May 2009
Robert Smeraldo
Hello again. I had originally planned to post a typical entry with an update and some other random stuff, but sadly I have other news to report. The Cleveland Indians and particularly the current and former players and staff of the Kinston Indians lost a member of our baseball family earlier tonight, when Kinston’s clubhouse manager Robert Smeraldo passed away from the complications of a massive stroke he suffered Monday morning. Robert was a great guy and a consummate professional who always went the extra mile to make sure we had what we needed, both in Kinston and spring training. He will be missed by many current and former members of the Indians organization and not soon forgotten. There is some more information on the Kinston Indians website for those who desire it, but I’ll leave it at that for now and ask you to keep Robert and his son Robert, Jr. in your thoughts.
Perfect end to the road trip
Hello again. It has been an eventful week since I last checked in. I’ve had two good outings and most importantly I’ve started to feel like I’m throwing the ball the way I am capable of throwing it. It finally feels fluid and natural, whereas for about the first month of the season I felt like I was fighting myself physically on the mound. It was just a matter of time and work, but nice to have that behind me (hopefully). As a team we just wrapped up an eight day road trip to Altoona, PA and Trenton, NJ. We took four of five games from Altoona and had the interesting experience of having one of my roommates (Randy Newsom) get traded to the Pirates, who assigned him to…the Altoona Curve. So he pitched for us one night and against us the next night, which was different to say the least. The Trenton series was a pretty non-descript series overall…except that another of my roommates (Jeanmar Gomez) threw the first nine inning perfect game in the Eastern League since 1943. I threw the last three innings of a combined no-hitter with Hector Rondon in 2007 and that was an amazing feeling, so I can’t imagine how great it must feel to not only take it another notch up the ladder to a perfect game but also to go the distance yourself. It was an awesome game to watch and couldn’t happen to a nicer guy.
The time away from the field on this road trip was not anything to write home about. There wasn’t anything of note within walking distance of the hotel either in Altoona or Trenton. Well, Altoona did have a Target and Walmart so I guess that was pretty cool. Trenton was fairly disappointing, because despite being right downtown there really wasn’t much there at all outside of some hole in the wall shops and restaurants that all battened down the hatches against what appeared to be the coming apocalypse at 7 p.m. (it was kind of scary after dark). I did find a used book store in Trenton about half a block from the hotel, which for me is kind of like winning a small lottery jackpot. I love used book stores because they each have a completely different inventory and I can always find either a new book I’ve wanted to read for super cheap or just a random book that I figure I might as well buy and look through because it’s $1. However, after about an hour of rummaging through old books and grabbing four or five books I happened to glance at the prices and realized that clearly this particular establishment did not understand that the idea of a used book store is not to find a bunch of cheap books and then mark them up to the original sale price. So bottom line on this trip was that I had a lot of sitting around time and read, which I did a lot of and I managed to finish off The Rights of Man by Thomas Paine, Hannibal Rising by Thomas Harris, and Dogs of God by James Reston, as well as putting a dent in Against the Machine by Lee Siegel. All very good books and a hats off to teammate Ryan Edell for recommending Dogs of God, a very insightful history of the Spanish inquisition and the extermination of the Moors that I would highly recommend to anyone and everyone. Anyhow, if I get going on literature I probably won’t be able to stop myself so I’ll call that enough for now and I’ll be back with more in the upcoming days.
Lights, Camera, Inaction
Hello again out there in cyberspace. I haven’t done a whole lot of pitching since my last entry so I’m just going to roll the tape forward to a topic that I actually want to right about: The Oscars. Ok so I realize that these were a while ago, but I finished watching all of the best picture nominees yesterday and I am still fairly flabbergasted that Slumdog Millionaire won best picture. I thought that it was a great picture and Dev Patel was outstanding, I just don’t have it being one of the top five films of the year let alone the best. This year was certainly a bit different from years past in that there were a lot of very good movies to choose from but none that were, in my opinion, surpassingly good so the Academy basically tried not to make the obvious pick. They couldn’t pick Milk because they’d given a best picture statue to a movie with a gay main character less than a handful of years ago, The Dark Knight was too popular, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button was the early front runner, The Wrestler was too offbeat, etc, etc. Again, Slumdog was a very good movie but seven Oscars for a movie that to me wasn’t a top five movie on the year is pretty ridiculous. Here’s how I had the top ten movies of 2008, keeping in mind that there are some fairly notable movies that I have yet to see (Gran Torino, Revolutionary Road, Waltz with Bashir, Departures, Last Chance Harvey).
1. Milk
2. The Dark Knight
3. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
4. The Wrestler
5. Doubt
6. Slumdog Millionaire
7. Frost/Nixon
8. Vicky Cristina Barcelona
9. Forgetting Sarah Marshall
10. Encounters at the End of The World
Most of these are fairly well known movies or movies that did very well at the box office, but there are a couple hidden gems mixed in as well. Vicky Cristina Barcelona stars Javier Bardem (of No Country for Old Men fame), Scarlett Johansson and Penelope Cruz as well as being directed by Woody Allen. It is a hilarious movie and a must see. Encounters is a documentary about the sights, sounds and people living at the South Pole as part of the National Science Foundation’s research efforts there. It sounds rather dry but it is very well filmed and is actually quite engaging and enjoyable. Well, I’ll call that good for now so I can settle in and do some reading but I’ll be sure to check in from our upcoming road trip. Until next time.
American Ruins
Well it has been about a week since I last checked in, but there is strangely little to report. After winning the last two games of our home stand to finish off a sweep of Harrisburg we went on the road and won the first two games of our road trip on Friday and Saturday, and that is all that has happened. We got rained out of our last at Bowie, rained out of our series opener against Altoona, and were again rained out of our Cinco de Mayo themed 5:55 start time yesterday. While a rainout is occasionally a much welcomed break in what can be an arduous season, our present situation isn’t what anybody wants. It puts us in a situation where for the next turn through the rotation all of our starters have had seven days off (instead of the usual four) and as a result will probably not be feeling as sharp as they would prefer. Bullpen pitchers even more so than starters tend to have some rust to knock off after a few days without game action, and having a full game for the bullpen to cover in our double header tonight will in large part negate the rest that we have gotten over the last three days. Needless to say the return to action will be very welcome to everyone involved (although we’re currently in a rain delay and there is a 90% chance of rain tomorrow so it could get pretty ugly).
On an unrelated note, I have decided that despite National Poetry Month having come to an end along with the month of April I will continue to tack a poem onto my postings from time to time as I decide they are relevant. I like doing it and I feel like most people aren’t exactly overexposed to poetry on a daily basis so I guess you’ll all just have to humor me on this point. With that in mind, the “poem” I present you with today is only a poem in the loosest sense of the term, as I tend to strongly resist the notion of song lyrics (the overwhelming majority anyhow) being poetry even if it is art. Anyway, this particular song–”Furry Sings the Blues” by Joni Mitchell–is one that I find myself thinking of fairly frequently while on the road. Many of the cities we stay in and pass through on our bus trips criss-crossing the eastern U.S. are older cities that had their heyday decades ago when banks (like Akron’s Savings and Loan building, built in 1888), bridges and public buildings were built to stand the test of time, of stone and concrete instead of glass and steel. In addition to being beautiful architecture in their own right, these buildings evoke visions of the past and the course of history through our country and is one of the things I tend to take some small enjoyment in on our long bus trips. So, on our recent bus trip from Bowie, MD to Altoona, PA I happened to be listening to this particular song when we were passing the ruined piers of an old, long disused bridge of cut stone and it occurred to me that it might make for an interesting opportunity to share a bit of my road trip experience. So until next time, enjoy.
Furry Sings the Blues by Joni Mitchell
Old Beale Street is coming down
Sweeties’ Snack Bar, boarded up now
And Egles The Tailor and the Shine Boy’s gone
Faded out with ragtime blues Handy’s cast in bronze
And he’s standing in a little park
With his trumpet in his hand
Like he’s listening back to the good old bands
And the click of high heeled shoes
Old Furry sings the blues
Propped up in his bed
With his dentures and his leg removed
And Ginny’s there
For her kindness and Furry’s beer
She’s the old man’s angel overseer
Pawn shops glitter like gold tooth caps
In the grey decay
They chew the last few dollars off
Old Beale Street’s carcass
Carrion and mercy
Blue and silver sparkling drums
Cheap guitars, eye shades and guns
Aimed at the hot blood of being no one
Down and out in Memphis, Tennessee
Old Furry sings the blues
You bring him smoke and drink and he’ll play for you
lt’s mostly muttering now and sideshow spiel
But there was one song he played
I could really feel
There’s a double bill murder at the New Daisy
The old girl’s silent across the street
She’s silent – waiting for the wrecker’s beat
Silent – staring at her stolen name
Diamond boys and satin dolls
Bourbon laughter- ghosts – history falls
To parking lots and shopping malls
As they tear down old Beale Street
Old Furry sings the blues
He points a bony finger at you and
“I don’t like you”
Everybody laughs as if it’s the old man’s standard joke
But it’s true
We’re only welcome for our drink and smoke
W.C. Handy I’m rich and I’m fay
And I’m not familiar with what you played
But I get such strong impressions of your hey day
Looking up and down old Beale Street
Ghosts of the darktown society
Come right out of the bricks at me
Like it’s a Saturday night
They’re in their finery
Dancing it up and making deals
Furry sings the blues
Why should I expect that old guy to give it to me true
Fallen to hard luck
And time and other thieves
While our limo is shining on his shanty street
Old Furry sings the blues.
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