Tag Archives: huffington post

Joyce’s Bad Call Once Again Proves Replay is the Only Answer

Wednesday night, I watched the Detroit-Cleveland baseball game from first pitch to last. I grew up 45 minutes from the front door of Tiger Stadium while my wife spent much of her developing years at Cleveland’s Municipal Stadium with her favorite uncle. We are a mixed marriage — one Tigers fan, one Indians fan.

And even she thought Armando Galarraga got jerked over.

Everybody knows the story by now. Tigers pitcher Armando Galarraga was robbed of a perfect game on Wednesday night when first base umpire Jim Joyce completely blew an out call on what should have been the final out of a 27-up, 27-out game. There was absolutely no question, even before a thousand replays were shown, that Jason Donald was thrown out, first base-to-pitcher, by Miguel Cabrera with Galarraga covering. Joyce blew the call, plain and simple.

And to his credit, Joyce admitted it. He told reporters after the game: “This isn’t ‘a’ call. This isn’t — This is — This is a history call and I kicked the shit out of it. And there’s nobody that feels worse than I do. I take pride in this job, and I kicked the shit out of it, and I took a perfect game away from that kid who worked his (butt) off all night.”

It was, perhaps, the worst call in baseball history (Huffington Post and the Big Lead called it “the worst call in sports history”), but at least Joyce took responsibility. I still think he should resign, but then again if you watch as much baseball as I do, you’ve long ago come to the conclusion that umpiring is a really, really imperfect science and over the course of a week, there are dozens of bad calls. In fact, the strike zone is a joke. The boys in blue (or is it black now?) make that thing up as they go along.

So I certainly didn’t disagree when commissioner Bud Selig said yesterday that he wouldn’t overturn the call even though it was the worst call in baseball history. I also agreed with Selig when he said he would take a close look at replay and umpiring.

Instituting replay is a simple task. Each manager gets one flag per game. Use it wisely. Balls and strikes are out (computers should call balls and strikes anyway). Jim Leyland could have had a chance to fix the problem from the dugout last night simply with the opportunity to go to the replay — a replay that was available to everyone watching that game in less than four seconds.

Replay would have saved Jim Joyce his torment (and a very funny website called www.firejimjoyce.com) and also give a journeyman starter like Armando Galarraga a real day in the sun (yeah, the Corvette was nice, but if I know the Tigers organization, owner Mike Ilitch would have bought Armando the entire Chevy line if he had “perfect game” on his resume).

Thursday afternoon at Comerica Park everybody kissed and made up, but St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony La Russa — as he often does — had the best take on the entire mess.

“I was thinking if the umpire says he made a mistake on replay, I’d call it a no-hitter, perfect game. Just scratch it,” La Russa said. “If I was Mr. Selig, in the best interest of the game. The guy got it and I’d give him his perfect game. But here again, I should just shut my mouth.”

Meanwhile, I have learned one important lesson from this incident: I vow to never again, never ever again, on the Shaw TV telecasts of Winnipeg Goldeyes baseball, to NEVER, EVER again criticize a Northern League umpire. From the horrendous umpiring done in the 2009 playoffs to Joyce’s blown call on Wednesday night, the arbiters in the majors are living proof that the guys in the Northern League are just as good as they are (or just as bad, whatever your point of view).

Fact is, the sad state of major league umpiring is a bigger problem for the game than steroids ever were.

Another Wild Week in The Mainstream Media Circus. And it’s Only Wednesday.

It never fails to amaze, that ol’ Mainstream Media Circus. Is it because papers are folding left and right, layoffs are always imminent and changes are coming at people very rapidly, that the “journalist” of today needs to write about meaningless, stupid, personal, hateful crap to sell the product?

Where did actual reporting go? Don’t sport sections break stories  anymore or is that now reserved for websites and blogs like this one or hotdoghockey.com and the websites of the individual teams and leagues. There seems to be more news coming off message boards (How you doing, U of M Bisons?) than out of newspapers these days.

Anyway, let’s look at what’s transpired this week. And have a few laughs.

1) Here’s this week’s trade rumour report – rumours that NEVER seem to come to fruition – courtesy of Trade Rumour Central, the Midnight News of the World. Or, rather, the Ottawa Sun.

The Ottawa Sun now claims that the New York Rangers are trying to trade Christopher Higgins, the Anaheim Ducks are trying to trade Todd Marchant, the Leafs are trying to trade Jason Blake and I love this one: Because the Chicago Blackhawks have a limited amount of cap space, they’re looking to trade Jonathan Toews and/or Patrick Kane.

Yeah, right. And I’m playing point guard for the New York freakin’ Knicks.

These aren’t rumours. These are festering piles of manufactured crapola.

2) Mike Kelly gets smarter every day. And maybe he doesn’t even know it. The Winnipeg media has been obsessed by Kelly’s radio outburst after Sunday’s 48-13 loss in Montreal. If you believe the local hacks, Kelly is bad for football in this town and while it’s nice that he’s giving people who already don’t go to the games an apparently valid excuse to continue not going, he has done something that the last coach of this team would never, ever do.

Kelly has decided that when his team loses, he’s going to take responsibility. What a novel idea. The last guy, Doug (It’s not my job) Berry, would throw half-a-dozen players under the bus before he’d even hint that maybe he didn’t do everything humanly possible to have his team ready to play. In fairness, Berry was often criticized for that approach.

Now, when the local fishwraps get a guy who takes ALL the responsibility, it makes them crazy. “He’s rude,” they cry.

Yep, he’s rude. He’s also taken the spotlight away from a horrible effort in Montreal and taken all the heat himself. Football needs more Mike Kellys, not fewer.

3) Speaking of Kelly, the most interesting suggestion made by the media during the past few weeks is that people have decided NOT to go to Blue Bomber games because those people don’t like the coach. Apparently, since the beginning of the 2009 season, Winnipeg football fans, care only about the coach. The colour of the uniforms and the people wearing those uniforms, no longer matter.

Spare me that crap. People don’t want to go to Blue Bomber games because (a) the parking is lousy, (b) the stadium is a broken-down dump, (c) the post-game traffic is a mess (d) the tickets are a tad expensive and (e) the game is on TSN HD. A growing number of real sports fans in Winnipeg get TSN HD and that means they get every Bomber home game in their living rooms with a great picture and replays and they don’t have to worry about bad parking, warm beer and a rotting stadium.

Get a grip boys. If owners actually believed that people suddenly started buying football tickets to watch coaches, those owners would immediately hire Jessica Biel, Kaley Cuoco, Jennifer Garner and Kate Beckinsale… as coaches.

4) Thanks to cable TV and talk radio, the poor old United States media is slowly but surely becoming a dumping ground for the lunatic fringe. The far-right religious nutters who scream at the tea parties, don’t know where their Medicare comes from, support the Constitution- and Bill of Rights-destroying Patriot Act, think all Latino-Americans are illegals and truly believe their African-American president was, somehow, born in Africa, now have a new hero to go with Glenn Beck and Lou Dobbs.

His name is Darren Rovell, another mainstream media hack who wrote that Meb Keflezighi, the American-citizen who won the New York City Marathon wasn’t really an American.

This mainstream media knucklehead wrote: “Meb Keflezighi is technically American by virtue of him becoming a citizen in 1998, but the fact that he’s not American-born takes away from the magnitude of the achievement.” Huh?

“Nothing against Keflezighi,” Rovell blurted, “but he’s like a ringer you hire to work a couple of hours at your office so that you can win the executive softball league.”

How do people like Rovell get work? And where did the mainstream media’s editors go? Technically American? Keflezighi chose to be an American. Guess he didn’t realize that 11 years after he became a citizen the “birthers” would come along and anyone in America who didn’t have a WASPy name and wasn’t born in Kansas or Indiana was to be considered as foreign as that Barack Hussein Obama guy.

As the Huffington Post’s Henry Blodgett wrote: “…this is seriously disturbing. It’s also probably racist. Would Rovell be saying the same thing if Arnold Schwarzenegger had won the marathon?”

If Rovell had been another far-to-the-right-of-Genghis-Khan nutbag blogger, you’d just laugh, but this was CNBC. Allegedly the big time, with the big money, and the big credibility.

Sad, but like a growing sea of insanity, the mainstream media, on both sides of the border, is becoming as nutty as a fruitcake.