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Celebrating A Great World Series + Claude Rains Nov 10 TCM Marathon

There are light years of difference between watching a game with emotional involvement for one of your teams and merely being interested in a good World Series game.  With my Woerioles under current management sadly headed nowhere (would love to be proven wrong), I adopted the gritty unheralded Blue Jays in the just-concluded Fall Classic.  By Games 6 and 7, I was really hoping Toronto would win over the Evil Empire West or less pejoratively, the Deferral Dodgers whose management has shrewdly backloaded many contracts to avoid paying luxury taxes to their less-financially-endowed and less-interested-in-winning partners.   

 

I watched Game 7 in a local Upper West Side bar, the Dive 106 on Amsterdam Ave.  It was a lively evening but not too raucous because the local Mets and Yankees were long gone from the playoffs - the Mets never even made them. It says here that having Juan Soto as a third MVP candidate doesn't seem right. My lasting memory of Soto this year was watching him take strike three called to end the penultimate game of the season in Miami and then arguing the call with the ump.  The Mets were still alive in the pennant race and NO WAY an MVP ends a crucial game with the bat on his shoulder.. 

 

There was an intense Dodger fan at the tavern wearing a blue Dodger T-shirt with the names on the front of Clayton Kershaw-Jackie Robinson-Sandy Koufax-and a 4th I can't remember. He told me that earlier in the season when the Dodgers came to New York to play both the Mets and Yankees, he met manager Dave Roberts at a downtown restaurant and he couldn't have been nicer. I thought to myself that the Jays' less-experienced manager John Schneider seemed like a good guy, too. 

 

Dive 106 customers might have been evenly split between Toronto and LAD rooters but when Alejandro Kirk hit into a Series-ending 6-6-3 DP started by Mookie Betts, T-shirted LAD fan erupted in bellicose joy.  Another happy camper was a Yankee fan who booed Blue Jay George Springer every time he came up.  She still held a grudge against any former Astro involved in the sign-stealing scandal that may have cost the Yankees the 2017 ALCS.  She did know the game though, learning it in Texas from her Brooklyn-born father.  She surmised accurately that walking potent Vladimir Guerrero Jr set up a double play trap for Kirk that he soon fell into.  Inning over, game over, World Series over, Dodgers win.

(Without John Sterling's screaming.)

 

The LA Dodgers are now the first back-to-back champions since the 1998-99-2000 Yankees. I don't want to nitpick too much because both teams could have won, but in the cruel crucible of baseball with its immensely long season, there is only one winner.  I did think after Toronto won Games 4 and 5 convincingly at Chavez Ravine they could win it all.  But the Dodgers are battle-tested and at least it was their grinders that made most of the difference. 

 

Not just the well-paid Mookie Betts who broke out of his slump long enough to get the huge hit in Game 6 - the two-run single off Kevin Gausman on an off-speed pitch after a long at-bat. They wouldn't have won without third baseman Max Muncy, a scrap heap pickup years ago, breaking out of his slump to homer in the 8th inning of Game 7 to bring the Dodgers within a run.   And then most improbably Miguel Rojas, 36-year-old former Miami Marlin who late in regular season announced his retirement after playoffs, hit the tying homer off recently-reliable closer Jeff Hoffman to tie the game with one out in the 9th. 

 

In a Series in which each team almost always answered runs quickly, the Blue Jays almost won it all in the bottom of the 9th. Alas, with the bases loaded and two out, defensive substitute Andy Pages made a leaping catch in left center knocking left fielder Kike Hernandez to the ground in the process.  The game was decided in the 11th when catcher Will Smith hit Shane Bieber's 2-0 pitch for a homer to deep left. LAD's young Japanese pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto was voted the Series MVP for winning 3 games and saving Game 7 with almost 3 innings of relief after throwing nearly 100 pitches in Game 6. 

 

I think Will Smith could have easily been the co-MVP because he caught every inning of every Series game. I counted at least 3 wild pitches he saved in the early innings of Game 7 when unicorn Shohei Ohtani was ineffective.  Smith reminds me of Yankee catcher Jorge Posada during the Bronx Bombers' most recent dynasty.  You love him if he's on your team and loathe him if he's an opponent.  Smith at least is a home-grown Dodger and came back from injury just in time to make his mark in the post-season. 

 

In many ways, I think Dodger manager Dave Roberts was the MVP. He manipulated his roster brilliantly, moving catcher Smith to second in the batting order to take pressure off Betts who until his big single in Game 6 was not contributing at the plate (but he was a whiz in the field, defying the pundits by playing shortstop for first time in MLB career.)

Roberts also inserted Rojas at second base for the last games and he came through on both sides of the ball.  Inserting rarely-used Justin Dean for defense in Game 6 proved very crucial when he immediately reacted to a line dlrive in the gap stuck in the outfield fence and got the umps to end the play without a run scoring.  

 

There is a revealing chapter on Dave Roberts in Scott Miller's recent book on managers SKIPPER. "I say a prayer every day, don't make it be about me."  More on this indispensable book coming up in Hot Stove League posts of this blog.  It is so sad that veteran sportswriter Scott Miller didn't live to enjoy most of the plaudits for SKIPPER because he died iof cancer n June at age 62.  It is a work that not only brings familiar managerial names back to life - Tom Kelly, Sparky Anderson, Billy Martin, Whitey Herzog, and others.  Miller also tells the stories of less-remembered managers like Cito Gaston, Art Howe, Jim Tracy, among others, who lost their jobs to the inexorable wave of analytics. 

 

Speaking of books, keep your eyes open for Steve Somers, ME HERE, YOU THERE which is available now on pre-order from Triumph Books and officially debuts on November 18. The San Francisco-born Somers made his New York radio debut in 1987 when WFAN went on the air as the first all-sports talk radio station.  Steve brought great knowledge and welcome humor to his overnight broadcasts. His carefully crafted well-written opening monologues were especially delightful after the host and caller screamings that punctuated sports talk radio then and now.   

 

Here's some TCM Turner Classic Movies tips, most notably Claude Rains marathon from 6A until 8P on Mon Nov 10.  I have dreamed of being reincarnated as Rains and (also Robert Preston and James Garner).  Here's the lineup for Rains:

6A "Four Daughters" (1938). Music teacher Rains is wary of his daughters, some of the Lane sisters, getting too friendly with John Garfield.

745A "Adventures of Robin Hood" (1938) Rains contends with Errol Flynn and Olivia DeHavilland

945A "Mr. Skeffington" (1942) Michael Curtiz reunites with Rains after "Casablanca" - Bette Davis has to contend with Rains who is spared her worst side in "Deception"

   which is not shown today.

1215P "Passage to Marseilles" (1944) - Curtiz again this time with Bogart along for a WW II story

215P "The Unsuspected" (1947) another villain role for Claude with Joan Caulfield and Audrey Totter

4P "Casablanca" (1943)

545P "Caesar and Cleopatra" (1945)

This amazing day on TCM opens at 1215A with the silent "Body and Soul" (1925) with Paul Robeson as philandering minister.  ("Ol' Man River" had not yet made its debut) 

And at 8P the oft-shown but always gripping "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" (1966). Mike Nichols directs Liz and Burton in Edward Albee's searing play

 

On the live music front for those in NYC area, Sa Nov 8 10A-10P - "Wall-To-Wall Stevie Wonder" - Symphony Space, Broadway/95th Street Manhattan

 

That's all for now.  Stay strong without baseball until late winter.  And always remember:  Stay Positive, Test Negative & Take It Easy But Take It!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

       

 

    

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The Coming World Series Will Have To Be Great To Match The ALCS + TCM Tips

Here's to the Toronto Blue Jays for winning a classic 7-game ALCS over the Seattle Mariners. They have home field advantage over the Los Angeles Dodgers who swept the Milwaukee Brewers behind great pitching and a record-setting Game 4 in which Shohei Ohtani hit 3 home runs and struck out 10 in 6 shutout innings.  They will be clear favorites over the Blue Jays but don't count them out. They won the AL championship in a gripping Game 7 and will enter their first World Series since 1993 when they completed a two-peat on Joe Carter's walkoff homer. 

 

George Springer's 3-run-shot this past Monday Oct 20 was not quite a walkoff - it was only in bottom of the 7th - but it turned the dramatic Game 7 on its head because Seattle had been leading 3-1 since the early innings.  Former Met Chris Bassiitt, a veteran thinking-man's RHP and a free-agent-to-be, threw a spotless 8th and so did closer Jeff Hoffman in the 9th. But not before some drama.  

 

Signed as an amateur by Toronto 10 years ago, Hoffman was traded in 2016 and after stops in Colorado and Philadelphia, he returned home this season. Two organizations, including my Woerioles (I am holding my tongue or fingers in this post about how the axis of newby owner David Rubenstein and overrated GM now President of Baseball Operations no less may never be ready for AL East prime time). Back to Jeff Hoffman who could injured in the future - who couldn't? but this year he stayed healthy although he did allow 15 regular season HRs (though not many recently). In the top of 9th on Monday, Jeff needed almost 10 pitches before striking out Julio Rodriguez, leaving slugger Cal Raleigh waiting on deck. Both had homered earlier in Game 7 so it made the last AB an exquisite exercise in ultimate baseball pressure. 

 

Vladimir Guerrero Jr is red-hot at the plate, adequate in the field, and a definite leader in the clubhouse.  Though Springer hit the final big blow, Guerrero Jr was a worthy ALCS MVP. He walked into the clubhouse before Game 7 wearing Auston Matthews' #34 Toronto Maple Leafs jersey.  The hockey superstar has not delivered a Stanley Cup yet. Neither has any Leaf player since the mid-1960s.  The awful but funny joke (if you are not a Toronto fan) is "Toronto is the only city where the Leafs fall in April."  Guerrero Jr.'s gesture was as if to say, "We want none of that, we will win it for our city and country." 

 

It looks another longtime offensive threat for the Jays, shortstop Bo Bichette (another son of a major leaguer, former Rockies and Yankees outfielder Dante Bichette- Vlad Sr. was a star on Montreal Expos and LA Angels and is in Hall of Fame) will be on the World Series roster though it won't be finalized until this Friday Oct 24.  When he is hot, Bo Bichette is an extremely productive offensive player.  He is not the greatest defensive shortstop but to me he is not horrible.  He will also be a free agent after the season so he has a lot to play for, especially if he is healthy after banging up his knee sliding into home against the Yankees in early September.)   

 

It was a tough ALCS loss for the Mariners, still the only one of the current 30 MLB franchises never to play in a World Series.  It is hard not to criticize manager Dan Wilson for his Game 7 pitching decisions. I would have let Game 7 starter, 4-year veteran George Kirby originally from nearby Rye NY, pitch more than 4 innings. I certainly would have let Bryan Woo pitch out of the jam in the 7th inning.  (With that name, pitching Woo is a baseball romantic's dream.) 

 

When Wilson chose one of his lower leverage relievers, well-traveled Eduardo Bazardo, to replace Woo with two runners in scoring position and Springer coming up, I sensed trouble.  And sure enough on Bazardo's second pitch,  Springer unloaded a long 3-run HR to left center.  So went up in smoke Seattle's 2-0 and 3-2 game leads in the series.  In hindsight, their offense left too many men on base and their defense and base-running betrayed them at key moments. Although a vital contributor on offense, first baseman Josh Naylor was the culprit twice on the bases.  In game 4 as the Mariners were rallying, Naylor made the third out trying to go from first to third on a single that cut their deficit to one run.  In Game 7, he foolishly tried to break up a double play by standing up going into second and let the shortstop's throw hit him. After the umps huddled, he was called out.  

 

But enough of this post-mortem. Seattle has so much to be proud of in its season, not least finally conquering the almost-perennial AL West champions Houston Astros in a September sweep. And then winning a dramatic  15-inning elimination game against the Tigers in the prior round of the playoffs.  I want to give the last word about the ALCS to Northwest Baseball blogger Amanda Lane Cumming.  She fell in love with baseball when she was a young teenager, a time when the Mariners of Ken Griffey Jr.-Randy Johnson-Edgar Martinez literally saved baseball in Seattle when voters chose to support funding to build a new stadium to replace the dreary Kingdome. 

 

Amanda has since lived through the ups and downs of Mariners baseball - mainly downs - but shortly before Game 7 began, she posted this moving entry.  With her permission, I am quoting a couple of her passages describing how she has fallen in love again with her local team:   "Baseball still has magic . . . between the layers of dirty laundry, underneath the filth of billionaire owners, and right-wing players.  There is still magic."  She concluded: "It's not about winning. It never was. It's about believing."

 

As for picking a World Series winner, I'd like to see Toronto win it at home either in the sixth or seventh game.  Since I'm not emotionally involved, I will vote for a Game 7 which will fall on Sa Nov 1 assuming no rainouts in LA. (Toronto's Rogers Center, formerly known as the Skydome, has a retractable roof.)  A couple of hours later at 2A on Su morning Nov 2, we lose a hour of daylight with the return of Standard Time.  How fitting that if it goes seven, darkness sets in.  As the late former baseball commissioner (and Yale University professor and university president) Bartlett Giamatti memorably said, "Just when we need the game the most, it is taken away." 

 

As we head towards the free agent frenzy that officially starts after the end of the World Series, expect lots of false rumors and bad signings as well as the occasional good ones. There will plenty of chances to discuss these thorny issues than many people think will lead to a lockout after next season.  I try to accentuate the positive in this blog (except admittedly when my team the Woerioles will fall out of indefinite non-contention under current management). But here are two gestures from late in the regular season that were such beautiful human interest stories that they deserve mention.

 **MIKE TROUT hit his 400th HR at Denver's Coors Field in mid-September.  A Rockies fan caught the ball in the bleachers and was glad to give it to Mike as a souvenir.  He asked for very little swag except a chance to play catch with his hero.  And guess what? After the game there was Mike and the fan having a catch along the third base line.

 

**Kudos to STEPHEN VOGT Guardians manager and Tigers LHP TARIK SKUBAL a likely two-peat winner next month of the AL Cy Young award (though Bosox lefty Garrett Crochet could nip him). Tarik expressed deep concern when Cleveland batter DAVID FRY fouled a Skubal pitch into his face in a taut ALDS Guardians-Tigers game.  Skubal, normally a cool customer on the mound, was so shaken that he lost the lead in that inning, ultimately getting a No Decision (ND). After the game, he insisted on going to the hospital to see how Fry was doing.  And manager Vogt drove well out of his regular route home to take Skubal to see his injured player.  Fortunately, it seems that Fry will have a full recovery.   

 

Now - it's time for some TCM tips for the the last days of October. Not many baseball references in them, but these films are worthy of seeing.

Th Oct 23 545P "The Great Dictator" (1940). Chaplin plays double role as a barber returning from years of amnesia after a WW I injury to find that the Nazis have taken over his shop. Chaplin plays a second role based on Hitler, Adenoid Hynkel, Jack Oakie was Oscar-nominated for his Benzino Napaloni, a character based on Mussolini, and Paulette Goddard plays the daughter of the leader of the under-siege Jewish community. 

Th Oct 23  8P "Death on the Nile" (1978) Peter Ustinov as Inspector Poirot tries to solve a murder/with Mia Farrow/Bette Davis

 

F Oct 24 6P "The Sunshine Boys" (1975) Richard Benjamin tries to induce old comics George Burns/Walter Matthau to return to the stage - a Neil Simon classic 

The next two films go directly against Game I of the World Series starting on Oct 24 after 8P on FOX

8P "Suspicion" (1941) Hitchcock thriller with Joan Fontaine/Cary Grant/Cedric Hardwicke

10P "The Fury" (1978). a Brian De Palma thriller about a distraught CIA operative with John Cassavetes/Kirk Douglas/Charles Durning who BTW once acted in a one-man show about Casey Stengel which is hard to find in print or video - Please contact me with leads if you have them.

 

Sa Oct 25. quite a feast of films, here are some of the highlights:

12N "Tales of Hoffmann" (1951) another Powell/Presburger classic based on the story of a man lamenting three of his loves - "Tales" was also, of course, a 19th century Offenbach opera still in the corpus of many opera companies all over the world.  The film stars Moira Shearer who was a huge hit in the Powell-Presburger 1948 film about ballet "The Red Shoes" 

415P "The League of Gentlemen" (1961) Basic Dearden directs bankers who plan a big heist

615P "Dr. Strangelove or How I Stopped Worrying And Learned to Love the Bomb" (1964)  TCM plays it a lot and it is always rewarding in a macabre kind of way fitting for 2025  

And for more counter programming in the middle of the World Series:

930P" "Rosemary's Baby" (1968) Roman Polanski's horror film based on true story written by Ira Levin about a woman fearful of giving birth to a child who might grow up to be Satan/with Mia Farrow/John Cassavetes/Ruth Gordon 

12M - repeated Sun Oct 26 10A. Noir Alley presents "Southside 1-1000" (1950) with Don DeFore, a year after he unravels Lisabeth Scott's dirty doings in "Too Late For Tears" (1949) and two years before he settles in as Ozzie and Harriet's neighbor in TV show of the same name.  I hope informed readers know that before Ozzie became a national big band leader, he played football at Rutgers "the state university of New Jersey".

 

Later on Sun Oct 26 following Noir Alley, there is an unusual back-to-back noir:

1145A "The Unfaithful" (1947) starring a rather talented trio:  Ann Sheridan (who hated being called by publicists the "oomph girl" because "oomph" reminded her of the sound a fat man made when he sat on a couch)/Lew Ayres who became a pacifist as did many others who worked on Lewis Milestone's searing "All Quiet on the Western Front" (1931). Ayres did work in a miitary medical corps in WW II. Another fun fact is that Ben Alexander, a child actor at 6, was around 18-19 when he played a German soldier eager to go into World War I. In the 1950s, Ben played Officer Frank Smith opposite Sgt. Jack Webb in the first TV "Dragnet". Also appearing in "The Unfaithful" is Zachary Scott who made a good living playing particularly smooth cads, notably in the classic "Mildred Pierce" (1945).  

 

No baseball on Sunday night but TCM brings two classic Hitchcocks back to life:

8P "Psycho" (1960) Bernard Herrmann's engrossing if unnerving score and Anthony Perkins doing in Janet Leigh who to me had far better roles in her career but she is too often mentioned for this one

10P "Shadow of A Doubt" (1943) Joseph Cotten after "Citizen Kane" and before "The Third Man," and Teresa Wright after "Pride of the Yankees" and before "Best Years of Our Lives"

 

M Oct 27. these films go head-to-head with Game 3 of World Series, the first one in LA

8P "Going My Way" (1944) actually most baseball references in this selection of TCM films appear here - young priest Crosby wears St. Louis Browns sweatshirt and utters several baseball comments  After World War II, he became a part owner of Pittsburgh Pirates (and Bob Hope also owned a slice of then-Cleveland Indians)

1015P "Papa's Delicate Condition" (1963)  Have not seen this one but talk about odd couples - Jackie Gleason is described on TCM as "small-town family man" with drinking issues.  British actress Glynis Johns . gifted with good looks and a notably husky and haunting voice - presumably tries to help Jackie. 

 

Tu Oct 28 here's an early morning one I must list and must see.

8A "Tennesse Johnson" (1942). One of Hollywood's post-Civil War historical dramas made at a time when we were trying to look to our history for inspiration for our fight against the Nazis.  How quaint today.  As a Branch Rickey biographer, I have a special interest in this film because TIME Magazine when they prolifed Rickey in early 1940s compared his speaking style to "Lionel Barrymore playing [arch-abolitionist US Senator] Thaddeus Stevens" in this film.  With Van Heflin as Andrew Johnson, Lincoln's successor and Ruth Hussey as AJ's wife.  William Dieterle directs.

 

That's all for now - always remember: "Stay Positive, Test Negative, and Take It Easy But Take It!" 

 

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