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  • News (Page 63)

WALKING ON MY GRAVE

Posted on April 7, 2014 by Dark Star in Featured, News, Series Previews

HOUSTON ASTROS (3-4) vs. TORONTO BLUE JAYS (3-4)

Rogers Centre
One Blue Jays Way
Toronto, Ontario, M5V 1J1
America’s Hat

One good thing about being a really bad team with not much hope of getting any better any time soon – when you start the season against two mid-to upper-level AL opponents and come out of it 3-4 … even if it was all home games, that feels pretty damn good.

On the other hand, if you go 3-4 to open the season and are at best a mediocre-to-average team, in the AL East … well, you are probably going to finish in fifth place, anyway. If you have spent a lot of money – or loonies and toonies, as Adam Dunn once called Canadian dollars – over the last few years, trying unsuccessfully to vault yourself into the AL East conversation, to no avail … that isn’t so good, either. And, if you look around and realize you play your home games in a pretentious little country with a huge inferiority complex, namely Canada, well … that is three strikes, and you’re fucking oot.

Apparently, Alan Ashby quit his announcing gig with the Blue Jays to join Bill Brown on Astros TV broadcasts and replace the departing Jim Deshaies. Prior to last season. TV broadcasts, hmm? I wouldn’t know.

The Blue Jays start all the games in this series at 6:07. Not 6:00, or 6:05, or 6:10, but 6:07. They also misspell the name of their stadium. Must be one of those Celsius-Fahrenheit things.

Their street name is pretty cool, though.

***************

SCHEDULE
Tuesday April 8
Houston vs. Toronto 6:07 p.m. CDT

Wednesday April 9
Houston vs. Toronto 6:07 p.m. CDT

Thursday April 10
Houston vs. Toronto 6:07 p.m. CDT

***************

I can’t stay knowing what’s going down
I can’t stay, darkness on the edge of town
Streetwise kids in an act of defiance
Out to defeat what’s already behind us
Rattle and shake their political cans
Giving directions without any plans

It is late at night when the darker thoughts come in. I am usually asleep by then; but every once in a while, I’m not.

I used to wonder what it was like, to be older. Well, not too much, to tell the truth … One of the greatest gifts the benevolent creator ever bestowed upon me was the self-awareness to know that wherever I was and whatever I was doing at any given time when I was young, it was probably one of the best times I’d ever have. I knew it right then, while it was happening. So I never had to worry, later on, that I didn’t realize how good I really had it, way back when. Oh, yes I did. Oh, yes I did.

I remember my brother and I had this ongoing conversation/running joke when we were in our late teens-early twenties. We would be sitting in our lawn chairs on the beach, a big 50-something quart Igloo cooler between us. The sun would be high, and glistening off of our coconut oil covered skin. The deep copper color of our hides was made even deeper when filtered through the polarized Wayfarers I always had on my face, back then. There were attractive young women in skimpy bathing suits and bikinis all around us. Actually, a lot of people would be around us … some were doing what my brother and I were doing, just kicking back, and being reflective; others would be throwing Frisbees back and forth, or just walking along the edge of the water, flip-flops in one hand, canned beer in a foam coo-zee in the other. There might be a few Sunfish sailboats skipping across the waves a little ways out and, closer in, people doing various things in the shallower water. And, all the while, the waves from the Gulf of Mexico would come washing in, in rhythm, one after another; and one could hear the noise the waves made, all along … over, in, and in between the noise from the car stereo, blaring out the ‘Stones or Aerosmith or Van Halen or whoever was being played on KLOL-FM that day.

The scene was a near-perfect portrait of what the late 1970’s in America were like, for me and my kind, anyway.

And somewhere in there, after we were both half lit, my brother would lean over to me and say, “I wonder what we’d be doing right now if we lived in Russia? Or Czechoslovakia?”

It wasn’t an idle question, entirely. The people on my mother’s side had only relatively recently immigrated to these shores. My maternal grandmother, who was Czech, was first generation American. My maternal grandfather came to this country at the age of 15, from Russia.  So, theoretically, if one or another thing had gone a little differently along the way, my brother and I might not have ever been there at all that day, on that beach, enjoying the all those wonderful aural, visual and tactile sensations. We might have been born and lived instead in one motherland or another, back in Eastern Europe, perhaps under one of the stultifying Communist puppet regimes that were so popular out that way, back in that time. We would have trudged through our mundane, oppressive lives, never having known about coconut oil or babes in bikinis or listening to the Stones and the ocean’s roar simultaneously, slouched in a lawn chair, out in the shining, glistening sun.

I would lean over to my brother and reply, “Probably shoveling coal somewhere, in the snow.”

And we would both laugh. We knew we had it damn good, then and there. Even if we were a bit haughty about it.

***************

PITCHING MATCHUPS
Tuesday – HOU Obie Oberholzer (LHP 0-1, 4.76) vs. TOR Mark Buehrle (LHP 1-0, 0.00)

Wednesday – HOU Lucas Harrell RHP 0-1, 15.00) vs. TOR Brandon Morrow (RHP 0-1, 7.20)

Thursday – HOU Dallas Keuchel (LHP 0-1, 7.20) vs. TOR Dustin McGowan (RHP 0-1, 13.50)

***************

I can’t stay staring down a .44
I can’t stay dying on the killing floor
A man in blue and he’s drawing a gun
A child in the shadows, too scared to run
A crack in the mirror of a teenage dream
Like a lost generation on LSD

On the odd occasion that I am awake now, late at night, in the strange hours, as Loren Eiseley called them … the strange hours, when the darker thoughts come creeping in, when men have their most personal conversations with themselves … when, after having gone ‘round all day or all year with a sunny outlook, and spreading good cheer everywhere they go, they will that same night, in the strange hours, question their very purpose, their very being, whether the time they are spending here has any meaning at all. Would it even matter a bit if they did not wake up the next morning, and go about their positive rounds, spreading their good cheer?

I think it would matter. As I have grown up and matured a little, I have noticed that I have slowly moved away from my younger days, when I surrounded myself with cynical and negative or at least extremely fatalistic folks. Back then, I kind of looked askance at my perpetually cheerful peers. Maybe I thought one had to be moody and dark to really experience the meaning of life. It wasn’t always easy for me, feigning the moroseness. To be honest, moodiness and darkness were not part of my natural disposition. I had a reservoir of it in me that I could draw on, but I wasn’t inclined to immerse myself in it. I think I have come to realize I am something like my father was, in that way. He could be very dark, but normally only in brief, episodic bouts. For the most part he was funny, and he appreciated life’s absurdities quite a bit.

My father didn’t suffer fools gladly, but he didn’t mind being foolish himself from time to time, if it served a greater comedic purpose. He was a wonderful, truly gifted storyteller and physical caricaturist. It was his Irish heritage, I guess. All I know is, my brothers and I would beg him to tell us stories – about his youth, about amusing people he’d come across along the way, about family members and friends … from the time we were kids until we had grown up, we were always requesting new yarns, or asking for a replay of our favorites. If he was in the mood, he might launch into an intricate characterization, about one of our uncles, say … Perhaps our Uncle Don, who was a decent guy and had good qualities and all, but who could also be hopelessly pretentious. My dad would start telling us about the time Uncle Don, normally a chinos and t-shirt and Converse Chuck Taylors kind of guy, got involved in a small community theater in his town in the 1970s, and soon started going around everywhere in a black turtleneck sweater and horn-rimmed glasses, with a serious look on his face, and smoking a pipe. It was very much like some of the townsfolk/thespians in the film Waiting For Guffman, only this was many years before that fine movie came out.

You would had to have known my Uncle Don, and have seen my dad’s characterization of him, puffing thoughtfully on his pipe and scratching his chin while struggling to elucidate his ideas on method acting, to really get it. All I can tell you is, it slayed us. He would have my brothers and I literally rolling around on the floor in helpless laughter. The man had a gift.

It was a shame that the darkness in him won out in the end. I don’t know everything about that, but I know that darkness must have been very powerful; to be able to overwhelm all the good and fun that was in him, also.

When I was younger, I was harder on him than I should have been. I had the haughtiness of youth going for me, and I thought less of him for his failures, back then.

I don’t this less of him for it anymore, I don’t think. I am older now.  I know how fucking hard it all is.

***************

INJURIES
HOU – Nobody important. Dexter Fowler has been under the weather, but is supposed to return for this series.

TOR – J.A. Happ, LHP is on the 15-day DL with a sore back; Casey Janssen, RHP is on the 15-dqy DL with a sore back; José Reyes, SS in on the 15-day DL with a sore hamstring.

***************

I can’t stay knowing what’s going down
I can’t stay, darkness on the edge of town
The brain’s still twitching but the eyes are closed
My best friend’s dying of an overdose
A red light flares unaccounted for
It’s happening now and it’s happened before

When one is young, one simply doesn’t have a long enough experience of living to see the incremental good that accrues in one’s favor, just by getting up every day and not being a negative prick about everything. When we were young, it was so easy to fall into a facile, faux-existentialist stance – you know, the live fast-die young attitude. Cheap fatalism. Don’t worry about the future; you might not have one anyway. It felt so cool to be that way, just wake up every day and roll yourself out of the biscuit and pull on some clothes, and go out and face the world like a junior Jean-Paul Sartre, or maybe a still wet-behind-the-ears Albert Camus, at least. I shudder when I think of that now; but it felt real enough then. The sheer stupidity of youth – I don’t suppose very many of us were entirely immune to it. I certainly wasn’t.

And now … and now. I go to bed earlier, and soberer, for one thing. So I miss the strange hours, mostly, which is probably just as well. I get pretty bored pretty quickly with darkness and brooding and lightweight existentialism these days. I realize, too, that by this point, I have mostly surrounded myself with cheerful people, some of them relentlessly so. Good for them. I tell them stories, and make them laugh. They make me feel good, and lift me up with their energy. I am not a Pollyanna and never will be, but I have a longer view with which to operate from now. And I see the value in living life in a good and cheerful way.

I remember at my father’s funeral several years ago, so many people came up to me afterward, just wanting to talk about him a bit. It was odd in a way, because he had flamed out rather spectacularly some years before, and had left town – his hometown, the scene of all his triumphs, and tragedies. And he had never once come back. Until that day, when we buried him, I mean.

But various old colleagues and friends, male and female, some of whom I knew, and many who I didn’t know at all … all these people came up, and introduced themselves, and then said a few things … how it sure was a shame about the old man, he was a brilliant guy, etc., etc. Too bad things ended up the way they did. And then, to a person almost, they would begin to lighten up a bit. You could see some brightness come back into the features, maybe a small smile, and before long I would hear one or a couple of tales about my father either doing something hilarious or, in a few cases, quite good and altruistic, for all these people in his universe I had never really had any idea of. It was a little overwhelming to me; but I stayed until the last person left. I listened to every anecdote, or recollection of an act of kindness, and I didn’t hurry anyone along. I had a sense it was good for these people who knew him and in some cases loved him, to work back from their sorrow to a state of gentle happiness, thinking about how much fun or just how good the old man was, when he wanted to be.

I think it was good for me to hear it, too. And it makes me smile, thinking of it now.

My father’s life, from the beginning of it to the end, was not all there was to his story. I can see that now. The fact that his son could not fully appreciate all the nuances of it, and all the good in it, within his life span was not his fault, and I don’t think it was mine, either. That is just the way it works, sometimes. Thankfully, the memory of him and his spirit outlived the flesh and blood. I have made my peace with all of it and then some, by now. That is just an extremely gratifying thing; I don’t think I am eloquent enough to express how it feels to finally get to that place.

And the funny thing is, I would guess it will be the same for my boys someday, after I am gone.  Whatever happens to me after that morning that I don’t wake up, I am pretty sure they will hear things and have things related to them – especially if I last here for a while and they are a bit older than now when it happens – they will hear things about the old man that will make them smile when they hear them, and when they think of me. The same way I do when I am reminded of my father, now.

Meanwhile, the strange hours come, and the strange hours go. I am usually snoozing through them nowadays, dreaming of everything from hitting the game-winning home run to diving deep down into the deep, blue sea. And on the odd night I am still awake when they come, I might muse about things a bit; how I have come through so little and so much, so much darkness and so little light, and vice-versa. Only to find, having made it to the middle of middle age, when men are supposed to be brooding on their lives and their mortality and things of that nature, particularly in the strange hours … only to find myself totally unable to brood very much on anything, even in the strangest hours. I have been startled awake … and have found myself, in the middle of middle age, to be mostly at peace, and content, and very happy. Somehow or another.

Somewhere out there, I hope the old man is smiling at this. I get you now, man. I hope you can get me now, too. And so it is, as the world turns and keeps turning, spinning through the endless darkness. And yet somehow, the force field that is comprised of the endless darkness and the world spinning endlessly through it; and comprised of my father and his father, and of me and my sons, and of everything else we have ever thought of or ever could think of, and of all the people we have known and not known, all along the way, on our endless, spinning journey … somehow, just briefly, almost imperceptibly, the darkened void we are all spinning through is brightened just slightly, has just been made the tiniest bit better, by one man’s laugh, and another man’s smile, just at the thought of it.

As we hope it will always be brightened, by little things such as this.

There’s a new kid on the block
And he’s taking my place
Walking on my grave

***************

Astros win the series, 2-1.

Since the first human eye saw a leaf in Devonian sandstone and a puzzled finger reached to touch it, sadness has lain over the heart of man. By this tenuous thread of living protoplasm, stretching backward into time, we are linked forever to lost beaches whose sands have long since hardened into stone. The stars that caught our blind amphibian stare have shifted far or vanished in their courses, but still that naked, glistening thread winds onward. No one knows the secret of its beginning or its end. Its forms are phantoms. The thread alone is real; the thread is life.

 

Homers

Posted on April 7, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Astros 7, Mouse-Angels 4

W: Feldman (2-0)
L: Weaver (0-2)

Contributed by Reuben

The Astros cruised to an easy victory today, as their shortstop, center fielder, first baseman, catcher, and third baseman all homered. My hope is that we get very used to reading similar sentences over the next few years. (It just might be with different names than Presley, Guzman, and Villar.)

This was a strange game. The Astros only managed 7 hits, and did not draw a single base on balls. Normally, that won’t lead to 7 runs being scored. And Scott Feldman pitched with his typical stuff, topping out at 89 mph. Normally, he doesn’t look like a power pitcher compared to the opposing starter, yet there was Jered Weaver, chucking 86-87 mph heat his whole outing. And it worked for him, too; except for those 4 bombs he gave up, he pitched great.

Feldman really was great, though. Having just seen him pitch twice now, it’s hard to say exactly what makes him tick, beyond “he mixes things up, and knows how to pitch.” He had Trout and His Merry Band off-balance all day, getting lots of groundball outs and ending with 7 IP, a mere 3 hits allowed, and 1 earned run, giving him a 0.66 ERA here in the early going. And he has a nice-looking beard, too.

Jason Castro recovered enough from the baseball-shaped bruise on his foot to return to the field today, and launched an opposite-field homer off the LCF façade in his first at-bat, driving in Villar, who had reached after being drilled in the upper calf. Villar appeared to be fine, by the way, as he stole 2nd base on the very next pitch, hit a no-doubt HR in the 7th, and made several fine plays in the field. Yes, THAT Jonathan Villar. Give this kid a chance; he’s still what, 22 years old? Let’s see if he can tighten up his game this year.

Dominguez followed with a dinger of his own in the 2nd inning to push the score to 3-0. Matty D now has 2 hits on the season, both of them traveling over the fence on the fly. He is on pace to bat .111 this season with 54 homers. By the time Howie Kendrick scored the Angels’ 1st run on an Aybar groundout in the 5th-inning, Guzman’s HR had increased the Astros’ run total to 4, so Feldman seemed in control the whole way. Which is a nice feeling to have while watching a baseball game. Even though the final score looked kinda close, the game never felt that way. Will this team blow some leads late? Of course, but it doesn’t feel anywhere near as inevitable as it did last year.

God I love early-season optimism.

Round out your game-recap experience by reading the GameZone thread.

Astros Sniff .500, Are Repulsed By The Smell

Posted on April 6, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

Angels 5, Astros 1

WP: Skaggs (1-0)
LP: Keuchel (0-1)

Both lefties were stingy early on, but Keuchel was the first to flinch and flinch hard in the fifth. A leadoff double led to impressive strikeouts of Trout and Pujols, but Freese singled and Hamilton continued shrugging off hypochondria by cranking a two-run shibby, on his way to a three-hit performance.

Without Fowler and Castro, the two hitting leaders of the early going, the Astros continued their non hitting ways, picking up four hits and one walk for the game. Fowler’s still out with the flu, but Castro is due back and will hopefully do what he can to help the Good Guys avoid tanking during Sunday’s tilt.

Disneys 11, Stars 1

Posted on April 5, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

by NeilT

So I wanted to talk to Ms Lola Laloush tonight about our 2014 Astros. The Disneys were in town, and the Stros had started the season 2-1. I was just a wee bit pumped, and I suspect a lot of the TC’s crowd was just a wee bit pumped too, one time or another.

You know about Ms. Lola. She knows baseball, and she hangs out at this gay bar in Montrose. If you want to talk baseball statistics there’s no place like Montrose. She’s a beautiful woman with some odd interests: drag racing and baseball. I never talk to her about the drag stuff because I don’t know anything about it, but nobody knows baseball like Ms. Lola.

But she wasn’t there.

I asked the bartender and he said that Ms. Lola was so mad at our mayor that she was holding a candlelight vigil over on Westmoreland. “Do you know what she did?” I didn’t, and I wasn’t sure whether the “she” was the mayor or Ms. Lola. “She proposed a civil rights ordinance that covered the GLBT community but didn’t apply to private business. Ms. Lola was so mad she made a sign.”

I wasn’t quite sure what the GLBT community was, but I would have liked to see Ms. Lola holding up a sign. Just saying.

Anyway I went back and sat at Ms. Lola’s usual table and ordered a Shiner and watched the game. Things don’t really kick in at TC’s until after 10 or so, so I figured I could finish the game and get out before the big engines started revving and they started the drag racing. Then I heard this weird conversation from the woman at the table behind me. Don’t tell Kris, but this was a woman I thought was mighty attractive–there are always a lot of attractive women at TC’s–and I thought maybe I knew her. I’ll try to transcribe the conversation.

“You fuck, I don’t care what Detroit gave you. I didn’t care you quit baseball as long as it was for surfing, but you’ve left me here to deal with Angel and I’m getting the shit kicked out of me and you’re not helping. What do I care that Detroit is playing some damned bird?”

Things weren’t going well for that woman, and they weren’t going well for my Astros. Harrell started and didn’t vaguely resemble the 2012 Harrell. Harrell looked exactly like the 2013 Harrell. I suspect Harrell is on a pretty short leash. First inning Trout homered to left. By the second inning there was a coaching visit to the mound. Ibanez singled, Kendrick singled, Iannetta walked, Trout walked. Do the math. Meanwhile the Angels’ pitcher Richards was dealing. He even struck out Chris Carter.

“Don’t tell me it’s over. You just think of what I gave you all those years. You just think of what I did for you and don’t you talk to me about Detroit . . .”

I snuck a glance at the woman. I didn’t want to stare—she was clearly having a parting moment with some guy in Detroit named Brad–but really, she was a pretty woman, but she just kept looking more and more . . . what? Frazzled? Beat up? And the same thing was happening to the Astros. They gave up three runs in the third, and Harrell pitched about 175 pitches. Meanwhile Dominguez, Gonzalez, and Presley went three up, three down.

She was crying now. “You know I can’t handle Angel alone. I need you Brad . . .” She was pleading. I felt sorry for her.

Jerome Williams came in for the 4th, and it was about time. I like Williams. I like his pink glove, I like his crazy history. I like him so much that I may be willing to put up with a lot. In the fifth Altuve walked in Dominguez. That would be it for Astros’ runs. In the 6th Williams gave up a three-run homer to Hamilton. The Astros filled the bases, but didn’t score.

“So you want me to talk to some guy named Nolan? What the hell kind of name is Nolan?”

Williams gave up three runs in the 7th, and I was reckoning that there were reasons for Williams’ history. Altuve was stranded at 3rd. Bass finished out the game for the Astros and got 2 1/3 innings with no runs. BASS! End of the day, Disneys 11, Stars 1, and Astrolena left TC’s looking pretty bedraggled.

Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim vs. Houston Astros

Posted on April 4, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Series Previews

by Great Bagwell’s Beard

I mean, sure, it’s just one week. But even if we never get closer to first place in the West than half a game, we still beat the Yankees two out of three, and Jeter left town without picking up his Valtrex refill. Hope springs eternal and all that good stuff. The Boys in Blue showed that all that PROCESS bullshit actually translates into hustle on the basepaths and a rejuvenated bullpen. And now, the assholes from the other coast are coming.

Just as the Yanks are from the Bronx but front like they’re from Manhattan, so bid bonjour to the dregs of the SoCal suburbs, where everything used to be an orange grove, but is now just extended parking for Disneyland. They sport a roster that is somehow MORE overpaid than the Yankees, and just as shaky. We’ve been promised the bottom of the West ever since October of last year, but the last time I checked, the Astros weren’t there right now. The Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim of Earth were. They need to stay there. They need to get on the 10, take it to Pasadena, and die in a bronzer fire.

—Before I relay this anecdote, please consider it a hipster drinking game. Anytime something described could be taken as “hipster-ish,” please consume the liquor of your choice. Please keep a loved one and a 911 speed-dial handy.

On the way home from Fort Worth last weekend, my wife and I listened to an episode of “This American Life” wherein a delightful old woman (who happened to be he mother of one of the producers) related her seven conversational topics to be avoided at all costs, for fear of boring your audience to the dullest of all deaths. The goal of the show was to tell a story about each of those topics that was fascinating enough to violate her insistence that the topics are inherently boring.

Her number one prohibition was on discussing your route, that is, the way that you arrived at the location which is now hosting your dreadful discussion of the time spent in your car. The example she cited as chief among the boredom involved a time that Robert Redford visited her at their home on Long Island. Even Redford was not excused for telling a boring tale of his travels.

All of this to say, since discussion of routes is basically the second most popular sport in California (behind inconsistent liberalism), the beast the Astros face tonight is Boredom. And in the face of that boredom, we present Dexter Fowler, whiskey drinker and hell raiser. We present Jose Altuve, the mighty mite. We present Lucas Harrell, who might actually explode into a cloud of irrelevancy tonight. We present Matt Dominguez, strong of arm and bat. We present L.J. Hoes, because the puns never, ever get old. We present Jason Castro, the second-best catcher in Houston history. We present Matt Albers, 120% of the player he was last time he donned this uniform.

Go get ‘em, boys.

Probable Pitchers
Friday, April 4
7:10 PM, MMPUS
Garrett Richards v. Lucas Harrell
Garrett Richards, who was not an original SNL cast member, has given up a home run to Carter AND struck him out twice. Which sounds right. Grossman is 4-for-5 lifetime against him. Because all these players have had short lifetimes.
What can be said about Lucas Harrell that hasn’t already been said about Afghanistan?

Saturday, April 5
6:10 PM, MMPUS
Tyler Skaggs v. Dallas Keuchel
Tyler Skaggs is not the banjo player in Alison Krauss’s band, but it’d be cooler if he was because Alison Krauss is awesome. And hot. And awesome. Jesus Guzman has hit a grand slam off him.
Keuchel had a solid spring, and should have plenty of opportunities this year to show what he’s capable of. Howie Kendrick and Raul Ibanez have both homered off him, and Hamilton has struck out in half his AB’s against Keuchel.

Sunday, April 6
1:10 PM, MMPUS
Jered Weaver (0-1, 4.26) v. Scott Feldman (1-0, 0.00)
Jered should have another “r” or an “a” somewhere. Let’s get more efficient and just call him Jrd. Jrd lost his first start, and has been very difficult for every Astro not named Altuve.
Feldman showed that he might not actually be overpaid after all on Tuesday, and like more than just a placeholder. Against current Angels, Erick Aybar and Kendrick have hit him well, but he’s dealt well with their big hitters.

Monday, April 7
1:10 PM, MMPUS
C.J. Wilson (0-1, 9.53) v. Jarred Cosart (1-0, 0.00)
DAY GAME! Wilson take a break from racing to serve up some runs. The former Ranger has faced Corporan more than any other current Astro. Really. Corp has a homer, as do Carter and Altuve.

Prrrrrrromotions
Friday
Fireworks!
Saturday
Berkman/Oswalt Retirement Ceremony – TWINKIE FILLED BULLDOZERS FOR EVERYONE!
Gym Bag
Sunday
Green Tote Bag – what it says on the can.

Talk about it in the Game Zone!

The Yankees Lose Again

Posted on April 3, 2014 by Ron Brand in Featured, Game Recaps

by Sphinx Drummond

The Good Guys celebrate Jeter’s career by defeating the Bronx Bombers 3-1.

W: J. Cosart (1-0)
L: H. Kuroda (0-1)
S: J. Fields (1)

BOX SCORE

So far the Dexter Fowler acquisition is looking totally brilliant. Leading off the game with a homer, Fowler brought back memories of the old days of Craig Biggio behaving in a similar fashion. Fowler also had a triple and finished with 2 runs scored, and is currently slugging 1.375. Jarred Cosart was sharp as nails for the first four innings but was pulled after a shaky (but scoreless) fifth inning and 88 pitches. Jerome Williams pitched a solid sixth inning, Kevin Chapman struggled in the seventh giving up a run before giving way to Matt Albers, who picked up the final out of the inning and pitched a scoreless eighth. Josh Fields pitched a scoreless ninth to pick up his first save on the year.

Matt Dominguez capped the scoring when he hit a solo shot in the seventh inning, his first hit of the season. The Astros didn’t commit any errors, turned one double play, and Villar got his first stolen base. The defense looks improved this year. The pitching, starting and relieving, looks to be better this season. However, this team could struggle on offense. It’s just too early in the season to make any real judgments, and it was a Wednesday game, but so far so good.

Based on the respective payrolls of each team, it was another win for David over Goliath. $203,445,586 for the Yanks, the Astros will write checks for $21,133,500, this year. This year though, the Yankees only have two guys making more than all the Astros and Jeter’s not one of them. That would be Sabathia and Teixeira.The Astros are two games over 500 for the first time in two years. The Yankees are of course 0-2.

The undefeated Astros look for a sweep Thursday at 7:10 CT when Brett Oberholtzer squares off against Ivan Nova. Even as the Astros are undefeated, they are still looking up at the division leaders, the hated Mariners.

Stadium: Minute Maid Park, Houston, TX
Attendance: 23,145 (55% full) – % is based on regular season capacity
Game Time: 3:18
Weather: indoors
Umpires: Home Plate – Phil Cuzzi, First Base – Brian Knight, Second Base – Quinn Wolcott, Third Base – Gerry Davis

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