Stick to baseball, 6/11/22.

I had one post for subscribers to the Athletic this past week, on Kumar Rocker’s 2022 debut for the independent Tri-City Valley Cats. (I tried to go see Reading/Altoona this week, but got rained out after I parked but before I even got into the stadium.) My current writing schedule has one more draft blog post coming after I see Carson Whisenhunt’s official 2022 debut on Sunday night, and then an updated Big Board on Thursday, June 16th.

My guest on the Keith Law Show this week was film critic (and Cardinals fan) Tim Grierson, talking about the logistics of film festivals and their similarities to scouting showcases, plus our thoughts on The Godfather trilogy as the first film marks its 50th anniversary. You can subscribe via iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, amazon, or wherever you get your podcasts.

I do send out a free email newsletter about twice a month. My two books, Smart Baseball and The Inside Game, are both available in paperback, and you can buy them at your local independent book store or at Bookshop.org.

And now, the links…

  • Longreads first: Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Kathryn Schulz, author of the wonderful memoir Lost & Found, writes about the world of sunken shipping containers and the detritus that washes up on shore from them. I would guess the occasional meeple shows up among the flotsam and jetsam.
  • Steve Kirsch, one of the inventors of the optical mouse and a serial entrepreneur, has become a massive proponent of misinformation about COVID-19 vaccines and false cures. McGill University’s Jonathan Jarry looks at how Kirsch got from A to B.
  • A 13-year-old Baltimore middle school student died suddenly on a school field trip in Cecil County, Maryland. There’s still no indication why he died or details on what happened, five days later. What a nightmare for his family.
  • The Washington Post has fired writer Felicia Sonmez. I won’t even attempt to summarize this in a sentence or two – the article (from The New York Times) has the details.
  • The Guardian explains “greenwashing,” when companies contributing to climate change run ads, such as on podcasts that tell stories about climate change and the fight against it, implying that those companies are aligned with the show’s aims.

Comments

  1. I read ‘The Box’. More interesting than you might think (wife makes fun of me). Malcolm McLean was a visionary. Not only did he revolutionize shipping, he is credited with the first Leveraged Buy Out because he bought a larger shipping company. My dad worked for Sea-Land in the early days when they were one of the first tenants in the World Trade Center.

  2. I dunno if I recommended that book to you in particular, but I recommend it to everyone I can. So much history written by non -historians is awful dreck, but that’s one of the most essential books I’ve ever read.

  3. People like Dillon Awes are a bigger threat to this country than any foreign terrorist ever could be.

  4. The DeSantis-Rays article feels like a right result, wrong process thing. If he really does firmly believe “I don’t support giving taxpayer dollars to professional sports stadiums” that’s a more than reasonable stance especially for the state since it’d just be moving the facility from one city in Florida to another. And then there’s the question if the Rays are even going to be in Florida after 2027 so why build them something with no guarantee they’ll even be around. But it’s also clear that the gun thing made it not even a question for him to deny it.

    • A Salty Scientist

      There’s also the whole Disney thing to make it clear that he’s simply a petty authoritarian asshat. The GOP hasn’t been the party of free markets though for a long time (assuming it ever was).

  5. Hi Keith.
    Any eta on when your ranking update of best 2 player games? I really enjoy reading your game rankings and reviews and look forward the 2 player game update as it has been over 2 years. Thanks!

  6. Not sure if you read Kiley McDaniel’s article today on Brandon Barriera. There was an interesting passage that was similar to what you wrote in The Inside Game about the success rate of prep pitchers taken high in the draft. Kiley looked at the prep pitcher that received the highest bonus and how often that pitcher ends up being the best prep pitcher taken in that draft. He only looked at 2007-2016, but he found that only once, in 2012, was the prep pitcher with the highest bonus also the best prep pitcher. There were a couple times where they weren’t the best but they still produced something, and several (6 of the 10 years) where they didn’t come close to fulfilling expectations. I wish he showed more details of his work as there might be more interesting tidbits. How often did the best Prep pitcher taken receive a bonus in the top 5, top 10 or top 20 for that year?

    https://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/34084142/how-one-pitching-prospect-change-mlb-draft-forever-not-pitching

    • I didn’t see this, but the premise is odd – Hunter Greene shut down in April of his draft year, and I don’t think it changed the dynamics of the draft at all. He still went #2 overall but nobody followed his path until now.

  7. Hey Keith,
    Given the new social media policies at The Athletic via the NYT, what’s next for you? I’m sure you’ve asked and/or thought of these questions, but I’m curious if this page counts as social media? And if you can write here, will you get in trouble if you link to the article on Twitter? When you push back on COVID deniers, vaccine crackpots etal, will that count as politics? No more Braves and criticism of the chop? I can’t imagine that this change is one you’re welcoming . . .

    I mean, I’d subscribe to your Substack . . .

    • A Salty Scientist

      I would subscribe as well. FWIW. The NYT is really frustrating as a media outlet–seems like it has dissociative identity disorder. Must be a lot of competing and conflicting messages at the top level.