Saturday, February 4, 2012

Baseball is Baseball....


Once again it was a great week of baseball in Florida -- the sixth time in seven years I have attended the Ponce de Leon Spring Training.  This year's Silver Medal for a second place finish comes after being on the winning team the last two years.  (See the valuable hardware in the photo with this year's medal in the middle.)  Following the first three year record of 1 win and 26 losses, the record for the past three years was 23 and 4 - so hopefully I can go back in 2013 to keep climbing above a .500 record. 

I felt good about my play for the week -- I started very poorly at bat - 1 for 9 after four games but had 5 hits in 10 at bats the rest of the week, and swung the bat much better.  My pitching was more consistent than it has been in previous years -- didn't even hit a batter this year!  Physically it is the best I have felt in any of the years I have been there -- Sun Salutations (remembering to breathe Jackie!) and a lot of stretching before and during games kept my legs in good shape.  My throwing arm felt strong all week.  I think the physical results were due in large part to off-season workouts I have been doing at Diamond Sports Training in Sterling VA, organized by my Ponce weeknight teammate Mike Heath (a devotee of St. Yaz.)   Mike rents a cage at DST several times a week and organizes some of his teammates to throw and bat (live pitching off a mound as well as batting off a JUGGS machine.)  I have been there with him a number of times over the last two months and it made a real difference, I think, in my preparation to play this week -- and helped keep me healthy for the duration. 

A couple of baseball items picked up during the week.  The Minnesota Twins had a terrible year last year -- in large part because their two MVP caliber players, Justin Morneau and Joe Mauer, had been hurt.  Steve Liddle said that he believes that Mauer will be fully healthy this year but that Morneau is still recovering from a severe concussion in 2010.  He continues to have after-effects from that concussion that may be exacerbated by hits taken as a young hockey player in his native Canada.....Victor Rodriguez said that Red Sox minor leaguer Ryan Westmoreland, a former top prospect who had brain surgery in 2010 at the age of 19, faced live pitching in a game in the Dominican Instructional League last fall -- and made contact in each of 6 trips to the plate.  He has made a remarkable recovery but still has an extremely long rehabilitation road ahead....Victor's son, Victor, had a successful first year as a Red Sox scout assigned to the Dominican Republic -- signing 10 players.  Bill suggested to Victor that one of those "might be the next Pedro!"....Victor had his Red Sox 2004 World Series ring on for the Awards Dessert on Thursday evening - an eye-popper, with 86 small diamonds, one for each year between World Series victories, Victor's name on one side, and "Greatest Comeback in History" on the other....Former Red Sox pitcher Bill Lee was at the camp on Wednesday -- he lives in Vermont but has a place in the Fort Myers area.  Lee plays in numerous senior league tournaments in New England as well as in Florida....Ryan Kalish, a top Red Sox minor league outfielding prospect was out last year with a hurt shoulder and neck.  He had neck surgery in the off-season that was the same as the surgery Peyton Manning had.  Kalish will likely need rehab going into the early part of this season.

One of the great things about the week and Ponce in general is that, by and large, teammates are very supportive of each other.  Particularly for this week (and the weeknight seasons back home) when rosters are a mix of ages from the 30+ league and the 48+ league, literally a generation can separate the players by age.  There is also a great variety in experience and skill levels.  Nonetheless, teammates pull for each other and overlook errors and mistakes so long as players try, and commit to the game.  While there are age jokes made by younger teammates -- I have been asked if I knew Abner Doubleday personally and what was it like to actually live through history like the Red Sox 1967 Impossible Dream year -- people 20 years or more younger than me like Mike, Chris Clark, Izzy, Zark and others treat me first as a ballplayer and a teammate (even if they did give me the Oldest Living Player Award a couple years ago.)  It is appreciated and it makes you want to try hard to keep up (a bit) with them.  There are a few exceptions.  The first year I went to the winter camp I was 59 years old and had my very first experience of anyone, anywhere patronizing me as a "old" person -- by a teammate that year who was about 10 years younger than me.  That player was back this year - and, with the intervening years, fitting in well with the older demographic of the camp.  I wonder if he is more enlightened now about the aging process. 

Finally, a real highlight for me this year was having my brother Bill with me for the week.  He came to the park every day and watched each one of my nine games.  We would talk over the games later and talk baseball (as well as family, politics, etc.) throughout the week.  I have been going to Red Sox and other baseball games with Bill for 60 years -- I have learned more baseball from and with him at ball games than from anyone else.  I have had great times at games with John, George, Flint and many others in years past but Bill is the gold standard for someone to watch a game with.  (I will say, however, that over the last 20 years Elizabeth has hit that standard as we go to Sox games or watch them nightly during the summer.)  My batting average was down this week, but that was only due in part to Bill making me report my performance accurately.  The biggest fib of the week was the one Bill told Ben today, "It was a week to fondly remember, including some great baseball (really.)"  When I asked Bill on Wednesday if the "action" was too boring and would he prefer to go off and do something else in Fort Myers during the day instead, he said, "No, I'm enjoying it.  Baseball is baseball."  That's how we all felt this week.

Chapstick Cosy with Chapstick
Pitchers and catchers report in two weeks.

Friday, February 3, 2012

By a Touchdown and Extra Point . . .


Late breaking sports flash -- in the premier national sporting event of the weekend, the Ponce Championship game in Fort Myers, the good guys - Team 3-C-Cliburn - lost to Team 2-B-Knapp by a score of 7 to 0.  Not much in the way of highlights for Team Cliburn.   We had some decent pitching and steady defense -- but we just did not handle the pitching of Chris Clark and Joe Leginus, the two best pitchers we faced in camp this week.  They held us to one or two hits in the first five innings until we posted a mild rally in the final inning to no avail.  I was 0 for 2 at bat.  They finished with the Gold Medal and a record of 8 and 1; we had a final record of 6 and 3 and settled for the Silver Medal (the medals are worth at least $5 or $6.)  A slight consolation particularly, as Elizabeth points out, "there's no medals in baseball" -- trophies or rings yes, medals, not so much.

Bill and I are on our way to Tampa to have dinner with Ben, Cristina and family and we fly back north on Saturday.  I will do a final posting with some thoughts on the week later on Saturday after I get back to DC.

A great week but we fell a little short.  Still, I believe the nearly undefeated team that was seeking revenge winning by a touchdown and extra point, bodes well for the Patriots in their game against the Giants in the second major sporting event this weekend -- Patriots by 7!   Go Pats!

Thursday, February 2, 2012

It's Not The Super Bowl, and It's Not Indianapolis, But .....


Team 3-C-Cliburn will play in the Ponce championship game on Friday morning in Fort Myers in the Terry Park main stadium.  We won two games today by scores of 10 to 5 and 5 to 4 to finish with a record of 6 wins and 2 losses.  However, that left us in a tie for second place with the team managed by Arnie Beyeler -- a team we split with in two games.  So the team to play in the championship game was chosen by a coin flip tonight at the awards dessert session.  Head's won the championship contest for Team 3-C-Cliburn.  We will oppose Rick Knapp's team that finished at the top of the standings with a 7 and 1 record, their only loss coming to us Wednesday morning when we won by a score of 8 to 5. 

To today's games.  This morning we beat the team managed by Victor Rodriguez by a score of 10 to 5.  The game was close throughout until we added three runs in the top of the sixth (the final inning) to get a 10 to 5 lead and hold on for the win.  Our fielding, which has been good after a shaky start on Monday, was very strong again today.  I pitched the final two innings - pitching well and giving up no runs - and was 1 for 2 at bat with an rbi.  In a see-saw afternoon game, we ended up winning by a score of 5 to 4 against Stu Cliburn's team.  They went ahead 2 to 0 with a run in each of the first two innings.  We tied it up in the third but they scored in the fourth to go ahead by a score of 3 to 2.  We scored 2 in the fifth and one in the sixth to take a 5 to 3 lead into the bottom of the final inning.  A hit and hit batter put two of their runners on base with one out.  Their next batter hit a ball over our left fielder's head -- with all runners taking off.  One run scored, but a perfect throw by our left fielder - David Remy - followed by a strong and accurate relay throw by shortstop Steve Abbuhl to the catcher got the second  runner -- and tieing run -- out at home plate.  The batter ended at third base with two outs and the score now 5 to 4.  The next batter hit a hard ground ball down the third base line, where our third baseman Brian Ronholm made a backhand stop and threw the batter out at first base to secure the victory.  Quite an exciting game and a finish that qualified us for the coin flip for the championship game.  I was 1 for 2 at bat and had a sacrifice fly. 

Tonight at the awards dessert (if you can have an awards dinner you should be able to have an awards dessert -- where only dessert and coffee are served) each team coach announced a winner of the Spirt of Ponce award and the team's Most Valuable Player award.  Team 3-C-Cliburn's spirit award went to George Borababy who was, I think, the most improved player on our team this week and a very encouraging and supportive teammate.  Brian Ronholm won the MVP -- pitching nearly shut out ball each day, making all the routine and several special plays in the field and hitting soldily all week.  Two very well earned awards.

A couple of notes:  On Wednesday our 72 year old pitcher Dave Wheeler was pitching to our 71 year old catcher Joe Neville with the batter at the plate 75 year old Skip Schatz.  The youngsters won that battle.  Skip, who has come to the Ponce camp for 12 of its 13 years of existence, announced tonight that he is "retiring" but looks forward to coming back to see games next year.  He was given his team's spirit and MVP awards and a standing ovation.....Victor Rodriquez said that Jose Iglesias, the young top shortstop prospect in the Red Sox system, is ready to play defense at the Major League level but still needs to work on his hitting and likely will play in Pawtucket for the year... Several coaches from other teams are puzzled that the Red Sox don't have someone set for the shortstop position, wondering how they can have such a big payroll but still have such a key position unsettled going into camp.....Steve Liddle said that he thinks very highly of Nick Punto who played a number of years for the Twins and whom the Sox picked up this winter.  He said he is a very valuable utility player....Three players on my team this week -- Evan Katz, Scott Collentro, and Rich Brouillette -- are here this week from Groton, Massachusetts.  They play senior baseball in a league centered in Lowell MA.  Evan was a childhood friend of Dan Beckhard in Brookline MA and Dan now lives in the DC area and is a long-time Ponce player and a key member of our team this week.  He first encouraged Evan to come to the camp some years ago and Evan has since recruited Scott and Rich.  Evan works as a financial officer in Ayer MA (home of Don Rzasa and Vicki Franz) for the Shirley-Ayer School District.

Finally, in response to inquiries about the fantastic Chapstick Cosy -- it is a holster for a chapstick with a hook that can hang on a belt loop.  Some people apparently are thinking I have hung the Chapstick Cosy to my uniform and have taken it to the field.  They are asking if I am applying chapstick during lulls on the field (there are plenty of those during Ponce "action.")  But no, that would be wrong -- disrespecting both baseball and chapsticks.  I have, instead, attached the Chapstick Cosy to my equipment bag and apply the chapstick, as needed, discretely in the dugout.  Hope that clears things up.

More tomorrow after the big game.  We will be a big underdog even though we beat them on Wednesday.  We did not face their two best pitchers then and, like the Patriots this weekend, they will be seeking revenge for a devastating loss that stood in their way of an undefeated season.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Moving into Contention!


Winning a doubleheader today -- on Hump Day -- put Team 3-C-Cliburn back in the championship race with just three games to go in the week.  This morning we took on the only previously undefeated team and gave them their first loss by a final score (I think) of 8-5.  We got to a lead of 3 to 1 in the first inning and, with good pitching, strong fielding and timely hitting stretched the lead to 8 to 3 going into the final inning and held on for the win.  A key play came in the fifth inning (all Ponce games this week are 6 inning games) when they loaded the bases with one out.  We were able to turn an inning ending double play (shortstop to second to first) to snuff their rally, with me in the middle on the turn.  Double plays in successive games!  I was 1 for 2 at bat, with an rbi single.  My tips from Don Buford ("move your hands up and flatten the bat") and brother Bill ("take a strike, see some pitches, you are too anxious up there") seem to be sinking in.  The team we beat had many players from the teams I played with the last two years when we won the championship each year and which includes, I think, the two best players in camp -- Chris Clark and Joe Cardi.  It was a nice victory

In the second game, we won 7 to 5 against the team that shut us out on Monday afternoon.  Again we had timely hitting, good pitching and tight defense.  Brian Ronholm (our youngest player at 44 years) pitched three strong innings to start the afternoon game after closing the morning game.  I had an rbi single in my first at bat and a double on my second.  Again we built an early lead, kept adding to it and held the opponent off in the end. The two victories put us in second place with a 4 and 2 record going into Thursday - only behind the team we beat on Wednesday morning (they are 5 and 1, with two of their wins coming in sudden death "shoot outs".)  The teams with the top two records after Thursday play for the championship in the main stadium on Friday morning.

A few notes:  Bill and I drove by the new Red Sox spring training facility -- JetBlue Park -- on Tuesday afternoon.  We couldn't get in to walk around the facility - security turned us back -- but it looks like a modern park in the middle of nowhere -- about 3 miles from the Fort Myers airport.  Victor Rodriguez -- Red Sox minor league hitting coordinator, just back from meetings in Boston -- said that some of the rookies will start workouts at the camp next Monday (and, I think Red Sox fantasy camp starts then too.)   Victor said that there are seven fields -- two for the major league team and five for the minor leaguers.   Plans for the area adjacent to the ballpark include hotels, apartments and commercial areas. 

Arnie Beyeler, as manager of the Red Sox triple A team in Pawtucket, was called up to the Red Sox to help in September after the AAA season ended.  He said it was very difficult for everyone to live through the Sox collapse during the month -- that people did everything they could to pull out of it, but nothing worked.  He said he had never seen anything like it.  (Same for all of us, I guess, but we didn't have the up close and personal view he had.)

There have been some cynical suggestions that - just because I'm in big time sports here in Fort Myers - I was giving a paid endorsement for the fabulous Chapstick Cozy and the delicious variety of Kellogg Cheez-It products.  How could people stoop so low and make personal attacks based on nothing but rumor and innuendo?  (My best non-denial, denial.) 

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Big Win Today!!!


That big win, however, was for Mitt Romney.   Team 3-C-Cliburn only split two games (well a lot better than Newt's day in Florida.)    In the main stadium, we lost our morning game by a score of 11-3 to the team we beat yesterday 3-2 (that's baseball.)   Again, we didn't hit and we had poor fielding combined with some shaky pitching.  I pitched two innings and gave up 4 runs and was zero for two at bat.   My arm felt better than I thought it would after pitching yesterday, but I was inconsistent.  (I did strike out the owner of the Ponce league, so some measure of satisfaction.)  We turned it around in the second game, winning by a score of 15 to 8, again in the main stadium.  Highlights for me was that I finally(!) got a hit, going 1 for 3, and started a doubleplay from my position at second base to end the game.

I believe these four games have been the worst stretch of hitting for me since I started to play in Ponce 7 years ago.  Just bad swings, and lungeing at bad pitches.  But part of the value of being here for the week is that there is terrific instruction that can help us improve.  For instance, former Oriole great, Don Buford (74 years old) stations himself at the facililty batting cage each morning and noontime and gives individual instruction (with him pitching batting practice) to any player who goes by to work with him.  Today at noontime, I went to Dr. Buford's batting cage (8th in line) and got tips on how to change the positioning of my bat pre-swing, so that it will be easier for me to be "short" to the pitch and more able to wait for the pitch to come to me rather than starting my swing too soon.  As an extra plus this week, my brother Bill is sharing helpful observations about my pitching and hitting.

Today was also a revelation -- I personally benefited from the impact of advanced medicine, American entrepreneurship, and Chinese engineering -- my Chapstick Cosy was a life saver (or at least a lip saver) today.   I started the week with a cold, and with the 80 degree weather, hot sun, and drying wind, my lips have been in peril.  (I have liberally used sunblock, but lips are a different challenge.)  So I have hydrated regularly and been applying chapstick.  But what to do at the field?  A chapstick in a handy holster, clipped to my equipment bag meant I was able to apply chapstick at the merest hint of dryness.  For more information about the handy Chapstick Cosy you can contact Elaine or Colleen (or maybe Dominic, and he knows why.)

Finally, a big surprise for Bill and me at our hotel last night -- a delivery of Cheez-Its (who knew they came in so many different varieties.)  My colleague at Novo Nordisk, Jacqueline, conspired with her friend Patrick to have seven boxes of Cheez-Its and Kellogg crackers delivered to us -- a big hit for us and a hit for the Ponce players we are sharing them with.  Cheez-Its, nothing better (except, perhaps, a few hits on the field tomorrow -- and a Chapstick Cosy.)

Terry Park was a voting place today for the Florida primary -- precinct 8 and precinct 88 both at the park.  However there was not much action at the polls.  Sort of the Ponce of voting sites.



Monday, January 30, 2012

Gentlemen, Start Your Engines!


Signs perhaps were ominous as we got ready to play our first Ponce games on Monday.  Bill noted at breakfast that he saw "three of your campers getting into a van that was parked in a handicapped spot."  Overheard snatches of conversation in the clubhouse included, "my cardiologist said . . . " and "after the surgery on my ankle I got an embolism in my lung."  Everyone's definition of "being ready for some baseball" is different. Nonetheless 82 players on six teams took the field on a 75 degree, breezy day to play the first two sets of games for the week.  Stan Cliburn, former Twins AAA manager (and my coach two years ago) is the manager for Team 3-C, now to be known at Team 3-C-Cliburn (so people can figure out who we are.)  There were some disgruntled campers who were not happy that they and friends they came to camp with were assigned to different teams.  So pre-game was marked by Ponce officials moving a number of players from one team to another to calm folks down -- we had a couple of adjustments to my team but still have13 players.  The other coaches this year are Rick Knapp, former Twins minor league pitching coordinator, former Tigers pitching coach, and current Kansas City minor league pitching coordinator; Stu Cliburn, Stan's twin brother and pitching coach in the Twins (fittingly enough) system; Darin Garner, Mariners minor league infield and base running instructor; Arnie Beyeler, manager of the Red Sox AAA team in Pawtucket; and Floyd Rayford, former Baltimore Oriole and Victor Rodriquez, Red Sox minor league hitting coordinator -- who are teaming up to coach the sixth team.  Victor will be here on Wednesday -- he is reportedly in Boston with all the minor league instructors to meet with new Sox manager Bobby Valentine ("so he can tell the instructors everything he knows about baseball.")  Other instructors include former Oriole Don Buford, and Cincinnati Red organization pitching coach Tom Brown.  Camp Director is Steve Liddle, Twins 3rd base coach.  Steve and most of the coaches have been at the camp for each of the 13 years it has existed.

After skills instruction (I took outfield drills without one ball hitting me on the head!) Team 3-C-Cliburn won our first game by a score of 3 to 2.  Unusually low scoring for a Ponce game -- our pitchers gave up only one walk and we received only two from the other team. Two of our runs scored on sacrifice flies with close plays at home plate.  There was good, sharp fielding by both teams (also relatively unusual for Ponce.)  In the afternoon game in  the main stadium, we were shut out 6 to 0 -- our fielding took a noticeable dip, we made several base-running errors and did not hit (in either game) as well as we should -- or I believe will.  If Bill were not here I would neglect to mention my stats for the day, but his truth-ometer forces out that I was 0 for 4 at bat for the day and gave up 3 runs in two innings in the afternoon game.  I had bad at-bats all day, but was basically pleased with how I threw the ball from the mound (and my arm and legs felt good.)

I think our team will be competitive for the week.  We are the oldest team (by far) of the six, but we have at least 5 pitchers who threw today and four catchers -- depth which should serve us well as the week go on.  In my first three years at Ponce camp my teams' collective record was 1win and 26 losses; the last two years that turned around and we went 17 wins with only one loss.  This week should be somewhere in the middle.  And despite the ominous signs early in the day, it seemed that virtually all the players got through the day relatively unharmed.  More tomorrow.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Countdown to Game Time


The Ponce baseball players are here in Florida, and for the next week there will charges and counter charges, trash talking, and accusations of bias and unfairness -- but that will be coming from the Republican candidates for President who are also in Florida and dominating the news.   On the other hand, good sportsmanship and fun will mark the week at Terry Park in Fort Myers as 82 baseball players from the DC area  -- with ages ranging from mid-30's to 70 -- will be having fun playing 9 games over the next 5 days.  Tonight the kick-off dinner was held at the league hotel, the Hilton Garden Inn, where team assignments were passed out.  In a typically chaotic "organizing" meeting I was assigned to Team 3 (which is also known on the schedule that was passed out as Team C.)  Coaches will be assigned tomorrow (drawing teams out of a hat.)  I have played previously with only one other person on my team (Steve Malinowski from my weekend team) and against only a couple of others that I know.  So I will get to know a bunch of new guys this week.  Team 3-C has 13 players -- ranging in age from 45 to 73 (6 of us are 62 or older - by far the oldest of the 6 teams.)

My brother Bill is with me here for the week to monitor play, get a few chuckles and make sure my blog accurately reports what happens without my usual exaggeration and self-promotion.  (So if you don't see any reports of my hitting and pitching you will know Bill has applied the truth-ometer -- no news will be bad news.)  Several folks have made suggestions for improving the blog -- including attaching some pictures.  We will see if, with Bill's help, I can get some shots and post them.  A couple of other suggestions were more far-fetched.  Mark K. suggested that I post a 5-minute video on YouTube with the highlights of the week's action -- probably not possible because it may take filming for whole week to compile even 5 minutes of "action."  Similarly Marc-boy suggested that I tweet from the field, but "keep your eye on the ball"  -- he may forget that the ball bounced off my forehead last year, so combining playing with tweeting would clearly be well beyond both my physical coordination and technical competence. 

Reports from the playing field tomorrow evening.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Occupy Fort Myers: The Geezer Baseball Edition - 2012


About 70 players from the DC area will be gathering in Fort Myers FL this weekend for the annual Ponce de Leon winter baseball week.  We will play 9 six-inning games from Monday to Friday at Terry Park, a Lee County baseball complex.  Team assignments are given out at a kick-off dinner on Sunday night.  This year my brother Bill, recently retired after 41 years of running the Park Department in Braintree MA (home of John Adams, John Quincy Adams, John Hancock, Gen. Sylvanus Thayer, and Lee Remick) will be joining me as an observer for the week.  Bill's job, apparently, will be to make sure I cut down on the lies I usually put into the blogs. 

Bill and I will start the weekend in Tampa visiting with Bill's son Ben and his wife Cristina, and Chloe and future Hall of Famer, Evan.  

I will post the first blog for the week after the kick-off dinner on Sunday night.