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Field of Dreams FAQ: Tickets, other details
July 15th, 2021
They built it, and they’re coming. One of the most highly anticipated games in Major League Baseball history is set for Thursday, Aug. 12, when the MLB at Field of Dreams Game presented by GEICO will be held at the famous movie site in Dyersville, Iowa.
After getting pushed back a year by the coronavirus pandemic, this game between the White Sox and Yankees is ready to emerge like ghosts coming out of the corn field, and interest is not all that dissimilar to the interest in Ray Kinsella’s farm-turned-field.
So here is a handy FAQ to answer any questions you might have about MLB at Field of Dreams. If you ask it, we will answer.
When and where is the game?
The game is scheduled to take place on Thursday, Aug. 12, and it will air live on FOX.
The game will take place at a newly constructed, 8,000-seat ballpark near the “Field of Dreams” movie site in Dyersville.
Who is playing in MLB at Field of Dreams?
The matchup from the original plans for the 2020 game is back on, as the White Sox and Yankees will face one another in the rescheduled event in 2021.
The Sox are the “home” team, surrendering a home date at Guaranteed Rate Field for this unique event. They were an obvious choice to be included because of their role in the 1989 “Field of Dreams” movie, in which the ghosts of “Shoeless” Joe Jackson and other members of the 1919 Black Sox play on the diamond in the Iowa cornfield.
Will this count as a regular-season game?
Yes.
Will fans be able to attend?
Yes. People will come. People will most definitely come.
How can fans get tickets?
A public registration will be available exclusively to residents of Iowa from Friday, July 16, through Friday, July 23. Registration for the lottery will be limited to fans who have Iowa zip codes. On Monday, Aug. 2, winners of the lottery will be notified and will then have the opportunity to purchase up to two tickets and one parking pass for the special game.
Will the game be played on the same field that was used in the movie?
No. Not only is that field not up to typical Major League dimensions, but too many balls would get lost in the cornfield.
3D Rendering of Field of Dreams
Aug 8, 2019 · 0:25
3D Rendering of Field of Dreams
Where will the ballpark be located?
In the field beyond the northern perimeter of the movie field. In a nice homage to the game in the film, a pathway through the cornfield leads to the ballpark.
The right-field wall features windows to show the cornfields beyond the ballpark.
How large will the ballpark be?
It is large enough to hold 8,000 fans.
What will the field look like?
The design of the park pays homage to Chicago’s Comiskey Park, which was home of the White Sox (and, for a time, “Shoeless” Joe) from 1910-90.
Will the ballpark be used again?
The field will stay intact. Go The Distance Baseball, the company that operates the movie site, will consider other potential uses for it.
Will this be the smallest facility to ever house an MLB regular-season game?
No, BB&T Ballpark at Historic Bowman Field in Williamsport, Pa., where the Little League Classic has been held, is the smallest. It has a capacity of 2,366.
What happens if the game gets rained out?
In the 2020 schedule, an off-day was built in after MLB at Field of Dreams to leave room for a makeup game. In the 2021 MLB regular-season schedule announced in July, the Yankees and White Sox were slated for a three-game series at Guaranteed Rate Field from Aug. 13-15 with an off-day on Aug. 12.
Has MLB ever had a regular-season game in Iowa?
No, this will be the first. But the White Sox and Cubs did stage an exhibition in Fort Dodge, Iowa, in 1942, for the opening of Dodger Stadium (no, not that one). Hall of Famers Bob Feller, Cap Anson, Dave Bancroft, Fred Clarke, Red Faber and Dazzy Vance all hail from Iowa. Feller’s father, William, predated the movie idea by building his son a ballfield on the family farm in Van Meter.
https://www.mlb.com/news/field-of-dreams-game-tickets-and-faqs
Free MiLB.TV weekend: 10 games to watch
July 15th, 2021
Somerset Patriots (Yankees) @ Richmond Flying Squirrels (Giants)
No. 7 Yankees prospect Luis Medina had the hardest-thrown pitch in Sunday’s Futures Game at 100.7 mph. In fact, 20 of his 28 pitches were clocked at 98 mph or above by Statcast. So when he takes the mound Friday in Richmond, expect the right-hander to bring a ton of velocity to MiLB.TV. He’ll be backed by No. 97 overall prospect Oswald Peraza, a strong defensive shortstop who has really taken a jump in his slugging ability during his age-21 season. The hosts have a Top 100 prospect of their own in No. 63 Heliot Ramos. The 21-year-old outfielder had a terrific spring for the Giants, and, though he’s had a bumpier time in Richmond, he still has the potential to impact any game with above-average power and a plus throwing arm.
https://www.mlb.com/yankees/news/10-milb-tv-matchups-to-watch-on-milb-major-fun-weekend
Dick Tidrow, two-time World Series champ with Yankees, dead at 74
Pitcher also credited with helping build San Francisco Giants' dynasty in early 2010s
https://www.foxnews.com/sports/dick-tidrow-world-series-champ-yankees-dead
San Francisco Giants outfielder Drew Robinson's remarkable second act
https://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/30800732/san-francisco-giants-outfielder-drew-robinson-remarkable-second-act
Sports tech company Hyperice strikes multiyear sponsorship deal with New York Yankees
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Bobby Brown, Yankee Infielder Turned Cardiologist, Is Dead at 96
He played in four World Series championships before opening a medical practice, then returned to baseball once more as the American League president.
By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/25/sports/bobby-brown-yankees-dead.html
Curt Schilling doesn't deserve to be in the baseball Hall of Fame
Chris Cwik
Chris Cwik
January 17, 2020
Baseball Hall of Fame voters have had their morality tested in recent years. The same writers who wrote lovingly about the home-run surge in the ‘90s now have to grapple with the idea of voting suspected steroid users — like Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens — into the Hall of Fame. Or, in Manny Ramirez’s case, voters have to decide whether multiple positive tests should keep out one of the best hitters of his era.
But of all those players, none deserves more scrutiny than Curt Schilling. On a ballot filled with suspected and confirmed steroid users, Schilling is the most controversial player up for induction.
The baseball case for Schilling’s induction is easy. Over 20 seasons, Schilling was one of the most accomplished pitchers in baseball. He was a six-time All-Star, three-time World Series winner and arguably the best postseason pitcher of his era. By Jay Jaffe’s JAWS metric, Schilling did enough on the field to warrant a spot in the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
Despite all that, Schilling is the least deserving of the candidates to be seriously considered for the honor. The 53-year-old has spent the last few years rapidly disqualifying himself from the conversation by spreading hateful speech and dangerous rhetoric.
And yet, Schilling still finds himself trending in the right direction. As of Friday, Schilling has appeared on 79 percent of 2020 ballots, according to Ryan Thibodaux’s fantastic Baseball Hall of Fame ballot tracker. While Schilling’s percentage will decline once private ballots get released, this is the best chance Schilling has at being inducted into the Hall.
His induction would be an egregious mistake. A vote for Schilling is confirmation that none of the abhorrent language he’s pushed since his retirement matters. Schilling isn’t held accountable for spreading hate speech or dangerous views. Instead, he gets rewarded with the largest possible platform and the most prestigious title in baseball. It’s a slap in the face to the marginalized groups Schilling has targeted over the past couple years. It tells those communities baseball doesn’t care about them, and turns those fans away from the game. A vote for Schilling confirms that baseball will not only accept, but reward horrible, hateful people.
While Schilling had been outspoken about his political beliefs during his playing career, he began to veer in a far more extreme direction once he retired and started working for ESPN. Schilling was suspended by the network in August 2015 after tweeting out a graphic that compared Muslims to Nazis. He was fired by ESPN in April 2016 after sharing a transphobic meme on his Facebook page. Schilling had been warned by ESPN multiple times that his conduct on social media violated the network’s policy.
Months later, Schilling shared another tweet in which he applauded a shirt advocating for journalists to be hung. The following year, Schilling — then working for Breitbart — interviewed congressional candidate and white nationalist Paul Nehlen. Schilling agreed with and endorsed some of Nehlen’s opinions during the interview, which Breitbart quickly deleted in an effort to distance itself from Nehlen.
For a brief moment, it looked as though Schilling’s comments would doom him. Months after Schilling endorsed the journalist’s tweet, he lost support in his quest for the Hall of Fame. Schilling received 45 percent of the vote in 2017, a sign that there would be consequences for his words.
That was short-lived. Schilling saw his voting percentage rise to 51.2 percent in 2018 and 60.8 percent in 2019. Those increases came after Schilling’s podcast with Nehlen. The Hall of Fame voters were willing to punish Schilling when they felt slighted, but managed to look the away when others were attacked. Even more voters have taken that approach this time around.
Those who continue to cast votes for Schilling justify that vote in a couple ways. They argue that men with histories of questionable off-the-field behavior are already in the Hall of Fame, ignoring the fact that they don’t have to keep that trend alive. They argue that they can’t punish players for what they did off the field despite invoking the character clause to keep out suspected steroid users. But when more serious issues come into play, voters suddenly forget they can invoke the character clause. You only see voters use it when discussing Bonds’ alleged steroid use, not his multiple domestic-violence accusations. The character clause only gets used when voters find it convenient.
The voters who use those justifications to support Schilling are only doing so to rationalize a bad decision. If they can find a loophole that allows them to conveniently ignore all the awful things Schilling has said, they don’t have to grapple with the consequences of making him a Hall of Famer.
That line of thinking is, of course, deeply flawed. Voters cannot simply put Schilling in the Hall of Fame and then ignore everything that happens once he’s there. Getting into the Hall of Fame is the highest honor a baseball player can achieve. Upon induction, that player is celebrated by thousands, gives an inspirational speech about his life and is forever immortalized in Cooperstown. It tells fans Schilling is a player deserving of adoration.
On the off chance Schilling doesn’t make it this year, he’s set up to eventually receive the honor. Players approaching the final years of eligibility usually gain votes in a last-ditch effort to get them in before they fall off the ballot. Schilling is in his eighth year of eligibility. Candidates remain on the ballot for 10 years before they lose eligibility.
Schilling doesn’t deserve that push. It would ignore all the vitriol and hate he’s pushed the past couple years. It taints the Hall of Fame, making it a worse, less inclusive place.
Voters can continue to rationalize their vote by telling themselves nothing Schilling has done away from the field matters, but they know that’s not true. The hatred Schilling has spread matters more than anything he ever accomplished on a baseball field.
Every vote that pushes Schilling close to induction is complicit in both normalizing and rewarding his reprehensible behavior.
https://sports.yahoo.com/curt-schilling-doesnt-deserve-to-be-in-the-baseball-hall-of-fame-021838902.html
He Just Wanted to Play Catch. They Got Relief From Troubled Times.
A callout on social media for a game of catch in Dallas drew a varied group of strangers who found escape from society’s turbulence in the most banal ritual.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/15/sports/baseball/baseball-catch-covid-impeachment.html
D.J. LeMahieu Is Staying With the Yankees on a $90 Million Deal
LeMahieu got a six-year contract that lets the Yankees avoid the luxury tax — for now. The team also agreed to a deal with Corey Kluber, an ace starter undone by injuries the past two seasons.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/15/sports/baseball/dj-lemahieu-yankees.html
Nationals invite Joe Biden to throw first pitch on opening day, something Donald Trump never did
Jack Baer
Writer
Yahoo SportsNov 7, 2020, 10:09 PM
https://sports.yahoo.com/nationals-invite-joe-biden-first-pitch-opening-day-donald-trump-mlb-030953647.html?src=rss
In a Golden Era for the Yankees, the Mound Belonged to Whitey Ford
Ford was a mainstay on a series of dominant teams in the 1950s and ’60s, collecting nearly every record for World Series longevity along the way.
20h ago
By TYLER KEPNER
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/09/sports/baseball/whitey-ford-yankees-world-series.html
RAYS 2, YANKEES 1 | TAMPA BAY WINS SERIES, 3-2
Rays Send Yankees to Another Off-Season of Vexing Questions
Mike Brosseau’s eighth-inning homer was the difference on Friday, but the Yankees again were left to analyze how a talented roster fell short in the playoffs.
2h ago
By JAMES WAGNER
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/09/sports/baseball/yankees-rays-game-5.html
"The Green Fields of the Mind "
It breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall alone. You count on it, rely on it to buffer the passage of time, to keep the memory of sunshine and high skies alive, and then just when the days are all twilight, when you need it most, it stops. Today, October 2, a Sunday of rain and broken branches and leaf-clogged drains and slick streets, it stopped, and summer was gone.
From A Great and Glorious Game: Baseball Writings of A. Bartlett Giamatti
by A. Bartlett Giamatti, et al
http://mason.gmu.edu/~rmatz/giamatti.html
Analytics says fire Boone and hire Gardner as player manager for 2021.
Two problems solved at once.
Whitey Ford, Beloved Yankees Pitcher Who Confounded Batters, Dies at 91
An irrepressible son of New York City, Ford joined the pantheon of baseball legends who dominated the 1950s and ’60s.
18m ago
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https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/09/sports/baseball/whitey-ford-dead.html
RIP, The chairman of the board.
Bob Gibson, Feared Flamethrower for the Cardinals, Dies at 84
Gibson, who won two Cy Young Awards and threw 56 career shutouts, was known for his high, inside fastballs.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/02/sports/baseball/bob-gibson-dies.html
Wild, unforgettable win sends Yanks to ALDS
https://www.mlb.com/news/yankees-sweep-indians-clinch-alds-berth
And thanks to Gary is scary Chapman worked OT.
I'm thinking I need to root for the Buffalo Blue Jays.
Frazier drives in 5 as Yanks roll over Red Sox
https://www.mlb.com/news/clint-frazier-has-big-game-as-yanks-beat-red-sox
LeMahieu sprains left thumb on swing
https://www.mlb.com/news/dj-lemahieu-injured-swinging-bat-exits-game
Ouch.
Warm memories of Mickey Mantle, 25 years after Yankees great’s death
By Mike VaccaroAugust 12, 2020 | 8:31pm
https://nypost.com/2020/08/12/warm-memories-of-mickey-mantle-25-years-after-yankees-greats-death/?
Fair Balls and Foul Language
With no live crowd noise as a buffer at M.L.B. games, on-field sounds are easy to hear on broadcasts — and it’s not all rated PG.
By JAMES WAGNER
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/06/sports/baseball/mlb-swearing.html
By James Wagner
Aug. 6, 2020
58
The frustration was understandable. After striking out Yankees first baseman Luke Voit to end a tough inning that included walking two batters, Boston Red Sox pitcher Austin Brice stomped off the mound on Sunday while berating himself.
“Walked everybody,” he shouted at himself, clearly picked up by the TV broadcast in an empty stadium. “Damn it.”
That was only part of what he said. The rest of his rant was filled with even stronger expletives.
Professional athletes voicing their exasperation, or glee, in the heat of the moment is certainly nothing new. But now, as Major League Baseball stages an untraditional 60-game campaign amid the coronavirus pandemic, players and coaches are trying to be more mindful of their colorful language without the noisy buffer usually created by the fans in the stands — with varying success.
Teams and broadcasters are using artificial crowd noise — both a constant murmur in between plays and cheering after big moments for the home team — to add a measure of familiarity and comfort to the experience. But stadium speakers and mixed-in feeds simply can’t match the volume of thousands of actual humans and their real-time reactions.
So, now, the pop of the catcher’s glove is clearer. The crack of the bat is louder. And spicy language on the field is more intelligible.
“Unfortunately, that’s going to happen,” said Yankees pitcher J.A. Happ, adding later, “It’s just some emotion out there that we’re not used to getting picked up.”
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Those running television and radio broadcasts may have to be more watchful of the more obscene ambient sounds at stadiums this season. While some executives and producers said it had not become a serious problem for them yet, there have been a few instances of adult language leaking through the airwaves already.
In a game last week, Houston Astros outfielder Josh Reddick popped out to Los Angeles Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner. Just after the ball fell into Turner’s glove, someone off camera — almost definitely a frustrated Reddick — yelled an audible obscenity.
Sheepishly, the Dodgers broadcaster Joe Davis said, “Sorry.”
The day before, Davis had to do the same when Astros Manager Dusty Baker shouted, “Get on the mound!” punctuated with an expletive. Baker was yelling at Dodgers relief pitcher Joe Kelly, who, in apparent retaliation for the Astros’ cheating during their 2017 and 2018 seasons, had thrown behind Houston third baseman Alex Bregman.
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Kelly later fired a pitch near Astros shortstop Carlos Correa’s head and taunted him, which led to both benches being cleared.
“Oooh, OK,” Davis said after Baker’s profanity. “So in empty stadiums, we pick up some things we don’t normally pick up. Apologies for whoever the potty mouth is.”
Jeff McNeil, the Mets’ infielder, has also been heard shouting an expletive after making outs this year. He is notoriously hard on himself, even when he is playing well, like in 2019 when he hit .318 with 23 home runs and was named an All-Star. He was hitting .343 through 10 games entering Wednesday’s game against the Washington Nationals.
ImageJeff McNeil is not known for hiding his frustration after making an out.
Jeff McNeil is not known for hiding his frustration after making an out.Credit...Adam Hunger/Associated Press
“I’m a really fiery person,” McNeil said last week, before sustaining a torso injury that has him listed as day to day. “I’m a perfectionist, and I want to do everything perfect and, if I don’t, I get a little upset.”
Colorado Rockies Manager Bud Black said that there had been so many changes for this M.L.B. season because of the pandemic that watching one’s mouth was simply another one. It has been easier for some than others.
“Players are watching their p’s and q’s,” he said, “and we’ve made pretty quick adjustments from all the things that are normal during a baseball game, from sunflower seeds to chewing tobacco to language. I don’t know whether we should be commended on that, but it’s been an adjustment.”
Jack Hicks, the longtime engineer for the Washington Nationals’ radio broadcast, said if people on the field were talking close to one of the microphones near each dugout — which are directed toward home plate and meant to pick up the crack of the bat — he shifts to another microphone or turns it down to avoid airing any private or unfiltered conversations. In situations when there could be a lot of swearing, Hicks said, the studio can trigger a delay of a few seconds on the broadcast to filter out any profanity.
And, Hicks said, he does not want any fans, especially children, to inadvertently hear anything inappropriate. “We’re in the entertainment business, and I’m not looking to alienate any listeners at all,” he said.
Despite his best efforts, Hicks said it can sometimes be impossible to avoid airing a player screaming an obscenity, particularly in the worst possible spot — right in front of a microphone. He said he had a reel of 15 years’ worth of such incidents, with the commentators Dave Jageler and Charlie Slowes doing their best to make light of those moments.
Tyler Glasnow, a pitcher for the Tampa Bay Rays, admitted he probably utters profanities after home runs more frequently than most. He did so after he surrendered a solo home run to Atlanta’s Dansby Swanson, in his first start of the season, on July 27. It was the only run he allowed over four innings that game.
Even though he knows microphones may hear him more this season, Glasnow said he just cannot help himself.
“I just do it, as bad as that sounds,” he said. “You only have so much mental capacity of what you can focus on, especially when you’re pitching.”
Last summer, Yankees Manager Aaron Boone produced a viral, profane moment even with fans in the stands when microphones caught him reprimanding the umpire Brennan Miller about his strike zone with some naughty words. A phrase Boone used — “savages in the box” — during the tirade to describe the Yankees’ powerful lineup came to define the team’s 2019 season and was printed on T-shirts and signs.
“Believe it or not, I try to be even mindful of that in all situations,” Boone said of his language. “But I’m also going to react honestly to what I see and try and strike that balance of being mindful and being careful and respectful but also intense.”
Gio Urshela, the Yankees’ standout third baseman, said players and coaches were trying to be more cognizant of everything they say — not just profanities — because opponents can also hear them better during quieter games this season.
The words uttered in any meeting about strategy on the field or chatter from the dugout can easily flutter toward the other side. In past seasons, paranoid players and coaches often covered their mouths with their hands or their gloves to shield against lip-reading opponents. (With most coaches wearing face coverings this year, it may be less of an issue, though some coaches have put a hand over their masks during meetings on the mound.)
None of this will affect Yankees pitcher Jordan Montgomery, who said he has always tried to keep his language clean on the mound — even before this year.
“I know my mom is watching, so I try to keep it PG,” he said.
https://www.mlb.com/news/rays-hold-yankees-to-two-hits-win-with-sac-fly
After Mike Tauchman led off the eighth with a double off Roe, DJ LeMahieu hit a roller to shortstop. With Adames positioned slightly to the right of the second-base bag, Tauchman took off for third on contact. But Adames showed off his arm, firing an 81.9 mph snap throw to Yandy Díaz at third to get Tauchman and erase the runner in scoring position.
Judge (6 HRs in 5 games) fuels Yanks' sweep
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Alexander K's 9 in a row, tying AL record
https://www.mlb.com/news/tyler-alexander-strikes-out-9-consecutive-batters
Mets’ Yoenis Cespedes Opts Out of 2020 Season
Cespedes had failed to show up to the ballpark in Atlanta for the Mets’ game against the Braves on Sunday, and the team did not know his whereabouts. After the game, they announced his decision to opt out.
By KEVIN ARMSTRONG
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/02/sports/baseball/Cespedes-missing-Atlanta.html
Baseball Is Playing for Its Life, and Ours
An outbreak of infections soon after reopening has struck a blow at more than just the Marlins.
By Doug Glanville
Mr. Glanville is a former Major League Baseball player and a sports commentator.
Aug. 2, 2020, 11:00 a.m. ET
In 1996, my rookie year in the major leagues with the Chicago Cubs, our manager Jim Riggleman often reminded us that we should play for the name on the front of our uniforms, not the name on the back. It was a noble idea — team before self — reinforced by the power big league athletes can feel when they realize they are representing entire cities, states, even countries, and taking a place in a long history of the sport they are so passionate about.
Last week, we learned once again that Covid-19 does not care about such loyalties. Only a few days after the Major League Baseball season opened, the Miami Marlins were dealing with an outbreak, with the number of players and staff infected with the coronavirus jumping from four to 17 in a matter of days. Quick action was taken: Games were postponed or canceled and the league announced it would require each team to have a “compliance officer” to enforce health safety rules.
Then Marlins infections hit 20; more games were postponed and canceled. ESPN reported that the league’s commissioner, Rob Manfred, told the players’ union executive director Tony Clark that if safety rules were not more stringently followed, shutting down the season could become possible. Then the St. Louis Cardinals reported positive tests for one player and three staff members. On the record, Mr. Manfred told ESPN’s Karl Ravech that “there is no reason to quit now”and that the situation was “manageable.”
Baseball teams were in the midst of spring training on March 11 when the N.B.A. halted its season because of the pandemic (the basketball league resumed games without fans in attendance on July 30), unleashing a ripple effect in the sports world and beyond. Baseball shut down soon after and quickly went to work trying to find the right time and way to get back on the field safely.
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The usual rancorous labor tensions made for a protracted timeline as they fought to agree on the terms of re-engagement, but eventually, it was “play ball.” Unlike the N.B.A. and some other leagues, baseball did not create a “bubble” for its players, given the real estate required and the size of these traveling teams. They were allowed to return home after games, undoubtedly increasing their chances of exposure and the risk for others beyond the clubhouse. Players and staff have taken precautions to protect their families and some players have even opted out of the season entirely. Still, day by day, the league is scrambling to contain the opponent that had put them out of business for so long, and is threatening to do so again.
Most Americans, even those who are not fans, are watching professional sports closely, not only to see our favorite team compete for a championship, but to see these institutions, whose power grew out of our collective imagination, fighting to win a real-time battle over this threat to our current existence. Even when humility tells us that triumph is simply prolonging our ability to safely play another day.
As usual, baseball is never just about baseball. It is called our national pastime for a reason. The virus has dealt a serious blow not just to the league’s operation but, in some sense, to the nation itself: Our confidence has been shaken, our helplessness reinforced, our anxiety and caution ramped up yet again. Baseball was entering the war against the pandemic, and the world was positioned to benefit from the information that would be gathered. The league, armed to the teeth with power and privilege, access to testing, cash flow, precision data collection, and high-powered, lower-risk athletes playing outdoors, was supposed to prevail.
Baseball’s success, then, will be our success; its failure, our failure. We want to know we can win this fight, without being curled up in a ball while waiting for a vaccine, even though we quietly understand that many variables that give these sports advantages in this fight are not fully available to the vast majority of people. Still, we hope that baseball’s eventual victory will wash over us as one.
I remember my time on the Phillies in wake of the Sept. 11 attacks. As both a player and a player representative, I wondered how we would justify coming back to play at all. In the grand scheme of things, we were only playing a game. We were nonessential on paper. But when we did return, we found that some of what we recaptured was essential — to the uplift of our spirit and to the restoration of the society we created with our inspiration and our passion for fair competition and gamesmanship. It had become larger than the scoreboard.
We know this game is still in progress. As the players and the league grapple with the outbreaks, and perhaps more infections to come, they have been forced to reconsider all of their protocols while still trying to keep the game recognizable and fair. As in any game, we do not know if they will succeed, but we can take some comfort from the fact that baseball is willing to find out for us.
We hope to come out of this season with a new world champion, the fulfillment of a baseball season completed. We hope that we will one day retire this virus, with an asterisk, to our scariest of histories, and that baseball and other sports will help get us there by aggressively gathering information about the risks we are all facing. In the end, this will be prove to be more valuable than anything normalcy can provide.
In the game we are playing now, there are no names on the front or the back of our jerseys. We are playing to survive.
Doug Glanville (@dougglanville), a former Major League Baseball player, an ESPN baseball analyst and the author of “The Game From Where I Stand.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/02/opinion/baseball-coronavirus-Marlins.html?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage
MLB stares into the abyss: Challenges of playing through pandemic may become insurmountable
Tim BrownMLB columnist,Yahoo Sports•July 31, 2020
https://sports.yahoo.com/mlb-stares-into-the-abyss-challenges-of-playing-through-a-pandemic-may-become-insurmountable-023000417.html
MLB tells broadcast partners to prepare for potential 2020 season shutdown, per report
R.J. Anderson 2 hrs ago
CBS Sports logoMLB tells broadcast partners to prepare for potential 2020 season shutdown, per report
Major League Baseball's commissioner Rob Manfred told MLB Players Association head Tony Clark on Friday that the season could be scrapped if the league's COVID-19 numbers continue to get worse, according to ESPN's Jeff Passan. Per Passan, some players briefed on the call believe Manfred could pull the plug as soon as Monday, depending on the extent of the weekend's testing.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/mlb/mlb-tells-broadcast-partners-to-prepare-for-potential-2020-season-shutdown-per-report/ar-BB17sewr
Judge homers, Montgomery sharp, Yanks top Sox in home opener
The Associated Press
JAKE SEINER (AP Sports Writer)
,The Associated Press•July 31, 2020
https://sports.yahoo.com/judge-homers-montgomery-sharp-yanks-top-sox-home-022813996--mlb.html
Dodgers announcer Orel Hershiser shades Astros after strikeout: 'Guessing is harder than knowing'
Jack BaerWriter,Yahoo Sports•July 30, 2020
https://sports.yahoo.com/dodgers-announcer-orel-hershiser-shades-astros-after-strikeout-guessing-is-harder-than-knowing-215006266.html
Yankees broadcaster Suzyn Waldman honors Gerrit Cole's years old request by singing national anthem
Mark TownsendYahoo Sports Contributor,Yahoo Sports•July 31, 2020
https://sports.yahoo.com/yankees-broadcaster-suzyn-waldman-honors-gerrit-cole-request-by-singing-national-anthem-230803815.html
MLB investigation says Marlins players went out, visited bars before coronavirus outbreak
Mike OzYahoo SportsJul 31, 2020, 6:41 PM
https://sports.yahoo.com/mlb-investigation-says-marlins-players-went-out-visited-bars-before-coronavirus-outbreak-224145396.html?src=rss
The Miami Marlins were “very lapse” in following MLB’s safety protocols before a coronavirus outbreak hit the team, reports Scott Miller of Bleacher Report. That included going out while on the road in Atlanta and congregating in the hotel bar.
The news comes from MLB’s internal investigation into the Marlins outbreak, which has by Friday infected 21 players and staff members. The team’s season is paused, with infected players being bused back to Miami. Marlins games until Monday are postponed, but reports Friday indicate that the league isn’t sure they’ll return by then.
Meanwhile, commissioner Rob Manfred has warned the players union that the season could be shut down as soon as Friday if players don’t do a better job following league protocols — from the more egregious things like going out to bars, to on-the-field no-nos like high-fives and spitting.
In a way, baseball’s 60-game season is a telling experiment about running such a large operation during a pandemic. As the country grapples with the realities of coronavirus and debates things like the re-opening of schools and businesses, baseball is painting a harsh picture: The virus can spread quickly, even with 110 pages of well-intentioned protocols like MLB has.
Out 7 years with yips, pitcher wins MLB return
https://www.mlb.com/news/daniel-bard-earns-win-in-first-mlb-game-since-2013
Stanton rips his hardest-hit homer since '18
https://www.mlb.com/news/giancarlo-stanton-hits-121-mph-home-run
Looks like he gets the ball after almost losing his head.
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Will Smith nearly takes off head of cutout at Dodger Stadium
1
“Never even thought I would be the first (guessing first) fan drilled in the face this year.”
By BlakeHarris@BlakeHarrisTBLA Jul 26, 2020, 5:47am PDT
https://www.truebluela.com/2020/7/26/21338889/los-angeles-dodgers-fan-cutout-hit-in-face-will-smith
Chipper Jones wasn’t behind trolling Mets cutout at Citi Field
By Zach BrazillerJuly 25, 2020 | 11:57am | Updated
Chipper Jones wasn’t behind the cardboard cutout of himself and his son, Shea, that was seen at Citi Field in Friday’s opener against the Braves.
It was purchased by ESPN, where he now works as a broadcaster, according to SNY.
The money from each cardboard cutout goes to the Mets’ Foundation for charity.
Fans are not allowed at MLB stadiums for the immediate future due to the coronavirus pandemic, so various ballparks, including Citi Field, have given fans the options to have cardboard versions of themselves attend the games.
Jones tortured the Mets as a player, blasting 49 homers, 159 RBIs and a .309/.406/.543 slash line against them, and named his son after the team’s old stadium in part because of his prowess there.
It immediately was thought that the Hall of Famer bought the cutouts himself to troll the club.
The Mets won their Opening Day matchup against Jones’ former team, 1-0.
https://nypost.com/2020/07/25/chipper-jones-want-behind-trolling-mets-cutout-at-citi-field/
Adam Duvall's HR finds dog cutout
MLB.com MLB.com•July 25, 2020
https://sports.yahoo.com/adam-duvalls-hr-finds-dog-202722848.html
Cole as advertised as Yanks take '20 opener
https://www.mlb.com/news/gerrit-cole-wins-yankees-debut-on-opening-day?game_pk=630851
Blue Jays to play home games in Buffalo
https://www.mlb.com/news/blue-jays-buffalo-home-games-2020
Dr. Anthony Fauci gets own baseball card after throwing out first pitch
Bill Shaikin 1 hr ago
https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/mlb/dr-anthony-fauci-gets-own-baseball-card-after-throwing-out-first-pitch/ar-BB179jIq?li=BBnb7Kz
For Sale: A Team With a Colorful Financial History
The Mets are up for auction, with Steve Cohen again being mentioned as a front-runner to buy the team.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/10/sports/baseball/new-york-mets.html
63 Years Later, a Confession in a Legendary Yankees Scandal
The incredible tale of the brawl at the Copacabana, the racist taunts that started it and a few unlikely heroes.
By DAVID MARGOLICK
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/19/nyregion/1957-yankees-brawl-copacabana-silvestri.html
Fans Want Sports. Sports Want Fans. But It’s Not That Simple.
...For weeks, Major League Baseball could not figure out how to play even a part of a season, creating the possibility that 2020 would be the first year without baseball in 150 years.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/18/sports/baseball/coronavirus-fans-return.html
M.L.B.’s Restart Encounters an Obstacle It Can’t Negotiate With
The league was planning to temporarily close all its training complexes in Arizona and Florida after players in both locations tested positive for the coronavirus.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/19/sports/phillies-blue-jays-coronavirus-mlb.html
Johnny Antonelli, Star Pitcher for the Giants, Dies at 89
He helped them win the World Series in 1954, when they played in New York, and remained an essential part of the team after they moved to San Francisco.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/28/sports/baseball/johnny-antonelli-dead.html
Yankees don’t know when Aaron Judge will be ready for game action
NBC Sports
Nick Stellini
NBC SportsFeb 29, 2020, 2:42 PM
https://sports.yahoo.com/yankees-don-t-know-aaron-194225607.html?src=rss
Ridiculous. They obviously don't know what they are doing during the off season.
The Trials of Rob Manfred
When baseball’s commissioner decided not to punish the players involved in the Astros’ sign-stealing scandal, he brought the wrath of rival teams and fans down on himself.
7m ago
By DAVID WALDSTEIN
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/22/sports/baseball/rob-manfred-astros.html
Rob Manfred hints Pete Rose’s latest appeal for reinstatement will be denied
Steve DelVecchio, Larry Brown Sports 2 hrs ago
Pete Rose is using the punishment — or lack thereof — that was handed down in the Houston Astros’ cheating scandal to argue that he deserves to be reinstated by Major League Baseball, but commissioner Rob Manfred does not sound like he is ready to allow Rose back into the game.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/mlb/rob-manfred-hints-pete-roses-latest-appeal-for-reinstatement-will-be-denied/ar-BB105s1u
Raising minor league pay is a start, but wins MLB little goodwill
Hannah Keyser,Yahoo Sports•February 14, 2020
https://sports.yahoo.com/raising-minor-league-pay-is-the-right-thing-to-do-but-earns-mlb-little-goodwill-022851583.html
Rob Manfred says Astros' apology 'was not successful'
Liz Roscher,Yahoo Sports•February 16, 2020
https://sports.yahoo.com/rob-manfred-says-astros-apology-was-not-successful-162019884.html
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