Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Cliff Lee's "The Decision"

I originally posted this Philadelphia Inquirer story about the Phillies signing Cliff Lee on facebook. What caught my attention was the opening paragraph.

Well, this just doesn't happen. Highly coveted free-agent athletes take their talents to South Beach, or sign bank-busting contracts with the Washington Nationals. That's just how it is.


We think of the Cliff Lee signing as a repudiation of money and fame. In signing with the Phillies, Lee spurned the millions of dollars that the Yankees could have given him in order to return to a team with which he felt comfortable. In doing so, Lee isn't "taking his talents to South Beach" or is he?

In some ways, he's doing the exact same thing Lebron James did. By joining the Phillies he's becoming part of a team that no becomes the odd-on favorite to win the National League pennant and return to the World Series. With a rotation of Doc Halladay, Cliff Lee, Roy Oswalt, Cole Hamels and who ever Charlie Manual throws out there on the fifth day, the Phillies have one of the best rotations, since, well...there's been a lot of speculation about that.

What Cliff Lee is doing is EXACTLY what Lebron James did. He's going to the place where he thinks he has the best chance of winning and where he will feel comfortable. James wanted to play with his friends Chris Bosh and Dewayne Wade and Miami was the only place he could do that and also become an immediate NBA Finals contender. Remember, that because of NBA salary cap rules, James could have signed a bigger contract with the Cavaliers. Cliff Lee has friends on the Phillies and by joining that team, and turning down a larger and longer contract with the Yankees, the Phils easily become the favorite to return to the World Series and even win it.

The difference? Well, there was that botched ESPN hour long special, and the infamous quote "I'm taking my talents to South Beach." Sometimes it's better to keep your mouth shut and just sign on the dotted line.

Sunday, December 05, 2010

G.K. Chesterton

"An inconvenience is an adventure wrongly considered. An adventure is an inconvenience rightly considered."
-All Things Considered: On Running After One's Hat

I like the optimistic view. The entire essay can be found here.

In times of difficulty, or anger, or frustration, I hope we can take a different view of the situation and find sport, or excitement in our trials.

Friday, August 27, 2010

Coach, do you remember my name?

The Twins went out and acquired a decent left-handed pitcher after the rest of their lanzadoras siniestras went down with injury. Brian Fuentes who came over from the Angels is a decent pitcher, but it was this quote from Twins manager Ron Gardenhire regarding how he was going to use Fuentes that made me smile.

Manager Ron Gardenhire said before Friday's series opener at Seattle that he will use the now-former Angels closer as a set up man for closer Matt Capps, and "probably as an occasional closer if I use the other guy too much."


The other guy? I mean, I guess 25 people is a lot of names to remember.

Saturday, August 07, 2010

Songs J Loves

Sometimes when little J is tired and fussy, he needs a song to cheer him up. A fussy complaining baby mañoso becomes bien tranquilo sentado in your lap.

The past couple of days it's been this one. The animation is kind of cute as well.

Saturday, July 03, 2010

The Psychology of Penalty Kicks

You could write a lot, and I’m sure a lot will be written, about the Uruguay-Ghana quarterfinal match this afternoon.  I will remember Suarez’s not one, but two stops at the goal line in the waning seconds of extra time, the second being a handball, and Gyan’s subsequent miss of the penalty kick.  Interestingly, what struck me as intriguing at the time and stuck wandering around in my mind was the last penalty kick of the shootout.  Over time it will probably lost amid the celebration of Uruguay, the disappointment of Ghana, and the focus of the ire of ethics teachers on Luis Suarez.  However, my first reaction upon seeing Sebastian Abreu’s penalty kick that clinched Uruguay’s quarterfinal win against Ghana was that it was one of the gutsiest penalty kick I’ve seen. 

But as I think about it more, I’m not so sure.  Instead of admiring his stalwart confidence, I instead admire his logical thought process of the situation.  Let me try to explain.

Now, granted, I don’t watch nearly as much soccer as I do baseball, but watch below, and maybe I can explain what I was thinking.

Notice how he chips the ball as if he were passing it to a 4 year old who is standing at the back of the net.  If the keeper doesn’t move it would be the easiest of saves, but, as keeper’s are apt to do in a penalty kick situation, he dives to one side guessing that Abreu will attempt to smash a shot into the corner of the net and the ball floats gently over the keeper and lands in the back of the net.  Gutsy, I thought.

The more I think about it, however, I believe what is to be admired is not his nerves, but perhaps instead his thought process that led him to take the PK the way he did.  At the time of Abreu’s PK, the last of the set of 5, Uruguay had a 3-2 lead in Penalty kicks.  If he misses, Ghana still has to make their next penalty just to tie the shootout and send it to another round of 5.  He’s in a situation where he has nothing to lose if his shot is blocked, and can clinch it if he makes it. 

In addition he has just seen his teammate Pereira sky a PK into the 25th row.  Perhaps I am giving him more mental credit than he deserves, but by forcing the keeper to make the stop you’re allowing for a larger margin of error into the equation.

And lastly, he’s apparently been practicing this.

Friday, May 21, 2010

I really love this guy!

027

How can you not love that smile!

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Godward

"And all true prayer is Godward. I have heard preachers who pray, so that one really wonders whether God is even allowed to overhear the prayer. It seems to be rather a roundabout way to instruct the congregation, especially when the prayer is introduced by the formula, ''Teach us, Oh Lord"—followed by a sermon in prayer format. But all true prayer is Godward, and it will never be anything else than Godward, especially when prayer moves toward meditation. As I leave for Sweden, I shall speak again that language, where the word for meditation is ''the act of looking at" (betraktelse). That is what meditation is. To look at an image of Jesus...when I look at Jesus, I see God."
-Krister Stendahl, Harvard Divinity School Convocation 1984


As I stumbled upon this, it made me pause to reconsider my own prayers. With a life full of academic pursuits, family responsibilities, and the pursuit of leisure, I find my own prayers short and very egocentric at times. They are focused on my own needs and wants and I forget the nature of my relationship with my Father in Heaven. While Stendahl warns about imposing our own teachings upon God, we can just as easily impose our own wants and needs on God. And yet in spite of our short comings our Father is willing to talk to us in any form. It is days like today where prayers have been answered and I have seen miracles in spite of my failure to follow the best patten of prayer, that I am reminded of the great power of prayer, and reminded again of my own need to better shape those prayers in a way that will bring me face to face with my Father.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Spring Training

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First day with shoes (March, 2010)

Monday, March 08, 2010

The Title's Wrong

The title of this article really should be "A's impose contracts on 29 players." "Agree with" is really a terrible word for a part of the collective bargaining agreement by which the team can renew a player's previous year's contract in his first 3 years of being in the major-leagues without any sort of negotiation.

Then again, I'd readily "agree to" a $400,000+ contract just to play baseball for 6 months.


Sunday, January 24, 2010

Nicknames

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The Little Elf (La Jolla, CA)

It seems as if we're constantly being asked what we're going to call J, as if he's never going to survive his full name. The full name is too much of a mouthful for some it seems, but we like it. But in case you can't manage the entire Scandinavian verbiage, here are some of the names he has that are officially approved by one or both of his parents:

1. The Viking or El Vikingo (for his hairyness at birth) (h/t to Kahl for the link)
2. The Brave, usually used as a title (J the Brave)
3. George (used when he's being funny)
4. Jimmy (in case you don't like George)
5. The Monkey (because he crawls all over you when you try and burp him)
6. The lineman (for his manly grunts)


Just as long as he isn't your average Joe.