Stick to baseball, 2/29/20.

My top 100 prospects package began to run this week on The Athletic, with the global top 100 running Monday, the column of guys who just missed on Tuesday, and then the American League org reports running the rest of the week. (Here’s the Rangers’ report, and the Royals’, for example.) You can access everything via this index page. I also held a Klawchat this Thursday.

My brand-new podcast, The Keith Law Show (also on iTunes), debuted this past week as well, with a guest appearance from Fangraphs’ lead prospect writer Eric Longenhagen. My thanks to all of you who’ve subscribed and/or left five-star ratings.

My second book, The Inside Game: Bad Calls, Strange Moves, and What Baseball Behavior Teaches Us About Ourselves, is due out on April 21st from Harper Collins, and you can pre-order it now via their site or wherever fine books are sold. Also, check out my free email newsletter, which I say I’ll write more often than I actually write it.

I’ve also got at least five signings scheduled at independent bookstores already, with two announced on the stores’ pages: April 24th at Politics & Prose in DC and April 25th at Midtown Scholar in Harrisburg.

And now, the links…

Comments

  1. Brian in ahwatukee

    Not related – how come you turned off the ability to comment on older posts? I sometimes want to comment in your book reviews.

    • It’s a wordpress setting – nearly all comments I would get on older posts are spam so I turned that setting on (to disable comments after some period, like six months) a while back.

  2. That GQ piece, what a fantastic read! Clearly the Argentine public’s general distrust of banks plays heavily into the crew being seen as folk heroes. But strangely absent is any reflection on the fact that they stole from private citizens, not actually from the bank itself. It doesn’t seem like this at all impacts the public’s view of the thieves.

  3. The coronavirus is the cure-
    Human Beings are the disease-

    This is the Earth correcting itself-

  4. The characterization of the Homepolish article feels way off after reading the article. I don’t see where it suggests Santos is a con man. He was certainly not a good CEO, but it was a legitimate business that was making money. When his partner left, he was put in a position he wasn’t suited for, and it brought the company down. Santos seemed like he was well suited for the marketing aspects (and a design company is a lot about the marketing), but not running the technical aspects of the company that it seemed his partner had been mostly responsible for. So when Santos had to take over everything he couldn’t handle it.

    It’s a sad story of a promising company going under, but it doesn’t seem like there was any sort of scam happening. Only things I saw that might have suggested there was anything untoward were the raising of the salaries and the expensive home. But their initial CEO salaries were really low for NYC, and the company was making money and doing well when they raised their salaries. And the expensive house seemed more like Santos’ husband’s thing, as his husband seemed to be independently well-off.

  5. Hi Keith,
    Unrelated, but I gotta ask, why don’t you like Chick-fil-A french fries? Apologies for the randomness, but have always been interested since stumbling upon your Twitter comment regarding them a ways back (as I love the things). Obviously not a pressing comment but would love to hear from you. All the best, man!

    • Hard to explain why I don’t like something … I just don’t think they have any real flavor and they have the distinctive texture of fries cooked from the freezer.

  6. KLAW, Appreciate all your work. You are why I still have ESPN Insider (just won’t re-new now that you’re at the Athletic, much easier finding your stories there).
    With COVID-19, we should be careful with quoting a mortality rate of a new-ish virus. The numerator vs denominator thing, we probably don’t realize how many people have been exposed, especially with children not really being affected by the virus (symptoms similar to normal seasonal cold). At this stage, 2% would probably represent millions of fatalities.