Red Right 88

In Cleveland, hope dies last

Archive for the month “July, 2011”

The true voices of the Cleveland fan

Had an excellent time last night at Waiting for Next Year’s gathering at Canal Park.

The night offered up the chance to meet several members of the WFNY staff, as well as Peter from Cleveland Frowns (turns out we have a mutual friend) and several others.

While it was great to meet everyone – and the 20-ounce Leinenkugels were perfect on a hot summer night (draft beer is truly one of life’s little pleasures) – even better was the opportunity to sit and talk with fellow Cleveland fans about why they write.

We had good conversations with Rick from WFNY and with Frowns about why they started their respective sites. It’s interesting that none of the founders of WFNY or Frowns himself ever aspired to be sports writers, but still gravitated to writing because they had something to say and were willing to put their opinions out there.

Sites like Cleveland Frowns, WFNY, The DiaTribe, Ten Cent Beers, RiverBurn (and this one), among others, are all working to make sure the voice of the fan is heard like never before. We are all working, in our own way, to give Cleveland what it needs, rather than something it already has.

And, just as importantly, this group is doing it without any hysterics. It has always drove us batty when we hear people ripping a particular player and then concluding that the player should be traded for a superstar. You won’t find that kind of irrational thought at most of the local sites, which is refreshing.

Rick pointed out that everyone at WFNY has a different style and brings different perspectives to the table. And you can see that applies to everyone else within the community. Frowns certainly has a unique voice, and The DiaTribe is a textbook example of quality over quantity. In their own way, everyone brings something beneficial to the discussion.

During our conversations the point was made that, as recently as 10 years ago, the only way you could be heard as a fan was to wait on hold for two hours so you could have 30 seconds with someone like Greg Brinda. (How depressing is that?)

Now those days are over and everyone – from the teams to the fans – are better off for it.

Rick talked about how front-office people from the local teams read WFNY to learn what fans are saying; Frowns talked about similar experiences with his site. If the teams are reading the sites, that only strengthens the message that the writers and the fans are delivering.

Plus, the more voices that are being heard the better – especially in a one-newspaper town like Cleveland. There is little doubt that the appetite for news about the local teams is enormous, which means there is plenty of room at the table for everyone to share an opinion.

We’re not as hard on the local beat writers as some – primarily because we used to be in the business – but if someone were to only receive their news about the Cavs, Indians and Browns from The Plain Dealer or WKNR, they would walk away with a perspective that is often not in touch with how fans really feel.

But with so many sites available comes a wide variety of opinions and, even if you sometimes disagree, the fact that so many people are talking and investing the time it takes to maintain a site shows the passion of Cleveland’s sports fans.

We’re definitely glad we decided to take a seat at the table.

Huffin’ & puffin’ the Twins

Just when we start to worry about the Tribe, they surprise us and pull us right back in.

After losing two straight to the last-place Orioles, the Indians headed to Minnesota for a big four-game series with Minnesota.

Monday’s day-night double header featured David Huff and Fausto Carmona taking the mound for the Tribe, leading us to worry about the prospect of a four-game losing streak.

So what happens?

Huff goes out in the opener and throws seven innings of shutout baseball to lead the Tribe to a win. And Carmona went six innings, somehow giving up just two runs as the Indians swept the Twins.

Just the way Manny Acta drew it up before the game.

“David Huff did a nice job,” Acta said in published reports. “David really pitched good with the lead. He attacked both sides of the plate. I can’t say enough about the job he did because he was on three days’ rest and it was so humid and hot.”

“(Fausto is) a guy with great stuff,” Travis Hafner said in published reports. “He’s one of the leaders on this team, so if he can pitch well it’s a huge boost for our club.”

Huff pitched so well that he earned another turn in the rotation, as the Indians sent Jeanmar Gomez back to Columbus after the game.

See what we mean about surprises?

No matter how many times the Tribe gets knocked down, they find a way to come back.

The latest punch came from Grady Sizemore going on the disabled list for the third time this season. Sizemore told The Plain Dealer that the injury feels similar to the one that led to season-ending microfracture surgery last year on his left knee.

“There’s a lot of concern,” Sizemore told the paper. “I just hope I don’t have to go through what I went through last year.”

That doesn’t sound good.

But the Indians have done nothing but play through injuries this year, and hopefully this won’t be any different. But we do have to wonder how much more one team can take and still keep on winning.

Taking the double header was huge for the Tribe. The Twins have been on a roll lately, but now sit seven games back in the standings.

With Justin Masterson and Josh Tomlin scheduled to pitch Tuesday and Wednesday, it sets the team up nicely to (at least) win the series and put some additional distance between them and the Twins.

If the Tribe can pull off the sweep of the four-game series, they can push the Twins nine games back, putting a big bucket of cold water on the hot streak the Twins have been on recently.

Let’s hope the Indians have a few more surprises in store for us.

Quick hits coming off holiday

Back in Ohio after a week of beach, BBQ and sweet tea in the Carolinas.

Not the way we would have liked to see the Tribe open the second half of the season, splitting a series with a Baltimore team that is 16 games under .500.

And while we were happy to hear the news that Mitch Talbot had a “back injury” that would require time on the disabled list, we’re not sunfried enough to think that Jeanmar Gomez, David Huff and Zach McAllister are going to come in and save the day.

Having said that, we don’t think it’s too much to ask that Gomez not blow a three-run lead to a last-place team.

The Tribe just completed an eight-game stretch against Toronto and Baltimore – the two worst teams in the AL East – with a 3-5 record. That’s not going to cut it if the Indians want to stay in the pennant race.

The good news is the Indians are still in first place and they play 47 of their remaining 69 games within the division. And while it does get tiring having to watch a steady diet of Detroit, Minnesota, Chicago and Kansas City, the Tribe has their fate in their own hands – take care of business in the division and they don’t have to worry about anything else.

***

So Pittsburgh’s James Harrison ran his mouth this week, criticizing teammates Ben Rothlisberger and Rashard Mendenhall.

And Hines Ward was arrested and charged with DWI in Georgia.

Good thing the Steelers have such upstanding owners who never put winning above doing the right thing.

Just look at how they handled Rothlisberger’s situation last summer. Oh that’s right, they didn’t do anything but welcome Rothlisberger back with open arms.

We expect nothing less from the hypocritical black and gold.

***

Even though they came up just short in their bid for the World Cup, congratulations are in order for the U.S. Women’s soccer team.

The team’s run to the cup came to an end Sunday against Japan on penalty kicks, but the late goals and never-give-up attitude of the team made them fun to watch.

Despite twice taking a one-goal lead, it just wasn’t meant to be for the team. And it’s not like Japan didn’t deserve to win.

It was just one of those days.

***

While on holiday we read Namath, Mark Kriegel’s 2004 biography of Joe Namath.

Excellent book.

Namath’s career was pretty much over by the time we were old enough to follow sports, so he’s one of those players that was always more myth to us. So reading about how he grew up in Beaver Falls, his exploits at Alabama and his time with the Jets gave us a new perspective on him.

Highly recommend it.

***

Ran into some current and former Clevelanders on vacation, both in Raleigh and Myrtle Beach, and had the chance to talk some Indians baseball.

The view outside of NE Ohio seems to be one of cautious optimism for the Wahoos.

So they have that going for them.

Ran into a chum with a bottle of rum …


Red Right 88 will be on holiday at the beach for a few days. Regular activity should hopefully resume around July 18.

We may have some updates next week if something big happens. But as we will be continuing our 20-year quest for the best Mai Tai, as well as seeing how much Carolina BBQ a Cleveland boy can eat, it would probably have to be something pretty big.

Have a good one.

Holding out for a hero

Another day, another hero, another win for the never-say-die Cleveland Indians.

They left it late, but the Tribe came through against the Blue Jays on Travis Hafner’s walk-off grand slam.

Hafner’s heroics were made possible, once again, by the Tribe bullpen, which combined for five innings of one-run ball while everyone waited for the offense to do something.

“We had the right guy up there, but it started with the guys at the bottom of our lineup,” Indians manager Manny Acta said in published reports. “After the first two guys got on — I didn’t think about a walk-off — but I thought we had a pretty good chance with our lineup rolling over.

“Everybody needs to have hope. Every day of your life, you have to think you’re going to do it.”

What a week its been for the Indians.

Taking two out of three from the Yankees, thanks to Austin Kearns’ improbable home run on Monday, and Josh Tomlin and Justin Masterson shoving it up the Yankees’ asses in the two wins (a combined 15 innings pitched, six hits, two earned runs, 11 strikeouts and only three walks) to last night’s comeback, the Tribe seems to have emerged from June’s slump.

And they are doing it with key players still struggling and what seems like almost an injury-a-day policy.

But, through it all, they keep plugging along, never giving in or giving up.

One example of never giving up comes from the always informative DiaTribe, which points out that the right-field platoon of Travis Buck, Austin Kearns and Shelley Duncan have combined to hit .307 with a .844 OPS on 43 plate appearances since Shin-Soo Choo went down with an injury.

It may not be pretty, and it may not feel like it at times, but there’s no questioning this team is finding ways to win – and that is one of the reasons they are so much fun to root for.

And through it all – the injuries, the slumps, guys coming up and going down to Columbus, the only having three-fifths of a reliable starting rotation – the Tribe is in first place, 1.5 games ahead of Detroit and 5.5. up on the White Sox. In fact, over the past 10 games the Indians have picked up three games on Detroit and two games on the ChiSox.

And with Tomlin and Carlos Carrasco scheduled to take the hill this weekend, there is everyone reason to believe the team will head into next week’s All-Star break on a high note.

Get ready Cleveland, it’s shaping up to be one heck of a second half of the season.

(Photo by The Associated Press)

The S doesn’t stand for sensitivity

Someone at ESPN obviously missed the sensitivity training seminar, as an “esteemed panel” of college football “experts” picked the Top 50 college players who failed on the professional level.

Somehow former Syracuse great and Heisman Trophy winner Ernie Davis – whom the Browns acquired in a trade with Washington for Hall-of-Famer Bobby Mitchell – made the list at No. 3.

The list included such notable bust as Hart Lee Dykes, Brian Bosworth and Andre Ware.

Of course, none of them died from leukemia before ever playing an NFL game, which seems like the kind of thing that ESPN’s “experts” would take into consideration when making such a list.

Instead of reading the drivel at ESPN, check out this first-person account from Davis that appeared in 1963 in The Saturday Evening Post less than two months before he passed away.

Or check out this video of Davis in the 1960 Cotton Bowl.

After reading how determined Davis was to get back on the field despite his illness, there’s no doubt that, if healthy, he would have been one hell of an NFL running back.

(h/t to Nunes Magician)

Browns blockers earn national ranking

Even with the Cleveland Indians in first place and the NFL lockout rolling along, that doesn’t mean we can’t take a moment to think about the Cleveland Browns.

The Fifth Down blog at The New York Times spent the past week rolling out its Top 10 list for each position and the Browns are well represented – especially on the left side of the offensive line.

Joe Thomas repeated as the top tackle in the NFL, someone who “makes the game look easy, especially in pass protection. Not a mauler, but as reliable a run blocker as you’ll find.”

Alex Mack moved up one spot, and is the second-best center, a “superb technician who holds his own in a phone booth and gets out in front with ease.”

Eric Steinbach dropped two spots at guard, but is still the seventh best as “he was Cleveland’s most impressive lineman in ’10. Can get to virtually any spot on the field.”

The rankings for Thomas, Mack and Steinbach are even more impressive when you take a look at the defensive ranks, which are filled with players that the Browns have to deal with in the division:

  • At defensive tackle, Pittsburgh’s Casey Hamilton (No. 7) and Baltimore’s Haloti Ngata (No. 1) were in the Top 10.
  • At outside linebacker, Pittsburgh’s LaMarr Woodley (No. 7) and Jerome Harrison (No. 1), along with Baltimore’s Terrell Suggs (No. 3) were all Top 10.
  • At inside linebacker, Baltimore’s Ray Lewis (No. 8) and Pittsburgh’s Lawrence Timmons (No. 4) were both Top 10.

Gives you a good idea of what the Browns face twice a year and emphasizes the importance of building a solid offensive line.

The Browns were represented on defense, as corner back Joe Haden was mentioned as a player who could make next year’s list as his “uncanny change-of-direction ability alone will make him top-10 before Halloween.”

Now if we could just see these guys on the field again sometime soon, all will be good.

(Photo by Getty Images)

We can be heroes, just for one day

“Though nothing will drive them away
We can beat them, just for one day

We can be heroes, just for one day

We have no doubt that it played out just the way Cleveland Indians manager Manny Acta planned it.

Trailing 2-0 in the bottom of the seventh with two outs Monday night against the Yankees, the Tribe was on the verge of wasting a beautiful start from Josh Tomlin.

And that’s when the most unlikely of heroes stepped up to save the day.

First, Lonnie Chisenhall was given a second chance after Alex Rodriguez and Brett Gardner couldn’t figure out how to catch a routine pop-up. Chisenhall ended up working A.J. Burnett for a walk, joining Grady Sizemore as Tribe base runners.

Then Shelly Duncan had a fantastic at bat (we know!) battling back from an 0-2 count against Burnett before dropping a single into right field to score Sizemore.

Finally, Austin Kearns, of the .192, two RBI Kearns, dropped a three-run homer on the Yankees to give the Tribe the lead.

“That’s what we’ve been able to do — find heroes just about every day,” Acta said in published reports.

As unlikely as Kearns’ heroics were, Tomlin’s performance was the real story of the game.

Tomlin is now 10-4 with an ERA of 3.78 – but somehow was not worthy of being an All Star. He’s doing it with a below-average fastball, but can throw four pitches well and mixes them up. He also leads the majors with 1.07 walks per nine innings.

In other words, he’s a pitcher, rather than a thrower. Maybe the Indians should arrange to have Fausto Carmona spend some time with Tomlin over the All-Star break.

Tomlin has been money and, along with Carlos Carrasco and Justin Masterson, is a big part of why the Tribe is still in first place despite a horrible month of June.

“Tomlin deserved that … He continues to amaze everybody. He doesn’t back down from anyone,” Acta said in published reports.

As for the All Star snub, it’s not just Tomlin, but Carrasco deserved a spot as well. But we’re actually OK with them not being included. We’d rather they take the time to rest up for what should be a crazy second-half of the season.

Carrasco gets to show his stuff tonight against the Evil Empire.

We can’t wait to see who wants to be a hero, if just one day.

(Photo by The Associated Press)

A blessing in disguise?

Looks like Fausto Carmona will potentially only miss one start after injuring himself while trying to run a mere 90 feet on Saturday.

Carmona will miss Thursday’s game against Toronto, but thanks to the All Star break he will be ready to return to the rotation on July 18 against Minnesota – if everything goes OK.

Is it wrong if we kind of wouldn’t be upset if everything didn’t go right with his rehab and Carmona missed a few extra starts?

Carmona has been a mess this season and some extra time off might help him get his head on straight and actually start pitching like a Major League starter.

With the Tribe expecting to call up either Zach McAllister (8-3, 2.97 ERA at Columbus) or Jeanmar Gomez (9-2, 2.26 ERA) to start on Thursday, there may not be a rush to get Carmona back on the mound.

Unfortunately, it doesn’t sound like the team is thinking that way.

“We’re anticipating that Fausto will just miss one outing,” manager Manny Acta said in published reports.

Oh well.

On a related note, we could not agree more with Sheldon Ocker at The Beacon Journal about the absurdity of the National League insisting on not having a DH.

The notion that having pitchers bat somehow makes the game more “pure” is nonsense; it’s just ridiculous. As Ocker rightly points out, if the NL teams think watching a pitcher try to swing a bat is so important, why don’t they keep the pitcher in the lineup when they visit American League parks?

Adding an extra bat to the lineup doesn’t hurt an NL team when it plays in an AL park, but taking the DH away from the AL clearly is unfair. We can’t help but think that having Travis Hafner in the lineup full time on this past road trip wouldn’t have helped out.

Of course, if Carmona was athletic enough to run 90 feet without hurting himself, we probably wouldn’t be having this conversation.

So we’ll wait to see how Carmona’s rehab progresses and hope for the best. It’s the Fourth of July, the Tribe is in first place and the Evil Empire is in town.

What could be better than that?

What if they threw a lockout …

… and nobody cared?

OK, that’s a bit of a stretch. We’re sure there are plenty of people who care that the NBA owners decided they didn’t want the NFL to have all the fun and called their own lockout.

But we don’t really care and we’re not sure why.

Maybe it’s labor fatigue. The NFL lockout is still ongoing and after months of hearing that the NBA owners wanted a lockout, the news was a bit anti-climatic.

After all, it’s only July 1 – no one is losing money yet and there are no games to be missed, so right now it’s all just talk.

It could be that we don’t trust that the owners want to make the NBA move competitive, but rather that they just want to make more money.

Of course, the NBA has never been competitive, not really, with only a handful of teams having won championships – the Lakers and Celtics have combined for 33 of the league’s 65 titles. So if anything really does change when a new labor deal is reached, it will most likely be a coincidence, not a result of the lockout.

Maybe it’s the realization that the fans just don’t matter anymore. What we want is so far down on the list of the league, the owners and the players, it probably doesn’t even register.

Maybe we don’t care because the Cavs aren’t very good right now and are not going to be much better next season. A shortened season wouldn’t really impact them one way or another.

Even if the season was reduced to 50 games – like in 1999 – that is enough for Kyrie Irving, Tristan Thompson and the other young players to get their feet wet.

If the Cavs were coming off consecutive 60-win seasons and were still a threat to win an NBA title, our feelings may be different.

But maybe not.

The Browns aren’t any good, coming off consecutive 5-11 seasons and in what seems like perpetual rebuilding mode – and we care very much about the NFL lockout.

The possibility, even if it is remote, that the NFL season will be shortened this fall is something we just don’t want to entertain. No Sunday Ticket, no fantasy football, no Cheddar Bay.

It’s all just too much.

But if the NBA doesn’t come back until the first of the year?

We’ll be OK.

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