Archive for August, 2008
Today we are all Hornets
Closed Published by Bright Side of The Sun August 30th, 2008 on AZ Sports Hub - Arizona's Destination for Sports - Blogs - Podcasts - ForumsThree years to the day that Katrina devastated a great American city and set in motion chain of events that lead to another minor disaster the citizens of New Orleans are facing yet another threat.
Let us hope as Matt Corn at Hardwood Paroxysm does that the disaster/gravitational pull that is Ron Artest will pull the storm off its present track.
And least you all think that in Phoenix we are spared from natural disasters here’s a picture from behind my house after Thursday’s thunderstorm hit with 100mph winds. My house is fine and we only lost power for about 24hrs. I am headed over to my friends house now to help out - her roof is gone.
None of this compares to what Katrina did and let’s hope and pray that Gustav will somehow be satiated by gulf shrimp and crab and peter out before making landfall.
Today, we are all Hornets.
D-Day
Closed Published by RaisingZona August 30th, 2008 on AZ Sports Hub - Arizona's Destination for Sports - Blogs - Podcasts - ForumsAs I wake up this morning to another season of college football, I also am not forgetting that today is the end of the road as far as hundreds of NFL players go. Today teams must cut their rosters down to 53. As far as the Cardinals go, some calls will be tough while others […]
Leinart Shows Up In Preseason Finale
Closed Published by Eli Wahlstrom August 30th, 2008 on AZ Sports Hub - Arizona's Destination for Sports - Blogs - Podcasts - Forums
Well this interesting preseason is finally over after a 28-14 loss
to the Denver Broncos. Most importantly the Arizona Cardinals got out
of there without any serious injuries. So maybe that’s a good omen for
the rest of the season.
But lets get to the exciting stuff…
Matt Leinart
tore it up out there tonight. He was 10 of 14 for 177 yards with 1
touchdown. He looked like a real professional football player and that
makes things even tougher on coach Whisenhunt
when making his final decision on who the starting quarterback is.
Warner on the other hand was no slouch himself. Kurt was 4 for 4 for 48
yards and looked very solid as usual. So who’s the starting quarterback
for the season opener in San Francisco?
I agree with Whisenhunt
when he says that they need to look at the body of work when picking
the quarterback. Well the body of work clearly favors Warner, I don’t
even think it’s close. Kurt is better right now and that’s when I want
to win, RIGHT NOW! I’ve
been talking about the future with the Cardinals for 20 years and I’m
running out of patients, I’d like to go to the playoffs this year and
not make a project out of the season. I’m still impressed with Matt and
still think he has a future in this league and possibly with the
Cardinals.
What’s amazing to
me is how you can go to all the Cardinals fan forums last week and see
everyone saying Kurt needs to start and Matt’s career is over. Then
after a good week for Leinart,
those same fans are saying Kurt needs to ride the pine. Are these the
same people that flip flop from candidate to candidate based on a
stupid political commercial? It just blows my mind how often people
keep changing their opinions with this Warner and Leinart thing. It’s just obvious, one guy is NFL ready and can move the ball up the field. The other has shown flashes of doing that but is way too inconsistent. I don’t think the Cardinals can afford that.
I’d
like to stress once again that I think Kurt should be the quarterback
for the Arizona Cardinals. But I am not giving up on Matt at all. I
think if Kurt does go down with an injury or is starting to struggle,
that Leinart is a very
capable player to step in and hold down the fort. For the time being
though Matt still seems like he has plenty to learn and some more time
on the bench might not be the worst thing for him. Even though he’s at
his best when coaches are showing confidence in him and letting him
play.
A couple quick notes about the last preseason game against Denver…
Calais
Campbell is the real deal. I know a lot of what he’s done is against
back ups but he man handles everyone that gets in his way. It looks
like the Cardinals have found one of their future defensive ends. On the topic of future defensive ends Kenny Iwebema
is looking very good himself and is a player I could see starting one
day for sure. Not only starting but being a very solid contributor to
the team.
I don’t want to be negative but the offensive and defensive
lines looked awful last night. What was more disappointing was both
starting lines for the Cardinals were going up against the Broncos back
ups. Hopefully this was because the Cardinals were missing a few starters themselves.
Dominique
Rodgers-Cromartie looks like the real deal. DRC is starting to look
like he’s figuring it all out. He clearly has the physical tools to
play against the best wide recievers out there. I’m very pleased with
what I’ve seen out of him.
There’s plenty more I could talk about
but I’m tired and want to go to bed. So forgive me for gramatical
errors. I’ll be doing another podcast soon once the final rosters come
out so watch for that. Now the real football begins!
Diamondbacks 9, Dodgers 3: Doug Davis Deftly Dodges Dodger Disaster
Closed Published by Jim McLennan August 30th, 2008 on AZ Snakepit: Front Page PostsRecord: 69-65. Pace: 83-79. Change on last season: -5
Magic number: 24. Playoff odds: 80.9%
For six and a half innings, that has to count among the most nerve-wracking baseball games I’ve ever attended. I was positive that the Diamondbacks were going to find a way, somehow, to screw this up. There were two moments in particular, where I would have bet several, fairly-major internal organs that the Dodgers were about to blow the game apart. The first was in the opening inning, where Doug Davis was as good at locating the strike-zone as… Well, my metaphorometer just imploded on that one: after 22 pitches, only six had been over the plate. He’d loaded the bases and fallen behind Loney 2-0. However, somehow, he got the Dodger batter to ground-out and posted a zero.
We’ll get back to Doug’s escapology later. Fast-forward, however, to the top of the seventh where Los Angeles had made it a one-run game against Cruz. Kirk Gibson - for reason, again, we’ll discuss in due course, Bob Melvin was not about - pulled Famine and sent in the Equallsizer. However, he promptly allowed another single, to put the tying run in scoring position with only one out. I haven’t checked the Gameday Thread yet, but I can only imagine ‘Skins readying his explanatory diagram about the folly of using Qualls with runners on base. However, disaster - and a possible ninth loss for our reliever - were averted, with the aid of a 4-6-3 double-play that ended the inning, and proved also to end the Dodgers’ last hope.
At that stage, I was still not looking forward to the last six outs. And just for clarification, that’s “not looking forward to,” in much the same way one would, for example, not look forward to exploratory root canal work, without anesthetic, performed by a chisel-wielding maniac with a grudge. The prospect of seeing Rauch and Lyon getting a vote of confidence, in the shape of one-run lead to defend, was actually making my stomach physically churn [though I admit the meatball sandwich and garlic fries probably didn’t help in this area]. I would therefore like to thank the offense for saving my digestive system from further punishment, by putting up a four-spot in the bottom of the seventh, to turn this into a comfortable margin.

Good to see us get back the Max Factor, touching 98 on the radar-gun
Doug Davis. [Yeah, this report is going to be all over the place. I’m pretty much just writing down stuff as I remember it] In the middle of the fourth, this was still a 0-0 game, but that simply goes to illustrate how you can take two utterly-different routes to the same end. Davis’s zero had been in spite of allowing five hits and two walks, with Los Angeles leaving six men on base, three of them in scoring position, Kuroda, on the other hand, had been perfect, retiring all nine men he faced. This being baseball, of course, it was Kuroda who got tagged first, Dunn doubling nicely down the left-field line to score Young, who’d ended the perfecto as the eleventh man up, with a clean single to center.
However, Doug’s bullet-dodging came to a grinding halt in the fifth, and it was partly his own fault, as he failed to get over and cover first-base, on a ball hit down the line. By the time he got there, Ethier had got his toe on the bag first. Mandy singled him over, and then Ethier stole third - one of three successful SB attepmpts against Davis this evening, which is not his usual modus operandi. However, it looked like the runner should have been called out at third; not the only dubious call to go against Arizona this evening, though since we won, I won’t be making too much of a fuss about them.
A sacrifice fly and a single gave Los Angeles the lead at 2-1, and the irritating Dodger fans [I particularly despite the ones in the ‘Ramirez #99′ shirts - yeah, that will be a good long-term investment…] were making their presence felt, though a clearly-gassed Davis got out of the inning without further damage, having survived five innings, thrown 98 pitches, allowed eight hits and three walks, but only two runs, both earned. It was far from his best performance of the year, but he did what he has done with a fair degree of regularity since coming to Arizona: keep his team in the game, despite a near-gridlock of opposing players on the base-paths.

The Dunninator takes a hearty swing
The game immediately swung back Arizona’s way in the bottom half, after Tracy singled and Snyder walked. Ojeda went up there attempting to bunt, but fouled off the first two attempts. He then grounded into a potential double-play, but Nomah fluffed the throw badly, allowing Tracy to score and put two men in scoring position. Davis was pinch-hit for [while, yes, we should praise Melvin for making good decisions, this was not exactly difficult - after Tracy’s hit, my first comment to Mrs. SnakePit was, “Good, Davis’s spot will come up and they’ll have to PH for him] and Salazar drove in the go-ahead run with a single. The amusing thing on that play was seeing Chip Hale at third, basically blocking Ojeda from going down the line - Augie having run through a rare Hale stop-sign a while ago. But The Littlest Ballplayer got to trot home on a Drew sacrifice fly, and we finished the inning back ahead, 4-2.
However it did end in interesting fashion. Jackson was called out for fan interference after a fan leaned over and caught a foul ball which James Loney was heading towards, down the right-field line. Now, there’s no doubt that the fan was in the wrong, and was clearly leaning into the field of play. But from where I was sitting, I don’t think Loney would have made the play, and that’s also a deciding factor in whether or not to call fan interference. My instinct was, the umpire blew the call - and Melvin apparently agreed, coming out and arguing the point so vehemently, that the first-base umpire tossed him from the game, Bob’s second ejection of the season. “That was a little bit of a misunderstanding,” Melvin said. “I did say a bad word which would get me thrown out.”
Sheesh, i’d better get this wrapped up. I think I’ve covered most of the important stuff. Justin Upton returned, and smoked a pinch-hit double in his first at-bat. Max Scherzer also came back, with a fine eighth innings. Romero and Rosales were the two people sent down to Tucson, though I suspect they may well both be back up in a couple of days, when the rosters expand. Two hits for Young, two and a walk for Dunn, Reynolds got a hit and a walk, and Snyder continued his impressive plate discipline with a pair of walks.
Game Notes
- I was surprised to see that were only 32,610 there - I’d have expected more, since that’s almost six thousand less than the last Friday game at Chase against the Dodgers, just after the All-Star break
- Unexpected giveaway tonight, in the shape of a Diamondbacks travel mug, courtesy of Panda Express. And, of course, about forty thousand BEAT LA signs.
- That helped make up for the AC, which seemed to be struggling all night long, even down on our lower level. There hardly seemed to be any cold air flowing at all, though perhaps the humidity had something to do with that.
- There was an embarrassing failure of the scoreboard during our three-run rally in the fifth, with the board getting badly stuck. It at first refused to acknowledge we’d scored a second run, wouldn’t move past displaying Salazar’s stats and also couldn’t perform basic math. Can you see something wrong with the following?
The boxscore then vanished entirely, being replaced by ‘Welcome to Chase Field’, before finally settling down, no doubt after a frantic call to tech support. - But that wasn’t the only glitch - when they tried to go split-screen for the Sausage Race, the right-hand image, supposedly of Vanessa and the contestants, was all squished and distorted like a fun-house mirror, much to the host’s disconcertion. Really, you’d think they’d have got the bugs out of the $10-12 million system by now.
- Tommy Lasorda was present, sitting a couple of rows behind the Dodgers dugout, but also getting his picture taken with fans, etc. I did see Vin Scully too, poking his head out from the broadcast booth above us.
- Yes, there did appear to be ’something’ going on in the left-field bleachers in the late inning of the game. I’m thinking it was some kind of brawl, but it was too far away for me to see. However, the people at the front of the section had basically abandoned the game, turning their backs on it, so whatever it was, was clearly quite interesting…
- We tried chanting, “4.5 games up! 4.5 games up!” as we left, but it didn’t quite have the same ring. Didn’t even stay around for the fireworks tonight, since we have to get ready for tomorrow. I’m sure they were basically the same as the other six times we’ve seen them this season.

[Click to enlarge, in new window]
Master of his domain: Augie Ojeda, +16.4%
Honorable mentions: Dunn, +12.8%; Qualls, +10.2%
God-emperor of suck: Juan Cruz, -6.0%
Looks like almost 800 comments this evening, an impressive total despite my absence. Took me a while to plow through them, but it seemed like a lot of fun - beating our nearest rival does, of course help! Present were: Azreous, 4 Corners Fan, foulpole, DbacksSkins, kishi, unnamedDBacksfan, AJforAZ, garyho, azwebber17, LucaMaz3, Wimb, Snakebitten, TwinnerA, pepperdinedevil, Diamondhacks, Scrbl, Zephon, hotclaws, Gravity, luckycc, njjohn, srdmad and soco.
Obviously, a huge, huge victory for the team: this was the game in the series I was most concerned about losing, and to take the win gives us a great boost. The worst that can happen now is, the Dodgers leave town still 2.5 games back, and with Webb plus Haren going in the remaining two contests, I am hoping we will be significantly better than that. A split would put us 4.5 ahead, with the Dodgers only having 25 games left to catch up. I shall certainly sleep well tonight… Not much from me until Sunday. I’ve already written the Gameday Thread, so that should appear automagically tomorrow afternoon. Hopefully you folk will cope without me, and I’ll wake up the day after tomorrow to read of more success.
Diamondbacks pad lead over L.A. with 9-3 win
Closed Published by Vince Marotta August 30th, 2008 on AZ Sports Hub - Arizona's Destination for Sports - Blogs - Podcasts - ForumsThe Skinny: Stephen Drew, Adam Dunn and Conor Jackson drove in 2 runs apiece as the Arizona Diamondbacks pasted the Los Angeles Dodgers 9-3 in the first game of a 3-game series at Chase Field. The loss was the Dodgers’ 8th straight. Dunn broke up a scoreless tie in the 4th with an rbi […]
Cards Dominated in All Phases of Game, Lose 28-14
Closed Published by RaisingZona August 30th, 2008 on AZ Sports Hub - Arizona's Destination for Sports - Blogs - Podcasts - ForumsSo, at least it was the fourth preseason game. It was the final tune-up leading to the regular season opener in San Francisco next weekend. If this was a regular season game, I’d be a little more than worried about the state of Arizona Cardinals football. However you cut it, the Cardinals lost to the […]
Amare wants to woo the ladies
Closed Published by Greg Esposito August 30th, 2008 on AZ Sports Hub - Arizona's Destination for Sports - Blogs - Podcasts - ForumsSuns.com went one-on-one with Amare Stoudemire to find out what he did with his summer. He has some interesting things to say, including the little nugget that he learned how to play piano to impress the ladies. Got to love the fact that the millionaire NBA star Amare Stoudemire needs another angle to get women. […]
Overflow Thread, #134: 8/29 vs. Dodgers
Closed Published by kishi August 30th, 2008 on AZ Snakepit: Front Page PostsUp 8-3, over 600 comments, going into the top of the eighth.
Beat LA!
In The Zona - Gold Medal Giveaway Edition 8/29/08
Closed Published by Matt Blake August 29th, 2008 on AZ Sports Hub - Arizona's Destination for Sports - Blogs - Podcasts - ForumsOn this week’s second edition of In The Zona, we talk about ASU’s Devil Dome getting teared to shreds, we continue to talk Warner/Leinart, preview the Dodgers coming into town, and lastly discuss Jason Kidd’s bizarre decision to give away his gold medal.
Now lets do this:
Topic 1: ASU’s Practice Dome Destroyed in Monsoon
Does this have […]
What to watch for: NAU at ASU
Closed Published by Pitchfork Nation August 29th, 2008 on AZ Sports Hub - Arizona's Destination for Sports - Blogs - Podcasts - ForumsLet’s get off the bad news of the $1 million worth of damage to the Dennis Dome for a while and focus back on what’s good in life: the fact that no one was injured in last night’s storm/dome deflation and that ASU football returns to the gridiron in ab…
