See American Innings: History through the eyesof Baseball - with Martin Lurie
The Giants:Can the Sum be Greater Than the Parts? by Ed Stern.
In this Sunday’s New York Times it becomes clear that the question which has intrigued and bedevilled the teams’s followers since the start of the season, why does this team win, is being asked in places other than San Francisco. The answer to the question, however, is no more apparent to the New York sportswriter, Jack Curry, than it has been to those of us who have been following the team through it’s first 116 games. Curry defines the team as “the sum is greater than the parts San Francisco Giants” and takes off from that premise.
Click below for more of Ed’s analysis on the division leading Giants. [Read more →]
August 10, 2003 No Comments
Sunday Morning Muse

Ken Macha has shown one distinctive trait in his first season of managing. Once he senses that a key situation has arisen that will determine the outcome of the game, no matter what inning, he brings in his most dependable reliever Chad Bradford to bail him out of the jam.
It worked Sturday night when the submariner was summoned in the fifth inning with one out and the bases loaded in a seemingly safe 6-2 game, Bradford proceeded to strike out the Big Hurt and then induce an easy ground ball off the bat of Magglio Ordonez to end the threat, putting the White Sox to bed for the evening.
Nice managing, nice pitching by Bradford who K’d five in recording seven outs.
By only going 4 1/3 innings, Ted Lilly puts pressure on the kid, Rich Harden to pitch at least into the sixth inning today or else the bull pen will have to work overtime which isn’t a good idea with the Red Sox in town for four starting Monday night.
AL Cy Young? Roy Halladay, Mark Mulder, and Esteban Loiaza in that order as of August 10th. All that can change over the next month especially with the A’s facing Loiaza today in a game the Sox need, then possibly seeing Halladay next weekend in Oakland.
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August 10, 2003 No Comments
Red Sox Try to Defy the Odds and Slug Their Way Through the Season

Can you slug your way to a pennant?
The Red sox are certainly trying to do just that.
Will they be successful?
Without settling into a reliable five man rotation it will be very difficult.
Pedro Martinez throws over 120 pitches per start, not a good thing for the fragile hall of famer to be. Derek Lowe now sports an ERA more typical of a pitcher on his way out. John Burkett is steady, but unspectacular in big games, Casey Fossum is not ready for prime time, Tim Wakefield, up and down with his knuckler, and Jeff Suppan is an adequate fourth or fifth guy.
This all adds up to hoping the hitters can carry the game to the bull pen and then pray they get it done. It’s been the same story for Boston since game number one this season.
The Red Sox come into Oakland next week for four games, which will test the mettle of the team. They will face Hudson, Zito, Mulder, and Lilly in that order. If they don’t hit the ball with the authority of the 27 Yankees, they won’t get very far, even if the A’s continue to hit like a team without a clue.
With only one lefty possibly going for Boston next week, the A’s lefthanded batters will get some decent swings after seeing Pedro Monday night. If Oakland wins on Monday, it will be no less than three of four for them by the time Boston leaves town on Thursday night.
Today in Chicago, Ted Lilly faces Jon Garland. The Sox are playing much better and having Carl Everett on the team is a big plus for the Sox because Everett, as a Ranger this year, has hurt the A’s with his bat and glove and lo and behold he did it again last night.
Runs will be plentiful in this game, the bull pens are well rested for both teams, so it wouldn’t surprise me to see each team in the pen by the sixth inning.
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August 9, 2003 No Comments
A's Hit the Windy City, Seattle in the Big Apple

The A’s take on the Chicago White Sox in Comiskey Park sending hometown lefty Mark Mulder against Mark Buehrle, a southpaw who has had mixed results against the Athletics.
There are times when Buehrle simply outpitches the A’s batters, then there are the times that the A’s simply crush the lefthander.
Mulder gets to face Carl Everett again since the enigmatic outfielder is now a White Sox instead of a Ranger. Let’s hope Chad Bradford doesn’t see Everett since the switchhitter has hit at least three homers off of Bradford this season.
The White Sox bull pen has been reduced at the end of the game to Damaso Marte and Tom Gordon. It is not clear who is the closer since Gordon has failed to hold the lead at least twice this week against KC.
In any case, Keith Foulke who always has something to prove against his former club should be a safer bet than either of the two Chicago short men. Billy Koch is not going to be a factor in the series unless he blows a mid inning lead to the Athletics. He is one mixed up dude right now when he comes into a game.
Eric Chavez is hot. Eric Chavez still doesn’t hit lefties with much authority. The A’s need Chavez to continue to hit well in the third spot, Chavez has hit some long homers in this park, too. It will be on his shoulders tonight to show his hot streak is not just a short term thing, but one the A’s can rely on to carry them this month. He is looking forward to seeing Jon Garland a righty tomorrow.
The A’s made so many mistakes yesterday it isn’t worth repeating them here, however Barry Zito pitched a decent game against a very bad ball club, giving hope that his next start against the Red Sox might be a good one.
For Zito’s sake he better not hang too many curves against Boston’s line up, they ain’t the Tigers.
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August 8, 2003 No Comments
Cubs Back in the Race, Hudson and Pedro Set for Monday
The Cubs are now back on my radar screen after Mark Prior and Kerry Wood won back to back games against the San Diego Padres. With 50 games to go for Chicago, they trail Houston by 2 1/2.
Pitching with a solid four man group of Wood. Prior, Matt Clement, Carlos Zambrano, and even an occasional acceptable start from Juan Cruz or Shawn Estes, gives the Cubs a real shot of making it through August still in contention.
Funny, but in 1969, the Mets did exactly that to the Cubs, trailing the Cubs by 8 in August, the Mets rotation of Tom Seaver, Jerry Koosman, Gary Gentry, Don Cardwell, and Jim McAndrew finally clicked at the same time, and the Mets won the division by 8 games, picking up 16 games on Chicago in two months.
Joe Borowski is still closing for the Cubs, but lately he has gotten some help from Kyle Farnsworth, Dave Veres, and Antonio Alfonseca.
Cubs-Red Sox, it’s not impossible.
Bizland has had trouble with its server, so the Dish is abbreviated today. Let’s hope for better computer luck tomorrow. [Read more →]
August 7, 2003 No Comments
Giants won the West

It is over in the National League
West. The San Francisco Giants
have won it. The Arizona Diamond-
backs have seven games left
with the Giants and the
Los Angeles Dodgers six.
Both teams will have to beat
the Giants in all those games
and then play .800 ball to be
there tied with Giants at
end of September.
And yes, at the same time
the Giants would have to
collapse. What are the
chances ? Easier for
Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown
to announce next week
the building of a new ballpark
in downtown Oakland for the
A’S.
By Amaury Pi-González
San Francisco [Read more →]
August 7, 2003 No Comments
Nelson Was Right, The Mariners Needed to Make a Trade
Jeff Nelson said it, the Mariners obviously listened. The veteran reliever was publically upset with “Stand Pat” Gillick when the Seattle GM didn’t make any deals at the trading deadline last Thursday.
Gillick took care of that on Wednesday when he dealt Nelson to the Yankees for reliever Armando Benitez.
It was obvious that the Yankees had no confidence in Benitez, not using him during the weekend series in Oakland, instead choosing to over work closer Mariano Rivera.
So, tell me what you think of the deal, will it help Seattle down the stretch, will it take the heat off the Seattle bullpen, will the Yankees be stronger in the eighth inning, will they bring Mike Stanton back next as the lefty set up man?
I’m interested in your thoughts. Never a dull moment in baseball.
More tomorrow on the over worked White Sox bull pen as they get Thursday off, in prepartion for the A’s this weekend. [Read more →]
August 6, 2003 No Comments
Sabean: Winning it all, right now, the only objective.
Four days out of town with no opportunity to watch some uncharacteristic performances by the Giants. Before leaving town, however, word of the Ponson trade hit the news wires. Ponson, from the accounts one reads of his performance this year with Baltimore, is an accomplished pitcher who should occupy the number two spot in the rotation and eat up the innings. The Giants can use a pitcher who meets that description. The team has a 12 game lead in a division that for the past month has provided no opposition. What we are talking about, therefore, are the playoffs.
Click Below for Ed Stern’s analysis of the current state of his favorite team. With a Bay Bridge Series a distinct possibility this season, Ed’s thoughts are much appreciated by AL fans…… Marty Lurie [Read more →]
August 5, 2003 No Comments
Royals Just Hit and Hit and Hit

They don’t have much pitching, they don’t have a lot of power, but the KC Royals do hit the ball all over the ball park.
Sound Familiar? Ever hear of the 2002 Anaheim Angels?
The Royals are holding their own in the AL
Central. Starting August 11th, they play the Yankees, Twins, Rangers, and Angels exclusively for one month.
Without much starting pitching, I don’t consider an oft injured Runelvys Hernandez, Kyle Snyder, blister plagued Jeremy Affeldt, Kris Wilson, banged up Jose Lima, minor league graduate Darrell May, or rookie Jimmy Gobble a pennant winning group, the Royals should get their lunch in August.
But they have two things going for them. One, they simply have destroyed the competition head to head in the central, and two, they do have an uncanny way of scoring runs just when you think they are out of the game and the pitchers I listed above somehow keep them in the game.
Seemingly down and out last night they put up a seven spot in the sixth inning against the White Sox bull pen and voila, a neat 13-9 win to extend their lead to three games.
Who knows how it will all turn out, these are the stories that make baseball the game it is.
Click below for more! [Read more →]
August 5, 2003 No Comments
Day Off Comes at the Right Time
August brings the dog days of baseball, it effects not only the players, but everyone connected to the game. I’m tired too.
One of the two days off the A’s will enjoy in August, comes on Monday, it is well appreciated by all.

The A’s and the Yankees finished one of the best series of the year Sunday with the A’s pulling out a 2-1 win on Miguel Tejada’s double to win the game in the ninth off of Mariano Rivera.
Click below for more thoughts on the weeknd. [Read more →]
August 3, 2003 No Comments
