Showing posts with label cincinnati reds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cincinnati reds. Show all posts

Friday, February 22, 2013

Sparky Anderson Teaches Management

Sparky Anderson once said this about managing: "I don't believe a manager ever won a pennant. Casey Stengel won all those pennants with the Yankees. How many did he win with the Boston Braves and Mets?"

And:  "My idea of managing is giving the ball to Tom Seaver and sitting down and watching him work."

And: "We averaged 96 wins my nine years in Cincinnati. We had Bench, Rose, Morgan, Perez, Foster, Griffey, Concepcion and Geronimo. Imagine what I could have done if they (the Reds front office) had given me some players!"

There were other quotes. Many, many others.

Monday, July 02, 2012

Sean Casey Day ... The Mayor of Cincinnati

Sean Casey, three-time All-Star first baseman for the Cincinnati Reds in the late 90s and the 00s, turns 38 today. He was inducted into the Reds Hall of Fame with Dan Driessen, the Reds first sacker who replaced Tony Perez in the mid-1970s. Casey said, "When I put on that '21' jersey everyday, it was for each and every one of you. I played my heart out because I love this city. When 'Cincinnati' was written across my chest, I never took it lightly . . . You are the greatest fans in major league baseball. Thank you so much!"

Here are the two speeches, from Dan and Casey.

Friday, March 23, 2012

Lee May ... Happy Birthday

One of my first baseball heroes, if I may use that word, was Lee May. Today is his birthday. Happy birthday, Lee.

Lee was a big-boppin' first baseman for the Cincinnati Reds in the late 1960s. I started to really follow him in 1969, when he hit .278 with 38 homers and 110 RBI. In 1970, he batted .253-34-98, and in '71, he hit .278-39-98. Then the Reds up and traded him to the Astros. On November 29, 1971, he was traded by the Cincinnati Reds with Tommy Helms and Jimmy Stewart to the Houston Astros for Ed Armbrister, Jack Billingham, Cesar Geronimo, and Denis Menke.

Oh, and Joe Morgan.

I didn't understand this. Why would they trade a young, great slugger and the steady Tommy Helms for a bunch of players that I was not too familiar with? Of course, it turned out that it was one of the greatest trades in Reds history, if not THE greatest, and I spent the rest of my days as a huge Tony Perez fan, as well as a Joe Morgan fan.

But I'll always remember big Lee.

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Sean Casey, 35, is still the mayor

Sean Casey turns 35 today. The Mayor. I absolutely love this guy. His last season, with Boston, in 2008, he hit .322. I would love to see Sean play again, but I think it's over for him. I've seen some beloved players in Cincinnati Reds history, but this guy is pretty close to the top. With good reason.


thankyouverymuch,





Here are his Cincinnati numbers:

R H 2B HR RBI BB SO BA OBP SA OPS
CIN 588 1223 256 118 604 387 465 .305 .371 .463 .834


Tuesday, December 02, 2008

George Foster, slugger of the Big Red Machine, Turns 60 Dec. 1

George Foster was an amazing slugger, and I was at an early age when I became a big fan of his. It is hard for folks to remember when hitting 50 homers was a landmark event. In 1977, Foster hit 52 homers. It was the first time that someone had broken the 50 mark since Willie Mays in 1965. The runner-up to Foster in 1977, Jeff Burroughs, had 41 homers. Mike Schmidt won the homer crown in 1976 with 38 dingers. In 1974, Schmidt led the league with 36. So when I was young, 52 seemed awesome. He was this skinny guy with a higher than average voice and a huge baseball bat colored jet black named "Black Beauty." He was awesome. Of course, you contrast those numbers with 2001, when Barry Bonds had 73 homers, Sammy Sosa had 64, Luis Gonzalez had 57, and in the A.L. shortstop Alex Rodriguez had 52 homers. Oh well. Foster's 52-homer season is tied for 25th all-time. There are only two guys in baseball history with a 50-homer season who don't really seem to belong ... for one reason or another. I would put Luis Gonzalez in that category, along with Brady Anderson and his 50 homers in 1996. But Foster belonged, and how.

Thursday, August 07, 2008

Danny Graves Born in Vietnam 35 Years Ago Today

Danny Graves, former Cincinnati Reds closer, was born in Saigon 35 years ago today. He is the first and thus far only Vietnamese-American player to have made the bigs. He was part of one of the best trade deadline deals in Reds history, and one of Jim Bowden's best deals as Reds GM.

Graves was part of the deal with Jeff Branson and John Smiley on July 31, 1997 that Bowden got from the Cleveland Indians. Bowden gave up Jim Crowell, Damian Jackson, and Scott Winchester. This was one of the great deals in Bowden's great deal-bad deal dichotomy.

Graves had seasons of 27, 30, 32, 32, and 41 saves for the Reds. They tried to make him a starter during that stretch, and he want 4-15 that season. But he was a helluva closer for several seasons. He is still active, pitching for the Twins Triple-A club. Minnesota was trying to make him a starter, but they recently abandoned that experiment. The image of Danny is from Sports Illustrated and Andy Lyons/Getty Images.

The Reds released Danny in 2005 after he gave the one-gun salute to some drunken moron who made racial slurs toward him at a game. Graves was really struggling, and it appeared that his time as a Red was coming to an end. While I almost always try to side with the fans--who I think are the least-considered stakeholder in pro sports--this time, no. I don't think Danny should have made the gesture. But they should have stuck with him at least for a while instead of letting that moronic damned fan "win."

Happy Birthday, Danny.

thankyouverymuch,
OldCleat

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Ken Griffey Jr. -- Good Guy Wearin' Black

Ken Griffey Jr. is now a Chicago White Sox. Good Guys wear black. Grab some bench. One Dog. Big Hurt. Little Hurt. Rockin' Robin. Paulie. El Duque. (Hawk Harrelson is sort of like George W. Bush in so many ways, but in this instance it's because he has nicknames for everyone.)

Ken Griffey Jr. cared about what the fans of Cincinnati thought about him. Paul Daugherty of the Enquirer called Junior the most thin-skinned star that he had covered in 20 years. Why was Junior thin-skinned, however? Because he cared what the fans thought. Most pro players could really give a rat's patootie.

I hope that Junior wins a World Series with the ChiSox. Since I'm up in Chicago, I am now going to go to some White Sox games down at the Comiskey and root Junior on. Junior is a great player, and I am a Junior fan. Sue me.

Junior is wearing No. 17. I don't know why.

Maybe I can round the kids up and go see Junior next week when the Sox are at home. Go Junior. Go Nick Masset. Go Rocket Richar.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Joe Nuxhall Born 80 Years Ago Today

Joe Nuxhall would have been 80 years old today. And all of Reds Nation misses him, I would think. The Reds have done a very nice job honoring Nuxy, one in a spate of folks that the Reds are honoring. That, friends, is an entry for another day (Joey Jay had a few monster years for the early-1960s Reds, but are the Cincinnati nine honoring too many former players?). I have nothing at all against Dave Niehaus, but I still am a little saddened that the HOF didn't honor Nuxy when he so richly deserved it (especially after huge support from his fans). According to this story, Nuxy dominated everyone -- "Of the 122,505 fans who participated in the online election, 82,304 (67.2 percent) voted for Nuxhall, who died Nov. 15 from pneumonia at the age of 79. His passing was mourned throughout baseball, especially in Cincinnati. -- In the online balloting, King received 7,659 votes and Morgan got 6,065." The image is from the Cincinnati Enquirer and their great cartoonist, Jim Borgman.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Eric Davis Another Year Older


Eric Davis for about five years in the late 1980s was what I thought Willie Mays was. Sorry. I know that you are not supposed to compare anyone to Willie Mays. But Davis was the best package, the most complete centerfielder, I had ever seen. At age 24, he had 27 homers and 80 stolen bases. At age 25, he had 37 homers and 50 stolen bases. Of course, then Junior came along, and E kept getting hurt, and so on. But, E was the guy. He was the one who led the Reds out of the dark times, all the way to a wire-to-wire World Series with one of my favorite teams of all time. In 2007, Davis received three out of 545 ballots for the Hall of Fame, or 0.6 percent. He tied Dante Bichette. Dante Bichette, for cryin' out loud. Jose Canseco doubled that vote total, getting six votes. Goes to show that Hall of Fame voters can be moronic just like the rest of us. Davis is 46 years old today. The somewhat disturbing image of Eric Davis and Marge Schott is from the Cincinnati Enquirer, Glenn Hartong.

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Aaron Harang Turns 30, Needs A Beer

Aaron Harang turned 30 years old yesterday. I just wanted to show him some support, since his teammates don't seem to.

Let's see … 15th in the League in ERA. No. 2 in the NL in strikeouts. No. 12 in the League in WHIP. Twenty-fifth in opponents slugging percentage. No. 12 in opponents on-base percentage. What's that get ya? A 1-5 record. The Reds have scored two runs or fewer in four of his losses. His 2.44 runs per nine run support is 180th overall, 94th out of 96 for all pitchers who have tossed 20 innings thus far this year. (Barry Zito is at 95th with 1.87 and Yovani Gallardo is 96th with 0.90)

Happy dang birthday, Aaron. Have a beer. Have five. You deserve it.

thankyouverymuch,

OldCleat