March 2012
Your 2012 Opening Day White Sox (Barring Any Late Moves):
After yesterday’s roster speculation about the bullpen and bench, the White Sox have now confirmed the 25-man roster that will open the season on Friday vs. the Rangers in Arlington.
Here are your 2012 Sox:
Pitchers (12): John Danks, Jake Peavy, Gavin Floyd, Chris Sale, Philip Humber, Matt Thornton, Jesse Crain, Will Ohman, Addison Reed, Hector Santiago, Zach Stewart and Nate Jones
Catchers (2): A.J. Pierzynski, Tyler Flowers
Infielders (6): Paul Konerko, Adam Dunn, Gordon Beckham, Alexei Ramirez, Brent Morel, Eduardo Escobar
Outfielders (5): Dayan Viciedo, Alejandro De Aza, Alex Rios, Brent Lillibridge, Kosuke Fukudome
And the Robin Ventura era begins…
Another Andy Strasberg Masterpiece: Baseball Fantography
Today, I’ll be writing about a new book that should be in bookstores and on Amazon.com as we speak. It’s called “Baseball Fantography: A Celebration in Snapshots and Stories from the Fans (Abrams Image).” It is written and compiled by Andy Strasberg, a long-time baseball executive with the San Diego Padres and one of the most creative marketers in the game. A man who has also worked with Hall of Famers Ozzie Smith, Tony Gwynn and umpire Doug Harvey.
The genesis of the tome came when Strasberg unearthed a snapshot of himself as a teenager with his idol, Roger Maris. Andy felt many others would have similiar photos and he set out on a long journey to find them.
Before I tell you about the book, which I absolutely love, here’s a disclaimer. Andy happens to be one of my best friends. A friend of more than 40 years in a relationship that has surivived the 3,000 miles in between his home in San Diego and mine in New York. But my affection for the book has little to do with my enduring affection for Andy. It’s just a wonderful project that I would appreciate if I didn’t know Andy Strasberg from Stephen Strasburg. It will take us back into time and bring up our best baseball memories.
Baseball Fantography is Andy’s latest passioniate idea turned into reality. What he has done is put together hundreds of iconic baseball photos, all taken by fans, and assimilated into a very personal collection of images with accompanying stories.
You’ll find a young Roberto Clemente, a graying Carl Yastrzemski and classic images both on and off the field of the likes of Hank Greenberg, Sandy Koufax, Tony Gwynn, Lou Gehrig, Ted Williams, Cal Ripken, Jr., Mickey Mantle, Ernie Banks, Derek Jeter and Jackie Robinson, among many others.
Have no fear, White Sox fans, we’re included too, as evidenced by the photos below, that all appear in the book. In order, that’s Hall of Fame knuckleballer Hoyt Wilhelm, pinch-hitter extraordinaire Smokey Burgess; hard-nosed outfielder Jim Rivera; and Bob Shaw, a stalwart hurler on the 1959 American League Champion Sox.
I’ve given you a little taste here of this amazing new book and there’s much, much more. Treat yourself and buy it–or have some you love buy it for you. Enjoy!
Will the Sox Be Pulling From the Same Rope?
I’m a week away from my annual trip to White Sox spring training to watch the Sox with my own eyes, but I like what I’m hearing from Camelback Ranch.
While Ozzie (Remember him?) is on the cover of Sports Illustrated representing the circus that will personify the Miami Marlins, our new low-key skipper is talking about “effort,” giving positive feedback to his players and acting like this club is going to confound the so-called experts and be a major surprise in the A.L. Central. And to that point it seems the troops are responding by saying all the right things with a sense of renewed camaraderie.
I wasn’t born yesterday. I know that every team thinks they have a chance in February and March. I’m just saying that after the Ozzie years Robin Ventura‘s approach is a breath of fresh air. As big a fan I was of Ozzie’s, it’s just time for a change.
The Sox marketing slogan this year is “Appreciate the Game,” low-key like the new skipper. I have no quarrel with that, but I could have been just as satisfied with something like, “No More Drama.”










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