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Around SBN: 2012 Budweiser Shootout Entry List Released

Books and Such: "The Last Nine Innings" by Charles Euchner

Charles Euchner's "The Last Nine Innings: Inside the Real Game Fans Never See" is clever in its approach to baseball storytelling. Per the publisher, the book is ostensibly about the so-called "Triple Revolution" that has taken place in baseball over the last decade, and continues to take place:

1. Globalization of Recruiting and Business
2. Scientific Analysis & Reduction of Physical Baseball Movements
3. Evolution Effect of Modernized Stat-Crunching

Euchner deftly uses the seventh game of the 2001 World Series between the Yankees and Diamondbacks as a canvass for his narrative. The game is broken down inning-by-inning and pitch-by-pitch, as the author segues into and out of numerous facets of a ballgame -- and of ballplayers -- that often go unnoticed by even the most die hard fan. The book dragged for me a little at the beginning as Euchner revealed to the casual fan the defensive deficiencies of Derek Jeter (aka Captain Fantastic). After the first few chapters, though, the book really took off and held me captivated until the end. Some points of interest:

On head-first slides (p.174)...

Using high-speed photography ... [they] speculate that the superior forward movement of the head-first slide is counted by other factors.

The researchers observe: "The surface area of the chest, abdomen, anterior legs, and knees, which contact the base path in a head-first slide, is much greater ... This increase in surface areas likely results in a greater amount of friction in the ground and the athlete in the last several feet of the head-first slide and may reduce the slider's speed."

On the psychology of the baseball player, specifically one Paul O'Neill (p.195)...
Psychology has always operated at the margin in baseball and other sports. The ethos of toughness that pervades sports is so powerful that there is often little room for consideration of fear and longing, of how childhood influences the man ... Even acknowledging a need for help threatens to undermine the very qualities that bring the athlete success in the first place -- single-minded determination, discipline to improve skills, confidence in the face of defeat.

But with the investment of hundreds of millions of dollars in teams and with success so uncertain, many teams have taken to using psychological testing and counseling to make sure they get and keep the kinds of players who can succeed in the unreality of professional sports.

On baseball players as one of Latin America's chief exports (p.223)...
Baseball in Latin America, to some skeptics' eyes, looks a lot like previous episodes of American colonialism. This time, the resource is not slaves, sugar, mining, oil, drugs, or tourism, but ballplayers. The U.S. and Japanese leagues have transformed once-independent leagues and turned the Dominican Republic into a farm system for the major leagues. The American teams chew up players by the hundreds, while a relative handful realize their dreams of playing Major League Baseball.
On the Diamondbacks' approach to hitting Mariano Rivera (p.267)...
With the late movement of Rivera's cutter, lefties almost always get jammed. To compensate for Rivera's killer pitches on the hands, the Diamondbacks adopted a one-time-only plan: violate the most basic rule taught to hitters from their days in Little League and step into the bucket.
"The Last Nine Innings" features portions of interviews with numerous members of the Diamondbacks' and Yankees' organizations, from players to coaches, as well as with experts in various fields not exclusive to Major League Baseball. There is a lot to learn in this book, even for the most ardent baseball enthusiast, and many will derive at least the tiniest bit of pleasure from the recounting of the Yankees' unceremonious defeat that fine November evening.

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I had about 20 people in my house
and I was, no surprise, the most ardent baseball fan among them.

When I saw the camera zoom in on Rivera, sitting in the dugout after the 8th, and him looking back, deeply into the lens, realizing the moment he was about to endure, I wondered, "Is he going to still have the icewater in his veins?" Since my guests were mostly Yankee fans, I didn't indulge in the speculation.

"SNAKES WIN! SNAKES WIN!" I shouted, as Luis Gonzalez's little bloop careened over the head of a pulled-in Jeter. Everyone else was stunned. After all, these were the charmed Yankees, those of the Brosius homer when all was lost, those for whom the Rabbi wrote to the Times, "The recent baseball results pose an interesting theological question. With all the problems in the world right now, why is God spending so much time with the New York Yankees?"

But even though New York could have used a boost at that time more than any city in recent memory, it was not to be. No, the mere victory in a sporting event was not suitable for soothing that city's wounds. Such wounds only time would heal.

by peeder on May 16, 2006 2:53 AM EDT reply actions  

I'll admit it
I wanted the Yankees to win that World Series.  I thought my city needed it.  October (and November) baseball was something everyone could turn to for a break from the terror alerts and the anthrax scares.  

And I couldn't bear the thought of a "ticker-tape parade" in a Phoenix strip mall or whatever.

by kingcritical on May 16, 2006 12:36 PM EDT up reply actions  

Agreed
2001 was the only year I actually found myself pulling for the Yanks, and it was all b/c of NYC.  Although looking back on it, I can say I am happy the Yanks haven't won in a while.

by Schifftis on May 16, 2006 12:43 PM EDT reply actions  

I was one of the few New Yorkers
Absolutely rooting against the Yankees. National League all the way. I couldn't bring myself to root for the Yankees even after 9/11.

Though, I certainly hated them a lot less than usual that fall.

by future on May 16, 2006 3:53 PM EDT reply actions  

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Judging by the comments to Matt Callan’s ode to 1986 Mets: A Year To Remember from a few weeks back, the video has a devoted Mets fan following. Despite being too young to remember anything about that season, it has a special place in my fandom as well. It was part of a two video rotation (Ghostbusters being the other) which ran almost daily on my television for a few years in the early 90s. And it remained a once-in-awhile watch through high school and college. 

Unsurprisingly, the physical tape deteriorated over time, and the screen jumps and sound skips made for a less than optimal viewing experience. With sale of the video discontinued, my brother converted it to DVD and gave it to me for Christmas in 2010. See the picture above for the box and DVD. He even created a scene selection function which can be accessed from the main menu. "Get Metsmerized!" plays on loop on the menu screen. It is my favorite Christmas gift ever and is still nice to throw on for a viewing.

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I was flipping through some of my parents' photo albums this afternoon in search of one particular shot of the sign my older sister made for Mets Banner Day back in the late eighties. Though I didn't find that one — I'll post it when I eventually track it down, and I can assure you that it's Keith-themed — but I did stumble upon this wonderful photo of my younger sister's stuffed animal menagerie spread out in front of a glorious rainbow-festooned Mets pennant, also from the late eighties.

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(click to embiggen)
Now that banner day is back, hopefully this years will look a little like this. I know it's not great, but i don't pretend to be a professional. embiggen!

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