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Houston Bees?


Valadius

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Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
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I think it was 80 million dollars that made him change to the American League.


Posted


I've always thought the Astros name stopped making sense once they retro'd their logo and moved into a ballpark that paid homage to a 1911 train station. Still, name-changing is a serious leap.

I recall stories surfacing in the 1981-82 offseason that the Mets were thinking they might want to find a new identity. This was on the heels of shunting (as it was seen then) Bob Murphy to radio exclusively plus installing a new manager and generally making with the new broom after two years of new ownership. Predictably, whatever trial balloon that was being floated got shot down. It was the first time I saw business guy Al Harazin's name in the paper, issuing a denial that noted how beloved the Mets were in 1969 or words to that effect as an explanation for why they'd never dream of changing the name.

Unfortunately (or from our perspective, just as well) the Astros don't have that kind of equity to hang their non-orange hats on. When you watch the Mets Yearbooks, you're reminded just how large 1969 loomed year after year in the Met consciousness. When they had nothing positive to report (which was mostly always prior to 1984), they found a way to insert 1969 into the conversation.


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G-Fafif wrote:
I've always thought the Astros name stopped making sense once they retro'd their logo and moved into a ballpark that paid homage to a 1911 train station. Still, name-changing is a serious leap.

I thought that too, but then I kind of got this steampunk vibe that the team suggested a notion of the leap to space as a natural extension of the rail revolution.


Guest Mets � Willets Point
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G-Fafif wrote:
Oh, and A+ for the thread title, Vlad.


I confess. I don't get it.


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
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Edgy DC wrote:
G-Fafif wrote:
I've always thought the Astros name stopped making sense once they retro'd their logo and moved into a ballpark that paid homage to a 1911 train station. Still, name-changing is a serious leap.

I thought that too, but then I kind of got this steampunk vibe that the team suggested a notion of the leap to space as a natural extension of the rail revolution.


I wouldn't give them credit for that. Seemed like McLane was Wilpon-like in his deafness to the history of the club he owned.


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I was thinking it might have to do with the Killer B's of the Biggio/Bagwell days.


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I think the move to the AL gives them a good reason to change names. It closes the book on the NL team's history and allows them to start a new chapter, with all the merchandising possibilities that entails. It can vest a new generation in the team. It's not like the "Astros" have this illustrious history they would be turning their back on, but to the extent they want to, they can still celebrate the special players and seasons of their past. They could even reclaim the "Oilers" name. or go with Tornadoes, or Power, or some other non-space age appellation.


Posted


John Cougar Lunchbucket wrote:
Edgy DC wrote:
G-Fafif wrote:
I've always thought the Astros name stopped making sense once they retro'd their logo and moved into a ballpark that paid homage to a 1911 train station. Still, name-changing is a serious leap.

I thought that too, but then I kind of got this steampunk vibe that the team suggested a notion of the leap to space as a natural extension of the rail revolution.


I wouldn't give them credit for that. Seemed like McLane was Wilpon-like in his deafness to the history of the club he owned.

Oh, sure, largely accidental perhaps, but a vibe nonetheless.






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Vic Sage wrote:
They could even reclaim the "Oilers" name. or go with Tornadoes, or Power, or some other non-space age appellation.


Power. That's good. How about the Houston Enrons?


Posted


Benjamin Grimm wrote:
I looked up what the team name was when Houston was a minor league city, and it looks like the answer is the Houston Buffaloes.

I don't think I like that.


Known more commonly as the Houston Buffs. One who was Buff was John Hernandez -- Keith's dad, in the late '40s.


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batmagadanleadoff wrote:
Vic Sage wrote:
They could even reclaim the "Oilers" name. or go with Tornadoes, or Power, or some other non-space age appellation.


Power. That's good. How about the Houston Enrons?


If they go in this direction, I can feel "the Houston Energy" being the focus-grouped result.

Which would be a heckuva MISL team name.


Posted


Keith's dad met Keith's mom -- a Buffalo gal, if you will -- when he was playing for Houston. Without the Buffs, there's no Keith. Without Keith, who makes the play on that bunt in Cincinnati after Mitchell and Knight are ejected?

Ralph always talked about the size of the mosquitoes in Houston. Keith hints at the birds and the, well, bees.


Posted


G-Fafif wrote:
Keith's dad met Keith's mom -- a Buffalo gal, if you will -- when he was playing for Houston. Without the Buffs, there's no Keith. Without Keith, who makes the play on that bunt in Cincinnati after Mitchell and Knight are ejected?

Ralph always talked about the size of the mosquitoes in Houston. Keith hints at the birds and the, well, bees.


Was this anecdote retold on TV recently. The details are so fresh in my head, as if I heard this tale 20 minutes ago.


Posted


batmagadanleadoff wrote:
G-Fafif wrote:
Keith's dad met Keith's mom -- a Buffalo gal, if you will -- when he was playing for Houston. Without the Buffs, there's no Keith. Without Keith, who makes the play on that bunt in Cincinnati after Mitchell and Knight are ejected?

Ralph always talked about the size of the mosquitoes in Houston. Keith hints at the birds and the, well, bees.


Was this anecdote retold on TV recently. The details are so fresh in my head, as if I heard this tale 20 minutes ago.


Keith's brought it up on the Houston trip each of the past two seasons.


Posted


G-Fafif wrote:
G-Fafif wrote:
Keith's dad met Keith's mom -- a Buffalo gal, if you will -- when he was playing for Houston. Without the Buffs, there's no Keith. Without Keith, who makes the play on that bunt in Cincinnati after Mitchell and Knight are ejected?

Ralph always talked about the size of the mosquitoes in Houston. Keith hints at the birds and the, well, bees.


Was this anecdote retold on TV recently. The details are so fresh in my head, as if I heard this tale 20 minutes ago.


Keith's brought it up on the Houston trip each of the past two seasons.



You're exactly right. In 2010, he retold the tale during the beginning of the Mets game in Houston that Nelson Figueroa started for the Astros. I recall because I watched this game two days ago.


Posted


Edgy DC wrote:
http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/player.cgi?id=hernan001joh

A shame to see "Unknown" with regard to what arm he threw with. Ask Keith!


As per Keith explaining in his book about his life-long comfort at hitting against LHPs, John Hernandez was a lefty.


Posted


Fman99 wrote:


RYOO CRAN'T CHRANGE TRHE RNAME RTHIS RIS RULLSHIT!


The Houston Tralfazes.


Posted


BTW, one of the Mets' radio sponsors during the 1986 playoffs was Astro Nissan. I considered that ironic at best, self-sabotaging at worst.


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