See American Innings: History through the eyesof Baseball - with Martin Lurie
Last Weekend Of Interleague Play

The last weekend of interleague play comes at the right time. The pitchers in baseball are getting worn down, the runs are coming in bunches and it is time to concentrate on the games within ones own division.
July first is right around the corner, The Marlins get a shot at the Braves next week, the A’s try to whittle the Seattle lead, and the Yankees, Red Sox, and Blue Jays will be fighting it out to see if one will be left standing in the wild card race come October first.
Randy Wolf showed he is for real with a sterling performance over the righty lineup of Atlanta Thursday night. Jarrod Washburn showed he better throw something other than hard stuff as Seattle mashed him again. Finally, before we go on, Gil Meche looked very hittable last night in the same game, even though his teammates bailed him out with ten runs.
A’s-Giants in Pac Bell tonight, click below for more. [Read more →]
June 27, 2003 No Comments

They call David Eckstein “Just Enough” because when he throws the ball to first base he has just enough on the throw to get the runner. Eckstein’s arm is not one of the best in the big leagues, but he gets the job done.
Mired in an awful slump, the diminutive leadoff hitter has been dropped to the number nine spot in the Angel’s batting order. Last night he came up big with four hits, a game icing homer in the eighth off of Matt White, and a key defensive play in the sixth with Anaheim ahead 4-3. Eckstein fielded a sharp ground ball off the bat of Ichiro and threw out Mark McLemore at the plate (rundown ensued), then his teammates completed an unlikely double play by getting Dan Wilson out at second after he rounded the bag too far. End of rally, end of Mariners for the night.
A great night’s work for Eckstein who is the catylyst for this Angel offense. Hitting .240, many blamed the Anaheim slump on Eckstein.
At least last night he got the team rolling. Today it’s home run heaven as Jarrod Washburn who has gotten rocked by the long ball in his last three starts goes against Gil Meche. Meche, who was robbed of his 10th victory last week when Jeff Nelson melted down against the Padres, will face the A’s next Tuesday or so in Oakland probably against Tim Hudson, great matchup.
Click Below for more! [Read more →]
June 26, 2003 No Comments
Is Wee Willie Keeler Next Up for the Dodgers?

If you ever wondered what it would be like to watch a game between two teams from the deadball era of baseball, just tune into tonight’s game between the Giants and the Dodgers.
Granted Jason Schmidt is the hottest pitcher in the National league right now, and deserveedly so, but this Dodgers team poses no threat at the plate. Come to think of it, with Edgardo Alfonzo in a deep freeze for the Giants, very few of the Giant batters worry the opposition (don’t forget the greatest player of all time Barry Bonds). Marquis Grissom continued punishing lefthanders with a game winning homer off southpaw Odalis Perez Tuesday night. Grissom must be licking his chops knowing he gets to face Ted Lilly, Barry Zito, and Mark Mulder this week in the big Phone Booth, known as Pac Bell Park.
Click below for more.
June 25, 2003 No Comments
Dodgers Hitting Lacking, A's, Giants Again Find A Way To Win

Watching the Dodgers play the Giants Monday night it became obvious to me that the Giants sputtering offense is light years beyond what the Dodgers batsmen can generate.
The Giants have one constant going for them…Barry Bonds who is a threat to produce a game winning event every time he steps into the batters box.
Bonds drew a leadoff walk from Eric Gagne in the 11th inning, then stole second base (his 500th lifetime steal), then rode home on the Giants other legitimate hitter’s (Benito Santiago) single to win the game.
In the dugout after Bonds scored the run, Gagne kicked the water bucket, threw his glove violently against the railing, then stormed away into the runway leading to the clubhouse. One of the great childish temper tantrums of all time.
The Dodgers don’t have much to offer at the plate. I don’t care how much pitching they have, they don’t have the offensive tools to make this pitching stand up over the course of 162 games. They don’t have an offense based on speed like the Dodgers of the 60’s had, they don’t have legit power threats in the lineup, they just don’t have very good offensive players, save for Paul Lo Duca who puts the ball in play with some authority. Shawn Green is a fine man, but cannot carry this team alone.
LA’s pitching keeps them in the game, but its offense needs a transfusion big time.
Scott Hatteberg delivered once again with men on base for the A’s against the Rangers. Hatteberg is shocked when he doesn’t put the bat on the ball, he delivered with his team down by one in the ninth with the bags loaded after Joe Hardy (Eric Byrnes) struck out looking for out number one.
Teams are coming in hard on Byrnes and he must adjust, he took three strikes well on the inside part of the plate and did not look good in his last at bat. You know baseball is a game of adjustments, well Byrnes better adjust to the inside fastball pronto.
click below for more! [Read more →]
June 24, 2003 No Comments
My Dear Friend and Hall Of Famer Leonard Koppett Passed Away Sunday

Baseball lost its finest historian and number one baseball writer, Leonard Koppett who passed away Sunday.
Leonard understood the origins of the game and loved to talk about the nuances of baseball in the press room. Leonard never turned down an interview request. I always started my first show of the year on Right Off the Bat with Leonard. He taught me how to approach the baseball season and how to put historical events into proper perspective.
Leonard was the smartest man I ever knew, no, matter what the subject his opinion was always well thought out, correct and treasured by me.
Leonard and I shared two wonderful trips to Cooperstown where he included me in his conversations with the greats of the game. Whether it was Koufax, LaSorda, writer Jack Lang, Warren Spahn or other luminaries of the game, Leonard was thrilled to see them and share stories with them. Leonard let me eavesdrop on those conversations, one of the highlights of my life.
Leonard’s favorite time of year was late July when he made his trip to Cooperstown to see his old friends. He loved sitting on the veranda of the old Otesaga hotel, just gazing out at the lake and taking in the view while talking to the all time greats of the game.
When I made a speech at the Hall of Fame in 2002 in their Bullpen Theater on induction weekend, I looked up and saw Leonard in the audience, he had come into Cooperstown early on Friday to hear me speak. I felt at home.
Another of his favorite sayings involved Koppett’s Law. It went like this. When a playoff series was nearing its conclusion all involved would wonder if that days game would conclude the series. Koppett’s Law would apply when he would say, “whatever was most inconvenient for the writers covering the event would happen, meaning another road trip, another flight, and another game will take place.” And it would happen time and time again just like he said it would.
He had a wonderful sense of humor, always present and charming. In his New York days, he would write the comedy lines for the annual skits put on at the winter dinner by the New York Baseabll Writers, the most prestigious baseball event of the year in New York.
Leonard Koppett was generous with his time and always was available to talk about baseball. I enjoyed our lunches during the winter, meeting at a San Mateo deli, we would eat and sit for two hours or more with other special guests and argue about some aspect of the game. Leonard always won and I loved it.
Our last time together was this past Friday night when he and I and Sam Spear and Bruce Magowan sat in the press lounge of the Coliseum and debated the merits of all time leadoff hitters Eddie Stanky and Eddie Yost. It was another wonderful moment listening to his views on the origininal analysis of on base percentage .
Leonard Koppett was the inspiration of my baseball life. He wanted me to tell the oral history of the game through my shows. He encouraged me and promoted my work, perhaps the greatest honor I ever received was Leonard telling a reporter that I was doing the best job of collecting the stories of baseball of anyone in the country.
Leonard’s legacy is contained in his many books and columns about baseball.
His book on managers, The Man in the Dugout, taught me how the game of baseball was passed on by John McGraw (Casey Stengel a disciple of McGraw was Leonard’s all time favorite and his baseball guru in the 50’s), Connie Mack and Branch Rickey to the managers of today. He was very proud of Koppett’s Concise History of Baseball, his chronological history of the game, he wanted fans to be able to pick it up and find the historical roots of baseball. I keep it by my bed and refer to it whenever I need to refresh my memory about a baseball event. Leonard left a beautiful baseball legacy, his Sporting News columns from the 60’s and 70’s predicted the labor changes that baseball would undergo in the late 70’s and 80’s. No one understood the history of the labor issues of baseball better than Leonard Koppett.
He told me that ever since the owners realized they could put a fence around the field in 1860, and charge admission, the players and owners have been arguing how to divide that money.
How true.
Leonard started the AP daily roundup of baseball in the 50’s, very common in today’s papers, when the Dodgers and Giants moved West.
No one in the history of baseball knew more about comparing the differences in baseball eras. Leonard may have been the unofficial founder of the Society of American Baseball Research (SABR) because he took the numbers of the game and told the story of a player’s career or of a specific era through his numerical comparisons.
He forever was compiling wonderful baseball lists.
He would start a conversation with me by simply stating with a twinkle in his eye “look at this”, or “I want to show you something”, and then I was privy to an intricate baseball fact that explained some part of today’s game. He was so proud of these discoveries.
Leonard felt that expansion had been overdone and the future of baseball would be brighter if the owners would cut back to 24 teams.
Many people come and go in life, Leonard Koppett was one of the most treasured friends I have ever had in my life.
My heart goes out to Leonard’s family, Sue, his wife, Kathy and David his children, and to everyone who knew Leonard Koppett.
We have lost one of the giants of life, he was not only a pillar of baseball, but the most generous, and gentle man I ever met.
Leonard Koppett will always be with me. I’ll miss him and never forget him.
Good bye old friend.
June 23, 2003 No Comments
Nothing wrong with interleague play.

Many people have been complaining,
about interleague play.
But the fact is that this
“experiment”by Major League
Baseball has been good for
the increase in attendance.
What other team besides the
Yankees can fill out the Network
Associates Coliseum? Yes, the Giants!
And for those Athletics fans that
complained that the Mariners
are playing the Padres while
the A’S are not…Padres took
2 out of 3 from Mariners this
weekend. So, case closed.
A few years from now, when
the Padres have a very good
team and are in their second or
third year in their beautiful new
ballpark in downtown San Diego
noboby will want to play the
Padres then.
By Amaury Pi-González
June 22, 2003 No Comments
Sunday Morning Muse

Summer is here and the pennant races are far from settled. We probably can pick a couple of teams headed for the playoffs, but other than Atlanta and Seattle, and only if they don’t have siginificant injuries to about 6 players, the rest of the spots are still up for grabs.
How do the Cardinals stay in contention with all their pitching miseries? Simple. Albert Pujols, Edgar Renteria, Scott Rolen, and Jim “Do you have to slide on every catch” Edmonds, crush the ball every night. Now, add rookie secondbaseman Bo Hart, 7-12 in his first weekend and you can see why the Cardinals hang around with substandard pitching.
Randy Wolf and Pedro Martinez pitched excellent games Saturday.
When the two pitchers exited the game the score was 2-1 Boston. The game ended 6-5 Phillies in 13 innings, who says this isn’t a game of bullpens? Boston’s will stay a disaster until Byung Hyun Kim is moved to the ninth inning role.
The best hitter on the team is supposed to hit third. This explains the A’s hitting woes as Miguel Tejada is hitting .230.
Someone tell me why Pedro Feliz doesn’t see more playing time for the Giants? I don’t care if he is a free swinger, the guy can play the outfield, third, or first and does hit the ball hard as he did Saturday night off Tim Hudson.
Hudson did not throw his usual array of pitches down in the strike zone and Feliz made him pay, the first homer he hit was just smoked to centerfield.
Click below for more thoughts this summer morning.
June 22, 2003 No Comments
Giants:This year's past & future by Ed Stern
Marty; This may be a time to do somewhat more than just look at last night’s game. At least, mention it in the context of what has been going on since the start of the season. It is true that it ain’t over till it’s over, but the past frequently can foreshadow the the future.
Fans, Ed Stern a dedicated Giants fan gives us his thoughts this morning on the team and a look at its future in his article. Ed knows baseball and especially the Giants, click below for another perspective on the Bay Area’s other team.
Thanks,
Marty [Read more →]
June 21, 2003 No Comments
A Unique Story About Hall of Famer Larry Doby by Charlie Danrick
Charlie Danrick, a frequent contributor to Loveofthegameproductions.com, had the largest collection of audio tapes of special baseball games in the world before partnering with MLB to distribute his fabulous game collection. Charlie wrote, in his won unique style, a perspective on Hall of Famer Larry Doby. I appreciate Charlie’s work, he is a true sportsman with a sense of humor that is pure East Coast. Check this story, you won’t be disappointed. Also, Charlie’s taped games can be found on MLB.com’s home page.
Click below for the story on a day in the life of Larry Doby, trust me it is different from the eulogies written over the past few days, it even includes another Hall of Famer, but I won’t ruin the surprise! [Read more →]
June 21, 2003 No Comments
Remember, Marathon Not A Sprint in Baseball

In our day to day lives we tend to focus on what is happening today rather than looking at the big picture.
In baseball, you have to keep in mind that what happens today does have a bearing on the game, but what happens over six months really tells the story of the season.
Teams slump for two weeks, then get hot. Pitchers lose three in a row, then turn it around, hitters go oh for fifteen, then hit .400.
You can’t lose faith until it is over, that’s what makes baseball different, among other things, from all the major sports.
With that in mind keep your eyes on the Arizona Diamondbacks who reached the magic .500 mark Friday night. One of these days, Curt Schilling and Randy Johnson will return, and if the young hitters on the team are still hitting, they can quickly get back into the race.
More baseball below! [Read more →]
June 21, 2003 No Comments
