Tuesday, April 29, 2008

A Tale of Two Cities

Interesting night for me as a fan. I have lived most of my life in two cities - Phoenix and Houston. I grew up an Astros fan and while I lived in Phoenix, there was no pro baseball team so my passion for Astros baseball continued to grow after I moved there, along with the associated misery (see 1986 NLCS) that goes with rooting for the Astros. When I moved to Phoenix, I was not much of an NBA fan but slowly became a Suns fan thanks to Walter Davis, Kevin Johnson, Tom Chambers and Sir Charles.

So tonight I spent the evening catching up on email and writing press releases while watching the Suns implode in the final two minutes against Spurs to lose in game 5 of their FIRST ROUND series, ending the Phoenix season. Then I flipped over to the Astros game and watched them close out a 6-4 win against the Arizona Diamondbacks.

The irony for me personally continues to be that the one Houston sports team (yes, I was a die-hard Oilers fan) I was not much of a fan of, the Houston Rockets, were the ones who eliminated the Suns two years in a row in the mid-90s. Those Rocket teams would go onto win back-t0-back championships.

Anyhow, a rough night for Phoenix sports fans who root for the home teams. While in Houston, their basketball team gets to live another day after silencing the Jazz and the Astros snapped their three-game skid. A rare good day for Houston sports fans. Basketball season is officially over for me now. Houston, you have my full attention once again.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Awful Day for my Teams

As a sports fan, Saturday was about as bad as it gets for me. First, the Suns lose in double OT after having led for pretty much the entire time in regulation against the Spurs. Given that I live in Austin, I'm up here in psuedo-Spurs country since San Antonio is 90 minutes away and so I'm forced to deal with Spurs media and fans.

It only gets worse from there, I couldn't even finish watching the Astros' game last night as they have just become a very pathetic display out on the field. They lose 3-2 after getting shelled the previous night 11-5 by a worn-out Rockies team that had played 22 innings the night before. All of this on the Astros' homefield.

All of this was capped off by the ASU baseball team continuing their downward spiral and getting shelled by Oregon State yet again, 12-3. ASU is ranked 3rd in the country right now but after getting beat twice at home, there's a high likelihood they will fall out of the top 10.

Oh well, at least the ASU football team was able to beat themselves in the Maroon and Gold game. Note to Dennis Erickson, please consider an open competition for the starting QB spot going into training camp.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

What a shame

Shawn Chacon unexpectedly pitches 8 very strong shutout innings and exits the game with a three run lead. Chacon has definitely been a pleasant surprise for the team as he has had three very solid outings in three starts this season. And as much as Chacon has been a pleasant surprise, Astros' closer Jose Valverde has been an alarming train wreck of a closer.

I don't question Cooper for bringing in Valverde to close the game out, nearly every manager in the league would have done the same thing. However, after blowing the lead by giving up four in the ninth against the Phillies, the question now becomes is how long does Coop continue to have Valverde be his closer?

Over the gut-wrenching past two seasons of Lidge closing out games, the Astros always had some decent options in Qualls and Wheeler. This year they really have no one who can step into that role. The only guy I can potentially see doing it is Brocail who has been a career middle-relief guy.

Not that they're asking me, but I'm going to offer up my suggestion on this one anyhow: move Valverde into a set-up role, ship the disappointing Oscar Villareal to Round Rock and call up Fernando Nieve and have him try closing. The guy has great stuff (when healthy) and he seems like the type of guy who is more suited toward letting it fly for an inning or two rather than trying to stretch it for 5 or 6.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Someone took their Deca Durabolin tonight


The Astros' biggest off-season acquisition and accused steroid user Miguel Tejada made a big impression on the locals in Houston tonight after he went yard to the opposite field for a walk-off two-run shot in the ninth to beat the rival Cardinals, 5-3. This came on the heels of Miggy making a great play to mercifully end a forgetful top of the ninth for new Astros' closer Jose Valverde (btw, Brad Lidge notched his first save for the Phillies today) who continues to be a win scavenger. No Astros' starter has a win yet, but all of them with the exception Oswalt should have one if not for the 2008 version of the Texaco bullpen.

The Astros are 3-5 now and if the bullpen were pitching well, they'd probably be 5-3 or at least .500 and Wandy and Backe would have a win each. I guess all those things D-backs' fans told me about Valverde are true and his 46 saves in 2007 were a bit of a mirage if you look behind the numbers.