Seattle Mariners Archives - womenssportsnow.com https://womenssportsnow.com/tag/seattle-mariners/ womenssportsnow.com Wed, 26 Jun 2024 09:50:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 214932294 Missing Bats: Before the strikeout craze, baseball’s ‘Galileos’ fought to change the game https://womenssportsnow.com/missing-bats-before-the-strikeout-craze-baseballs-galileos-fought-to-change-the-game/ https://womenssportsnow.com/missing-bats-before-the-strikeout-craze-baseballs-galileos-fought-to-change-the-game/#respond Wed, 26 Jun 2024 09:00:31 +0000 https://womenssportsnow.com/missing-bats-before-the-strikeout-craze-baseballs-galileos-fought-to-change-the-game/

The San Diego School of Baseball was backed by hitting stars such as Tony Gwynn and Alan Trammell, but it was the pitching minds that gave the early 1980s baseball camp its charm — and its legacy. Brent Strom and Tom House had been teammates at the University of Southern California and then, later, journeyman […]

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The San Diego School of Baseball was backed by hitting stars such as Tony Gwynn and Alan Trammell, but it was the pitching minds that gave the early 1980s baseball camp its charm — and its legacy.

Brent Strom and Tom House had been teammates at the University of Southern California and then, later, journeyman pitchers in the major leagues. Aside from lineage, they also shared deep-seated hunches that there was more to learn about baseball than previous generations had taught.

So when the day’s instruction was over, they sat in the dugouts of Grossmont College or ventured to a local watering hole, tossing ideas back and forth: the things they loved about the game, the things they thought were wrong, the things they wanted to change.

Once, during a baby shower for another coach’s wife, the men were scolded when they were found in the corner of a room, playing back film of pitchers. They were all obsessives, and the San Diego School of Baseball was their offseason oasis — a place where they could gather and discuss, without judgment and scorn, some of the very concepts that decades later would alter the balance of baseball.

“A summit,” House called it, “of smart baseball minds.”

Before PITCHf/x and Statcast could measure progress, before internet message boards and…

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Adrián Beltré, Todd Helton, Joe Mauer elected to Baseball Hall of Fame https://womenssportsnow.com/adrian-beltre-todd-helton-joe-mauer-elected-to-baseball-hall-of-fame/ https://womenssportsnow.com/adrian-beltre-todd-helton-joe-mauer-elected-to-baseball-hall-of-fame/#respond Tue, 23 Jan 2024 23:27:44 +0000 https://womenssportsnow.com/adrian-beltre-todd-helton-joe-mauer-elected-to-baseball-hall-of-fame/

The Hall of Fame is made for players like Adrián Beltré. As a pure hitter, reliable slugger and slick third baseman, Beltré had few peers: No other infielder in the history of baseball has 3,000 hits, 400 homers and five Gold Glove awards. Beltré, now 44, was a lock for the Hall of Fame. As […]

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The Hall of Fame is made for players like Adrián Beltré. As a pure hitter, reliable slugger and slick third baseman, Beltré had few peers: No other infielder in the history of baseball has 3,000 hits, 400 homers and five Gold Glove awards. Beltré, now 44, was a lock for the Hall of Fame.

As a first-time Cooperstown candidate, Beltré did not need to follow the breathless tracking of public ballots this winter. Yet he still could not feel secure, he said, until his wife and son assured him on Tuesday that election day looked promising. He could savor it.

“That made me relax a little bit more, and I kind of forced myself to try to enjoy this moment,” Beltré said from his home in Southern California, moments after achieving his sport’s greatest honor. “It was going to be a nice moment, and probably the last moment in baseball that I was going to accomplish, being at the pinnacle of the game.”

Beltré had company at the summit on Tuesday, with Todd Helton and Joe Mauer joining him in the new class of Hall of Famers. Former manager Jim Leyland, elected by the Contemporary Baseball Era Committee last month, will also be inducted at the ceremony July 21.

Candidates must receive 75 percent of the ballots from 10-year members of the Baseball Writers’ Association of…

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Lou Piniella, one vote short again, should have had his Hall of Fame moment https://womenssportsnow.com/lou-piniella-one-vote-short-again-should-have-had-his-hall-of-fame-moment/ https://womenssportsnow.com/lou-piniella-one-vote-short-again-should-have-had-his-hall-of-fame-moment/#respond Tue, 05 Dec 2023 02:04:27 +0000 https://womenssportsnow.com/lou-piniella-one-vote-short-again-should-have-had-his-hall-of-fame-moment/

NASHVILLE — Jim Leyland buttoned up his forever jersey on Monday, the one with “Hall of Fame” in script across the front. He sat on a ballroom dais at the Winter Meetings, flanked by Hall officials as his wife, Katie, beamed with pride from a few feet away. So did former rivals and colleagues like […]

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NASHVILLE — Jim Leyland buttoned up his forever jersey on Monday, the one with “Hall of Fame” in script across the front. He sat on a ballroom dais at the Winter Meetings, flanked by Hall officials as his wife, Katie, beamed with pride from a few feet away. So did former rivals and colleagues like Tony La Russa and Joe Torre.

Leyland, 78, was one of them now: a certified Hall of Famer, elected by the Contemporary Baseball Era Committee on Sunday night. A phone call from the Hall’s chairman, Jane Forbes Clark, welcomed him to Cooperstown.

“My wife said, who is that? I said, ‘It’s Jake from State Farm,’” Leyland said, his deadpan wit still sharp. “Anyway, I had 294 texts last night, from friends and people all over the world, really. … I can’t tell you how fortunate a ride it’s been.”

As joyous as the occasion was for Leyland, it was striking to see the other, empty side of the dais. That’s where Lou Piniella should have been.

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