Soccer Pimp: Evertonian Impressions

Monday, December 07th, 2009 | Author: Ottawa Sports Guy

Goldenballs holding the new World Cup ball

Before I get going, let me address the egregious lack of posting since August. Yes, I’m aware I’ve neglected the blog, Yes, I’m aware some of you are disappointed. No, I won’t apologize. Life (and procrastination) has a way of getting in the way of my amateur writing career, so it is what it is.

________________________

Man, am I ever stoked for the World Cup. So stoked that I plunked down $15 extra per month, on a four-month mandatory contract with Rogers to get Setanta. Fifteen dollars is price-gouging at its very worst (shocker coming from the cable industry, I know), but the fever hit this weekend and I want to be completely versed on as many World Cup players as possible come June 11th. Oh, and for $15, you’d think the channel would be available in HD at the very least – no such luck (to join the “soccer in HD” conversation, check out the comments to this William Houston post).

And so it was that on Saturday, I was able to watch Manchester City defy the odds and hand Chelsea its 3rd loss of the season. As good as that game was, Sunday’s match pitting my Toffees to Tottenham had me on the edge of my seat from beginning to end.

I’m sad to admit that it was the first Everton match I’ve watched this season, but I know all the players thanks to FIFA 10. This is a talented bunch but they have been decimated by injury, and on Sunday all four defenders were fullbacks: Tony Hibbert and Lucas Neill, who filled in as centre backs, are usually found on the right side of defence, while Seamus Robinson and Leighton Baines were on the right and left sides, respectively.

Following a goalless first half, Tottenham knocked two into the Everton goal and I thought it was game over. I could see that Tottenham were just breezing through the Everton midfield, there was no opposition whatsoever. It left me yearning for a Gennaro Gattuso 0r Roy Keane type of midfield stopper, that bulldog that every good team needs to disrupt opposing offensive manoeuvres before they really become a threat.

As it was, Jermaine Defoe and Michael Dawson had free reign in assaulting the Everton goal. It looked like another Everton loss, and with Chelsea as their next opponent and coming off the aforementioned loss to Manchester City, I was starting to believe that Everton was headed for a second half relegation struggle.

Hey, that might still happen, but the Toffees showed something on Sunday that leads me to believe there is no way in hell they will be relegated. When Louis Saha was brought on in the 63rd, shortly after the second Tottenham goal, the Everton spirit was evident and the game took on a different tone. When Saha potted his 10th goal of the campaign to make it 2-1, we knew we were at least in line for an exciting finished. We were not going to be disappointed.

Australian internation Tim Cahill equalizes

Australian internation Tim Cahill equalizes

Everton proceeded to lay siege to the Hotspur goal, constantly asking questions of the Tottenham defence until they could no longer answer; in the 86th minute, Tim Cahill blasted a shot past Brazilian keeper Gomes to make the game 2-2. Game over, right?

Wrong.

In the 94th minute, Honduran Wilson Palacios came barreling into the Everton penalty area, leading with his head to knock the ball forward. Unfortunately, Tony Hibbert was also charging at the ball and instead of knocking the ball out of play he knocked Palacios into the next postal code. Entertaining? Yes. As a Canadian, satisfying to see a Honduran footballer LEGITIMATELY lying on the pitch? Absolutely (your cheque is in the mail, Tony). Smart? No. The referee immediately pointed to the spot and Jermaine Defoe lined up to take it.

The USA’s hopes in the upcoming World Cup will rest largely upon the shoulders of Everton keeper Tim Howard. While I had already conceded that Everton would end up losing the game despite their courageous fightback (and aren’t those the worst of the gut punch games?), Tim Howard had different ideas. Before the kick he kept gesturing wildly, I guess in an attempt to throw Defoe off his game. Whatever it was, it worked. Defoe drilled the ball straight into the middle and Howard, who had hesitated briefly before diving to his right, knocked the ball away to safety with the tips of his toes. Game saved.

I have been away from soccer for too long. I seem to go through these waves of enthusiasm, or lack thereof, after Canada inevitably fails out of qualifying for my favourite spectator sporting event, the FIFA World Cup. I haven’t felt that visceral excitement watching a sporting event in a long time (probably since Adrian Serioux knocked that header into the goal back in Montreal in 2008), and this was just a league game on a lazy Sunday in December.

Will you have me back, old friend?

The Pimple: More Familiar Faces

Thursday, August 20th, 2009 | Author: Ottawa Sports Guy
Bills Killer!

Bills Killer!

As noted in yesterday’s post, it seems the stories we are witnessing from the NFL seem to involve many of the same characters:

Terrell Owens:

The “T.O. Show” is getting a lot of press in Canada because Buffalo is close to Toronto, and Toronto wishes it was Buffalo (ZING!). I can only shake my head at this. It seems that sports fans are incapable of reasoned thinking when it comes to their team. With T.O.’s every new destination, my friends who are fans of that team become devotees of the “Human H-Bomb”. They go from snickering in disbelief at how Owens wrecks every locker room he invades to uttering platitudes like “Well, he’s always well-behaved in the first year, and, well, the guy can play”.

Franchises that have suffered through T.O.’s scorched earth policies: Four (I include Baltimore).

Super Bowl wins: Zero.

Hey, I’m a Dolphins fan, so I welcome any factor that will keep the Bills in the gutter!

Plaxico Burress:

If ever they make a movie about Plaxico Burress’ life, it should be directed by Quentin Tarantino and he should borrow a line from his masterpiece “Pulp Fiction”. Only instead of John Travolta saying “Ah man, I shot Marvin in the face!!” it should be Plaxico, playing himself of course, exclaiming “Ah man, I shot myself in the leg!”. Then Plaxico should roll around on the ground clutching his leg yelling “Whyyyyy meeeeeee!?!?!” à-la Nancy Kerrigan. Yeah, someone needs to make this happen.

Dolphins Ownership:

Jimmy Buffet. Gloria Estefan. Marc Anthony (the singer, not the Roman Senator). Some dude called Steven Ross. And now, the Williams Sisters. Pardon me as I indulge in a little self-deprecation: “WHAT THE FUCK IS GOING ON WITH MY DOLPHINS!!!”. Thank you. Here’s hoping Dolphins ownership is never put in charge of the Super Bowl halftime show, because that would be worse than the year they had Diana Ross.

Raiders Shenanigans:

Tom Cable, Head Coach of the Oakland Raiders, punched one of his assistants in the face. I would like to thank the Raiders for once again providing comic relief to a league that often takes itself too seriously.

Did I miss anything? What storylines will you be following as the season unfolds?

The Pimple: Brett Favre, Man-Child of a Generation

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009 | Author: Ottawa Sports Guy
The Buffoon

The Buffoon-In-Chief

Welcome to 2009’s first edition of The Pimple, my literary foray into the world of the National Football League. The 2009 season already has a number of riveting sub-plots, but the cast of characters is strikingly similar to past years:

Brett Favre:

For one we have The Buffoon deciding that after all, he’s not done harassing those like myself that appreciate people who can make a decsision and stick to it (within reason, of course). The Brett is a Viking now, and wants us to believe the choice of team has nothing to do with the stick in his ass he insists was placed there by Packer GM Ted Thompson (apparently Favre thought it was ok to go months into the offseason without telling the GM of your team whether or not you’re coming back, and felt spurned when the Packers moved on after repeated offseasons of this melodrama. This was but a preview of what was to become a full-blown tradition).

No, apparently there is no ill will to be deciphered from the fact that he’s just signed with the Packers hated rival, the team the Packers insisted he could not be traded to last year because it was deemed too much of a threat (turns out a leaky defence was a greater threat, but I digress).

I have nothing against once-great players sticking around past their prime. If you love the game that much, and don’t care what level you’re playing, all the power to you. For example, I totally respect Rickey Henderson’s decision to play into his forties for a bevy of minor-league teams. What bothers me is being dicked around by a half-wit man-child who can’t decide whether he’s coming or going, despite insisting at every plot turn that this time “It’s for good”. It’s the boy who cried wolf in a media obsessed environment.

Is there anyone out there not wearing purple still cheering for Brett Favre? This man – not through murder, dog fighting, domestic abuse, drug abuse (ok maybe a little Vicodin) or DUI, but through indecision – has gone from universally lauded legend to a villain we just can’t shake. The worst part of him coming back is knowing he’ll leave again. And then, who knows?

Michael Vick:

I’m no fan of Donovan McNabb, but I’ve got to admit he’s a brave, brave man in lobbying to bring Michael Vick into the Eagle’s fold. The Eagles are one of those teams that I love to hate (heck, any Philadelphia team is fun to hate!), and the signing of such a villain as Michael Vick is like an early Christmas present. As with any signing of this nature, I don’t expect Vick to get too much of a hard ride in Philly. Eagles fans will turn out to be just as morally fickle as Giants fans (Bonds), Chargers fans (Merriman), and Senators fans (Yashin). If he makes the team better, the fans will embrace him, whether they believe a Canine Holocaust is good or evil.

Eli Manning:

Eli Manning is now the  highest-paid player in football. Give yourself a second to pause and think about that. You can stop shaking your head now. You think David Tyree, the 6th string receiver who pulled in the miracle “Velcro” catch that kept the Giants in the Super Bowl (and thus enabling this ridiculous contract) will get a cut of that? Yeah, life is a cruel mistress at times.

There is no lack of interesting storylines to follow this year, and there are many more that I will outline in the coming days, but that’s all I’ve to for today.

Soccer Pimp: ESPN’s Sports Guy Sees The Light

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009 | Author: Ottawa Sports Guy
Bill Simmons discovers soccer

Bill Simmons discovers soccer

I quit reading Bill Simmons a few years ago when it seemed 9 out of 10 columns were dedicated to a sport I have no time for – basketball.  Moonturk forwarded this amazing article Simmons wrote following his trip to Azteca to watch the U.S.A. take on Mexico in a World Cup qualifier last week. Check it out.

Check in tomorrow as I launch the NFL season here at OSG with a post about The Buffoon. Can you guess who “The Buffoon” is?

Category: Soccer Pimp  | 3 Comments

The Twit: Of Alex Rios, Michael Vick and Patrick Kane…

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009 | Author: Ottawa Sports Guy
Rios off to the playoffs - not much of a penalty for sucking

Rios off to the playoffs - not much of a penalty for sucking

…and Michael Schumacher and Roger Federer and other goodies.

- Yesterday Alexis Rios became a member of the Chicago White Sox, at no cost to them save for his inflated (we believe) salary. It’s really too bad it didn’t work out in Toronto and I feel that he should have been given a crack in centre field over Vernon Wells. But don’t feel too bad for him. He becomes the starting centre fielder on a team in the thick of a pennant race. I wouldn’t be surprised if he finally finds his moxy after this move. Blair seems to think this is yet another sign that Rogers has pretty much given up on competing. I’m not willing to concede that…yet.

- Thanks to my hiatus, I haven’t really had the opportunity to chime in on the Michael Vick issue. Those of you that know me might be surprised to hear this, but I agree with the decision to let him back into the league. As far as I’m concerned he’s paid his dues to society according to the laws in place. I don’t want him on my team (the Dolphins), and what he did still disgusts me, but if some GM out there want to risk alienating his fan base, I say go for it. My feeling is that he’ll land somewhere before the season starts so he can immediately start serving his six-game suspension (which I agree with, since he had lied to club and league officials about his off-the-field issues). In my view the best fits would be Minnesota, San Francisco, Buffalo or Cleveland (ironically, the Dawg Pound).

- Innocent until proven guilty, but come on now. The accusations Patrick Kane faces regarding the beating of a cab driver for refusing to provide 20 cents in change have a certain authenticity that only someone who grew up in a small town with a AAA midget hockey team can relate to. Most star players have been raised to believe that the world is their oyster and should a plebeian step out of line in denying them something, consequences must follow. Society has a way of protecting these patricians until the day it doesn’t. For a long time the media protected players from all kinds of unsavory reporting, but those days are long gone and star athletes need to realize that off the ice/field/track/court, they must play by the same rules as everyone else.

- Turning to F1, which I’ve stopped writing about because most of the action happens off the track, had me excited about its next race if only to see what Michael Schumacher could bring to the track in a comeback necessitated by Felipe Massa’s frightening and possibly career-ending injury. Not too fast, though, as the word is that he is pulling out due to injuries incurred in a biking accident earlier in the year. Oh well, maybe reports that Jacques Villeneuve will come back to the circuit with USF1 will bear fruit and turn my attention back to this rotting sport.

- I’m almost embarrassed that both Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal are playing at the Rogers Cup in Montreal and I’m not going to check them out. Bad tennis fan! Bad!

- Oh and yeah, I am in interest to see if Tiger Woods can win the PGA Championship. Might even watch a bit of it if he’s in contention on Sunday.

- Is there an issue I’ve overlooked in the past month that you’d like to see me cover? Let me know in the comments section.

The Rosin Bag: Emerging From The Madness

Wednesday, August 05th, 2009 | Author: Ottawa Sports Guy
Gut tells me Roy starts next season as a Jay

Gut tells me Roy starts next season as a Jay

Wondering why I’ve been quiet?

To be honest, I lost a whole lot of respect for the sports media, both mainstream and blogger-based, over the past month. The whole Halladay Fiasco turned some of the reporters and commentators I respected most into TMZ-style Twitter-twits, one long stream of consciousness with little intelligent opinion or fact-based reporting.  As usual, though, Stephen Brunt was above this rabble, injecting sanity at key moments.

And so I decided to take a break. It’s not like I have a huge readership, or that my “voice” actually matters, but refraining from adding to the madness allowed me to be at peace with my opinions, which I had shared right when Ken Rosenthal “broke” his “story”. To wit: Roy Halladay was going nowhere, JP was bound by his job description to listen to offers, which is all he said (at first). How that little comment turned into a full-blown media shit-hurricane can be attributed to bored columnists and our society’s transient needs.

The whole episode can be recapped thusly: GM says he’ll listen to offers because that’s what GM’s do; GM would need to be blown away by an offer; such an offer was not forthcoming; Halladay is still a Blue Jay. If you were out of the country for the past month, that’s all you need to know. You’re welcome.

Almost lost in all of this is the fact that Scott Rolen is no longer with the team. According to some reports he wanted out to be close to the Mid-West. Despite the loss of one of my favourite Jays players (Fossil Fries please!), the Jays apparently did very well in the trade, getting a 3rd baseman in Edwin Encarnacion who with a little bit of defensive tweaking might grow into an everyday player, plus two pitching prospects with live arms.

But here’s what I’m looking at as objectively as I can: Supposing Halladay sticks around through the winter, the Jays (who are definitely out of it this year) are looking at an opening day rotation of Doc, Shaun Marcum, Ricky Romero, Brett Cecil and a fifth pitcher who could be any one of Scott Richmond, Jesse Litsch, Brad Mills, Mark Rzepcynski, Brian Tallet, Rob Ray, David Purcey or maybe (MAYBE) Dustin McGowan. Talk about depth in starting pitching.

Cecil and Romero, both rookies, are rounding into fantastic starters. Cecil is 5-1 with a 4.36 ERA and Romero is 10-4 with a 3.53 ERA. If you need any kind of incentive to tune into Jays games for the rest of the season, these two kids are good candidates.

Then take a look at Travis Snider, who just won the PCL’s Player of the Week award, and you can take a deep breath. Ok, Snider is finding his swing again. Maybe he can take over for Lind in left and in turn Lind can assume his natural DH spot (talk about a backhanded compliment!).

Maybe in a perfect world the Jays trade Alex Rios in the offseason and turn the page on this disaster. Vernon Wells is staying, kids, so might as well accept it and move on. One question I do have though: with lots of columnists musing that teams who were interested in Alex Rios would have moved him to his natural position of centre field, and considering how terrible Wells has been (one SABR-estimate a few weeks ago had him costing the Jays 28 runs with his defence up to that point in the season), why not switch them up? Put Rios in centre, and Wells in right! All you’re hurting is Wells’ ego and maybe in doing so Rios gets a psychological boost?

Anyway, the point is, it’s easy to get real down about how this season has turned out, especially considering the circus the media just concocted for us. Take a step back, breathe, and you’ll see that things ARE lining up for a run in 2010.

Sure there are question marks (3rd base, Scutaro leaving after the season), but name me a team that doesn’t have any of those?

Gargs Grifted On Final Play; Would-Be Win Turns Into Another Loss

Friday, July 31st, 2009 | Author: Redd Fissher
Brennae (R) was as emotional as weve ever seen after this controversial loss

Brennae (R) was as emotional as we've ever seen after this controversial loss

OTTAWA (ODB) — The Ottawa Avnet Gargoyles were still stewing long after their controversial 9-8 loss to the Acadiens Thursday night, in a game that ended on a bizarre bang-bang play at the plate in which the Acadien runner should have been called out.

“That was absolute (nonsense),” fumed Gargs catcher Mark Brennae, using a word that seemed more to rhyme with “bull spit.” “I had him tagged out and (the runner) reached into my glove and dislodged the ball. How everyone could see that but not the home plate umpire is beyond me. That was absolute garbage.”

Mark was furious following the play — and with good reason.

Whatever home plate umpire Don Dinkinger was looking at was remarkably different than what was witnessed by everyone in press row, as well as the assembled crowd of eight at a steamy Carlington Park.

“I asked him why he didn’t call the runner out, not just because he was tagged, but because he reached into my glove and stole the ball before I could secure it with my other hand and all the umpire could say was: ‘I didn’t see it.’ ” a livid Brennae said, immediately following the game, which resulted in the Gargs’ 19th loss of the season.

“ ‘I didn’t see it? I didn’t see it?’ What the hell did he see, then?” continued Brennae. “I yelled at him that he called a pretty good game but there was no excuse for that horse—- call,” said the catcher, still seething. “Horse—-. Just horse—-.”

With runners on first and third and the score tied at eight, an Acadian batter belted a high fly ball to centre field. Gargs centre-fielder Matthew Stephenson caught it and unleashed a perfect throw to the plate that arrived at the same time as the runner. Brennae appeared to catch the ball with his glove directly touching the baserunner’s torso and as he lifted the leather to show possession, a basketball-like tug of war for the ball ensued. And with Brennae now leaping over the legs of the sliding runner, and his glove moving upward, the ball flew out, but not before the tag was clearly made.

“I usually get my right hand right on the ball inside my glove to prevent that kind of thing but the way it happened, so quickly, I didn’t have time to get it in there. That’s when I saw his hands go into the glove just enough to pry it loose,” Brennae  said.

“I don’t blame the runner, although it’s a bit of a bush play, but I certainly don’t know how an umpire couldn’t see what we all saw. I don’t care where he was standing — it was pretty f—— obvious,” stewed Brennae.

The unfortunate call was heart-wrenching for the Gargs (2-19), who had played a decent game and had dramatically battled back to take an 8-7 lead in the top of the seventh.

With two out, Norm Wong grounded to third but was safe at first when the third baseman threw wildly to first. The next batter, Stephenson,  hit a sharp bouncer to short which the shortstop booted, allowing both runners to move up to second and third, respectively. Brennae came to the plate and, following a fastball that perhaps should have been strike three, the Gargs’ catcher drilled a 2-2 pitch over the left-fielder’s head for a double to drive in both runners.

The Acadiens got a bunt single, followed by a solid single and then another, to tie the game, leading to the ensuing fireworks.

It would be easy to say the Dinkinger call was the turning point in this one but as most students of the game know, there are always other places to look when searching for reasons of failure.

With Todd Duckworth (L, 0-9) pitching a tidy, economical game, the Gargs defence made three errors in the third, leading to five runs and a 5-4 Acadien lead.

The Gargs also loaded the bases but came up empty in the fifth.

“We did a lot right,” said Matty. “But we did a lot wrong.”

The game featured some fine fielding from Wong and Karl Bélanger, who tracked down a fly ball to make a tremendous diving catch well behind first.

On offence, Brennae and Zach Schowalter each drove in a pair and Mathieu Gauthier belted his first OCSL home run, a heck of a swat, off the scoreboard in left field, which at the time, gave the Gargs a 4-0 lead. But the Gargs only produced six hits on the night and that, not a “horse—-” call was the difference in the game.

Gargs Largs: When the Gargs took the field in the bottom of the seventh to protect a lead, it was the first time they had done so all season . . . The Gargs had six hits, seven bases on balls and were the beneficiaries of three Acadiens errors. That’s 16 baserunners, half of whom were stranded . . . Théo Gauthier made two terrific plays in the second inning to reach for throws from the left side of the infield. The adroit first-baseman stretched to help record the outs and to save a couple of would-be errors. Rob Lafontaine and Zach can thank T for those plays. T also made a nice play to handle Mathieu’s throw to first from right-field for what appeared to be a double-play. Alas, the umpires, following a lengthy conference (all the Gargs were in the dugout and preparing to bat) ruled he placed his foot fully on the orange side of the bag, negating the out. The Gargs retook the field and Todd retired Jean-Guy on a bouncer to second which the Acadiens’ hurler didn’t even run out . . . The Gargs play a double-dip Tuesday (7 p.m. and 9 p.m., Hampton Yards) against the Wings and Ollsons, respectively.

Box
Rob Lafontaine 1-3, run, BB
Norm Wong 0-3, 2runs, BB
Matthew Stephenson 0-2, run, 2BB
Mark Brennae 2-3, run, 2B, BB, 2RBI
Zach Schowalter 1-3, 2RBI, BB
Karl Bélanger 0-3
Ken Wong 0-2, run, BB
Théo Gauthier 1-3
Rick Devereux 0-3
Mathieu Gauthier 1-3 HR (1), 2runs, 2RBI

Todd Duckworth (L, 0-9) 6.1 IP, 9 runs (5 earned) 8H 1BB 1K

Gargoyles 3 1 0 2 0 0 2 8 6 4
Acadiens 0 0 5 0 2 0 2 9 8 3
Time: 1:38
Att: 8.

Gargs Win! Gargs Win!

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009 | Author: Redd Fissher

OTTAWA (ODB) — Well, now we know Lady Luck is not a stingy, little biatch.

After enduring countless instances of bad hops, rover-snagged liners and balls that somehow fell in for opposition hits, the Gargoyles finally had a few things go their way Tuesday night at Hampton Yards in a 10-0 rout of Broadway.

Check that. They had many things go their way.

About time, too. Because the Gargs were on the verge of losing whatever confidence that remained prior to this well-earned victory that snapped a five-game losing streak.

Taking advantage of some breaks allowed the Men in Black to record their first victory since July 5 (a 13-9 defeat of Ollsons); their first mercy killing since June 22 of last season when they dumped Ollsons 16-7 in five innings; and their first shutout victory since May 13, 2007, when they blanked the Pirates 22-0.

“Everything went our way,” Brian McGregor so rightly put it, following the game, over beers at W. “But hey, 19 games of s— luck. We’ll take it.”

The Gargs pounded out 12 hits and scored in every inning except the first, to beat a Broadway club that was beat tired following a tie game with the Wings and a trip to Boston from which 14 team members returned only a day earlier, bleery-eyed and spent.

That the Gargs (2-18), were able to defeat their longtime rivals was due in part to a tired opponent which was clearly a step behind all night; some head’s-up baserunning; timely hitting; and oh, yeah: a one-hit performance from Kevin Emmerson, who struggled a bit with his location but gave his defence a chance to make outs — with three-quarters of those outs registered on fly balls.

Emmerson, 1-6, walked six batters and had runners aboard in five of the six innings, but he reared back to register three key strikeouts and relied on some brilliant defence.

“I know I was off,” said Emmerson, over a cold one. “(Brennae) called it high and inside and I would throw it outside and low. But everything that went wrong worked out all right.”

The big right-hander fought the glove at times, but he got the job done in a masterful way, pitching 4 2/3 innings of no-hit ball. “I was thinking, ‘Hit the f—— glove, because I wasn’t,” said Emmerson, who had trouble with his mechanics until the fifth when his pitches regained the pop to which the Gargs have become accustomed.

“I wasn’t pushing off with my (correct) foot. It was all arm,” said Emmerson, who struck out the final batter with a high fastball, right on target.

“He was in tough tonight, no doubt,” said Mark Brennae. “But he kept them off-balance. Kev kept ’em guessing and when we needed a great play, we got it.”

Rob Lafontaine made a tremendous catch, diving high to his right to snare a drilled liner at short; Rick Devereux rushed in and made a beauty of a diving snag in centre and Mathieu Gauthier ran a steeple chase to his left to track down a drive headed for four extra bases in right field.

The Gargs scored one in the second, two in the third and added a killer three runs in the fourth.

When the Gargs scored twice on the same wild pitch (Karl Bélanger, followed closely behind by Matthew Stephenson), you had to know the worm had turned.

“The TSN turning point,” smiled Bélanger after the game.

Of the 10 Gargoyle runs, only five were plated as RBIs, evidence that this was the Gargs’ fortunate evening.

“We didn’t hit well enough to score 10 runs but we did hit well enough to win,” said Lafontaine.

“I’m not surprised we beat them,” concurred Stephenson. “But I am surprised we mercied them.”

With four games remaining in the regular season, it’s up to the Gargs to build on what they received Tuesday night: some good fortune and a solid effort from throughout the lineup.

Gargs Largs: The Gargs’ team batting average has improved from .224 as of June 18 to .286 as of July 15. It now stands at .290. The club’s slugging percentage is now .428. That’s an improvement of .110 since June 18 . . . The Gargs had no triples until last week when they got two against Broadway (Rob, B-Mac). They got two more Tuesday (Matty and Mathieu). Matty was a productive 2-3, scoring three times and drawing a walk. Mathieu also was 2-3 with a run, RBI and sacrifice fly. Todd Duckworth laid down a sac bunt . . . “I had to spark the team,” said Zach Schowalter, referring to spending the first three innings on the bench . . . The Gargs turned a nifty double-play in the sixth when Todd caught a liner at rover and threw a short bullet to Rob covering the bag at second to nail a wayward runner . . . Broadway spent three days in Beantown, hitting Fenway and taking in the Tragically Hip in Vermont. It was part of a boy’s weekend and bachelor party. The Gargs will spend the afternoon of Aug. 8 trying to pick each other off when they get together for a paintball war followed by dinner at Sterling and then a night at the ballet . . . Quote of the night: “I want an affair with her.” — anonymous . . . The Gargs take on Les Acadiens Thursday night (9 p.m., Carlington Park). Todd (0-8) will get the ball for the Men in Black.

Box
Rob Lafontaine 1-3, BB
Karl Bélanger 1-3, run, BB, RBI
Matthew Stephenson 2-3, 3runs, 3B, BB
Mark Brennae 3-4, run
Théo Gauthier 0-3
Zach Schowalter 0-1, run
Rick Devereux 1-4, run, RBI
Brian McGregor 0-1, run, 2BB, HBP
Mathieu Gauthier 2-3, run, 3B, sac fly, RBI
Todd Duckworth 1-3, RBI, sac
Kevin Emmerson 2-3, run, RBI

Kevin Emmerson(W, 1-6) 6IP 0runs 1H 6BB 3K

Gargs 0 1 2 3 1 3 10 12 3
Broadway 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3
Time: 1:50
Att: 2.

Hiatus

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009 | Author: Mimglow

Ottawa Sports Guy will return in early August, batteries recharged and ready to commentate (oh yeah, new word!) on all things sports.

See you then!

Category: The Twit  | One Comment

Gargs Gag In C Division Encounter; Fall To 1-14

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009 | Author: Redd Fissher
Duckworth trying to dig deep

Duckworth trying to dig deep

OTTAWA (ODB) — Through 3 1/2 innings Sunday night, it looked as though the Ottawa Avnet Gargoyles were on their way to their second consecutive OCSL victory.

But those aspirations were sidetracked by a pair of robust innings as C division Pennex knocked the ball around and scored 12 runs in the fourth and fifth frames.

Staked to a seemingly comfortable 9-2 lead, the Gargs let this one slip from their grips, going on to lose 15-10 in front of a crowd of 18 at Hampton Yards.

“We should have won that one,” said Rob Lafontaine, on the quiet ride to W, following the Gargs’ 14th loss in 15 starts. “I thought we were going to win, for sure,” sided Mark Brennae.

The Gargs’ undoing came after they put up a five-spot in the top of the fourth to take that seven-run lead. Pennex, though, has some pretty good hitters and they proved that, banging out a string of safeties to score five in the bottom of the inning and seven more in the next to take their only lead of the night.

Todd Duckworth (L, 0-7) clearly wasn’t the Todd we are used to. Hey, it happens.

The longtime Gargs star pitcher allowed 14 earned runs on 14 hits and although the game wasn’t decided until that fifth frame, one could see early on that the veteran did not have his best stuff.

After the Gargs scored three in the first, Pennex made three very loud outs in the bottom of the inning — a sensational leaping catch at first by Théo Gauthier; a long, running catch from Matthew Stephenson in centre and a dandy diving play from Rob Lafontaine at short.

“I was just thinking ‘no runs have scored,’ ” said Duckworth of that inning following the game, over beers at W.

It was just a matter of time.

And that’s not to point the finger at Duckworth. This guy has been the club workhorse for years and although his record would indicate an off-season, he actually has pitched very well in spots this campaign; most notably blanking the A-division Yankees through six on June 25.

Admittedly, it’s become a matter of confidence for the 52-year-old righty. “I don’t seem to have the same pop on the ball,” the pitcher conceded. “No location because I have no velocity. No velocity because I can’t find the location.”
This chicken-and-egg combination proved fatal Sunday night, leading Duckworth to conclude it’s the result of a lack of arm speed combined with a weaker upper body — something he’s vowed to work on both in the off-season and down the stretch (the Gargs have nine games to play before they face a do-or-die best-of-three playoff series in August).

The Gargs defence sparkled Tuesday night, with T. Gauthier, Lafontaine, Rick Devereux in LF, Matthew Stephenson and Mathieu Gauthier in right all making head’s-up plays. And the bats continued to produce with the Men in Black belting out 14 hits, including home runs from Lafontaine (his first) and 3B Zach Schowalter (his second). The steady third baseman went 1-1 with a dinger, drove in two, including one on a sacrifice fly, and walked three times. He also scored a pair of runs. Stephenson collected three hits, including a double, in five at bats, while Lafontaine went 3-4 and is now batting .714 (10-14). M. Gauthier and Devereux each had a pair of hits.

Gargs Largs: Théo made an amazing play to prevent a run and Mark an error (and also to earn a beer from the catcher) when the Gargs 1B lunged high and to his right to snare a pickoff toss that had right-field written all over it. “You owe him one,” the plate umpire whispered to Mark afterward. “I know,” Mark agreed . . . Rob made his patented over-the-shoulder catch, nicely tracking a ball far behind shortstop in short left-centre field . . . Real Horrorshow: According to a post-game discussion of horror films, it seems The Thing, Cloverfield and The Blair Witch Project are among the Gargs’ favourite spine-chillers to watch when they’re on the road. “I’m not into horror shows,” said Mark. “But when I want to see one, I usually just go to a Gargs’ game,” he quipped . . . Which Bullpen?: Odd to see Jeff come out and pitch the final two innings to earn a save against the Gargs. It was just a month ago (June 8) that Jeff pitched a five-hitter for the Gargs, in a 5-1 loss to the Acadiens . . . The Gargs played with nine men and no rover . . . E=MC2: Never let it be said the Gargs don’t have deep conversations following their games. Overheard at W was Zach explaining how Force = Mass X Acceleration . . . Quote of the night: From Zach, courtesy Rob. “Zach comes up to me in the field and says ‘Todd’s not himself tonight — he’s not yelling at anyone.’ ” . . . Karl Bélanger made it back alive from Guinea but his nightmare wasn’t in the African nation, it was at Logan Aiport in Boston where his flight to Ottawa was cancelled. The airline offered to bus the second baseman to Montreal for a flight to the nation’s capital. Karl opted to stay the night in Beantown and take in a game at Fenway where operating on basically no sleep (a nine-hour overlay in Paris will do that), Karl fell asleep in the stands high above home plate . . . The Gargs visit the Acadiens Tuesday night (9 p.m., Hampton Yards), with Duckworth expected to take the ball.

Box
Rob Lafontaine 3-4, 2 runs, HR (1), BB, RBI
Glen McGregor 1-4, 2 runs, BB
Karl Bélanger 0-0
Matthew Stephenson 3-5, run, 2B
Théo Gauthier 0-5, RBI
Zach Schowalter 1-1, 2 runs, HR (2), 3BB, sac fly, 2 RBI
Mark Brennae 1-5, run
Rick Devereux 2-4, run, BB
Mathieu Gauthier 2-5, RBI
Todd Duckworth 1-4, run, RBI

Todd Duckworth (L, 0-7) 6IP, 15 runs (14 earned), 14H, 1K, 3BB

Gargs     3 0 1 5 0 1 0     10 14 2
Pennex   0 0 2 5 7 1 x     15 14 4
Time: 1:50
Att.: 18.

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