Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Braves Chatter


If it's mid-February, then it must be time for reports to trickle out of Braves camp (as they do from each spring training camp, even, we presume, that of the Royals) about every roster player (and the occasional non-roster invitee) looking great. The hitters have all either gained or lost weight and either way, that portends a great season. The pitchers are all throwing with great velocity and are impressing Bobby (with the added perk this year that they're all learning new things from Roger McDowell.) Anyway, the reports are here and here. I don't have much to add, other than to say that it'll be interesting to return to these articles in July to see that Anthony Lerew, Chuck James, and Oscar Villarreal were so highly touted in spring ball. My guess is that one of the three will have an impact, although for James, that's contingent on one or possibly two injuries in the starting rotation.

3 comments:

Michael said...

If I was successful in turning you into a softcore Michigan fan, then maybe I can do the same for F.C. Barcelona?

Michael said...

I highly recommend "How Soccer Explains the World" by Franklin Foer, a quick and entertaining read. The chapter on Barca summarizes nicely why I started rooting for them. The club is owned by the fans. They've never had a sponsor on their jerseys. They were a rallying point for Catalan opposition to the Franco dictatorship, while Real were the regime's team. They've always played positive football. They've never had a hooligan problem (other than throwing coins, cell phones, and a pig's head at Luis Figo, but he deserved it.) Plus, Barcelona is my favorite city in the world (although London, Ann Arbor, and Charlottesville are up there) and I proposed to my wife there, so you'll have to take my word for it that they are the right team to support. And they need you tomorrow against the oligarch's team whose fans were among the first hooligans, whose coach whines constantly and coaches the most expensive team in the world to play behind the ball, and whose star central defender and midfielder taunted stranded American tourists after 9/11.

Michael said...

2:30 on ESPN2.

There's a chapter in "How Soccer Explains the World" on Chelsea's hooligan tradition. Interestingly, the club is located in ritzy West London and has some really rich fans. They were the cosmopolitan English team in the 90s. All that is at odds with the hooligans they have.

http://www.espnstar.com/studio/studio_coldetail_1493228.html

"Lampard was already developing a reputation as a young hedonist when he, Terry and some teammates were reported to have been appallingly drunk and abusive at an airport hotel near Heathrow in front of some shocked Americans in the immediate aftermath of the September 11 strikes on New York City. Lampard was dropped from the England squad to meet Greece in Manchester, and English people the world over shook their heads at the continued misbehaviour of these highly-paid players."

By "drunk and abusive," the article means that he imitated an airplane.