Marty Lurie Talks San Francisco Giants Baseball
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Posts from — June 2007

Right Off The Bat Special Interview with Mariano Rivera

Listen to Marty and Mariano Rivera discuss the secret to his success, his days of playing the outfield, and his childhood sports’ hero: Pele.

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June 30, 2007   No Comments

Inside Baseball Saturday Morning Right off the Bat – June 30th, 2007

INSIDE BASEBALL with Marty Lurie – Oakland: cold bats?, White Sox: The entire team on the Trading Block? Dodgers: Offense needs a boost? Barry Bonds: All-Star?

Segment one : Marty & Joseph Reaves (National Baseball Writer for The Arizona Republic)
Segment two : Marty & Mark Gonzales (Sports Writer for Chicago Tribune)
Segment three : Marty & Ken Gurnick (from MLB.com)

RIGHT OFF THE BAT with Marty Lurie

Segment one : Marty opens the show
Segment two : Interview – Charlie Kerfeld
Segment three : Marty’s Awards
Segment four: Interview – Robinson Cano
Segment five : Memories – Ron Brand 3
Segment six : Rattle the Lumber with Ken Korach

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June 30, 2007   No Comments

The Long View: Israel Baseball League Begins

On the 8th of Tammuz (June 24 to you) in the year 5767 (or 2007, American) the first game of the Israel Baseball League was played.
Among other drama, the season has already seen a no-hitter that ended in… a home run derby.

That’s right, there have been a few notable changes to make America’s Pastime a going venture in the Middle East. Games are scheduled for seven innings, and ties are settled by a home run contest. (In addition, no games are played on Friday or Saturday, in observation of the Jewish Sabbath.) Click below for more!
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June 29, 2007   No Comments

Right off the Bat – June 28th, 2007

Right Off The Bat with Marty Lurie

Segment one : Marty opens the show
Segment two : Interview – Ernie Reddick
Segment three : Marty’s Awards
Segment four : Marty sets up Memories
Segment five : Memories of the Game: Charlie Manuel 2
Segment six : Rattle the Lumber with Ken Korach

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June 29, 2007   No Comments

Right Off The Bat – June 24th, 2007

Right Off The Bat with Marty Lurie

Segment one : Marty opens the show
Segment two : Interview – Joe Kerrigan
Segment three : Marty’s Awards
Segment four : Marty sets up Memories
Segment five : Memories of the Game: Howard Johnson 2
Segment six : Rattle the Lumber with Ken Korach

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June 26, 2007   No Comments

Right Off The Bat – June 23rd, 2007

Right Off The Bat with Marty Lurie

Segment one : Marty opens the show
Segment two : Marty talks about league news & sets up the game
Segment three : Marty’s Awards
Segment four : Interview – Tim Keown
Segment five : Memories of the Game: Howard Johnson 1
Segment six : Rattle the Lumber with Ken Korach

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June 26, 2007   No Comments

AL All Stars Should Be Powerful Once Again

Batter Up June 24th, 2007
With the all-star game approaching on July 10th a potential American League team is loaded with big bats and power pitchers.
Here are my picks for the 32- player AL team based on first half performances.
First base: David Ortiz. Big Papi hits third on the AL East’s best team, he hits third in this game too. Minnesota’s Justin Morneau. The 2006 MVP specializes in late game heroics. Boston’s Kevin Youkilis. He can play third if necessary.

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June 24, 2007   No Comments

Inside Baseball Saturday Night 06/23/07

INSIDE BASEBALL with Marty Lurie– A-Rod: Staying with Yanks, Bonds: Will he get traded after the record? White Sox: trading away some starters?

Segment one : Marty & Ann Killian (Sports Writer for the San Jose Mercury News)
Segment two : Marty & Roxy Bernstein (Play-by-Play Voice for The Florida Marlins)
Segment three : Marty interview with YES Network Baseball Analyst Ken Singleton

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June 24, 2007   No Comments

The Long View: Dawn of the Chinese Era

Hello everyone, and thanks for reading the first installment of The Long View. Over the course of the summer, I’ll be using this space to peer a little deeper into some of the news and personalities around the game.

Today, for instance, an item crossed the news ticker that prompted precious few raised eyebrows among casual fans, as the New York Yankees announced the signing of a pair of teenage Chinese nationals. But ten or twenty years down the line, we – and a metric ton of new Chinese fans – may look back on today as an important moment in baseball history.

Not much information is available about left-handed pitcher Kai Liu and catcher Zhenwang Zhang, both 19. Both players, whom the Yankees will introduce at a July 6 press conference, have played in China’s six-team professional league. Zhang, who has won three titles with the Tianjin Lions, appeared briefly in one game of last spring’s World Baseball Classic, but did not bat.

Just last month, MLB representatives traveled to China to talk about the Chinese Baseball League, the possible return of baseball to the Olympic Games (in 2016 or 2020,) and even Major League exhibitions on Chinese soil. The importance MLB places on building a presence in China can be measured by a glance at the trip’s participants, among them the CEOs of three Major League teams, including the Red Sox’ Larry Lucchino, plus Bud Selig’s right-hand man, MLB COO Bob DuPuy.

What’s at stake is a massive, practically untouched economy. When it comes to American sports in China, everyone’s playing catch-up to the NBA. Fans who remember the long bargaining process that brought Yao Ming to the Houston Rockets know how deeply political bureaucracy colors relations between China and the outside world. Yet the question of whether it’s worth the effort has already been answered; now the only question is, “How?”

It’s more than possible that Liu and Zhang will never play under the Major League spotlight. But their signings represent a landmark event in what promises to be a long and important relationship between MLB and China (and represents the starting gun in the race to China between the Yankees, the Red Sox, and Everyone Else.)

In 1951, when Cuban dandy Minnie Minoso came to the Chicago White Sox, the game’s storied history was similarly devoid of Latin players. By 1965, no fewer than eight Latinos were on the All-Star team.

Neither Liu nor Zhang is the first Chinese player to be signed by a Major League team; instead, their signings represent the first successful attempt to bring Chinese players to the U.S. through the proper channels. The Seattle Mariners – who were owned by Nintendo magnate Hiroshi Yamauchi from 1992 to 2004, and have been active in the Pacific Rim since Kazuhiro Sasaki and Ichiro Suzuki won the 21st century’s first two AL Rookie of the Year awards – signed Chinese pitcher Wang Chao in 2002. But that signing, done without the permission of the Chinese Baseball Association, was not considered legitimate.

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June 19, 2007   No Comments

Beware the Ides of June

Batter up June 17th, 2007
Just as the soothsayer whispered to Julius Caesar, ”Beware the ides of March” any baseball team leading its division this month best beware the ides of June.
Call it a June Swoon or merely a correction in the market, but many of the division leaders who seemed so untouchable just two weeks ago all of a sudden are coming back to the pack.
The Mets and Red Sox have seen comfortable division leads reduced due to the lack of consistent hitting.

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June 17, 2007   No Comments