Archive for the ‘blues’ Category

Olio

Sunday, September 30th, 2007

I wrote this comment at the tail end of a rather bitter post at VeB regarding the Cubs going to the playoffs while the Cards hit the links:

Last October, I was watching game 7 of the NLCS at a bar that was 90% Cub fans—all rooting fanatically for the Mets. After Wagonmaker froze Beltran, there was a split second of pained silence (aside from my celebration) before a chant went up: Lets Go Tigers! *clap* *clap* *clap*clap*clap*

I’d never be so lame as to root for whatever team is playing the Cubs, but as a fan of the Cards, I find it very hard to root for them to win—not for any hatred-fueled rivalry, but for what it would mean going forward.

The Cubs have a small window to win the World Series before all these backloaded contracts they recently signed turn into pumpkins. If they can ride these new horses to a world series, the faithful in the friendly confines would be grateful enough to give Cub management a free pass for whatever they want to do, and if they’re wise, they’d rid themselves of those contracts to some dumb GM who pays more attention to the playoffs than to the likely future performance of players with large contracts and restock their farm system with a supply of top prospects to tap into for years to come.

This would be a very bad thing for the Cardinals, since it would give a division rival in a big market huge payroll flexibility and a stream of talent coming up for years to come just when they were on the brink of being handcuffed through the first half-decade of the second century of their World Series drought.

The Cubs are very hot right now and have a good front three in their rotation, but it’s hard to believe that the worst division in baseball could produce two WS champions in consecutive years.

I’m not rooting against ‘em, but most definitely not rooting for ‘em either.

It was a difficult season, come to a close today in fine fashion on a five game winning streak. Rest up, birds. Be ready to have some real fun again next year.

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Wasn’t feeling great last night, so I used the evening to read Bing West’s The Village. This morning, I read through this webpage maintained by marines who fought in Combined Action Platoons. Included are West’s Marine Corps Gazette article, Fast Rifles, and scans of his pamphlet Small Unit Action in Vietnam. Incredible stories. I couldn’t stop reading the book until it was finished. Every review mentions that West’s style of writing is emotionally detached and without pretense. It’s a palpable effect—you learn of these amazing men and come to admire and respect them only to have their deaths at Viet Cong hands reported with unceremonious brevity.

It’s a good thing to take from the book—and impossible to miss—these men deserve respect and gratitude for their work. Not just those men in the book, too. At the CAP Veteranas website, there’s an anecdote of digging three VC out of a tunnel and finding them in possession of boxes of clothing donated by Berkeley students. Shameful.

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I’ve made significant academic progress (finally) over the past few weeks. I wrote my proposal and the first draft was accepted. I’ve scheduled my written Prelim for two weeks from now and the oral defense in a little over three weeks. I’m swamped with non-academic work this week—I’ll be working 8am-7pm the next two days for two very important clients and it only gets slightly better the rest of the week. I’m going to get working on my research project in whatever downtime I have, though. I’m hoping to put myself into a position where I can go into my oral prelim with some proof-of-concept work in my back pocket to address whatever issues my committee identifies as areas of concern.

I’ll be working late in the lab tonight getting things ready for the week, so I don’t expect to sleep much the next three nights.

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On a monthly good-news note, a new episode of Cautionary Tales of Swords will be out sometime tomorrow. Hopefully it comes back for a fifth episode. Because I laugh hard at it.

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In non-Cardinal sporting news, the Lambs got their butts handed to them by the Cowboys today in a game I didn’t watch. Fortunately, the Illini beat #21 AP-ranked Penn State (19 in the Coach’s poll) and a promising young Blues team starts the new season on Thursday. In this week’s polls, the University of Illinois football team received 59 votes from the AP, which I guess lands us at #28 in their rankings. Put up a good showing (or even, dare to dream, defeat) #5 Wisconsin this Saturday and we’ll start getting some national recognition. To have a team built on talented freshmen and sophomores having that kind of success would do wonders for Zook’s already exceptional recruiting efforts.

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Barbarism in Burma: this blog is a good place to start.

Long Day

Wednesday, March 7th, 2007

An encouraging sign: Jason Isringhausen threw to batters today for the first time since September and it went pretty well for such a long layoff, major surgery notwithstanding. When I hear that he threw 24 pitches and two of them sawed off bats, it’s a very good sign. I see on tonight’s Cardinals Live Report, they’re billing it as a “bad day.”

There’s no word as to who is the ninth player at major league camp to be re-assigned to minor league camp. My guess from yesterday, Mike Smith, is the most likely candidate. I wonder whether nobody followed up on that due to a belief that his re-assignment isn’t all that noteworthy or whether it’s a different player, whom I speculated on in the comments to that post. In order to better understand the consequences of that speculated player’s assignment to minor-league camp, I dug up this useful article, and found that he’d need to be placed on irrevocable waivers. It sounds like it’s going to happen sooner or later, but I’d prefer they wait until he has a few bad games (maybe) or other teams get closer to establishing their 25-man rosters. I don’t know well the effective strategies front offices use in these situations, though, so I’ll be keeping an eye out for a few days.

This kid‘s dad has a happy home life.

It’s a good thing I didn’t send a boastful email to Bobovski when the Blues were up 2-0 late in the second period. His beloved Flames just came back to win 4-2.

I got my first look at Windows Vista, running on a new HP box with 2 gig RAM. Applications pop open quick. With nothing running but an empty excel spreadsheet, 871 megs of memory was in use. With all the driver problems I’ve heard of, this looks like a great opportunity for Linux to grab a bit of the home market. All my personal computers dual-boot to XP and Slack. I’d imagine that at least some people will give at least a dual-boot setup a try, given the opportunity. I’m not sure if any distribution has tried to exploit the niche, but you’d think somebody would build a disk partitioner into their install procedures.

I stayed up until 4:30am last night preparing a talk for this morning on this paper. I was mildly annoyed by what must be a major error in example (33), where there’s a * next to Andrew in the gloss that can’t be there without making the example useless. The talk went pretty well from what classmates told me. I figure I hit myself a double. I’m safe from a double play and I’m in scoring position. I’ve got another talk tomorrow on a much longer, more complex paper and with a good presentation of that one, I’ll be circling the bases like the Gashouse Gorillas.

The plan is to set the coffee pot to kick on at 4:30am and get back to work.

Gonna See Some Ballgames

Saturday, March 3rd, 2007

I’m overloaded with sports this morning. Watching a nail-biter of an Illini at Iowa game, delayed by the magic of DVR due to the fact that I was consumed with buying Cardinal tickets for this season when the game started. I picked up tickets for these games:

The last two games of a mid-week Pirates series, May 23rd and 24th. The 23rd game is autograph night (sponsored by Ice Mountain) and the 24th is Bud Light t-shirt night, and I loves me some free T. I’m hoping Tom Gorzelanny both makes the rotation and pitches one of those days.

The first home game in July against the Diamondbacks. I’m going on a family vacation to Rehoboth Beach the week before then and had the choice of either seeing a Royals game before the trip or the Snakes afterwards. Big Carlos Quentin fan I am, I went for the D-Backs. It’d be a treat if Big Unit pitches that game, too. I bought Bank of America club tickets for that one… Looking forward to that.

The Braves series in August. I go to at least one full series every year since I have a bit of a drive to go to the Lou and would rather see three or four games than one. Last season, I took some friends from Atlanta to a Braves series and we had an outstanding time. Enough fun to guarantee that we’d do it again this year, although two of them are moving to Denver in a few weeks. If they can’t make it to the Lou for that weekend, it shouldn’t be too difficult to find three friends in St. Louis to take the tickets for weekend games. We didn’t get to see Smoltz make a start last season, so I’m hoping we see him and Mike Hampton, who I courageously predict to have a gigantic season.

Damn, Illinois just lost the game at Iowa. This game was pencilled in as a loss several weeks ago—Iowa is too strong at home for this Illini team.

Let the overload continue, though. The Blues are up 2-0 in a noon start against the first hockey team that I rooted for, the New York Rangers. (Guy LaFleur!)

Finally, this article about Carlos Zambrano has me laughing. Bookmark that one and whip it out come June.