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Eric on baseball
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    1
    0 starseric | Shared With: Everyone - Jan 08 2008 | news, baseball, Roger Clemens
    Nonverbal Actions Add to Clemens’s Story - New York Times

    The money quote: "Even the most skilled body-language experts are right in only about half of all cases, he said, and investigators often study body language to decide when to dig deeper."

    I'm sorry. A 50% success rate in determining a yes/no question does not connote any great skill.

    On the positive side, I guess we can all be body language experts.

  • vote
    8
    0 starseric | Shared With: Everyone - Dec 05 2007 | business, sports, Alex Rodriguez, baseball, New York, Yankees, economics
    A-Rod's dollars make sense for Yankees - MLB - Yahoo! Sports

    A great breakdown of the numbers involved in determining what a star player like Alex Rodriguez, means to an organization like the Yankees.

    Quoted: The landmark $305-million contract should prove a sound investment because of Rodriguez's performance and marquee value. - Major League Baseball news

  • vote
    20
    0 starseric | Shared With: Everyone - May 24 2007 | baseball, TIVO
    Thumbnailclick to play

    Another new Tivo commercial, also funny.

    Quoted: What does your TiVo get you? Share your TiVo story (and try on your antenna) at MyTiVoGetsMe.com

  • vote
    10
    0 starseric | Shared With: Everyone - May 10 2007 | Curt Schilling, baseball, blogs
    38 Pitches

    Curt Schilling's "38 Pitches" blog is actually quite compelling reading tor you baseball fans. It's a look inside the day to day public life of one of the game's great pitchers, replete with media bashing, mea culpas, and straight talk.

  • vote
    28
    4 starseric | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 06 2007 | pitcher, baseball, video
    The Ultimate Relief Specialist | New York Times Video

    Yikes. I'm glad i never had to face an ambidextrous pitcher in little league.

    Quoted: Pat Venditte Creighton University pitcher Pat Venditte, believed to be the only ambidextrous pitcher in N.C.A.A. Division I baseball, performs in a game.,

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    5
    5 starseric | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 20 2006 | baseball, MLB
    ESPN.com - MLB - Cardinals vs, Mets - Game 7 - NLCS

    Last night's Game 7 NLCS game was one of the most enjoyable baseball games I have watched in a while. It had high drama, amazing plays and gritty performances.

  • vote
    8
    5 starseric | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 19 2006 | Nomar Garciaparra, baseball, Los Angeles, San Diego, sports, video, Padres, Dodgers, home run
    ESPN > Back to back to back to back home runs!

    If you're a baseball fan, you really have to see these highlights from last night's game between the San Diego Padres and Los Angeles Dodgers. One of the most amazing games and finishes. If this had happened in the post-season, it would be legend.

  • vote
    3
    5 starseric | Shared With: Everyone - Aug 01 2006 | Mark Lowe, Seattle, Mariners, sports, baseball
    Seattle Mariners : Player Information: Mark Lowe

    This new reliever, Mark Lowe, has been absolutely stellar every time I have seen him. Fearless. He's pitched in 9 games in some very difficult situations (bases loaded, etc.) and he has not given up a run yet!

    The snapshot as of today:

    1W / 0L
    9 Games
    10.1 IP
    5 H
    3 BB
    12 SO

    ERA 0.00

    Yowzah!

  • vote
    3
    4 starseric | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 04 2006 | Mark Fainaru-Wada, Lance Williams, Bill Clinton, Barry Bonds, Mark McGwire, baseball, sports, steroids, Balco, books
    Salon.com Books | The scapegoat | "Game of Shadows," by Mark Fainaru-Wada and Lance Williams

    An exceptionally well written review of the new "Game of Shadows" book which is causing Barry Bonds such a stir. it sounds like a really intriguing read.

    I like Bill Clinton's take on the whole issue:

    "First of all, keep in mind that as I understand it Major League Baseball did not adopt a clear, unequivocal ban on steroid use with consequences, like the Olympics has had for years, until recently ... Well, my experience is in politics and everything else, if you're in a great contest with high stakes, people will do what it takes to win within the framework of the rules ... It's clear now that there is an overwhelming, perhaps unanimous consensus among the owners and the players and the representatives and the media that steroid use is not only bad for the players, it's bad for the game and it's wrong, and it should be banned and there should be consequences for violating the ban ... But I think we have to be careful looking back before that was the rule and even before that was the consensus ... We need to remember that baseball itself was highly ambivalent about doing anything about this, facing the truth and having strict rules for years and years and years. So now we have the rules. Let's go forward and enforce them. But I think ... looking back and looking down on people and trying to claim that, you know, things that happened five, 10 years ago in their careers weren't real because they did this -- I think that's a little hypocritical. Where were we then and why didn't we ban it then if that's the way we feel?"

    Quoted: "Game of Shadows" makes a powerful case that Barry Bonds is guilty of steroid use. But baseball is guilty, too -- and so am I.

  • vote
    5
    4 starseric | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 17 2005 | baseball, politics

    This term was used in a blog I was reading regarding Bush's well-rehearsed and scripted presentation to troops recently. Bush joked with a military commander that he didn't mean to throw a hardball when asking how things were going in Iraq. Audio shows that this was rehearsed and more of an Eephus pitch than a hardball. Cool metaphor.

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