Edgy MD Site Manager Posted September 8, 2015 Posted September 8, 2015 Before there was Diamond Mind Baseball, there was Pursue the Pennant, its ancestor card-based game that was that Strat-o-Matic for the guys who wanted to go deeper.Occasionally, things got a little weird and borderline racist. There were little icons on a very few cards that would mean extraordinary occurrences would occur for these players and these players only. For instance, there was skate on Lonnie Smith's card (and presumably on the cards of a few other klutzy fielders), which meant that a certain roll of the dice on a hit in Lonnie's direction would mean some sort of disastrous error, such as falling down and losing his shoes, or kicking the ball into centerfield for a four-base error.For Andujar and Jose Rijo and perhaps a few others, there was a chili pepper (I think) icon. This meant that they were eligible for plays from the "Latin Hothead" chart, and if the dice came up just so, they would go nuts, try and brain somebody with a pitch, tear off the uniform, attack an umpire, or maybe try to batter Johnny Roseboro with a Hillerich & Bradsby.
Benjamin Grimm Old-Timey Member Posted September 8, 2015 Posted September 8, 2015 The Latin Hothead Chart? Wow!
Edgy MD Site Manager Posted September 8, 2015 Posted September 8, 2015 It was a more innocent/more guilty time. I think Paul Molitor bankrolled the game's development in the early years. Maybe with some of his Brewer teammates like Don Money and Cecil Cooper?
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted September 8, 2015 Posted September 8, 2015 G-Fafif wrote:First game I ever saw Seaver start in person, the opponent was Andujar. Seaver was brilliant: 8 IP, 11 K, 0 BB, 3 H. All he gave up was a barely fence-clearing line drive homer to Cesar Cedeno in the first. But that was all he had to give up. Andujar threw a complete game shutout and won, 1-0.Couldn't stand the guy in the heat of 1985, of course, but you're not supposed to cotton to the toughest of competitors on your archrivals.There's a cool Mets trivia question in here. Anyone who scours Mets media guides would probably nail the question and the answer before even finishing reading this post.
G-Fafif Old-Timey Member Posted September 8, 2015 Author Posted September 8, 2015 batmagadanleadoff wrote:First game I ever saw Seaver start in person, the opponent was Andujar. Seaver was brilliant: 8 IP, 11 K, 0 BB, 3 H. All he gave up was a barely fence-clearing line drive homer to Cesar Cedeno in the first. But that was all he had to give up. Andujar threw a complete game shutout and won, 1-0.Couldn't stand the guy in the heat of 1985, of course, but you're not supposed to cotton to the toughest of competitors on your archrivals.There's a cool Mets trivia question in here. Anyone who scours Mets media guides would probably nail the question and the answer before even finishing reading this post.Well now I need to be enlightened.This have something to do with the 1-0 games decided by home runs perennial filler entry?
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted September 8, 2015 Posted September 8, 2015 G-Fafif wrote:G-Fafif wrote:First game I ever saw Seaver start in person, the opponent was Andujar. Seaver was brilliant: 8 IP, 11 K, 0 BB, 3 H. All he gave up was a barely fence-clearing line drive homer to Cesar Cedeno in the first. But that was all he had to give up. Andujar threw a complete game shutout and won, 1-0.Couldn't stand the guy in the heat of 1985, of course, but you're not supposed to cotton to the toughest of competitors on your archrivals.There's a cool Mets trivia question in here. Anyone who scours Mets media guides would probably nail the question and the answer before even finishing reading this post.Well now I need to be enlightened.This have something to do with the 1-0 games decided by home runs perennial filler entry?You're definitely on the right track.
G-Fafif Old-Timey Member Posted September 8, 2015 Author Posted September 8, 2015 Only time Seaver was the LP in one of those games?
batmagadanleadoff Old-Timey Member Posted September 8, 2015 Posted September 8, 2015 G-Fafif wrote:Only time Seaver was the LP in one of those games?Cesar Cedeno was the only player to twice hit a Home Run in a game that the Mets lost 1-0
G-Fafif Old-Timey Member Posted September 8, 2015 Author Posted September 8, 2015 Cripes. The second time was presumably the 1-0 loss to STL from 30 years ago this week.That's very good (well, very bad) stuff.
Edgy MD Site Manager Posted September 8, 2015 Posted September 8, 2015 Cedeño was one of the all-time great stretch run additions. LOOK at that month he had with St. Louis as he was limping toward the end of his career. How the heck did that happen?That the Mets should lose a pennant because the Cards traded some going-nowhere minor leaguer for the Cedeño while the Mets gobbled up Larry Bowa who played exactly as bad as you might have expected (in fact, worse) ... well life isn't fair, Johnny.
Guest Mets Willets Point Guests Posted September 9, 2015 Posted September 9, 2015 Edgy MD wrote:Larry Bowa Hothead Caucasian dudes.
Guest Rockin' Doc Guests Posted September 9, 2015 Posted September 9, 2015 Mets – Willets Point wrote:Edgy MD wrote:Larry Bowa Hothead Caucasian dudes.Definitely. Instead a chili icon, Bowa's card had a nut.
Edgy MD Site Manager Posted September 18, 2015 Posted September 18, 2015 Milo Hamilton, long-, long-time MLB play-by-play announcer, who called Hank Aaron's 715th, among many other milestones, has died.Spent the second half his career in Houston, but he also worked for the Cardinals, Cubs, White Sox, Braves, and Buccos.Fantastic taste in jackets.
Guest themetfairy Guests Posted November 10, 2015 Posted November 10, 2015 Former Braves Pitcher Tommy Hanson29 years old - sheesh!
Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket Guests Posted November 10, 2015 Posted November 10, 2015 Holy mackeral, I was just thinking about what became of him. "Catastrophic organ failure." I don't wanna speculate but is that substance abuse?
seawolf17 Old-Timey Member Posted November 10, 2015 Posted November 10, 2015 John Cougar Lunchbucket wrote:Holy mackeral, I was just thinking about what became of him. "Catastrophic organ failure." I don't wanna speculate but is that substance abuse?I suppose we'll find out eventually, but man, stuff like that is terrifying.
Guest themetfairy Guests Posted November 10, 2015 Posted November 10, 2015 John Cougar Lunchbucket wrote:Holy mackeral, I was just thinking about what became of him. "Catastrophic organ failure." I don't wanna speculate but is that substance abuse?I was thinking it could have been one of those fast moving systemic infections.
Zvon Old-Timey Member Posted November 11, 2015 Posted November 11, 2015 John Cougar Lunchbucket wrote:Holy mackeral, I was just thinking about what became of him. "Catastrophic organ failure." I don't wanna speculate but is that substance abuse?I am reading that it was.
Edgy MD Site Manager Posted November 24, 2015 Posted November 24, 2015 Do something excellently but futilely, because excellence is its own reward. Do it in honor of Ken Johnson, MLB's only loser of a nine-inning no-hitter, who passes at 82.
Edgy MD Site Manager Posted December 11, 2015 Posted December 11, 2015 John Cougar Lunchbucket wrote:Holy mackeral, I was just thinking about what became of him. "Catastrophic organ failure." I don't wanna speculate but is that substance abuse?Overdose. Toxic levels of cocaine and alcohol.http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mlb-big-league-stew/tommy-hanson-died-due-to-an-accidental-cocaine-overdose-172444428.htmlStay clean, young Mets.
Guest themetfairy Guests Posted December 27, 2015 Posted December 27, 2015 RIP Dave HendersonAge 57 - kidney failure
MFS62 Old-Timey Member Posted December 28, 2015 Posted December 28, 2015 Jim O'Toole. 78.http://sports.yahoo.com/news/former-cincinnati-reds-star-pitcher-jim-otoole-dies-185322291--mlb.htmlRIP.Later
Frayed Knot Old-Timey Member Posted December 28, 2015 Posted December 28, 2015 Everybody of course remembers Henderson. But even outside of the '86 post-season he was just a fun guy to watch because he always looked like he was having so much fun out there - even if we saw him only sparingly because he spent most of his career on the left coast.I remember O'Toole vaguely. He had a string of strong years pitching for some good Cincy* clubs in the early/mid-60s -- going 69-43 from 1961-'64 -- even if often while playing second banana to staff-mates Joey Jay and later Jim Maloney.But those four years also consisted of 131 starts plus 7 relief appearances and 2 WS games adding up to nearly 1,000 innings pitched. And, like most stories about how real men back in the day 'finished what they started' etc., those kinds of stories generally fail to add in the part about how this 'real man' had his last good year at age 27 and was out of the game completely by 30. Maybe that was from heavy use, maybe not, but that part is inevitably left out of the story when tales of pitchers of a certain era are told; see also: Koufax, Drysdale, Marichal (done, or virtually so, at 30, 31 & 33).* Reds averaged 92.25 wins/yr from '61-'64 but won just one pennant ('61) before losing the WS to the Yanx in 5In '62 they won 98 games but finished 3rd!! (LAD & SFG tied at 102), and then in '64 they lost the pennant in the final weekend by losing 4 of their final 5 games right after leaping into 1st place by sweeping the Mets in a five game/three day series (DH's Fri & Sun). Mets scored just 4 runs over the five games.
Zach Thornton Syracuse Mets - AAA LHP On Sunday, the southpaw tossed five shutout innings as the bulk pitcher. He gave up 2 hits, walked 2 and had 5 strikeouts. Explore Zach Thornton News >
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