6-3-26
LA
Angel Jo Adell,
who robbed three home runs in April, had a ball deflect off this head
for a home run last night. This game has a way of humbling
you.
At
the Chihuahuas
game against the Space
Cowboys,
Cavan
Biggio
flied out to Will
Wagner.
That’s Craig
Biggio’s
kid flying out to Billy
Wagner’s
kid. While those two were teammates in Houston, Cavan is on
the Cowboys, the Astros’
affiliate, while Will is on the Chihuahuas, though he was on Cowboys
in a previous season. While it was raining cats and dogs here
in Las Cruces, apparently it wasn’t raining in El Paso.
Apart from some wind gusting in, there was no rain for the entire
game. Maybe that was too bad for the Chihuahuas as they lost,
15-8.
6-7-26
The
big news this weekend (for me, at least) was the MLB
debut of former Aggie,
Sammy
Natera,
with the Angels.
I’d heard him pitch well for Salt
Lake City
against the Chihuahuas,
so this was not unexpected. From what I saw, his line was 2
innings, no runs, no hits, 1 walk, and 3 strikeouts. He’s
looking good and Aggie Baseball will need to add another plaque to
their batting cage.
I
tuned into the Angels versus Dodgers
game on Sunday afternoon on a Mexican station. Natera did not
pitch, but it was still interesting. The Angels had a 6-1 lead
in the fifth. The Dodgers came with 4 runs in the sixth, but
the Halos came up with 6 runs in the seventh. The stat line
right afterward was amazing. The bottom half of their order
went 11 for 11 at that point in the game. Angels win 13-5,
as Dodger management vowed to purchase every good free agent at the
trade deadline.
Before
this game, I went for lunch with dad and his neighbor to Roni’s
for
their great mac and cheese. The three best words in the
English language are not, “I love you,” it’s “Chicken Bacon
Ranch.” It was great, but it was over $45 with me paying for
just myself and dad. No wonder the place was empty.
We
came back and watched some Banana
Ball.
It was a first with the Party
Animals
headlining a game in an MLB stadium, not the famous Savannah
Bananas.
The two games in Milwaukee
still sold out. The fans there were tremendous. They
even caught 4 foul balls for outs. (It’s so entertaining, I
can almost see this rule being implemented in Major League Baseball,
but how do you score that? FF10?)
Elsewhere,
the
Rangers
lost 6-0
on Saturday to the INDIANS!
However, the Rangers came back Sunday with a 10-0
win. In Triple-A,
the Chihuahuas finally broke a 6-game home losing streak on
Saturday. I think they hit a low-point on Friday night with
the bases loaded and no outs in the eighth, but the Space
Cowboys’
reliever struck out the side.
6-11-26
It
was a two-and-a-half hour rain delay with no rain. So much for
listening to the Rangers
and the Royals’
baseball game this afternoon before work. Never trust a Kansas
City
weather forecaster. Rain Delay Theater was somewhat more relaxing
than what I would have been listening to, I guess.
Meanwhile,
the A’s
were playing for a week in their future home city of Las
Vegas
at their Triple-A
ballpark. Early in the week, the A’s and the Brewers
stunned the baseball world with a combined 11-home run barrage.
I don’t think Las
Vegas Ballpark
is known for being that hitter-friendly. Maybe the wind was
blowing out?
In
the evening, the Chihuahuas
were playing Round
Rock.
Early in the game, Nick
Prado,
who had changed dugouts after a trade during the series, hit a
Chihuahua home run into the corner. Broadcaster Tim Hagerty
couldn’t see it, because the press box only had an occluded view to
that corner.
The
pups got an amazing tenth inning win. Up a run, the Express
had the tying and winning runs on at the corners with one out. The
runner at first attempted to steal second. The pitcher had
already disengaged twice, but still threw to first and picked off the
runner. The runner at third tried to score and was thrown out
at the plate to end the game, 7-6.
If the pick off hadn’t worked that would have balked in the
tying run.
6-14-26
This
Sunday there was an unexpected
ABC
broadcast of the Cubs
versus
Giants.
I thought they’d abandoned
MLB
TV broadcasts. It was a beautiful day in San
Francisco
and a full house. Giants’ pitcher Logan
Webb
was pitching very well during the game. In the eighth, a Cubs’
run came in via an error with two outs. The manager went out to
get Webb. After a 5-second conversation, Webb stayed in.
The next pitch was a blast out to right field, a sure double.
Jun-hoo
Lee
ran it down, reached out and caught it, and ran right into the foul
pole. He held on. Webb waited for him by the dugout to
thank him, as the crowd chanted, “Jun-hoo!” Giants win,
5-1.
I’d
watched the game over at dad’s apartment. I’d called him
earlier about getting a pizza. While I was out paying for the
pizza, he called and asked about going out for a pizza with his
neighbor, who had just invited him. I told him to go ahead go,
but dad chose me and told me bring the pizza I’d bought.
“She probably just wanted somebody to pay for the meal anyway,”
he said. I sure wasn’t going to pay for two pizzas.
A
storm went through while I tried to listen to the Chihuahuas
at Round
Rock.
It was probably a good thing the pups were on the road. The
storm moved steadily from here to El Paso. I think it was a
good game. I couldn’t hardly tell, because weather alerts
were going off constantly on the radio. In the eighth, the
Chihuahuas took the lead on a bases loaded walk. In the ninth,
the pups blew the save and then lost it on a bases loaded walk to
rehabbing Ranger,
Josh
Smith,
who successfully challenged the final pitch, 5-4
Round Rock.
NBC
was showing the Rangers
at the Red
Sox,
but the story was the crowd. A large contingent of Scotsmen
were there for the World
Cup.
They were celebrating Scotland winning their soccer match.
Some were in kilts. Many were wearing a Scotish dark blue Red
Sox shirt. They’d had a parade before the game complete with
bagpipes. The Scots were standing, chanting, and singing for
the whole game. They sang all of Sweet
Caroline,
even when the PA stopped playing it. They got louder as the
game went on.
However,
Rangers would win it 6-4.
The Red Sox did make a pretty good comeback in the game to make
it interesting. Ranger Wyatt
Langford
hit a first pitch homer into the Green Monster Seats where it was
retrieved by a group of Ranger fans. Ranger Kyle
Higashioka
later hit a 3-run homer into the Monster seats that was retrieved by
a happy kid in a Scotland jersey.
The
Stanley
Cup
playoffs Game Six was on as well at the same time. Congrats to
the Carolina
Hurricanes
for their victory over the Vegas
Golden Knights.
I only watched the third period with everything else on. I
was just never able to get into hockey this season.
6-18-26
You
know your team is swooning when the regular announcers don’t even
show up for the game. The Rangers
got swept by the Twins.
Today’s outcome was 9-3.
Eric
Nadel,
who isn’t doing home games, and Matt
Hicks
weren’t available for the broadcast. At least it wasn’t
totally unfamiliar with Jared
Sandler
there. He was working with another guy I hadn’t heard
before, whose name I didn’t get as usual. He had a good
voice and did a good job on a lousy game.
6-19-25
I
was home on a Friday night for the Juneteenth holiday. Dad
thankfully reminded me that the Rockies
were playing on TV. They were playing the Pirates
and I found myself kind of rooting for both teams. Aggie
star, Nick
Gonzales,
was hitting second in the lineup for the Bucs. He’s batting
.293 and is now playing third, which I never saw him do at NMSU.
The Rockies announcers did give a shoutout to New
Mexico State.
The
Chihuahuas
and the Rangers
were playing on the radio at the same time. I had to pick one
and the Chihuahuas had better reception. (Actually, it was
okay reception versus no reception.) I did get an update on
the Ranger game anyway. Broadcaster Tim
Hagerty
reported the Padres’
Ty France
had hit a grand slam off Jacob
deGrom
and hit another homer in his next at bat. The Rangers still
won, 9-7.
I missed a good game there.
Back
in Denver,
Rockies pitcher, Kyle
Freeland,
got his 1,000 career strikeout in the seventh. Some of the
crowd were aware of it before the announcement and were cheering him
on. Freeland waved at the crowd and struckout the next batter
to end the inning. He put down 15 down in a row with 8
strikeouts. Unfortunately in the eighth, he gave up a run and
was taken out. Pirate Bryan
Reynolds,
a late scratch in the lineup, came in to pinch hit, and on the first
pitch, drove in the tying run to make it, 2-2. Nick then
tripled in the go-ahead run.
In
the bottom of the eighth with two outs, Rockies pinch hitter, Broxton
Fulford,
doubled in two runs to give the Rox back the lead, 4-3. In the
top of the ninth, the Pirates loaded the bases with no outs.
Reliever Antonio
Senzatela
got a strikeout and a double play to end the game, 4-3
Rockies. What a game! Let’s hear it for the day off.
It
was also a sub two-and-a-half hour game. I turned the
Chihuahuas’ game back on. When the sun went down, the reception had
gotten too bad to listen to. I’d thought it was a close game
when I left. Imagine my shock that it was 14-1
pups over the Aces
after a 7-run eighth. The Aces even sent in a position player
to pitch for part of that eighth inning. The Chihuahuas have
strangely been playing better since the Padres called up several of
their best players.
Oddly
I was getting better reception out of Albuquerque
for an Isotopes’
game that was still going on late. They had a 9-3
win
over Sugar
Land.
They’re going to finish the first half over .500, which is an
accomplishment for them.
6-20-26
The
next night, nearly the same situation. Paul
Skenes
started for the Pirates
against the Rockies.
I didn’t get to hear that part of the game. I couldn’t
get KOA
until the sun went down. I missed the Rockies’ Jake
McCarthy
hitting a lead off inside-the-park home run in the first. It
was an epic 13-second dash around the basepads.
When
I was listening, it was the ninth with the Rockies up, 2-1.
However, the Pirates had the bases loaded and two outs. On a
slow roller to third, the fielder had no play on it, but he waved
that he was interfered with by the runner coming from second. I
hear alternating accounts that the runner had brushed the fielder or
the ball. The umps conferenced and agreed that interference
had happened and that was the end of the game. Rockies win,
2-1.
Lucky wins still count. Did I hear the postgame correctly?
This was the first time since last year that the Rockies had won two
in a row? Also, they had 40k fans there. They’re over
a million in attendance already this year? For this team?
NASCAR
was racing in San
Diego
at the naval base there. There were issues on the temporary
street course. The Truck
Series
only had 4 undamaged vehicles by the end of the race. The
O’Reilly
Series
race, which I tried to watch, had an hour delay at the beginning of
the race as a manhole cover came up and damaged a car. They
had to check all of the manhole covers at that point. Then
there was another hour delay with a 19-car wreck at the start of
Stage 3.
I
thought the late finish would mean they’d join the following Banana
Ball
game in progress or not at all, but they waited two hours to start
the game. This meant that the fans were there after midnight
in Nashville
to watch the Party
Animals
versus the Texas
Tailgaters.
At least they got a good game.
In
the ninth, a fan might have caught a ball for the second out of the
inning, but he was on the concourse where there are no cameras.
The players and fans complained. The fan even came out on
field with the ball, but it was disallowed. After a 14-pitch
battle, which included another near foul out to a fan, the batter
ended up hitting a 3-run homer for the Tailgators to put them in the
lead. In the bottom, there was a near fight between the teams
after a play at the plate. The Party Animals did come back and
win it in the bottom of the inning, though.