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Archive for March, 2006

Baseball Bias: REMINDER: First Articles due Saturday!

Posted by jetblack on March 27th, 2006

This is just a friendly reminder, that will be posted on the mailing list, my LJ, and also the forums.. that your first article of the season is due on Saturday, April 1, 2006. Topics to help you get started were posted in the forums. You should already have logged in to the forums and checked in with everyone there by now. If not, I’m going to assume you don’t want to write for us anymore.

Please make sure you get it in by 10pm Saturday night. If you cannot make your deadline, please let me know. If you’re having problems getting start, please let me know. If you’re having second thoughts about writing for us, please let me know.

Notice the key part of that paragraph is letting me know. A lack of communication just pisses me off. If you let me know, I won’t be pissed.

Thank you.

Baseball Bias: WBC Coverage

Posted by jetblack on March 27th, 2006

You guys should really go read Tap’s awesome articles on the World Baseball Classic. With ’s photography, I think they turned out to look amazing.

http://www.baseballbias.com

2006 Hope Station Giants

Posted by jetblack on March 27th, 2006

And now, the roster for your Hope Station Giants:

C: Jason LaRue
1B: Todd Helton
2B: Jorge Cantu
SS: Khalil Greene
3B: Troy Glaus
OF: Barry Bonds
OF: Randy Winn
OF: Garret Anderson
OF: Nick Swisher
DH: Lyle Overbay (1B)
DH: Chone Figgins (3B)
BH: Ross Gload (1B)
BH: Nick Johnson (1B)
BH: Craig Monroe (OF)
BH: Jarrod Saltalamacchia (C)
BH: Willy Tavares (OF)
BH: Yorvit Torreabla (C)
BH: Kevin Frandsen (2B)
BH: Doug Mientkiewicz (1B)
BH: Kevin Thompson (2B)
BH: Carlos Pena (1B)
BH: B. J. Upton (SS)

SP: Noah Lowry
SP: Matt Cain
SP: Matt Morris
SP: Jake Westbrook
SP: Tim Hudson
SP: Tim Wakefield
RP: Derek Turnbow
RP: Francisco Rodriguez
BH: Aaron Harang (SP)
BH: Tomokazu Ohka (SP)

So, I did the fantasy auction today for the BayCities league. Tap and I own a team called the Hope Station Giants and the buy-in is $200 plus web expenses (usually around $20). The auction is prety cool, and I had a lot of fun with it last year because there was a lot of trash talk, and a lot of people who’re snagging players that others wanted. Last year was my first real experience with an actual live draft in person (I’d done several online live drafts). This year, the venue was moved from San Jose to San Francisco, and while I was expecting to spend 12 hours, we spent only 8 hours if you don’t include the lunch break. By the time I got to the end of the draft, I was pretty loopy from having a major headache and I was just wanting to get out of there and back home.

I’m pretty satisfied with our team. We didn’t pay more than 60 bucks for any player (the most expensive was $55 for Todd Helton and K-Rod). Last year, I paid $109 for A-Rod and $65 for Nomar, taking away more than a quarter of my salary cap before the draft begun.

The grand prize is $1200 this year :) I hope we can contend for it.

Baseball Bias: April’s Writing Assignments

Posted by jetblack on March 24th, 2006

http://smf.baseballbias.com/index.php?topic=56.0

Please go there now and read. This should resolve the lack of topics to write about problem we had last year.

Baseball Bias: Predictions due tonight

Posted by jetblack on March 23rd, 2006

We pushed off the predictions one more day, because we still haven’t heard from , , , , , or . You guys aren’t giving me the warm and fuzzy feeling of being on the ball. Where are your picks? If I don’t have your preseason predictions by 1am Pacific time tomorrow morning, then I’ll be left with no choice but to see if I can find writers to replace you. I need consistant writing, especially for the Yankees and Red Sox. I cannot afford to have flakes. Please check the forums to see what kind of format we’re using. If you are having problems logging into the site, then you should be telling me so, but I haven’t heard much from any of you so far.

In other news, has applied to be a writer for the Phillies. Any comments on this? :)

Baseball Bias: First Article is up!

Posted by jetblack on March 22nd, 2006

http://www.baseballbias.com

For those of you waiting, Tap’s article on the WBC along with James’ awesome photos are now up and viewable on the main page.

Also, the RSS feed is now fixed. Woohoo!

Awesome way to start off our year!

Baseball Bias: Preseason Predictions

Posted by jetblack on March 22nd, 2006

Last Tuesday, Tasha sent out a mail asking for preseason predictions due on Wednesday, March 22nd. Check your calendars, folk, because that’s today. In case you have forgotten (and most likely you have), we need the following preseason predictions:

Pennant winners, wild cards, and champs for each league and division.
Your pick for World Champs.
Your pick for Rookie of the Year (AL/NL).
Your pick for Cy Young (AL/NL).
Your pick for League MVP.

With each pick, I will require a brief explanation (around 100-200 words) on how you arrived at those conclusions. We will be running your answers every day next week, so we need time to format them and get them ready. I’m using Tap’s submission as the yardstick for how I’d like you to write this up:


NL East Braves

The rest of this division is so unimpressive. The Mets have a stockpile of good hitting if key components like Delgado and Floyd can stay healthy, and if Beltran can figure himself out after last season’s disappointing outcome. The Phillies seem to have the right pieces like NL Rookie of the Year Ryan Howard, and infield mates Chase utley and Jimmy Rollins, and who can forget Bobby Abreu? For whatever reason it doesn’t come together for them, and it won’t again in 2006. Those two teams pose the greatest threat to the Braves, and it’s not that big of a threat to worry Atlanta fans. That, and the Braves seem to win no matter what happens.

NL Central Cardinals

The NL Central is another division that’s difficult to pick a winner for. The Cardinals are definitely not the team that went to the World Series in 2004, but they still have Pujols, and their starting staff is solid despite losing Morris, and with a healthy Scott Rolen, they can win the title without much competition. The Cubs success lies in their starting staff and with the usual health issues of Prior and Wood, the team will go only as far as those two take them. The improving Brewers are still a year or two from pushing for the division title, and the Astros will experience some drop-off from the pennant winning run of a season ago. After that, there’s no reason to discuss what will happen within the division; the Reds and Pirates won’t make a difference in the final outcome of the NL Central.

NL West Giants

With a healthy Bonds, this team is a contender, bottom line. Bonds shows no ill effects from the knee problems and/or legal issues he suffered through last season and he’s lighting it up in spring training. That may not mean anything come April 3, but it’s one more reason the Giants are looking up. After adding the starting pitcher they’ve been needing for a while in Matt Morris, San Francisco’s chances multiplied thanks to strong pitching and a weak division. The Dodgers and Padres should keep pace behind the Giants for most of the season, and Colorado and Arizona aren’t equipped to do a lot in this division regardless of how poor it may end up.

AL East Yankees

Isn’t this what happens every year? Given that the Red Sox can’t figure out what they’re doing and Toronto just spent a lot of money that won’t get them very far, the Yankees kind of win this by default. They still have the players that matter: Mariano Rivera, Derek Jeter, et. al., and while the starting staff has looked shaky the past few years, the Yankees are in the best shape of all teams in the division.

AL Central White Sox

The best team in the league got better when they traded for Javier Vasquez and Jim Thome. Granted, those two have had their problems, but with a Sox roster that has remained relatively unchanged following their championship run, there’s no reason they can’t repeat. The Indians look mighty exciting and should hang with Chicago for most of the way. The Twins have faded badly since becoming the talk of this division in 2000 and don’t have much left to contend for the title, and what can be said about the Royals and Tigers that won’t put the reader to sleep is very little. Onto the AL West.

AL West Angels

The Western divisions in both leagues have fallen into tepid competitions between the teams that mess up the least. This year’s fight will be no different than the past few years, Angels and A’s taking it to the final days of the season to see who wins the division crown. The Angels should win it again, if the A’s new and improved power hitting falters. Milton Bradley has a lot of potential, and when inserted into a lineup that needs that kind of boost, it could be the right combination. The other side of Bradley’s coin is that he could just flat-out detonate and use up what may be his last chance, in Oakland. The A’s success is not contingent upon the life and times of their new outfielder, especially with arguably the best pitching in the league, but Bradley means more to the Athletics than he has on any previous roster. If that’s saying the Angels will win because the A’s won’t, so be it. Seattle is still a work-in-progress it seems, and Texas has baseball schitzophrenia; they can’t figure out if they’re contenders, pretenders, spoilers, or bottom-feeders.

NL Wild Card Brewers

Is 81-81 a record to be excited about? If you follow the Brewers, you’d better believe it. It proves what most Brewers fans know, and in turn what a lot of baseball fans are just now learning, that Milwaukee has the tools to be a contender for a while. Rome wasn’t built in a day, and neither is a championship ballclub, and while it may be a stretch to consider the Brewers for a wild card spot already, it’s worth giving them a shot. The team that finishes behind the Braves in the East could contend for this spot, but right now, it’s Brewers, especially if their quietly great pitching holds up.

AL Wild Card Indians

Cleveland almost stole the division from under Chicago’s nose last season, and despite losing Coco Crisp, they’ll be the most exciting team in the league. It’s possible that Oakland will end up as the Wild Card with the Red Sox in the mix, but there’s more reason to expect the Indians to be there when all is said and done.

NL Pennant Braves

See above NL predicitions.

AL Pennant White Sox

You have to be in it to win it.

WS Champ White Sox

White Sox will repeat. Next?

AL ROY Francisco Liriano, Twins

The pressure is off this top prospect with the Twins not expected to contend. It’s the right atmosphere for the young man to develop. Competing for the fifth starter slot will give him a sense of purpose, and pitching out of the back end of the rotation gives him all the room he needs to make mistakes.

NL ROY Matt Cain, Giants

For years the Giants minor league system was weak. With two teams in the organization winning their league titles and only one club finishing below .500, AAA Fresno, that’s changed. Giants fans know Matt Cain is the proof of the farm turnaround, and when he is thrust into a role on a contending team, it’ll make or break him. He impressed while pitching for the dismal 05 team late in the year; the
next step is to see how he handles games that count.

AL Cy Felix Hernandez, Mariners

A world of potential is in this kid’s hands. Like Liriano, he has the blessing/curse of developing while the team won’t cotend for a playoff spot. Given his age, still only nineteen years old, for all the ability and talent he has, a less-than-ideal environment could hurt whatever progress he can make. Voters didn’t take Marlins young ace Dontrelle Willis’ case seriously in 2005, thanks Cardinals starter Chris Carpenter’s comparable stats. One thing Carpenter has on Willis was the playoff appearance. If voters won’t buy Hernandez’s stats without a division or wild card title, it’s the biggest threat to his award chances.

NL Cy Ben Sheets, Brewers

All eyes will be on the Brewers in 2006, and if they are to contend, they’ll need their pitching to carry them. Ben Sheets leads the rotation and his success is imperative to the team’s chances to further improve and to make some noise in both the divisional and wild card races. Injuries are a concern, and if his back problems continue, there will be no title run for the team and no award for Sheets. However, if he’s left unhindered, there’s no telling what he can do.

AL MVP Vladimir Guerrero, Angels

So his numbers have been up and down the last few years, this guy can still hit and run and field and just flat out play the game. Voters like to give players of contending teams more credit than guys who are not in divisional or wild card races, and since the Angels should win the AL West again, it’s to be expected that Guerrero will lead the way for them, and to his second MVP award.

NL MVP Barry Bonds, Giants

Death, taxes and a healthy Barry Bonds winning NL MVP awards. Like him or hate him, the scandals and the distractions can’t slow him down. This man is the Giants, period the end. Many contending teams rely on one or two guys to push them to success, but no team leans so heavily on their superstar than the Giants do on Bonds. For a title run, he’ll swing the bat, play defense without incident, and even the intentional walks won’t make a difference. In nine years the Giants have been in various playoff races to at least the very end of the season, and Bonds has won 4 MVPs in that span. Coincidence, definitely not.


Please don’t blow your first assignment. I sincerely hope you all are writing articles ahead of time, so as not to leave a gap in weekly content.

Thanks.

Outstanding

Posted by jetblack on March 20th, 2006

Congratulations to Team Japan and Oh-san! Yatta!

From the Archives: Opening Day 2005

Posted by jetblack on March 20th, 2006

http://jetblack.livejournal.com/126778.html?thread=183354#t183354

This seriously made me chuckle. Man, I can’t wait for next season to start!

Death of a Swordfish and Other News

Posted by jetblack on March 20th, 2006

My three year-old laptop, Swordfish, finally croaked this weekend when the hard drive marked itself nearly 50% bad and then Windows told me to grab what I could and get the fuck out of Dodge, because it was about to burn down. Luckily, I noticed the hard drive getting slower and slower before the warning (hard drive failure is IMMINENT!) and backed up all my important data to my 60GB iPod as quickly as I could.

When it comes to computers, I’m pretty peculiar in some respects. I have machines with dedicated purposes. Swordfish was my internet and writing machine. Redtail is my games-only machine. How I design and install applications has a lot to do with what I use machines for, and so while swordfish was decked out with serious anti-spyware and the like, Redtail I never surfed on and used only to hook up on EverQuest or Guild Wars… so when Swordfish finally keeled, I had to look at Redtail as my last hope. Unfortunately, I used Redtail to such an extreme that it only had around 900 megs free on it. Doh.

A new laptop was needed, anyway, as I never travel without one. So last night, in an attempt to price new laptops, Julia and I ventured out to Fry’s, Best Buy, and Circuit City. It was not our intent to buy a laptop, as I was pretty much convinced after we left Best Buy that going online to buy one was going to be our only option. When we arrived at Circuit City, though, they had the exact laptop I was looking for like a year ago. Okay, it was no longer being made and the chipset was a little on the old side, but it was perfect for my needs in all respects. We returned home with a new toy, and I named it Hammerhead (after Jet Black’s fighter from Cowboy Bebop). I spent a majority of the night transferring my stuff onto it and uninstalling all the superfluous shit they pre-install into their laptops (I really don’t need Microsoft Works… when clearly it Does Not Work).

In other news, Baseball Bias is nearly complete in getting all the bugs worked out of the system in its beta stage. The RSS feed is fucked up, though, and I’m trying to figure out how to fix it. I’ll add it to the list of stuff I need to do that’s not work-related. The one thing about BBB that scares me is that most of my writers don’t seem at all interested in doing this. All but one have responded to my mails; all but one have actually submitted an article and well… it just plain sucks. I can stomp and howl and shout all I want, but I can’t write everyone’s articles for them, so I guess if it fails, Julia and I are out the money we invested into it. And this was no small sum, either. I’m hoping for the best, but it seems like my optimism is biting me in the ass already.

Work’s been okay… I think the hard part’s over (getting situated), and not it’s all about finding things for me to do. Unfortunately, that sometimes lands me on the wrong side of most projects and tasks, but at least they’re keeping me busy and interested in my work, which was something missing from my previous jobs.

I’ve been feeling the urge to write again, but this is so not the best time for it. With the wedding coming up and my work schedule becoming more and more erratic, it’s difficult for me to actually find the time to sit down and dedicate an hour or two to writing when it could be better spent working on something that needs to get done. Since I finished Knight Commander late October last year, and started writing Knightfall for the National Novel Writing Month in November, I logged over 100,000 words in under two months (closer to 125,000 words). That’s a lot of fucking writing in such a short amount of time (for me), and I think I might have overloaded my creative side by giving it that level of access to my free time. By the end of December, I felt as though the wind had completely spilled out of my creative sail and I needed some time to recharge. I just hope it doesn’t take me another year to get back on the horse… of course, that would be just in time for NaNoWriMo 2006, now, wouldn’t it?

Unwound will be starting up after I get married, but we haven’t published a new schedule for it, yet. I’m hoping to sit down with Jesse and Jenn and discuss season three with them in the next week.

Anyway, that’s pretty much all the news I’ve got. Do you dare to comment?