Wednesday, October 31, 2018

The World Series in Review

As we all know by now, the Boston Red Sox won the 2018 World Series.  


I believe I had that. Although I said they'd need six games to do so, and they did it in five.

Some Thoughts-At-Large from The Grandstander on the just completed Fall Classic.
  • This just in.....The Red Sox are really, really good.  No surprise there.  108 wins in the season, beat the 100 win Yankees and the 103 win Astros in the AL Playoffs, and dusted off the Dodgers in five games in the Series.  Ruthless and efficient, that is what these Red Sox were in 2018.
  • Aside from the Red Sox dominance, this was a rather unmemorable World Series.  After the first two games, I said on Facebook that unless the Dodgers did something to alter the course of events, this thus far juiceless World Series would go down as one of the more unmemorable ones in recent memory.  Well, Game Three turned that statement pretty much upside down when the teams played 18 innings over 7 hours and 20 minutes, both world Series records, that the Dodgers won with a Max Muncy walk off home run.
  • No, I did not stay to the end of that game, which ended at 3:30 AM here in Pittsburgh.  I made it through eleven, and gave way to the sandman.  I just couldn't stay awake any longer.
  • This was also the World Series where we were bludgeoned with endless streams of no, not cigarettes and magazines, but endless reams of 21st century baseball metrics and analytics.  Launch angles, exit velocities, catch probabilities, and such arcane minutia like percentage of curve balls thrown by pitcher Jock LeStrap when he has two strikes on right handed hitters in even numbered innings vs. odd numbered innings.  Stuff like that.  I am not a complete Luddite, and if baseball guys can use such analytics to win games, I say go for it, but please, please don't present it all to me in such mind-numbing detail.
  • Speaking of analytics, both managers, Alex Cora and Dave Roberts, are strict analytics guys.  Every move that Cora made (with one exception) worked.  Every move that Roberts made blew up in his face like a cheap exploding cigar. 
  • In Game Four with the Dodgers holding a 1-0 lead in the sixth inning, Yasiel Puig came to bat with two men on and Sox pitcher Eduardo Rodriguez obviously laboring.  The Sox metrics guys said that despite all of that, Rodriguez should be the guy to pitch to Puig.  Puig then hit one that I believe has still yet to land on Southern California soil, and LA led 4-0, and appeared to be in a position to turn the Series around, but more on that in a bit.
  • As for the Dodgers' metrics, and this is just one example, they somehow told Roberts not to start Cody Bellinger in three of the five games.  They also told him to keep using Ryan Madson in relief.  In three games, Madson came into pitch and inherited eight base runners, all of whom scored.  
  • After that Puig home run in Game Four, we got a glimpse of the cold blooded efficiency of the Sox.  They responded with three runs in the seventh, one in the eighth, and five in the ninth on the way to a 9-6 win that removed all doubt, if any existed at all, as to how this Series was going to turn out.
  • Getting back to metrics, they are great, I suppose, over the course of a 162 game season, but in a short, best-of-seven series, not so much.  Sometimes a manager has to know, just KNOW when to make a move and go against what the seam heads are telling you.  When to start a left handed hitter against a lefty, when to pull pitcher even if the book says leave him in, or when to leave him in the game.  In that pivotal fourth game, Cora left his pitcher in when he should have yanked him, and Roberts pulled Rich Hill when maybe he should have let him go for another couple of batters.  Cora's Sox bailed him out, though, whereas Roberts' lads did not.
A word about World Series Most Valuable Player Steve Pearce.


I think that it was a well deserved award, and I am delighted that a journeyman, and his career path is the very definition of that term, like Pearce gets this moment of glory and that fancy big ass Chevy truck.  Pirates fans will remember that he is a product  of the Bucco organization.  An eighth round draft pick in 2005, he was the team's Minor League Player of the Year in 2007.  He was a teammate of both Andrew McCutchen and Neil Walker in Altoona and Indianapolis.  Of those three players, which one would YOU have predicted would one day be a World Series hero?  He made it to Pittsburgh in 2007 and spent parts of five seasons as a Pirate (I would never have guessed that he was here that long), but never made it like Cutch and Walker did.  In parts of five seasons as a Pirate, he played in 185 games and hit .232 with 9 HR and 52 RBI.  


After leaving Pittsburgh after the 2011 season, he kicked around with six other teams, landing in Boston midway through this season.  How fortuitous for him.

Some people have said that the MVP Award should have gone to pitcher David Price, and a case can certainly be made for him, but I'm glad it went to Pearce.  Let's face it, Price is a star, he's cashed in on free agent gold at least once in his career, and may be able to do it again before he's through.  He is a five time All-Star, a Cy Young Award winner, and now he's a World Series champion and hero.  He's also made $144 million over the course of his career and is guaranteed to earn another $127 million under his current deal.  Pearce has kicked around with seven teams, made $23.2 million.  He's a free agent again, and while his World Series heroics may help him in free agency, he'll still be scrambling for another contract, and he won't come close to making what David Price makes.  So again, I'm happy for Steve Pearce.

In conclusion, this Series will be remembered, if it is much remembered at all outside of New England, for three things:
  1. Total domination by a great team, the Boston Red Sox.
  2. That monumental 18 inning, 7 hour and 20 minute third game.
  3. The fact that wizened, gnome-like 84 year old Larry King hung  there for all 18 innings of that game.  
He never made it back for Games Four and Five.
Maybe that's why the Dodgers lost.

Monday, October 29, 2018

My Collectables

As much as I love sports (you knew that, right?), I am not one for accumulating collectables, autographs, or memorabilia.  About the only such thing that I have is a large album....


that contains and displays post cards of all members of the Baseball Hall of Fame.


I bought this album and a complete set of postcards when we visited the HOF in Cooperstown back in 1999.  Each year, I purchase the postcards for the new HOF enshrinees.  In three of those years, 2001, 2011, and 2016, I purchased the additional cards when we revisited Cooperstown.

Today, the cards for the Class of 2018, Vladimir Guerrero, Trevor Hoffman, Chipper Jones, Jack Morris, Jim Thome, and Alan Trammell arrived.


I will carefully place this cards in the album and return the album to its spot on my bookshelf.  Someday, many, many years from now, I hope, I will be in that great Grandstand in the Sky, and some great-niece or great-nephew of mine will come across this album and probably say something like, "Well, what in the hell are we going to do with this?"

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Old Movies....."The Petrified Forest" (1936)


So, I DVR'd this old movie when TCM showed it a few weeks ago and got around to watching it earlier in the week.  Based on a stage play by Robert Sherwood, the movie is the story of a John Dillinger-type gangster who descends upon a combination gas station / lunch counter in the Middle of Nowhere Arizona desert and holds the denizens of this establishment hostage as he attempts to lam in to the Mexican border.

It's no great shakes but I wanted to see this now 82 year old film it because it is often sited as the movie that was the breakout role for Humphrey Bogart.  He was 37 at the time and up until then was pretty much a bit player in a long string of B-movie gangster flicks that Warner Bros. was always cranking out back then.  He played the role of killer Duke Mantee in the stage play, that also starred Leslie Howard on Broadway.  When Warners decided to turn it into a movie, they had signed Howard to recreate his starring role and have Edward G. Robinson play the role of Mantee, but Howard insisted that they cast Bogart, or he wouldn't do the movie himself.

So, Bogie played Mantee with all the menace the role demanded, and went on to become a big star, or so the legend says.  You will note in the poster for the film above, Leslie Howard and Bette Davis received billing above the title, and Bogie was only the third billed actor below the title, yet today, "The Petrified Forest" is considered a classic "Bogart movie".


The revelation to me in the movie, though, was Bette Davis.  We all know and concede that Bette Davis was one of the great actresses of Hollywood history, but she has never been considered a great beauty as so many of her contemporaries were, but in this one I was struck by just how pretty, if not beautiful, the 28 year old Bette Davis was.


Like I said, it's no great shakes, The Grandstander gives it Two Stars at best, but it's worth seeing once just to catch two of Hollywood's all-time greats, Bette Davis and Humphrey Bogart, early on in their careers.

Sunday, October 21, 2018

And The World Series Winner Will Be......

I didn't pay a lot of attention to the American League East throughout the 2018 season, but I know that the Boston Red Sox laid waste to that race by winning 108 games.  

I didn't pay a lot of attention to the American League Division Series as the Boston Red Sox laid waste to the New York Yankees.

I predicted that the defending World Series Champs and winners of 103 games Houston Astros would win the American League Championship series and then watched as the Boston Red Sox laid waste to them in five games.

So, I've learned my lesson, and I am predicting that the winner of the upcoming 2018 World Series will be.....


Not going to give a lot of analysis here.  Just calling the Sox to defeat the Dodgers in six games.

Oh, and in case you forgot, I also predicted that the Brewers would defeat the Dodgers in the NLCS.  I believe that I DIDN'T have that, so, as always, watch, but don't bet.

Wednesday, October 17, 2018

To Absent Friends - Paul Allen

Paul Allen
1953-2018


The Grandstander experienced a "first" of sorts when this request from pal Dan Houston popped up on Facebook yesterday:

Hey Bob any chance you do an "Absent Friends" on Paul Allen? I know people in Pittsburgh probably aren't huge fans but he single handedly saved Pro Football in the PNW, all while starting a rock museum and owning a basketball team. He also co-founded a small computer company.

Like I said, this was the first time I received a request for an obituary, and upon further reflection, Mr. Allen is certainly deserving.  He died this past Sunday of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma at the age of 65.

On a sports related note, Allen is the owner of the NFL's Seattle Seahawks, the NBA's Portland Trailblazers, and the MSL's Seattle Sounders, so, yeah, he is a giant sports figure in the Pacific Northwest.  In the area of popular culture, the "rock museum" that Dan noted started out as a tribute to Seattle's Jimi Hendrix and a place to showcase Allen's own impressive memorabilia collection.  It has since morphed into a large rock and roll and popular culture center and is now known as the Museum of Pop Culture in Seattle.

But it is that "small computer company", actually  computer software company, that Allen co-founded back in 1975 with his classmate, Bill Gates, that will leave Allen's biggest impact on the  world.  The company was, of course, Microsoft, and what bit of technology has had a greater impact on society in the last fifty years or so?  If Microsoft's impact is not Number One, it is surely in the Top Five.

Allen and Gates
1981

This statement issued by Microsoft upon Allen's death says it all:

“In his own quiet and persistent way, he created magical products, experiences and institutions, and in doing so, he changed the world."

RIP Paul Allen.

 
Hoisting the Lombardi Trophy
2014 Super Bowl

On an unrelated note, for inspiring this post, Dan Houston has now been named the Official Pacific Northwest Correspondent for The Grandstander.

"Anastasia"


When we purchased a season subscription for the 2018-19 Broadway in Pittsburgh season, we all felt that "Anastasia" would be the one show where our expectations were the lowest.  How wrong we were.

This musical version of what what might have happened to the Princess Anastasia after the Romanov Family was executed in the 1917 Russian Revolution (right off the bat you might say, "they're going to do THIS as a musical comedy?") was a delightful experience.  Perhaps the most amazing aspect of this show were the sets.  It looks like that used a rear projection type of thing to change the backdrops of the various scenes.  The scene where the characters are riding on a train car is really cool.

The star of the show was young Lila Coogan as Anya, the street sweep who con artists Demitry and Vlad want to pain her off as the long missing Princess.  Miss Coogan was a wonderful singer and dancer and is quite lovely....

Lila Coogan

And did I mention that she is very young, although her own website does not list her age, she has to still be in her twenties.

While none of the songs in the show are destined to become classic popular tunes, they were quite pleasant and told the story very well.  I will note that the comic number in the show, "The Countess and the Common Man" in Act II was very funny and well performed by Tari Kelly as the Countess Lily and Edward Staudenmayer as Vlad.

Tari Kelly

Very good show and quite entertaining and enjoyable.  Terrific actors, wonderful music, beautiful costumes, and terrific staging.  What's not to like?  It runs through Sunday at the Benedum here in Pittsburgh.


Tuesday, October 16, 2018

"First Man"



When the Oscar nominations are announced and when the awards themselves are passed out, you are going to hear the movie "First Man" mentioned a lot, and rightfully so.  Saw this one this afternoon, and it is a terrific movie.

It is the story of Neil Armstrong and the journey to his being the first man to set foot on the moon.  It begins with a scene of test pilot Armstrong flying an X-15 over the Mojave desert in 1961, and the story then follows the Armstrongs losing a child (something that I never knew about), his selection as a Gemini astronaut (the sequence of Armstrong's and David Scott's Gemini 8 mission is thrilling and harrowing), the tragic deaths of the Apollo 1 astronauts in a training exercise, and, of course, the historic mission of Apollo 11 in July, 1969.

This is not only a terrific story, but it is great movie making.  The scene of the lunar landscape after the LEM lands and the musical score that accompanies it is breathtaking.  And director Damien Chazelle puts you inside a cramped spacecraft and lets you know how really, really hard it is to be an astronaut even better than such terrific past movies as "The Right Stuff" and "Apollo 13" did.

The movies stars Ryan Gosling as Armstrong and Claire Foy as his wife, Janet.



Both are terrific. Gosling plays Armstrong as the reserved egghead (as described by a fellow astronaut) engineer that he was, not as a rowdy space cowboy, but as a guy whose reserved nature can be traced back to the personal tragedy of the death of a child.  Foy, best known as the young Queen Elizabeth in "The Crown" is fabulous as Janet, who has to deal not only with the loss of her daughter, but with raising two rowdy sons, dealing with NASA bureaucrats, and being married to man who every day runs the risk of not surviving his job.  The scene where she forces Neil to talk to the kids before he leaves for Cape Kennedy and the Apollo 11 mission is the clip that you will be seeing when they  show why she received her Best Actress nomination.

The movie is directed by Damien Chazelle, an Oscar winner for "La La Land" and has a screenplay by Josh Scott, an Oscar winner for "Spotlight".   Add that pedigree to great acting performances, an exciting and true story (yeah, it's edge-of-the-seat stuff even though you know how it ends), and you have what just might be the best movie of the year.

Four stars from The Grandstander, plus a tip of the space helmet to the man who inspired the whole story.

Neil Armstrong
The First Man