There are no great teams in Major League Baseball. Sure, the Dodgers and Red Sox appear to be running away with the the National League West and the American League East, respectively. And certainly, there are T-ball teams with a better chance of making the playoffs than the Washington Nationals. But other than the six division leaders, there are 23 additional teams within 10 games of being in the playoffs. So that’s 29 out of 30 teams with a shot at the playoffs. Twenty-three of those teams are at worst 5 games below .500. Everyone is “in”, at least on June 23rd. In theory, it should make for great baseball, with every team feeling like they are in it each and every game. So the season should be chock full of moments like this past weekend when eleven games were won in the last at-bat.
What’s with all this socializing going on? or Two thumbs up for Footer Tweets

About this column: We had to do it folks, sorry. We just could not bear the thought of stuff like this appearing on the Talkzone any more. It was killing our bandwidth and some of you (you know who you are) were encouraging this behavior by our author. So we’ve given Noe his own little sandbox to play in and you can count on his ramblings to appear here from now on. You can thank us later. Plus, Noe is encouraging your comments on his thought here if you’d like. That is a dumb idea but it was the only way we could convince him to let go of the TZ.
May 2009 Spike Award
month’s Spike Award winner is none other than Michael Bourn. Tossing his body around the field all month long making some spectacular plays out in centerfield. At times it seemed he would not be able to avoid the DL unlike just about every other Astro player this year. That includes last month’s Spike Award winner too. Bourn has been every bit the break out player on the team that was predicted by GM Ed Wade, although methinks the break out was probably pointed towards his offense and not his defense. But defense isn’t lost around here, the young man is just simply outstanding out there taking care of the hard plays with ease and the impossible plays with awe inspired yells of “hell yeah!” from the SnS.
May 2009 Star Award
we no more create the Star Award and we get our first ever two time winner. Wandy Rodriquez beat out some great competition on individual performance this month to carry away the helmet award. Wandy, although struggling a little bit towards the end of the month, still had enough great performances in May to keep himself front and center as the best Astros player on the squad. What can we say other than we have no intention of renaming the award to the “Wandy”, but who could blame us if we did?
This
As we round into the last week of the first month of the MLB season, it’s time for SpikesnStars to look back and select our “Player of the Month”. The SnS APOTM is selected not only for good to great play on and maybe off the field, but for many other factors, Spikes’nStar’s style. First order of business for us though was naming this award to add significance to the trophy we might shell out some cayshe to purchase and award to our selection. Would it be the coveted Zipper award? How about giving someone an Arky? How about the getting a Craig? Something has to ring a bell soon enough for us to go out and have the trophy manufactured for us. Give it some thought and get back to us in the TalkZone on that one.
Wandy “Eny” Rodriquez – where has this been for the last few years? Wandy is pitching like a man who finally gets it and what better way to show we all notice than to give him our award! Perhaps it will work as a reverse karma thing though so maybe he won’t accept it. Wise man. Any way, home or away, Wandy is pitching really great and if he finishes the week strong, he will have to be the front-runner for this recognition. Right? Well, if anything he is perhaps the one Houston Astros who should be lauded for showing up this month.
Michael Bourn – when Astros GM Ed Wade said emphatically that this would be Michael Bourn’s breakout year, he raised some eyebrows. None more noteworthy than the Astros manager Cecil Cooper. Really? Breakout year? Michael Bourn? It’s hard to have a breakout year offensively hitting #8 and had it not been for the early exit to the bench because of some sort of health issue for Matsui, Bourn would still be hitting in the next to the pitcher spot in the lineup. But when given the chance, Bourn delivered solid play with the top of the order assignment and has remained there now for a series of games. Oh by the way, Michael is also providing spectacular centerfield play on defense, not a small thing for a winning team formula. Cooper, the ever sly one, says “maybe, maybe not” in terms of whether Bourn stays up in the lineup or not. Nice of Cooper to keep playing head games with the one player tabbed as the “breakout player” by his boss. Be that as it may, would our SnS award help the young man finally turn the corner in Cooper’s eyes? One would hope we do not have that much power, but if Joe Schmoe walking the concourse at the MMPUS can talk Drayton McLane into firing his employees, then anything can happen.