Monday, January 31, 2011
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Saturday, January 29, 2011
The Day - Artists line up for Hygienic XXXII | News from southeastern Connecticut
Brought my offering down to the Hygienic this morning...
a collage of pretty much every ticket stub I still had from the Navigators 1995-2005. Forgot to take a pic of it, I'll update it later this week.
Hygienic is a winter classic in downtown New London as described below in Friday's post.
The artist (me) can be glimpsed at the 45 second mark wearing the famous Opening Day parka (wimp) and weathered (classic) Defs cap.
The Day - Artists line up for Hygienic XXXII | News from southeastern Connecticut
Brought my offering down to the Hygenic this morning...
a collage of pretty much every ticket stub I still had from the Navigators 1995-2005. Forgot to take a pic of it.
Hygenic is sort of a winter classic in downtown New London as described below in Friday's post.
Friday, January 28, 2011
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Monday, January 24, 2011
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Friday, January 21, 2011
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Monday, January 17, 2011
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Friday, January 14, 2011
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Mac is back in the EL!...Richmond....
"RICHMOND, VA - In conjunction with their parent club, the 2010 World Series Champion San Francisco Giants, the Richmond Flying Squirrels are pleased to announce their field staff for the 2011 season. Veteran skipper Dave Machemer (Mack-uh-mer) will assume the role of Manager in Richmond in 2011. Pitching Coach Ross Grimsley will return for his second season with the Squirrels, and Ken Joyce will serve as the team's Hitting Coach.
Machemer, who guided the Augusta GreenJackets (A - South Atlantic League) each of the past two seasons, takes over for Andy Skeels, who led the club during their inaugural season in Richmond. 2011 will mark Machemer's 38th season in professional baseball, the last six of which have been spent with the Giants organization. In 2010, Machemer led the GreenJackets to the best record (79-59) in the South Atlantic League's Southern division and second best mark overall. In 2009, his Augusta squad boasted the best overall record (76-63) in the SAL. 2011 will mark a return to the Eastern League for Machemer, having previously managed the Flying Squirrels' predecessor, the Connecticut Defenders, for three seasons (2005-07)"
the above is a Richmond Flying Sqirrels press release..
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Monday, January 10, 2011
RIP Ryne....
Associated Press story:
"Ryne Duren was an All-Star for the Yankees in 1958.
His death was announced by his stepson Mark Jackson, The Associated Press said.
Pitching for the Yankees from 1958 to 1961, the right-handed Duren would sometimes deliver at least one warm-up pitch high against the screen, presumably to intimidate the batter soon to face him.
Duren led the American League in saves with 20 in 1958 and was named an All-Star three times. He pitched for the Yankees in the 1958 World Series against the Milwaukee Braves, striking out 14 batters in nine and a third innings, and in the 1960 Series against the Pittsburgh Pirates.
He struck out 630 batters in just over 589 innings during his 10-season career. But he also walked 392 batters as he bounced among seven teams, his career and his marriage ruined by alcoholism.
Duren’s penchant for wild warm-up pitches came about by accident.
He relieved the Yankees’ Bob Turley one day, and, as he once told The Los Angeles Times: “I was feeling pretty good so I decided to really let the first warm-up pitch go. When I planted my foot, my knee hit me in the chin and the ball just took off.”
But for all the stories about Duren’s fastballs delivered from a 6-foot-2, 190-pound frame, there was a dark side to his life.
“Sportswriters wrote that I wore glasses that resembled the bottoms of Coke bottles,” Duren recalled in his 1978 memoir “The Comeback,” written with Robert Drury.
“Everyone agreed that it was a dangerous combination: a guy wearing glasses that thick and throwing a pitch that fast. But what everyone didn’t know was that there was another dimension that made me even more dangerous than they thought I was. I had a drinking problem.”
Duren was involved in an incident after the Yankees’ 1958 pennant-clinching when the team left Kansas City by train. He got into a scuffle with Ralph Houk, then a Yankee coach, whose ring cut Duren over his eye.
Duren remembered how in August 1965, pitching for the original Washington Senators, he was hit hard by the Yankees in relief while pitching with a hangover, had some drinks afterward, then left his car on the way home, climbed a bridge and started shouting. The police brought Manager Gil Hodges to the scene to talk him down. A week later, the Senators released Duren, and he was finished in baseball.
Rinold George Duren Jr. was born in Cazenovia, Wis., on Feb. 22, 1929. He made his major league debut with the Baltimore Orioles in 1954 and also pitched for the Kansas City Athletics before being traded to the Yankees. He had a career record of 27-44 with 57 saves.
After leaving baseball, he was hospitalized for addiction treatment, and he later worked as an addiction counselor in Stoughton, Wis.
“Ryne could throw the heck out of the ball,” Yogi Berra told Major League Baseball’s Web site. “He threw fear in some hitters. I remember he had several pair of glasses, but it didn’t seem like he saw good in any of them.”"