Jun 30

Your periodic reminder that baseball players are human beings

Yesterday, a number of commenters on a story in the Star blasted Jonathan Sanchez because of his Twitter account. Apparently, Sanchez definitively hates Kansas City and doesn’t care about his performance here because he doesn’t Tweet about baseball. No, seriously:

Did anyone hear about this clown’s twitter account? Not one mention of the Royals. Most of his tweets are inane crap about his star sign, quotes about love and relationships and almost nothing about baseball. He should be let go just for that if it’s really true.

So, because he doesn’t tweet about his job, he should be fired from it? Does Carol from Human Resources tweet about her job? No? FIRE THAT CLOWN. CAROL DON’T CARE.

A reply to that comment:

I was hoping to see something about the initial trade or how his was progressing with rehab, but it’s all crap about being a Scorpio.

Reminder: Twitter is a wonderful way for celebrities to break down the walls between them and their fans. HOWEVER COMMA, it is not a requirement that athletes tweet about their injuries, their feelings on a trade, how they played today, their personal goals for the season, how the July heat is going to change their game, the clubhouse chemistry, their working relationship with their coaches, or anything else about their sport.

If a Royals player wants to just tweet  stuff about the team, that’s neat! Fine! How nice of them to share about their job outside of press conferences. But if they don’t, that’s OK too! It’s a personal account, not a team-mandated exercise in public relations. They choose to share little 140-character bits of themselves with you – follow if if you like it; unfollow if you don’t. It’s simple.

Ballplayers aren’t robots built solely for the purpose of baseball. They’re people, and it’s OK for them to sometimes think about things that aren’t baseball.

The people who left these comments on the Star don’t know Jonathan Sanchez personally, but they’re perfectly comfortable with diagnosing him as a man who doesn’t care about his job, because he doesn’t constantly tweet about it.

I don’t know him either* so I won’t say definitively that the commenters are wrong. Maybe he doesn’t care? I don’t know. But reading his Twitter account is not the way to know, because he’s a human person with a family and stuff, and it’s OK to express thoughts and ideas about them sometimes.

*but I did let him borrow my camera one time. And, you know, I’ve had conversations with him, which is certainly more interaction than the armchair shrinks in the Star comments can say.

Jonathan Sanchez enjoys trying new hobbies, such as photography. That's my camera.


Of course, Sanchez pitched badly today. (I was mercifully not present for those innings. Thank you to my doctor for scheduling an appointment at that time so I was spared from watching that.) I’m not trying to sugarcoat that. But no matter what his postgame comments might be, please remind your neighbors and coworkers that sometimes, people internalize their struggles and not share them with reporters.

Failing is hard. Failing in front of a bunch of people is even harder. Having reporters shove microphones in your face after you’ve failed in front of a bunch of people is harder still, I would imagine, though luckily my life’s failings are not scrutinized that way. We might wish for a thoughtful breakdown of every faulty pitch sequence, an admission of shortcoming, and a contrite promise to do better, but not everyone emotes or communicates that way.

All of this is to say: Jonathan Sanchez is a human person. So is every other player on the 40-man. They may perform badly on the field, but they’re still people and you probably don’t know them personally, so can we stop with the psychoanalysis?

Salvador Perez and Jonathan Sanchez

One more picture, just because. Click the pic to see more from Omaha's season.

 

__________________________________________________________________________________

Please consider supporting my writing and photography by doing your Amazon shopping through my affiliate link. (Explanation here.)

Jun 25

A blog post about blog posts: Farewell, Will McDonald

Nobody in my day-to-day life is likely to care much (if at all) about the changes happening in the Royals blog community today. If I tried to explain to any of my coworkers why I got a little bit choked up while reading a post about a blogger ceasing to blog, it wouldn’t make sense.

But where would I be without Royals blogs? That’s a serious question with an answer that is a little bit scary: without Royals blogs, I imagine myself still thinking about Ws and Ls as the things that best define a pitcher’s talent; lamenting low batting averages without looking for other outcomes that make a hitter valuable. And perhaps worst of all, watching a game by myself could mean I was watching a game alone.

It’s weird how much Royals fans online mean to each other. Baseball is just a game, but it’s not. It’s a time investment that would be wasted if we didn’t share in it meaningfully with other human people. And it’s awfully hard to find other human people in regular life who care the way we do, right? So Royals Review isn’t just a blog, and Will McDonald isn’t just a blogger. The site, under his direction, is our free support group, where we sarcastically plan victory parades in the Plaza whenever GMDM does something we don’t like. Back when Google Reader still had a Share function/community, a large number of my shared items were things McDonald wrote, accompanied by the note “Will is better at blogging than you.” None of my ShareBros ever argued that point.

Anyway, real life happens, and sometimes bloggers have to tend to that.

Now the crew at Royals Authority is stepping up to fill McDonald’s vacant throne. Craig, Clark, and Nick wonderful guys and tremendous bloggers as well. They’ve been supportive of me all along, and even included my work in their book one year. And really, it will be nice to have so much of the best Royals stuff in one place instead of two.

Best of luck to Will McDonald in life offline, and to the Royals Authority trio in their new home. Change is hard.

Jun 08

The greatest picture in the history of whatever

Irving Falu and Kevin Kouzmanoff, presented without further comment:

OK, just one comment: I like these guys. (Click image to see the rest of last night's pictures!)

 

 

Jun 02

A few notes from Friday night’s 5-4 Chasers win

Iowa’s pitching coach Mike Mason was ejected in the 3rd for arguing a balk call. Here is Anthony Seratelli diving back into first on what turned out to be a balk that moved him to 2nd.

The pitcher had to balk to make the play this close.

Animated faces from Mason as he gets ejected.

 

See? Fun faces!

The funny thing is, it ended up not mattering whether Seratelli got to take second on the contested balk. He scored on a Wil Myers home run anyway. The homer was to dead center, and Myers said afterwards that he didn’t even get all of that ball. How many guys can hit homers to dead center of anywhere without actually making solid contact?

Myers heading into the dugout after homering.

Ryan Verdugo didn’t get the win* but he pitched well enough, racking up 6 Ks while walking just two in five innings. He did give up 2 runs, 1 on a home run. He ran into some trouble in the 6th, facing three batters without retiring anyone. Francisley Bueno bailed him out and went on to record two scoreless innings.

*Jeremy Jeffress got a really stupid W. He blew the Chasers’ lead in the 8th by giving up a homer to Josh Vitters, but Omaha scored in the bottom of the 8th so the doubleyoo goes to Jeffress. Dumb.

And now for some bullet points!

  • I tweeted this earlier, but Myers will return to CF duty on approximately Monday. He has been suffering from some tendonitis in his right shoulder, but took a break from throwing for a few days. He has been back to throwing the past three days and feels fine, which is good because apparently DHing is boring.
  • Kevin Kouzmanoff got two hits, including one that produced the game-winning RBI. With Irving Falu back tonight, and Johnny Giavotella likely to follow, it is starting look like my Kouzy might be the odd infielder out. It’s going to be a pretty crowded portion of the roster.
  • Speaking of Falu being back, he arrived in the Omaha dugout in the early innings and greeted manager Mike Jirschele with a huge hug. Falu is just one of those cheery people who improves the moods of those around him, just by being in the vacinity.
  • Outfielder Terry Evans cut his hair, which is a noticeable change because it used to look like this. Evans and Myers are now no longer hair-twins.
  • Below is a picture of Ryan Verdugo, because I couldn’t figure out how to incorporate it earlier.

Good night from Werner Park, where the Storm Chasers improved their record to 33-23 and protected their 7-game lead over Iowa.

May 24

A tale of David Lough and triumph and woe

David Lough now owns the club record for career triples, with one in the 8th inning of Omaha’s 5-2 win over Salt Lake. Big congratulations to him!

I was only about 30 feet from 3rd base when he slid in safely and captured the record. I was in the middle of an experiment with shutter speed, trying to reduce the blurriness caused by motion that is often a problem after sundown. So here’s Lough preparing to step in to the box:

Like I said, I was experimenting, so it's dark. I know.

I tired to follow Lough around the bases, extending my experiment with various camera settings.

the operative word is "tried."

Once I realized Lough was going for third, I had to scramble to get around the railing of the dugout steps and adjust the focus so it was somewhere in the vicinity of third base. That…didn’t quite happen.

We wanted to look at those pretty billboards back there, right?

So…yeah. This kind of thing is why I say I’m a “picture-taker,” not a “photographer.” And it sucks that Lough doesn’t get a sweet picture to commemorate his accomplishment.

Bullet points:

  • Wil Myers homered to left again tonight. Though the wind was blowing out that way, he didn’t need it. It went even further than his first one – and that one cleared the AT&T Home Run Porch.
  • Clint Robinson and Tony Abreu also homered for Omaha.
  • Odorizzi was quite good, going 6 innings with 7 Ks and zero walks, and six hits. Five Bees hitters flied out, and on a windy day like this, any ball hit in the air has the potential to turn into disaster. But none fell in or flew out for SLC against Odorizzi.
  • Francisley Bueno and Tommy Hottovy needed just 28 pitches to get through the final three innings.

 

May 22

Storm Chasers lose to Bees, but here’s a picture of Ryan Eigsti in a ketchup hat

He borrowed it from the promotions staff.

Wil Myers went 0-3 with a walk and a strikeout. He led off the 8th with a fly ball to deep center that looked like it could have been his first AAA home run, but fell a bit short.

There really wasn’t much offense of which to speak. Tony Abreu tripled in the 8th, but was stranded.

On the other side of the ball, Mike Montgomery was serviceable, but not dominant. He threw 6 innings with three walks and four strikeouts. He gave up three runs, all on a homer in the 2nd by SLC CF Matt Long.

Francisley Bueno continued his fantastic season with a two-inning outing. He allowed no hits and no walks, and struck out four Bees. Coming into tonight, Bueno had struck out a little more than a batter per inning.

A special birthday shoutout goes to current Bee and former O-Royal Ed Lucas, who turned 30. For an idea as to why Lucas is one of my favorite people in baseball, check out the answers he gave me when I interviewed him about life in the minors a couple years ago. (His interview is about halfway down the page.)

Happy Birthday!

good night from Werner Park…Ryan Verdugo starts tomorrow for hopefully one of the last times as a Storm Chaser. It’s getting to be time to see what he can do in the Bigs, no?

May 20

Doubleheader Game One: Chasers win 8-5

Outfielders Derrick Robinson (front), Jason Bourgeois (right), and Wil Myers (back) have ups. Bourgeois broke up a no-hitter in the 4th and started an explosion of offense. Omaha won 8-5.

 

WIL MYERS UPDATE: Myers went0-2 with a strikeout and a walk. He also scored a run. His batting average in Omaha is .455, and obviously will remain that high forever and ever, amen. A three-game sample is big enough, right?

 

Omaha is now 27-16 and has an 8-game lead in the division. Game two is about to start, with Sean O’Sullivan making the start.

May 18

Your first (?) look at Wil Myers in Omaha

Wil Myers started tonight in CF, batting third. He told me I can take as many pictures as I want, as long as they’re good. Well, uhh….sorry about this first one, Wil.

DSC_5078

Uh. gross. I didn't even mean to.

Myers went on to single in his first plate appearance. Here’s a few shots of that at bat.

DSC_5102DSC_5110

this swing produced his first AAA hit. THE LEGEND GROWS.

DSC_5111

Cruising into first. Click on this or any of the pictures to see more shots of Myers on Flickr!

Bloggers, you know the deal – you’re welcome to use these and anything else from my Flickr, same as always. Just attribute responsibly.

__________________________________________________________________________________

Please consider supporting my writing and photography by doing your Amazon shopping through my affiliate link. (Explanation here.)

May 15

Link of the Day: Storm Chasers player cards, by me!

For some reason, I didn’t shout this off the rooftops, even though it has been extremely exciting for me: The Storm Chasers hired me to take the photos for their 2012 player cards.

So, for the first homestand-plus, I ran all over the ballpark, taking pictures of each player. It was actually the project I used to justify the purchase of my new lens, and I’ve been giddy with anticipation, waiting to see my work on the cards.

They’re here!

Go buy a set?

Unrelated: I think that it is necessary to post the following picture every time Jonathan Broxton earns a save.

May 13

You’ve got to be kidding me

Below is a screengrab from a Royals.com story. I can’t even wrap my head around this editorial decision.

I'm sorry, what did you say? Am I misreading that headline?

Let's take a closer look. Yeah, that says what I thought it did. But let's look a tiny bit closer.

 

Yep. It's official. They think we are that stupid.

Older posts «

» Newer posts

site tracking with Asynchronous Google Analytics plugin for Multisite by WordPress Expert at Web Design Jakarta.