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Friday, August 31, 2012

Tim Hudson has some advice for Tim Lincecum: ‘Be aggressive’ - Yahoo! Sports


This is good advice from an opponent. I'm sure the Giants staff gives him similar advice. His dad must weigh in from time to time with tidbits from his past.

To me it just seems like part of the process of Timmy transitioning from a power pitcher to a finesse pitcher.

His stuff has changed.
His repertoire of pitches has changed.

He simply needs to make the transition mentally. "Trust your stuff". You're talking about a guy who has thrived via the strikeout, nine or ten punch outs per game and now he may have to become comfortable with four or five K's per game. The trust factor doesn't seem to be there 100% of the time. He has to trust that his "new" stuff can get into the strike-zone and come out without leaving the yard. The ultimate rebuke to a former dominant, bat-missing, power-type pitcher.

It will come in time....but meanwhile there are going to be bouts of doubt.

From the San Francisco Chronicle:
Tim Hudson has some advice for Tim Lincecum: ‘Be aggressive’ | Big League Stew - Yahoo! Sports:

Afterward, Hudson was asked about Lincecum, and he respectfully said the two-time Cy Young Award winner could be "a lot more aggressive in the strike zone."
Hudson added, "Just as a fan and a veteran of the game, you want to try to help out young pitchers. From the other dugout, it's what I see. His stuff is good. He's still 91, 92, 93 (mph), plenty to win in this league, especially with that changeup. He doesn't have to make every pitch a swing-and-miss pitch ... I was the same way when I was younger. You feel like a stud out there when people swing and miss. As I've gotten older, I've preached to our young guys that strikeouts are sexy, but outs are outs, man, no matter how you get them.

'via Blog this'

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

We're Dealing With a Lot of Sh*t

CLASSIC SCENE FROM BULL DURHAM.   
(just the cover I need to pontificate about politics)
[Larry jogs out to the mound to break up a players' conference]  Larry: Excuse me, but what the hell's going on out here?  Crash Davis: Well, Nuke's scared because his eyelids are jammed and his old man's here. We need a live... is it a live rooster?  [Jose nods]  Crash Davis: . We need a live rooster to take the curse off Jose's glove and nobody seems to know what to get Millie or Jimmy for their wedding present.  [to the players]  Crash Davis: Is that about right?  [the players nod]  Crash Davis: We're dealing with a lot of s--t.  Larry: Okay, well, uh... candlesticks always make a nice gift, and uh, maybe you could find out where she's registered and maybe a place-setting or maybe a silverware pattern. Okay, let's get two! Go get 'em. 
This about sums up my take on the Presidential election pre-convention. Americans are dealing with a  lot of sh*t. On the R- side, folks are looking for reasons to wrap their arms or their minds around the idea of Mitt Romney being their future President, like a reluctant lover reticent to commit to marriage for fear that their future Mr. / Mrs. Wright or Mr. / Mrs. Soul-mate will waltz through the door the moment AFTER they commit. Ain't life just like that?    On the D- side, we have a lot of folks heavily invested emotionally in President Obama. Hanging on like an abused spouse (see Juan Williams below).
Reluctant to leave, even though they feel like -- deep down inside -- it's the right thing to do. He's not good for them, but yet they blame themselves for the abuse. Not the abuser. A little dash of Stockholm Syndrome thrown in  for good measure.  And it's really hard to make a rational decision when you're dealing with emotional issues, right?  So, here we are. Welcome to Sh*t-ville.       -----   Disgusting pig Juan Williams – Ann Romney looked like a ‘corporate wife’ – she’s rich and her husband takes care of her     http://www.fireandreamitchell.com/2012/08/28/disgusting-pig-juan-williams-ann-romney-looked-like-a-corporate-wife-shes-rich-and-her-husband-takes-care-of-her-video/ ---- ---- Juan Williams comes off as nothing but a little p*nk-a$$ b*tch, who is going to be crying for the second election in a row, this time for a different reason. Last time, it was because Mr. Hope and Change was elected. This time it will be because he will be given the home game mainly for delivering more despair than hope and plenty of change, just too much change for the worse in the minds of most R-s, I-s and whites who voted him in the first time. ---
---- This Ann Romney speech encapsulates the so-called "War on Women" in a nutshell. It's not men vs. women. If that's the case, and men are prosecuting this so-called war, you can call it off right now. We lost. It's not even R- men vs. women. They couldn't win a war vs. an ant farm with a case of Raid. It's liberal feminist women vs. traditional wives who are balancing career and motherhood. To some, they are a threat. It is what Sarah Palin represented and that's what an Ann Romney represents, among other things. And it's why they are attacked and feared.     ---   from Wikipedia:
In April 2012, Ann Romney was spotlighted when Democratic commentator  Hilary Rosen declared Romney to be unfit to address women's economic issues because as a stay-at-home mother, she had "never worked a day in her life".[78] In response, Ann Romney issued her first tweet, saying "I made a choice to stay home and raise five boys. Believe me, it was hard work."[79] The following day Rosen said, "I apologize to Ann Romney and anyone else who was offended."[78]
Don't kid yourself for one moment, not ONE!! This is the kind of woman the Ann Romney and Sarah Palin represent. -----
---- And a War on Women -- if their is one to speak of -- has been declared ON these women by the types of radical feminists you will see in full-throated display in Charlotte shortly.  Good Luck Losers. I know who I'm rooting for.  So, we're still dealing with a lot of sh*t. Women engaged in a Civil War. And an electorate that needs a major dose of Dr. Phil to make what may go down as the most important electoral decision in American history. ----
We are so screwed!!! 
My prediction:
---- Way to go Ann!! The most CLUTCH political speech in history. The balance of the election was tipped last night, IMO. She will have more of an effect on the eventual outcome than VP selection Paul Ryan. The pundits set the bar exceedingly high for her -- mainly so she couldn't possibly clear it -- taking the Romney - Ryan chances down with her.  And yet, she delivers the most classy, dignified and inspiring defense of a candidate I've ever heard. And she left a lot on the table. More impressive to me is what she didn't say. She didn't mention one word about Romney giving away his father's inheritance. She did indirectly when she said Mitt is reluctant to pat himself on the back for his charity. The hyper-partisan web site Politifact (a more apt name would be Politi-hacks). You can read their "opinion" as to why the claim is "half-true". I would say after reading, you would be more likely to rate this site "half-assed" and "Pants on Fire" partisan.   ---     from Politi-hack:   http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2012/jan/20/mitt-romney/mitt-romney-says-he-didnt-inherit-money-his-parent/
Our ruling
Mitt Romney, making the case that he made his own wealth, said, "I didn't inherit money from my parents."
Indeed, he was already a wealthy man by the time his father, George, died in 1995. He did receive an inheritance but says he gave it away. We don't have independent confirmation of that. But a family-funded endowment at BYU started in 1998 to support the George W. Romney Institute of Public Management, bolstering Romney's claim.
Did Romney's career benefit from having well-to-do parents? It certainly eased his way, with their financial help allowing him to focus on his studies. But there's good evidence he also worked hard to make his own success, graduating with honors at BYU and Harvard, and building a reputation at Boston Consulting Group and Bain that ultimately catapulted him to wealth.
Romney wasn't entirely clear about the inheritance he gave away when he said he "didn't inherit money" from his parents. But he's right that such a gift wasn't key to his success. We rate his claim Half True.
CORRECTION: An earlier version of this item gave the wrong decade for George Romney's presidential run. He ran in 1968.
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2012/aug/27/reince-priebus/republican-national-committee-chair-reince-priebus/
Our ruling

Reince Priebus says that Romney "gave away his father's inheritance."

Romney has repeatedly said so himself and that's backed up by the simple fact that Brigham Young University has an institute named for his father launched just a few years after his death. And there’s no reason to think Romney would have needed the money a decade after his lucrative move to Bain Capital.

We find the evidence supports the claim and we see nothing to contradict it. If any evidence emerges, we'll review it. But in the meantime, we rate Priebus’ claim True. Half-true in January and True August 26th. What changed? These folks are ridiculous. --- Ann also did not do what many of the political pundits said she should do to capitalize on the fact that Mitt stayed with her like the dutiful husband through her struggles with MS and breast cancer. She could have played the victim card and she didn't, she mentioned it once, and moved on. Very dignified and graceful. Very rare in modern politics as well. I expect that these two are sufficiently well-grounded emotionally and spiritually that they would never have even considered capitalizing on that aspect of their story.   from Wikipedia:
Regarding the couple's wealth, she alluded to her health problems and said, "Look, I don't even consider myself wealthy, which is an interesting thing, it can be here today and gone tomorrow. And how I measure riches is by the friends I have and the loved ones that I have and the people that I care about in my life."
---- It was a very illuminating insight into how out of touch these folks who wade in the dirty waters of partisan politics are. And how well-grounded the Romney's as a married couple are. We may not know until 4-8 years from now how great a MAN Mitt Romney actually is, judging him by the measuring stick he now wants the American public to use to judge him by. Leader of the nation during a very challenging time.  But if the old adage "Behind (or beside) every great man is a great woman" can still be true in this culture we live in today, perhaps Ann Romney just demonstrated that Mitt HAS exactly what it takes to be great. And she just delivered, in the clutch, the best political speech I've heard in a long time. ---- If she didn't move the dial in closing the so-called gender gap between Romney and Obama, I would be very surprised.  If she didn't move the dial in increasing the enthusiasm gap R-s had in wrapping their arms fully around Mitt as a candidate, I would be very surprised.  If she didn't move the dial among evangelicals, I would be very surprised. -----   WAY TO GO,  ANN ROMNEY!!

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Dallas Cowboys -- Jason Garrett says Dez Bryant's rules about accountability - ESPN Dallas


Perhaps a bit of schadenfreude here, but as a Giant fan,  it feels good to know that the guy the Cowboys offense is counting on to carry them past the G-men still needs a baby sitter. In the interest of full disclosure, I have most of those same restrictions imposed on me by Mrs. TheSlav. I just don't need a baby sitter.

from ESPN Dallas:
Dallas Cowboys -- Jason Garrett says Dez Bryant's rules about accountability - ESPN Dallas:

"Some of the guidelines say Bryant has a midnight curfew, can't drink alcohol or attend strip clubs and must have a security team taking him to and from team functions, practices and games."

'via Blog this'

Schadenfreude, schadenfreude how can something be so wrong when at times it just seems soooooo right?


Sunday, August 26, 2012

Armstrong 'protected' from 2005 hotel raid - lawyer - Yahoo! Sports


This kind of blows a hole in the "well he passed every test" argument. Easy to pass a test when you have all the answers.



Armstrong 'protected' from 2005 hotel raid - lawyer - Yahoo! Sports
:

"On Saturday Michel Rieu, the scientific adviser to France's national anti-doping agency the AFLD claimed Armstrong was "warned before all doping controls". 
"The inspectors had a lot of trouble carrying out random checks. Armstrong was always tipped off in advance, so he still had twenty minutes to cover his tracks," Rieu told the paper. 
 "He could thin his blood or replace his urine. He used the EPO (erythropoietin) only in small quantities, so it was no longer there to detect. We were powerless against this.""

'via Blog this'



So that just leaves us with the question of how someone beats not only cancer, but all his competitors -- who no reasonable person argues -- are cheating, BY NOT CHEATING?!?!!

Kind of argues against the efficacy of cheating in the first place, in which case -- WHY ALL THE TESTING AND HAND - WRINGING IN THE FIRST PLACE.

Armstrong, who finishing second in the Power of Four mountain bike race in Colorado on Saturday, insisted afterwards that "I'm more at ease now than I've been in 10 years," and said his cancer foundation, which has raised hundreds of millions of dollars to fight the disease, would remain "unaffected by all the noise out there."
If we can get an answer to that question, then we can all be more at ease.


Red Sox Reboot Creates Many Questions...




First and foremost for Giants fans -- as the NYP's Joel Sherman notes below -- are the Guggenheim / Magic Johnson led Dodgers primed to become the "Yankees West"? IT'S SHOWTIME!!!

from Seamheads.com
Red Sox Reboot Creates Many Questions | Seamheads.com:


"Boston Red Sox fans have agitated for the better part of the 2012 season for the team to facilitate major change as a way to address their disappointing play since the end of last year. News reports of a completed earth shattering trade suggest that the front office has finally heeded those wishes. Adrian Gonzalez, Carl Crawford, Josh Beckett, and Nick Punto have been jettisoned to the Los Angeles Dodgers for a raft of A- to B+ level prospects (Rubby De La Rosa, Jerry Sands, Allen Webster, and Ivan De Jesus) and veteran first baseman James Loney, making it the most significant trade in terms of money in baseball history. The Red Sox are expected to send back only a fraction of the remaining money owed to the departing players, making it a textbook salary dump. This trade is the equivalent of the Red Sox hitting the reset button and make their immediate and distant futures complete unknowns and fraught with questions."

'via Blog this'

from the New York Post:
http://www.nypost.com/p/sports/more_sports/bosox_dodgers_blockbuster_underscores_7w6YB9H9WXnXCmZ3eBMCBP

The Red Sox and Dodgers orchestrated the most sensational August trade in baseball history, an orgy of superstars and mega-salaries in which two flagship franchises defined their current identities with all the subtlety of an MMA fight.
The recalibrating Red Sox and go-for-it Dodgers opened themselves to both instant and long-term analysis off of this nine-player blockbuster inspired by cable TV money. Boston signed Josh Beckett, Carl Crawford and Adrian Gonzalez to their current outsized deals, in large part, to feed the beast of NESN while the Dodgers accepted those contracts in near total because of a cable deal expected to be finalized this winter that could make the Yankees’ YES arrangement look like something the bunny-eared antenna dragged in.


.......

Which is the other area in which the Mets — and their fans — are losers here. Six months ago, the Mets and Dodgers were lumped in as big-city financial disasters; the Mets because of their owners’ relationship with Bernie Madoff and the Dodgers because of their miserly owner, Frank McCourt. But in late March, the Dodgers were sold for more than any other sports franchise ever, $2.15 billion, to the Guggenheim group. At that time an NL personnel chief told me, “Watch, they want to and will become Yankees West.”

And they have. The new ownership gave Andre Ethier a five-year, $85 million extension. They signed a Cuban they had not scouted in person, Yasiel Puig, to a $42 million contract. And since late July, in trades, they have added Hanley Ramirez, Shane Victorino, Joe Blanton, Brandon League, Randy Choate and now Gonzalez, Crawford, Beckett and Nick Punto. The price tag for all of that, as Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times reported, is $432 million — or $12 million more than McCourt bought the team for in 2004.

It bears repeating....Chicago Values SUCK....This just in!!! NY, not much better


Where are the race-baiters when the time comes to point the finger at their own? Or just take the time to take a long, hard look in the mirror? Great jobs you guys are doing there Herrs Emanuel and Bloomberg. GREAT EFFORT.

Let's do the math, shall we?
--- NY, CHI and Wash DC
--- all strict gun control areas
--- all cesspools of violence
--- all led for years by demonstrably failed political, sociological ideologues
--- and the solution is MORE gun control laws?
--- and not turning away from the demonstrably failed ideology?

Hmmmm........why can't I figure this out?

Don't tell me the problem is with the failure of the "value systems" of some of the folks that have consistently LED (and I use the term loosely) these areas -- where the preponderance of these cesspools are located -- down the wrong path politically (and have for decades)?

No, that can't be it. Could it?

from Godfather Politics:
Did Targeting the 1% by Occupy Wall Street Movement Lead to NY Shootings? - Godfather Politics:

 "Let’s not forget what’s going on in Chicago, the city led by Mayor Rahm Emanuel who served as the White House Chief of Staff to President Obama. It’s now the murder capital of the world. But since the victims and perpetrators don’t fit the liberal, anti-conservative narrative, the liberal media can’t and won’t make an issue of the city’s violence."

'via Blog this'

It should be great theatre to see how Bloomberg spins the recent Empire State Building shooting after this "army that couldn't shoot straight" (NYPD) nearly turned the apprehension of a lone gunman into a mass-killing field. Maybe now he can advocate for less guns in the hands of the NYPD.

from Foxnews.comhttp://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/08/24/multiple-people-shot-near-empire-state-building-in-manhattan-police-say/?test=latestnews?test=latestnews

 NYPD: 9 shooting bystander victims hit by police gunfire
All nine bystanders caught in the crossfire of a shooting outside New York City's iconic Empire State Building were wounded by two police officers who had never fired their weapons on duty, authorities confirmed Saturday.
Officer Craig Matthews fired seven times and Officer Robert Sinishtaj fired nine times at Jeffrey Johnson on a busy Friday morning in the highly touristed area after Johnson shot a former co-worker to death and then pointed his pistol at them




Pence talks push bunt



A clean-up hitter who is willing to bunt when the situation calls for it. I knew there was good reason to like this guy, over and above the unique sounding name. The fact that we have to bat him clean-up is a story for another day. We're trying to focus on the positives for now.

From Mercurynews.com GIANTS EXTRA:
http://blogs.mercurynews.com/giants/2012/08/25/postgame-notes-giants-still-have-the-best-lineup-and-its-five-starters-pence-talks-about-push-bunting-and-his-struggles/?

“I’m confident in the push bunt because I’ve been practicing it for two years,” said Pence Friday. “I’ll have sessions where I’ll spend a good 30-45 minutes just bunting. I did a whole bunch until I got good at it.”
Pence went to the push bunt when opposing teams started shading him to pull more and more often. He had one too many line drives up the middle gobbled up by an second baseman playing right behind the bag and decided to do something about it.
“Balls hit up the middle should be hits, so I practiced the push bunt to try and change how teams were playing me,” he said. “The situation has to be right. But first and third with less than two outs like last night, there are a lot of good things that can happen with a good bunt.”
While with the Philadelphia Phillies earlier this year, Pence executed a similar push bunt for a hit against the Boston Red Sox. That one was more difficult, he said, because the defense was playing him straight up and no one was on base.
“We were down by two in the ninth and we just needed a runner that time,” he said. “But last night, Dan (Uggla) was basically playing me behind second base, so I had a large margin for error. I practiced it a whole bunch earlier this year, so I figured worse-case scenario, I get by the pitcher, I get a run in and I get a guy over. Potentially, I get a hit. No one was really expecting it.”
Including Bochy. Pence told third base Tim Flannery that he had the push bunt as a potential and Flannery said he’d pass it along, but apparently the message didn’t get relayed.
“I came in after the inning and Boch said, `I didn’t know you had that in you,’ ” Pence said. “But I hadn’t been swinging the bat particularly well, so it was the perfect time for it.”
Atlanta manager Fredi Gonzalez said Friday thought it was a masterly strategic decision.
“He put it right where you couldn’t even defend it,” Gonzalez said. “We weren’t expecting it, but even if you knew it was coming, he put it out there in a spot where you couldn’t do anything about it.” Pence came into Friday night still hitting .195 but he does have 16 RBIs in 22 games. Yet it grates on him that he hasn’t produced to his own expectations.
“Most of the time I put a lot of pressure on myself to carry and do a lot more,” he said. “It’s just been one of those years where it’s really been a test for myself, and it’s going to make me stronger. It’s not been easy. I’m definitely not happy about where I’m at. I know I’m better than this, and I’m going to keep plugging away until it turns around.”
Yes, even if it means bunting out of the middle of the order.

Francisco Peguero debuts for Giants



Scouting Book: The Book on Francisco Peguero, OF:


The Book on Francisco Peguero



Prospect Info and Scouting Report

Francisco Peguero / OF, SF 
Born 6/1/1988 (24 yrs old) 
Nigua, D.R.

Height 6-0
Weight 175
Bats/Throws R/R
225
ScoutingBook Combine Ranking (8/26/2012): #279 none 
MLB.com/MiLB.com Season Preview: #98 
Scout.com/FOX Sports: Unranked or n/a 
ESPN: Unranked or n/a 
The Sporting News: Unranked or n/a 
Baseball America 2012: Unranked or n/a 
Baseball Prospectus: Unranked or n/a

A speedy outfielder in the Giants' system, Dominican Francisco Peguero is a solid defender with developing on-base skills. A line drive hitter whose build doesn't suggest future power (he's shaped more or less like Eugenio Velez, though he hits exclusively from the right side), Peguero will have to keep reaching base at a high clip in order to contribute. He's got some distance to close, too: despite the nice batting average, his walk rate is too low, and he is getting caught stealing a frightfully high percentage of the time.




Saturday, August 25, 2012

On Lance Armstrong.....we've come full circle


So we've come full circle in about 10 years. I've been saying for years that once a popular figure was caught in the PED web, they would attack the system. That theory is on full display in this case.

When Barry Bonds was the only one cheating (snicker), I said if you use the same standards you have to look at McGwire, Clemens and Lance Armstrong. It's taken 10 years, but all three have since fallen from grace.

And again using the same arguments that went against Bonds, you at least have to say Hmmmm...... at the run Derek Jeter is making at Pete Rose. And that case has just started to be made in some peoples minds.

from Yahoo Sports:
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/unfounded-suggestion-yankees-jeter-used-hgh-fan-reaction-204000190--mlb.html

Didn't we openly question how Bonds could not be improving as a hitter (granted a power hitter) at such an advanced age? Where are the SABR-cats and the media zealots now with their pocket calculators and their angry rhetoric?

And who is doing the calculations on what the odds are on all these perfect games that are being tossed lately? Even if you say, well it's because testing is working, the rate of perfect games has to be greater than at ANY other time in baseball history, pre and post steroid era.

Hell, perfect games and no-hitters seem to be happening at a rate unexplained by any other era save the war years. Or would this lead us to the conclusion that tinkering with the liveliness of the ball was more of an issue than PED's ever were? This just in, HR's still down in Coors Field, HELLO!!!!

You mean we could have replaced drug - testing with humidors and coefficient of restitution tinkering instead of the PR nightmare that testing has wrought?

And cheating doesn't seem to have gone down much at all. Guys are taking the 50 game suspension like an extended trip to the DL. It's like imposing a fine equal to these guys tip money. No effect. Just apologize, take the PR hit, continue to ring the cash register and get on with it.

This is what happens when we selectively apply morality -- sometimes on an absolute basis (against those we don't like) and sometimes on a relative basis.

It's reflected in society when we can one day hear the President say "rape is rape" to defend an agenda and on another day hear Whoopi Goldberg say "it wasn't rape - rape" to defend a colleague ( Roman Polanski ) who committed statutory rape. What seems absolute is not applied on an absolute basis, we grade our friends on the curve.

That's why I agree with Armstrong in a sense when he says "Why have testing?" If all we're going to do is judge people in the court of public opinion anyway, why not cut out the middle man? He's just taking his ball and jacks and playing the game in a court where he knows he can win. He likely loses in a court of law and wins in the court of public opinion, the other guys -- Bonds, Clemens, et al -- not so much.

I also agree with Lance when he SEEMS TO BE SAYING (if you read between the lines a little bit) that "Hey, I passed all your tests, played by YOUR rules and and therefore competed on a LEVEL playing field, you CANNOT go back retro-actively and change the rules and say I cheated." And I would agree with him completely. YOU CAN'T. But if I give Armstrong the courtesy of that argument, I have to give it to everybody.

In all cases, what these guys are NOT saying is "I cheated by your definition as fans and writers, but not by our definition as competitors." And those are two different standards. And they could NEVER say that openly and publicly, but it does seem to be the truth.

Most sports operate under different legal and moral standards anyway. I can charge the mound and punch a guy, which would be an assault on the street. But it's just good clean fun in the context of a game at the old ball yard.

Anyway, I hate to say I told you so....but you know that's not true. Still just shaking my head at all this foolishness we seem to enjoy putting ourselves through..

Here are some other background stories so you can judge for yourself since that's the direction this seems to be going. THE COURT OF PUBLIC OPINION, ONLY IN AMERICA!!!

from RedState.com
On Lance Armstrong | RedState:

"There’s a lot of jealousy in the world. I don’t know whether Armstrong cheated or it is all jealousy. But he tested clean every time and the USADA has ignored its own statute of limitations to make an example of Armstrong.

The horror stories of professional athletes and the abuse they suffer at the hands of anti-doping bureaucrats can boggle the mind. There’s something very much of the feel of a witch hunt to this. If Armstrong was doping, then by God take away his awards and give him a medal for being the smartest damn athlete on the planet.

You can read Lance Armstrong’s statement here. Again, I’ve got no dog in the fight and I haven’t much cared for Lance Armstrong since he left his family for Sheryl “one piece of toilet paper” Crowe. But objectively, it seems the investigation of the USADA amounts to holding Armstrong under water until he dies to declare him human or, should he survive, burning him at the stake for being a witch. In the process they’ve taken a sport made relevant by Lance Armstrong and put the whole thing under a cloud of suspicion that the anti-doping bureaucrats’ tests can’t even beat Lance Armstrong."


Michael Phelps better watch his back with this as precedent.
Exit point: if we’re going to go through this witch hunt every time an athlete gets too famous, maybe we should just let them dope and then, on the same competitive level, see who is best.
'via Blog this'

http://bicycling.com/blogs/boulderreport/2012/08/24/texas-fold-em/?cm_mmc=Twitter-_-Bicycling-_-Content-Blog-_-texas-fold

There’s been much talk of whether the sanction of Armstrong matters after 13 years since his first Tour win, and the hopeless moral relativism of trying to re-award his seven titles during an era when much of the top 10 on GC was also doped. That conveniently ignores that several of those charged—Bruyneel and Michele Ferrari, most prominently—are still active in the sport.
But in terms of the evolution of anti-doping and its effects on future cases, if Armstrong had really sought to expose the workings of what he calls a personal vendetta by Tygart, a biased system, and the paucity of evidence, he had another avenue available to him: He could have requested an open hearing where the full weight, or absence, of USADA’s evidence would be made clear, along with what he called a “one-sided and unfair” process.
If anyone thought this would finally clear up the Armstrong account, they’re wrong. Those firmly convinced of his innocence or guilt remain so. The rest wonder why this can’t somehow be finally resolved so that it at least just goes away.
Instead, it drags on, and the gravitational pull threatens to suck in the entire sport. If the UCI is overruled by CAS in an arbitration with USADA over stripping the titles, the decision could put them in violation of the WADA code, which would jeopardize cycling’s standing as an Olympic sport.
http://www.bicycling.com/news/featured-stories/injustice-all

I didn’t wonder if I would finally find out if Armstrong had doped—though I do wonder if there is any cyclist left on earth who doesn’t understand the decision has long been rendered. The judgment of Lance Armstrong was not rendered during the SCA arbitration in 2004, when the guaranteer of a contracted $5 million bonus for winning the Tour sought to prove that because he doped he should forfeit the money, nor did it come during the federal investigation that was closed without charges this past February, nor will it arise from USADA. The trial of Armstrong has been held in public and by the public since he first faced questions about cheating during the 1999 Tour, and at some point between then and now society delivered its maddening outcome: The jury is hung.

Honest Lance vs. Lying Lance ]
You believe or you don’t, and anything USADA says or decides will change that for few.

Through nearly two decades of various degrees of intensity and proximity as a fan, chronicler, antagonist, and friend of Armstrong, I granted him at times my full belief and at other times at least the possibility that he had raced clean; in 2011, I became convinced beyond any doubt that he had doped. I said so in this magazine more than a year ago, and detailed why, to much clamor and at least one public hope that I would burn in hell. Inciting nearly as much vitriol from his critics, I also said and still believe he was the greatest Tour de France champion of my era, a skilled bike racer with insane focus and a genetic gift that revealed itself when he was still in his teens, and that ­generations from now he will be revered as one of cycling’s complex but astounding legends.


http://www.bicycling.com/news/featured-stories/which-lance-armstrong?page=0,0

We asked two experts—forensic psychologist Ken Manges, and Paul Ekman, a renowned researcher on lying and liars—to help us understand what sort of internal machinations and motivations might be at work in either possibility. While neither Manges nor Ekman would comment directly on Armstrong, both offered insights into the traits, personality types, and reactions most common among celebrities who have faced allegations of dishonesty, cheating, corruption or similar wrongdoing. What follows are two imagined fictional character sketches based on that input. 

http://www.bicycling.com/news/pro-cycling/lance-armstrongs-endgame
 WHEN I told my daughter that I believed that Lance Armstrong had doped, she didn't have much to say. She had more important things on her mind, had a big homework project going—writing a clerihew using her own name. But she knows in her 12-year-old way what Lance Armstrong means to me. She knows that I met him before she was born, that I spent most of a year away from her so I could follow him around the world and write a book about his comeback, that I think he, along with a few guys with funnier names she often can't remember, such as Coppi and Anquetil and Zoetemelk and Merckx, was beautiful on a bicycle. She's heard me talk, for years now, to and about people who confront cancer or their deaths or that of their beloved with more strength because of him. She knows that group includes her own mother. She knows I've been on television telling Jim Lehrer or Larry King or John Roberts that I believed he didn't dope or, sometimes, that we couldn't know if he'd ever doped. She knows that Armstrong has called our house and left messages and her friends overheard and thought that was really nuts so he must be cool even if her dad likes him. She knows that I am embarrassed to have once owned a signed Lance Armstrong lunch box. She knows that I talked to him last time I was down in Austin. She knows I've been sick to my stomach lately.

For all of those reasons and whatever unknowable simple moralities operate in a child's mind, she summoned a moment of empathy for her father and asked, "How does that make you feel?"


"I don't know," I said, which was both true and false. It encompassed the chaos of everything I was feeling but identified none of it. I figured I should pick one emotion, so I said, "Accepting that Lance cheated makes me want to cry. A 46-year-old guy. Can you imagine that?"

But Natalie had already gone back to her life's own pressing matters. And I was stuck with mine.


You, The Jury
The FDA investigation of Armstrong should finally provide a definitive legal answer—judged by a jury of his peers to be innocent (or not worthy of being indicted) or guilty. We've distilled 10 of the most salient allegations for you. If you were on a jury, your vote would be based in large part on your response to these arguments. By Joe Lindsey





http://www.velonation.com/News/ID/12726/AFLD-claims-Armstrong-was-regularly-tipped-off-about-tests.aspx

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Melky Cabrera suspended 50 games for testosterone - GIANT DISGRACE

By Daniel Shirey, US Presswire

Hopefully, the talk on a long term deal are OFF THE TABLE FOR GOOD!!! This team needs to crash and burn. Rebuild from within. Seems like nothing but trouble whenever these guys go outside the organization for help. Good job Melky, good effort.

Melky Cabrera suspended 50 games for testosterone:

"Melky Cabrera, whose breakout season with the San Francisco Giants was highlighted by his MVP performance in the All-Star Game, has been suspended 50 games for testing positive for testosterone, Major League Baseball announced."

He and the Giants had exploratory discussions on a contract extension over the All-Star break before talks were tabled until after the season.

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Saturday, August 11, 2012

Honey Badger apparently doesn't give a s&*t about his team....

The Crazy Nastyass Honey Badger (original narration by Randall)


Honey Badger just does what he wants. Oh yeah, you've heard that before somewhere. Just another case of life imitating art, I guess.

from espn.com
Mathieu's selfishness costs him at LSU
http://espn.go.com/blog/sec/post/_/id/47866/mathieus-selfishness-costs-him-at-lsu


At the end of the day, Tyrann Mathieu just couldn’t stop thinking about himself.

Months after proclaiming he was changed, humbled and ready to lead, Mathieu’s selfishness cost him his LSU career, as Les Miles announced his player's dismissal at a news conference Friday.

Thursday, August 09, 2012

PREGAME NOTES: Lineups, intriguing minor league arms and an update on Gary Brown | Giants Extra

GIANTS PROSPECT MIKE KICKHAM

FROM MERCURYNEWS.COM
PREGAME NOTES: Lineups, intriguing minor league arms and an update on Gary Brown | Giants Extra:

"The quality pitching wasn’t limited to Busch Stadium last night. Richmond left-hander Mike Kickham threw seven no-hit innings at Double-A before being removed because he had thrown 105 pitches. Kickham, 23, struck out eight and walked two.

He’s a name to follow down on the farm. I saw him throw a bit in the spring and a couple of his coaches told me to keep an eye on him because he was going to have a huge season. Well: 9-8 with a 2.76 ERA and only 96 hits in 120 2/3 innings coming into last night’s gem. The red flag is the walks (63 entering tonight), but he seems to have gotten that under control over his past few starts."

Kyle Crick was nearly as good for Augusta, striking out 10 in 6 2/3 innings and giving up just one run on a walk and three hits. Over his last 10 starts, Crick has a 1.18 ERA and 56 strikeouts in 53 1/3 innings. He’s given up just 23 hits over that span. His teammate, Clayton Blackburn, has a 2.63 ERA and 118 strikeouts in 109 1/3 innings. Here’s the best part: He’s 19 and he’s only walked 16 guys this season.

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GIANTS PROSPECT KYLE CRICK

Wednesday, August 08, 2012

Building a Better Athlete - Michael Yessis


Just a little nugget from a source I have relied on for many years, Dr. Michael Yessis. Lot's of good stuff if you are a coach looking to build better athletes -- who then go on to become better pitchers for you.

from doctoryessis.com
I Told You So:

"I Told You So"

Dr. Michael Yessis

For years I've been telling athletes who throw a ball or an implement, that they must generate the power for the throw with the body and use the arm for accuracy. This was recently brought out in a statement by San Diego Padres pitcher Kevin Correia to explain his improvement.

He stated that "I'm using my body more to throw the ball. It's easier to control." Many people were surprised by this statement but if you closely examine it, it makes perfect sense. In fact, I am surprised that more pitchers have not learned this, especially on the professional level."


Some basic knowledge of anatomy and biomechanics will tell you that the body has all the large powerful muscles. For a pitcher this means making use of the hip muscles, the abdominal oblique and flexor muscles and the very powerful shoulder muscles. The arm on the other hand, has relatively medium to small muscles.

Rather than making use of these large and strong muscles many pitchers still rely on the arm to generate maximum force in the throw. This I believe is the main reason why there are so many shoulder and elbow injuries to pitchers. They place excessive force on the muscles and joints that are not capable of handling the stresses involved.

What is especially interesting to note is that when you use the body to develop the force needed for the throw, the throw for the most part becomes effortless. I've had many players tell me that the throw has never been easier while at the same time they are throwing harder than ever before -- all because of using the body to develop the force.

It should also be noted that when you use the body to develop the force, the large muscles must go into action in sequence, beginning with the foot and ending with the hand. In this way the force generated by one joint can be transferred to the next adjacent joint and so on. In this way you build up to the maximum force possible when the ball or implement is released by the hand.

Although there are many good pitchers who use the body effectively to generate force, it appears that most still do not. This is not new knowledge as I know I have been saying and teaching this for at least 30 years. When will this knowledge permeate through the myths and misconceptions that guide throwing, down to the coaches and players?

For information on throwing and the muscles and actions involved see "Build a Better Athlete."




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100 Million Poor People In America And 39 Other Facts About Poverty That Will Blow Your Mind


from theeconomiccollapeblog.com:
100 Million Poor People In America And 39 Other Facts About Poverty That Will Blow Your Mind:

"Every single day more Americans fall into poverty.  This should deeply alarm you no matter what political party you belong to and no matter what your personal economic philosophy is.  Right now, approximately 100 million Americans are either "poor" or "near poor".  For a lot of people "poverty" can be a nebulous concept, so let's define it.  The poverty level as defined by the federal government in 2010 was $11,139 for an individual and $22,314 for a family of four.  Could you take care of a family of four on less than $2000 a month?  Millions upon millions of families are experiencing a tremendous amount of pain in this economy, and no matter what "solutions" we think are correct, the reality is that we all should have compassion on them.  Sadly, things are about to get even worse.  The next major economic downturn is rapidly approaching, and when it hits the statistics posted below are going to look even more horrendous."


When it comes to poverty, most Americans immediately want to get into debates about tax rates and wealth redistribution and things like that.

But the truth is that they are missing the main point.

The way we slice up the pie is not going to solve our problems, because the pie is constantly getting smaller.

Our economic infrastructure is being absolutely gutted, the U.S. dollar is slowly losing its status as the reserve currency of the world and we are steadily getting poorer as a nation.

Don't be fooled by the government statistics that show a very small amount of "economic growth". Those figures do not account for inflation.

After accounting for inflation, our economic growth has actually been negative all the way back into the middle of the last decade.

According to numbers compiled by John Williams of shadowstats.com, our "real GDP" has continually been negative since 2005.

So that means we are getting poorer as a nation.

Meanwhile, we have been piling up astounding amounts of debt.

40 years ago the total amount of debt in the United States (government, business and consumer) was less than 2 trillion dollars.

Today it is nearly 55 trillion dollars.

So we have a massive problem.

Our economic pie is shrinking and millions of Americans have been falling out of the middle class. Meanwhile, we have been piling up staggering amounts of debt in order to maintain our vastly inflated standard of living. As our economic problems get even worse, those trends are going to accelerate even more.

So don't look down on the poor. You might be joining them a lot sooner than you might think.

The following are 40 facts about poverty in America that will blow your mind....


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Baptist Press - FIRST-PERSON: The riches of integrity




from bpnews.net
Baptist Press - FIRST-PERSON: The riches of integrity - News with a Christian Perspective:

"Concerning legalized gambling, longtime news anchor Walter Cronkite once commented, "A nation once built on a work ethic embraces the belief that it's possible to get something for nothing." Recent studies prove Cronkite's observation to be correct. A poll conducted in 1999 by the nonprofit Consumer Federation and the financial services firm Primerica revealed that 51 percent of people in households with incomes of $35,000 or less are firmly convinced they have a better chance of becoming financially secure by investing in a lottery than by any other means.

It is clear that the long-term effect of the government sanctioning any activity is the attitude citizens eventually adopt toward the said activity. The killing of the unborn, once considered reprehensible to a majority of Americans, is now approved by approximately half of the population. Similarly, gambling once frowned upon, is now accepted and embraced."

Once upon a time churches in America took firm principled stands against what they deemed were moral wrongs. Pastors took the lead and spoke out because they believed activities like abortion and gambling were not only inherently wrong, but they also understood the implications of the state legitimizing a morally subversive activity. In the short term, individuals would be damaged, but in the long term it would be all of society that would suffer.

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Why the IOC will never memorialize the '72 Munich massacre - FOX


The reason given by the IOC to the families of the Israelis slain during the '72 Games (second story below) is all the reason I need to not want to watch any more of the current crop of games than is absolutely necessary. And quite frankly, none of it is must-see TV.

The IOC is run by a bunch of human garbage. The sports low light of the week, perhaps the decade.


from foxsports.com
11 slain Israelis remembered at Munich memorial - News | FOX Sports on MSN:

"The families reject the official reasons they've been given for why this cannot happen. At Montreal in 1976, they said they were told the reason was that the Arabs would leave. At Barcelona in 1992, it was an unwillingness to bring politics into the games. At Atlanta in 1996, the reason was protocol. At Athens in 2004, organizers said it was not the appropriate time.

Just before the memorial, sponsored by the British Jewish community, Prime Minister David Cameron expressed support for honoring the slain Israelis.

''As the world comes together in London to celebrate the games and the values it represents, it is right that we should stop and remember the 11 Israeli athletes who so tragically lost their lives when those values came under attack in Munich 40 years ago,'' Cameron told an audience prior to the main memorial service. ''It was a truly shocking act of evil. A crime against the Jewish people. A crime against humanity. A crime the world must never forget.''"

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from foxnews.com

In 1996, I, along with other Munich orphans and three of the widows, were invited for the first time to the Olympic Games in Atlanta. Before the Opening Ceremony, we met with Alex Gilady. Gilady has been a member of the IOC's Radio and Television Commission since 1984 and has been the senior vice president of NBC Sports since 1996.

I have known Mr. Gilady since I was a kid; in fact, I grew up with his daughter. He had been supportive in the past regarding our plea for a moment of silence during the Opening Ceremonies, so we arrived with high hopes. Gilady informed us that a moment of silence was not possible because if the IOC had a moment of silence for the Israeli athletes, they would also have to do the same for the Palestinians who died at the Olympics in 1972.

My mother said, "But no Palestinian athletes died."

Gilady responded, "Well, there were Palestinians who died at the 1972 Olympics."
I heard one of the widows say to Gilady, "Are you equating the murder of my husband to the terrorists that killed him?"

Silence.

Then Ilana Romano burst out with a cry that has haunted me to this day. She screamed at Gilady,

"How DARE you! You KNOW what they did to my husband! They let him lay there for hours, dying slowly, and then finished him off by castrating him and shoving it in his mouth, ALEX!"
I looked at Gilady's face as he sat there, stone cold with no emotion. This man knew these athletes personally. This man led the Israeli media delegation at the 1972 Olympics and saw this atrocity first hand. This man saw my father's dead, naked body thrown out front of the Olympic Village for all the world to see.

Without a hint of empathy, Gilady excused himself from our meeting.

Willie Roaf's father knocks one out of the park - ESPN



I find football players entering the Hall of Fame tend to do it more humble than baseball players -- who act as if they are being anointed to sainthood.

I can see why Willie Roaf is a Hall of Famer today -- he comes from Hall of Fame lineage. You probably will not see this speech anywhere except this story by Wright Thompson. The father was a dentist and the mother, a state Supreme Court justice. The background of many of the family members almost makes Willie Roaf seem like the ne'er do well. AWESOME STORY!!

From ESPN.com:

"One of the things that saddens me is that his mother is not here," he says. "In person ... She's here in spirit. But she did so much for the development of the character of this child, and she put so much into all these children. Even though she was truly an academic and an intellect, she did love sports. And this would just make her heart glow."

The conversation is about to move on, but Cliff is still thinking about the names from Phoebe's prayer, remembering those people, and the ones who came before them, the long lines of invisible ghosts that trail each one of us. He thinks about all of their secret desires and struggles, and what started as a hilarious recounting of Big Willie stories is about to become something else entirely.

"I want you to get the essence of what she just said," he says. "In order for you to understand what she said, I have to go back a little bit in history.""


He apologizes before he even begins, trying to stop himself from turning this into a sermon. The rest of the family sees the passion on his face and falls quiet. The floor is his.
"It starts a long time ago off the west coast of Africa," he says.
He tells of slave ships, people crammed in so tight they couldn't sit up, how the "cargo" was thrown overboard if they got sick or if an anti-slave vessel approached. Sharks, he says, learned to follow the boat, and when he describes it, everyone can see the fins lurking in the wake.
The room is silent.
"When we got to America, we had absolutely nothing," he says. "We had no clothes, no food, no place to go. And now I'm gonna get into my preaching mode. … One of those slaves heard a name, and I don't know what your religious affiliations are, he heard a name called Jesus. Those people that had nothing had God."
His voice cracks for the first time when he says "Jesus."
"And because they called Jesus," he says, his voice cracking again, "we are sitting in this room and Will Roaf is gonna walk across that stage. Because of Jesus. I know there are people who feel so sophisticated and they are so … "
Cliff Roaf is crying.
"We didn't have anything but Jesus," he sobs, "and Jesus answered the prayers starting way back yonder, and when Will Roaf walks across that stage, for the Layton family and the Roaf family, he is a personification of God's majesty. For all of my people that grew up as sharecroppers and woodcutters, for all of those people, Will Roaf is the essence of their hopes, their aspirations, and thankfulness to this entity that we call Jesus. I'm gonna get up, because I get a little bit emotional."
Someone makes a joke about it being dusty in this hotel room.
"No," he says, his voice strong again, "it's not dusty. Ain't no dust in my eyes. It's an emotion of happiness. It's an emotion of thankfulness because this wonderful creator did not forget what he promised to generation after generation after generation. God promised people in our families that if we loved him, and served him, and honored him, he would bring blessings to our children and their children and their children. That is what is the essence of Will Roaf."
Phoebe Layton hugs him. He wipes his eyes with a tissue. He remembers his own father, who worked at a lumberyard, riding a bike or walking every day, making $12 a week. "From my father to me to Will Roaf," he says, "that went to over $4 million a year. Only in America will you have a grandfather making $12 a week to a grandson making millions. Only here in America."
His voice cracks again, and he seems one powerful memory away from being unable to continue. He can see his childhood in rural Arkansas, and the road from those hot fields to a hotel room in Canton.
"See, I'm a cotton chopper," he says, fighting the sobs. "That's what I am. I grew up in a four-room shack. I didn't even have a bed to sleep in. I ate out of pot tops and drank out of jelly jars."
Then he stood up straight and walked out, headed downstairs to a Hall of Fame luncheon with his son -- the grandson of a man who chopped wood for two dollars a day.


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