Now that was a Twins game that was fun to come home and catch the end of. (I’m sort of glad that I didn’t get to see yesterday’s 18-5 disaster. In my completely biased and uninformed opinion, I’m confident that the triple play should have stood.)
Today, I turned on the TV and found the local Tigers affiliate when Detroit was up 6-2. But the Twins dribbled back to tie the game up in the 9th. My future husband went 5-5 and hit what should have been called a homerun in the 8th, but had to settle for a double. It turned out to be okay though — Morneau scored on a sacrifice and then hit a homerun (that counted) to win the game in the 11th.
Interestingly enough, I was on the phone with my dad at the end of the game and discovered that, even through whatever delay the phone has, WCCO radio in Minneapolis has about a 3 second jump on FSN Detroit broadcasting in Sault Ste Marie, MI.
It sounds like I’ll be up here for the duration of the weekend — at least there will be baseball to watch!
Edit: Dear Jim Leyland, regarding your Tigers Post Game Interview: It was a four run lead you couldn’t hold on to, not just three.
Author Archives: errhode
Red Sox 1, Twins 0
Nail-biter of a game in which neither team seemed to be able to capitalize on some big hits until the Red Sox lucked out in the 8th… alas, for this is one of the few a times in the year that I was rooting against them. I’ll echo my dad’s sentiments and say that the Twins lost it by pinch hitting Monroe for Kubel with bases loaded and one out in the 8th.
But enough about the game itself… sitting here at the northern tip of Michigan, I was lucky enough to watch my two favorite teams because it happened to be ESPN’s Monday Night Game. And boy, did their New England bias come through. In the top of the fifth, the announcers managed to spend the entire half inning prattling on about whether Schilling, Pedro, or Mussina belongs in the Hall of Fame without once commenting on the play going on on the field. Here I was watching the Twins with a runner on first and one out in a very tight game with a limited amount of base runners and the play-by-play guys decided that it was more important to talk about three players (two with Red Sox affiliations, one Yankee) who aren’t playing in the game that’s going on right in front of them. And in the bottom of the inning when the Sox came to bat, suddenly it was all about whether or not Boston could score… despite the fact that they went down 1-2-3.
If anyone wants to know why I occasionally talk about how the Red Sox and Yankees aren’t liked in the middle of the country, this kind of implicit bias is exactly why!
Edit: On Baseball Tonight, the daily webgems have an absurd number of Boston plays. (And I missed the first few, but I didn’t see Denard Span’s catch at the wall in any of those, which was at least as impressive, if not more so, than some of those Boston plays.) But John Kruk is calling them out on the “east coast bias”, so at least someone over there notices.
Clippers 6, Mudhens 5
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I came back to Ann Arbor for the 4th of July whereupon I discovered that neither Ann Arbor or the neighboring town of Ypsilanti does fireworks. (This was actually my first 4th in AA, as I’ve previously always gone out of town.) Thus, to satiate the fireworks craving, my roommate Maggie and I headed down to Toledo to catch some minor league baseball, complete with post-game fireworks. (Nate said he’d come with us, and then bailed because he had “too much work.” But he still had time to spend his afternoon watching a Lifetime movie. Nathan Crockett is lame and I want the Internet to know it.)
Being a holiday weekend, tickets were hard to come by, so Maggie and I had to settle for two seats in the same section, but different rows. Knowing that we would probably be wandering a little looking for adjacent seating we might be able to snare elsewhere, I did an amazing thing.
I did not keep score.
This was the first baseball game I’ve been to since 2004 in which I didn’t record every pitch. I felt like I was doing something wrong when the line-up was called and I didn’t record it. (I did crack eventually and wrote the line-up and the box score on a random receipt from my purse.) It was remarkably freeing to be able to get up and walk around and get food and meet the Mudonna the Mudhen.
Plus, remarkably, a very nice usher asked if we had standing room only seats. When Maggie (wrongly) said yes, we did, he offered us seats right behind homeplate. In the middle of our first inning in our new seats, he offered to bump us up to six rows behind homeplate. As off as I felt, if I had been keeping score, that never would have happened.
The game itself was an exciting one… the Mudhens were never ahead, but down two in the 9th, they managed to score a run. With a runner on second, Mike Hessman, who had been the hero in the 5th inning with a three run homer (his 28th of the season!), came up to the plate. But in true “Casey at the Bat” style, there was no joy in Mudhensville — the Mighty Hessman did strike out.
The box score is below and the full set of pictures are here.
Pow Wow
I’ve just returned from my first ever pow wow, the 17th annual Bay Mills Honoring Our Veterans Pow Wow to be specific. My photos are here. For those unaware, a pow wow is basically a drum and dance competition within the community — and sometimes competitors come from neighboring reservations and tribes. The dancers are judged both on their skills as a dancer and on their regalia, most of which was breathtaking. I can’t even begin to imagine the number of hours spent on the bead work alone!
We showed up for the start on Friday and I was a little let down by the casualness of what I saw. But it turns out, Friday was just the hand drum competition and the just-for-fun two-step “competition.” The Grand Entry (which I took pictures of before I learned it was sacred — they’ve been deleted) didn’t take place until Saturday afternoon. The remainder of Saturday and Sunday was filled with impressive competition dancing and intertribals.
Dancers are categorized by gender, age group (juniors, teens, adult, and golden agers), and style of dance. Men’s dancing, which is for the most part flashier than women’s dancing, has three styles: traditional, grass, and fancy. Fancy, as the name suggests, is the most intricate of the three, both in dance steps and regalia, and seemed to be the crowd favorite. By comparison, women’s traditional is much more controlled — the movement is minimal and the focus is on positioning. Each little movement has deep healing significance. Women’s jingle, as it sounds, is the noisiest of the women’s dances. The regalia for these dances are covered in little metal cones which “jingle” as they dance. However, I preferred women’s fancy shawl dancing, which has the most elaborate quilting of any of the women’s costumes.
In between the competition dance rounds were the intertribal dances. During these dances, which were open to anyone, each of the five drum groups were judged. The singing drum groups consist of around six men who all beat the same drum while singing. The students in my class told me that women are not allowed to beat the main drum, though they can play the hand drums and sing. Indeed, two of the five groups had a woman singer who stood behind the drummer and joined in the choruses — and they were the groups who took first and second in the competition.
Beyond the competition part of the pow wow were vendors selling their wares and food — mmm, fry bread and wild rice soup. The whole thing had an air of any other small town celebration that I’ve been to. Little kids ran around, high school students hung in the back seeming too cool for it all (but not too cool to skip it entirely), and parents and grandparents beamed with pride when it came their kid’s turn to compete. With the exception of the rainstorm that blew threw in the middle of Saturday, the weather was gorgeous. It was a great way to spend a weekend.
Hello from the Sault (Soo)
As of Sunday evening, I am in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan where I will be teaching Ojibwe students some computer science on the Bay Mills Reservation. More specifically, we are teaching them how to use Drupal to build a digital content management system to be the base for a virtual museum of their tribe’s history.
And while I’m doing that during the day, in the evening I am staying in an apartment at Lake Superior State University in Sault Ste Marie, MI. (Not to be confused with Sault Ste Marie, Ontario across the lake.) This evening I took a little walk at sunset down by the water and brought my camera. Based on maps, I thought I could just go from the backyard of my apartment and walk straight over to the water… but then I realized that there is a border crossing in the way. I didn’t think they’d smile too kindly on me hopping a fence just to cut through, especially since I left all of my forms of ID inside. Thus, I took a more roundabout way to the water instead.
The photos I took are here. Unfortunately, while I went to a lighthouse this afternoon, I didn’t have my camera with me. I’ll try not to make that mistake again…
Haikus
These are for Sarah,
Who is up in Alaska,
And asked me to blog.
We have no snow here,
In fact, it is quite nice out,
Unlike at Toolik.
The Detroit Tigers
massacred Minnesota
in Saturday’s game.
But I was away
watching Indiana Jones
under the night sky
with Dave and Martine
at the old Starlite Drive-In
in Cincinnati.
Now Kansas City
is where the Twins are playing.
Easy victories.
Red Sox road trip slump.
Can Manny hit five-hundred?
Not in Seattle…
Maybe Baltimore
is where the Sox can catch up
to the Devil Rays.
Here Come the Grooms…
Big news out of California… with some timely personal significance for my friends Brad and Russ who have been engaged for about a year AND are moving to California this summer so Brad can start a professorship at USC. Hurray Brad and Russ! Now they need to work on having kids so that we can call them Brussell Sprouts… and yes, they’re aware that I’ve been saving that pun for awhile now. The most intriguing part of the NY Times article was the following:
“The court left open the possibility that the Legislature could use a term other than ‘marriage’ to denote state-sanctioned unions so long as that term was used across the board — for both opposite-sex and same-sex couples.”
I’ve been saying for years that the answer is to just get rid of the term marriage in the legal system and make all domestic partnerships, gay or straight, civil unions. I realize this might not play well in the bible belt, but they got over interracial marriages (well, most of them did).
How to Make an American Quilt
Inspired by vague recollections of a similar quilt owned by tfazio, lately I’ve been working on creating my own T-shirt quilt. Today I finished the front side — which is about 5’x7′.
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Now I just need to create the back (same thing, but with the backs of the shirts) and sew them together… which means I’m less than halfway to being finished. If I ever make another quilt, I’m buying myself a rotary cutter. Cutting all those squares and strips with scissors is really tedious. If you want to see more pictures, they’re here.
Red Sox 5, Tigers 1
It took all the way to May to get me to the ballpark this year — the latest for a first game since 2004, when I waited until June. I had some nebulous plans to attend the Twins-Tigers series back in April, but a family emergency had me, coincidentally, back in Minnesota for that week. And thus, my inaugural ballgame of the year was tonight’s Red Sox-Tigers game at Comerica Park.
And it was a good game for a Sox fan. Boston scored three runs in the 2nd inning and never looked back, winning 5-1. Looking at the starting pitchers, Beckett and Verlander, I thought it might be a pitcher’s duel, but then I talked to a pair of guys sitting next to me and it turns out that Verlander hasn’t been the no-hitter throwing Verlander of last year. So instead, the game itself was pretty non-exciting. My observation of the evening (which I’m sure I’ve made before) is that if the home team is never really in contention, the crowd is pretty blah leading to a dull atmosphere at the ballpark.
However, I did have some amusing snippets of conversation with the two guys sitting next to me. For starters, we bought our tickets from the same scalper official ticket booth, and they actually bargained the guy down $10 cheaper than I paid. Note to self — never accept the first offer, even if it is cheaper than face value. Second, being a Red Sox fan pretty much sets you up to be hated outside of Fenway Park. (And arguably with good reason, but I’ll not go there.) However, declaring that your first allegiance is to another Central Division team actually redeems you quite a bit. And being able to remember the name Archibald “Moonlight” Graham will redeem you even further.
Free Ice Cream
Public service announcement by way of one Miss Sheeva Azma…
It is free cone day at Ben & Jerry’s today. Find your local scoop shop and go… thank me later.