We had some tornado warnings last night, and then massive storms overnight. The huge puddles of water all around the exterior of the house have me hoping our sump pump is ready for a serious couple of days.
• This is a lot of fun – 12 years ago, Jon Lester threw a no-hitter for the Boston Red Sox, and he recounts his memory of the moment:
.@JLester34 will never forget jumping into @RedSox captain Jason Varitek's arms after getting that 27th out 12 years ago today!
Watch Jon Lester's May, 19 2008 no-hitter at 9am ET on MLB Network 📺 pic.twitter.com/7kjVdM3g6y
— MLB Network (@MLBNetwork) May 19, 2020
• Look at this young guy finishing things off with 96 mph at the top of the zone on pitch number 130(!):
• Fun fact: that Royals lineup featured two Cubs at the top, one former and one yet to be: David DeJesus and Mark Grudzielanek.
• Also, Lester was battling cancer just two years before that moment. Really incredible.
• Earlier this morning, if you missed it, an update on the standoff between the players and the owners about the financial particulars of starting the MLB season. Hopefully some more documentation flows this week, new ideas get bounced around, and a fair and equitable solution comes up. It remains the case that the sport can ably survive a season lost to the pandemic. But a season lost to a financial fight? No one will be itching to forgive that one.
• To that end, Buster Olney takes a different view of the topic, suggesting that the players try to use their existing 2020 leverage to extract longer-term value from the owners. With the current CBA expiring after next season, and with so many key issues on the docket that need addressing, could the players help the owners out in 2020 in exchange for some of their most important concerns in the future CBA? From Olney:
Or Clark could parlay this into a larger discussion, to address the union’s big-picture wish list. With this 2020 standoff, he’s in position to arrange better terms in the next collective bargaining agreement, perhaps fashioning an extension that wraps the last year of the current CBA into a deal that lasts well beyond the 2021 expiration.
Clark might be able to bolster free agency for years to come, a big player concern in recent years. The union could attack service-time manipulation, which has become standard operating procedure among almost all teams. The union could insist that through draft rule adjustments, MLB address the practice of tanking, which was popularized with the success of the Astros. Clark could ask that MLB raise minimum salaries for young players.
• These kinds of talks have not actually taken place, according to Olney, and he concedes the obvious: getting massive, longer-term issues done in the time the sides have is probably not realistic. But if the sides are trying to figure out how to come to terms in a year when the owners are essentially asking players to sacrifice some of their dollars to share the pain, then why not at least find out what the owners would be willing to give up in the future in that exchange?
• It’s now 233 days:
The last Chicago Cubs pitch we saw was Ben Zobrist striking out Yadi Molina 232 days ago. pic.twitter.com/z3EhFOgAL5
— Bleacher Nation (@BleacherNation) May 18, 2020
• Ian Happ is clearly going to have a long career in podcasting when his baseball days are over, because he’s everywhere right now:
My guest on this week's episode of The Keith Law Show is the Cubs' @ihapp_1, a fellow coffee connoisseur, who has partnered with @connectroasters to raise money for COVID-19 relief charities. Listen here:
— keithlaw (@keithlaw) May 18, 2020
Apple: https://t.co/PmoH23wwpV
Spotify: https://t.co/ortCF9x593
• I am being trolled by horrifying images:
Cares, they’re both future Cardinals anyway pic.twitter.com/vONctymgG5
— Cabby Appleseed (@jojo_s30) May 18, 2020
Even trade? pic.twitter.com/UxgiGws5oi
— Cabby Appleseed (@jojo_s30) May 18, 2020
• Our adopted Lotte Giants have a famous fan:
His nicknames include Santa Grandfather, Lotte Grandfather and KFC Grandfather. He takes 50-200 photos with fans at every KBO game and is more famous than many of the players.
Meet Kerry Maher, one of the only people in the world attending live sports:https://t.co/2oNKjgbjpm
— joon lee (@joonlee) May 19, 2020
• Off the bat, and seeing how long it took to corral, I’m like, how on earth did this end up a single – then you see:
Launch angle single. pic.twitter.com/p2PwWdIQvo
— Rob Friedman (@PitchingNinja) May 19, 2020
• That’s fun: a portable solar charger battery pack for under 35 bucks at Amazon. #ad
• I knew it (sound on):
— DOM (@DOM_Frederic) May 18, 2020
• I was a very passive observer of the Bulls back in the ’90s, so I’m learning a lot way after the fact thanks to Eli and Lu, as well as ‘The Last Dance,’ obviously. But increasingly, it feels to me like one of the most fundamental problems in the wake of the second three-peat was Jerry Reinsdorf’s failure to fully understand just what he had, and how fragile it could be:
Jerry Reinsdorf Was “Not Pleased” with MJ’s Final Comments in The Last Dancehttps://t.co/w2gDOrZLqj
— Bleacher Nation Bulls (@BN_Bulls) May 19, 2020
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