NEWS—The
National Football League’s silly season—otherwise known as the preseason—is in
full swing.
VIEW—Fans
have their fingers crossed that their teams can survive it without calamity.
The old
saw “no news is good news” never applies more strongly than during the NFL’s
August exercises. Everyone, the owners included, has come to believe that four
practice games in preparation for the regular season is excessive, but by
contract and greed they’re trapped in it for at least this year. The only headlines that come out of the games
concern injuries, which are inescapable whenever football is played. Every team
will suffer losses, the only question being how many.
The
league and its players association already have begun talks about the labor
pact that expires in March, 2021, and the owners reportedly have proposed
cutting the preseason by two games while adding two to the now-16-game regular
campaign. Uh-uh, say the players (so far), the season is plenty long enough as
it is. Simply eliminating two August games
is an unlikely option because of the revenues they generate, the teams
continuing their odious practice of adding them to season-ticket packages. At
full price, of course.
The plus
side is that, increasingly, NFL teams are deemphasizing the preseason in other
ways. Regulars—especially quarterbacks-- play little if at all and contact
drills are employed sparingly, as they are between the games that count.
Spurred by the growing awareness of the dangers of head-butting whenever it
occurs, they’ve come to believe that the benefits of the rock-‘em, sock-‘em practice
sessions of yore aren’t worth the cost. Hey, even stopped clocks are right twice
a day.
NEWS:
More Major League Baseball teams extend the protective netting in front of
their stadium seating areas.
VIEW—It’s
about time.
MLB this
season decreed that all of its teams install nets reaching to the ends of the
dugouts, but four—the Chicago White Sox, Washington Nationals, Detroit Tigers
and Houston Astros—have extended them farther, even to the foul poles. That
came after a two-year-old girl was severely injured in May by a foul ball hit
into the stands at Houston’s Minute Maid Stadium. A half-dozen more teams have said they’ll be installing
extensions beginning next season.
That’s
good because people in the lower seating areas just past the dugouts are at
greatest risk from the sort of line-drive fouls that can cause the most damage.
The pop-up kind travel at lesser speeds and, at least, give people time to
either protect themselves or get out their mitts.
I’m a
big fan of staying behind the netting at ballparks, partly because I think
behind-the-plate seats are best and partly because I keep a scorecard and don’t
want to always be on alert for flying objects. My favored seats for AZ
Diamondback games at Chase Field are in the upper deck, where few fouls reach.
Foul-ball
tip: when a player fouls one off to any part of the park he’s a pretty good bet
to do it again to about the same area during the same at-bat.
NEWS—The
minor leagues’ hottest young hitting prospect belongs to the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
VIEW—Them
that has gets.
The
young man in question is Gavin Lux, a 21-year-old, lefty-hitting middle
infielder from Kenosha, Wisconsin. He was the Dodgers’ first pick in the 2016
amateur draft, the 20th player chosen overall. Signed as a skinny
18-year-old, he got off to an unremarkable start in the rookie and low-A
leagues, but while adding 40 pounds (to 205) blossomed into a formidable
batsman, hitting a combined .324 in A and AA ball in 2018, .313 in AA early
this season, and an eye-popping .456 in his first 32 games (136 at bats) at AAA Oklahoma City. You’ll be
able to see him soon because the Dodgers say they’ll call him up to the Majors
in September.
Lux is
said to play older than his years, probably because of the life-long attention
he’s received from his uncle, Augie Schmidt. Schmidt was the No. 2 player
chosen in the 1982 draft, by the Toronto Blue Jays, but never made it to the Bigs
after five seasons in the minors and left the game to finish college.
Gravitating to coaching thereafter, he’s been head baseball coach at Carthage
College in Kenosha since 1988, posting a 67% winning average and collecting
lots of Division III trophies. Schmidt’s
father coached at the school before him, suggesting deep baseball genes.
An
internet search quotes observers likening Lux to Cody Bellinger as a hitting
threat for the already-potent Dodgers, MLB’s currently winningest team. We’ll
see about that but YouTubes of some of the youngster’s home runs are
impressive. And if that isn’t enough, the kid kinda looks like Leonardo DiCaprio.