Tuesday, September 7, 2010

MLB Free Pick: Blue Jays Will Extend Rangers Losing Streak - Baseball Betting Preview

Texas is losing steam and losing games without slugger Josh Hamilton. Toronto, minus 165 on the MLB odds board, will continue to give the Rangers fits in Tuesday
The Texas Rangers (75-62, 32-36 road) are in one of their worst slumps of the MLB season, having lost four consecutive games. They are also without their best hitter, outfielder Josh Hamilton, for an extended period due to a rib injury. Their best pitcher, Cliff Lee, is dealing with back issues.
The Toronto Blue Jays (71-66, 37-29 home) will look to extend the Rangers’ woes on Tuesday night at the Rogers Center in the second game of a four-game series. First pitch is scheduled for 7:07 p.m. ET.
Current baseball odds have the Blue Jays listed as -165 favorites. The total is set at nine runs.
In the first game of the series on Monday afternoon, the Blue Jays blasted the Rangers by a score of 7-2. Vernon Wells had a home run and three RBI for Toronto, which sent Texas to its fourth straight loss. It was also the sixth consecutive win for the Blue Jays over the Rangers, dating back to April 7.
Story continued at MLB Free Pick: Blue Jays Will Extend Rangers Losing Streak - Baseball Betting Preview

- msaks@ectts.com
---------

- msaks@ectts.com
---------

msaks@ectts.com -
---------
specialized hauling

msaks@ectts.com - specialized hauling
----------

Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

From The Star
Mark Zwolinski  
Sports Reporter

It’s being called “The Year of the Pitcher.”

Pitchers are dominating in the major leagues this season, and they’re having an effect on the record book as well.

The Jays’ Brandon Morrow joined a growing list of one-hit and no-hit hurlers who have surfaced this season at near record pace.

Already, there are five no-hitters in baseball this year, two shy of the record reached in 1990 and ’91. Ubaldo Jimenez, Matt Garza and Edwin Jackson have each tossed a no-no. The other two, by ex-Jay Roy Halladay and Oakland’s Dallas Braden, were perfect games. There would have been a record three perfect games this season had it not been for an umpire’s blown call in Detroit earlier this season that robbed Armando Gallaraga of perfection.
Morrow’s 17-strikeout masterpiece marked the fourth time this season a pitcher has taken a no-hitter into the ninth (two of those — Morrow’s and Gallaraga’s in Detroit — were lost with two out in the ninth).

Four no-hitters lost in the ninth is not a record — baseball saw eight of them broken in the ninth in 1988 — but the number of strikeouts being tallied these days certainly suggests pitchers are on their game and hitters are still catching up.

Consider the number of combined (both teams) strikeouts per game in the sport at the moment. As of Monday, teams were combining for 13.9 strikeouts.

That number puts the sport on pace for an all-time record in combined strikeouts per game. And if that isn’t enough to suggest pitching is dominating the game, that number has been going up steadily since 2005.
“We as hitters live on mistakes by pitchers, but if (pitchers) are making well executed pitches like they seem to be, then it’s tough to deal with,” Jays centre fielder Vernon Wells said.

“If guys are hitting their spots, then it’s going to be tougher for hitters, no question.”

Wells, like several other stars in the game, agreed the game is seeing an influx of excellent young pitchers who can handle major league hitting from their very first start.

Take Morrow, for instance. Drafted in the first round, fifth overall, by Seattle in 2006, he made his first start in the majors Sept. 5, 2008 and pitched 7.2 innings of no-hit ball against the Yankees.

Afterwards, he bounced between the pen and the starting rotation, and the Mariners — despite his 98 m.p.h. stuff — felt he wouldn’t reach the consistency needed to survive as a big league starter.

Prior to Sunday’s performance, Morrow was 9-9 as a starter with a 4.46 ERA in 37 outings.

Turn the page to his arrival with the Jays this season and Morrow, 9-6 in Toronto, has not allowed a hit through five innings in five of those 37 career starts. Cliff Lee, considered the best pitcher in the American League at the moment, has only four such starts in nine major league seasons.

Baseball experts note several factors in pitching superiority, including the emergence of young pitchers like Morrow who master control over three or four pitches early in their careers. There’s also a renaissance in the sport on defence (Seattle, for instance, won 24 more games in 2009 than 2008 because, in part, they gave up 114 fewer runs); and the crackdown on performance-enhancing drugs to deter power hitters.

Pitchers are also equipped with far more statistical knowledge than their predecessors.

“I can see that . . . we as players kind of listen in on pre-series meetings, and both catchers get together with the starter and try and attack everyone’s weaknesses as hitters,” said Wells.

Indeed, computerized hitting reports and video now centre on as many as 16 hitting zones that can be attacked or exploited.

“The game has really come along in the video department . . . everyone does video now, pitchers and hitters, everyone’s looking for an advantage,” Wells said.

Ultimately, as Wells added, good pitching will beat good hitting every time. And it’s showing itself in the record book.
-------------------------------------

- msaks@ectts.com
---------

- msaks@ectts.com
---------

msaks@ectts.com -
---------
specialized hauling

msaks@ectts.com - specialized hauling
---------

Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, August 6, 2010

Feschuk: Argos swarmed, but not by Eskies - thestar.com

From The Toronto Star
by Scott Feschuk  
Sports Columnist

As if the Argonauts didn’t have enough to worry about, what with a struggling rookie quarterback running a bottom-of-the-league offence.

Heading into Friday night’s game at Commonwealth Stadium, there’s every chance Toronto’s CFL team won’t get its fourth victory of the season unless it wins a night’s worth of battles, not only against the Edmonton Eskimos but also against one or more of the forces of nature that rule these parts.


- msaks@ectts.com

Andre Talbot is happy to educate his former teammates on the scope of the earthly wrath that could be unleashed come kickoff. Talbot, the Toronto-bred receiver, spent nine years as an Argo before he was dealt here in the off-season.

And five games into his career as an Eskimo, he has already witnessed a lightning delay (which halted last week’s Edmonton win over the B.C. Lions for about 40 minutes) and a series of sunny-day showers (“They just swoop in from nowhere,” marvels Talbot).

And don’t get him started about this summer’s crop of Alberta mosquitos, which appear to be giving Winnipeg’s infamous bloodsuckers a run as the CFL’s wickedest vein-tapping menace.

Who says the hermetically sealed Rogers Centre is bad place for football?

“(The mosquitos) are brutal. It’s unbelievable. I’ve never seen such a swarming,” Talbot said. “Last week on the field, guys were just covered in them.”

Insects aside, Edmonton isn’t known for its ability to mount a swarm.

The 1-4 Eskimos are, in the words of coach Richie Hall, “a fragile team.” And their run defence, in particular, ranks last in the league.

So even if Toronto’s anemic passing game doesn’t escape its half-decade-old rut anytime soon, there’s some reason to believe the Argos could find some salvation on the ground on Friday night.

Cory Boyd, the Toronto running back who put up three 100-yard-plus performances in the season’s first four games, is coming off a subpar effort in a blowout loss to Montreal.

On Thursday, not long after the Argos arrived here after a morning flight, Boyd offered a suggestion for returning to his big-gaining ways.

“I guess we’ve got to feed me a little more, get the running game going early in the game,” said Boyd. “I guess that’s how it always starts and we just go downhill from there.”

If that wasn’t exactly an optimistic take on Toronto’s prospects, it fit the tone of the moment. The Eskimos, five days removed from the firing of general manager Danny Maciocia, weren’t exactly crowing in the wake of their only win of the year.

“You talk about (the Argos) being fragile offensively. We have a fragile football team ... It took us five games into the season before we won our first game,” said Hall, who outlined the Edmonton game plan all the same.

“We want to try and make a team one dimensional, and that means taking away the run. They’ve got a great running back there. He runs hard . . . We’ve given up some yards running. We’ve given up some chunks of yards.”

Boyd, for his part, certainly wasn’t sounding overconfident — disingenuous would be a better word for his press briefing.

First, Boyd, who turns 25 on Friday, claimed he has “never really celebrated a birthday before.”

And even if that sounded plausible, he then claimed to be unaware he is currently leading the CFL in rushing yards.

Boyd, mind you, was standing on the turf at Commonwealth Stadium on Thursday when he spoke to the media, where the mosquitos were enjoying a midday buffet that included sportswriter flank (in plentiful supply) and running back calf.

“Even as I’m speaking, I’m getting (eaten) up in the back of my legs,” he said.

So forgive him if he sounded distracted. Boyd, not long after he preached on the evils of the post-touchdown celebration, also acknowledged that, should the Argos conquer the Eskimos and Mother Nature on Friday night, he just might find time to ring in his personal new year.

“Hopefully, we’ll have a win so I can go out with the fellows, enjoy our time, and just have a little champagne or wine,” said Boyd. “Hopefully, some of the opposing team can come and we can all just make it a family affair.”

If Boyd spends Friday night drinking with the opposing team, he’ll be making like a certain six-legged swiller of vital fluid.

Said Kenneth Pettaway, the Eskimos defensive end: “If I had some advice for the Argos, I’d say: ‘Bring lots of bug spray.’ ”

msaks@ectts.com - specialized hauling



Enhanced by Zemanta

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Jays lose Buck and game in Bronx

 From the Toronto Star

NEW YORK—The Blue Jays didn’t blast music in the locker room the way they do after a win, but post-game moping that usually follows a getaway day loss was absent.
The Blue Jays remained remarkably loose for a team that had just lost three times in a single day.
First they lost the game, 5-1 to the Yankees and squandering a chance to sweep the World Series champs on the road.

They also lost the Alex Rodriguez lottery when, after 12 games of waiting and mounting hype, the Yankees third baseman took Shaun Marcum deep for the 600th home run of his career.

Finally, they lost catcher John Buck, who took a Rodriguez foul tip of his right thumb in the fifth inning.
The foul ball’s impact didn’t break bones — and Buck considers himself lucky for that — but it split Buck’s skin, a gash requiring three stitches to close and a few days to heal.

Immediately after the game the Jays placed Buck on the 15-day disabled list, but he hopes to start throwing again well inside that time frame.

“They were able to sew (the skin) right to my thumbnail, so hopefully that will make it heal quicker,” Buck said, his thumb wrapped in bandage. “I can move it and everything. It feels fine. . . . The doctor said as soon as I feel like I can start throwing I can play catch.”

Jose Molina replaced Buck midway through Wednesday’s game but afterward the club announced they will promote highly-rated catching prospect J.P. Arencibia from Triple-A Las Vegas. Arencibia has been touted as the club’s catcher of the future since the Jays drafted him in 2007 and has played well enough in Las Vegas to make Buck pre-deadline trade bait even though the incumbent starting catcher made his first all-star team.
Through Tuesday the 24-year-old Arencibia had played 95 games for Las Vegas, batting .303 with 32 doubles and 31 home runs, most in the minor leagues. His power numbers are even more impressing considering that he hit only eight homers in the first two months of the season.

Arencibia’s arrival will provide a glimpse into the Jays’ future, but halfway through their season series with the powerhouse Yankees the present looks more pleasant than most observers would have predicted.

Instead of limping in the final two months the Jays remain four games over .500. Wednesday’s loss comes after two straight wins at Yankee Stadium and clearly represents a lost opportunity.

But the Jays still lead the season series 5-4, and starting the toughest month on their schedule with a series win over the Yankees tempers the disappointment.

“You always like to win that last one on the way home,” said manager Cito Gaston, “but we’ll take two out of three anytime we can.”




Jays lose Buck and game in Bronx - thestar.com
Enhanced by Zemanta

Beer-cooler balloon drop from 24 kilometres up - thestar.com

The Star
Lesley Ciarula Taylor
Staff Reporter

A group of California engineers rigged a polystyrene beer cooler up to a helium balloon to film the Earth from 80,000 feet – and the crash that followed.

Sophisticated cameras and electronics were perched in the basket to capture the journey that started just after dawn one recent morning on the California coast near Davenport.

“You see the best shadows early in the morning,” one of the engineers, Kevin Macko, 28, told the Star on Thursday.

At 80,000 feet – more than 24 kilometres up – the ever-expanding balloon popped and the apparatus took a half-hour to float back to the ground, landing without even cracking the cooler, he said.

Since the June flight, the team’s second, Discovery Channel Canada has contacted them about filming the next effort.

What will the goal behind that event be?

“To keep getting higher until we fail,” said Macko.






-----------------------------------------------



Video: a beer-cooler balloon drop from 24 kilometres up - thestar.com

- msaks@ectts.com


msaks@ectts.com -


msaks@ectts.com - specialized hauling



- msaks@ectts.com


msaks@ectts.com -


msaks@ectts.com - specialized hauling










Video: a beer-cooler balloon drop from 24 kilometres up - thestar.com
Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Are they ready to dominate the ice?

Monday Morning Musings with Me The Big E: Leafs All But Set and More | Bleacher Report

By Eric Warren
(Maple Leafs Featured Columnist) on August 2, 2010

The Toronto Maple Leafs appear to be almost set for next season. With 21 players signed and a little over two million left under the cap there is almost certainly a trade in the works with someone.

While the odds on favorite to be dealt is still long time Toronto Maple Leafs defenseman Tomas Kaberle, I wouldn't take that to the bank just yet.

Although there are newer members of the team, don't think for a second that Brian Burke would hesitate in dealing Versteeg, Armstrong, or anyone else for that matter if the deal is right.

Brian Burke has all but said his mission here in Toronto is to build a dynasty.
The Toronto Maple Leafs haven't seen a dynasty team since, oddly enough, the last time they won the Stanley cup.

It was 1967 and the Leafs had just completed a run that saw them win their fourth cup in six years, drawing to a close the team's second and final real dynasty.

There have been teams that have been pretty good for several years, but they obviously haven't won a cup and therefore cannot fall into the same category.

Dynasty is not a word that is thrown around much anymore. There hasn't been a real hockey dynasty since Wayne Gretzky and the Edmonton Oilers dominated the better part of the 1980's winning five Stanley Cups in just eight years.

In a salary cap era, it may seem as though the likelihood of a dynasty type team is remote, but it can't be impossible can it?

It appears that Brian Burke and the Toronto Maple Leafs may be headed not perhaps in the right direction.
With certainly more of a youth movement than I've seen in the organization in my 40 plus years, and at least the appearance of some depth in the minors, if, and this is a giant if, Burke and his talent laden front office can continue ever so slowly but surely in the same direction, I dare say the possibility is there.
A bold statement I know, but even I can dream can't I?

Monday Morning Musings with Me The Big E: Leafs All But Set and More | Bleacher Report

-------



msaks@ectts.com -


- msaks@ectts.com

Enhanced by Zemanta

Gulf disaster makes its way to Ontario?

Experts worried about Ontario birds migrating to Gulf oil spill - thestar.com


Enhanced by Zemanta

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Brian Burke's Best Work Yet To Come?

By
(Maple Leafs Featured Columnist) on July 29, 2010
From Bleacherreport.com
 

Toronto Maple Leafs' general manager Brian Burke has had a busy summer acquiring numerous players via free agency and trading for some much needed depth.

This summer Burke has acquired rugged forwards Colby Armstrong and Mike Brown via free agency while also adding speedy Stanley Cup winner Kris Versteeg to the fold through a trade with the Chicago Blackhawks.

On defense Burke picked up veteran defenseman Brett Lebda, giving him even more depth on defense, which in turn may allow him to trade his ace in the hole, defenseman Tomas Kaberle.
The acquisitions of Armstrong, Versteeg, Brown and Lebda should help transform the Leafs from perennial bottom-feeders to playoff contenders.

Burke’s earlier acquisitions include defensemen Mike Komisarek, Dion Phaneuf (who was awarded the captaincy over the summer), and Francois Beauchemin, all of whom should play huge roles in the Leafs' success or failures this season.

At forward Burke has done an admiral job acquiring the likes of Luca Caputi, Tyler Bozak, Fredrik Sjostrom, Brayden Irwin, Christian Hanson, Marcel Mueller, Michael Zigomanis, Colton Orr, and, of course, Phil Kessel.

What it all amounts to is a complete face lift for the Leafs, an overhaul that gives the Leafs' Nation some much needed optimism heading into the 2010-11 NHL season.

It is widely believed that Burke has as many as half a dozen offers on the table for Kaberle, none of which appear to have peaked Burke’s interest.

Given the fact that Burke has not pulled the trigger on a Kaberle deal, one can deduce that Burke has not been offered a top six forward (preferably a centre) who could significantly improve the Leafs' lineup up front.
While many Leaf fans are growing impatient with Burke, it appears as if Burke is on the verge of intensifying trade negotiations in hopes of soliciting a better offer from the NHL teams that have shown interest.
Will a bidding war for Kaberle’s services ever evolve? Only time will tell.

One thing’s for sure, Burke is going to try to milk a potential Kaberle deal for everything it's worth, and so he should.

According to capgeek.com the Leafs have 21 players signed for the upcoming 2010-11 season with just over $2 million in cap space left with which to sign another player.

That $2 million combined with the $4.25 million in salary that Kaberle will earn in 2010-11 should allow Burke to trade for a player making upwards of $6 million.

Which players making $6 million or less are on the trading block right now?

Boston Bruins' forward Marc Savard has been mentioned in several deals, but his injury concerns will likely keep Burke from acquiring the talented set-up man.

Ottawa Senators' centre Jason Spezza has been mentioned as a possible solution for the Leafs, but his $7 million cap hit in each of the next five seasons would be a huge commitment for Burke to make for a player who has been underachieving and, more recently, whining about his situation in Ottawa, something Burke has frowned on in the past.

While the Anaheim Ducks continue to try to hammer out a new deal with Bobby Ryan, the two sides still appear to be wide apart on a long-term deal. There's no question that given their history and the talent level Ryan would bring to the table, Burke would be interested in acquiring Ryan, but the asking price is likely to be a lot more than just Kaberle, and Burke does not have many assets to trade right now.

The reality is, Burke may have to take a lesser player in return for Kaberle or get stuck with a bloated contract, something I suspect Burke will avoid like the plague.

Alternatively, Burke could acquire a player in the $3-4 million range and dip into a depleted free agent pool that still includes the likes of elder statesmen Paul Kariya, Bill Guerin, and Teemu Selanne (none of whom are good fits for the Leafs).

Given the fact that Burke has been on a youth kick the last year and a half, I suspect he is done with free agency this season, which means if Burke chooses not to bring in a big ticket player via trade he can hold on to his cap space with an eye on making a big deal or deals at the trade deadline.
Without a significant upgrade up front the Leafs will struggle offensively, which will put them at risk to miss the playoffs…again!

Burke wants no part of a team that will not compete for a playoff spot. Leaf fans are growing antsy, as are Leafs' management and Burke himself.

While Ilya Kovalchuk’s contract seems to be holding a lot of NHL teams back from making free agent signings, it appears as if Burke will aim to get a deal involving Kaberle done sooner rather than later.
Needless to say, as good as Burke has been in acquiring talent for the Leafs' organization, his best work (a deal for a top six forward) is yet to come. Let’s hope he can pull off another steal, bringing in a top-notch set-up man to compliment Phil Kessel’s scoring abilities.

Anything less could be the difference between the Leafs making the playoffs in 2010-11 or heading to the golf courses in early April.









Enhanced by Zemanta
--------------------------------------------------------------------

- msaks@ectts.com

Thursday, July 22, 2010

please dont try this at home..or anywhere else!

pulled from Toronto Sun
July 21,2010

A Kitchener truck driver is facing a careless driving charge but on the bright side, his tooth doesn’t hurt anymore.

Lambton County OPP say they stopped a big rig driver doing some driving dentistry along Hwy. 402 on Wednesday.

Const. John Reurink told the Sun Saturday it’s the first time he’s ever heard of a driver being pulled over performing dental surgery.

“I’ve never heard of this sort of thing occurring before,” Reurink said, adding he has stopped drivers doing their make-up, reading a map or talking on a cellphone. “Somebody doing an amateur tooth pulling? That’s a first.”

Reurink said it all started June 30 when an officer was on Hwy. 402 in Warwick Township, near Sarnia, and a passing driver pointed him to a tractor trailer being driven “all over the road.”

The officer found the eastbound rig and pulled it over.

Cops determined the 58-year-old driver was driving so poorly because he was trying to pull out a tooth while he was driving.

“The driver was very forthright with the officer,” Reurink said.

The amateur dentist of a driver had rigged a string around his hurting tooth and then tied the other end to the roof of the cab, police said.

“One good bump and the tooth should come out,” police explained.

Turns out the “one good bump” likely did come along at some point.

“The evidence of his efforts were nearby,” Reurink said.

When the driver was stopped the officer found a bloody tooth and a string lying next to him.

Strangely, police say the road down that way isn’t that bumpy and was recently resurfaced.

“He may have been better off on a sideroad,” Reurink said.

Police won’t be releasing the driver’s name because he’s charged under the Highway Traffic Act, not the Criminal Code, and they figure he’d be “continuously bombarded” by media trying to talk to him about his stunt - which would likely be more of a headache than a toothache.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------







msaks@ectts.com -


- msaks@ectts.com
Enhanced by Zemanta