Category: The American Game
Holding my breath
If this baseball season produces nothing else of note, the fans shouldn’t be too disappointed. Wednesday night’s incomparably thrilling down-to-the-wire four-city wild-card rumpus will be hard to top.
But the 2011 postseason, which starts Friday, does have the potential to create another anomalous spectacle worth staying up late for: the best pitching matchup in World Series history.
Should the American League’s Detroit Tigers and the National League’s Philadelphia Phillies advance to the Fall Classic with their current rosters intact, the first game between them would likely pit Philadelphia ace Roy Halladay, who has 19 wins, 220 strikeouts and a 2.35 earned-run average, against Detroit’s Justin Verlander, who has 24 wins, a 2.40 ERA and 250 strikeouts.
By the numbers, these are the two best pitchers in baseball this season. But they’re also two of the best pitchers to climb a mound in the last 10 years. Together, they’d be better than the pairing of Sandy Koufax and Whitey Ford in 1963, better than the duo of Koufax and Jim Kaat two years later and better than the famous 1948 showdown between Bob Feller of the Cleveland Indians and Johnny Sain of the Boston Braves.
If Halladay and Verlander met in the World Series, they’d be one of the six highest-rated pairings ever and, of that elite group, the most evenly matched. Ricky Bottalico, a former pitcher who’s a baseball analyst for Comcast SportsNet in Philadelphia, calls the possible matchup a tantalizing one. “Those two guys are so far beyond anyone else,” he says.
Choked
Red Sox and the Braves. Fans, I feel your deep, primal pain, having been there far too many times myself.
It could still happen
What’s your favorite baseball movie?
A discussion at Salon. They left out one of my favorites, the original “Angels In The Outfield,” the movie that made this little girl fall in love with baseball – and newspapers.
What would you pick?
Harvard Business Review: ‘Was Marx right?’
You know the economy in big trouble when a Harvard business school publication runs a revisionist piece about Karl Marx’s critiques of unfettered free market capitalism.
Mitchell’s ‘Coyote’ still lean and mean
The video above is the studio version of “Coyote,” with Jaco Pastorius on bass. Go here for a video and description of the great live version of the song in Martin Scorsese’s The Last Waltz.
Your town flooded? Come to Ocean City!
Interesting front-page advertorial on behalf of the Ocean City, NJ, tourism industry in Friday’s Philadelphia Inquirer. The reporter maximizes the story’s tackiness by quoting a public relations hack who urges Hurricane Irene victims to to enjoy an expensive weekend of sun and fun in Ocean City…
It gets better
I don’t know if I’m the reason this got done, but I sent a request from a gay fan to my relative who works for the Phillies, she passed it along and now they’ve done it. Yay!
At the Bank
Nice little color piece this morning about the Phillies fans who live in the neighborhood of Citizens Bank Park.
