Tag Archives: Winnipeg Goldeyes

A Remarkable Night in the ‘Peg

I won’t call Winnipeg “Swaggerville,” because that seems to be something owned by the members of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. And make no mistake, this little monologue is about Winnipeg, not just about one team.

On Friday night, we witnessed what was almost a perfect storm.

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Buck Pierce in front of 30,033 fans (photo by Shawn Coates)

Over on Maroons Road, the Blue Bombers drew 30,033 spectators to watch the home football side beat the Hamilton Tiger-Cats 30-27 and improve to 7-1 on the season.

Meanwhile, down at the East End of Portage Ave., the Winnipeg Goldeyes drew 8,065 fans to Shaw Park to watch the Local 9 whip their arch-rivals, the Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks, 9-5, to wrap up the American Association’s North Division pennant.

However, while it was definitely an evening of celebration at both venues, it was also one of the most remarkable nights in Winnipeg sports history. On one night, there were 38,098 Winnipeg sports fans watching two professional teams at exactly the same time. And both games were also on TV.

Now that’s not the largest pair of crowds ever to watch two pro sports teams in Winnipeg on the same day. Back in the 1990s, the Bombers and Jets often combined to surpass the 40,000 mark on the same day. But this might have been the largest double crowd for two teams playing at exactly the same time and it was first time anyone could remember that two Winnipeg teams drew more fans than there were actual permanent seats available for them to sit in — at exactly the same time with both teams on TV.

The Bombers added 500 temporary seats — and sold them all  in a few hours — to get from 29,533 seats to 30,033. The Goldeyes, meanwhile, sold tickets on the grass berm and probably a few standing room spots to surpass the 7,481 permanent seats at their beautiful little downtown ball park.

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Goldeyes manager Rick Forney

There is nothing like a winner to grab peoples’ interest and when you have two winners, folks will obviously respond. With Friday night’s 9-5 win, the Goldeyes swept a four-game series from Fargo this week to improve to 58-38 — 20 games over .500 for the first time since 2003. It was also the first time the Fish had clinched a division title since 2003.

It was also a night to celebrate Rick Forney’s outstanding season as manager of the Goldeyes. In his sixth year as the Goldeyes’ skipper, he built a winner by bringing in (a) an commplished group of veteran leaders and (b) the four best rookies in the American Association and as a result, he won a championship and was named 2011 Manager of the Year.

As well, the Goldeyes reversed a trend this season. After dropping in attendance every year from 2004-2010, the Goldeyes turned things around. Last year, the team drew 271,399 fans and then missed the playoffs. This year, the Fish have drawn 286,885 spectators and the team has at least two playoff games remaining. Getting back to 300,000 is s possibility.

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Ace Walker (Photo by Shawn Coates)

“It’s been awesome to be part of this,” said Ace Walker who joined Chris Salamida as the second Goldeyes pitcher to pick up his 10th win of the season this week. “Last year, at the end, was really an emotional time for me (he threw a one-hitter in the final game of the year and thought it would be his final game with the Goldeyes). I don’t think baseball will ever be out of my blood. I think I’ll always want to play. But last year, I thought maybe I was done. Then Rick (manager Forney) really impressed me with the people he was bringing in and when he asked me to play, I really wanted to be part of it. I’m glad I came back.”

Meanwhile, the 7-1 Bombers have four home games remaining and all 30,033 seats available for the Banjo Bowl on Sept. 11, have been sold. That means the Bombers are on pace to set a post-1999 franchise attendance record (1999 was when the available seating at Canad Inns Stadium was actually lowered for the Pan Am Games) in the final year of the Old Dump on Maroons. Next year, the Bombers will move into a brand new 33,000-seat stadium on the campus of the U of M and they’ll do it with a good team playing great football. In fact, after Montreal’s loss to Calgary on Sunday, the Bombers are now four points up on the Alouettes in the CFL East.

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The Awesome Bombers D (photo by Shawn Coates)

The Bombers are 7-1 now and with all things being fair and equal, they could very well finish somewhere between 13-5 and 16-2, depending on how well they play down the stretch. This is a team with a remarkable defence that actually got a little help from Buck Pierce and the offence on Friday night.

When the Winnipeg Jets play their home opener on Oct. 9, they could be following a pro baseball championship and a pro football team that is oh, say, 11-3 (as a conservative sports pundit, I still can’t call them winners against Montreal … yet). No wonder Winnipeggers are excited about sports these days.

In fact, any suggestion that there is not a Sports Renaissance in this city is coming from people who think the earth is flat.

Goldeyes Make the Playoffs

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Goldeyes Co-Player of the Year Wes Long.

It started Thursday morning, just hours after the Winnipeg Goldeyes defeated the Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks 7-4 on Wednesday night.

While everyone in the American Association was focused on a tremendous race for first place in the North Division between the Goldeyes and St. Paul Saints, the Goldeyes CFO Jason McRae-King went looking a little deeper.

McRae-King, was checking out the remaining schedules for the top five teams involved in the various playoff American Association playoff races and something caught his eye. One of the final four-game series of the 2011 season involved the Gary SouthShore RailCats and the St. Paul Saints. It became obvious to the team’s No. 1 number cruncher that no matter what happened down the stretch, either St. Paul or Gary was going to make the playoffs, but not both of them. McRae-King told me what he’d found and I couldn’t argue. He said he was going to take his discovery to Goldeyes GM Andrew Collier.

McRae-King believed that the Goldeyes had already clinched a playoff berth, even though they still hadn’t clinched top spot in the American Association’s North Division.

He took his hunch to Collier, the boss crunched the numbers himself and then he sent his findings to the American Association’s head office. With that, the league called back and said, “Yes, indeed, the Goldeyes could do no worse than be a playoff wild card team.”

As Collier pointed out in a release to the media yesterday, the only two teams that could push Winnipeg out of a playoff spot were St. Paul and Gary and they face each other in the final four-game series of the year.

For St. Paul to catch Winnipeg and finish in a tie for first in the North Division, the Saints would have to win four of their final six games. That would include two victories against the RailCats during that final series. Two more losses by Gary would guarantee Winnipeg the Wild Card spot.

For Gary to tie Winnipeg in the Wild card race, the RailCats would have to win five of their last six games, including three against St. Paul in that final series. If they beat St. Paul three times, the Saints would be eliminated from the race for first in the North Division. With that. Winnipeg would clinch first even if the Fish lost all of their final six games.

The Goldeyes magic number to clinch first place in the North Division is still three, since St. Paul wins the tiebreaker by virtue of having a better record against teams outside the division. If Winnipeg holds on and wins the North, it will be the Goldeyes first Division championship since 2003.

Regardless of whether the playoffs start in Winnipeg, St. Paul or Gary, the fact remains that the 56-38 Goldeyes are in the playoffs and those playoffs start next Thursday night.

Tickets will be available on Friday at Ticketmaster.

Two Nice Teams

On Monday night I had the honor, once again, to play host to the Hearts of Blue and Gold Dinner for Variety the Children’s Charity at Earl’s St. Vital in Winnipeg. The people from Variety are wonderful and our hosts from Earl’s are always terrific. It never fails to be a great evening.

I’ve been the Master of Ceremonies at this twice-a-season dinner now for eight years and I will admit, for many of those years, it was a chore. There were times when the Bombers weren’t very good, the team really didn’t want to spend an evening with the public and for Obby Khan, the Bomber who arranges the player appearances for this event, attracting participants was like pulling teeth.

That was not the case on Monday night. There were 17 current Bombers at the dinner and five alumni stars and with the team 6-1 and a heavy favorite to beat Hamilton in front of a sellout at Canad Inns Stadium on Friday night, the players who attended all seemed happy to be there. In fact, even the ones who probably wanted to be someplace else bought into the importance of this fund raising event and worked hard to make the evening enjoyable for everyone in attendance.

obby khan Two Nice Teams

Obby Khan: A great Friend of Variety

As I always do during these events, I try to spend as much time as I can with the players. It’s a great opportunity to get to know the team away from the Stadium, and this year’s crew is nice to be around. From Joe Lobendahn to Mike Renaud, from Clint Kent to Andre Douglas and from Alex Suber to Alex Brink, this is a team that has learned how to win and has learned how to handle itself in public. They were all true gentlemen and carried themselves with humility and self-deprecation.

Swaggerville is fun, but that’s not the real personality of this team. As team president Jim Bell, who also attended the dinner (without fanfare, by the way), found out on Monday, he has a very nice group filled with respectful people who are professional in every way.

Meanwhile, I’ve spent the entire baseball season in the midst of the Winnipeg Goldeyes and that’s another team that should make Winnipeg proud. This is a team that does not believe winning is easy and it also believes that representing a community is a big part of a professional athlete’s list of responsibilities.

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Andrew Walker

From Ace Walker to Chris Salamida and from Brian Myrow to Lou Ott and Wes Long, the Goldeyes are a professional baseball team that works hard, acts professionally and wins a lot more often than it loses.

Winnipeg is extremely fortunate this summer to boast two winning teams that also represent the community with class. The Goldeyes head into a four-game series with Fargo on Tuesday night with a four-game lead over the St. Paul Saints. Their magic number for clinching the American Association’s North Division is four. There is no cockiness involved in this club. It’s about hard work and winning games — and always showing up for the post-game autograph session with the fans.

Meanwhile, the Bombers have played tremendous football en route to a 6-1 record and sole possession of first place in the Canadian Football League’s Eastern Conference. Friday night, the Bombers are 4.5-point favorites to beat Hamilton and remain in first.

Winnipeg is lucky to be able to cheer these two exceptional teams. One can’t wait to see if the city’s new NHL team is equally exceptional — both on and off the ice.

Goldeyes Now Into Run to the Playoffs

It’s been a great summer here in Winnipeg. The Bombers are 6-1 and the 50-36 Winnipeg Goldeyes, with 14 games to play, are now in the thick of the playoff race in baseball’s American Association.

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Zach Baldwin: Huge Start Sunday

There are three playoff spots up for grabs and four — maybe even five — teams with a legitimate shot at those three spots. The South Division champions from Grand Prairie, Tex., are through to the post-season and already coasting, but in the North and Central Divisions, there is a real race coming down to the wire.

Winnipeg is 50-36, two games ahead of 48-38 St. Paul in the North thanks to a tremendous start on Sunday by lefty Zach Baldwin. The Goldeyes beat Wichita 4-2 to salvage the final game of a three-game series at Shaw Park and Baldwin’s mastery played a significant role in the outcome. Meanwhile, Gary is 49-37, two games up on 47-39 Wichita. And one probably can’t count out Sioux City, who just happen to be 45-41 in the Central and are now only four back of Gary, two behind Wichita and three behind St. Paul.

However, with a full five-game lead over Sioux City, if the Goldeyes and let the Explorers catch them, both teams will probably miss the post-season with only 14 to go.

Tonight (Monday, Aug. 15), the Goldeyes will open a three-game series with St. Paul. If the Fish win it, they’ll just about bury the Saints with only 11 games left. It’s a huge series.

In fact, all four teams in the thick of the race have a handful of huge series to finish the season. Here are the schedules of the four teams that are really chasing the final three spots:

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Winnipeg's Shaw Park

WINNIPEG

August 15 vs. St. Paul

August 16 vs. St. Paul

August 17 vs. St. Paul

August 19 at Lincoln

August 20 at Lincoln

August 21 at Lincoln

August 23 vs. Fargo

August 24 vs. Fargo

August 25 vs. Fargo

August 26 vs. Fargo

August 27 at Sioux Falls

August 28 at Sioux Falls

August 29 at Sioux Falls

August 30 at Sioux Falls

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St. Paul's Midway Stadium

ST. PAUL

August 15 at Winnipeg

August 16 at Winnipeg

August 17 at Winnipeg

August 19 vs. Fargo

August 20 vs. Fargo

August 21 vs. Fargo

August 23 vs. Sioux City

August 24 vs. Sioux City

August 25 vs. Sioux City

August 26 vs. Sioux City

August 27 at Gary

August 28 at Gary

August 29 at Gary

August 30 at Gary

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Gary's U.S. Steel Yard

GARY

August 15 vs. Shreveport

August 16 vs. Shreveport

August 17 vs. Shreveport

August 19 at Wichita

August 20 at Wichita

August 21 at Wichita

August 23 vs. Lincoln

August 24 vs. Lincoln

August 25 vs. Lincoln

August 26 vs. Lincoln

August 27 vs. St. Paul

August 28 vs. St. Paul

August 29 vs. St. Paul

August 30 vs. St. Paul

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Wichita's Lawrence-Dumont Stadium

WICHITA

August 16 vs. Kansas City

August 17 vs. Kansas City

August 18 vs. Kansas City

August 19 vs. Gary

August 20 vs. Gary

August 21 vs. Gary

August 23 vs. Gary

August 24 vs. Amarillo

August 25 vs. Amarillo

August 26 vs. Amarillo

August 27 at El Paso

August 28 at El Paso

August 29 at El Paso

August 30 at El Paso

It is going to be a tremendous race to the finish and the only way in which to guarantee yourself a spot is to just keep winning. Wichita probably has the easiest schedule while Gary has the toughest. Winnipeg plays seven of their last 11 on the road and that won’t be a walk in the sunshine.

It’s going to be fun. See you at the ballpark.

Good Days and Bad.

Had a nice conversation with Fehlandt Lentini on Tuesday. Fehlandt had a good day.

The former Goldeye fan-favorite is now a current Goldeye fan-favorite. After getting his release from the Amarillo Sox of the American Association, he was signed by Winnipeg manager Rick Forney and hit out of the six hole on Tuesday night. He was absolutely thrilled.

Lentini was  released from a team that was 38-43 and right out of the post-season hunt and signed by a team that was 47-33 and first in the North Division. Sometimes being released isn’t the end of the road, even for a veteran player. Sometimes, a release is a ticket to a better situation.

In Lentini’s case, the situation couldn’t be better. He, indeed, had a good week.

So far, it’s been a very interesting week for a lot of people. Some good, some bad. Here’s a guy who could have had a great week, but ended up having a bad one:

steve williams interview 300x189 Good Days and Bad.

The Mouth That Spewed

Professional golf bag carrier, Steve Williams, was able to serve Adam Scott as Scott hit all the shots and won the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational. It was a great Sunday for Williams who, of course, had recently been fired by Tiger Woods.

But because Williams is such a narcissistic bloviator, he went on television, dumped all over Woods and praised — no, not Scott — but himself for winning the Bridgestone. It was a dreadful and somewhat embarrassing outburst by a person who was described as “delusional” by Golf Digest.

It’s nice to work for a winner. It’s bat-$#it crazy to take credit for winning when you don’t hit a shot.

Williams had a great Sunday, but his mouth turned it into a horrible Monday.

On the upside, it’s painfully obvious why Woods got rid of Williams and, in fact, I’m surprised Woods didn’t fire Williams the day he ripped Phil Mickelson. If you really want to change your life, as Woods obviously does, getting rid of some old baggage never hurts.

By the way, after Williams shot off his mouth, here is what Paul Azinger said about Tiger in an interview with Steve Deuming at WDAE in Tampa: “I have always pulled for Tiger to do well, he’s the most exciting player whether you like him or hate him now, and for me personally it’s hard to watch the product unless he is in it.”

That’s the most honest assessment of the PGA Tour I’ve ever read.

It’s a Sports Renaissance in the ‘Peg.

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Donovan McNabb at Mankato, Minn.

MINNEAPOLIS — Every day I’m in the Twin Cities, sports people come up and ask me why I’m in Minnesota watching football and baseball. I tell then that my readership at www.fantrax.com demands inside knowledge of Major League Baseball and the National Football League, therefore, I’ve spent a long weekend in Minneapolis and Mankato, taking a first hand look at the Vikings, Twins and Chicago White Sox.

However, I have to admit, I understand their questions. With the return of the Winnipeg Jets, folks down here immediately assume that the only thing anyone is talking about in Winnipeg is the National Hockey League. I tell them it’s certainly at the top of every conversation, but there are still plenty of NFL, MLB, NBA and UFC fans in the ‘Peg and because I write far too many on-line columns that can be read all over the world, holding myself to the NHL in August is a tad narrow.

Of course, it is more difficult to leave Winnipeg, even for a weekend of MLB and NFL. It’s something that few people outside of Winnipeg think about: Winnipeg is in the midst of a Sports Renaissance (if you ask Mayor Sam Katz, the city is in a renaissance in a lot of other ways, as well, so check out http://www.newentertainment.ca/newmagazine/home.html and read my piece on what the mayor has brought to the ‘Peg).

As an example, when Winnipeg sports fans woke up on Saturday they had a professional football team in first place and a professional baseball team in first place.

The Bombers had just beaten the Edmonton Eskimos 28-16 thanks to a courageous effort by Buck Pierce and a defense that is as good as anything I’ve seen in Winnipeg since 1993. Even without Doug Brown, the Bombers shut down the heretofore best offence in the CFL and came back from an 11-1 first quarter deficit to outscore Edmonton 27-5 in the final three quarters. At 5-1, the Bombers are first in the East and tied with Edmonton for the best record overall.

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Ace Walker

But that wasn’t the only big win on Friday night. Here in St. Paul, Minn., the Winnipeg Goldeyes came back from a 5-3 deficit by scoring three runs in the top of the seventh. After that its bullpen — Ian Thomas, Aaron Hartsock and Jamie Vermilyea — shut the St. Paul Saints right down en route to a 6-5 victory. With the win, the Goldeyes improved to 45-32 and pulled a full game ahead of second-place St. Paul in the race for first in the American Association’s North Division.

For the first time since 2001, the Bombers and Goldeyes are in first place at the same time. For the first time in history they’re both in first place while the Winnipeg Jets wait to start a new season.

I was over at River City Sports last Wednesday and had a nice chat with the young guys working on the sales floor. They knew that Jets gear would be popular, but even they were blown away by the rate at which the hats, T-shirts and memorabilia were flying off the shelves. There is no question that the Jets are the hottest thing to hit Winnipeg since the advent of indoor plumbing.

However, the return of the Jets has also coincided with two other professional success stories, the start of the Prairie Junior Football Conference season, the incredible improvement in the level of play in the Manitoba Junior Hockey League, top-notch university sports, the return of the Canadian Fighting Championship in September and more local amateur success than Winnipeg has had in decades.

There is a Sports Renaissance going on in this town and it just might last a while. All you have do is go to the games — or try to go to the games — to see what’s happening. After all, it’s hard to get a ticket to a Bomber game and the Goldeyes are drawing a younger crowd than they have in years. The city’s sports scene is exciting.

And to think, the Jets haven’t even played a game yet.

A Week In the Trenches

It’s been quite a week — and it’s only Tuesday.

The new Winnipeg Jets have signed a load of players, most destined for St. John’s of the American Hockey League. The Winnipeg Blue Bombers still aren’t certain if Buck Pierce will be ready to go in Toronto on Saturday. The first-place Winnipeg Goldeyes open a three-game series with the Sioux City Explorers tonight. And at some point this week, the newly-minted Jets will announce their radio and TV rights holders.

Time for a closer look at all the stuff:

1) The Jets got an important player under contract on Monday. Right winger Blake Wheeler agreed to a two-year $5.1 million deal. Like most of the players on this team, he’s a bit of a grinder, Wheeler had 18 goals in 81 games last season with the Bruins and then, after a trade at the deadline, with the Thrashers. He’s a good player and will only get better the longer he’s in Winnipeg.

Meanwhile, the Jets continue on their way to being the best American Hockey League team in the NHL. After signing centre Ben Maxwell (one goal in 32 NHL games over three seasons) on Monday, the club signed AHL defensemen Arturs Kulda (0) and Brett Festerling (1) and forwards Spencer Machacek (10), Riley Holzapfel (0), Kenndal McArdle (11) and Jason Jaffray (0) yesterday.

The numbers in brackets refer to the number of NHL games this group of six played last season — a grand total of 22. They are all, nice hard-working hockey players who will make St. John’s an outstanding team.

2) Since arriving in Winnipeg before the start of the 2010 season — after he was released by B.C. who admitted he had some physical issues — quarterback Buck Pierce has played parts of eight games with the Bombers. The team, meanwhile has played 21 games in that time.

This week, Pierce is expected to play against Toronto at Rogers Centre on Saturday, but as head coach Paul LaPolice has admitted, there is still no guarantee. Without Pierce, Alex Brink is the backup because Joey Elliott (who has looked pretty good in his few opportunities on the field) tore up a knee making a tackle (a freakin’ tackle). That’s one of the many skills quarterbacks need in Winnipeg. They must be able to make tackles after interceptions and fumbles.

The Bombers defense has carried this team to a 2-1 record and one could easily argue that with any offence at all, the Big Blue would be 3-0. Trouble is, quarterbacks are starting to get hurt and there are reasons to believe this offence won’t snap out of it.

The big problem, of course, is that there just aren’t enough quarterbacks to go around. As former GM Paul Robson once said, “There aren’t enough quarterbacks in the NFL. How can there possibly be enough decent quarterbacks in the CFL if there aren’t enough quarterbacks in NFL?” As usual, Robson was right.

Week 4 begins in the Canadian Football League this Friday night with 1-2 Hamilton at 0-3 B.C. It’s a doubleheader on Saturday with 2-1 Winnipeg at 1-2 Toronto at 3 and 3-0 Edmonton at 2-1 Calgary at 6 and then on Sunday, 0-3 Saskatchewan is at 3-0 Montreal. Winnipeg won’t be the only team with questions at quarterback. In fact, Montreal and Edmonton are the only two teams that don’t have questions.

3) Saturday night, after the Winnipeg Goldeyes beat Sioux Falls 19-5, one of Winnipeg’s hottest hitters said that fans shouldn’t expect the club’s offensive explosion to last forever.

It didn’t, of course. The Goldeyes lost 4-1 on Sunday. Still, it’s painfully obvious that this team’s early-season slump is long gone. Brian Myrow and Jon Weber both said, “don’t worry, this team will hit,” and they were right.

“Right now this is a little ridiculous,” Myrow said on Saturday night. “Don’t expect 18, 19, 20 hits to happen every night. But it is fun to play well.”

The Goldeyes have won 22 of their last 30 games and are 11-5 in the month of July. They are 7-2 since last Sunday’s win in Fargo. At 38-23, they are in first place in the American Association’s North Division, a game and a half ahead of St. Paul.

“We hit the ball very well when we force the opposing pitcher to throw strikes,” said Myrow. “We’re hitting better now because guys are having better at bats. They’re not swinging at the first ball that moves or the first fastball they see. They’re being patient at the plate and forcing the opposing pitcher to throw more pitches.

“They say hitting is contagious, but I think it’s more a matter of hitting well because people around you are hitting well. When there is a runner at third and one out there is less pressure to get a hit. You can hit a sacrifice fly and drive in a run and how many times, with no pressure, does that turn into a double?

“We’re just more comfortable hitting with one or two strikes. And it’s getting warmer. The ball is carrying real well. But don’t expect 15 and 18 hits to be a regular occurrence.”

Saturday night was a great night to pad statistics. The only Goldeyes’ starter not to get an RBI was No. 9 hitter Brian Joynt, who did score two runs. Meanhwile, it was a hit-fest for Winnipeg:

1) Leadoff man Prince Kendall went one-for-five with two RBI.

2) Kody Kaiser went two-for-four with three runs scored and two RBI.

3) Wes Long went two-for-five with three runs scored, five RBI and a grand slam home run. He now leads the Goldeyes with 53 runs batted in.

4) Myrow went three-for-five with a run scored and three RBI. He now leads the Goldeyes with a .326 batting average.

5) Jon Weber went two-for-five with three runs scored and two RBI, including his seventh homer of the year and his second in as many nights.

6) Luis Alen went three-for-five with four runs scored and an RBI. In the last month, he has raised his batting average from .244 to .309.

7) Justin Bass went three-for-four with two runs scored and three runs batted in. All three RBI came on a three-run homer in the second inning, his team-leading 12th of the season.

icon cool A Week In the Trenches Louis Ott went three-for-five with a run scored and an RBI.

This year’s edition of the Goldeyes is the best team Rick Forney has managed. It’s even better than the 2009 team that was one error away from reaching the final.

The pitching is solid, the defense is sound and if the hitting continues to improve, this team will have a very enjoyable August. In fact, when the Fish return from the six-game road that starts Friday, they’ll play 20 of their last 30 games at Shaw Park.

4) The Winnipeg Jets are said to be preparing to announce their radio and TV rights holders this week. If I were a betting man, I’d put my money on CJOB and TSN.

 

Things That Make Me Smile

James Reimer came up to the Shaw TV booth on Friday night during our telecast of the Goldeyes and Sioux Falls.

The Toronto Maple Leafs netminder is one of those terrific young men you just cheer for. Even if you hate the damn Leafs, you can’t help but want the best for a happy, respectful, intelligent Christian young man like Reimer.

He’s one of the people, places and things that made me smile this week. In fact, without getting too gushy, it’s really been a great week here in Winnipeg and a week that reminded me that life in the summer in this town is pretty darn nice.

Here’s a list of the things that made me smile this week. Visit me on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001559147071) and tell me the things that made you smile:

1) The Winnipeg Goldeyes were outstanding this week. It all started with a complete-game, two-hour-and-24-minute, eight-hit grinder by Ace Walker and finished with a complete-game, two-hour-and 39 minute, six-hit grinder by Ace Walker.

The Goldeyes won 7-2 in Fargo this past Sunday as Walker was terrific, and then they went into St. Paul and emerged as the No. 1 team in the American Association’s North Division. They won a doubleheader, 5-4 and 3-2 on Monday, won 6-1 on Tuesday and 10-4 on Wednesday to take a three-game lead in the race for first.

After losing 17-7 in their return to Winnipeg on Thursday, the Goldeyes rode Walker’s right arm — and the bats of Jon Weber and Brian Myrow — to an 18-1 shlellacking of a good hitting team from Sioux Falls. The Fish almost scored as many runs on Friday as the Bombers scored points on Thursday.

Sunday afternoon, Chris Salamida (7-1, 2.71 ERA) will face former Goldeyes starter Ben Moore (8-2, 2.40 ERA) of Sioux Falls in what should be one of the best pitching match-ups of the year. I’m smiling just thinking about it.

2) The Winnipeg Blue Bombers defense. They’re fast, aggressive, angry, swarming and opportunistic. The best in the CFL. This group reminds me of the late 80s-early 90s Bomber defenses with James West, Tyrone Jones, Paul Randolph, Mike Gray, Rod Hill, and the great Greg Battle.

Too bad the offense has to come out on the field, I could watch that defense all night.

3) Anthony Calvillo makes me smile. It’s amazing, but the guy had cancer last fall. He might be a better quarterback now than he was before the cancer was removed.

Friday night, he completed 29-of-43 passes for 307 yards and two touchdowns as he became the career leader in touchdown passes in the CFL with 395.

Meanwhile, he led the Alouettes to a 40-17 drubbing of the Toronto Argonauts as Montreal improved to 3-0. We’re three games into the 2011 season and a guy who has come back from cancer surgery is already on pace to be the CFL’s player of the year.

4) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows 2 in IMAX 3D at Silver City Polo Park made me happy.

5) The end of the NFL lockout.

The news just gets better every day for NFL fans. My insiders tell me that an agreement between the owners and players is done and will be ratified this week. Free agency will start the Week of the 25th and training camps should open in early August. The Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio, is preparing for its Hall of Fame Game on Aug. 7 as if there is no glitch in the schedule. The NFL itself has confirmed that no games — pre-season or otherwise have been cancelled.

I can’t wait. In the meantime, the more I learn about the deal, the wider my smile.

 

Lots Going On. Some Good, Some Bad and Some, well you know…

Another week in Toyland and another week of good, bad, and very, very ugly.

THE GOOD

1) On the good side, there was Ben Dartnell. As a young kid, Ben was a Winnipeg Goldeyes bat boy who used to play catch at Shaw Park (old Canwest Park) with anyone who happened to have a glove. He was a great kid who always seemed to be better than the other youngsters  his age.

This week, Ben Dartnell was selected in the 34th round (1,042 overall) by the Boston Red Sox on Day 3, of the Major League Baseball Amateur Draft. A 6-foot-3, 210-pound lefthanded throwing fireballer out of Vauxhall Baseball Academy in Alberta, Dartnell has been a Red Sox fan all his life.

“This is a kid who owned Red Sox underwear,” said his dad, Goldeyes director of security, Paul Dartnell.

“I can’t complain,” young Ben said via Facebook. “I’m part of Red Sox Nation!”

It doesn’t get a lot better than that.

2) According to Forbes Magazine, this past week NHL commissioner Gary Bettman told Research in Motion founder, Jim Balsillie, he could still acquire an NHL team as long as he “didn’t create any more bad publicity for the league.”

Interesting comment considering that very few people have created more bad publicity for the NHL than Gary Bettman.

In fairness, however, that’s a big turnabout for Bettman who refused to allow Balsillie to buy the Phoenix Coyotes out of bankruptcy. Now, it’s apparent that with the instant success of the Winnipeg franchise that maybe Balsillie could bail the NHL out of that mess it has created in Phoenix.

The fact that another Canadian-based NHL team could be on the horizon makes Bettman’s reluctant kind-of-apology to Balsillie intriguing.

3) On Saturday,  the Winnipeg Blue Bombers held a day of training camp at Brandon’s Vincent Massey High School. Practice ran from 11:30 to 1:30 and autographs followed soon after the workout.

For no profound reason, that’s just good.

4) Ichiro. Watched him play against Detroit this week. Ichiro is good.

5) Nyjer Morgan. Because the guy is certifiably wonderful. Watch him here: http://ca.deadspin.com/5810810/the-week-in-deadspin?skyline=true&s=i

THE BAD

1) The Dallas Mavericks defeated the Miami Heat 112-103 in Game 5 of the NBA Finals.

The Mavericks had another big run to the finish. This time they outscored the Heat 15-3 down the stretch. Dirk Nowitzki led Dallas with 29 points, but the dagger was a long three by Jason Terry, over a lazy LeBron James, with 20 seconds left. The Mavs shot 56.5 per cent from the field, 68 per-cent, 13-of-19, from three-point range. LeBron had a triple double, 17 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists but only two points in the fourth quarter.

The Mavs lead the Heat 3-2 heading back to Miami for Games 6 and 7. Miami can still win this championship and LeBron can win the first of all those championships he vowed to win when he decided to “take my talents to South Beach.”

But here’s what can make this still fluid situation bad: the Heat do proceed to lose the series. This was a team that celebrated its 2011 championship BEFORE it held its first shoot-around. It’s as if the Heat are supposed to win.

They aren’t. And if they don’t, the entire season was a failure and the stupid TV show last summer looks even more outrageous.

2) The reports of an “imminent (there’s that word again)” deal to end the NFL lockout was apparently premature. The Eagle-Tribune of Lowell, Mass., reported that the players and owners were close to a deal to end the work stoppage but spokesmen for both the players and owners said otherwise.

NFLPA spokesman George Atallah posted this 54-character comment on his Twitter account: “There’s a report that the lockout is over. Umm…no.”

It’s bad that the lockout isn’t over. It’s good, however, that there is at least some discussion about ending it.

3) So we’re told LeBron and Dwyane made a snotty remark about Dirk Nowitzki’s case of the flu this week and while Dirk seemed a little hurt by it, the American media blew right up.

“I just thought it was a little childish, a little ignorant,” Dirk said. “I’ve been in this league for 13 years, I’ve never faked an injury or an illness before, but it happened.”

To that, Wade’s response was as follows: “First of all, it wasn’t fake coughing. I actually did cough. And with the cameras being right there, we made a joke out of it because we knew you guys were going to blow it up. You did exactly what we knew. We never said Dirk’s name. I think he’s not the only one in the world who can get sick or have a cough. We just had fun with the cameras being right in our face about the blowup of the incident, and it held to be true. You blew it up.”

No matter who is right or wrong — the two Heatles or the U.S. media — the whole stupid little joke was just bad.

THE UGLY

1) The track at Belmont Park on Saturday.

2) LeBron’s shot … on both Tuesday and Thursday.

3) Colby Lewis’ fastball against Detroit on Monday and Minnesota on Saturday.

4) Roberto Luongo on Monday and Wednesday in Boston.

5) Shane Carwin’s face on Saturday night.

 

Busy Weekend, Lots to Know

When one wakes up on a Saturday morning in the sports business and knows he’ll go non-stop for the next 17 hours, he also knows there is nothing better in the world.

Let’s check the daytimer:

10 a.m. Winnipeg Goldeyes Open House, team practices from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

2 p.m. Radio in Ottawa with A.J. Jakubec on the TEAM 1200.

3 p.m. Assiniboia Downs, 137th running of the Kentucky Derby.

7 p.m. Induction Ceremony for the Manitoba Softball Hall of Fame.

In between all that we have to sneak around to watch the Canadian Football League draft,  the Nashville-Vancouver Stanley Cup playoff game, the Sugar Shane Mosley-Manny Pacquiao WBO Welterweight Title Fight, the Oklahoma City-Memphis and Miami-Boston NBA playoff games and a whole slate of Major League Baseball games that just can’t be missed.

It’s one of the days that when it ends, you say to yourself, “Thank the Lord I’m alive and someday, if things ever get quiet, I just might get to play golf.”

While we rush around from place-to-place, here’s what we need to know:

1. We like Dialed In in the Derby because ever since Big Brown, we have always bet the Florida Derby champion at Churchill. Haven’t always won, but in a 19-horse race that is as good a strategy as any.

2. The Canadian Football League draft, although billed as “a franchise-changing day” for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, is and, well, isn’t.

It IS because the Bombers finally have some draft picks. It ISN’T because players who are selected in the Canadian draft tend to a) fail miserably or b) play for every other team in the league at some point in their career, anyway. Perhaps the best player drafted No. 1 overall in the last 10 years was Steve Morley by Calgary and he now plays for the Bombers.

3. Vancouver can eliminate Nashville at home tonight and probably will. Despite the brilliance of Preds head coach Barry Trotz, the Canucks are just better at every aspect of the game.

4. Now that Dallas has the Lakers’ backs to the wall at 3-0, can Memphis take out Oklahoma City. Memphis hadn’t won a playoff game in franchise history until this year and now the Grizzlies have won a series. If they can win two games at home — starting tonight — they just could be the first NBA Cinderella team in a long, long time.

5. Pacquiao will take out Mosley in three rounds.