Stick to baseball, 7/13/19.

I had two ESPN+ pieces this week: my midseason ranking of the top 50 prospects in baseball and my Futures Game wrapup. I held a Klawchat on Thursday.

I’d planned to send a newsletter out yesterday but I’m so backed up on life things from being sick for ten days (I’m recovered now, just dealing with a mild cough). I’m going to try to do that in the next few days, though, and you can still sign up here.

And now, the links…

Comments

  1. The question is, does Keith love Wawa?

  2. A Salty Scientist

    Has any generation tried to pull the ladder up more than the Boomers?

    • Yes, every previous generation. Boomers were never monolithic. You can go back to when we were kids. For every kid who played a Beatles record, there was one who broke a Beatles record in protest. Half the kids protested the Viet Nam war, half supported it. Housing segregation was far worse when I was a kid than it is now. We have a long way to go, but this childish “blame the Boomers” is just intellectual laziness, not a fact-based description of current challenges.

    • Every generation tries; the rich always want to get richer.

      The boomers are the first generation to *succeed*, in that young people today are the first U.S. generation that can reasonably expect not to live as well as their parents.

  3. “Seth Rich murder conspiracy theory”

    I’m sorry, bu to have a conspiracy theory, there must be a contradictory factual account/narrative.

    To date, police have only theorized it was a botched robbery and the investigation remains open.

    It’s probably better, and more defensible, to say some of these theories are “wildly speculative,” but dismissing them as “conspiracy theories” when the official, factual account is so thin is just poor form.

    This isn’t a good look for you, Keith.

    • A Salty Scientist

      Hmmm, so claiming that Clinton and the DNC conspired to kill Seth Rich to avenge and cover up his leak without any evidence is merely wildly speculative instead of a conspiracy theory. And it’s a bad look to say otherwise. Pretty weird hill to die on.

    • I never said anything about “Clinton and the DNC.”

    • Do NOT try to play a semantics game to weasel your way out of this. If the baseless claim that the Clintons and/or the DNC were responsible for the murder of Seth Rich is not a “conspiracy theory,” then what, pray tell, is it?

    • A Salty Scientist

      I never said you personally did, but that’s what the conspiracy theorists–sorry, wild speculatists–are saying.

    • You just can’t help yourself, can you, MW?

  4. Glad this MW troll has returned to argue about wildly speculative vs. conspiracy theories. You have to just sort of marvel at it.

    Where do these people come from?

    • He’s banned now. He can push this over at r/TheDonald all he likes.

    • Of course I made my post in the previous thread before seeing this comment. Good on you, Keith. That guy’s whole shtick was, “Let me make the worst semantic arguments possible to prove that I’m the smartest person here and argue some deplorable points of view while I’m at it!”

      Good riddance.

  5. FYI, Michael Becker passed away within the last week or so.

  6. ESPN had a couple of good articles this week on injuries in youth sports, especially in those that specialized in one sport. There isn’t much on baseball, mostly basketball and tennis, but have there been more HS pitchers being drafted who already had a Tommy John surgery?

    “A separate 2016 study from Bell and his team found that 36% of high school athletes classified as highly specialized, training in one sport for more than eight months a year — and that those athletes were two to three times more likely to suffer a hip or knee injury”

    There is a link to the second part from here.

    https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/27125793/these-kids-ticking-bombs-threat-youth-basketball

  7. Re: generalization. I teach physics. There is a constant question at the high school level about whether or not physics should be a graduation requirement. My current principal often makes the argument that students should have more choice. My position on that is student choice is good, but the core educational requirements should keep as many doors as we can open for students as as long as possible, and that means having broad requirements as we never know what students will do. This is a great article to reinforce that point.

  8. FWIW, Orange County isn’t full of progressives, ha. It’s more blue overall than it has been ever, for sure, but there are massively powerful conservative organizations there as well, with lingering conservative/Republican presences on local boards/councils/city governments/etc.

    Regardless of that, it’s also not really a fair thing to compare “sober living” group homes to, say, affordable housing builds. https://calmatters.org/health/2018/04/doing-the-sober-living-dance-on-californias-rehab-riviera/

    • (Edit to add: not defending the NIMBY position here, obviously, just noting that it’s a distinct and complex issue.)