Stick to baseball, 9/16/17.

For Insiders this week, I wrote two pieces, one on eight top 100 prospects who had disappointing years in 2017, and my last minor-league scouting notebook of the season, covering Yankees, Pirates, Nationals, and Cardinals prospects. I held my regular Klawchat on Thursday. My next column for ESPN will be my annual “players I got wrong” piece; if you have suggestions, throw them in the comments. I try to stick to players who’ve beaten expectations for more than just one season, although sometimes I waive that if there’s a particular story I want to tell.

Over at Paste I reviewed Yamataï, the new boardgame from Days of Wonder, which hasn’t fared that well critically or commercially but which all three members of my family really liked. It’s also a gorgeous game, which never hurts around here.

My book, Smart Baseball, is out and still selling well (or so I’m told); thanks to all of you who’ve already picked up a copy. And please sign up for my free email newsletter, which is back to more or less weekly at this point now that I’m not traveling for a bit.

I have a ton of links from the NY Times this week, which requires a subscription above a certain number of free articles. I normally try to spread my links out across many sources, but the NYT had so much great content this week that I stuck with it. I’ve tagged a few of them as such for those of you who don’t subscribe (I do, obviously). And now, the links…

Comments

  1. More about youth football. A local community has cancelled it’s youth tackle football program after only 11 participants signed up (baseball’s participation rate tripled!). Highland Park is a well-to-do community and there is already talk that the high school in there may merge it’s football team with a neighboring school in a few years.

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/highland-park/news/ct-hpn-park-dist-cancels-tackle-football-tl-0831-20170823-story.html

    • I played football in high school (many years ago) and loved it. I watch it every Sunday (and every other day the freaking NFL decides it needs to make more money from) and of course am a slave to fantasy football. But the science behind brain damage and football is just too overwhelming. Thank goodness I had daughters so I didn’t have to worry about whether I would allow my kids to play football, but I’m very, very glad to say that my son-in-law does not intend to let my grandson play football. The world will survive if youth football is discontinued; there are tons of other sports for kids to play that are safer than tackle football and teach the positive values of team sports.

    • I saw this interesting study on the topic of high school football.

      http://www.charlotteobserver.com/sports/nfl/carolina-panthers/article172064837.html?curator=SportsREDEF

  2. Brian in ahwatukee

    3rd wave is being bought up by large companies. Intelly, blue bottle, stumptown etc. apparently there is thought they can be profitable. I suspect they lose the allure as the brand dissipates in quest for higher company profits. Does 3rd wave return to 2nd wave?

  3. The Dude Abides

    Of course the first word on that PA legislator’s bio is “Christian.” What car would Jesus use to run over protestors?

  4. There was a great Nova episode on the Cassini Mission: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/space/death-dive-to-Saturn.html

    Amazing footage and discoveries.

  5. Out of basic curiosity, on the Jemele Hill comments, does ESPN (or any of your other bosses for that matter) mention or train you on your social network activity?

    My job does, but in the sense of sensitive information. They also make it clear that our associations will be monitored for security background checks. I have never heard of someone being fired over it, and I certainly work with some publicly eccentric folks.

    • I think the question comes down (or perhaps should come down to) to whether Hill posted the comments on an ESPN account, or a personal account. If the former, she’s essentially representing her employer. The Feds and a lot of private companies make that distinction — if you post something on a company account, or mentioning the employer in a way that makes it appear you’re reflecting company/agency policy, you’re in the wrong and liable.

    • We don’t have official ESPN accounts.

    • I don’t have any official accounts connected to my work, either. My employer still has mandatory training for us involving our public persona. As I said, I was just curious how a such a large corporation may attempt to instruct those in employs. Thanks.

    • A Salty Scientist

      At my relatively large Flyover U, we have no specific policies in place regarding personal social media accounts (at least nothing easily searchable in the faculty handbook). There are policies against discrimination and harassment that could potentially be used in the case of inappropriate social media posts. But there is also specific verbiage about supporting academic freedom (free expression of political opinions and freedom to contact government officials as a private citizen). Not sure how other large universities handle this, but my educated guess is that they are similarly ad hoc.

    • A Salty Scientist, at Northwestern we had a electrical engineering professor who was also a Holocaust denier. Every so often he’d make the news with his views, but he was scrupulous enough to avoid linking them to his job as an NU professor in any way that the school would kind of grit its teeth and say there really wasn’t anything they could do about it.