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Sunday, May 29, 2022
Thanks Spectrum
Friday, May 27, 2022
My suggestion for MLB: Offensive Assists
I might have said this before, and if I have - good. It's worth repeating, because I think it's a good idea. I've done a cursory Google search and come up dry, so it might even be a unique idea. I doubt that - I don't see how - but who knows?
Baseball is a game rife with statistics, where every action, even bat angle and launch speed, is measured. If you get on base and score, you are given a run scored. If you knock in a run, you're awarded a RBI. So why no metric that awards a batter for moving a runner (that subsequently scores) into scoring position?
Case in point: last week Yelich singled Rowdy doubled, moving him to third. McCutchen waked to fill the bases, and the next batter brought Yelich and Rowdy home.
Ok. So they both get a Run, and the batter a RBI. But other than adding to his batting average and slugging percentage, Rowdy got no recognition (formal that is) of his moving Yelich into a position that then made it possible for him to score on the subsequent hit.
There should be such a statistic. And it should be called an Offensive Assist. If you move a runner from first to either second or third, be it by a walk, hit, or fly out, and they score during a subsequent at-bat, you get credit.
Period pooh.
Thursday, May 26, 2022
Preach
Ray Liotta
I'm not sure their generation is as pro-mass transit as they say they are lol
Wednesday, May 25, 2022
Tuesday, May 24, 2022
Heartbreaking
Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness
Monday, May 23, 2022
Your Eyes Deceive
The late Louis L'amour was/is one of my favorite authors, and I found his son Beau's insight into the story behind this cover photo fascinating. Even when you eyes say something is so, you better double check your sources.
Beau notes that Louis barely knew how to drive, never had a license, and never owned a car. Friends or relatives drove him whenever he could talk them into it, other times, he rode the bus or train or walked. On this trip he traveled with a friend, Ed Ross. After Louis died of lung cancer we got a lot of mail from fans about his having been a smoker. It was all because of this picture, which was reproduced on the back cover of his novel "COMSTOCK LODE." Louis never smoked, but the slip of paper that is laying on the counter inside the Post Office was mistaken for a cigarette being held between the fingers of his right hand.