The Pinetar Rag

May 13, 2012

Congrats: City!

Filed under: Canned Heat,EPL,Football,Footy,Random,Red Sox,Soccer,Uncategorized,Urban Legend — mcgonnigle @ 11:15 am


(The moment that Ferguson got the news…)
Was that not one of the most amazing things you’ve ever seen in sports? My goodness. What a final league day. Phenomenal. Defies description. That’s how it ended in my head in the backyard, as a kid, doing my own commentary and kicking the ball against the shed. My oh my oh my. Take THAT, Whiskey-Nose! Hahahahaahahaha….wowo. I emailed my City friend congrats. He’ll be incoherent after that. Don’t blame him. Wow.

So long Dirk Kuyt. You’ll Never Walk Alone, Dirk. Loved your work.

Seeing Maxi in the team twice in the last two games makes me wonder if he won’t stay another year. Hmm…

To those of you who don’t like or “get” soccer, or believe all the stupid nonsense about how it’s “girly” or the guys wear shorts, or there’s no hitting like American football, or there’s not enough scoring…I just want to say, today, I feel extra sorry for you.

May 12, 2012

Hair they are

Filed under: Canned Heat,EPL,Nostalgia,Red Sox,Soccer,Uncategorized — mcgonnigle @ 8:36 am

Somewhere in this photo of Ted Williams at the 1982 Old Timer’s game at Fenway, is a regular reader of the Rag.

The hair is amazing. Check out the kid who’s head is partly behind that book on the left side. That’s like a shampoo commercial~
***
EPL season ends Sunday. City and United tied. If both win, United would have to win 10-0 or better, assuming a City win of 1-0. I really hope United doesn’t win #20. City fans have suffered since before the days of NY Cosmos Denny Tuert, who was on the last cup winning side in the 70′s before last year’s FA Cup triumph.

Sure, I’m rooting for them now, but after their ridiculous money turns them into a juggernaut, I’ll be ruing it. But right now, enjoy it. Walk on, City…

May 1, 2012

Opposite of “Drill Baby Drill”

I’ve been reading and hearing folks cry about how the USA is not drilling and is importing too much oil. I understand the jobs aspect, certainly. But I have always had a contrarian thought about this topic and I never hear anyone bring this up: To the extent that we buy and import oil/gas/coal/fossil fuels, we are essentially “conserving” our own and burning that of other nations. By “own”, I mean, that which we can dig up inside our current political borders.

This is a complex issue and I don’t mean to simplify it to say good or bad, but think about it, if we burn every last crumb of what we have here, THEN we will have to import 100% of it and there will be no recourse. If we burn others’, we will end up relatively, with more and more. So, to me, so long as things are politically stable, AND we can economically swing it, buying and burning other countries’ oil/gas, makes our slice of the pie (that we politically control), bigger in the longrun.

Also realize that in some ways, even though we are gluttons and that is not a good thing, it is an astounding fact that 90% of ALL the oil burned on ALL SIDES in World War II, came from Texas.

The scary thing is that unless some drastically new technology (not the stupid battery cars) is developed/discovered, or some serious conservation happens, there WILL be a day of reckoning – out about 100 to 250 years, where modern society will cease to “work”, for lack of a better term, as energy becomes so expensive that things we take for granted, like food and transportation (of food) become prohibitively expensive. I would expect “resource-wars” before that, but you get the idea. I’m not taking a political position on this, either, just making the observation. It’s coming. Those reading this probably won’t have to worry about it, but our kids might; or their kids.

I giggle a little at the fracking issue. Trust me, when the price goes high enough, they’ll frack; everyone, including your auntie, will frack. They’ll frack and frack some more because of what the price will do. Thought experiment: imagine a stream in the woods and EVERYONE knows it’s full of gold nuggets but they’re told, “don’t take the gold out”. How long do you think that gold will sit there? Well, sure, it depends on the consequences, as it always does, but when the price of something goes high enough, people will risk even death, to get at it (and I am by no means equating fracking with death.  Not at all.  The same group that ignores such a basic things as the variability of the sun, is now campaigning against fracking).

And before you get upset at how we are blowing through our natural resources (we are, let’s face it), try and realize how many GOOD things have come out of that. That’s the part the “anti-” crowd never wants to imagine or talk about. All the inventions and medicines and knowledge and industry that using the energy has unleashed. Oh yes, it has. It’s real, but it’s harder to imagine, particularly for the simple folks, which is what makes it easy to demagogue. Most of one side’s positions are conveniently on the “easy” side of the ledger and the other side has the complex arguments to make–the uphill climb.

Anyway, to the extent that we burn others’, we bank our own. That was the original premise. Someday we may be glad we did. God help us then.

April 18, 2012

Jackie Robinson Day 4/15/2012 Citizens Bank Park


For the 2nd straight year, we were guests of the Philadelphia Phillies on the occasion of Jackie Robinson Day, April 15, 2012. The statue is a one-of-a-kind, hand-carved, solid-wood statue, depicting Robinson in a 1955 home Dodger uniform. Everything you see on that statue is wood; the shoes, shoelaces, hat, skin, uniform: everything. Fans enjoyed taking photos with it all game long. It was a great experience and I want to thank the Phillies, particularly Kenny Johnson and Deb Rinaldi, for their work in making this come off so easily.

Jackie’s next stop is scheduled to be the Negro League Baseball Museum in Kansas City, MO, in time for this Summer’s All-Star game, which is in KC this year.

The Phillies crew gets some close ups of Jackie right off the bat.

The boys eat lunch behind the sign. It’s a long drive down for them and they need some fuel.

The boys each got a Phillie Phanatic from the guys at the Phillies. It was a very generous gift for them and they loved them! All day, they were our constant companions.

Here’s Gregg Murphy of the Phillies going over our in-game spot in the 5th inning. They could not get a camera to show the statue live, so they used the shots they had gotten earlier and we did the spot from the standing room section behind the left field foul pole. Murphy was very nice and put me at ease and the spot came off nice and relaxed.

The boys were tired but rallied in the suite. We only had an inning or two up there, because we have to be with the statue mostly, but we did get up there. The two gentlemen in the background are the fellows who played for the Phildelphia Stars in the early 1950′s. They signed the ball we got last year and we were glad to see them again. The Tuskegee Airmen were in a different suite and I got over there in time to speak to a few of them and that was a real nice treat. They are great guys and the country should be aware of their sacrifices under trying conditions.

The boys pose with their Phanatics.

The boys loved the doughnut car and even got some freebies.

All in all, it was a wonderful day. Both boys were old enough to go and really enjoyed it. The Phillies’ staff was just great as always and we hit all of our marks during the day. Many, many people said very nice things about the statue and it’s always great to get the statue out in front of baseball fans and hear their comments. It makes all the hours spent covered with sawdust seem worth it. Thanks, everybody. Hope to see you next year.

April 12, 2012

Holy Comollis

Filed under: Canned Heat,EPL,Liverpool,Liverpool Football,Red Sox,Uncategorized — mcgonnigle @ 8:24 am

Click here to read it on This is Anfield

Liverpool, just 2 days from the FA Cup Semi vs crosstown rivals, Everton, have dusted Damien Comolli. The move is not shocking, but the timing is a bit of head-scratcher.

Comolli, for readers who don’t know (read: J, if he’s even read this far on a “sah-ker” post), was recommended to John Henry by Billy Beane. He had done some nice things at Spurs (Gareth Bale for one) and he was our “Moneyball” analyst. I hate the term “Moneyball”, because most don’t understand what it is. You mean, “looking for undervalued players in the player market”? That’s been going on since the beginning of time. So now it has a name.

Comollis had been, and will continue to be, the focus of intense fan debate. As in, “how much influence did he have”? Who bought Adam, Downing, Henderson and Carroll? Who bought Enrique and Suarez? The good buys. So the debate will rage on: was it Kenny? Or Comolli? Or Henry even?

I would point out something about the spending that most overlook. After the mistrust and bad feeling and dare-I-say, “anti-American” feeling, I feel Henry deliberately made sure to pump cash in to sway fan opinion, such was level of vitriol at the time. In other words, Henry calculated that he needed to buy his way out of some of the anti-American bad-feeling. So Liverpool fans need to realize that they can be, at times, part of the problem.

The firing sends a message that Henry will not sit idly by. He will act decisively. That’s good. Will Kenny be next? Is this the firing that buys Kenny more time? Can the bad stuff be dumped on the guy exiting and Kenny live to fight another season? If they win the FA Cup, can you fire the guy? It will get interesting. Big match on Sat. I have an idea what I think but don’t want to jinx them. I will say that I hope that Carra does not play but I am afraid he will. If he plays, and Everton scores, will he be central to giving up the goal? We’ll see. Love to see Maxi, Bells and Suarez play starting XI. Love to see Downing and Adam on the bench. Ditto Carroll. Behind, you may run him out there to help score on set pieces, but only as desperation. It’s going to be fun.

March 26, 2012

Video game players make worse drivers (and make you late)

I read a report on a study while waiting in a deli. I don’t have a link for it, unfortunately. The study measured whether frequent video gamers are better drivers. Findings? They are not.

They are actually more prone to accidents, tickets and road rage. This is something I didn’t need the study to just know in my bones. There are certain cars you see treating traffic on a morning commute like a video game. They take risks all out of proportion with any time saved (usually very little to none). And you can imagine that some of them are very taken with their own “skills”, to the point where they are kind of “showing off” to us lesser drivers.

To them I say, “we know you CAN do this or that, but you really SHOULDN’T”. Even if you are super skillful, there are all sorts of people on the roads and the populations’ skill level is the old bell shaped curve. I call it the rule of “mom”. You must picture every other car being driven by your mom. Would you tailgate then? Would you flash brights? Flip them off? Cut them off? If mom doesn’t work for you, then picture Jesus. Ask yourself the same questions. He died for all the dumb things you ever did: would you still cut him off?

The study posited that perhaps the video gaming removed the thought of real world consequences from these folks. Sure. I’ll buy some of that.

Add to all this, the fact that in other studies I have read, volume tie-ups are actually CAUSED by the most selfish drivers. Yup, because they go too fast and travel too close to the guy ahead of them, they have to over react to speed changes, and that slowing down propogates backwards through traffic until someone is stopped dead and traffic piles up behind them. Once that happens, the only way to undo it, is one car at a time, from the front.

So the guy flashing you the brights and passing you with inches to spare to shame you; he’s not only endangering your life (and property), he’s actually making you late on a good many days. And you thought he might be a good guy because of that big, giant, NY in the back window of his black SUV…

February 5, 2012

Is the NFL “Socialist”? MLB Socialist?

Filed under: A's,Baseball,Casting Call,Football,Random,Red Sox,Yankees — mcgonnigle @ 12:13 pm

I keep hearing this. “The NFL is Socialist”. You also hear it when you complain that the Yankees take the field every night with an AVERAGE payroll advantage of 115 million! That’s AVERAGE. About half the time, yea, it’s worse. That’s a joke, right (well, not to Yankee fans who are in mass denial)? No, Yankee fans cry that if you have a problem with that, then you want “Socialism” for MLB.

There’s one problem with that. It’s 1000% wrong. The term “Socialism” describes the relationship between a government and its people. Got it?

When you talk about the NFL, or MLB, you are talking about an individual business. These businesses sell a product to the public. The product happens to be a fair sporting contest on the field between professional athletes. By “fair”, we mean, at a minimum, that the outcome is not known to any great degree, beforehand (that’s wrestling). That’s why players gambling is frowned upon; because the whole thing rests on the public TRUSTING that the games are honestly competed on the field.

Sharing revenue or capping expenditures, ENHANCES that which the business is selling: fair, honest competition on the field. It apples to oranges to even mention “Socialism” at this point.

If you DO NOT limit expenditure disparity (read: New York Yankees), then you have an UNFAIR system where outcomes are not totally in doubt.

Why hasn’t this system glitch been addressed in MLB? Well, the owners that bought the teams (including the Yankees) bought into an unfair system, and to change it with them holding the team, would diminish the value of their asset. That’s a tough sell. Good luck.

The other reason it has never changed is TV money. The biggest post season numbers come from the biggest markets and that drives the biggest revenue generator, the national TV package. So the on-the-field bias, translates into a nice bias at the cash register. Again, good luck changing that one. It’s patently unfair, but it works FOR them. Look, even the Mafia knew in 1930, to split New York into 5 zones! Having NY compete with Pittsburgh or KC is patently ABSURD!

Why else is it permitted? Well….er…Yankee fans LIKE IT! They like beatdowns and they have convinced themselves that it isn’t unfair. With an irrational mass denial akin to political or religious fervor, they have opted to “look away”. They like to feel “superior” in their fandom. There’s nothing wrong with what they do–only with what others do. Heck, it’s to the point where Yankee fans will advocate with a straight face, that super rich men should buy the small market teams and operate them at tens of millions in losses each year out of their own pockets! Just so Yankee fans don’t feel, ahh, you know, guilty, about outspending the rest of the league by an average of 114 million in 2010 and 115 million a night in 2011. Great.

Socialism to ensure your product actually IS what you say it IS? No, not even close. If MLB was a drug company, they’d be shut down because their product does not live up to it’s label (Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906). Imagine that. But there’s nothing to see here.

February 2, 2012

Unique Curt Schilling life size “bloody sock” sculpture to be auctioned for ALS

Click here to go to the site in a new window

Recently completed: a solid-wood, hand carved, life size statue of Curt Schilling’s leg (yes, leg). The sculpture will be auctioned off to benefit ALS at a future date to be determined.

I had a ball making this item and I really like it although it generates some interesting responses, from bemused to, “who’s Curt Schilling?” from the non-sporting crowd. I have had it in front of people and the responses have been nice.

I got so tired of people not understanding that my art was 100% wood, even, at times, when they were standing in front of it and being told by me that it was wood. You would be surprised. So with this piece, I put it right out there and I plan on doing that with all of my pieces from now on.

* And before anyone asks me, I’ll tell you. ALS is handling the auction. It’s not on any fast track right now. Yes, I have tried to contact Curt Schilling through social media to propose the idea that he sign it to give it legs in the auction. Since I’m not making a dime off of it, I figured that I’d at least be acknowledged and to date I have not been. Am I disappointed in that? Well, to be completely honest, I am a little, I have to admit, but, I know he’s doing this huge launch to a product that his company has sweated blood to produce, so I understand the busyness.

I know he has people coming at him from all angles with his gaming company and on and on, so I do respect the demands placed on him, however, when someone spends the time I did, meticulously creating an art object for a charity auction for a cause that he champions, then I would hope for an acknowledgement at least. Even if the answer is “no”, which it could easily be. He may be uncomfortable getting too close to something that might appear self-serving. I would totally respect that. But I would like to at least hear, “message rcvd. great work. sorry, no can do good luck”. That’s it. Would that be too much? I read 10 tweets a day from him about the video games and sundry so it’s not like he’s not plugged in. Oh well, everything happens for a reason. So don’t ask me this question again! Got it? haha. Thanks.

Addendum: The Jackie Robinson statue looks like it will be appearing at Citizens Bank Park for the Mets-Phils on Sun April 15, 2012, but I do not have confirmation on that as of right now. It’s a strong possibility however. Love to see everyone there. Day game! Very pleased that the schedule makers did that.

Also, I am in talks with the Negro League Baseball Museum to have Jackie shipped out to Kansas City and displayed at the museum through the All-Star Game period. I’m very happy about that as well. Jackie belongs there and I hope a lot of folks get to see him.

January 29, 2012

Downing: John Henry in a white suit

Robbie Fowler still has the white suit. He is blase about it saying that if they’d won, no one would care, and I think he’s right about that. So much of media stuff deliberately manufactured and manipulated. Have a look at newsbusters.org any day to read examples from bias to outright lies.

Anyway, my brother and I have a fascination with Fowler and I had not seen the white suits in years. I still recall the sting of Cantona’s goal. I was at O’Donahue’s on 1st Street in Hoboken, NJ. I recall the ball brushed Ian Rush as it went by and I always thought, “…how odd that his last touch in Red was that one.” Cruel really. Things like that made yesterday all the more sweet.

There was one alarming piece of news regarding the Downing transfer. It is theorized that Werner and Henry were duped by this video of Downing putting balls into trash cans willy-nilly, from 30 yards. If you play footy, you know instantly that this is doctored footage. Once or twice you could get lucky, but it’s clearly not real. And even if it were, the game of football has so many different skills, that even if you could do that, it wouldn’t guarantee that you’d be a top EPL player!

So the urban legend that is building is that the stupid Americans got duped by this video and overpaid for Downing. While I’d like to think there was SOME explanation for it, this is bad. This will turn the fans on the American owners and now, as soon as anything negative turns up, the ire will be directed at John Henry. The Yanks need to do some serious damage control asap! This is not a good thing longterm. They’ll never live this down. They have gone from the guys who swooped in and, with Liverpool 4 hours from bankruptcy, saved the team and righted the ship. It was a great platform from which to start, but, I’m afraid, is pretty much undone in this one story, true or not.

Being that Henry made millions in farm futures, you are pretty sure that there is no grass growing under him. I don’t believe that their due dilligence was limited to this doctored video. I don’t doubt that the video might have piqued their interest, but I would like to think they did more homework, but, with the fans we’re looking at, it won’t much matter once this becomes accepted as “the version” of what went down. They don’t need much convincing to buy the “Americans are stupid and know nothing about soccer” meme. Henry might just as well show up at Anfield in a white suit next time. Is he Fowler’s size? The suit still hangs and is a phone call away.

October 20, 2011

Artie Shaw, Bobby Thomson and why the Cards have already won it

The Cards just look ready and centered for this. Seeing Ron Washington send up Esteban German, who had not had an at bat since Sep 15, and he strikes out with a man on second…brutal.

Cards in 5 or 6. I have rarely or ever seen a team so poised to play postseason as LaRussa’s group is. They KNOW they will win. They conduct themselves like that. Baseball is mental and the Cards have that conquered.

I loved Joe Buck comparing LaRussa to John J. McGraw. McGraw was hated in his time. Edd Roush didn’t want to go play for him. He lost the 1908 pennant because he was hated. Good analogy for Tony? haha. I can not deny, however, the degree to which I feel the Cards are READY for this. They are out ahead of the game. You want to use the phrase dujour? The game “slows down” for them.

I actually find that “slowing down the game” to be a very apt description of it. Since I have started playing soccer again, for the first time since the mid 80′s, I really feel that is very descriptive.

When you are not confident, you tend to feel that there is LESS TIME to do something, than in actuality. The great clarinetist and bandleader, Artie Shaw, had one of my favorite quotes. I read it 30 years ago and still dredge it up from time to time. Folks gushed about his playing and he downplayed it by saying something along the lines of [I'm paraphrasing] “There is more time than you realize between things that seem to happening very fast”. He was talking about “fast” in a musical setting of course, but his point is that with practice, you can gain familiarity and effectively LENGTHEN the time that you have to make decisions, between closely spaced events.

In soccer recently, I have seen this in spades. Even though I haven’t played in 30 years with people, (except for a handful of pickup games), I have spent hours hitting the ball, two footed, off of walls. It’s a form of cardio exercise that I have always enjoyed. So my footy skills are decent, but my game vision is not!

When I first started back up, I would feel that I had no time to do things, ergo, I rushed them and had really bad results. I resorted to consciously trying to slow myself down–slowing down my decision making; picking up my head and looking around. All of a sudden, I wasn’t forcing passes that weren’t there. The great Jan Molby, of Liverpool, once said to Jamie Rednap, “…you can’t play what you don’t see”. And he’s right. It’s not enough to have a hunch that a blur in your peripheral vision is a runner with the right color shirt on, you have to SEE it and KNOW that they are there.

So it’s counter intuitive, but by slowing down YOUR reactions, you actually have better results, because your brain needs an extra beat to take in information and process it before you act on it. Now in soccer, you might make 30 or 40 key decisions in a game, if not more. But a fielder in a world series baseball game? Maybe he makes 3 or 4 key decisions; maybe even just one per game. You don’t get the chance at redemption in pressure baseball, is my point. You better get that decision right.

One step in on a ball over your head? Throw to the wrong base in a bunt situation? Very little room for error, so the team that can slow it down enough to make the correct decision, is, like Artie Shaw, aware that there is a beat more time to make these decisions than the inexperienced panicking player THINKS there is.

And bear in mind that the ability to calm yourself and remain in this “calm-but-centered” state is difficult to maintain! It’s not as easy as just THINKING it! It’s a well-honed discipline. For me, in soccer, sometimes making an early dopey decision can actually SHARPEN it! And sometimes, it can wreck it. While you can “find” it mid-game, I feel that more often, it’s a product of your mental attitude before the game. How do you feel? Do you feel strong? Are you excited to play? Or did you just look at the forward you will be covering and get that sense of dread, as in, “…I can’t go step-for-step with that guy!”

What I’m saying is that it’s a mental approach that can not be faked or manufactured and yet it is so important to performance, particularly under pressure. The team that can generate this feeling of confidence and maintain it, will prevail–it is often the difference. It can also be said, I believe, of managers and coaches and gaffers. It can also be contagious among team mates and coaxed at times among team mates.

Look for this in the games that are left. Ask yourself which team seems more confident in the moment? And realize that it doesn’t always mean that the player with this feeling will always get a hit–always succeed. It just means what Bobby Thomson told himself on Oct 3, 1951, before he hit “The Shot Heard Around the World”. He went up to hit thinking, “…give yourself a CHANCE to hit”.

And he did.

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