Richard Justice goes batty again

justice12.gifAs noted here and here earlier, Chronicle sports columnist Richard Justice comes uncorked at the darndest times.
Take Justice’s recent blog post on why the Stros should not make a play for disgruntled New York Yankees star, Alex Rodriguez. Rodriguez is the same age as Stros slugger Lance Berkman and has substantially better career hitting statistics than Berkman, but Justice engages in vacuous blathering about how Rodriguez would not be a “good fit” for the Stros despite the fact that it is clear that the Stros’ main need is a hitter of Rodriguez’s quality.
Well, Justice’s subjective analysis would normally not even merit a comment, except that he ends it with the following salvo:

A-Rod may be the kind of guy [Stros GM] Tim Purpura would want, but I’m guessing the best GMs–Billy Beane, Gerry Hunsicker, Pat Gillick, etc.–wouldn’t touch him.

What a cheap shot at Purpura. Although it’s fine to think that Rodriguez would not be welcome in the Stros clubhouse, it’s silly to suggest that exploring a trade for a hitter of his caliber reflects poor judgment by the Stros GM. And though Justice apparently doesn’t want to admit it, his old buddy Hunsicker is such a good general manager that he couldn’t even land a GM job at all after leaving the Stros last year and ended up working this past season as an aide to the GM at Tampa Bay, not exactly on the upper-crust of Major League Baseball.
Richard Justice needs to remove his nose from Gerry Hunsicker’s rear end.

Stros 2006 Review, Part Ten: Season Recap and Report Card

berkman_bashing.jpgWith the League Championship Series matchups now set, it’s time to put the Stros 2006 season to rest. At least the Stros’ late season surge was fun while it lasted, but it ended in the same manner as too many of this club’s games (previous reviews here) — with a whimper in Atlanta as the Stros failed to make the playoffs for the first time in three seasons and for the only the fourth time in the past 10 seasons. This tenth and final review of the season will provide a report card on the Stros, hopefully without the subjective blather that we endure from much of the mainstream media that covers the club.
The Stros played well down the stretch as they posted an 11-6 record in the final 1/10th of the season (including their magical nine game winning streak), which means that they were a solid 21-12 over the final 20% of the season. However, inasmuch as the Stros were 19-13 during the first 20% of the season, that means that the club was an abysmal 42-55 during the middle 60% of the season. That latter record is reflective of the club’s poor hitting, while the 40-25 record during the first and final 20% segments of the season reflect the club’s strong pitching. The combination of the two means that the Stros are about a National League-average team, which is proved by the club’s 82-80 final record.
The Stros late-season run was fueled by outstanding pitching, which has been the foundation of the club’s success throughout the Biggio-Bagwell era. After a slow start this season, the Stros pitching staff really picked it up over the second half of the season, finishing by saving an outstanding 78 more runs than a National League-average pitching staff would have saved in the same number of innings (RSAA, explained here). That was the best of any pitching staff in the National League this season.
Oswalt_Roy_03.jpgNevertheless, as has been the case over the past six seasons, the Stros’ overall hitting declined again this season. The club’s hitters generated a poor 47 runs fewer runs than a National League-average team would have created using the same number of outs (RCAA, explained here), which was only 11th among the 16 National League teams.
Thus, while this season was clearly not disastrous, my main concern is that the club’s fast finish will distract management from recognizing and addressing the festering problem with the club’s hitting that — if not rectified — will prevent the Stros from being a perennial playoff contender during the Berkman-Oswalt era. The initial management move — firing pitching coach Jim Hickey while retaining manager Phil Garner and hitting coach Sean Berry — is not particularly encouraging, although it must be conceded that young, back-end rotation starters Taylor Buchholz and Wandy Rodriguez struggled this season. That probably sealed Hickey’s fate.
But as my grades for the Stros players reflect, the Stros have far bigger issues than their pitching coach. The club’s model of emphasizing pitching remains sound, so the club doesn’t need to become even an above-average National League-hitting team to return to serious playoff contention. In fact, adding merely one above-average hitting corner outfielder may be enough to do the trick so long as the pitching continues to excel. But whatever deals Stros management make, the club clearly does not need to make wholesale changes during the off-season to return to serious playoff contention in the 2007 season. Indeed, the $40 million or so in payroll that will be freed up with the expiration of the Bagwell, Clemens and Pettitte contracts will provide Stros management with some much-needed flexibility in consummating a deal or two.
My report card for the Stros follows the final season statistics below. Pdf’s of the final hitting stats are here and the final pitching stats are here), courtesy of Lee Sinins‘ sabermetric Complete Baseball Encyclopedia. The abbreviations for the hitting stats are defined here and the same for the pitching stats are here:

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The Amish Way

amish.jpgThe first two paragraphs of Rod Dreher’s op-ed in the Dallas Morning News says it all:

Is there any place on earth that more bespeaks peace, restfulness and sanctuary from the demons of modern life than a one-room Amish schoolhouse? That fact is no doubt why so many of us felt so defiled ñ there is no more precise word ñ by news of the mass murders that took place there this week. If you’re not safe in an Amish schoolhouse … And yet, as unspeakable as those killings were, they were not the most shocking news to come out of Lancaster County this week.
No, that would be the revelation that the Amish community, which buried five of its little girls this week, is collecting money to help the widow and children of Charles Carl Roberts IV, the man who executed their own children before taking his own life. A serene Amish midwife told NBC News on Tuesday that this is normal for them. It’s what Jesus would have them do.

Read the entire piece. What a magnificent expression of true faith.

Project Posner

posner8.jpgNot just any judge has one of these. But it’s a darn good idea. The following is the website’s description:

The purpose of this site is to make freely and easily available to the public Richard Posner’s largest and greatest body of work ó his judicial opinions. The database contains opinions from 1981 to 2006. It will not contain the most recent opinions.
Why this site? While Posner’s books and popular writings are easily available to the public, his opinions are difficult or expensive for the public to access, let alone search. This site, for the first time, collects almost all of his opinions in a single searchable and easily readable database.
For lawyers and those interested in law, Posner’s opinions have a particular substantive value. One thing that distinguishes the opinions is the effort to try and get at why a given law actually exists, and an effort to try and make sense of the law. That can make them more useful than most case reports.
In addition, the opinions often develop the American general and state common law. Posner is among the judges who feels free to take the rule of Erie as more suggestion than injunction.
Finally, some of the opinions are funny.

I wonder whether Judge Easterbrook will get one, too?

The talented Mr. Munitz skates free

munitz14.jpgAlmost lost amidst the media firestorm over California Attorney General Bill Lochyer’s decision to prosecute former Hewlett Packard board chairperson Patricia Dunn was this news item that Lochyer’s office has decided not to sue or prosecute former Getty Trust president and former University of Houston president Barry Munitz (prior posts here).
Lochyer’s office had been investigating Munitz over misuse of trust money for his wifeís travel, using employees for personal errands and making improper payments to a graduate student from trust funds. Lochyer’s office concluded that no legal action was advisable because Munitz’s actions were authorized by the Getty board and that his settlement with the Getty Trust when he resigned exceeded the value of what the state could recover from Munitz in a civil action or a prosecution.
In other words, Lochyer concluded that there was no need to prosecute Munitz because he had done the right thing in settling up with the Getty Trust. That decision in regard to Munitz makes his decision to prosecute Ms. Dunn all the more curious. Perhaps Ms. Dunn should have done lunch with Lochyer?

The NY Times on James Baker’s new book

baker_19122003.jpgFormer White House Chief of Staff, Secretary of State and Secretary of Treasury James Baker, III, who spends his time these days at the Baker Institute at Rice University, has written a new book entitled ìWork Hard, Study . . . and Keep Out of Politics!î Adventures and Lessons From an Unexpected Public Life.” The title of the book is the legendary advice of Baker’s grandfather, James Addison Baker, who was one of the founders of the venerable Houston law firm, Baker & Botts.
This NY Times review of Baker’s new book belittles the current Bush Administration, even though the book does no such thing. That passes for a book review in the NY Times these days.

More on that energy price conspiracy

o'reillyhand7.jpgA couple of weeks ago, this post noted the news stories about some pundits were floating the theory that the recent slide in energy prices was a dark conspiracy of powerful political forces that were attempting to ensure the victory of the evil capitalist roaders in the upcoming mid-term elections. Bill O’Reilly was probably pleased with these reports.
Subsequently, a week or so ago, Clear Thinkers favorite James Hamilton shot down a similar report that Goldman Sachs was really behind the price decline.
But absurd conspiracy theories do not die easily in American society. Last Friday, this Washington Post article again channels the conspiracy theory, this time pointing toward a new bogeyman, Saudi Arabia:

According to this theory, the Saudi government is doing Bush a favor by trying to bring down prices before the election. The evidence? Some say the Saudi government has a long-standing relationship with the Bush family. They also cite the 2004 book by author and Washington Post assistant managing editor Bob Woodward, “Plan of Attack,” which said that then-Saudi ambassador to the United States, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, promised to keep oil production high enough to moderate fuel prices and bolster the U.S. economy during the presidential election year.

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2006 Weekly local football review

mccoy_colt_100706_446.jpgTexas Longhorns 28 Oklahoma 10

As noted in last week’s review, my recent up-close exposure to this Texas team led me to conclude that the Sooners would have their hands full with the Longhorns (5-1, 2-0), and that was certainly the case during the second half of the annual Red River Shootout in Dallas on Saturday. The Horns dominated the Sooners 21-0 in the second half on their way to a convincing 28-10 victory in what really amounted to a rock’em, sock’em defensive battle that was won by the team with the fewer turnovers. Texas QB Colt McCoy had a couple of nice TD passes during that second half and Longhorn CB Aaron Ross was all over the field, icing the game with an alert scoop-up of a lateral pass in the 4th quarter. Texas’ current 17-game winning streak in Big 12 games is the longest in conference history, surpassing Kansas State’s 15-game winning streak from 1997-98. The Longhorns have surprising Baylor (3-3, 2-0) at home next week before facing the toughest part of their schedule — consecutive road games at Nebraska (5-1, 2-0) and Texas Tech (4-2, 1-1).

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M.D. Andersen patients get a nice Friday surprise

MD Andersen.jpgThe University of Texas M.D. Andersen Cancer Center in Houston’s Texas Medical Center is one of the nation’s leading cancer hospitals and research centers. It is a place where difficult issues relating to life and death are confronted on a daily basis, yet the M.D. Andersen professionals work hard to encourage a culture of hope and optimism. It is truly one of Houston’s most remarkable places.
Sheryl Crow.jpgConsistent with that remarkable nature, look at who M.D. Andersen patients and workers were able to stumble across yesterday over the lunch hour:

On her way to Friday night’s concert in The Woodlands, Sheryl Crow made a detour for a smaller, kindred audience: women with breast cancer.
Six months after her own breast cancer made headlines, the Grammy-winning rocker stopped by the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center to mingle with and play for patients and survivors of the disease.

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Scorsese scores again

Nicholson and DiCaprio.jpegIt’s always worth noting when Martin Scorsese produces a film, and his newest one — The Departed — with Jack Nicholson, Leanardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon and an outstanding supporting cast opens today. The initial reviews indicate that it’s another Scorsese masterpiece:
NY Times;
Richard Roeper (Chicago Sun-Times);
Joe Morgenstern (WSJ $); and
reviews via Google.