A blog about Sports & Recreation.
About TheNoiseFactor


Member Since:
August 26, 2008
Last Signed In:
November 15, 2009
Profile Views:
783
Blog Views:
2768
View Profile
Send a Message
Send To A Friend
Sign Guestbook
Add as a Friend

Previous Posts
NFL Week 10 Preview
NFL Week 9 Preview
World Series Game 6 Preview
New York evens the series and heads to Philly for Game 3
English Premiere Soccer Week 11 Preview
NFL Week 8 Preview
2009 World Series Preview
Phiilies still waiting for outcome of ALCS
NFL Week 7 Preview
Angels try to stay alive in Game 5
Archives
August 08
September 08
October 08
November 08
December 08
January 09
February 09
March 09
April 09
May 09
June 09
July 09
August 09
September 09
October 09
November 09
Jackass of the Week Award

Ex-NBA star Jayson Williams allegedly trashed a suite in a suicidal rage and was subdued by a stun gun and taken to a psychiatric clinic, New York police said.

Police used a stun gun and two sets of handcuffs to subdue Williams. They allegedly found suicide notes and empty bottles and vials of sleeping pills, antidepressants and human growth hormone, police sources told the New York Post.

The Award is shared this week by Williams for being Williams and the NYPD for using a stun gun on a suicidal man.

Subscribe!
RSS 2.0 feed RSS 2.0
Add to My Yahoo
Add to My Google
Add to Bloglines
Add to My AOL

Share!


Even though corn doesn't line the outfield at Sam Lynn ballpark, it’s still one of baseballs “Field of Dreams”.

As a follow up to my prior article last month regarding the announcement by the Bakersfield Blaze to depart from the City of Bakersfield after the 2009 season, unless a new ballpark was put in place, I have decided to focus on what’s really important to Bakersfield baseball. Tradition and history, and Sam Lynn Ballpark has played a vital role in both.

Maybe erecting a new baseball monument instead of breathing new life into one so rich in history and tradition is not really the answer. Maybe the issue is not about whether or not the Blaze decide to stay in Bakersfield, but rather will baseball remain a part of Bakersfield.

Could a plan be put into action to resurrect the 58-year old stadium?

Built in 1941 for the Bakersfield Badgers, Sam Lynn Ballpark is perhaps best known as the ballpark that was built backwards. It is the only venue in professional baseball in which the batter faces west. The ballpark was named after Sam Lynn the former local owner of a Coca-Cola bottling company who donated much of his income to youth baseball leagues, and became one of the founders of the California League. Ironically, he died just months before the league began play.

In the 58-years following the parks construction, it has been allowed to fall into a state of deterioration, despite attempts in both 1993 and 2006 to renovate the aging facility. Despite the fading paint the park sits as a timeless reminder of baseballs golden age.

At 354 feet to center field, Sam Lynn also has the shortest center field in professional baseball.
However, it still poses a challenge to be a hitter’s park due to the fact that the outfielders are closer together. Over to the right field wall, Sam Lynn features an out-of-use catwalk set into the wall about 15 feet above the warning track. If the ball bounces off the catwalk or the wall above it is played as live, but if the ball stays on the catwalk it is a ground rule double. The bat racks and on-deck circles are located about 80 feet away from the cement dugouts that are slightly taller than 6 feet, thus creating what’s been called  "the walk of shame" for any batter who strikes out.

The sport of baseball has forever been shrouded and associated with many mysteries, countless curses and ghosts. So too has the mystery behind the only professional ballpark with a west facing field. 

As the baseball community has accepted Sam Lynn Ball Park as being a quirky little stadium, is it possible to save Sam Lynn from extinction? As efforts are being made to save the Padre Hotel, and the now beautifully restored majestic Fox Theater. One has to ask, the same about Sam Lynn Ballpark. Or is the answer to filling seats, a new state of the art ballpark?

If you build it they will come, or will they?

A perfect example of this is when the Chicago White Sox ten years ago bulldozed friendly old Comiskey Park, built in 1910 by Charles Comiskey himself, because the owners thought a modern, concrete goliath would better equip them for the 21st century and draw more fans. But after the initial excitement wore off, fans stayed away in droves from the sterile food courts and the steeply pitched upper deck. The White Sox now draw fewer fans to now renamed US Cellular Field, than they did at Comiskey, despite wining an AL Pennant and World Series Championship in 2005. Proving that baseball fans do not allow ourselves to be played for suckers by people who see us not as fans but as a "revenue stream."

Fields like Sam Lynn Ballpark are baseball's Libraries of Alexandria, the repositories for its greatest treasures. The memories, which distinguish baseball from every other American sport, are the reasons we can't give up the game even after owners and teams abandon us.

I for one am in favor of keeping those treasures polished and protected for baseballs generations to come. Without these precious gems as reminders of the past, we deny younger legions of baseball fans the chance to look back into baseballs fabled past. 

There is one advantage to Sam Lynn’s west-facing field. You get to enjoy the colors created by a pre-game sunset fading behind the center field wall. Usually you don't get to see it at other parks because it's behind you, but at Sam Lynn much like its history, it's right in front of you to enjoy.

Sam Lynn Fun Facts:

Sam Lynn Ballpark holds the California League single game attendance record at 8,175, set on July 3rd, 1995.

Sam Lynn used to have an operating digital display above the left field wall that showed pitch speeds and player stats. In 2002, then-prospect Josh Hamilton hit an opposite field homerun that sent the ball smashing into the front of the display (a-la "The Natural"), rendering it permanently inoperable. Today the display still remains over left field, but is covered with a banner advertising the team's website.

Posted in the Sports & Recreation interest group.
Topics: bakersfield blaze, Baseball, sam lynn ballpark
posted by TheNoiseFactor on Thursday, October 16, 2008 at 03:15 PM
Permalink - Comments [1] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 15 times

So I have a 12-year old son that is in his first year of junior high school. I know you feel sorry for me. But don’t, he really is a good kid for the most. Every evening we gather around the dinner table to partake in a delectable meal that mom has prepared, and swap stories about our day. First there is the 5-year old, whose excitement for the day is whether or not she received a green ticket in class. Usually we know if she received a green ticket, because she is bouncing along when she arrives at the bus stop. You see a green ticket means a sweet reward for her and punishment for us.
 
We then turn our attention to the boy and his amusing anecdotes. Mainly, ones surrounding girls and the latest middle school gossip. Ah, the 12 year old mind. However, this particular days recollection was about a certain t-shirt that he had worn to school. It was a shirt my wife had purchased for the new school year. You see one of the school administrators had questioned whether or not this particular shirt violated the schools dress code. The reasoning, the style of lettering. Now I may be a little older, but the particular shirt in question did in no way promote or invoke any affiliation or would distract any student from obtaining the realms of higher education.
 
Right now your probably asking, so what does this have to do with sports?
 
Earlier this month a sophomore at Elgin High School in Elgin, IL, was asked to remove her Chicago Cubs, Kosuke Fukudome jersey and wear a gym t-shirt to class because of a misunderstanding about how to pronounce the All-Star right-fielder's last name. The incident began when the schools dean stopped her and asked what the name of Cubs player was, and she pronounced foo-koo-DOUGH-may. The school staffer wasn't so sure and consulted with other faculty. The dean then told the girl the jersey was inappropriate and made her remove it.
 
Maybe we should also ban the study of Uranus in astronomy class as well as ban any atlas or globe that shows the location of Phuket, Thailand.
 
By late afternoon, common sense -- and proper pronunciation – prevailed as the Associate Principal announced that students could wear the Fukudome apparel at school.
 
This issue is not just reserved for high school students. It was revealed that one Oklahoma woman was asked to remove her Kosuke Fukudome jersey during work hours because the F-U-K-U letters may be offensive to some. Yet Doris in accounting wearing her Dick Trickle NASCAR jersey is totally fine.
 
Well good thing neither one of these young ladies didn’t buy a Yankees pitcher, Chien-Ming Wang jersey.
 

 

Posted in the Sports & Recreation interest group.
Topics: cubs, Baseball, Kosuke Fukudome, MLB
posted by TheNoiseFactor on Friday, October 10, 2008 at 04:21 PM
Permalink - Comments [3] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 62 times

Are the Cubs finished in this postseason? You lose two straight at home to open a best-of-5 series and you practically deserve to get ousted.

Four errors, a bases-loaded double by Russell Martin, another home run from Manny Ramirez-his 26th career post-season homer, and seven two-out RBIs in game two, have the Dodgers one win away from their first playoff series win since 1988.  Two of the four errors came in a five-run second inning against Cubs pitcher, Carlos Zambrano.


 “It wasn’t good baseball. In fact, the last two days, that’s probably been the two worst games we’ve played all year,” a frustrated Lou Piniella said. “It wasn’t fun to watch, I’ll tell you that.” The Cubs manager then gently laid his head on his desk and closed his eyes, as members of the press tiptoed out, careful not to wake him.

Only once in the history of a best-of-5 series has a team lost the first two games at home and come back to win the series. That team was the 2001 New York Yankees, managed by Joe Torre, who did it against Oakland.

The Cubs certainly are capable of winning three straight games. In fact, they've had winning streaks of at least three games 16 times this year. Meanwhile, champagne is on ice in Mannywood, as the Dodgers look to close it out in Chavez Ravine on Saturday night.

Posted in the Sports & Recreation interest group.
Topics: MLB, playoofs, Chicago Cubs, los angeles dodgers, Baseball
posted by TheNoiseFactor on Friday, October 3, 2008 at 10:37 AM
Permalink - Comments [2] - Leave a Comment - Report a Violation
Viewed 42 times