tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-90037133213067200822024-03-19T04:59:20.293-04:00Respect the TekWe do not shake off Jason Varitek in this house.lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.comBlogger117125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-40034018536221817342011-04-06T22:11:00.002-04:002011-04-06T22:14:19.670-04:00In other news, the Indians have racist hats. DiscussALL RIGHT, RED SOX, WE GET IT.<br /><br />We realize that you're losing just because we haven't been blogging. BLOG IN YOUR FACE NOW.<br /><br />Ahem. We don't actually believe that. (Really.) (Not really.)<br /><br />Let's just say, though, that it's awfully early in the season for us to be turning away from the Sox game in order to watch a show on Animal Planet about killer catfish.*<br /><br />And no, mainstream media, we're not panicking; we know the sky is not falling; we're not flying paper airplanes into Theo Epstein's office with directives on who he should trade, where, for what bag of baseballs. We're actually quite tired of the narrative that Red Sox fans are freaking out that the season is over before it's even a week old. The truth is that none of us are panicking. What we are? Is not having fun yet.<br /><br />Hang on a second. The killer catfish has a name. It's called "The Goonch." Okay, back.<br /><br />Perhaps this is the problem with the amount of spring coverage we get here at the molten core of Planet Red Sox. The early games in March took the very edge off our baseball jones, allowed us to make all our "crack of the bat, roar of the crowd" comments and used up our relevant Bart Giamatti quotes. We got acclimated to the joy of having baseball back on tv with Jerry Remy pontificating in our ears. And now we want winning. Or at the very least, we'd like to see some quality baseball instead of the Keystone Kops version. And for the time being, the Red Sox are as bad at baseball as... as... as we are at finishing sentences. Put another way, Dan Shaughnessy is to journalism as... well, okay, maybe that's unfair to the team.<br /><br />We believe this team will sort itself out. In the big picture, these 6 losses are a small percentage of the season as a whole. In the present, however, they're 100% of our baseball season, and that's just less fun than a guy sitting on a wet rock, waiting for a killer catfish to come get him.<br /><br />That's right, Red Sox! We have betrayed you for a...catfish hunter!<br /><br />Okay, now that we've reached the bottom of the pun barrel, will they start winning games?<br /><br />A game?<br /><br />An inning?<br /><br />An at-bat?<br /><br />...excuse us, we have to go get umbrellas. That piece of sky up there looks awfully loose.<br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><br />*This show is called River Monsters, and it appears to be the love child of Charlie Moore Outdoors and No Reservations. So, you know, season pass! </span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-8626761233057898122011-03-31T10:01:00.007-04:002011-03-31T10:26:16.686-04:00This is Not the Opening Day Post You're Looking ForNo, really, we had an entire AL East preview post planned--err, by "planned," we mean that we talked about it all the time and cracked ourselves up doing so, but never quite got around to writing anything down--but this MLB Mancave Fancave Frat Boy Extravaganza Real World Reunion Tour 2011 distracted us from our plans. Heck, it distracted us from baking (for our men) while wearing heels and pearls and cleaning (for our men) while rocking a beehive and loving pink (for our men) and putting on makeup (for our men) and all the other stereotypically girly things MLB apparently thinks we spend all of our time doing.* Be assured, though, that we'll at least share the Red Sox and Yankees sections of the post, and hopefully sooner rather than later. Before the All Star Break at the very least. <br /><br />And, hey, we'll admit that we basically mocked the initial contest concept--who could watch all the baseball? how would that person have time to, you know, shower? or actually physically go out to the ballpark to watch a game?--and neither of us entered. However, we know that at least one female fan did. So it's not like there weren't any female contestants from which to choose.** We didn't sit down and watch all of the video submissions, so we have no way to judge whether or not the ones that won were the best. We did watch the clips from the Yankees fan's submission that are online, though, and let's just say we were decidedly whelmed. We're pretty sure that MLB saw all the memorabilia he has and thought "KA-CHING, we have a winner. Oh, hey, and he probably does drunken impressions at the bar--just like us!" (No, we're not linking. We don't want to give them the traffic.) <br /><br />But let's just say there weren't any "qualified"--quotes used more because the qualifications were maddeningly vague from the start of the contest than for the sarcasm they may imply--female contestants. It's possible. That doesn't mean that MLB needs to market this entire thing as a glorified mini-frathouse, complete with Z100's Greg T the Frat Boy. That doesn't mean that they need to interview an underwear model to celebrate Opening Day; we'd argue that even if the VS model in question is a hardcore baseball fan, that advertising the event as "interviews with an underwear model" rather than "interviews with this totally hardcore baseball fan who, by the way, happens to be a VS model" basically tells that MLB is pretty damned sure that their audience is male, straight, and into underwear models. When dealing with a PR-based initiative--which the Mancave surely is, wrapped up in Real World nostalgia and Jersey Shore mystique--perception is a huge part of the equation. <br /><br />And, to a female fan right now, the perception is that MLB either doesn't care or doesn't recognize that female fans make up about 45% of their demographic. That's pretty damned close to half, or so we hear; we're girls, doncha know, which means we don't understand the complicated math.*** <br /><br />It's just, look, we're constantly being asked if we understand the infield fly rule, no matter how many times we're the ones in our section who can tell you the name and scouting report of that kid they just called up from Portland. We're the ones buying kids' player tees because the men's ones don't fit--and we're lucky because we're both shorter than Dustin Pedroia and can fit into kids' t-shirts, even if they don't particularly fit our shapes properly--and we don't want to wear sparkles or bangles or pink or PINK. And while it's nice to be told by the grandfatherly type two seats over that he was "relieved" when we "proved our knowledge" because he "groaned" when he saw us coming to sit near him because we "look like teenage girls," well. It's actually not. And we'd really like to think that MLB the Giant [redacted] Entity thinks better of us than that guy, you know? We'd like to think that maybe the fact that we buy tickets and the Extra Innings package and scorebooks and baseball cards might make our fandom just the teensiest bit important. The sparkles and the bangles and the pink and the PINK really should've been a clue. <br /><br />Heck, and this is just off the top of our heads here so please bear with us on this, but if they want to start things out by bringing a beautiful woman into the Mancave, why not invite Alyssa Milano? We hear she's definitely into baseball. <br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*Please note that we mean no disrespect to anyone who does any of these things--we do some of them ourselves!--because all of these things are awesome too. Though as neither of us currently has a man, per se, we're doing them for ourselves. Because who doesn't love a delicious Iraqi cardamom whole wheat cookie? Or a really great pair of heels? </span><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"></span><span style="font-size:85%;">**We're not even going into the fact that both winners are white-seeming dudes who root for AL East teams. But, you know, <em>both winners are seemingly white dudes who root for AL East teams.</em> </span><span style="font-size:85%;"></span><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">***Actually, math isn't our strong suit. But that's because we're liberal arts majors, not because we're women. </span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-88801657226361135102011-02-18T17:02:00.006-05:002011-02-18T17:15:12.120-05:00Leslie Knope for President & Other Signs of Spring<span class="Apple-style-span">Jim Leyland ruined all our "best shape of our lives" jokes. In fact, he ruined all of the "best shape of his/her life" jokes. Ever. Normally, that sort of thing would get him cult hero status in Casa de Respect the Tek, but <a href="http://www.sbnation.com/mlb/2011/2/18/2000910/jim-leyland-not-worried-about-miguel-cabrera">the way he went about it was disturbing and offensive enough</a> to kill that movement before it could get started. We're still going to keep calling him "<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JcwF9z_3msk">Crazy Old Jim Leyland, Hmmm...</a>" in our best Gaston voices though. Because we can.<br /><br />But <a href="http://www.nesn.com/2011/02/gary-tuck-running-tight-ship-as-camp-tuck-helps-to-keep-red-sox-catchers-in-line.html" target="_blank">Camp Tuck</a> is in full effect, Lil Papi's taken his cuts and <a href="http://cache.boston.com/bonzai-fba/Globe_Photo/2011/02/17/11__1297977478_7930.jpg">high-fived his newest teammate</a>, and it even feels like spring here in Boston for a couple of hours. We're ready for baseball season (and not at all writing this to step away from KaberleKaberle 2011: The Electric Trade Dance Boogaloo*). We're ready for Fenway Park, and overpriced beerwater; we're ready to stand up to see if that ball's going out, only to sit down again when it lands anticlimactically in an outfielder's glove.<br /><br />We're so ready for baseball, in fact, that a few weeks ago, we bussed it down to Enemy Territory (aka Manhattan) to listen to people way smarter than us talk about baseball. Yes, that's right, we want to Baseball Prospectus's SABR Day event at Foley's. And we were ready to write about it that night, only we had a little too much to drink. And then we were ready to talk about it the next day, only we had to ride a bus all day, which required the taking of all the Dramamine in the land. And then we had to watch the Bruins. Or Parks & Recreation. Or we had to re-watch Parks & Recreation again and again during the intermissions of Bruins games.*<br /><br />Of course, enough time has now passed that a) no one really wants to our recap anymore and b) we've forgotten most of the truly awesome stuff we were going to tell you. Still, here are a couple of tidbits too amazing to sweep under the rug just because we're lazy and also hockey fans and viewers of brilliant situational comedy.<br /><br />1. There is nothing quite like the groan of a entire room of baseball geeks--including many a Mets fan!--at the mere mention of <a href="http://eephusleague.com/2011/02/thankful/" target="_blank">Jeff Francoeur</a>'s name. Except maybe the groan of an entire room of baseball geeks when a panel member dares to mention the RBI or the Golden Glove in trying to convince us all that Dale Murphy should be in the Hall of Fame.<br /><br />2. We are possibly living in a golden--nay, chocolate wrapped in gold foil--age of baseball-related facial hair. Dennis Sheehan was rocking a killer handlebar during his discussion of the drool-worthy Kansas City system and baseball scouting in general. Jay Jaffe could give Ron Swanson a run for his money.<br /><br />3. <span dir="ltr">You just can't shout down a tech geek who wants to know what mainframe PitchFX runs on, no matter how much you want to ask about what PitchFX can do.</span><br /><br />4. However, we did learn that FieldFX--which is designed to track everything that moves on a baseball field--is still in the works, and when it comes out the data will be made available to those of us who don't currently have our dream jobs in baseball ops.We're already planning a brand new website dedicated to tracking umpires and manager tantrums based on this new technology. How far off Country Joe West can Jim Leyland bounce? We may soon be able to calculate this figure to within 1/18th of an inch.<br /><br />5. Sometimes, a <a href="http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/p/papeljo01.shtml" target="_blank">player</a>'s mom will write a letter to the author of one of the approximately 70 billion out there prospect lists because she thinks her precious son should've been ranked higher. Have you seen his fastball?<br /><br />6. The Mets should be a valid major league organization once again in 2023. Book it.<br /><br />We also experienced a minor baseball miracle during the post-event pre-leaving-the-bar portion of the day, while mingling and staring at all the cool sports paraphernalia hanging on the walls of the bar. We stood around chatting about baseball with Mets fans, a <a href="http://www.baseball-ladies.com/">Phillies phan</a>, and a couple of Yankees fans, and no one lost a limb. Not even a pinkie finger. It was like Christmas, only with 100% less frankincense and myrrh!<br /><br />Sso that got us through the winter and now that it's spring (sort of! not really!) we're ready to watch us some baseballl, with stats in our head and crazy Carl Crawford love in our hearts, with spreadsheets to the left, beer to the right, and a Captain Fenway hoodie keeping us warm on those oh-my-god, it's-still-April nights. And we're ready to tell you what we see. We're gonna do this blog up right. Because spring is all about new beginnings, blah blah cliche blah. And, besides, have you seen us? We're in the best shape of our lives.***</span><br /><br /><span class="Apple-style-span" ><br /><span class="Apple-style-span">*We would officially like to admit that we are bummed to lose both Stu and Wheels, even if these trades do make the team better in aggregate.<br /><br />**No, seriously, Parks & Recreation. We can't recommend this show highly enough. DVR it if your favorite sports team is playing that night: Ken Tremendous would totally understand.<br /><br />***Do not test us on this; we just baked a cookie the size of home plate.</span></span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-26042163627888479192010-10-07T00:00:00.005-04:002010-10-07T00:05:47.687-04:00In non-Doctober newsSix for our Sox:<br /><br />1. Let the record show that on Sunday, October 3, 2010, we ran into the following people wandering the concourse at Fenway before the game: Derek Jeter, Jorge Posada, Josh Reddick, Kevin Youkilis, Robert Coello, AJ Burnett, Larry Lucchino, Rich Hill, Mark Teixeira, Lance Berkman. Let the record also show that we neither committed physical harm on the Yankees nor embarrassed ourselves unduly around the Red Sox. Let the record further show that Derek Jeter wearing a sports jacket and rolling a small suitcase behind him looks exactly like Derek Jeter wearing a sports jacket and rolling a small suitcase behind him would look like.<br /><br />2. Sunday's game was the best season-ender we could've hoped for in a non-playoff season (non-perfect game &/or no-hitter &/or hitting for the cycle division). First, the home nine won--and, in doing so, thwarted the Yankees' division hopes. Playing spoiler! Good times! Second, we got to watch Jennifer's brother-in-law look slack-jawed and incredulous over Jorge Posada's insane decision to throw to second with a runner on third--thus allowing the runner to score when he, inevitably,* failed to catch the baserunner stealing--a move we haven't seen work outside short season ball. Third, Jedediah Jethro Lowrie, y'all. We even got to watch John Lackey be mostly quite good at that pitching thing the Red Sox pay him so much to do, and we got to standing O our blogsake multiple times. There were no tears, except for the ones we were forced to cry because it was so frickin' cold.<br /><br />3. If JD Drew decides to retire once his contract expires next year--hey, he did bring up the possibility--and he actually makes the decision before the end of the season,** the Red Sox probably won't hold a "Thanks, JD" night. Therefore, we propose that those of us chilling in the Mom's-basement-o-sphere hold our own such event. T-shirts, posters, people who appreciate what a great ballplayer JD is, all getting together to say thanks while drinking overpriced beers and nachos. Because JD Drew is several kinds of awesome, no matter what Bill Simmons says, and he deserves a goofy video montage as much as anyone.<br /><br />4. We wish Adrian Beltre and his family the best--we're singing "Happy Birthday, young Beltre child" right now--but we wish we could've watched him play just one more time with the Red Sox. Which obviously means that Theo needs to get started on re-signing him yesterday.<br /><br />5. We're rooting for the San Francisco Giants*** this postseason. Consider this our official apology to any lifelong SF Giants fans whose team we've just jinxed. (We have an entire hierarchy of rooting interests after this one, but the Giants are the cart we're hitching our metaphorical horses to. You can probably guess who happens to be at the very bottom of the hierarchy, in a big box marked "DANGER: CONTAINS EXTREMELY LARGE PLAQUE.")<br /><br />5. We kept saying (and saying, and saying) that we weren't going to be too upset if/when the Red Sox were officially eliminated from postseason contention. "The injuries," we'd remind ourselves. "We're going to honestly be thrilled with a winning season, given that our team this year was comprised of Papi, Beltre, and shrubbery." But under all that swagger, we had a niggling fear that we'd become that which we've long disdained: the fan who Expects the Postseason and Considers Anything Less Than That Abject Failure and a Reason To Fire &/or Trade Everyone. Finally, it happened. The Red Sox were eliminated. And the world didn't end. We were sad, yes, and disappointed that we're not getting bonus baseball this year. But we're not angry, or irrationally upset, or any of that. We're proud--in that weird way fans can be proud of professional athletes--of this crazy, injured, random team of ours.<br /><br />Although, we're a little sad that we'll never get a job with WEEI.<br /> <br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*We mock because the Red Sox had Victor Martinez and Jason Varitek catching this year, if you know what we mean.<br /><br />**Because, c'mon, the only reason Jason Varitek and Tim Wakefield aren't getting "Thanks for Gloving A-Rod in the Face" and "Thanks for Getting Us Out Of a Pickle When Hideki Matsui Meandered Over to Third Base That Time" nights, respectively, is that both want to play next season. We're not getting into whether or not they actually will--there are emotions involved, damn it, and emotions cloud objectivity--but there's obviously a chance neither will be dressing for the Sox come April.<br /><br />***We actually fell for this team and their Tim Lincecum and their Buster Posey way back at the beginning of the season. (Hell, the fall started last season, if we're going to be honest, with Jonathan Sanchez's no-no and Pablo Sandoval's Kung Fu Panda action and, yes, Tim Lincecum's nasty, beautiful change-up.) Now, of course, we're stuck pinning our hopes to Pat Burrell.<br /><br /></span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-39976027690789498182010-08-31T22:14:00.004-04:002010-08-31T22:27:03.180-04:00These are, in fact, your father's Red Sox*Maybe next year? Is that what we're supposed to say after two painful losses to that irritating team down south?**<br /><br />It's weird. We're pessimists by nature--the glass is always half-empty, and the water's always lukewarm with that funky chemical aftertaste--but we haven't quite lost hope this season. Maybe because it's, you know, not mathematically over. Maybe because we were there when the Mets screwed things up last year. And the year before that, etc., etc. And we watched from afar as the Colorado Rockies found Je--uhh--made their amazing run in 2007. We've got approximately a month of baseball left, and we're not about to start watching preseason football.<br /><br />So it's time to give up on the tired "every season in which the Red Sox fail to make the postseason is, post hoc ergo procter hoc, a capital-F Failure" meme. If life in the big, bad AL East continues apace--hell, if the Matuszes and the Morrowses and the Wieterses and the Sniders of the world continue to improve, it could theoretically get even more competitive up here in the sports world's scariest division of all time***--we could see more seasons just like this. The same team won't be left playing golf in October every season, but when you have three or more legitimate World Series contenders in the same division, well...<br /><br />Shit happens.<br /><br />Look, between that glorious day when the Red Sox fielded their actual roster (oh, Opening Day, a time of joy and sunshine and hope) and the present, the Red Sox have lost their MVP-caliber first and second basemen, as well as 2/3 of their opening day outfield. They're down fifteen catchers and seventy-four Jonathan Van Everys. Hideki Okajima, Scott Atchison, Manny Delcarmen,**** and a motley cast of clowns have been allowed to pitch in actual games. Major league games, against other major league teams. The Red Sox are also on pace to win about 90 games.<br /><br />Think about that, then get back to us about this being a lost season. A bridge year. Run prevention, ha ha ha.<br /><br />Sure, the Red Sox face long odds against making the playoffs. We're not math people--liberal arts majors FTW!--but we're pretty sure the Red Sox need to win 79 of their remaining 31 games, while the Yankees and (Devil) Rays only have to tread water (literally: they're not even obligated to play out the remainder of their games, so they're all getting into the hot tub). But that doesn't we should consider the season a waste, or stop watching and rooting for our team. There's a difference, we think, between facing up to the odds and the reality behind them--the Sox lost too many games to bottom-dweller teams, and lost too many players to supremely freakish injuries--and giving up, full-stop, on the season.<br /><br />This is a good team. One of the best in baseball. There's lots of fun left to be had.<br /><br /><ol><li>Take bets on how many more head taps, exactly, it'll take for Adrian Beltre to really go medieval on Victor Martinez. For a team that has "no star power" he's mighty fun to watch: from the defense to those one-kneed proposal home runs he's fond of hitting. The dude may not have a Beard of Truth or Dreads of Destruction, but otherwise he's definitely our idea of star power: great baseball skills, fun personality, and a sideline in wacky brotherly dugout hijinks. We're bummed that he'll likely be playing for a West Coast team next year. </li><li>Dance to the beat of "The Kids Are All Right." Ryan Kalish, Felix Doubront, and whoever ends up on the roster next. We're hoping for a Josh Reddick sighting as early as tomorrow. Now we have all of September to give all the rooks crazy new nicknames. Can we do better than Yamaico "Me Feel So Young" Navarro? The answer is yes. We hope.</li><li>Clap if you believe in Jed Lowrie. C'mon, you were starting to think that he was just a figment of our collective imaginations, too.</li><li>Write that Made for TV movie you've been talking about writing lo these many years. Base it on the lives and careers of Darnell McDonald and Daniel Nava. Shop it around only to have execs tell you it's too farfetched to be believable and that maybe you should head over to Disney with this one.</li><li>Invent a sandwich in Terry Francona's honor. No, wait, that's a bad idea--it would probably involve ham that had been left out too long. And by ham, we mean starting pitchers. (We kid, Tito, we kid. But we have wondered if Leo DiCaprio inceptioned you into believing you manage in the National League.)</li></ol><br />The Red Sox are still mathematically in things, and if this season has reinforced any of the many lessons we've learned in our time as baseball fans it's that sometimes? Athletes get hurt. Ballplayers underperform. Pitchers throw meatballs right down the middle of the plate, and batters swing through a pitch that's sitting right there in their sweetspot. Baseball is unpredictable. As Kevin Garnett would yell, eyes bugging out of his head, "anything is possible."<br /><br />In the meantime, why not relax with a nice cold beverage and enjoy what's left of the Red Sox season? Maybe it'll end on October 2. Maybe they'll make one of those miracle runs we'll all talk about for years to come. Either way, it's baseball. And we like baseball.<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*And your father didn't whine about it on Twitter, so suck it up, punk!<br /><br />**Our plan: if the Rays can't scam the city into building them a new park, they should relocate. To Montreal.<br /><br />**The obligatory "in any other division" disclaimer: in any other division, they'd be no further out than 2 games (and, it could be posited, based on their record vs., say, the NL West, that they'd have more wins and ergo be in first place in that division, blah blah blah conjecture-cakes). But, of course, they're not in any other division. We're not going to go all George Steinbrenner on you and start railing against a tough division our team, in part, helped create, but the facts are facts. The Yankees and Rays are both projected to win close to 100 games. Sometimes you just have to tip your cap. (But not to the Orioles, not anytime soon.)<br /><br />***Bye, Manny in the Del! We'll probably miss the idea of you--you're from Boston!--more than actual you--you can't throw strikes and give up too many home runs!--but you were a part of a championship season and no one will ever be able to take that away from you. Or us. Maybe now you'll be able to put "Blame it on the Rain" behind you and live up to your potential.</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-89479472282745569412010-08-26T21:40:00.003-04:002010-08-26T21:44:39.582-04:00We're not here to talk nonsense to Bob LoblawSometimes, Twitter lets you follow dramatic news or intricate political stories as they break. Sometimes, you just get bored sportswriters during rain delays. Obviously, we prefer the latter.<br /><br />And so it was that Joe Haggerty brought <a href="http://twitter.com/HackswithHaggs/status/22123739158">this</a> to our attention:<br />It's time to think about how to store Red Sox players safely over the offseason.<br /><br />Haggs suggests bubblewrap, a classic choice. We're sure that armed guards and giant cotton balls have also been considered. But by investing literally minutes of deep thought in this, we've come up with an even better plan: Comas.<br /><br />Not just any comas, protective comas! You know, the kind that doctors on medical TV shows put patients into while they're busy with A) their romantic entanglements, B) their daddy issues, or C) their thoroughly unbelievable hair? Well, we're not sure they're real, but then we never thought Adrian Beltre could break a man's bones with an I-Dream-of-Jeannie-esque blink. And with Dustin "I'm Not A Midget, I Just Play One On TV" Pedroia back in the boot, well, it's time for a surreal conclusion to a surreal season.<br /><br />Of course, once we came up with this idea, our minds went immediately to Dr. Gregory House, MD. TV's least ethical doctor is an excellent candidate for practicing nonconsensual sports medicine. Just picture House administering a "routine check-up" to one player at a time, slipping 'em a "B-12 shot"* and then tucking them in for a long winter's nap. Sure, some players might put up more of a fight than others--<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">PAPELBON: I can't be in no coma, man, I got ducks to shoot! </span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">HOUSE: Hold still, I'm pretty sure you have vasculitis!</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">PAPELBON: Get that needle away from my booty!</span><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">[Cue chase scene set to the tune of Yackety Sax]</span><br /><br />--But in the end, we think Theo Epstein would agree: nobody puts patients in comas like House, and comas are definitely the way to go. That way, nobody strains a muscle in the winter while golfing or inhaling a pumpkin pie. Everyone will show up healthy to spring training!<br /><br />And if anyone sues for malpractice, our lawyer, <a href="http://www.imdb.com/character/ch0011702/quotes">Bob Loblaw</a>, is on retainer. And he's got a blog, so he must be smart.<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*Not one of Roger Clemens's B-12s, and we swear that's all we have to say on that subject.</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-92072990421850793632010-08-22T22:34:00.004-04:002010-08-22T22:50:34.700-04:00Limping off the DL.<span style="font-style: italic;">SCOREBOARD: "Last year, JD Drew ranked fourth out of all AL outfielders with a .911 OPS" </span><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">GUY BEHIND US: "Does anyone even know what OPS is?"</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">HIS FRIEND: "I do."</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">GUY: "RIght, so what is it?"</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">FRIEND: "OBS?"</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">GUY: "OPS, dude, it says OPS."</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">FRIEND: "Well, it's OBS."</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">GUY: "Fine, OBS, OPS, whatever. But what does it mean? You claim you know, so tell me."</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">FRIEND: "OBS means...on-base percentage."</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">GUY: "Is 900 good?"</span><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">US, REFRAINING FROM TURNING AROUND AND SAYING THIS TO THESE FINE GENTLEMEN, AND INSTEAD JUST LAUGHING BETWEEN OURSELVES: "Nah, man, a 900 OBS is just walking and clogging up the basepaths. Everyone knows JD Drew's a baseclogging jerk who doesn't care about baseball. Now, 900 RBI and a dirty cap, on the other hand..."</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;"> </span><br /><br />Last night, we went to a baseball game. It'd been a while--Futures at Fenway was our last attempt, and the skies opened and poured down on us and, lo, we were soaked to the bone and the poor kids from Salem had to take a long busride back home without playing a single inning on the hallowed grounds--and we were getting antsy. But things worked out in our favor, and by 5:00 we were pre-gaming at McGreevey's.* A couple of really weak drinks and an inning or two of the LLWS, and we were on our way.<br /><br /><div style="text-align: justify;">We're not going to get into an intensive play-by-play here--either you watched the game, or you didn't, and there are plenty of places on the internet to get that kind of information--but we figured, hey, what better way to get off the DL and into the game than by talking about a game we actually attended? Much better than bitching about Sullivan's Tire commercials.<br /></div><br />And, while we're profoundly not thrilled about the injury parade,** how cool is it to see kids we know from Sea Dogs and Spinners teams past playing for the big team? How awesome is it to look up and see Ryan Kalish on second base or Yamaico Navarro fielding a grounder? We admit it. We cheered for those guys harder than we cheered for almost anyone else. The kids, y'all. They're kind of all right.<br /><br />Even Daisuke Matsusaka impressed us. Maybe we were still slightly tipsy, but he seems to be working faster and more authoritatively. Sure, he had that one inning where it seemed like everything was hit hard, but for most of the game he kept a really good hitting team off balance and off the basepaths. We approve of this guy. This guy didn't drive us back to the bar once.<br /><br />Of course, this being our 2010 Red Sox, things weren't easy. As we all know, the game ended up tied through nine, and we had ourselves a little bonus baseball. We dashed to the ladies' after the home nine failed to score in the tenth, then set up in standing room behind home plate for the eleventh. (Papelbon works slowly enough that we really only missed one batter. True story.) A nearby usher started talking about the fact that he really thought Bard should've stayed in for another inning. Another guy looked like he was about to throw up. Someone in another section started the wave.<br /><br />The wave. Top of the eleventh. Heart of the order up and a closer who had imploded the last time he faced this very opponent on the mound. What better time to stand up and down and lift your hands in the air like you just don't care? Not like there's anything happening in the game or--<br /><br />--Jed Lowrie drops a routine pop-up in foul territory, and everyone in our section moans and grabs their hearts--<br /><br />anything.<br /><br />As we stood there, pounding our chests and hoping we'd remember to breathe at some point, Papelbon struck John Buck out. And suddenly the air seemed more oxygenated. We were going to be okay.<br /><br />Plus: "now that Lowrie kid can redeem himself," someone said. "He has to."<br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">8th INNING, SAME GUYS. RYAN KALISH HAS JUST JOGGED BACK TO SECOND AFTER AN ATTEMPTED STOLEN BASE. </span><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">GUY: "But I thought he stole third."</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">FRIEND: "Nah, man, he had to go back because the batter swung. You can't steal a base if the batter swings the bat."</span><br /><br /><br />If there's one thing we enjoy, it's the film <span style="font-style: italic;">Overboard</span>, starring Goldie Hawn and--<br /><br />Okay, strike that, if there's one thing we enjoy, it's watching Red Sox players embrace each other at home plate. If there's two things we enjoy, it's walking out of Fenway Park singing.<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Overboard </span>would make the top five, though.<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><br />*Look, we'd seen Friday's game. We figured hard liquor might be key to our enjoyment of Saturday's game.<br /><br />**We blame Gary Bettman. As every hockey fan out there knows, there's pretty much nothing out there that you can't blame him for. In this case, though, we even have a reason. Bettman brought us the Winter Classic, the Winter Classic brought the Bruins to Fenway, the Bruins brought their broken-itis to Fenway, and the Red Sox all fell down</span>.lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-65475652179995556482010-05-13T20:39:00.006-04:002010-05-13T20:49:35.232-04:00Kevin Millar begs to differ.Nothing gets us all riled up and angry like a bad sports analogy or cliche run amok.* Maybe those of you who follow our twitter feed have noticed us @broadcaster'ing whenever the NESN Sports Desk folks tell us that "the Flyers wanted it more" or that "momentum momentum momentum."** Well, we tweet because the TV finally stopped listening to us when we told it that it was being ridiculous.<br /><br />In the last 24 hours, we've noticed a disturbing trend on the internets: people actually comparing the 2010 Philadelphia Flyers to the 2004 Red Sox. Yes, our 2004 Red Sox. The Idiots. "Don't let us win tonight." The Steal. People have had the gall to compare Carrot Top and his Merry Band of Diving Mustachioed Flyers to Sir Curtis Montague Schilling And His Right Esteemed Sock Monkeys. As our ex-roommate's third cousin would say, "that shit ain't right."<br /><br />We know all of you out there in loyal-reader-land understand why the 2010 Flyers are in no way analogous to the 2004 Red Sox, but for any random souls who have stumbled upon our humble blog when they were looking for Respect the Ted: A Blog about Ted from Scrubs, well, we've prepared a handy-dandy list. With pie charts. Because who doesn't love <a href="http://www.flipflopflyin.com/flipflopflyball/">a good pie chart</a>?***<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Reason #1: No Aaron Fuckin' Boone.</span><br /><br />In 2003, the Red Sox were defeated by the Evil Sorcerer Boone in what has largely become known as The Shot That Launched A Thousand Bucky Dent Flashbacks*. In 2004, the Red Sox staged an epic comeback by stealing a base, hitting a home run, and breaking the Mariano Bot for a couple of innings.<br /><br />The 2009 Bruins did not do anything to make Flyers fans gaze longingly at whatever Philadelphia's version of the Tobin Bridge happens to be. The 2010 Flyers have not actually completed an epic comeback, at press time, and the 2010 Bruins do not feature an ageless robot who throws a cutter.<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Reason #2: No ghosts.</span><br /><br />In 2004, Yankees fans were known to dress up as the ghost of a long-dead fat slugger. This was mostly in an attempt to hide the fact that they'd split their pants at the all-you-can-eat Chinese buffet down the street from the Stadium, but also referred to an unfortunate incident in which Red Sox ownership traded--well, you know the story. Let's not rehash it here.<br /><br />Bruins fans in 2010 do not dress up as the ghost of...well, any player traded from the Flyers to the Bruins. No, we're not going to do any research to find out who that might be. You know why? Because if it was in any way equivalent to Babe "George Herman" Ruth, we would <i>already</i> have heard of it. The only ghosts involved in this series are those of Marco Sturm's slaughtered tendons.<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Reason #3: 1918.</span><br /><br />Before 2004, the Red Sox had not won the World Series since 1918. Maybe you recall those charming, sing-song, "19-18" chants the Yankees faithful used to serenade us with (it's like Montreal's "Ole Ole" song, only completely different!). The Yankees had won 17 billion World Championships between 1918 and 2004, approximately 1.4 million per season.<br /><br />Before 2010, the Flyers had not won the Stanley Cup since 1975. The Bruins? 1972. So, not a Yankees/Red Sox type dynamic at all. By our calendars, it's a lot more like the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Baltimore Orioles.<br /><br />Hey, the team colors even match up, so we must be right!<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Reason #4: Not enough bad blood.</span><br /><br />We weren't alive during those 1970s years we just mentioned. So we're not really sure who Bobby Orr would have considered his archnemesis at the time. We'll stipulate that the Big Bad Bruins and the Broad Street Bullies were enemies. Bitter enemies with big hair. Fine. But What about the eighties, and nineties? We're reasonably sure we remember those decades--we have the peasant blouses to prove it--and we don't remember any Bruins and Flyers rivalry lighting up our radar screen.<br /><br />Oh, we hate the Flyers, don't get us wrong, but not nearly enough to call them our rivals. It's just not like that. Flyers and Bruins fans don't fight in the street--and these are sports fans from Boston and Philly; it's not like they need anything bigger than a hamburger bun to fight over. The Habs, now? Give us the Habs and we'll show you our hate.<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Reason #5: Instant karma is not gonna get you.</span><br /><br />There are people out there wondering if the Bruins' possible case of the chokesies is karma's way of punishing us for the Red Sox' 2004 miracle. These people are clearly not scholars of sports mojo like ourselves. You know, if the real world worked that way, it would be colossally unfair to the athletes--to say nothing of the fans that root for different towns in different sports (here's looking at you, Connecticut, with your weird combinations and your lack of Whale). But let's forget about justice and look at the logic of it. If karma really has nothing better to do than balance Boston's sports luck, then what happened in the 1950s and 60s when the Red Sox were bottom of the barrel? It's not like the Celtics spent those decades winning all the--<br /><br />Oh, snap! Karma!<br /><br />Uh...we'll get you that pie chart right after we go to Calcutta to work with the poor.<br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><br />*Lies, damned lies, and statistics.<br /><br />**Which reminds us: are we the only people left in the world who a) remember <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/01/25/elec04.prez.lieberman/">Joementum</a> and b) use it to describe the opposite of forward momentum on a semi-regular basis? Inquiring minds want to know!<br /><br />***Mmmm, pie. /Homer Simpson</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-33696604670519098862010-05-12T23:03:00.003-04:002010-05-13T16:29:53.322-04:00Pessimism: it's what's for dinner!In the grand tradition of the MLB Post-Season on Fox, we have compiled Seven Keys to the Game for the Bruins going into the pivotal game 7 that should've never come to pass:<br /><br />1. Shoot the puck<br />2. Score goals<br />3. Don't let the Flyers score goals<br />4. Stop taking stupid penalties<br />5. Hit Mike Richards<br />6. Score even more goals<br />7. Don't let it go back to Fenway<br /><br />Look, we may not always have had faith that the Bruins would make it to the playoffs, but now that they're here we want them to win this series.* And then we want them to beat the Habs. And the Sharkhawks. And we want that shiny, shiny Cup. We really don't think that's too much to ask.<br /><br />Especially since the Red Sox are currently doing their upmost to make us cling to hockey season for as long as humanly possible, what with their losing and their getting hurt and their letting outfielders pitch because their pitchers can't and did we mention their getting swept by the Orioles. Sure, there have been bright moments: the midget's taken to wearing tall socks more frequently, which make him look even more like a member of the Lollipop Guild than he normally does, and Jonny Lester remembered how that whole pitching thing works. Tek's OPSing 1.287, which is just a crazy video game number. JD Drew still thinks his strike zone is superior to any umpire's. Oh, and we've decided to call Marco Scutaro Scoots McGoots. It's fun to say! You should try it!<br /><br />We've also been busy coming up with our own advanced pitching metrics. There's the standard quality start, of course, but even better is the wicked quality (WQ) start: 7IP, 2 or fewer ER, less than 4 wild pitches and two hit batsmen. And the WTF start, which is what Dice-K did last night.** We're still working on the math part, but we're sure these are going to be a hit with the BP crowd!<br /><br />We're hoping to get back into the whole blogging groove now that we're done with this season's mandatory period of going to ballgames with our mothers (no, really, that's what we've been doing since Blogapalooza***), but we're over making promises of that sort. We'll blog when we remember to, and then we'll forget for a while, and then we'll think that blogging is jinxy before we remember that it's not blogging that's a jinx. It'll be a long, crazy, 162-game ride.<br /><br />Unless the Stanley Cup Playoffs kill us first.<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*Jennifer's other NHL team, the Devils, already lost to this particular Flyers squad. She really does not want last year's "both my teams lost to the Hurricanes" fiasco to repeat itself this year. Especially since the Flyers, unlike the Hurricanes, are actually Evil.<br /><br />**No, really, WTF? We were there, and we're still not sure that happened.<br /><br />***Hello to those of you we met! We liked quite a few of your t-shirts and would like to subscribe to your newsletters!</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-35456602609023895742010-04-17T14:11:00.002-04:002010-04-17T14:19:46.204-04:00Hit the panic button on your remote controlWe're almost two whole weeks into the season, so it's definitely time to overreact. We'll finally be heading to Fenway tonight*, but until then, we've only experienced baseball through the magic of TV. No big--we finally joined 2008 and got ourselves some HD--that's how most of us end up watching most of the season. As such, there's been quite a bit of talk lately about televised baseball: the calling of, the filming of, the watching of. We don't consider ourselves experts, per se, but we're pretty dedicated amateurs. Of course we have some advice to impart on the fine folks at NESN.**<br /><br />No, none of this is new, or groundbreaking, or even particularly unique. But it does come from the heart. Which is, as everyone knows, where pitching comes from.<br /><br />1. It's too early in the season to be this punchy.<br /><br />2. Let the Eck take a shift or two. We love Remy with the pureness of only the most Stockholm Syndromed of NESN-viewing fans, but the Eck not only brought us such genius as "the moss" and "hairy cheese," but also just a bit more inside-baseball talk than we get from the regular team. Nothing against the classic combo of the Dawg and the Don-O, but sometimes they're so comfortable bantering, they forget that there's a ballgame happening.<br /><br />3. Do not--we repeat: DO NOT--film routine fly-outs as if they are (in descending order): game-winning home runs, game-tying home runs, doubles off the Monster, triples in the corner, bloopers, singles, or anything but the absolutely routine out they actually are. We get that sometimes an outfielder--damn you, Ankiel!--is going to make a spectacular play, but more often, a can of corn is just that.<br /><br />4. Show us the outfielders on each play. One of the things we miss when we're at home instead of the park--besides seven-dollar diet Cokes--is being able to see B.J. Upton yawning with his glove hand held up, just waiting there for the "deep, far, caught" ball that Dustin Pedroia just hit.<br /><br />5. We get it: you have overhead cameras! And a cartoon blimp! The main upside to watching road games these days is the lack of, "ooh, let's shoot this from overhead!" "okay, now this!" "ooh, and this!" going on. Night baseball at Fenway is really pretty from the air...the first five times. In one night.<br /><br />6. No, really, Jerry, last week was way too early in the season to start pontificating about Don's wardrobe malfunctions instead of actually following the game. Way. Too. Early. In fact, we'd submit that, right up until the last game of the season, it is always too early.<br /><br />7. Last but not least, maybe not so much with the weirdly sexist commercials. Have you guys seen the one where the cabbie ditches his fare for Heidi Watney, or the one where the (awesome cause) <a href="http://www.runtohomebase.org/">Run to Home Base</a> is promoted by a posse of girls stretching in Baywatch-style slow motion? Seen them about a hundred times each? We're not being greedy, not asking for <a href="http://www.nesn.com/2010/03/tim-wakefield-meets-18yearold-female-knuckleballer-from-japan.html">Eri Yoshida</a> to get a bullpen spot*** or anything. It would just be nice if you maybe remembered that your baseball audience isn't all bros who wear their failhats backward. You have female viewers! Some of them even care enough to write thousand-word blog posts about their local sports network!<br /><br />Weird, right?<br /><br />Oh, NESN. You know we only bug you because we love you. Tell Charlie Moore we said hello.<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*The weather forecast is promising temperatures in the balmy upper 30s! Who's got spring fever?<br /><br />**We have advice for the fine folks at ESPN and FOX, too, mostly about <a href="http://www.firejoemorgan.com/">firing Joe Morgan</a> and cutting down on the excessive hype around Crosby and Ovech--oh, wait, that's NBC/Versus, never mind. But, since we've only really watched NESN (and other local channels, thanks to Extra Innings: did everyone else already know that sometimes SNY <em>takes calls live on air</em>? Can you imagine what would happen if NESN tried that? George Carlin would blush.) so far this year, we'll hold off on dissing the national networks until we suffer from one of our weekly bouts of writers' block later in the season.<br /><br />***She may not be ready for a bullpen spot; so how about a buddy cop show with Eri and Wakefield? Knuckleballers united for truth and justice! </span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-37054225192264904072010-04-07T19:39:00.004-04:002010-04-07T19:58:29.333-04:00Mad Libs with Big Papi<p style="margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 12.0px Helvetica"><i>"Good," he said, turning to face the reporters encircling him. "You guys wait 'til [sassafrass] happens, then you can talk [poppycock]. Two [bloomin'] games, and already you [pigeon-smokers] are going crazy.</i></p> <p style="margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 12.0px Helvetica; min-height: 14.0px"><i><br /></i></p> <p style="margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 12.0px Helvetica"><i>"What's up with that, man? [Great Googly-Moogly.] [Dadblamed] 160 games left. That's a [humbug]. One of you [Commies] got to go ahead and hit for me." <span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-style: normal; ">--<a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/boston/mlb/columns/story?columnist=edes_gordon&id=5062758">David Ortiz</a></span></i></p> <p style="margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 12.0px Helvetica; min-height: 14.0px"><br /></p> <p style="margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 12.0px Helvetica">All of which to say: it's a new day, a new season. Two and half games down, 159 and a half to go. Let's do this thing.</p>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-74979388664309664022010-01-13T13:21:00.004-05:002010-01-13T13:30:17.522-05:0061 ain't nothin' but a numberAre we supposed to be responding to the Mark McGwire steroid admission? We've heard that's all the rage these days. We're supposed to say, "Hey, he ruined the game." Or maybe, "Hey, he apologized, but we don't think he meant it." We're supposed to rend our garments and reconsider our nonexistent Hall of Fame ballot, and we're supposed to judge every twitch, every teary eyed moment, every word.<br /><br />We don't care.* We just don't. We think that guys were doing greenies before they were doing roids, that guys were corking the bat and spitting on the ball and sharpening their spikes and doing whatever it took--whatever it took--to play baseball at the highest level possible since the game began. They'll continue to do so tomorrow, and next month, and next year, and on and on; the only question is what, exactly, that next big performance enhancer is going to be. Jonathan Papelbon, for one, votes for robot parts. In particular robot knees for certain catchers who have 900 year old knees. And robot elbows. And robot--<br /><br />You get the picture.<br /><br />Of course, our Lack of Caring is intensified by the news coming <a href="http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/01/earthquake_in_haiti.html">out of Haiti</a> at the moment.** It makes McGwire's not-at-all surprising "revelation" seem about as crucial to our lives as Heidi Montag's new album. So instead of bitching and moaning about the integrity of the sport, instead of trying to figure out the physics that explain the alternate reality where Tony LaRussa is continuously living in 1994, we're going to pony up and donate to one of <a href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34834553/ns/msnbc_tv-rachel_maddow_show">these here charities</a>. If you've got a couple of bucks stored away in your Fenway beer money commemorative plastic cup, maybe you could send that their way too.<br /><br />Look, we're a sports blog, yes, but some things are more important than sports. Even if it doesn't always feel that way when your closer's in the process of giving up the lead in an elimination game. Even if it doesn't feel like it when one of your favorite players gets traded to one of your most hated rivals. We're mostly here to tell jokes about A-Rod being a douche and to laugh at Papi plunking Jimmy Fallon with an egg, to question Tito's every managerial move*** and worry about Clay Buchholz's fastball command. Once in a while we may even bring up the Bruins and their complete and utter inability to put the biscuit in the basket. Just not today.<br /><br />Today is for being preachy. And time travel.<br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><br />*We are glad to see him confess--to the amazing Joe Posnanski, if not on air with The Costas--that, hey, staying on the field did pad his numbers somewhat. You know, even if he doesn't believe that steroids actually helped him hit those towering shots, at least he does seem to recognize that, wait a second, he couldn't hit them anything at all from the DL. Just as JD Drew--bah dum bum.<br /><br />**"Ah ha!" you think, "So this is why they've come out of hiatus after so long." And, yes, you would be correct. Though we still fully intend to write our review of the Marco Scutaro signing based entirely on his performance in that modern cinematic masterpiece, A Player To Be Named Later. Spoiler: he's a better actor than we would've expected, though not quite as skilled as Kevin Costner at playing a ballplayer.<br /><br />***Us: knock knock. You: Who's there? Us: TAKE SCHILL OUT IT'S THE SIXTH INNING. Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, we'll be here all night.</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-55955023705501826342009-10-07T20:36:00.003-04:002009-10-07T20:42:19.495-04:00Three Nights in Septober: A Week in Boston Sports<span style="font-weight: bold;">Loss #1: Toronto 8, Red Sox 7</span><br /><br />At least the Red Sox made it interesting. Down 8-2 as we finished the last fist-pumping chorus of "Sweet Caroline," the Red Sox fought and clawed and clambered aboard a JD Drew home run to reach a respectable 8-7 score heading into the ninth. But that's getting ahead of ourselves a bit.<br /><br />This game started with a bang of the wrong kind: a first pitch lead-off home run and the realization that we were sitting in front of the dude who felt the need to prove his mad baseball knowledge by commenting on every. freaking. pitch. Seriously. "Well, they should've gone inside there." "That changeup was too high." "He's teeing off on pitches away." And on and on and motherfucking on. Yeah, he's one of Those People You Meet at Fenway. No, we didn't test the efficiency of the security hotline on him.<br /><br />We were in <a href="http://respectthetek.blogspot.com/2007/06/we-do-not-flash-doug-mirabelli-in-this.html">Lawyer Larry's seats</a> for the first time since Tim Wakefield's magical start against the Rockies back in 2007, and we were at a possible clinching game for the second year in a row. We possibly got our hopes up a little, is what we're saying. Not enough to jinx things, we don't think, but a bit. We laughed over the fact that, for the first time in our shared game-attending history, the singers did a worse job with the Canadian anthem than the American one. We rolled our eyes when people near us said stupid things. We were ready. This was going to be The Game.<br /><br />And then the game started, and little old Claybee couldn't keep the ball in the yard.<br /><br />Before the game, during most of the game, and for a few hours afterward, we were pretty down on our Red Sox. They'd been losing to the Royals and were in the process of losing to the Jays, and they hadn't managed to clinch their division on their own turf. Not quite the 2007 Mets, that's true, but it didn't exactly fuel excitement. But then...they turned it on. They found their offense in one burst, and for a few minutes, even if it wasn't The Game, it was definitely The Team. The team that couldn't be eliminated in 2004 or 2007; the team that pushed their luck all the way to the breaking point in 2008, the team that will not quit until they've got a reason to hug and cheer and pour booze on the bullpen cop.<br /><br />The park shook.<br /><br />Called strike three. And we all went home.*<br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Loss #2: Toronto 12, Red Sox 0</span><br /><br />We weren't no-hit!<br /><br />Yeah, this one was a laugher from the moment they posted the lineup. Hell, from the time the Rangers lost to the Angels, thus clinching a playoff berth for the Red Sox and allowing our actual MLB players to have a closed-doors bacchanal that left everyone with a hangover the size of Big Papi's smile. To say we weren't expecting much would be an understatement. We figured we'd head out to the park, catch what might be Timmy Wakefield's very last start, and enjoy ourselves out in the bleachers with the rest of the crazies. No expectations. No stress. Just baseball.<br /><br />Baseball against Roy Halladay. Right.<br /><br />This loss was totally different than the Tuesday loss. For one thing, there was never so much as an inkling of false hope. For another thing, with our ALDS spot assured, all that energy that went to crossing fingers and knocking wood could be diverted to creative yelling. We told Joey Gathright he was our hero (this was after he broke up the no-hitter--before that we were loudly reminiscing about how we used to babysit him), and we reminded the Blue Jays that they're losers because they loooove artificial turf. We even got the guy in front of us to heckle Jose Bautista with lyrics by the Police. Of course, the highlight of the game was obviously Dusty Brown's major league pitching debut; sure, Mr. Autographed Brian Daubach Jersey couldn't believe we even knew who Brown is--never mind that we were the only people in the vicinity who could tell our Josh Reddicks from our Brian Andersons--but that didn't quell our enthusiasm. Dusty Brown, y'all. We've loved that kid since Sea Dogs times.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/83932658@N00/3989468430/" title="Dusty Brown does pitching!"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2507/3989468430_8d2599977d.jpg" alt="Dusty Brown" height="375" width="500" /></a><br /><br />All that was worth the price of admission, and the price of the huge coffees we needed to stay warm, and even the complete-game shutout the Doc twirled at the PawSox. We don't think we've ever had a better time watching a game that was lost before it began.<br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Loss #3: Capitals 4, Bruins 1</span><br /><br />Hockey.<br /><br />Hockey’s back.<br /><br />Yes, we are a Red Sox blog, but we are also Bruins fans and we decided that, you know what, we would never forgive ourselves for missing out on Opening Night at the TD Banknorth Fleet Center Garden. So we donned the Black and Gold and wandered out into the autumn night once more.<br /><br />We were ready. Our fellow fans in the cheap seats were ready. Unfortunately, the Caps fan in the row in front of us and the guy whose shirt she was wearing--some dude named Ovechkin? Yeah, we don’t know either--were also ready. More ready, in fact, than the Bruins. Who looked like they were playing on your dad’s beer league team for most of the game.<br /><br />Your dad’s over-50 beer league team.<br /><br />So, yes, the game happened. We cheered, we yelled “Shoot the fucking puck already!”, we cheered some more. And while it would’ve been nice to actually win the home opener—or, hell, to at least make it a game—it’s so early in the season that we just can’t stress about it quite yet. The aforementioned Caps fan turned around as the second intermission drew to a close to tell us that our row was full of good fans. We're not sure if she meant it in a condescending manner or not, but she pointed out that we never gave up cheering for our team and actually seemed to know things. Like players' names. And what was going on. She was nice enough when she said it, but we can't help but think it was a touch condescending in the "aww, look at the little fans watching my team crush their team" sense.<br /><br />Of course, she was sitting next to Tuukka Rask's boyfriend the entire game, so maybe she really did mean it.<br /><br />Because, yes, we met Tuukka Rask's boyfriend. Or maybe he was the guy Tuukka Rask has a restraining order against. But his love for Tuukka is true, and strong, and obsessed with the butterfly style. Even when the game was still technically close--in score, if not in feel--he was calling for Julien to play Tuukka. "He's calm in net," he told everyone in the section, "Not like Thomas. Tall and calm and he doesn't flail around." At one point, we're pretty sure he broke into haiku:<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Tuukka Rask always</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Looks good when he makes a save.</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">I've seen him naked.</span><br /><br />As confirmed Tim Thomas fans, we didn't share his passion. But three periods of watching our guys mishandle the puck while Alex Ovechkin did triple salchows around them was two point five periods too many. That's okay, though--the Bruins have plenty of time to get Big and Bad and figure out their problem, and we'll check back in with them as soon as we get out of playoff mode.<br /><br />About playoff mode: Hell, yes! Playoff mode! We're ready to roll. We have our lucky shirts, and a selection of lucky socks, and a bottle of Absolut Boston (yes, we're that cheesy) to help us either celebrate or cope. We also have a Twitter, which you can see at left, and which we used to "liveblog," as the kids used to call it, the Twins/Tigers one-game playoff. We'll be posting a lot of things there that are shorter than this thing you're still reading. Follow us and we'll promise not to use the word 'tweet' as a noun.<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*Except for Jason Bay. He went out for drinks with his agent. His agent! C'mon, Jay Bay, kick it up! </span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-62939563218837798772009-08-25T22:57:00.004-04:002009-08-25T23:13:42.535-04:00Gagné Joke In 3... 2....Look, here's the thing: we've watched more Mets baseball than is probably--okay, definitely--healthy over the past couple of years*, and we're just not sure that picking up anyone who has spent any time in their bullpen is a good idea. Hell, anyone who has ever been cared for by one of their trainers, anyone who played with them in spring training, anyone who has watched an entire Mets game this season is almost suspect at this point. After word that they ignored Johan Santana's** sore elbow for, oh, <span style="font-style: italic;">an entire season</span> came out, how can any other organization trade for a Mets player without the lingering fear that they're getting some dude with post-concussion syndrome or a gimpy elbow or, hell, a severe case of <a href="http://thesportshernia.typepad.com/blog/2009/07/vengeful-baseball-zeros-in-on-jeff-francoeur.html">baseballphobia</a>?<br /><br />Not that we have anything against Billy Wagner personally, of course. We don't actually know him. Sure, he's caused his share of heartache and pain, but so has every other relief pitcher in the history of ever. Mo blew the 2004 ALCS that time, and you won't find any Yankees fans who won't argue--at the top of their lungs, even, until you need to tell them to just "shut up, already, <span style="font-style: italic;">we know</span>"--that he's the best closer to ever close a game. Pap's blown a few himself. Trevor Hoffman, Dennis Eckersley, Goose Gossage: no one has a 100% save rate, which means that they've all caused a bit of the old weeping and rending of the garments action.<br /><br />And, fine, there are rumors that he's not the easiest guy to be around, though we're taking anything Schill says about someone else's personality with a grain of salt. But, hell, until he actually pisses one of our guys off, we're willing to give him the benefit of the doubt on that front. Because, again, we don't know Billy Wagner, and we don't know anyone who does. Maybe if our dream of hanging out with David Wright and Jose Reyes is ever realized we'll get some of the juicy gossip, but in the meantime we're stuck with Jon Heyman and Buster Olney.<br /><br />No, we're mostly scared because a) as with any former Mets player, the fear that said player's hand will fall off and run away is a legitimate one, and b) we was in the Mets bullpen that killed all winning during that horrible stretch we call the Post-Endy-Pre-K-Rod*** Period. Maybe he'll be okay? Sure, the move from the NL to the AL is the absolute wrong direction, as John Smoltz would tell us if he weren't so busy blaming his former Red Sox teammates for not noticing that he was tipping his pitches or whatever he's doing out there in St. Louis, and he's less than a year removed from the dreaded John of Tommy. And, fine, Papelbon's already calling him out, and there's been a bit of a war of words going on. But, you know, it's a contract year for Billy, so maybe he'll pull a Johnny Damon and hit a bunch of windtunnel-aiding home--or, erm, he'll kick ass and take names and get lefties out all night long. Who can say? If nothing else, we should--crossing all sorts of fingers--get some sort of draft picks out of these whole experiment, which will already rate it as more successful than our other failed reclamation projects these year.<br /><br />Of course, ask us again after we find out who the hell the PTBNL are going to be. We've got us some baby baller woobies we don't want to see consigned to a life on the DL.<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*Endy Chavez's Catch was the beginning of the end.<br /><br />**Yes, that Johan Santana. The one they've got millions invested in. The one who--Jason Varitek's freakish ability to hit him aside--is a legitimate perennial Cy Young candidate. The one good starting pitcher they actually have. That Johan Santana.<br /><br />***We still think K-Rod's overrated, by the way. Or at least not as good as he used to be. But signing him was at least some sort of acknowledgment by Omar Minaya that, hey, having one good starting pitcher doesn't really help if he doesn't pitch a complete game every time he's out on the mound.</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-7934528063666218202009-08-22T21:24:00.006-04:002009-08-22T21:31:57.878-04:00Down the road and back again.Since our neighborhood kids didn't make it to the Little League World Series, we figured we'd put those little punks--er, adorable cherubs--to work. So we recruited them to the official Respect The Tek Graphics Department (they're almost as well paid as our crack research staff). We asked them to document our feelings about Friday's and today's Sox/Yankees showdown, and we must say, they have worked wonders. Here come the pie charts, cut yourself a slice!<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhc_Lfb6aOaCbK7MzUi394pbiwC2Yv9I0dWxOFTKrw_dhieAtF0VZ6zyJrggZWoqNav6QrSoRDmT8em4J-yVzgIELNy637TAR57Ys0DGQNzUIxqNtbYfWCbpTyAP8xgaoxeeOAG6MglYeqf/s1600-h/piechart.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 286px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhc_Lfb6aOaCbK7MzUi394pbiwC2Yv9I0dWxOFTKrw_dhieAtF0VZ6zyJrggZWoqNav6QrSoRDmT8em4J-yVzgIELNy637TAR57Ys0DGQNzUIxqNtbYfWCbpTyAP8xgaoxeeOAG6MglYeqf/s400/piechart.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5372965151384220210" border="0" /></a><br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhd-NUO7qsx9kpZ0loaogS8fg0Jo3ujKS7-LET0795FEOgRy0ttB-mbE8n531hgUNow4GctlvgGB64Yw4QBW0St18INgcTBqT1ZmkYoYDhwW42KQ2YbmatfjPsfQ7Vy_ixaOvIAm8huhmPD/s1600-h/piechart2.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 286px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhd-NUO7qsx9kpZ0loaogS8fg0Jo3ujKS7-LET0795FEOgRy0ttB-mbE8n531hgUNow4GctlvgGB64Yw4QBW0St18INgcTBqT1ZmkYoYDhwW42KQ2YbmatfjPsfQ7Vy_ixaOvIAm8huhmPD/s400/piechart2.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5372965374194781010" border="0" /></a><span style="font-size:85%;"><br />* For taking Justin Masterson from us. Bastards.<br /><br />** For giving us Victor Martinez. Yay!<br /><br />*** For being a friend.</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com21tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-78641730758685405412009-08-19T19:13:00.001-04:002009-08-19T19:15:23.798-04:00Jonathan Papelbon is why we need universal health care.In between bullpen-related heart attacks last night, we were wondering why, exactly, the Red Sox reacquired Alex Gonzalez. You know, since it's obviously not because of his bat. Well, we couldn't let this question go unanswered. So we dug up the truth, and now we bring you the true reason for the Gonzalez acquisition: It's almost football season, and Nick Green needed to reassume his alternate identity as Wes Welker.<br /><br />Respect the Tek: we do research so you don't have to.*<br /><br />Now, about that game. All the cliches--a win is a win, even aces need luck sometimes, Jason Varitek is trying to steal Gary Tuck's job, mumblety-mumble--apply. We're especially grateful for this one, not only because The Hour Of The Doc is upon us, but because it might quiet one or two of the doom- and gloom-sayers out there. Look, guys, we know that this season has been hard to watch at times. We know that the Globe is trying to whip us all into a torch-bearing mob. Hey, we're all in trouble when the Herald is Boston's voice of reason.<br /><br />But we also know that Youkilis' suspension weakened our lineup, that J. Bay and B. Papi are just starting to get their late summer legs under them, and that Pedroia is due for a Daddy Streak. We know that the pitching....well, okay, we don't have the answer to the pitching, just yet, but how can we look at Junichi Tazawa's tiny little childlike face and not feel the love? A lot of love, actually. And a little bit of hope. Maybe even enough to get us through six more weeks of baseball.<br /><br />Nobody bitches and moans like a Red Sox fan.** But nobody rocks a stretch drive harder. So keep your torch in one hand, but keep the other one free for fistbumps. As last night proved, we can't lose 'em all.<br /><br />And if we actually do, well, who's up for doing shots and singing a sad chorus of Kum-Ba-Yah?<br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><br />*And yet we didn't bother to dig up pictures of Green and Welker. But you can trust us. Have we ever lied to you? Except for the 'research' thing?<br /><br />**Keep on practicing, Mets and Cubs fans.</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-68430377511396270662009-08-14T09:40:00.001-04:002009-08-14T09:45:09.956-04:00It's Beckett's world and we're living in it. Until he aces us.Wednesday night, we met perhaps the rarest of the People You Meet at Fenway, the nice guy who, when noticing that he may be blocking the short chick who is kind of diagonally behind him in standing room says, "You tell me if I'm blocking your view at all, okay, and I'll move." (During the same game, we also spotted Dude in an Unadulterated Damon Jersey, multiple Kotsay shirts(?!?!), Guy in Babe Ruth Jersey, a custom Dom DiMaggio road jersey, and so much more. Definitely a successful outing to Fenway, people-watching style. And don't get us started on the security guys in our section--hi-lar-i-ous, people, and pretty much made of win.) Props to you, nice guy! We will always remember you and your nice guy ways!<br /><br />Mostly, though, the night was memorable for Beckett Being Beckett. Which is to say: hot. Filthy. Nasty. Totally jinxed by those two yahoos--one of whom read Jennifer's twitter feed over her shoulder and wanted us to call Texas Gal over so he could tell her all about the superiority of the Sooners*--who kept saying, "Oh, hey, doesn't Beckett have a NO-HITTER going? Wonder if he's going to keep NO-HITTING them."<br /><br />Sure, Mikey Lowell's third home run in two games was fun, as was the whole offense clicking on all cylinders (okay, fine, so the Tigers were featuring a bullpen guy because their actual starter went down with strep or whatever, but still; you have your delusions, we have ours), but Beckett's Beckettocity was the true star of the game. Yeah, he made those two mistakes, and the Tigers didn't miss them, but he was slicing and dicing through that lineup like they were the San Diego Padres.** It never felt like this was anything but his game. His field. His mound. And it took roughly four minutes for him to walk from that mound to the dugout. Now that is swagger.<br /><br />This morning Jennifer's off to the land of Orioles, where she'll celebrate her birthday, Dustin Pedroia's, by watching Matt Wieters face off against Mike Napoli. Caroline's off to the land of, well, Red Sox and Yankees, true battlefield territory. We'll be back next week. Here's hoping the Red Sox grab some of the Fenway dirt and bring it with them to the Kingdom of Nolan Ryan.<br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><br />*We didn't invite you, Texy, because we didn't want to deal with their crying and sniveling when you masterfully destroyed their wills to live. Sorry!<br /><br />**Or whoever the most inept lineup in baseball is this week. Is it the Royals again? It's probably the Royals, isn't it?</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-16264767272562216252009-08-10T22:30:00.003-04:002009-08-10T22:38:19.797-04:00Newsflash: we won tonight's game. It's a miracle! Wake up your children!The plan was simple: go to Fenway, watch some Red Sox prospects and a few major league retreads duke it out with the Orioles' prospects and organizational filler, and steadfastly ignore the major league scoreboard. And, hey, were it not for our perverse preoccupation with the outcome of the epic Barry Zito-Bronson Arroyo duel going down in the NL, we would've very probably succeeded. Still, Futures at Fenway is, bar none, one of our favorite baseball experiences every year, and even though we think it works better when the Lowell Spinners get the invite (no offense to the Paw Sox, but both they and the Norfolk Tides are littered with guys who were playing in the bigs only a few weeks ago), it was an awesome time yet again.<br /><br />We sat in what we lovingly call the "rich people's seats," up close and personal with the visitors' on deck circle. We cheered for our favorites--no, they weren't all catchers, though we obviously shouted extra loud for Expo and Brownie--and avoided sunstroke due to a fortuitous combination of SPF 75 and some timely shadows. We decided that Ryan Kalish and Ryan Khoury should be best friends forever based on nothing more than their names. We ate ballpark food. We tried to keep score (an unfortunately timed bathroom run killed that plan), and we <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/83932658@N00/sets/72157621991729276/">took a few pictures.</a><br /><br />And we needed those simple pleasures, to remind us that baseball games aren't always the terrifying experiences that have happened to certain parent clubs in recent times.* Sometimes you can even sit through nine whole innings and still have enamel left on your teeth at the end.<br /><br />Futures helped us to remember that, though baseball is famous for for its yesterdays--its segregated, dead-balled, spike-sharpened, mob-rigged, amphetamined and roid-raged yesterdays--there are always tomorrows. There are 21-year-old kids who get to hit a home run over the Green Monster, and keep that story forever. There's Josh Reddick making the most of things (and sacrificing his Mohawk in the process, oh, woe). There's tomorrow, and Junichi Tazawa's second chance to make a first impression.<br /><br />And then there's the day after tomorrow, when we'll be back in the standing room saddle, resisting the siren song of frozen lemonade and cheering for the guys in the biggest, reddest socks of them all.** And reminding Dustin Pedroia that we expect to see a laser show. We may grow weary, but we never turn our backs on our boys.<br /><br />Because we're afraid of getting hit with a line drive foul. That would hurt!<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*Hey, as long as no one gets diagnosed with cancer, we're counting this season as better than 2006. Knock on wood!<br /><br />**This means you, Tek.</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-18623978442089089792009-07-20T16:21:00.005-04:002009-07-20T20:40:00.109-04:00An ode to sports radioOh no! The sky is falling! The Red Sox can't win! The Yankees can't lose! The Not-Devil Rays just swept the powerhouse Royals! Quick, Theo, make some moves! Before the world ends and we're stuck rooting for whichever team emerges from the NL Central!<br /><br />Ahem.<br /><br />Anyway, as we were saying, just because this Red Sox team is on track to win something like 99 games* doesn't mean they're not obviously horrible, flawed, and in need of a massive overhaul. We're here to provide some helpful tips for the front office. That is, if they're brave enough to take it.First of all, while watching the ESPN game tonight, we noticed that the Mets' starting pitcher just went down with a Doug Mirabelli baserunning injury. And they're still starting Alex Cora at shortstop. So, we thought, why not offer them something in a "Brad Penny plus Julio Lugo" package? The Mets don't have much in their farm system--Omar Minaya** said something about a flood. Or was that a drought? Oh, wait, it's a slavish adherence to Bud Selig's inane slotting system!--but, seriously, we don't expect much in exchange for those two. Send us a lower level prospect for Penny, and we'll send Lugo's full salary with him. Sure, it'll mean giving up on our dream of pretending Julio Lugo never actually existed, but we're willing to make that sacrifice.<br /><br />Of course, that's not nearly enough. That's just housekeeping.<br /><br />Next up, Theo needs to give the Blue Jays a call and offer the entire farm system for Roy Halladay. Clay Buchholz, Michael Bowden, Dan Bard, Lars Anderson, and Casey Kelly not enough? Offer up Yamaico Navarro and Josh Reddick! Throw in Anthony Rizzo! Sure, the system's going to be pretty barren at the end of the day, but we'll have Roy Halladay. He'll pitch complete games every other day, saving both the bullpen and the rest of the starting rotation. Which'll be helpful because the step three involves calling the Indians to offer up Jon Lester, Justin Masterson, Manny Delcarmen, and the rest of the farm system (crazy <a href="http://lowell.spinners.milb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20090713&content_id=5861632&vkey=news_t558&fext=.jsp&sid=t558">Star Wars uniforms</a> and all) for Victor Martinez.<br /><br />Oh, and get Hanley Ramirez back. Sure, it'll involve trading the rest of the team--minus our shiny new pitcher and C/DH/1B, of course-- with a pile of gold bars big enough to pay Jonathan Papelbon as much crazy money as his little heart desires, but it'll be worth it. Just picture it: a team entirely made up of Roy Halladay, Victor Martinez, and Hanley Ramirez.**** Unbeatable!<br /><br />Of course, trading the future away for today doesn't work if our division rivals continue to do nothing but win, so Theo's going to have to invest in a bit of sabotage as well. Send someone into New Yankee to set up a giant fan that'll blow in from the infamous right field porch; hell, use Javier Lopez to do it. He can even wear that old gorilla suit Theo's got lying around in his closet as a disguise, and it'll be a way for him to earn his salary for the year. Javy should then fly south to disable all the cowbells in the Tampa Bay area; while he's there, he can also switch out Joe Maddon's glasses for ones with the wrong prescription. He'll spend all his time dealing with headaches and blurred vision instead of being the genius manager everyone tells us he is.<br /><br />Luckily, the Red Sox don't have to travel to the west coast for the rest of the season, so we don't have to make up those subliminal messages for the team in attempt to convince them that they're on the east coast when they're really not. We're still working on the tapes that'll convince them that they're on natural grass under a beautiful summer sky when they're actually in domes, though.<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*Yes, we are too lazy to look up the actual number. But, suffice it to say, it's high 90s. Trust us.</span><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"></span><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">**Look, we know this is a Red Sox blog, but we feel compelled to point out that we could do a better job GMing the Mets than Minaya, armed only with a fondness for catchers and a beat up copy of <em>Moneyball</em>. This is perhaps a sign that Omar Minaya is very bad at his job.</span><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"></span><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">**** And some guys from the Newark Bears. Apparently it's against the rules to field a team of only three players. </span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-1251623204358114232009-07-10T20:34:00.004-04:002009-07-10T20:42:49.580-04:00We've seen the lights go out on Broadway.We were going to call <a href="http://joeposnanski.com/JoeBlog/">Joe Posnanski</a> out for lying to us about his Kansas City Royals and their ability to score runs, but, in all honesty, we're a little scared of him. Dude's bigger than us, tougher than us, meaner than us: he's the Big Red Machine* to our 1962 Mets. So even though he told us this is a team that struggles to score runs--patently a lie, based on our highly scientific one-game study, and possibly intended to lure us into a false sense of security--we are willing to accept that maybe, just maybe, he merely failed to recognize the awesome power of Ryan Freel and leave it at that. Because Joe Posnanski? So much better than us.** He's written a book! He's written more than one book! We've written a blog, and a half-assed one at that! So, no, we will not be calling Joe Posnanski out tonight.<br /><br />Instead, we're going to call out Dude In The Pedroia T-Shirt With The Schilling Jersey Over It Sitting Two Rows In Front Of Us In Infield Grandstand Section 16, Who Came to Fenway Already Completely Drunk Out Of His Mind And Proceeded To Try To Get Everyone To Do The Wave In The Third Inning (And Was Completely Annoying And Loud In Other Ways, Too). Dude--can we call you Dude, for short?--even your buddy was trying to get you to chill out a little. Look, we appreciate your enthusiasm. After the Red Sox coughed up the lead, you were one of the people leading the "Let's Go Red Sox" and "Let's Go Kotsay" chants in our section. However, screaming "I'm leading this!" at other fans when they tried to start new chants was not cool. Not to mention the fact that you shouted every. single. thing. you. said. and there was a kid a few seats over from us who probably didn' t need to hear all of that.<br /><br />We're also going to call out the fellow behind us who took the initiative, after just about every pitch of every at-bat, to announce the on-field situation to everyone in the greater Back Bay area. "Oh, man, it's THREE AND TWO!" Buddy, baseball is not a play, and you are not the narrator. And if it <span style="font-style: italic;">was</span> a play, Red Sox baseball would not need you--it would need, instead, a show-stopping musical number with a full ensemble cast.<br /><br />Ahem.<br /><br />What?<br /><br />Oh, fine. It goes <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=odrZ6NtPR2M">something like this</a>:<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tek</span>: One play more,<br />Another ball, another baserunner,<br />This never-ending road to October.<br />If A-Rod fouls off this pitch,<br />I'm gonna have to choke a bitch--<br />One play more!<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tito</span>: The bullpen barely got through eight,<br />How will they pitch with bases loaded?<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tek</span>: One play more!<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tito</span>: The winning run is at the plate,<br />Someone check if my head's exploded.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tek</span>: One play more!<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Pap</span>: One more strike I got to throw,<br /> [<span style="font-weight: bold;">Fenway Faithful: </span>Will he ever throw a fastball?]<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Pap</span>: Then I get to do my fistpumps!<br /> [<span style="font-weight: bold;">Fenway Faithful: </span>His last slider didn't slide!]<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Pap</span>: Can't believe he called that low!<br /> [<span style="font-weight: bold;">Fenway Faithful: </span>How the hell was that outside?]<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Pap</span>: I am gonna plonk the ump!<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Infielders: </span>One more play to win the game,<br />Drive the enemy from Fenway<br />Or else hide our heads in shame<br />Is it ball four or strike three?<br /> [<span style="font-weight: bold;">Fenway Faithful: </span>The count is full! The end is near!]<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tek: </span>One play more!<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">A-Rod</span>: One more pitch to end the ballgame,<br />I will hit it with my bat,<br />It will land out in the bleachers--<br />Do these pants make me look fat?<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tek: </span>One play more!<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Orsillo: </span>Bottom of the ninth, Fenway going mad,<br />Isn't this a good time for an Aflac ad?<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Eckersley</span>: That was easy cheese, that was lousy luck<br />If I was that pitcher, I'd be yelling--[BLEEP.]<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Fielders</span>: One more run means extra innings!<br /> [<span style="font-weight: bold;">Fenway Faithful: </span>Live to fight another day]<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Fielders: </span>We have got to beat this team!<br /> [<span style="font-weight: bold;">Fenway Faithful: </span>Did we mention, Jeter's gay?]<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Fielders: </span>There's the AL East for winning!<br /> [<span style="font-weight: bold;">Fenway Faithful: </span>Do we curse or do we pray?]<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Fielders: </span>Do you hear the people scream?<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Pap: </span>I got my sign--here comes the ball!<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tek: </span>One play more!<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tito: </span>The bullpen barely got through eight--<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Pap: </span>One more strike I got to throw!<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Orsillo: </span>Bottom of the ninth, right here this is it--<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Eckersley:</span> If I was that pitcher, I'd be shouting--[BLEEP!]<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tek: </span>This game has got to end someday, tomorrow we're at Tampa Bay--<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">All: </span>This pitch is going to tell us who the playoff berth is for--<br />One more pitch,<br />One more play,<br />One play more!<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*<a href="http://search.barnesandnoble.com/The-Machine/Joe-Posnanski/e/9780061582561/?itm=3">09/09/09</a></span><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">**That being said, we did not steal the asterisk thing from him. We were into asterisks when they were still underground.</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-51984754018867238992009-07-06T18:36:00.007-04:002009-07-06T18:49:03.206-04:00Baby, you're a big star nowSo, <a href="http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/events/all_star/y2009/roster_league.jsp">this All-Star roster</a>, it's amazingly inoffensive, right? Sure, there are a couple eyebrow-raising omissions, as always. Either the fans or Joe Maddon should damn well have made sure Ian Kinsler made the AL squad, and hey, even Charlie Manuel more or less admitted that Ryan Howard is there because he's popular, not because he's more worthy than a certain Kung Fu Panda out West.* But, by and large, it seems like the right people are going to be there in all the right places, with the double-play combination of Jeter and Pedroia once again freaking out a large chunk of the Eastern Seaboard.<br /><br />The lack of ballot controversy leaves us free to focus all our energy on sighing happily in Tim Wakefield's direction. We have a documented fondness for the knuckleball and its practitioners, and for Wake** in particular, and we were horribly worried at Fenway on Friday night that a Fan Who Shall Remain Nameless had snatched Wake's All-Star chances right out of Youk's glove. We're so thrilled for the man. He's earned his spot--we've seen him start in person a few times this season, and for the vast majority of those innings, he was dealing--and it's also something he clearly values. Honestly, how can anyone sound so humble and endearing while basically saying, "I damn well deserve this recognition"? Wake should bottle that stuff, and send a six-pack to City Hall.<br /><br />Our favorite part of this, the feel-good sports movie of the summer, is that Terry Francona attempted to psych Wake out by calling him into the office <span style="font-style: italic;">just </span>as the team's other five all-stars (and we congratulate them, too, obviously) left with their packages. First of all, we imagine the look on both their faces was completely adorable. Secondly--<br /><br />Hang on, packages? Brown paper packages, tied up with strings? Just what gifts does Bud Selig bestow on good little boys who make it to the Midsummer Sorta Kinda Classic? Here are our totally intrepid guesses:<br /><br /><ol><li>Free samples of the most commonly-advertised products on baseball telecasts. Guys who've been making All Stars for years must simply be swimming in Coors Light and smoothies from Sonic. And we don't even want to think about the Viagra stockpiles.<br /></li><li>A clue--one per player--to some sort of epic, <span style="font-style: italic;">Da Vinci Code</span>-style scavenger hunt. Will the players be able to work together and find the hidden shards of Abner Doubleday's magical baseball bat? I guess we'll know if any albino monks show up. Or Tom Hanks.</li><li>A <a href="http://flyingbirdhat.com/">flying bird hat</a>. Hey, it's at the Cards' park, so it kind of fits. We just hope the All-Stars are careful about wearing these--they might get hunted by an overexcited Jonathan Papelbon.</li></ol><br />Now that we've solved the mystery of the Suspicious Packages, we're settling in to watch the Return Of Nomahhh. We can't understand why there's any debate about how to react to his presence--if you're not applauding the guy for what he did here, you're doing it wrong.<br /><br />Also, a word of advice that never gets old***: "Don't look directly at him! He's got a HEAHHHT MUHMUHHH!"<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*And isn't Kung Fu Panda the best baseball nickname to come along in a long time? It's especially great when you forget about the movie, as history surely will, and just imagine it engraved on a plaque--or, more likely, popping up in baseball-reference.com searches in a few decades.<br /><br />**Speaking of nicknames, we're not sure whether or not to be ashamed of this, but we occasionally think of him as "Eggs'n'Bakey."<br /><br />***And that's the only time we'll ever say that about anything involving Jimmy Fallon.</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-1323107948149365692009-07-01T21:27:00.004-04:002009-07-01T21:37:16.050-04:00Easy as one-two-three, as simple as do-re-mi.*We didn't plan to blog today. Up 10-1 in the 7th last night, we figured, "eh, this one's such a laugher, there won't be anything to say." Sure, we could write something about the time Jonathan Papelbon took it upon himself to teach his teammates to count to three,** going all Count from Sesame Street on their asses, but that one's definitely funnier when we do the voices. It doesn't quite translate to the written word. Up 10-5, we thought, "hmm, well at least it's--wait, fuck, another run! Okay, this isn't funny anymore."<br /><br />A game as horrifically, transcendentally, amazingly, trainwreckingly bad as last night's game deserves--nay, demands--a detailed response from the blogosphere.*** As representatives of said imaginary land, that means us. We think.<br /><br />At first, we were willing to write it off. Bad games happen, even to good teams. There are no extra points for style: the fact that we lost this one the way we did doesn't mean it counts for than your average 1-0 or 2-1 loss. But then we realized the truth. The truth is that there is obviously some sort of grand conspiracy going on here. Maybe there's a grassy knoll, maybe there's a Broadway musical; we're not 100% sure on all of the details, but we've definitely got some ideas.<br /><br />1. It's the return of the Curse of the Bambino! No, really, hear us out: the Babe was born in Baltimore, right? And this game happened where? That's right! Baltimore! At Camden Yards, even, which is allegedly located at the exact same spot he was born lo those many years ago. Ergo, the Curse is back. Sorry, guys, this means Orioles fans are going to be chanting "11-10" at us for years to come.<br /><br />2. The entire bullpen hates John Smoltz. Now, they'll try to deny it--"He's a surefire Hall of Famer," Masty'll say; "Who doesn't love Smotlz?" Okaji will ask (okay, he'd ask in Japanese, but we're the kind of stereotypical Americans who get by with some English, a couple of catchphrases in Spanish and French, and charm)--but the facts can't be denied. Smoltz pitched well yesterday, but the bullpen was in full-on sabotage mode. Never mind that Smoltz wasn't in line for the win anyway; little details like "facts" and "logic" merely get in the way of a brilliant conspiracy theory. Actually, that isn't even the biggest flaw in this theory, anyway. The biggest problem is the fact that Jonathan Papelbon would have to be in on the plan, and we all know he's got the memory of a non-memory-having thing. Like a goldfish. Or a cactus. A scene, if you'll indulge us:<br /><br />PAP: He's always going on about his friend, Tiger Woods. 'My friend Tiger woods did this, my friend Tiger Woods did that.' You don't see me always bragging on 'my friend Eli Manning,' do you?<br />TEK: No, but that'd be dumb.<br />PAP: Ex--heeey, wait a--<br />TEK: Eli. I was insulting Eli.<br />PAP: Okay then. Wait, what were we talking about again?<br /><br />...and end scene.<br /><br />3. Picture it: Baltimore, 2009. A solitary figure stands atop a lonely light tower, peering into a long-range telescope. Every so often, he flickers a flashlight. Or one of those red laser pointer things. Back on the field, the Orioles batter reads the sign being transitted from on high and swings. He does not miss.<br /><br />4. It was the power of The Wieters. He is Baseball Jesus, after all.<br /><br />5. Perhaps you noticed, as we did, that when play resumed after the rain delay, Tek was no longer wearing the tall socks. It was jarring. It was strange. It was wrong. Of course, Tito pulled him not long after we made that observation, and it quickly slipped our minds. How could we overlook such an important wardrobe issue? Could Tek without tall socks be the hosiery version of Failhat? Let's hope this hypothesis is never again tested!<br /><br />Luckily, it looks like the intrepid crew we call the Red Sox recognized all of the above signs and portents and took appropriate action late last night. A phone call was placed to one Kevin Millar, and he talked his former teammates and his ex-Marlin friends (and even Julio Lugo) through the appropriate curse-breaking rituals. Sure, Beckett's pitching was possibly affected by the copious amounts of Jack Daniels he was forced to drink--against his will, we're sure--to complete the ritual, but luckily the curse lifted just as the ninth inning rolled around.<br /><br />So, yes, yesterday hurt. There's no sugarcoating it. But, hey, if the Red Sox win in extra innings and no one's there to see it because we're all stuck in our stupid offices cursing the IT gods in vain, it still kicks ass. And that's a fact.<br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><br /><br />*We've filled our obligatory Michael Jackson reference quota, so the world blog police can't come after us.<br /><br />**PAP: All's I know is, you never see me doin' my fist-pumps before the third strike. That's three. Count 'em. <span style="font-style: italic;">Uno, dos, tres, quatorze.</span><br /><br />***What a horrible word. We vote that we rename it "Goretopia," for the founder, inventer, and colonial conquerer of these here interwebs.</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-52120737556686671002009-06-25T21:30:00.003-04:002009-06-25T21:53:15.553-04:00You close your eyes and hope that this is just imagination*He warned us that some of his worst performances came when he was closing for the first time and returning to the rotation thereafter, but who among us wasn't secretly hoping for a dominant six innings out of Smoltz tonight? Oh well. We're not stressing this yet; a few more starts of a similar nature and we'll be calling for him to join Dice-K on the WBCDL, but for now we're going to assume it's some rust and that he'll shake it off over the next couple of weeks. Even in this, um, less than inspiring start, he had moments when you could see exactly why he's a no doubt hall of famer.** And then he'd give up another hit to Josh Bard.***<br /><br />Too bad Jordan Zimmermann was consistently good. He's a seriously impressive kid.<br /><br />Luckily, we took the first two games of the series, so we're actually okay with this loss. Winning is better--<span style="font-style: italic;">don't get us wrong! we like winning! we think it's kind of nifty keen!</span>--but we still won the series. And that's the key. Sometimes you just need to tip your cap and move on to Atlanta. <br /><br />In conclusion, you know a game's out of reach when Julio Lugo shows up. And promptly boots a grounder.<br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*RIP, Michael Jackson. And Farrah Fawcett.<br /><br />**See also, the fifth inning.<br /><br />***He really hates the Red Sox, doesn't he? Not that we can blame him.</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-64449303969172994012009-06-25T00:56:00.010-04:002009-06-25T01:24:04.756-04:00The world shines as I cross the Macon County lineOkay, fine. We confess: we missed most of it. Jennifer had commuting problems* and was an hour late getting home; Caroline has to head out to Logan tomorrow morning and had to do some laundry, pack, and bake some delightful cookies to bring to the person she's staying with. And, of course, there was the College World Series** to watch. So, yes, we missed most of tonight's game. Over the course of a 162-game season, it's bound to happen from time to time. But we hear tell that Papi and Tek went yard, which thrills us, and that while Jonny Lester wasn't at his sharpest, he kept the team in the game. These are things that please us greatly.<br /><br />Anyway, Caroline's heading down to Atlanta to do a little recon*** while Jennifer's stuck up here fighting the good fight against the rain and the MBTA, so if we don't manage to post anything over the next week, that'd be why. It has nothing at all to do with Jennifer's propensity to fall asleep in lieu of blogging or her complete inability to finish anything without another person to bounce ideas off of. We're going to try to write a post or two through a cunning use of Twitter, twine, and a stick of gum, but that may limit things to a one-liner or two rather than a fully thought out blog post of the quality you've come to expect from Respect the Tek.<br /><br />We've got a couple of ideas percolating (or fermenting, if you'd prefer the alcohol metaphor, and we always prefer the alcohol metaphor), though, so once Caroline's safe and sound back in the land of socks that are crimson-ish in hue and quarterbacks with supermodel wives, we're totally going to do our best to bring you a quality blog-reading experience.<br /><br />In the meantime, as always, go Red Sox!<br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">*It's wet out, which means the buses are contractually obligated to run on their alternate super secret schedule of sucktitude.<br /><br />**Congrats to the LSU Tigers! We were rooting for Pedroia's Sun Devils, but since they got knocked out before the final we were mostly rooting for a 3-game series.<br /><br />***By which we mean that she's going to try to kidnap Brian McCann.<br /></span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9003713321306720082.post-24380079242507114832009-06-19T22:13:00.006-04:002009-06-19T22:48:02.392-04:00By and by, we'll defy a little bit of gravityA spy deep in the heart of Braves territory informs us that even the Atlanta TV announcers disapprove of the Fail!hat.* This is important because, well, we're not sure why it's important. Possibly because we hate the hats? And obviously they're very, very, very unlucky. Made of fail, as it were. When something is so bad that even the opposing team's announcers are commenting on it, it's time for a change. Hey, look, if they won't send skip Dice-K's next couple (dozen) starts, the least the Red Sox can do is give up on this alternate hat experiment. If not for us, then for the children.<br /><br />Because, yes, Dice-K happened. It was just as horrifyingly painful as every other Dice-K start this season, and we dipped into the alcohol and chocolate portion of our evening slightly--okay, much--earlier than we'd planned. Chocolate is awesome. Alcohol is awesome. A Dice-K start? Is not awesome. His stuff just does not look good this year. Even last year, when he was walking everyone and their father's cousin's old college roommate, his stuff had a way of looking relatively filthy once he had those bases nice and loaded. This year, though, it all looks flat. Hittable. Tasty and delicious and right down the middle of the plate for anyone who wants to go deep. He needs some time on the sunny beaches of Bermuda.** He needs to stop insisting that he's healthy, so he can go on the DL and do another rehab stint.<br /><br />Of course, it's not as if his offense his helping him any. Pretty much everyone on the team looked lifeless at the plate--even Jason Bay, whose 2-run homer was a thing of parabolic beauty, seemed listless in other at-bats--and we refuse to believe that the Braves pitching is that good. We expect everyone to take some extra cuts with Mag tomorrow morning; Derek Lowe's starting, and we do not want to see people grounding into double plays without anyone on base.***<br /><br />We also expect Tek to give out the Super Secret D. Lowe Scouting Report, Port City Roosters loyalty be damned. We want to see some runs on the board. And since Lowe is actually <a href="http://dereklowe.mlblogs.com/archives/2009/06/looking_forward_to_my_return_t.html">blogging about how much he still loves the Red Sox</a>, we're sure he wouldn't mind helping us out by leaving a sinker or two up in the zone.<br /><br />Oh, and Beckett? You're gonna go out there and kick some Braves ass, right? Lie to us if you have to.<br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><br />*TM <a href="http://www.outincenterfield.com/2009/04/failhat-throughout-history/">Texy</a>. (Don't call it a hat-tip!)<br /><br />**Sponsored by the Boston Red Sox. Which is probably great for business, but forced us to get "Kokomo" stuck in our heads. And now it's in yours. Sorry!<br /><br />***If any team could manage it, the team we've seen the last two nights could. MLB history, baby!</span>lucky number 33http://www.blogger.com/profile/16927425445373342462noreply@blogger.com2