Friday, November 03, 2017
Thursday, November 02, 2017
Post-Season Pic #13- Let's Play Two
Posted by pmPilgrim
Labels: baseball, Hall of Fame, sports, World Series 0 comments
Wednesday, November 01, 2017
Post-Season Pic #12- Tonight's the Night
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Tuesday, October 31, 2017
Post-Season Pic #11- Good Advice
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Monday, October 30, 2017
Post-Season Pic #10- A Game of Words
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Sunday, October 29, 2017
Post-Season Pic #9- When You're Down, You're Down
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Saturday, October 28, 2017
Post-Season Pic #8- The Promise of Wisdom
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Friday, October 27, 2017
Post-Season Pic #7- Better Than the Ritz
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Thursday, October 26, 2017
Post-Season Pic #6: Can't Argue With Yogi
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Wednesday, October 25, 2017
Post-Season Pic #5: Magnetic and Addictive?
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Tuesday, October 24, 2017
Post-Season Pic #4: It's the World Series
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Monday, October 23, 2017
Post-Season Pic #3: Men of Character
Three who did more than just play ball;
they made us a better people!
Posted by pmPilgrim
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Sunday, October 22, 2017
Post-Season Pic #2: There's Truth in There
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Saturday, October 21, 2017
Post-Season Pic #1: Sports Truism
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Saturday, April 15, 2017
A 70-Year Memory: When Baseball Changed!
Thanks, Jackie Robinson!
Posted by pmPilgrim
Labels: 1947, baseball, civil rights, integration, Jackie Robinson 0 comments
Wednesday, November 02, 2016
Are We Still Here?


It's over.
What a game it has been. It had everything including a rain delay.
Either team could have won tonight. Joe Maddon would have been second-guessed for years had they lost.
The long wait of 108 years is now history.
I assume that if you are reading this, Jesus hasn't come back, the world is still here, although I have a hunch that Cubs fans have been raptured.
Steve Goodman's Dying Cub Fan's Last Request will now be simply an interesting artifact of our American love of baseball.
What else is there to say tonight?
Next year, the Twins? After this year, anything is possible.
Posted by pmPilgrim
Labels: baseball, Chicago Cubs, history, World Series 0 comments
Is it Possible?
Tonight.
Game 7.
Can the Cubs really do it?
Will the Indians bring it all together?
Or will what I posted on September 18 come true?
Long time friends of these wanderings will recognize ... my scenario for the hapless, World Series Championship-less Chicago Cubs.You heard it here.
- It's the bottom of the ninth in game 7 of the World Series.
- The Cubs are leading and on the verge of their first championship in over a century.
- It's two outs, no one on base for the American League opponent.
- Then, as the Cubs pitcher winds up for the final strike-
- Jesus returns.
Posted by pmPilgrim
Labels: baseball, Chicago Cubs, fun, World Series 0 comments
Monday, October 31, 2016
How the Experts Figured It
It's a travel day in the World Series. It's still a long road, the Cubs can't lose a game. But it could be an interesting two games?
I wondered what the experts had thought way back when the season began. In April ESPN asked 31 experts for their end of the baseball season predictions. (Link)
- 1 of the 31 predicted that Cleveland would be in the World Series.
- He picked the Giants for the NL champs- and winner.
- 19 predicted the Cubs would be there.
- 14 of those 19 picked the Cubs to win it all.
We will see what we will see. Or, as Yogi once said:
It ain't over till it's over.
Posted by pmPilgrim
Labels: baseball, Chicago Cubs, Cleveland Indians, World Series 0 comments
Friday, October 28, 2016
1908
That's a long time ago! Wikipedia has a list of 41 people who are 110 years old or older. The oldest was just shy of 6 years old when the Cubs last won a Series. (My dad was just short of age 3.)
The World Series continues with game 3 tonight with the Series tied at 1 win apiece. It will be the first
game in Chicago in 71 years. That means that after tonight we can stop
all this craziness of first times until one of them wins. Which will
happen.
The 1908 Cubs had four future Hall of Famers:
- Mordecai Brown, Pitcher
- Frank Chance, 1B and manager
- Johnny Evers, 2B
- Joe Tinker, SS
These are the saddest of possible words:The trio played together at Chicago from 1902, including four National League pennants from 1906 to 1910. Some credit the poem for their election to the Hall of Fame.
"Tinker to Evers to Chance."
Trio of bear cubs, and fleeter than birds,
Tinker and Evers and Chance.
Ruthlessly pricking our gonfalon bubble,
Making a Giant hit into a double-
Words that are heavy with nothing but trouble:
"Tinker to Evers to Chance."
1908 was the year of the infamous "Merkle's Boner" play that allowed the Chicago Cubs to reach the World Series after beating the New York Giants... in a one-game "playoff", actually the makeup game for the tie that the Merkle play had caused. -Wikipedia
Merkle's Boner refers to the notorious base running mistake committed by rookie Fred Merkle of the New York Giants in a game against the Chicago Cubs in 1908. Merkle's failure to advance to second base on what should have been a game-winning hit led instead to a forceout at second and a tied game. The Cubs later won the makeup game, which proved decisive as they beat the Giants by one game to win the National League pennant in 1908. It has been described as "the most controversial game in baseball history." -WikipediaSome credit that for the curse that would keep the Cubs winless in the World Series for at least the next 107 years. After all, the Cubs would appear in seven more World Series- 1910, 1918, 1929, 1932, 1935, 1938, and 1945, but, as we know, lost them all.
This was the least attended World Series in history as the Cubs beat Ty Cobb and the Detroit Tigers in five games.
Posted by pmPilgrim
Labels: 1908, baseball, Chicago Cubs, history, World Series 0 comments
Thursday, October 27, 2016
1948
Two games have been played in Cleveland and the Series is tied 1-1.
According to MLB, the last 1 home teams who won game 1, went on to win
the Series. But this is its own Series- historic and anything could happen. I wouldn't count either team out until one of them wins the 4th game.
Earlier this week I looked at the last World Series that each of this year's teams played in- and lost- 1997 for the Indians; 1945 for the Cubs. Today I thought I would look at the last time the Indians won. As I said when in an earlier post, I was two months old the last time the Indians won the World Series win 1948. In other words you have to be an early Baby Boomer or older to have been alive. So who were the 1948 Indians?
They had six future Hall of Famers on the team.
- Lou Boudreau SS, also their player-manager
- Larry Doby OF
- Bob Feller P
- Joe Gordon 2B
- Bob Lemon P
- Satchell Paige P
That and Paige appeared in Game 5 for the Indians, becoming the first black pitcher to take the mound in World Series history.
They beat the Boston Braves in six games.
From Wikipedia:
The Braves had won the National League pennant for the first time since the "Miracle Braves" team of 1914, while the Indians had spoiled a chance for the only all-Boston World Series by winning a one-game playoff against the Boston Red Sox for the American League flag. Though superstar pitcher Bob Feller failed to win either of his two starts, the Indians ... capture[d] their second championship and their first since 1920 (as well as their last to the present date).
It was the first World Series to be televised on a nationwide network and was announced by famed sportcasters Red Barber, Tom Hussey (in Boston) and Van Patrick (in Cleveland).
This was the second appearance in the Fall Classic for both teams, with the Indians' lone previous appearance coming in a 1920 win against the Brooklyn Dodgers and the Braves' lone precious appearance coming in a 1914 win against the Philadelphia Athletics.
This was the only World Series from 1947 to 1958 not to feature a New York team, and also the last World Series until 1957 not won by a New York team.
Posted by pmPilgrim
Labels: 1948, baseball, Cleveland Indians, history, World Series 0 comments


















