Category — Inside the Press Box
Life without Bonds

SBC Park is not selling out, there is no Barry
Bonds to be seen at the plate, the Giants lost
their closer Armando BenÃtez for most of the
season and all-of-a-sudden I do not get calls
from my “friends”for Giants tickets ?
By Amaury Pi-González [Read more →]
May 1, 2005 No Comments
They all want to play in the Majors

During the past 20 years baseball has
really become international and according
to Major League Baseball annual report
there is a new record of foreign players
today. The percentage of players born
outside the United States increased to
a 29.2%. The best players in the world,
they all want to come here and play.
By Amaury Pi-González [Read more →]
April 25, 2005 No Comments
Just What Is Wrong with the Giants? by Ed Stern

Marty; If there is one thing which should have been learned these past two years, writing some thirty five columns each year in following the fortunes and misfortunes of the Giants, it is that being inevitably opinionated once a week leaves one open to captions such as the above. A short time ago I pointed out the Giants pitching problems resided in the inability of the bullpen to get anyone out when it made a difference.
Note: Ed’s column was filed before Jerome Williams was optioned to Fresno.
Click below for more!
[Read more →]
April 25, 2005 No Comments
Long Time Prep Sports Writer Merv Harris Passes Away by George Devine, Jr.
I know many of you may have seen this in Tuesday’s Chronicle Sporting Green, but longtime Bay Area Sportswriter Merv Harris passed away this week.
I first met Merv in 1985 or 86 when he covered Sacred Heart basketball for the old Examiner during my high school years. Over the years, I learned a great deal from Merv. He used to recall his days covering the Fabulous Lakers of the early 70’s and draw similarities with the games and athletes he covered in the ’80s and ’90s. Merv would manage to keep accurate statistics in his trusty little scorebook while sharing a tale or two about Jerry West, Wilt Chamberlain, and other NBA giants of .the pre-SportsCenter era. If anyone ever heard a WCAL basketball PA announcer chuckle as they started to announce a foul, you can blame Merv for providing an ill-timed, but well-appreciated to a story about Bob Cousy or Nate Thurmond.
Please click below for a wonderful tribute to Merv Harris by George Devine, Jr. I knew Merv from my early days in radio when he was on “The Prep Sports Showcase,” one of my first shows on KECG 88.1 FM. A terrific man! Thanks George for this article. Marty Lurie [Read more →]
April 21, 2005 No Comments
First in War in Peace and in the NL East

President Bush threw out the first pitch last
week at RFK Stadium, temporary home of
the Washington Nationals,once the Montreal
Expos and baseball fever is back in the
capital.
By Amaury Pi-González [Read more →]
April 17, 2005 No Comments
Eric Chavez Still An Enigma by Glenn Dickey

THE OAKLAND A’s are a much different team this year, with an almost entirely new starting rotation, but there is one constant: We’re all still wondering when Eric Chavez will finally fulfill his potential.
Players who are able to make it to the big leagues before their 21st birthday, as Chavez did in September, 1998, are usually headed for the Baseball Hall of Fame. We’re talking players like Hank Aaron, Johnny Bench, Orlando Cepeda, Willie Mays, Frank Robinson, Ted Williams. Ken Griffey Jr. would be in the grouping, too, if it weren’t for his frequent injuries. [Read more →]
April 13, 2005 No Comments
Rueter and the Giants' Bullpen; An Unfortunate Combination

Marty; I was looking forward to spending a relaxing week, watch a few ball games and then reflect on the week’s developments. Yesterday I raised some concerns about the state of the Giants’ bullpen, additionally giving vent to the thought that managment should, sooner rather than later, consider the need to remove Rueter from a starting role. Little did I realize that within twenty-four hours what had been expressed as a portent of things to come would quickly reach calamitous proportions. [Read more →]
April 12, 2005 No Comments
Bull Pen Woes Once Again? By Ed Stern

Marty; The season is now six games behind us. six games in a long marathon season. While these six games have undoubtedly not bequeathed additional insight to us, they may have reinforced thoughts which have been lurking since the start of spring training.
The Giants have won four of these six games, three of them coming at the expense of the hapless Rockies. In these games, not unexpectedly, the team has called on the bullpen in each of them. Leaving Benitez aside, he having performed as expected, the ”pen, in the 6th, 7th and 8th innings has failed, with dismal regularity, to get hitters out. [Read more →]
April 11, 2005 No Comments
Play Ball: A History of A's Home Openers by A.J. Hayes
Play Ball
A history of Oakland A’s home openers
By A.J. Hayes
Overall Record: Since moving west in 1968 the A’s have gone 20-16 in games played on opening day in Oakland.
First Opener: On April 17, 1968 the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum was over following with excitement as 50,164 fans filed into the park for the first official major league game played in Oakland. Veteran right-hander Lew Krausse started for the A’s against Baltimore’s Dave McNally. Krausse opened the game by walking Baltimore lead off man Curt Blefary, but he escaped the frame unscathed. He wasn’t so lucky in the second when Baltimore’s Boog Powell produced the first hit and run in the history of the Coliseum with one swing as he slugged a one-out, solo home run.
Baltimore spoiled the A’s west coast debut 4-1 with Krausse taking the loss.
Click below for more of a tremendous look at A’s baseball history, Marty [Read more →]
April 1, 2005 No Comments
Three Latino Statues

When Juan Marichal got the news
about being the second Latinamerican
player to have a statue,
he was honored, thrilled, but not
well informed.
By Amaury Pi-González [Read more →]
March 30, 2005 No Comments
