Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Top 11 Great Baseball Podcasts – Spring 2012 Edition



About a year or so ago, I sat down to write with the good intentions of reviewing baseball podcasts, perhaps on a weekly basis, in order to share with my handful of readers what I was listening to and why…and at the same time, provide some feedback that may or may not be taken seriously by the producers of those podcasts. Other things seemed to happen, and my initial post was never published…as in my aborted attempt to write a series of baseball book reviews, I felt that literary criticism wasn’t my strong suit and that initiative fell away.

Actually, the focus of this blog was, is, and shall always be scorekeeping…starting this year, I renewed my commitment to sharply hone this focus and produce more scorekeeping-specific content. I’ve fallen short towards this end in the first quarter, but this is mostly due to other circumstances beyond my control that are improving. That being said, most of you shouldn’t mind a little extraneous content (baseball history, or some statistical discussion perhaps) from time to time. So instead of a series, I’ll just post a ‘best of’ list right now, at the time of this writing, and do my best to fulfill my promises of doing my part to bring scorekeeping to the forefront of this blog.

No true Baseball Enthusiast would be a well-rounded as such without a regular dose of baseball podcasting in their daily routine. The universe as it was has changed exponentially over just the past few years…I used to scramble and search frantically for more baseball podcast content when what I had available to listen to had run out. Today, there are so many more options, and so many excellent options, that I’m writing this today as I’ve got to make some serious cuts in my baseball podcast rotation. My once 25-man-shy roster has expanded to Spring Training-like numbers and for me, the only thing I can do is send some programs down to Minor League camp and stay current with the best players on my team.

Some cuts are easier to make than others, some cuts are painful because I’ve been with them since day one, but I have my reasons for these omissions. If you’ve read my timeline recently, you can see how outspoken I’ve been about this. My original approach was to write private emails to the producers of podcasts that weren’t going to make my 25-man roster, as most of these folks are always seemingly wanting to hear feedback from their listeners, in hopes that they would respond, if anything, in an effort to keep me as a listener. The truth of the matter is, as I’ve found out, most of these same folks make it difficult to contact them outside of public-forum social media platforms. My criticism is meant for you, just between us, and not blurted out in public…so the first lesson here is: if you produce a baseball podcast and really do welcome feedback of any kind, make it easy for listeners to provide it on a one-on-one basis. If you don’t, my assumption is that you don’t care what they have to say, and therefore don’t care if they bail on you for any reason without presenting you an opportunity to review criticism in an effort to improve your product.

My good friend and fave follow @cowsarecool220 replied to one of my rants and in doing so, seconded my next best idea: present a list of the best baseball podcasts. So then, here it is, in no particular order, 11 best-listening recommendations with brief notes for each. Following this list (plus an Honorable Mention entry) are 2 expired podcasts in my Hall of Fame.

In an effort to stay kind, I won’t list the cuts on my roster…since my perception of their willingness to not receive feedback is taken at face value, I won’t waste the time on singling any of them out…rather, at the end of my list I will present some of the criteria I used to make these cuts (how those listed made the roster will be evident by my notes). If any of those folks are bothering to read this, then they will be able to look in the mirror and ask themselves if this song is about them.

And before I go on, I want to print a disclaimer: if your baseball podcast is not listed, that may not mean it didn’t make the cut…it may mean I haven’t heard of it and/or had a chance to hear it yet…I do my best to seek these out, but I’m sure there are some good ones out there I’m missing. If your podcast isn’t on here, let’s make a deal: follow me on twitter (if you aren’t already, see my handle at the end of this post) and reach out to me with info on your podcast, as well as an RSS/XML link so that I can sync on something other than iTunes… my best tip is, always set those up because if the only way I can listen to your show is on iTunes or only on my PC, I’m not going to listen to your show.

1. Up and In: The Baseball Prospectus Podcast
Needless to say (but still needs to be said), “Up and In” is the Gold standard of baseball podcasts. Kevin Goldstein and Jason Parks had a concept; 2 guys sitting in a pub, drinking a little and talking about baseball (particularly scouting,player development, and Major League systems) plus the goofy stuff. They nailed this from the very first episode (the “Point Niner” of Up and In mythology knows) and have consistently produced the best and most honest yet informative baseball podcast of all known and recorded history ever since. I could write a small book on all of the different levels this production works, and on how many levels it never ever fails…but I won’t do that, since my assumption is that most of you listen, and most of the most of you who listen share my feelings for this outstanding podcast. The goofy stuff is an integral part of the holistic baseball discussion, in ways I can’t explain but can certainly profess to. After only a few episodes (even sooner), Kevin and Jason are “us,” and we feel like we are hanging out with good friends, talking about stuff we all share in common…and they really do know their stuff, and are never braggarts about it. Always timely and fascinating guests are featured, their fingers on the pulse of baseball is a valid benefit to society. The “Top 11” list is a big hat tip to “Up and In.” #want

2. The 20-80 Report
This is a new find of mine, from the guys who bring you Seedlings to Stars (particularly, Nathaniel Stoltz) the 20-80 Report is a very concise and involving prospects and Minor Leaguers for all systems, most of the kind of content you may have seen at Seedling to Stars, but now you can listen to an interactive discussion of the same. Another side of who is where, how they are doing, where they could go, and all the stuff that could happen around all of that.

3. Baseball History Podcast
This was one of the very first baseball podcasts I ever subscribed to, and is still mandatory listening for any type of fan of baseball history. Each episode focuses on a baseball player from the past, with a concise review of their life and career. Your Game Announcer Bob Wright is very meticulous in his format, always reviewing his content and making pertinent changes primarily based on listener feedback, and typically extracts the basis of his material from the SABR Biography Project…this podcast is 100% Baseball Enthusiast approved!!

4. The Central Message
I prayed for a fun, unassuming, light-hearted yet firm podcast that focused on the Chicago Cubs and the St Louis Cardinals…two Nicks (Devlin and Selby) answered my prayers, and the result is “The Central Message,” I am looking very much forward to the conversation once the season starts! The best baseball rivalry in history, as a podcast…what a wonderful concept!! If I had 10 thumbs, they would all be UP.

5. Ivie League Productions
The hardest working man in baseball podcasting (and blog platforms, to boot) is without a doubt, Bill Ivie. “Ivie League Productions” is a formidable suite of several somewhat integrated podcast productions (usually live podcasts) that cover a variety of content, from St Louis Cardinals and Kansas City Royals discussions (I-70 Baseball Radio) to Fantasy Baseball (Full Spectrum Baseball) to a Baseball Bloggers Alliance roundtable (BBA Baseball Talk) and team-specific content (UCB Radio Hour/Cardinals and Kult of Mets Personalities/Mets). There really is something for everybody, and even if you don’t have time to listen to all of these, you can usually sync several episodes of each a week for a nice mix of material.

6. Japan Baseball Weekly
From John E. Gibson at JapaneseBaseball.com and Jim Allen comes a very nice podcast about one of my favorite topics…Japanese Baseball! Need I say more? Discussions on rosters, news, and great interviews with NPB names of all kinds. Need your Pro Yakyuu podcast fix? Here’s where you can get it!

7. Conversations with C70
Daniel Shoptaw is the founding member of the Baseball Bloggers Alliance, of which I am a proud and enthusiastic member, and can also be heard in the Ivie League Productions podcast “UCB Radio Hour.” “Conversations with C70” is Daniel’s own podcast, focusing on interviews with other baseball bloggers…not just Cardinals bloggers, either, but of all types. The immense respect and admiration I have for what Daniel does with the BBA needs to be heralded here, this podcast is a formidable primer for how the sausage is made, from a baseball blogging point of view. One of my favorite recent episodes featured the unusual topic of “historic replay” as Jeff Polman of Mystery Ball ‘58 was interviewed regarding his unusual penchant for the 1958 season and Strat-O-Matic practices around the same. WOW.

8. Phoulballz Podcast
Another brand new addition to my lineup is the “Phoulballz” podcast (“That’s a PH at the front, with a Z at the end”) featuring Jay Floyd of Phoulballz.com along with my pal Tug Haines “The Casual Fan,” talking about the Phillies system with an emphasis on Minor League players. This one is still fresh in my queue, but if you remember Tug’s appearances on Ty Pyburn’s “Sports Buzz” last season then you will know how totally kool Tug is and how much fun he is, anytime, anywhere. Realistically, Tug Haines could be talking about RBI Baseball replays with just about anybody and it would be great to listen to, but in all fairness, the content so far has been great…and I’m not a Phillies fan, so there!!

9. Baseball Press Podcast
You need help with your Fantasy Baseball league…of course you do. BaseballPress.com is a great place to go for concise information, their podcast in return is great listening. Nate, Dan, and/or Reggie focus on addressing listener questions and while they don’t have the shine and swag of the elite Fantasy 411 podcast, your access is greater and therefore you are nearly assured that if you submit a question, it will be addressed.

10. Sports Poscast with Joe Posnanski
Joe Posnanski’s reputation speaks for itself, and most of us are very glad his podcast is back after his Joe Paterno book hiatus. One of the greatest moments on the Poscast was his interview with Bob Costas. I enjoy his drafts with Michael Schur, much more than I do the sometimes lethal doses of Michael Schur that occur from time to time…thankfully, that doesn’t happen often. Joe does talk too much about other sports from time to time (more on that later), but you can usually pick and choose the podcast you want to sync and avoid this. Fundamentally, most of the content is about baseball, and that’s why it’s on the list. Should Joe spend the rest of this season not talking about baseball very much, I could be inclined to change my mind…but he’s one of the best sports writers in the world, so I just have to listen.

11. Productive Outs PRODcast
Last but not least, here’s another new program hosted by the inimitable Ian Miller and Riley Breck of Productive Outs fame…if you don’t know of this blog/site/spam/whatever platform, then you should probably scope it out. If not, do not pass GO, do not collect $200, and report immediately to the Hall of Jeffs. Ian and Riley are, respectively, Giants and Angels fans…they are also musicians, and exhibit a refreshing and delicately controlled substance of latent whackiness tempered with the resolve of a titanium firetruck driven by Vegans and AcidHeads on parade. Their baseball talk is pertinent and fan-oriented, with a dominant respect for statistical analysis and prospect miasma, and their talk about music is downright humble and amazing. I had to pull my car over once while listening to Ian’s Brian Baker tattoo story because I was (a) laughing so hard, and (b) had to tweet him my thoughts on this with my own Nils Ackermann story. These guys have hearts and their eyes on what fans like me are watching all the time. Go there. Subscribe. Grab it. Sync. Live your life to its fullest!!

Honorable mention:
Fantasy 411 - Audio
Fantasy 411 - Video
I can’t break away from a lineup like this without mentioning Fantasy 411. If you are a Fantasy Baseball person, how can you not be aware of this? Well, I don’t know. I’ll miss the show on MLB Network’s lineup, but I usually watched and/or listened on my Zune anyhow, so no worries. Those of us who have been regular subscribers of this program can attest to the difference of our League performance before and after its incept.

The Baseball Podcast Hall of Fame: Two memorable podcasts that are no longer with us, but will always hold a special place in my heart…for obvious reasons.

CubsCast
They were the best of the best, and were around for 6-plus seasons when they were unceremoniously shut down by MLBAM through no fault of their own, but as part of a burn on a Twins podcast that went out of bounds and attracted the wrong kind of attention. It’s hard to believe this happened over a year ago, it seems like it was longer. If you missed it, or if you still miss it, the old Cubscast episodes are still on feedburner. I miss Lou and Sheps tremendously, and still have a tendency to end conversations with “what is the question?”

Broken Bat Single
“Broken Bat Single” was my first Royals podcast, and the best that ever was. The end of “BBS” was not the same as “CubsCast,” rather host Nick Scott just seems to have gotten too busy with other stuff (writing for the excellent Royals Authority, also writing for the Lawrence (KS) Journal-World, and also raising a family, and I’m sure work fit in there somewhere) and this excellent, star-quality podcast with frank discussion and blunt (yet objective) opinion was first and foremost among just about any other sports media you could find for free on the internets. I pester Nick (@brokenbatsingle) from time to time about resurrecting the podcast…perhaps someday he will…but I understand his reasons for the hiatus, and hope that someday he will reverse the course of his decision.

Baseball Podcasts: the DON’Ts
Now that you’ve read the Top 11 plus, you can see what I think is “right” about the podcasts that made the list. Here are some things that typically are contributing factors to my either not listening to a podcast, or not listening to it as much. These points reflect personal taste, the only measurement I can stack up the time I have to listen to baseball podcasts.

If you podcast live and feature call-in guests, keep them on for only as long as you need to and don’t let them lead you away from your main topic.

If you podcast live, don’t do so from a bar…it’s hard to laugh at a drunk when you aren’t drunk, I do most of my listening while driving, so I’m prone to get annoyed when there are many people at a bar on a podcast yocking it up and snorting to their own jokes…we are NOT there, we do NOT get it.

Baseball Podcast Rule of Baseball – it’s OK to stray away from Baseball to other content, particularly other sports, in a limited manner and when congruent to your established format. It’s not OK to spend 10% of your podcast talking about Cricket or Football or (God forbid) NCAA Basketball, particularly if you publish and advertise your product as a “baseball” podcast. There are other podcasts for that, I’m listening to your podcast because of baseball. Goofy stuff is OK, once again, as long as it’s congruent to your format and limited by design.

If you have guests on the show, keep yourself grounded and don’t spend a great deal of your allotted time with your guest on the show slobbering all over them or their qualifications. Get on with the interview, we only want to hear what your guest has to say about what you are asking them!

Audio quality is a PLUS. I hope that someday everyone will start to explore embracing Skype-like technology and get away from the telephone audio…I understand this is FREE STUFF but even the best podcasts can stand to improve my working towards improved audio quality. On a similar note, if you are using Skype-like technology, be sure your uploads are of a quality bit-rate. I can’t bear to listen to a very famous podcast with decent content because the 32 bitrate quality sounds like poop on bread to me.

Podcasting is (and should be) understood as amateur hour, otherwise you’d be a paid broadcaster. We all understand this, so don’t spend a great deal of time and bandwidth apologizing for your mistakes. Nobody likes to hear this. First rule of conversation is not to apologize for anything you say, the same is true when you are podcasting.

Don’t be so LOUD. I can’t stand another high-profile general baseball podcast because the hosts talk REAL LOUD ALL THE TIME LIKE THEY ARE IN NEW YORK CITY…it’s grating and annoying to say the least. Talk, don’t scream.

Don’t over-promote. We are listening to your podcast, we know where we got it and we know who you are. It’s fine to introduce yourselves at the beginning of the show, but to identify yourself as well as the show as well as the website as well as how to get your show as well as ad nauseum every 10-15 minutes is bizarre. Your program didn’t magically appear on my playlist, I know who you are, I can stand to not be reminded so much. Take it easy!

Don’t be so SERIOUS, please. Have some fun. Fun is good. Without fun, we all fall asleep. I’m driving, I don’t need to sleep.

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Sunday, March 18, 2012

The Doug Davis Series

OK…so it’s really the ‘Doug Davis and the Cubs’ series, or even ‘Doug Davis 2011’ would be catchy…but it’s really a 3-game series chronicling 3 of Davis’ starts for the Cubs, plus an Epilogue of sorts. I did not love Doug Davis as a Cub, I did not hate Doug Davis as a Cub. With these posts, and this post to herald their existence, I only want to formally acknowledge, but not celebrate, the Circle of Doug Davis and the Cubs. In all fariness, I should have included Doug’s single Win for the Cubs, in his start against the visiting New York Yankees on 6/17/11, but I haven’t seen or heard the game yet…I’m sure he gave ‘em hell, after all the box score shows it to have been a strong start for him. I should have included it, but I didn’t, but I did mention it, so that perhaps his other 8 outings wouldn’t seem as bad as they really were.


Game 1: 5/14/11 SF @ CHC
Doug Davis’ Cubs debut, Ryan Vogelsong and the Giants.

Game 2: 5/20/11 CHC @ BOS
The Cubs’ first visit to Fenway Park since the 1918 World Series. He leaves the game with an 8.31 ERA, his second start for the Cubs.

Game 3: 6/28/11 SF @ CHC
Doug Davis’ final Cubs appearance, Ryan Vogelsong and the Giants.

Epilogue: 7/23/11 CHA @ LOU
Doug Davis’ 2nd start with the Charlotte Knights, his first W with the club against the Louisville Bats. The Famous Chicken is also at the game, and Corky Miller signed a foul ball he hit for me earlier in the season.

So come on now, you want to know more about him: Doug Davis

If you enjoy my work, I encourage you to spread the word via Twitter
(I am @yoshiki89), and also please leave a comment!

Friday, March 16, 2012

Dirk Hayhurst leaves Nettuno

Imagine my shock earlier this afternoon when FIBS (Federazione Italiana Baseball Softball) tweeted that "Rick" Hayhurst had abruptly left Nettuno and was returning to the USA. I did correct them ("DIRK Hayhurst") but the fact remains, the Italian media seems to be a little bit miffed about this and are leaving it up to Hayhurst to "explain to his followers why he left Nettuno after only a few days."


I love international baseball, and I offer nothing but respect and admiration as a fan to Nettuno and to the league, but I am also a big fan of Dirk Hayhurst, so naturally I'm going to withhold any commentary and wait for the Garfoose to officially update his fans on what happened. I'm sure he will set the record straight.

For your review, are loosely translated articles that were published a few hours ago regarding this shocking development. You can think what you want (especially if you are FIBS), but Dirk has been vocally frustrated over visa issues, no internet access, and such over the past few days.

I've asked FIBS to clarify what on Earth they mean about Dirk and his wanting to be a "commentator on American television" but I've yet to get a response. Like I said, they are kinda pissed, the start of the season is right around the corner.

UPDATE: After this was posted, FIBS was kind enough to respond to my inquiry for clarification on this, and they confirmed that he had an offer to do color commentary for a TV station.

The first article is the initial announcement, I have no idea what the heck the Marco Constantini divorce business at the end of the article is. The second article comprises of the official seething comments from nettuno manager Roger Bagialemani...as you can see, he is not very kind about this situation. Using the term "Bush League" is usually an indication of this.

Clamoroso a Nettuno! Hayhurst torna a casa (by Mauro Cugola)
Sensational to Neptune! Hayhurst returns home
Tomorrow the U.S. pitcher will return to the U.S.. A bolt from the blue to the team who is now departing Bagialemani stranger a few days before the IBL 2012

Not even time to have seen him run for a recovery, that fans of Neptune should already say goodbye to Dirk Hayhurst. And 'in fact this afternoon, while disputing the friendly match against the Germans of Regensburg, the startling news that the U.S. pitcher will return home tomorrow.

It is a grain, needless to say, for the Danes Neptune, a few days before the start of the championship is not what should be the starter for the races of foreign launchers, and especially after having exhausted the visa. In short it is expected an official announcement from the company.

It also appears as yet another official divorce between the association and Nettunense Marco Costantini, who was married off to Rome, where he find himself the manager William Trinci.

Bagialemani: "Hayhurst non si è comportato seriamente" (by Mauro Cugola)
Bagialemani: "Hayhurst did not behave seriously"
In an impromptu press conference to officially confirm the departure Danesi Nettuno revealing the reason for his departure. Will do in a U.S. television commentator. Exhausted the visa, you try the substitute
On the one hand the company, who explained what happened. Across the manager Bagialemani that at some point he stopped to say everything word for word what he truly thinks Hayhurst. In an impromptu press conference, while in the field was the penultimate scene in the friendly against Regensburg, Caffè Danesi Nettuno baseball.it officially informed that he had anticipated some ten minutes before ...

"Hayhurst will go away tomorrow. A decision that took him from America because it offered what he considered the work of life, or as a commentator for American television," said general manager Alberto De Carolis. The broadcasting instead of the baseball player, personal choice, but that broke up more than a few seasonal strategy of Neptune. "He left us a bit 'banned (and visibly annoyed, nda) because we had to repeat over and over again that the rules in Italy were very restrictive about entry visas, and that there would be no possibility of substitution. We had confirmed that everything was OK, that there were problems, and this also just arrived. Then yesterday he came out with this thing ... ". And on a technical level? "We say that fortunately the mound is quite long and gives us ample reassurances. Santos Hernandez will be departing for the first embossed with Leal, Riccardo Hernandez for the second and Riccardo De Santis for the third, with other findings in turn. Now we'll see how to bridge this gap. We have not seen but in return we can still tap into the market of Community and naturalized. We have some contacts in this direction. "

Certainly it did not go down to Bagialemani. "It has resulted in a serious way, has not respected the work of leadership, the team has not complied with, and put us into very serious difficulties which can compromise your season," he says, but hinting that it will be a difficulty that the team will address with even greater force. On the other hand, and those with long memories will remember well, during the league in '90 Galasso was the third pitcher to arrive at this beginning of the season quite eventful.

Sure, there was no rule of visas ... And there was no Internet. Talking with someone who has had a chance to see him (very little, a stay of three days in all) has learned that he immediately requested a way to connect to the network, which is a greedy attender, lamenting the lack of wireless in its apartment. The other, for the record, we were forewarned about to buy a stick for personal connections. While many suspicions aroused his physical condition, anything but good. It is colorless, the test performance, even mediocre against the Germans in a friendly match of Regensburg. Among other things, had not yet been visited by medical staff of Neptune. Thus, proposed by the U.S. aside, the feeling is that it was likely to be in front of a player far from suitable for the Italian league. If nothing else, at least unprepared.

I wonder if these things Dirk Hayhurst will write on his next book, or will say in his next commentary. Perhaps thinking of a vacation, or to a championship level lowest. What he definitely called "bush league" somewhere, but that has not even had the pleasure to try and misurarcisi.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

2/12/12 Melbourne Aces 6, Perth Heat 7

Barbagallo Ballpark, Perth, Australia
Australian Baseball League Championship Series Game 3
(Series tied 1-1)

Outside of Peter Moylan and his ilk, Australian Baseball was an unbelievably unknown element to me and what I thought was my better-than-typical focus on International Baseball. My first real exposure to the Australian Baseball League was the ABL All-Star game aired on MLB Network late last year; having been completely overjoyed to find something new and exciting in the Baseball world such as this, I was sure to have this Championship Series in my DVR queue once I found out about it. I was certainly universally less than disappointed; as the All-Star game was a source of joy, this series was a source of pure elation.

Three key items of note permeated this magnificent off-season spectacle: Amazingly good pitching, wonderfully coy announcers with brilliant and crisp Australian accents, and a bevy of formidable talent the likes of which you may recognize in some faces and which you may never have known about before this event. Besides that, squirmy baseball fans such as myself were treated to extra-innings mayhem, the successful movement of baserunners when most appropriate, the dramatic and sometimes critically sorrowful pitching changes by managers who knew what they were doing as well as should have known better, and the emotional call and response of costly errors, with offensive and defensive response to those errors.

This is Tournament Baseball without the hype, playoff action without the glam, and focused Minor League-plus competition at its finest. By comparison, this series makes the AAA PCL-IL 1-game championship playoff look like a Little League intra-squad scrimmage. I mean it. This is a very big stage for these players; regardless of what you may think, most of them aren’t even Australian…some have Minor League contracts, some had Major League contracts at one time, some are only recently removed from successful stints in Independent League as well as other International Baseball Leagues. They know that no matter what their current contract status, their performance right here, right now, in the Western Australian sun, is being watched by millions of fans, writers, front office people, and a handful of others who can alter their professional baseball careers with a pen or a phone call. This did happen to at least one player, immediately following one of these games. They know the stakes here…the Claxton Shield, yes…but beyond that, they know what this series can mean to them, and they are legitimately executing every play as if they understand.

The Australian Baseball League is comprised of 6 teams and plays a short season schedule of 45 games. The League in its current format is, not surprisingly, part of a joint venture between the Australian Baseball Federation, the Australian Federal Government, and Major League Baseball (the latter of which owns a 75% share…again, shouldn’t be a surprise to find that out). There was an ABL that existed from 1989-1999, but the current league has been around since 2009…what both versions have in common is, among other things, the prized Claxton Shield, the award that goes to the victor of the annual Championship Series. This is the second ABLCS, the first was won by the Perth Heat 2-1 against the Adelaide Bite. This year, the Heat return to face the Melbourne Aces (who finished 13 games behind the Heat in the regular season). The Perth Heat are the only team located in Western Australia, the other 5 teams are located largely around the Central-to-Southeastern coast. Perth claimed the right to play the series at their home park, known today as Barbagallo Ballpark (also known as, blah, Baseball Park).

Here, I am presenting all 3 games with my scoresheets. You’ll see more of an emphasis on the pitchers and their pitches in some of these posts than you may be accustomed to…after all, as I wrote earlier, this series was all about pitching, and damn excellent pitching to top it off. I’m also a sucker for the metric system!!


Two games down, and I am on a veritable International Baseball high. Proper pitching in the Perth Heat’s victory in Game 1, followed by extra-innings mayhem and my first look at a fantastic pitcher with charisma, character, and great stuff in the Melbourne Aces’ victory in Game 2. Today is the rubber match, to the victor goes the Claxton Shield and while I thought, at first, that Perth would take the championship, I’m now rooting for the Melbourne team after their comeback triumph yesterday.

On the mound for the Aces today is Jeff Jamnik, who famously won (or lost?) a “best mullet contest” to none other than my hero from Game 2, mister Bubbie Buzachero earlier in the season, this is why his previously wicked mullet-ified locks in this photo: are now shorn, yielding a much-cleaner look for Jamnik, but with the same ol’ nastiness in his pitching:

His opponent is yet another surprise for me, none other than Geoff Brown starting for the Heat. If you don’t remember Geoff, he was a 23rd round pick for the Kansas City Royals during the 2007 Draft. Brown didn’t sign with the Royals, choosing instead to stay near his home and pitch for the Washington University Huskies. Brown was un-dazzling in his 4-year stint there, compiling an 8-19 record in 94 games (25 starts), with an ERA of 5.53 and a gruesome opponent BA of .298; his work with the Heat this season is his first venture into professional baseball. His work in this game is rather short, yet brutal.



Brown lives on his fastball, sitting between 86-90 mph only touching 90 a few times. He used his curve quite a bit, but his accuracy with this pitch caused him to walk a few folks. As far as the Aces were concerned, they loved his fastball just as much as he did. Brown faced 14 batters in 1.2 innings of work, struggling to record outs, and was mercifully lifted after giving up 5 runs (4 earned) on 5 hits and no punchouts.

One of these hits was good news for Perth CF Elliot Biddle, who emerged from his offensive silence in the series with a bases-clearing triple in the first inning that put the Heat on the board. Biddle hails from Victoria, Australia; other than 3 games for the GCL Twins (as a pitcher) in 2008, his only professional baseball experience is 2 seasons in the ABL, including the current season.

Brown’s replacement is Jacob Clem, another native of Washington State, whose only professional baseball experience is also this season in ABL. Clem is a klassic “sinker slider guy,” according to Jon Deeble, with “3-quarter side-arm action,” according to Warren Smith. I love side-arm pitchers; Clem wields a curiously formidable fastball, with 86-90 mph velocity (including a nasty 86-87 mph sinking fastball) plus a 70-74 mph Curve and a 72 mph changeup, used sparingly. Clem stays in through the 8th inning, with his only damage being a single run on 4 hits.

Jeff Jamnik, by comparison, fared much better than Brown but still wasn’t able to handcuff the Heat effectively. The Arlington, TX native has worked exclusively in Independent League Baseball from 2008-2010, this is his second season with the Aces in the ABL. Jamnik fits the mold of ABL pitchers as a Fastball/Curve/Changeup pitcher; his FB sits at 86-91 with an 83 mph Slider, wicked 73-77 mph breaking curve and a pitch-to-contact changeup that doesn’t fool as many batters as it does send balls lazily into the air, turning them into gravy for outfielders. Jamnik doesn’t go the distance, only working 4 innings and allowing 5 earned runs on 8 hits, including a 1st inning 2-run HR by Allen de San Miguel.

With a lead-off single by Brenden Webb in the bottom of the 5th, Phil Dale calls on his “Ace in the hole,” removing Jamnik in favor of his mullet contest adversary…yes, that’s right…Bubbie Buzachero is back!! Until now, the pitching in this series of unusually great pitching has been surprisingly not unusually great. Bubbie allows Webb to score on a line drive to left center by Mitch Graham (charged to Jamnik) and allows one more run in the inning on a SAC fly by James McOwen, scoring de San Miguel…this 2nd run ties the game at 5 apiece.

From this point forward, Buzachero is literally inhuman. Bubbie confuses the Heat deliberately with his amazing curve (occasionally a curve-slider and/or curve disguised as an elevated fastball) and devastating changeup, and his sneak-attack fastball worked in between. Watching his work inning-by-inning was a truly gripping affair.

Still tied after the 9th, the game goes into extras again and for the second day in a row, I’m in Baseball Heaven.

If Buzachero’s performance yesterday was brilliant, today it was phenomenal. During the 11th, Jon Deeble playfully cheers “It’s the 11th inning, and he gets better as the night goes on!!!” Truth! In the 10th, Buzachero retires the side on 2 flyouts and a strikeout, throwing 6 pitches total. In the 11th, Buzachero hits Mychal Givens after retiring 2 batters, but retires Brenden Webb on a pop out…all in 11 pitches.

Buzachero regains his focus after hitting Givens…the look on his face is priceless, as I wrote in my Game 2 post, Bubbie bears more than a functional resemblance to the wonderful Mitch Williams…this gaze, this countenance screams Mitch Williams. In this brilliant sequence, I provide an example as evidence that as the night went on, Buzachero was certainly channeling his own “inner Mitch Williams” as he works against Webb…


Buzachero held his own against Fastballer Brendan Wise (9th inning) and Jack Frawley, who lives “almost exclusively on the slider.” After the 12th, Bubbie has thrown 113 pitches, 74 for strikes, has stuck out 7, walked one, and allowed one run on 4 hits. In the bottom of the 13th, Bubbie surprisingly takes the mound again…maybe not such a surprise, as by this point he is a certified pitching monster. Then the unbelievable happens…

Buzachero hits James McOwen on his first pitch of the inning. Just like that, Phil Dale is on the field and Buzachero reluctantly hands him the ball.

This isn’t the time or the place for a vexed discourse on the fallacy of earned runs and how earned runs, along with the traditional W-L record, really add a bit of bitter pudding to the long-standing historical picture of a pitcher’s true performance in a game, as a pitcher, and not as a toy of defense, offense, and otherwise independent factors. If you want to read more of this, start with the fantastic book Baseball Between the Numbers, primarily the chapter “When Does a Pitcher Earn an Earned Run?” and go from there. From my standpoint, Buzachero’s mark in the box score of this game, from this point forward, is more than a clear example of what could be wrong with the stickiness of these outdated, non-illustrative, situation-disregarding numbers and what they really mean (or don’t mean).

Of course, if you’ve been reading this series, you may consider me a “Bubbie Buzachero Apologist” after what I’m about to write…you need to know, I don’t have a problem with this whatsoever. Bubbie was totally and unequivocally fantastic tonight…where his line score ends up at the conclusion of this game is fundamentally unfair in regards to his performance today, and that’s really the bottom line.

Every great pitcher has these moments…I’ve mentioned Mitch Williams quite a bit, especially in my admiration of Buzachero as an homage (not a comp) to Williams. This happened to him. This happened to Goose Gossage. This happened to Dennis Eckersley. Tonight it happened to Bubbie Buzachero, that’s reality.

In relief, side-armer Andrew Russell retires Perth PH Dylan Jones on a SAC bunt on one pitch, McOwen advances to second. He retires Perth 1B Matt Kennelly on a full-count grounder to short, McOwen advances to second. Russell is on his way to closing the inning and stranding McOwen to continue the game and salvage Buzachero’s antiquated linescore heritage. After two pitches, both away from the zone, Russell delivers a wild pitch and in a scene reminiscent (but not as glorious) of an extra-innings game I saw on the second BIL Tour on 8/26/2010, McOwen crosses home plate while Kevin David scurries to retrieve the ball, and just like that…the Perth Heat win, and are recipients of the Claxton Shield for the second consecutive year. Russell was that damn close to getting the Aces out of this inning and extending the game, but as he lost control of his slider, even during Kennelly’s AB, he pretty much blew the chances of that, pitch by pitch. Again, my point is sure, Buzachero owned the runner on base, but where in the linescore will it record, accurately, that it was indeed Andrew Russell, whose errant throw was wild enough to preclude any other outcome, who gave up the game? And if this is so, then why will Buzachero walk away with an “L” in the linescore and even take credit for that scored run?

This is perhaps why Buzachero is a hero and a legend to Australian baseball fans, despite the fact that he’s a guy from Tennessee, a competitor who does things differently than the grain on the bat runs. Think what you want about that “L” in this most important game, but Bubbie won a great deal more. He won the collective hearts of a nation of baseball fans, and even more hearts around the world, those who couldn’t have enjoyed his work more than they ever thought possible…this fan certainly included.

Mitch Williams. Goose Gossage. Dennis Eckersley. The moments they are infamous for are decidedly much more humbling yet in hindsight, never tarnished their respective reputations. They dealt with it, Bubbie deals with it, and for fans like me, we all know what really happened. Bubbie was amazing, did the heavy lifting for the Aces in staying in this game, and was intrinsically no more responsible for the loss than McOwen was in scoring the winning run.

The game was called by Warren Smith and Australian National Baseball Team Manager Jon Deeble for Fox Australia, their accents are really growing on me now…so much that I fear I may campaign MLB Network for Australian SAP on their broadcasts!! Besides their glowing amazement at Buzachero’s performance, they kept a thread of discussion around catcher framing going on throughout the game. Catcher framing is so damn important in this game, it’s nice to hear these blokes discuss the reality and validity of catcher framing, where dorks like Joe Morgan would rather talk about their career!! If you haven’t read Mike Fast’s gospel on Catcher Framing (”Spinning Yarn” on Baseball Prospectus, one of the most outrageous and wonderful writings of 2011) then you really, really should!

Do you want to know more about the Australian Baseball League? Of course you do, if there’s one takeaway I would request if you’re reading this it would be for you to want to know more. Head on over to the Official Site of the ABL where there is a lot more information, including the ripping History section, where you can read about Australia’s Baseball beginnings, previous domestic leagues and competitions, international successes, and a lot more. You can also follow the league on twitter: @ABLeague

You can also follow Bubbie on twitter (@bbuzachero) or visit his fun website, Bubbie Buzachero International Baseball to find out more about him and where his interesting career will take him next. Bubbie has announced that this season, he’ll be pitching in Europe!! I’ll be doing more than my best to keep up with him during this next phase of his career!






If you enjoy my work, I encourage you to spread the word via Twitter
(I am @yoshiki89), and also please leave a comment!

Thursday, March 1, 2012

2/11/12 Melbourne Aces 3, Perth Heat 2

Barbagallo Ballpark, Perth, Australia
Australian Baseball League Championship Series Game 2
(Perth leads the series 1-0)

Outside of Peter Moylan and his ilk, Australian Baseball was an unbelievably unknown element to me and what I thought was my better-than-typical focus on International Baseball. My first real exposure to the Australian Baseball League was the ABL All-Star game aired on MLB Network late last year; having been completely overjoyed to find something new and exciting in the Baseball world such as this, I was sure to have this Championship Series in my DVR queue once I found out about it. I was certainly universally less than disappointed; as the All-Star game was a source of joy, this series was a source of pure elation.

Three key items of note permeated this magnificent off-season spectacle: Amazingly good pitching, wonderfully coy announcers with brilliant and crisp Australian accents, and a bevy of formidable talent the likes of which you may recognize in some faces and which you may never have known about before this event. Besides that, squirmy baseball fans such as myself were treated to extra-innings mayhem, the successful movement of baserunners when most appropriate, the dramatic and sometimes critically sorrowful pitching changes by managers who knew what they were doing as well as should have known better, and the emotional call and response of costly errors, with offensive and defensive response to those errors.

This is Tournament Baseball without the hype, playoff action without the glam, and focused Minor League-plus competition at its finest. By comparison, this series makes the AAA PCL-IL 1-game championship playoff look like a Little League intra-squad scrimmage. I mean it. This is a very big stage for these players; regardless of what you may think, most of them aren’t even Australian…some have Minor League contracts, some had Major League contracts at one time, some are only recently removed from successful stints in Independent League as well as other International Baseball Leagues. They know that no matter what their current contract status, their performance right here, right now, in the Western Australian sun, is being watched by millions of fans, writers, front office people, and a handful of others who can alter their professional baseball careers with a pen or a phone call. This did happen to at least one player, immediately following one of these games. They know the stakes here…the Claxton Shield, yes…but beyond that, they know what this series can mean to them, and they are legitimately executing every play as if they understand.

The Australian Baseball League is comprised of 6 teams and plays a short season schedule of 45 games. The League in its current format is, not surprisingly, part of a joint venture between the Australian Baseball Federation, the Australian Federal Government, and Major League Baseball (the latter of which owns a 75% share…again, shouldn’t be a surprise to find that out). There was an ABL that existed from 1989-1999, but the current league has been around since 2009…what both versions have in common is, among other things, the prized Claxton Shield, the award that goes to the victor of the annual Championship Series. This is the second ABLCS, the first was won by the Perth Heat 2-1 against the Adelaide Bite. This year, the Heat return to face the Melbourne Aces (who finished 13 games behind the Heat in the regular season). The Perth Heat are the only team located in Western Australia, the other 5 teams are located largely around the Central-to-Southeastern coast. Perth claimed the right to play the series at their home park, known today as Barbagallo Ballpark (also known as, blah, Baseball Park).

Here, I am presenting all 3 games with my scoresheets. You’ll see more of an emphasis on the pitchers and their pitches in some of these posts than you may be accustomed to…after all, as I wrote earlier, this series was all about pitching, and damn excellent pitching to top it off. I’m also a sucker for the metric system!!


Still on a buzz from Game 1, I’m ready for more of this great ABL stuff as the Aces collect their baseball wits and try to come back against the Heat to even up the series and stay in it for the Shield. Dubuque, Iowa native Nic Ungs starts for Melbourne against Queensland, Australia native Warwick Saupold, both of whom have great baseball names. But the hands down winner in this category is neither. The definitive winner, and after this game, suddenly one of my favorite pitchers in baseball, is none other than Bubbie Buzachero.



Nic Ungs is a veteran Minor Leaguer, with 10 seasons of work for the Marlins and Brewers organizations (no MLB experience), who spent last season with the Somerset Patriots of the Independent Atlantic League (the very same league where Michael Schlact, ABLCS Game 1 stud Virgil Vasquez, and the aforementioned Buzachero all pitched last year). Ungs is a “pitch to contact” guy. He doesn’t throw with fire (he sits at 80-85 mph, touching 87 only occasionally), or possess any inordinate nasty stuff (his predominant pitch is a sinker)…he throws strikes, and throws them well. For a right-handed pitcher, he has an excellent pick-off move, the kind that would even make lefties blush with envy.

Warwick Saupold, on the other hand, has only pitched in the ABL during his career, and was only 21 in 2011. Saupold’s payoff pitch seems to be the well-located 2-seam fastball (sitting at 90-91 mph), with an occasional 73-76 mph Curve.

Hijinks ensue almost right away, as Melbourne 3B Scott Wearne has a rough defensive inning, charged with 2 errors in the 2nd. Wearne is another Australian native with only 1 season of indie ball experience under his belt in 2010, to be fair he flashed some great glove work in the game despite this inning, and the Heat fail to capitalize on the affair, with the game staying scoreless until the 5th.

I forged a slight disagreement with the Official Scorer on one of the Wearne error plays, Perth DH Dylan Jones placed a hard-hit dribbler in Wearne’s direction and reached 1B on the charge, reached 2B on a bad throw by Wearne. The Scorer charged Wearne with the throwing error (which I agree with), but didn’t credit Jones with a base hit. Wearne had no play at all, I’ve watched the tape several times, and I stand by my initial ruling…no play, Jones reaches 1B on a single, and reaches 2B on the error throw.

In the 5th, the Heat strike first when lead-off man Mychal Givens (an Orioles farmhand for the last 2 seasons) reaches on a double, advances on a SAC bunt by Brenden Webb, and scores on a SAC fly by Tim Kennelly. The small-ball barrage on Ungs continues when Allan de San Miguel doubles and SS Mitch Graham reaches first on a bloop single to left-center, scoring de San Miguel. Aces Manager and Australian Baseball legend Phil Dale gives Ungs the hook in favor of RHP Bubbie Buzachero, who retires James McOwen on a grounder to 2B to end the inning.

From the moment I see Bubbie on the mound, I know this guy is going to be something special; with his errant, free-flowing mullet, flat-brim cap pulled down to obscure his eyebrows in shadows, leaving only his cold, argumentative stare…socks strikingly visible, and a set of ink on his arm that would make Kyle Farnsworth smile.When his name comes up, that pretty much seals the deal. My first thought is “what a great baseball name, and he really looks like a Bubbie Buzachero.” Once he starts throwing, I find myself particularly enthralled by this enigmatic pitcher. Immediate memories of the most entertaining pitcher in MLB history, Mitch Williams, start raging through my consciousness. Not just in his form, one of unkept aggression and sinister pin-point control, but also in his occasional violent backlash from his arsenal of pitches, sometimes throwing himself into a crouch over the mound.

Bubbie was born in Livingston, TN as Edward Dale Buzachero, but don’t call him that. Legend has it that his sister gave him the nickname, but in baseball mythology one can only speculate on how many other permutations of the origin might possibly exist. Beyond mythology, know ye this: Buzachero was drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays in the 23rd round of the 2002 draft and spent 4 seasons in that organization before heading to the Cleveland Indians in 2006, splitting 146 games between AA Akron and AAA Buffalo from 2006-2008. In 2009 he spent some time as a Long Island Duck in the Independent Atlantic League and eventually returned to the Toronto system. 2010 found Buzachero starting out in the Houston Astros system, before finishing that season as a Blue Jay farmhand once again. In 2011, Buzachero returned to the Long Island Ducks’ roster, appearing in 52 games and finishing the season with a 7-2 record, 3.26 ERA, and admirable 1.190 WHIP and 6.1 SO/9. This is his first season in the Australian Baseball League, and the fans down there can’t get enough of him.Aside from his cold stare and aggro mound presence attack, Bubbie’s pitching arsenal is very mixed and effective. His slider has a great deal of nasty, ranging from 77-84 mph; on the lower speed end batters swing helplessly as the ball breaks down and away, at higher speeds, batters pop up sky high. His devastating change-up sits at about 75-78 mph (including his quasi-trademark “knuckle curve,” as described by commentators Warren Smith and Jon Deeble), his curve ball is a thing of true beauty and his sneak-attack fastball (sitting at 89-91 mph) is an effective part of his portfolio that adds to the bewilderment of opposing batters. Buzachero can mix these up in deadly fashion, I assure you that every pitch is as exciting to watch as the last one.

The decision by Dale to bring in Bubbie is an effective one; Buzachero handcuffs the Heat for 3.1 innings and along with his defensive backup, keeps things under control. Buzachero does his part for defense as well…In the kookiest play during the series so far, as Matt Kennelly lines out into a double-play that is more accurately scored as “Buzachero’s shoulder > Ramos”…the line shot bounces high and wide off of Bubbie’s shoulder, into the glove of Ramos, who steps on the bag at 2B for the second out.

Melbourne responds to the Heat’s 5th inning strike by capitalizing on a throwing error by Perth 3B Tim Kennelly to his brother 1B Matt Kennelly, allowing Melbourne 1B Josh Davies to reach safely. Saupold is unable to keep the Aces from advancing Davies one batter at a time, and he scores on a 2-out line drive single to left-center by Justin Huber, allowing Davies and SS Dominic Ramos to score, both unearned runs for Saupold.

Huber is one of two MLB veterans in the Aces’ lineup…the Melbourne native spent 2001-2004 as a New York Mets prospect, then 2005-2007 as a Royals farmhand before spending a season each with the San Diego and Minnesota organizations. Huber never saw any MLB experience with the Mets, but played in 38 games with the Royals, 33 games for the Padres, and a single game for the Twins. Justin was on the Hiroshima Carp roster in NPB during 2010, and spent 2011 as a Somerset Patriot, along with Nic Ungs. This RBI single was Huber’s first and only hit in the series.

NOW we’ve got us a baseball game!!

Saupold faces 2 batters to start the bottom of the 6th, after Royals farmhand Kevin David singles to lead-off, he is advanced by DH Joshua Hendricks on a SAC bunt and Saupold is yanked by manager Brooke Knight in favor of Perth native RHP Cameron Lamb. Lamb has spent 4 seasons with the San Francisco Giants organization (missing the entire 2008 season) and utilizes a treacherous mix of a 90-94 mph FB with aggressive movment, and an 84-85 mph slider that sometimes translates into a sinker-slider at higher speeds. Lamb throws 3.2 scoreless innings.

Meanwhile, Buzachero is in the game until the bottom of the 9th, game still tied, with the 8,9, and 1 hitters due up. Manager Phil Dale gives the ball to side-armer Andrew Russell, and Buzachero is demonstratively livid, animatedly arguing with Dale to no avail, and returns to the dugout, throwing his glove in disgust. As this occurs, I am throwing stuff around as well…I really wanted Bubbie to stay in! With only 1 hit allowed and only having thrown 48 pitches, he seemed prime and ready to go. Smith and Deeble assert all of us that this is necessary on Dale’s part for strategic purposes. Bubbie was hot tonight, if Dale hopes to win this game and force a 3rd game, he’ll want Buzachero available for that game…if he works anymore tonight, Dale won’t have that option. OK, I settle down, and a few minutes later Bubbie is seen cooling down in the dugout, so everything is fine.

Russell does his job with a great sinking fastball and an occasional curve (that is occasionally a little wild). The 9th ends, still tied at 2-2 and we are headed for extra-innings!!! The joy of this series just got more joyous, Bonus Baseball RULES!!

Lambs stays in for the 10th, 2 of the 3 hits he allows happen in this inning but he manages to stave off the Aces’ threat. In the 11th, Lamb is replaced by side-armer Benn Grice (from parts unknown, whose sole experience is 2 seasons in ABL) who pitches 2 beautiful innings. In the top of the 13th, Grice allows Davies to reach on a base hit to lead off, Davies eventually scores on a double (my ruling, not the Official Scorer’s) by Brad Harman and the Aces have the advantage. “Haahhhman” (hat tip to the Aussie commentators!), is the other MLB veteran in the Aces’ lineup and like Huber, is also a native of Melbourne and has spent his entire Minor League career in the Phillies organization (2004-2009). His cup of coffee stint with the MLB Phillies occurred in 2008, appearing in 6 games towards the end of the season. This is his first season in ABL; he picked up his offense a little bit in this game (2-for-5 with this key RBI). Grice’s adversary during these 3 innings two innings is Kevin Reese, who pitched one inning in yesterday’s game. Harman lends some great defensive assistance in robbing de San Miguel of a sure-thing chopper base hit to start the bottom of the 13th. Subsequently, Reese cruises through to end the 13th inning, allowing 3 hits and fanning 2, and the Aces win the game 3-2.

I shined out Heat SS Mitch Graham for his defensive plus to their roster in my post on Game 1, I only thought it would be fair to mention Aces SS Dominic Ramos, who is nearly as good at what he does. Ramos is from Texas and spent 2 seasons in the Boston Red Sox organization before starting a lengthy trek in Independent Baseball; in 2007 he was on the Worcester Tornadoes roster, from 2008-2011 he played for the Brockton Rox, both teams of the Canadian-American Association. Another hat-tip goes out to Heat LF Corey Adamson, son of Australian Baseball star Tony Adamson, as he slid straight into the left-field chain-link wall to steal complete extra bases from Justin Huber.

The game was called by Warren Smith and Australian National Baseball Team Manager Jon Deeble for Fox Australia, their accents are really growing on me now…so much that I fear I may campaign MLB Network for Australian SAP on their broadcasts!! I don’t know what the deal is with the microphones they use, but check out these screenshots of an in-the-booth interview with Game 1 winner Virgil Vasquez. Maybe I’m just not up on the new microphone technology, but from what I saw here, you have to press the plastic piece on top of the mike against your upper lip when you speak into it. Amazing stuff, I guess.

2 games down, the series is tied, and so far the score is:
1 complete game victory
1 mayhemic extra-innings contest
9 fantastic pitchers, including 1 extra-special fantastic pitcher who is a great deal of fun to watch

I’m hoping Phil Dale does bring Buzachero back, I’d hate to think that this would be the last I’d see of him for a while!!

Do you want to know more about the Australian Baseball League? Of course you do, if there’s one takeaway I would request if you’re reading this it would be for you to want to know more. Head on over to the Official Site of the ABL where there is a lot more information, including the ripping History section, where you can read about Australia’s Baseball beginnings, previous domestic leagues and competitions, international successes, and a lot more. You can also follow the league on twitter: @ABLeague

You can also follow Bubbie on twitter (@bbuzachero) or visit his fun website, Bubbie Buzachero International Baseball to find out more about him and where his interesting career will take him next.






If you enjoy my work, I encourage you to spread the word via Twitter
(I am @yoshiki89), and also please leave a comment!
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