7:41 pm, top of the 1st — The Twins got their first base runner on with a walk and I am sitting in my living room watching them play for the first time since moving to Boston. Er, strike that base runner… double play… following by Mauer striking out. Not a good start, boys.
7:52 pm, bottom of the 1st — The White Sox have their own double play in the first, and I am simultaneously watching Tina Fey impersonate Sarah Palin… and by imitate, I apparently mean “quote word for word.”
7:55 pm, top of the 2nd — If Justin Morneau gets an RBI tonight, he will tie Josh Hamilton for the league lead. Striking out is not the way to get that RBI. Speaking of Twins players who struck out, Joe Mauer can do as badly as 0 for 7 and still win the batting title. Barring a multiple extra innings, I think that one’s safe.
8:25 pm, end of the 3rd — Still no score… this whole end of the season reminds me of the South Park episode where the boys are on a Little League team that wins and winds up going to the playoffs… much to their chagrin. They proceed to attempt to lose so that they can just go home and play video games, only to discover that the other teams are trying to lose too. I kind of get the feeling that both the Twins and the White Sox would rather just get the time off this October.
8:31 pm, top of the 4th — Mauer watch: strike out… five more at bats before he loses the crown
Morneau watch: Pop up… not an RBI
Score watch: Still non-existent
8:46 pm, top of the 5th — Ozzie Guillen is interviewed in the dugout and the players are throwing sunflower seeds at him. Meanwhile, the Twins have a runner on third with 1 out. Awesome.
8:49 pm, top of the 5th — Who the heck sent Cuddyer home on a pop fly to *short* center field where the center fielder is Ken Griffey Jr?!?! Way to blow an opportunity.
9:05 pm, middle of the 6th — “This is the first time a one game playoff has been scoreless after five and a half innings,” say our commentators. Fabulous. And then they proceed to give Griffey credit for that throw home… ignoring the fact that he was standing right behind 2nd base when he made the throw. They really should be “crediting” the Twins 3rd base coach for the horrible call. Also, this may have been the first time I have ever seen a break between innings not go to commercial.
9:13 pm, top of the 7th — Mauer attempts a bunt?!?! That’s four remaining at bats he has to lose the title. Meanwhile, Morneau grounds out for another non-RBI at bat.
9:19 pm, bottom of the 7th — Crap.
(That’s code for “Jim Thome just hit a homerun to put the White Sox up 1-0.”)
9:27 pm, bottom of the 7th — Pitching change… no commercial. Is there a lack of advertisers for this game or what?
9:31 pm, end of the 7th — Well, that was less painful than it could have been as the White Sox strand runners on 2nd and 3rd. Now it’s time for the Twins to score some runs and make up for that homer.
9:40 pm, middle of the 8th — With a double play to end any hopes the Twins might have had of making it a big 8th inning, now is as good a time as any to mention the “blackout” and how ridiculous I think it is. They are the White Sox — the color is in their name. And yet, the fans choose to dress in all black, reminding me of the Black Sox Scandal, which mars the franchise’s past.
9:57, end of the game — Darn.
At least Mauer didn’t get up to bat 7 times. I guess I’ll be a Cubs fan now. (Um, about those Red Sox… that’ll be saved for another entry.)
Author Archives: errhode
Go Tigers!
I’ve never been a bigger Detroit baseball fan than I am today. Here’s hoping the White Sox choke at the hands of the Motor City, thus giving the Twins the final playoff berth. Yahoo’s got an interesting story about how the Tigers starting pitcher, Freddy Garcia, is related via marriage to Ozzie Guillen and was traded from the White Sox to the Tigers for the White Sox starting pitcher. Here’s hoping Garcia’s out for revenge and doesn’t want to do his uncle-in-law any favors.
If the Tigers can’t pull it off, the season still isn’t over with a one game playoff tomorrow… but I don’t know if I like the Twinkies chances at US Cellular. I’d have been much more comfortable if they had been able to capitalize on all those stranded base runners on Saturday, thus making these extra games superfluous.
Oh, and as long as Mauer doesn’t go 0-7 in the possible game remaining, he’s the AL batting champ for the second time in three seasons. Go Joe!
Twins 7, White Sox 6
Last night the Twins, down by half a game in the AL Central, squared off against that team they were down against in the third and final game of a series in which the Twins had taken the first two. Going into the series, we knew the Twins were going to half to sweep in order to take a crack at the division title. And here they were, posed to do it… and I was stuck in Boston with no television or radio coverage. At least in Ann Arbor I would have been able to pick up the Chicago radio station.
Have you ever watched an exciting game via Yahoo!’s Game Channel? It sucks. So much so that I wasn’t really watching as much as occasionally checking the window in between other pointless internet surfing. Once the White Sox had their big 4th inning to go up 6-1, I pretty much stopped checking the score. Right before deciding to go to sleep for the night, I finally checked again to see what the damage was, and much to my delight and surprise, it was tied 6-6 at the end of the 8th.
Only I was tired and getting over a cold and as much as I tried to stay awake, it was between innings and nothing was getting updated… and I fell asleep.
That might have been for the best, however. This morning, as I walked from the T stop to my office, I called my dad and he gave me the play by play of the final innings, which was far superior to watching a screen refresh some numbers. I think most people would have just given me the final score, but not my dad. He walked me through every at bat, from the 1-2-3 9th to the blooping 10th in which the Twins scored the winning run in classic short ball fashion.
And now the Twins are up by a half game and we’re into the last series of the regular season. I’m a Cleveland fan now. Here’s hoping they beat the White Sox while the Twins clobber Kansas City.
Another reason for choosing Palin
She has a more crosswordese name than McCain. I don’t care what that article says — she’s too new on the scene to look at past puzzles. It’s only a matter of time before we see the clue “2008 VP candidate who can see Russia from her home state.”
Nixon probably picked Spiro Agnew for similar reasons.
Also, I keep meaning to blog about the AL Central pennant race. I wish tonight’s Twins-Bad Sox game was on national TV! (I’ve got a post about the Red Sox coming too… but I’m not sure how popular it will be.)
Sarah Palin vs. Robin the Frog
I saw a picture of Sarah Palin today and she suddenly reminded me of Robin the Frog (aka Kermit’s nephew). But then I tried searching for images of the two of them to compare, and it’s not as uncanny as I thought. But still, does anyone else see it?
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Update from the road
Wednesday morning I took off with my sister from our house in Minnesota and headed north. Highlights so far include…
Wednesday
- Being introduced to the concept of “guerilla photography” (invented by my sister and father?) — hold the camera out the window and snap pictures while driving and hope some of them come out
- Lunch in Duluth, MN at Hell’s Kitchen
- Seeing the John B. Aird (boat) for the second time this summer
- Dessert in Two Harbors at Betty’s Pies
- Visiting Gooseberry Falls
- Being asked to pull over at an international border crossing for the first time in my life. (They asked me multiple times why I was moving, and what my new job would entail… I think they were trying to make sure I wasn’t fleeing to Canada, which is tempting, but not the case.)
- A night in Thunder Bay, Ontario after having to switch rooms when the first room was unopenable by any key in the hotel.
Thursday
- Lots of rain while driving along the Canadian side of Lake Superior
- Lots of fog too
- Stopping in Wawa, ON to see the big steel geese (three of them!) and buy some in-car fun (trivia games for “ages 8-18”)
- Dipping the toes in at Katherine Cove… in the rain
- Seeing Agawa Rock again… in the rain
- Camping on a beach on Agawa Bay… in the rain… resulting in a very angry sister
- Lots of card playing in a tent (which stayed surprisingly dry inside)
- Sleeping to the sounds of waves crashing on the shore… the rain had finally stopped
Friday
- Waking up just as the sun finished rising and catching the tail end of pinkness over the lake
- Wading briefly in Lake Superior and walking down the beach while the aforementioned angry sister waited back at the campsite
- Successfully building a small campfire… quickly stopped by angry sister wanting to “just get on the road right away”
- Shopping in Sault Ste Marie to buy sister dry jeans
- Trying in vain to find Mad Libs at at least five different stores
- Driving to many episodes of The Jack Benny Show
- Dinner and a walk along a Nipissing Lake beach in North Bay, Ontario
- Solving crossword puzzles while driving
- Stopping in Pembroke, the site of a Fiddlers and Steppers Festival and sleeping in a bed across from a snoring, much appeased sister
Anne, who is by far the better photographer, took many good pictures. At some point I’ll get them off the camera and post the highlights.
Tomorrow… onto Montreal.
State Fair Placentophagy
It is time for my annual report of being gluttonous at the Minnesota State Fair. This year I hit the fair in two separate trips. Last night with my mom and dad, we saw Brandi Carlile in a free concert, which was awesome — her cover of “Hallelujah” is fantastic (better than Rufus Wainwright, not as good as Jeff Buckley… but who is?). Today with my mother and sister we saw the animal barns, which was also awesome because of my first ever observation of placentophagy. (Note that I don’t mean to imply any similarities between the awesomeness of Brandi Carlile and the awesomeness of placentophagy.)
But before I get to the sheep eating one of the richest sources of proteins available, here is the list of foods I ate:
- Pig Lickers (chocolate covered bacon) — Delicious, but rich
- A turkey drumstick — generally reserved for Renaissance Festivals, it fits in well with the State Fair’s “on-a-stick” theme
- Frozen apple cider — So fresh it still tasted like apples
- A honey stick — Just a quarter for a straw full of clover honey
- The best chocolate malt ever — I wait all year for this dairy barn treat, located next to the butter sculptures
- Birch Beer — Why drink a standard Coca Cola or Pepsi product when all this variation is available?
- Sweet Martha’s Chocolate Chip Cookies — Comes in a giant bucket
- Scotch Egg (hard boiled egg stuffed in pork sausage and slathered in horseradish… on a stick, duh) — Always a favorite
- Deep fried cheese curds — A mouthwatering heart attack waiting to happen
- All-I-Could-Drink Milk — A pathetically low number of three glasses this year (because we were only there once and my sister wouldn’t let us return for more)
- Raspberry Chocolate Wine Ice Cream — I couldn’t taste the supposed wine
- Black Cow (root beer float with chocolate syrup) — I was skeptical, but it was good
- Bites of my mother’s corn dog and my sister’s brownie — Always share
- Free water from WCCO radio to wash it all down!
And now for the part you’ve been waiting for… at the Miracle of Birth Center (i.e. stick a bunch of pregnant animals in a barn and hope most of them give birth during the fair), a sheep had given birth to two lambs just before we arrived. When we got there, the birth was so new that the placenta had just fallen out and some of it was still attached to the mother and the umbilical cords were still attached to the lambs. Sure enough, mom and babies were nibbling at that rarest of protein sources, the placenta.
For the human kids in attendance, it was quite the learning experience. I heard more than one parent awkwardly trying to explain to their kid just what they were seeing. “No, dear, it’s okay that she’s bleeding. That’s natural.” “Um, I’m not sure why she’s eating it. Maybe it tastes good.”
And for lasting this long into the entry, if you’re not easily grossed out by the facts of life, here’s one of my tamer photos of the scene. And here’s a little more detailed one, but not for the faint of heart (or all work places). (Both photos are >2MB.)
I should probably mention…
I’m moving out of Ann Arbor in a few hours. First I’m heading to Minnesota to visit with the family, and then up through Canada landing eventually in Boston where I’ll start a new job at my old stomping grounds of MGH.
Also, Nathan Crockett is my hero as are Joshua Brammer, Mark Haynes, James Wiswall, Sarah Barbrow, and John Prensner, because all of them helped me pack my stuff into a little cube to be hauled away by ABF tomorrow. But double kudos to Nate for moving the most stuff.
Bay Mills students on YouTube
As we’re wrapping up the project, which ends tomorrow, we’ve allowed the students to have a little fun and create their own “youth based” content. The highlight of these are the two student created films, now available on a YouTube near you…
- Blueberry Picking (or “What To Do If You See A Bear”) — I get some co-creator credits here for procuring some sound effects and bear footage. I’m also credited for my appearance as “That one white girl.”
- The Brad and Cole Show — Brad and Cole go fishing and don’t catch anything.
The Return to Agawa Rock
After my previous trip to see the Agawa pictographs, I mentioned it to Wanda Perron, one of the Bay Mills historians, and she lent me a book about the pictographs written in 1992. While I knew I hadn’t gotten to all of the accessible pictographs because of the weather, official park literature told me that the last panel of pictographs was accessible only by boat. However, the book mentioned that if the water is calm and you are feeling adventuresome, you can veer off the coastal trail a bit a reach the other side of the rock. The potential for finding the remaining pictographs was enough to get me to go back this weekend, armed with a newer camera borrowed from the virtual museum project.
Saturday, before the alarm clock went off, I woke up at 5 am. As an extended aside, knowing the Olympics had started and that it was 5 pm in Beijng, I flipped on the TV and observed that while NBC was re-airing the opening ceremonies for a second time, the CBC (Canada) was airing live coverage of the first day of swimming prelims, including Michael Phelps first Olympic race. Guess which channel I watched… NBC take note.
After I had my Olympic fix, I got on the road. Before reaching the park, I took a detour to check out the Chippewa Falls. After stopping to get a park pass, I went straight to Agawa Rock where I found much calmer water than during my previous trip. (The two linked photos were taken at almost exactly the same spot.) As a result of the nicer weather, I saw both things I had seen before and was able to make it further down the rock and see pictographs that were new to me.
But that wasn’t the exciting part.

