Finneran: Sports Talk

Tom Finneran, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Finneran: Sports Talk

Baseball reigns supreme for the next couple of weeks.

Bruins’, Celtics’, and Patriots’ seasons are in their very early stages. There’s plenty of time—months in fact-- to gauge their chances for serious playoff runs. Not so with baseball and the Red Sox. As the cliché reminds us—“there is no tomorrow”.

The same holds true for college football which is never a big event in New England. Nonetheless, serious fans watch from a distance and assess Alabama, Ohio State, Clemson, Notre Dame and the emerging scene. Here too there is time to separate the men from the boys.

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Back to baseball. The Sox win over the Yankees was impressive. Yankee Stadium, Yankee myth, and Yankee mystique were in play, particularly after the Yanks grabbed a split coming out of Fenway. Also in play-- Aaron Judge and the rest of that scary lineup. The Sox didn’t tremble however. They attacked Yankee pitchers and they prospered. Porcello and Evoldi were clutch performers in the Bronx.

On to Houston, home to the defending World Series Champions the Astros. They are a great team. And, as of the writing of this column (early Wednesday evening), the series is up in the air. It’s riveting stuff.

Three observations, two current and one retrospective. First, I like listening to the game on the radio. The Sox announcers are good conversationalists. They don’t force the broadcast. They don’t cram in irrelevant nonsense curated by college interns---who cares about a team’s historical performance from two decades ago? It has absolutely no bearing on these two very different and very good teams battling it out in front of us. The radio guys let the rhythm of the game direct the broadcast. There’s nothing better than a professional silence between pitches where the murmur of the crowd and the call of “hotdogs here”, “get your Coke here” help paint the scene.

Second, I can’t stand pitchers who take forever between pitches. They are ruining the game. Throw the damn ball. If I was umpiring I’d have the stopwatch out all game. Twelve seconds at most between pitches.....no exceptions. Make it clear to both managers at the outset and eliminate the prima donna stare down crap.

As I said, throw the damn ball. And, on this subject, I’ll give Chris Sale and Rick Porcello their due. They take the throw from the catcher, go to the rubber, check the sign, and make the pitch. There’s no phony gunslinger spaghetti-Western stare-down. In doing so of course they establish the tempo and force the batters to play on their terms.

My retrospective observation goes back fifty years to the 1968 World Series between the Cardinals and the Tigers. Look up Bill Dow’s recent column in the Detroit Free Press and read about Mickey Lolich’s three complete games against the defending World Champion Cardinals. These were the Cardinals of Gibson, Cepeda, McCarver, Lou Brock, Steve Carlton, and Curt Flood, all great ballplayers. Dow’s column is a treat, worthy of your time.

Also worthy of your time is the comparison of pitching habits and trends. I would suggest that the four best pitchers in this year’s ALCS are Verlander and Cole for the Astros, Sale and Porcello for the Red Sox. Let’s throw in David Price as well based on his regular season performance. Between those five pitchers, they pitched a mere four complete games for the entire 2018 season. Lolich, in the ’68 Series, pitched three complete games, throwing the last game on two days’ rest!  Three complete games in nine days!!

I won’t give you all the wonderful baseball nuggets—about Roger Maris, Reggie Jackson, and Willie Horton among others-- in Dow’s column. You deserve the joy of reading it for yourself. I will however give you two stats about Lolich. In sixteen seasons of Major League baseball he pitched 195 complete games! That fact must be utterly astounding to today’s geniuses who monitor pitch counts as if Moses decreed them on sacred tablets. And, in the 1971 season alone, Lolich pitched 376 innings and 29 complete games. In a single season!

By the way, the ’68 Series was over by October 10th! About that seventh game—it was played in daylight in 2 hours and 7 minutes. Throw the damn ball!

Tom Finneran is the former Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, served as the head the Massachusetts Biotechnology Council, and was a longstanding radio voice in Boston radio.

Everything to Know About Red Sox vs Astros in ALCS - October 2018

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