The NBA has told teams they can set a target date of May 8 to reopen their practice facilities if they play in a location where public health guidelines allow it. “The purpose of these changes is to allow for… Read More: https://ift.tt/3f2RfBd
Bruno (he asked us to use his nickname) woke up on March 12 expecting it to be a glorious day. After all, it was his 50th birthday, a milestone in anyone’s life. The sun had a brilliant presence and the waves from the Pacific Ocean pounded along the beach. For a Jersey kid now living […]
Just think of the photographs snapped of Muhammad Ali and the Beatles. Put together they would reach the moon and back. Muhammad Ali was probably the most famous person in the world in the 20th century. Kids on remote islands in the middle of nowhere knew about Ali. The two were truly the greatest in […]
Toronto FC GM Ali Curtis did not pour cold water on the hot topic of former TFC star midfielder Victor Vazquez possibly returning to the Reds. Read More
At a time when Toronto’s rinks are dark and the Maple Leafs and Marlies are shuttered, the National Women’s Hockey League is set to reveal a new team in town.
The unnamed franchise was announced Wednesday morning, an ownership group headed by U.S.-born former Harvard captain Johanna Boynton, with fellow American and former Brown University coach Margaret ‘Digit’ Murphy as president. It already has five players under contract, but does not have a home venue lined up. Everything in the sport is on hold with COVID-19 concerns.
The NWHL was established in 2015 as a startup venture by Dani Rylan and backed by private investors, becoming North America’s first women’s league to pay its players. Its foray into Canada comes a year after the six-team Canadian Women’s Hockey League (CWHL) folded following 12 seasons due to financial issues. The Leafs were a sponsor of the CWHL, which hoped to get a restart at some stage, possibly with NHL involvement.NWHL✔@NWHL
We couldn’t be happier to have Johanna, Tyler & Digit join us on this journey
“Launching our first team in Canada is a pivotal and proud moment for the NWHL,” Rylan said in statement. “Everyone in the Toronto hockey community can be sure that this first-class team of professionals will make bold strides for the women’s game.”
The new team brings the NWHL to six clubs, with teams in Boston, Buffalo, Monmouth Junction, N.J. Danbury, Conn. and Saint Paul, Minn.
All five Toronto players signed were in the CWHL, with the most notable being Shiann Darkangelo, a member of the American team that won the 2016 world championships. The four other players are Canadians: Forward Taylor Woods, defencemen Kristen Barbara and Emma Greco, and goalie Elaine Chuli.
“A year ago, when the CWHL shut down, they had one of the best hockey products on the market. So I just see this as a continuation of that, and Toronto deserves a women’s franchise.”
After leaving Brown, where she won 318 games, Murphy won two CWHL championships during three seasons coaching the Boston Blades. Murphy then spent 2017-18 coaching a CWHL expansion team in China, whose players included Darkangelo and Chuli.
The AP speculated it’s unlikely the NWHL will be able to draw from the rosters of current U.S. or Canadian national teams after their members helped form the Professional Women’s Hockey Players’ Association (PWHPA) in the wake of the CWHL’s demise.
The PWHPA was opposed to a pro league in North America without establishment of salaried players and a financially stable long-term economic model. The PWHPA spent last season holding a series of exhibition weekends to fill the void.
Last week, PWHPA executive member Jayna Hefford told the AP she was aware of and welcomed the NWHL’s expansion bid, as least as a way of sustaining interest in the women’s cause. Some NWHL players reportedly make as much as US$15,000, but full salaries are not released. They have a revenue generating plan through sponsorship and media, combined with players salaries.
“I don’t’ want to get cocky and say, ‘We’re going to win the Cup,’” Murphy said of Toronto’s first-season forecast, “but I want to contend.”
RIP to Damaso Garcia, an All-Star second baseman who played for 11 seasons in the major leagues. He died on April 15 at the age of 63 in the Dominican Republic. No cause of death was given; however, Garcia had a malignant brain tumor removed 29 years ago, and the surgery had affected his mobility […]
LONDON, (Reuters) – Former Leeds United and England defender Norman ‘Bites Yer Legs’ Hunter has died at 76 after contracting the new coronavirus, the Championship (second-tier) club said yesterday. The article Leeds great Hunter dies at 76 after contracting COVID-19 appeared first on Stabroek News.
Sabrina Ionescu, the consensus best player in women’s basketball, was the No. 1 pick in Friday night’s WNBA draft, as expected. But hers was not the first name called. It shouldn’t be surprising that the late Kobe Bryant was front and center, given his prominent support of girls and women’s basketball before losing his life…
A’s minor league manager off ventilator in coronavirus fight
A’s minor league manager off ventilator in coronavirus fight — OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Oakland Athletics minor league manager Webster Garrison has resumed breathing completely on his own for the first time in more than three weeks and no longer requires a ventilator as he fights the coronavirus, his fiancee said Thursday. Garrison, hospitalized in his home state of Louisiana, wasn’t yet speaking when Nikki Trudeaux posted her latest update Thursday. “Webster Garrison is off the ventilator,” Trudeaux wrote, using a series of exclamation points. “He is still weak and can’t say words. He’s mumbling a little bit. That’s expected with that tube down his throat for that length of time and also being on all those sedatives so long. However, being on a ventilator for three weeks and one day, he is now breathing 100% on his own and his oxygen saturation level is at 100%.”
Trudeaux has been asking for nightly prayers and using the hash tag “WebbyStrong” as the 54-year-old former major leaguer fights COVID-19. The A’s haven’t identified Garrison but released a a statement late last month that “a minor league staff member has tested positive for COVID-19 and is under hospital care.” Garrison managed the Class A Stockton Ports last season, and he is scheduled to manage in the rookie level Arizona League this year. The ex-infielder played five games for the A’s in 1996, never getting a hit in 10 plate appearances while drawing one walk. He is from Marrero, Louisiana. Trudeaux said she also tested positive for COVID-19 and described the emotional toll of not being able to be with Garrison during his illness. On Wednesday, she shared the encouraging developments such as that his eyes were open — and Trudeaux was hopeful he would be off the ventilator. “He is smiling,” she posted. “He is wiggling his toes. He is just doing great!” For most people, the new coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. Older adults and people with existing health problems can experience severe illness, including pneumonia and death.
For starters, let’s note that the franchise that would become the Tigers was not the first major league team in Detroit. That distinction belongs to the Detroit Wolverines, who were a new member of the National League in 1881. They lasted eight seasons — winning the National League pennant in 1887 — but folded during one of the NL’s early rounds of contraction after the following season. Mostly because the owner spent too much money buying up stars he couldn’t afford. It happens.
The Tigers, like a number of the teams which would become charter members of the American League, began as a minor league club in the upstart Western League. There had been earlier iterations of the Western League before that, but this one — formed by Ban Johnson and Charles Comiskey in the winter of 1893-94 — began play in 1894. In fact, the Tigers are the only original Johnson/Comiskey Western League team that still plays where they were founded that year.
The others:
Comiskey’s own Sioux City Cornhuskers, who would become the St. Paul Saints in 1895 and then move to Chicago and become the White Stockings — and later the White Sox — in 1900;
The Milwaukee Brewers, who would move to St. Louis to become the Browns in 1902 and, of course, would move to Baltimore to become the Orioles in 1954;
The Grand Rapids Rustlers, who wandered to St. Joesph, Missouri, then to Omaha Nebraska, and then to Columbus, Ohio to become the Senators, before they moved north to become the Cleveland Blues in 1900, after which they would switch to the Cleveland Broncos by around 1902, exist as the Cleveland Naps from 1903 through 1914 and then, finally, the Cleveland Indians in 1915. Wouldn’t be shocked if they change names again in my lifetime;
The Kansas City Blues, who would move to Washington to become the Senators franchise in 1901 and then move on to Minnesota to become the Twins in 1961;
The Toledo White Stockings, who also moved to Columbus, where they were the Buckeyes, and then were dropped entirely when the Buffalo Bisons were formed in 1899. Those same Buffalo Bisons lated only two years before they were dropped and were replaced by the Boston Americans who are today’s Boston Red Sox in 1901; and
The Minneapolis Millers and Indianapolis Indians who each just ceased to exist in 1901 in favor of a club in Baltimore, who would later become the Yankees, and a club in Philadelphia, which would then, as now, be known as the Athletics, even if they’ve moved cities a couple of times themselves.
Got that? If not, try to keep up. Thanks.
Anyway, the Detroit team was not the Tigers in 1894. They were sometimes called the Wolverines, as a throwback to the defunct NL team but they were more commonly known in their first season as . . . the Creams. Unlike a lot of early teams, however, this name was not a function of the colors they wore. Rather, they were called this because team owner George Vanderbeck boasted the team would be the “cream of the league.” In this I like to think of them as nominal cousins of the Brooklyn Superbas. And it makes me wonder if there were ever teams called the “Spiffys” or the “Swells.” If not, there probably should’ve been.
The Creams would really only last a season, however, because on this date in 1895, after their victory over a local semipro team known as the Athletics, Detroit Free Press editor Philip Reid wrote the headline “Strouthers’ Tigers showed up very nicely.” Strouthers, by the way, was the team’s manager, Cornelius “Con” Strouthers, who in 1905, as manager of the Augusta Tourists of the Sally League, would sign a young player by the name of Ty Cobb and subsequently sell his contract to the Detroit Tigers for $750. That happened the same month Cobb’s mother murdered his father (she was acquitted) but that’s a whole ‘nother story. Maybe we’ll cover it in August if we still don’t have any real baseball.
Anyway.
Where did Reid come up with the name “Tigers?” On one level it was probably just a nod to their ferocious play. “Go get ’em, Tiger,” and all of that. But there was a somewhat deeper connection at play here, as “Tigers” was also the nickname for the Detroit Light Guard, a unit of Michigan’s Army National Guard, which had fought in the Civil War and would soon fight in the Spanish-American War and which still exists today as the United States Army’s 1225th Corps Support Battalion. There would’ve been a lot of local pride surrounding that unit at the time, and most historians believe that Reid was invoking them in his usage. The team would formally ask the Light Guard for official permission to use “Tigers” around 1900, when the Western League changed its name to the American League, though they had been using it informally for five years by then.
Later in 1895 Vanderbeck decided to build the team their own park, called Bennett Park, at the corner of Michigan and Trumbull Avenues in downtown Detroit. The Tigers would play their first game there on April 28, 1896, defeating the Columbus Senators. Bennett Park was built on the cheap, with the smallest seating capacity in the Western League when it became the American League. It also was kind of dangerous, as they simply laid the dirt and sod over preexisting cobblestones, which would sometimes protrude out over the dirt. Talk about a hard slide. In 1911 the Tigers would make a move to get better digs when they purchased some land adjacent to Bennett Park, demolished the stands, turned the field 90 degrees and constructed Navin Field for the 1912 season.
Like the team, it too would change named, later becoming Briggs Stadium and then, finally, Tiger Stadium, which the baseball club formerly known as the Creams would play through the 1999 season. It was a pretty good place.
Also today in baseball history:
1929: Indians’ rookie center fielder Earl Averill homers off of Tigers pitcher Earl Whitehill, becoming the first American League player to hit a home run in his first major league at-bat;
1929: In that same game, the Indians become the first team to wear numbers on the back of their jerseys on a permanent basis. The Yankees would also adopt numbers permanently in 1929, but their April 16th game was rained out, so they wouldn’t take the field in them until the following day;
1935: Babe Ruth makes his National league debut, playing for the Boston Braves and hitting a homer and a single off Giants’ legend Carl Hubbell;
1940: Bob Feller tosses an Opening Day no-hitter, beating Chicago at Comiskey Park, 1-0;
1946: Harry Truman becomes the first President to throw the ceremonial first pitch left-handed;
1948: WGN-TV in Chicago televises a baseball game for the first time. It’s an exhibition game, with the White Sox beating the Cubs 4-1. Jack Brickhouse does the play-by-play;
1983: Padres first baseman Steve Garvey, playing against his old team, the Dodgers, for the first time, appears in his 1,118th straight game, breaking the National League record for consecutive games played, previously held by Billy Williams of the Cubs. Garvey’s consecutive game streak will end at 1,207 due to a dislocated thumb. On this same date, five years later, the Padres will retire Garvey’s number;
Joe Kelly’s latest wild pitch is going to cost him. With the 2020 Major League Baseball season currently on pause, players across the league are forced to take matters into their own hands to keep their skills sharp. But if a video from Kelly’s at-home workout Wednesday is any indication, one of his pitches isn’t…
Joe Kelly’s latest wild pitch is going to cost him. With the 2020 Major League Baseball season currently on pause, players across the league are forced to take matters into their own hands to keep their skills sharp. But if a video from Kelly’s at-home workout Wednesday is any indication, one of his pitches isn’t exactly operating at the highest level. Kelly’s wife, Ashley, shared clips of the Los Angeles Dodgers fireballer going through his throwing routine in their backyard. Not only did one pitch get away from Kelly, it sailed right through a window and resulted in quite the mess. You can check out the video here. On the bright side, replacing the broken window can make for a project to help kill time while quarantined.