Tag Archives: Italy

Canada goes down in Flames. Whitt and Hamilton should go, too.

It was one of the saddest performances ever staged by a Canadian baseball team — at least, in the past decade.

 

Italy 6, Canada 2. Canada is eliminated in two games from the World baseball Classic.

 

Come on. How does that happen? Italy? That team would struggle against a decent Double A club. 

 

Worse yet, how does Canada lose a game with that much importance attached to it at home? Somebody explain that.

 

Obviously, it happens because alleged “big time” players, who seem to be the favoured belled cows of Baseball Canada’s expert hired staff, laid an egg right when they needed to play like champions. As they often do.

 

Let’s take a look at these stats:

 

Shortstop Chris Barnwell, 0-for-4 against the U.S., 0-for-3 against Italy

Third baseman Mark Teahen, 1-for-4 against the U.S., 0-for-2 against Italy

Leftfielder Nick Weglarz, 0-for-2 against the U.S., 0-for-3 against Italy (he hit two balls in fair territory in two games)

Second baseman Peter Orr, 0-for-4 against the U.S., 0-for-3 against Italy (plus two strikeouts and a horrible play at second base).

Rightfielder Matt Stairs, 0-for-3 against the U.S., 0-for-3 against Italy

 

Weglarz, only 21 and a lifetime .270 hitter at the Single A level, was completely overmatched. Stairs looked done. Orr was just downright horrible in every possibly way.

 

How do those guys play while a nine-year major league veteran like Corey Koskie sits on the bench?

 

Koskie was the best hitter on the team leaving Dunedin. In two games, he went five-for-six with a walk and was hit. He scored four runs and drove in two. Everything he hit, he hit right on the nose.

 

And he didn’t even get to pinch hit in the WBC. That’s ridiculous.

 

Ernie Whitt promised Koskie “You’ll be the first bat off the bench,” and so he chose Team Canada ahead of the Chicago Cubs. Obviously a bad decision.

 

In fairness, it’s unlikely Whitt lied. It’s likely that when Koskie got to Toronto, Greg Hamilton took over. For years, Max Poulin has claimed that Hamilton only plays his buddies. I always questioned that, but now I’ve seen it for myself. Hamilton’s pal Stubby Clapp, who hasn’t done anything at the plate in three years, got to pinch hit while the best hitter in Dunedin didn’t get a sniff.

 

Nick Weglarz? Peter Orr? Matt Stairs? All of them awful.

 

In fact, this is how badly handled this team was managed: The Kansas City Royals wanted Mark Teahen to play second base. Whitt put Teahen at third and Orr at second. Why? How about Koskie at third and Teahen at second? Peter Orr — and Weglarz and Stairs — were nothing more than automatic outs. And defensive liabilities.

 

At lot of people wanted to blame Whitt’s Northern League pitching staff, but the fact remains, if you can’t score seven runs against a semi-pro staff like Italy’s, you should PLAY in the Northern League. It’s interesting that, historically, Hamilton has put down the Northern League. If it wasn’t for the N.L., he would not have had a pitching staff (Mike Johnson, Vince Perkins, Scott Richmond and Chris Begg are all Northern Leaguers or ex-Northern Leaguers). That’s because far too many big leaguers won’t play for Canada.

 

People in this country are saying that this team put the nation’s baseball program back 10 years. I believe it put the program back three decades. 

 

And the only way to fix it is to fire Greg Hamilton right now.

 

And let Ernie Whitt carry the boxes on moving day.

We called another one: TSN’s collective brain WAS bigger than a walnut.

Some things you just know are going to happen. Between France’s 0-0 snoozer with Romania and the Netherlands’ 3-0 blistering of the undermanned Italians in the European Soccer Championship came the news that you will now hear the Hockey Night in Canada theme, Canada’s second national anthem, on all NHL games and Olympic hockey games televised on TSN from now on.

From TSN’s standpoint that’s not a surprise. Even if you had just a little, tiny, squirrel brain, you could have said to yourself, “If those morons at CBC actually do dump the theme, we’ll pay what we need to pay in order to get the rights.”

In fact, in our Friday blog entitled, “CBC to drop Canada’s “second national anthem” along with Bob Cole. Sad,” we wrote the following: “At first, I lamented CBC’s decision to dump the theme and then I thought, “Well if TSN has a collective brain bigger than a walnut, those folks will start sending cheques to the composer, Dolores Claman, and start using the theme themselves.” TSN’s broadcast crew is already better than CBC’s, they might just as well take the theme music — the best there is and, without argument, Canada’s second national anthem. 

Yesterday, the news story arrived…

TORONTO (CP) — CTV has acquired the rights to the song that’s been CBC’s “Hockey Night in Canada” theme for the past 40 years.

CTV and Copyright Music and Visuals, the company that controls use of the classic song composed by Dolores Claman, announced Monday afternoon that CTV acquired all rights to the song in perpetuity.

The network says it will use the song on NHL broadcasts on TSN, RDS and during the broadcaster’s coverage of the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver.

CTV says it made an agreement in principle Friday with Copyright Music and Visuals after CBC announced a contest to find a new theme song.

The contest announcement followed months of negotiations that failed to result in a new licensing agreement between CBC and the agent. 

CBC lost the rights to the tune because it made a giant error in judgment that will now haunt it forever. 

The press release read as follows:

“The song has a long and storied history in Canadian sports and has become ingrained in the hearts and minds of hockey fans across the country. It is an iconic tune, embraced by Canadians everywhere, and we felt it was imperative to save it. We know we will be in hockey forever, so there’s no doubt this acquisition will create value for us,” said Rick Brace, President, Revenue, Business Planning and Sports, CTV Inc. “It’s an honour and a privilege to own such a cherished piece of Canadiana.

 

“I am very moved by how so many Canadians have taken the hockey theme to heart. We are so pleased the song has found a new home,” said Claman. “Throughout our negotiations, CTV displayed a tremendous amount of respect for my family and the song. ‘The Hockey Theme’ means so much to Canadians, and we know it’s in good hands with CTV.”

 

Poor old CBC. They actually hired sports lawyer Gord Kirke on Monday morning to negotiate a new deal. By 3 p.m. on Monday, they’d lost the song forever.

 

Obviously, the people who run the CBC do not have brains as big as walnuts. Or squirrels. 

 

However, we must ask: “…and that’s the kind of leadership that our $975 million a year worth of tax money is buying?” 

 

Sorry. Now, I really have to wonder who has the tiny, little brain.