+ sync Posted July 12 Posted July 12 I can only imagine the bliss of being paid so much for doing what one loves doing.
BuffaloKyle Posted July 16 Posted July 16 On 3/27/2025 at 2:17 PM, BuffaloKyle said: My predictions: AL East: Blue Jays AL Central: Tigers AL West: Rangers AL Wild Cards: Royals, Mariners, Yankees NL East: Phillies NL Central: Brewers NL West: Dodgers NL Wild Cards: Braves, Mets, Diamondbacks Good time to check in on my predictions (current leader): AL East: Blue Jays (Blue Jays) AL Central: Tigers (Tigers) AL West: Rangers (Astros) AL Wild Cards: Royals, Mariners, Yankees (Yankees, Red Sox, Mariners) So two out of three division leaders correct and four out of six playoff teams correct so far NL East: Phillies (Phillies) NL Central: Brewers (Cubs) NL West: Dodgers (Dodgers) NL Wild Cards: Braves, Mets, Diamondbacks (Brewers, Mets, Padres) Also two out of three division leaders correct and four out of six playoff teams correct so far
samhexum Posted July 26 Author Posted July 26 Nick Kurtz of the A's had a decent game tonight... 6-6, a single, a double, four homers, 6 runs, 8 RBI
samhexum Posted August 1 Author Posted August 1 (edited) Jacob Wilson fractured his left forearm... Ladies and gentlemen, your AL Rookie of the Year, Nick Kurtz! xxxxx They were celebratin' in B'more the other night: Justin Holliday's 8th inning SF was the team's fifth of the game, tying the record. WOO-HOO! xxxxx Chad Green must've still thought he was pitching for the Yankees... Last four appearances- 3 2/3 IP, 12H, 11ER, 4HR 14 HR in 43 2/3 IP on the season Shockingly, he was designated for assignment to make room for Sir Anthony Dominguez. It ain't easy being Green. Tweet from after the Yankees win the other night: Crazy note from our pals at STATS Perform: “The Yankees are the only MLB team in the modern era to erase a deficit in the 8th, erase a deficit in the 9th, erase a deficit in the 10th and then win in the 11th.” xxxxx interesting game in Cincinnati last night… Great field/no hit Ke'Bryan Hayes made an error and hit a home run. The game was tied 3 - 3 after seven innings and 11 - 11 after eight innings. Edited August 1 by samhexum because he felt like it
BuffaloKyle Posted August 14 Posted August 14 Anyone in Milwaukee, get your free burgers! Free Burgers! The Brewers Did It — 12 in a Row! :: George Webb GEORGEWEBB.COM
+ purplekow Posted August 14 Posted August 14 Nice promotion. What will they do for a World Series championship
samhexum Posted August 17 Author Posted August 17 The Padres put on a base running clinic worthy of the Yankees last night… The game started thusly: Single, caught stealing Double Single, runner stops at third, then runner at first caught stealing Fly ball to end inning so the game starts with three consecutive hits, including a double and no runs are scored and only four men bat. Then Xander Bogarts led off the second inning with a single and was caught stealing.
samhexum Posted August 20 Author Posted August 20 Yankees drafted player after he admitted he drew swastika on Jewish student’s door in college. Why? When the New York Yankees drafted University of Utah shortstop Core Jackson in the fifth round in July, they were aware that he had drawn a swastika on the dorm room door of a Jewish student in 2021, when he was a 17-year-old freshman at the University of Nebraska. Jackson voluntarily called teams to tell them about his actions before the 2024 draft. In a phone interview with The Athletic, Jackson said that he was “blackout drunk” when he drew the swastika, and that he had no recollection of the incident or why he did it. He said he knows that he made a “really stupid mistake,” and that he has learned and grown since that time and is no longer “the person he was when it all happened.” The University of Nebraska declined to discuss any specifics of the incident, and the university police did not respond to multiple requests for comment. Yankees amateur scouting director Damon Oppenheimer said the team’s decision followed the most thorough “due diligence” look into a player in his 23 years on the job, and that it was cleared directly with owner Hal Steinbrenner. The draft pick came after multiple members of the organization had conversations with Jackson and those close to him, and after discussing the situation with multiple high-ranking Jewish members of the club, including team president Randy Levine, who supported the decision to draft Jackson. The club, however, did not speak with anyone at Nebraska about the incident, according to Oppenheimer. Jackson also was charged with driving under the influence on Utah’s campus in September 2024. According to his agent, Blake Corosky of True Gravity Baseball, the charge was later reduced to impaired driving, a misdemeanor. Corosky said Jackson had performed community service, received substance abuse training and paid fines. Jackson said he hasn’t “touched a drop of alcohol” in the months since. Oppenheimer said he thought the swastika incident “affected (Jackson’s) draft status” and was likely part of teams’ calculus when he went undrafted in 2024. (Jackson transferred to a junior college for the 2023 season and played for Utah the past two seasons). “I think that his tool set, his athleticism, his performance was definitely something that would have gone a lot higher in the draft,” the scouting director added. The Yankees drafted Jackson at No. 164 overall this July, signing him to a bonus of $147,500, well under the pick’s $411,1000 slot value. “I think it’s important that it is part of my story,” said Jackson, now 21. “I have this platform now that God has given me, and I can share my story about his forgiveness.” The greater New York area was home to about 1.4 million people who identified as Jewish as of 2023, according to a study by the United Jewish Appeal-Federation of New York, making it the largest Jewish community in the world outside of Israel. The Yankees were “looking to find the good in this,” Oppenheimer said. “He’s shown his accountability here,” Oppenheimer said. “I think his actions have shown his remorse. He’s acknowledged it. I think he’s taken the right steps to continue to learn, to understand what he’s done.” Jackson said he was so drunk the night he drew the swastika, in October 2021, that he blacked out and doesn’t remember any of the incident. He claims that he didn’t know who lived in the dorm room, and said that he “broke down in tears” the next day when someone told him what he had done. “I felt like the worst person in the world,” he said. “I don’t want there to be any excuses for my actions.” He said he wanted to apologize to the student, but that campus police told him to not contact them. He said the University of Nebraska fined him, had him undergo basic sensitivity training online and made him perform community service after the incident, but that there were “no other repercussions.” He was not arrested, and he played on the university’s baseball team the following spring. A Nebraska spokesperson declined to comment on the situation, but said that it “takes discrimination and similar allegations very seriously and has policies and procedures in place to rapidly respond to student concerns.” The Athletic was not able to identify or speak with the victim, or to independently verify Jackson’s version of events. A Freedom of Information Act request submitted to the University of Nebraska asking for documents pertaining to the incident had not received a response at the time of publication. Jackson played for the Nebraska baseball team in 2022, hitting .210 in 44 games, but left the school that summer. He described his freshman year as “being in a dark place,” and said that he departed because he was not “growing in my faith or getting better at baseball.” Jackson said he didn’t have any Division I offers upon leaving Nebraska, so he played his sophomore year at South Mountain Community College in Phoenix, hitting .321 with four homers, 33 RBIs and a .907 OPS. He was eligible for the draft in 2023 but wasn’t selected, and then enrolled at the University of Utah, where in 2024 he hit .363 with four home runs, 41 RBIs and a .979 OPS as a junior. That spring, he began attracting the attention of MLB teams intrigued by his arm strength, right-handed power and athleticism. At the end of his first interview with a Boston Red Sox scout, Jackson was asked if there was anything else he wanted to talk about. Jackson told him about the swastika incident. “Everybody found out about it (then),” said Corosky, Jackson’s agent. “Including us.” After hearing the story from Jackson, Corosky said he considered no longer advising the shortstop. Corosky also represented Jacob Steinmetz, an Arizona Diamondbacks pitching prospect and the first practicing Orthodox Jewish player ever drafted. As a courtesy, Corosky said that he called Jacob’s father, Elliot, who is the head men’s basketball coach at Yeshiva University, a Division III Orthodox Jewish school in New York City. He wanted Elliot to be aware of what had happened. Corosky told Elliot Steinmetz that Jackson appeared “extremely remorseful,” but also “doesn’t (understand) exactly what he did.” After Steinmetz’s initial anger faded, he suggested that Corosky consider trying to educate Jackson about antisemitism. A few hours later, Steinmetz called Jackson. “Right away,” he said, “you could tell (Jackson) was the nicest, sweetest kid in the world, (but) dumb as rocks when it came to these kinds of issues.” According to Steinmetz, Jackson hadn’t seemed to fully grasp the dark history behind the swastika — the symbol that represented the German Nazi Party in the 20th century and is still being used by neo-Nazis worldwide. Jackson told Steinmetz that his education on the symbol was limited. Jackson grew up in a Christian household in Wyoming, Ontario, a rural town about 30 minutes from the Michigan border, and told The Athletic that he had hardly encountered Jewish people or learned about Jewish history in school. Steinmetz had a point he wanted to impress upon Jackson. “If I walked into a hall and saw a swastika, I’d be pissed off,” Steinmetz said. “My grandparents would be freaked out and terrified by it.” Corosky ultimately told Jackson he would continue advising him, but under two conditions. First, Jackson would have to call a representative from each of the 30 teams in Major League Baseball and describe what he did. He told Jackson “not to pull any punches” no matter how difficult it was to talk about. Second, Jackson would have to work with Steinmetz on “some intense, gut-wrenching understanding of why what he did was so hurtful and awful.” Jackson agreed. “Obviously,” he said of calling teams to inform them, “it wasn’t easy, but it was part of growing up and understanding to take ownership of my actions.” Most scouts told Jackson they appreciated his candidness. Steinmetz reached out to the head of Holocaust studies at Yeshiva, who put him in contact with Ann Squicciarini, then a graduate student at the school. Squicciarini, who is Christian, had enrolled in Yeshiva’s Holocaust education program in the wake of two Jewish students being attacked in her native Brooklyn in May 2021. Squicciarini designed a five-week course for Jackson, including video and reading assignments, and the pair met for an hour each week. Squicciarini logged everything, and sent post-session reports to Steinmetz. “He was attentive and engaged,” Squicciarini said. Neither she nor Steinmetz were paid to work with Jackson; both said they wanted to use education to fight hate. Ari Kohen, the director of the Harris Center for Judaic Studies at Nebraska, said that it’s “absolutely crucial” for society to learn how to teach antisemitism and preach awareness of “all forms of bigotry, truthfully, to young people today.” “I don’t feel that we have fully figured it out at this point,” said Kohen, who was at the Harris Center when Jackson drew the swastika but had not been aware of the incident before being contacted by The Athletic. “Especially with how quickly our culture changes, thanks to social media, thanks to the meme-ification of all these things.” It’s important to try to educate someone who commits an act of hate, Kohen said. “If we drive to punish,” he said, “that doesn’t allow us to take that teachable opportunity. There’s a lot that I think we miss.” Steinmetz agreed. “It’s not redeemable if you think it’s just a joke,” he said. “It’s redeemable if you do the work, take the path back (and) prove to people you’re not just doing it to get a job out of it.” Oppenheimer, the Yankees’ scouting director, has known Utah head coach Gary Henderson for more than 40 years. Henderson called him about Jackson in the fall of 2024 — well after the Yankees were aware of what Jackson had done. Other teams had been “very active in trying to understand the situation,” including the Houston Astros, Toronto Blue Jays and San Diego Padres, Corosky said. Jackson worked out for the Detroit Tigers and the Yankees. Henderson told Oppenheimer that Jackson was “really playing well” and that “he’s turned a corner. He’s been a good person, a good teammate.” That’s when the Yankees’ conversations began. Jackson met twice with Steve Nagy, the Yankees’ scout who covers Utah as part of the Four Corners region, who “heard the story for himself,” Oppenheimer said. Oppenheimer himself talked to Corosky, and then with Jackson and Steinmetz. Oppenheimer also met via video conference call with Jackson and Yankees director of mental conditioning Chris Passarella, who signed off on the decision. Yankees national cross checker Mike Wagner, who is Jewish, met with Steinmetz. Oppenheimer met with assistant director of player development Stephen Swindal Jr., who is also Jewish, to discuss Jackson. Oppenheimer also called general manager Brian Cashman and Steinbrenner, who rarely gets involved in player selection, and arranged a conference call that Oppenheimer attended with Steinmetz and Levine. The Yankees did not speak with anyone from the University of Nebraska, according to Oppenheimer, but they felt their process was thorough. “I don’t think we’ve ever done this,” Oppenheimer said regarding the breadth of their inquiry into a single draftee. “(Yankees brass) has knowledge of the players we think we’re going to be involved in, but not to the degree that they needed to be aware of (this) situation.” “I feel that moving forward,” Oppenheimer said, “we’ve got a good citizen and a good person and a good baseball player.” Minutes after the Yankees drafted Jackson on July 14, he called Steinmetz. “He was thanking me for everything I did,” Steinmetz said, “how much it means to him, how he’s not going to let me down and how he’s going to get to work.” Oppenheimer said he already made the player development staff aware of Jackson’s history, and that Jackson has had no issues since joining the Yankees, who quickly promoted him to High-A Hudson Valley. Jackson said he understands that people may be upset by his past. “I would ask for their forgiveness and let them know I’m not the same person I was when that happened,” he said. “I’ve grown up. I’ve learned. I’ve reconciled. I’ve done the things I needed to do to learn about it.”
samhexum Posted August 27 Author Posted August 27 Josh Naylor is one of the biggest, slowest players in Major League Baseball. And out of nowhere, he’s become one of the game’s most prolific base stealers. In the past month, Naylor’s swiped 11 bags, second-most in the Majors in that span. It’s the same numbers as noted speedsters Elly De La Cruz, Jarren Duran and Pete Crow-Armstrong combined. Naylor has stolen third base five times this season. He’s stolen against three Gold Glove-winning catchers. He has a career-high 22 steals for the year — half of them since being traded to the Seattle Mariners in late July — and he’s been caught only twice, once while trying to steal home. He hasn’t been caught stealing since late April. Naylor is not built like Bobby Witt Jr., and doesn’t run like him either. Naylor is listed at 235 pounds, making him — according to Stathead — one of only nine active players who weigh that much without being more than six feet tall (the other eight have combined for seven steals this season). Statcast has measured Naylor’s average sprint speed at 24.5 feet per second. Witt is the fastest player in baseball at 30.3 feet per second, while Naylor ranks 532nd out of 546 players who have been clocked at least 10 times. According to Stathead, Naylor is the only player 6-foot-or-under, and weighing at least 235 pounds, to ever steal 20-plus bases in a season. How has a big, slow first baseman managed to steal more bases this season than Duran, Shohei Ohtani, or Corbin Carroll? And how has he only been caught a single time in the past four months? “For Josh, it’s the intellectual part of the game,” Cleveland Guardians’ catcher Bo Naylor said. Bo would know. He’s Josh’s little brother. Naylor’s ability is not raw speed. He’s played seven seasons in the Majors, and this is the slowest he’s ever been. The last time Naylor stole more than 10 bases in a season was 2016, when he was 19 years old in A ball. Even then, he stole only 11. But he has a lifelong eye for detail, having grown up watching baseball with his dad, who preached situational awareness. Naylor’s carried that into major league clubhouses. Naylor played the past five seasons with the Guardians. They rarely asked him to steal because they had speedsters for that, and Naylor’s job was to drive them in. But Naylor was 23-for-29 on stolen base attempts with the Guardians. His baserunning metrics weren’t great, but they weren’t awful, and more often than not, he could get a bag when a pitcher gave him an opening or a catcher gave him a chance. Traded to the Arizona Diamondbacks this winter, Naylor stole three bases in the first week and a half of this season. He was thrown out trying to steal home (in extra innings) on April 20, and was caught stealing again the next game, but Naylor hasn’t been thrown out since, going 18-for-18 the past four months. Shipped to the Mariners at the trade deadline, Naylor has stolen 11 more bases since his Mariners debut on July 25. Only New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. (12) has stolen as many in the past month. Naylor has stolen two bases in a game three times since he got to the Mariners. In one two-game stretch, he stole four off touted Chicago White Sox rookie Kyle Teel. Earlier in the season, he stole bases against notably strong throwers J.T. Realmuto of the Philadelphia Phillies and Patrick Bailey of the San Francisco Giants. He also stole one against Colorado Rockies catcher Jacob Stallings, another Gold Glove winner (though not one with a particularly strong arm). Naylor has stolen bases against the Brewers, Giants, Nationals, Blue Jays, Phillies and Cubs, all top-11 in the majors in caught stealing percentage. Naylor’s ability to pick up on tendencies and take advantage of them on the bases will meet a fascinating match this week when his Mariners travel to Cleveland to play the Guardians. Naylor will be up against his former team — the Guardians have been among the best in baseball at throwing out base stealers this season — and his brother should be behind the plate. The Naylor family is planning to fly into Cleveland for the series. Will the slowest base stealer in the major leagues try to swipe a bag against his little brother with Mom and Dad in the stands? “Oh, 100 percent,” Bo Naylor said. “I’d be shocked if he didn’t, to be honest.”
samhexum Posted August 29 Author Posted August 29 Kyle Schwarber of the Phillies became the 21st man to hit four homers in a game last night. Afterward he did the postgame on-field interview, then did something that had been scheduled for last night a few months ago... filmed an on-field scene for Abbott elementary.
samhexum Posted September 7 Author Posted September 7 ONE OUT FROM A NO HITTER AND HE GIVES UP A HR, THEN BLAKE TREINEN & TANNER SCOTT BLOW THE GAME!
viewing ownly Posted September 7 Posted September 7 2 hours ago, samhexum said: ONE OUT FROM A NO HITTER AND HE GIVES UP A HR, THEN BLAKE TREINEN & TANNER SCOTT BLOW THE GAME! Best regular season Dodgers loss EVER! That was a beautiful epic collapse. They still have the best stadium organist, though. I love it when it takes me several minutes to recall what obscure Alternative 90s song he just played!
samhexum Posted September 11 Author Posted September 11 as I was driving home from Stopnshop last night I was listening to the Yankee game for five minutes and there was an ad offering $2000/mo to be a sperm donor. Sports are so klassy nowadays.
samhexum Posted September 13 Author Posted September 13 Aaron Judge’s home run Friday night marked his 19th in the first inning this year, breaking the MLB single-season record. The previous mark was held by Judge (in 2024) and Alex Rodriguez (in 2001).
samhexum Posted September 14 Author Posted September 14 On 7/26/2025 at 12:44 AM, samhexum said: Nick Kurtz of the A's had a decent game tonight... 6-6, a single, a double, four homers, 6 runs, 8 RBI Kurtz's 493 foot grand slam put an exclamation point on tonight's 11-5 A's win over the Reds. Doesn't any team want the third NL wildcard? NY, SF, CIN keep losing. Meanwhile, Tex & Cleveland have risen from the dead multiple times and Houston, Sea, & even Boston if the Yankees sweep could still be knocked out of the postseason altogether if the zombie teams keep winning.
samhexum Posted Thursday at 11:47 PM Author Posted Thursday at 11:47 PM Clayton Kershaw To Retire After 2025 Season WWW.MLBTRADERUMORS.COM A legendary Dodger is calling it a career. Click over to MLB Trade Rumors to read more.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now