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Jerseyville to prosecute Alton teens after assault by Super Soaker

Tuesday, April 18th, 2006, by Fred (, No Comments »
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5 Alton teens charged in water gun escapade at school

Five Alton teenagers face criminal charges after four of them, armed with plastic water guns, climbed through a window at Jersey High School and doused students taking a history exam.Alton High was out of school for a holiday break Thursday, and students at Jersey Community High School were wrapping up a shortened day when the four young men, dressed in black with bandannas covering their faces, slid through a first-floor window into a classroom, sprayed the classroom with Super Soaker water guns, then sprinted down the hallway, said Jerseyville police Sgt. Roger Kirby.

A fifth teen was waiting outside in the getaway car. A neighborhood resident had already called police because the car was parked in her driveway and she was suspicious because the car had duct tape over its license plate, Kirby said.

You’ve got to be kidding me. A Class B and two Class C misdemeanors for assault by Super Soaker? Suspend them from school, sure. Maybe even a single criminal count so you can impose some probation and community service, but this is a bit extreme. As is the reaction of Jerseyville Police Sgt. Roger Kirby:

“They said they didn’t know why we were making such a big deal out of this, that it was just a joke,” Kirby said. “They invaded our school, concealed their identity. … We didn’t take it as a joke,” especially considering the time of year, he said, referring to the anniversary this week of the Columbine school shootings in Colorado.

They didn’t “invade” your school. They sprayed a bunch of kids with Super Soakers, and they should be punished for it. But let’s leave the Columbine references on the sideline and not try to put these teenagers in adult lockup for six months.

Pujols goes yard in fourth straight AB

Tuesday, April 18th, 2006, by Fred (, No Comments »
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Pujols20060417.jpgAnother day, another Albert Pujols game-winning homer. At this rate, he’ll hit 112 home runs. Pujols and Chris Shelton have each hit 9 HR in their first 13 games, 2nd best in major league history behind Mike Schmidt, who hit 11 in the first 13 games of 1976 (he actually was homerless in game 13 on 4/27/76, so it was 11 in his first 12 including a four homer, 8 RBI game). Schmidt ended up cooling off in 1976, and hit .262 with 38 HR and 95 RBI.

Pujols’ game-winning dinger came in the top of the first, as Jason Marquis made the lead hold up through eight strong innings. That means Pujols hit homers in four straight plate appearances, the first Cardinal to do so (Stan Musial hit HRs in four straight at-bats, but there were walks in between official at bats). He hit game-winning homers in two straight plate appearances. The four homers in four straight plate appearances marked the 20th time the feat had been accomplished.

Pujols’ long ball drove in So Taguchi, who filled the #2 hole in the order, allowing Juan Encarnacion to take the 5 hole vacated by Jim Edmonds. Taguchi was 2-5, an improvement over Encarnacion’s recent performance in that role. Hector Luna got the start at 2B, and went 2-4, keeping his average at .500 on the season. This offense continues to be carried by Pujols, Scott Rolen and the combination of Luna and Aaron Miles, while Edmonds, Encarnacion and Yadier Molina wait to get on track.

Marquis20060417.jpgJason Marquis had another strong outing, giving up a single run on three hits over eight innings. Two of those hits came in the eighth, as a pinch hit single by Nate McLouth drove in Jose Castillo, who had doubled. Marquis got out of the eighth with no further damage, and Jason Isringhausen pitched around a leadoff double in the ninth to get the save, finishing with two strikeouts and a grounder to second. Hopefully, this means Izzy, who had served up game-winning HRs in 2 of his last 3 appearances, has turned a corner.

The Cards play game 2 of a three-game set with the Pirates at PNC Tuesday. Jeff Suppan (0-1, 4.09) faces the Bucs’ Oliver Perez (0-2, 8.10).

Missouri sex offender gets name wiped off registry

Monday, April 17th, 2006, by Fred (, No Comments »
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As a parent, I respect the motivation begind sex offender registries, and I consult them in deciding where to live. But they are overinclusive, and their rigidity can lead to unnecessary hardship not easily reconciled. One Missouri “sex offender” found a way off the registry by getting a judge to throw out his guilty plea.

Sylvester Adaway, now 30, had sex with a 13-year-old girl twleve years ago (when he was 18). She told authorities that she had consented and had not disclosed her age. Adaway agreed to plead guilty to statutory rape in exchange for a suspended imposition of sentence, serving two years of probation in return for having no felony conviction on his record. An untold number of registered sex offenders in Missouri got there in similar fashion, pleading guilty in return for a suspended sentence and no felony record.

Since his conviction, Adaway was charged in Michigan for failing to register as a sex offender, causing him to lose his job as a police officer, his wife to lose her license as an in-home day care provider, and forcing him onto the Arkansas sex offender registry (where he now lives). So Adaway turned to the judge from his 1993 guilty pleas for help.

[Adaway] asked the judge in his 1993 rape case to throw out his guilty plea and dismiss the case.

Judge Stephen R. Sharp did so - and gladly.

Sharp, the presiding judge in Dunklin County, in the Missouri Bootheel, said he had not intended for Adaway’s guilty plea to brand him for life as a rapist.

“My hopes for him are that he can go ahead now without being stigmatized as some sort of threat to his neighbors and people in the neighborhood, which I don’t believe he is or ever was,” Sharp said.

Sex offender registries serve a useful purpose, and their privacy implications can probably be justified under the circumstances. But the law needs to limit what types of offenders must register, and should allow offenders to petition for removal from the registry. Missouri currently does neither, and the legislature or courts should rectify this problem.

Cardinals weekend report

Monday, April 17th, 2006, by Fred (, No Comments »
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The Cards closed out their first homestand at their new stadium by taking two of three from the Reds, who came into St. Louis sporting a somewhat surprising 6-3 record. The longball was the story of the two Cardinals wins, as the home team slammed seven homers in Saturday and Sunday’s games, including four by Albert Pujols. Three of those came yesterday, as Pujols tied the game at 4 with a two run blast in the fifth and won the game with a dramatic walk-off two run shot to left in the ninth. This reversed a mini-slump for Albert, who entered Saturday’s game hitting .273 and left Sunday’s game batting .341 with a league-leading 8 HR and 17 RBI.

Chris Carpenter pitched like a Cy Young winner on Friday, even though he got tagged with a 1-0 loss, giving up only four hits and one run in eight innings. Sidney Ponson picked up his first win as a Cardinal on Saturday in a good but not great performance, giving up two runs in six and a third. Ponson throws a lot of pitches, and isn’t going to pitch much past the sixth inning in any game. Mark Mulder wasn’t nearly as sharp Sunday as he was in hist previous start, giving up four runs on ten hits in five innings.

Ponson and Mulder’s starts emphasized the most glaring weakness on the 2006 Cardinals - the bullpen. Mulder was in line for the win after Pujols and Scott Rolen went deep back-to-back in the fifth, but the pen had to be rescued by Pujols’ ninth-inning heroics. Ricardo Rincon and Jason Isringhausen sport ERAs of 9.00 and 15.00, respectively. Izzy is 3-for-4 in saves, but gave the Brewers a win on Thursday and has walked 5 in 6 innings, only striking out one. This is the biggest flaw Tony LaRussa needs to address, although Jim Edmonds’ sloppy defense and lack of hitting is also a concern.

Next up: the Cards start a road trip with a visit to Pittsburgh. Jason Marquis (2-0, 3.97) faces paul Maholm (0-1, 7.71).

There’s no place like home

Thursday, April 13th, 2006, by Fred (, No Comments »
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StLouisCardinals.jpgThe Cards sure seem to like the friendly confines of New Busch. After getting swept in Wrigley, they’ve returned home to post two straight wins, including last night’s 8-3 win over the Brewers. The offensive key was Jim Edmonds’ bases-clearing double in the fourth. Edmonds was the beneficiary of some very favorable scoring on that play, which featured two errors, the latter of which allowed him to score as well.

More encouraging for the Redbirds was the performance of Juan Encarnacion. Coming into the game in a miserable 4-for-26 slump, with no extra-base hits, no RBIs, and 23 runners left on base. Last night, however, Encarnacion had two singles in four at bats, including a hit-and-run single moving David Eckstein to third in the two-run third inning and a single in the fifth ahead of Edmond’s Little League grand slam. Encarnacion may be ready to settle into the two hole in the order - up to now, he’s just looked lost, leading to some calls to move someone else into that spot in the order (perhaps Skip Schumaker, hitting .316 with an OPS of .855).

Jason Marquis had six fairly strong innings, giving up all the Brewers’ runs on Carlos Lee’s three-run homer in the fourth that cut the Cards’ lead to 4-3. Braden Looper pitched a scoreless seventh, suggesting he may be ready to fill the setup role LaRussa envisioned when he was signed. Brad Thompson pitched out of trouble in the eighth, as a single, error by Scott Rolen and hit batter loaded the bases for Prince Fielder. Thompson induced an infield popup to end that threat. Josh Hancock then pitched a scoreless ninth marred only by a throwing error by Aaron Miles.

Next up: the Cards go for the sweep in an afternoon start at Busch. Jeff Suppan (0-1, 7.20) gets the start for St. Louis, facing the Brewers’ Doug Davis (0-1, 4.91). It’ll be my first personal taste of the new stadium.

Life, liberty, and cheap parking

Wednesday, April 12th, 2006, by Fred (, No Comments »
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Boston politicos are bent out of shape over private parking fees at Fenway

Mayor Thomas “Mumbles” Menino issued a statement saying he’s going to seek a city ordinance capping how much private lots can charge for parking. One of those city councilors called the rates “criminal,” and city officials are looking at ways to punish the lot owners — such as rigorous inspections, citations, and even pulling their parking licenses.Pardon me, but when the hell did “cheap parking” become a Constitutional right? Especially “cheap parking to go see a baseball game?”

Here’s a simple test for the parking socialists: check out the lots that charge the most on game day. If they’re full, then they’re not charging too much. People who can not or will not pay that much will say “screw it” and find another way to deal with it. The lot owners are not sending armed attendants out into the street to force people to park there.

The real issue here is not that the prices are too high, but that the city isn’t getting their piece of the pie. They see some people making really good money, and are infuriated that they can’t get their hands on it. To be financially successful is a bad thing, and must be punished.

Jay Tea’s absolutely right. This is free enterprise at work. If the prices are too high, the lots will be empty. Don’t want to pay $90? Drive a little further and walk. Or find alternative transportation. It’s none of the government’s business what these private landowners charge for parking. Or what private businesses charge for anything, for that matter, absent abuse of monopoly power or price fixing. But you never go wrong in Massachusetts defending the wallets of Red Sox Nation.

Selig claims steroid investigation will go wherever the evidence takes it

Tuesday, April 11th, 2006, by Fred (, No Comments »
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Bud Selig claims that ‘everything is fair game’ in the Mitchell steroids investigation

Selig defended himself and Major League Baseball in the face of questions Monday about baseball’s knowledge of performance-enhancing drugs such as steroids during the late 1990s. Selig said it was the report of Mark McGwire’s use of the legal supplement andro that first got him asking around about usage of all performance enhancers. Selig contended that steroid use was not as well-known as “revisionist” history is making out to be. He’s looked into it.And now he has someone doing a more thorough job.

Independent investigator George Mitchell, a former U.S. senator, “can go wherever the evidence takes him,” Selig said while attending Monday’s game at Busch Stadium. “What I’ve told him is that’s a judgment he has to make. He has to go wherever the evidence takes him - both in terms of time and people.”

Selig’s building a house of crap of a foundation of lies. Selig didn’t know about steroid and supplement use until it came out in 1998 that Mark McGwire was using andro? Then why did both the June 7, 1991 and May 15, 1997 memoranda from the Office of the Commissioner to all major league clubs state that baseball’s ban on illegal drug use by players “applies to all illegal drugs and controlled substances, including steroids and prescription drugs for which the individual in possession of the drug does not have a prescription”?

This just smells of cover-up. Selig still refuses to take responsibility for his role in the Steroids Era, and he’s appointed a Friend of Baseball to “investigate” steroid use by players.

Mark Mulder, slugger

Tuesday, April 11th, 2006, by Fred (, No Comments »
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Quick - what do Mark Mulder and “Tacky” Tom Parrott have in common? They’re the only two pitchers in major league history to hit a home run and earn the victory in the inaugural game at a new ballpark. Mulder pitched eight strong innings, giving up two runs on seven hits while striking out five Brewers in a 6-4 Cardinals win at Busch. He also went 2-for-3 at the plate, with a double and a two-run homer in the seventh inning to give the Cards a 6-2 lead. The homer proved decisive, as Braden Looper and Jason Isringhausen combined to give back two runs in the ninth.

And Tacky Tom? He earned the win in the Cincinnati Reds’ 10-6 victory over the Chicago Colts on April 20, 1894, in the first game played in the second iteration of League Park. He also homered for the red stockings that day, and went on to post a 17-19 record in 41 games, hitting .323 in 229 at bats, getting playing time at every position but catcher. On September 28, 1894, Parrott hit for the cycle against the New York Giants. Unfortunately for Parrott, the next day was memorable for other reasons:

Tom had one of his most memorable days on September 28, 1894, when he connected for the cycle in a game against the New York Giants. The very next day was memorable for less positive reasons. Due to pitch the first game of a double-header, Parrott reported for duty midway through the game. Pitching the second game instead, Parrott was about the start the second inning when, responding to a bit of encouragement from Arlie Latham, the Reds’ third baseman and captain, Parrott got in a heated argument with Latham, ultimately refusing to pitch further. He was ordered off the field and suspended for the duration of the season. The local Sporting News correspondent was fed up: “Parrott has been kindly treated by the patrons of the game in this city, and very often he did not deserve it. He wanted to be known as a clown, and in this role he was a dismal failure.”

Returning to the 2006 Cards, Mulder’s day was the most memorable, but not the only performance of note. Albert Pujols hit a towering drive to left that barely stayed in the park - it cleared the fence, but nearly left the stadium entirely. Pujols is likely to hit one onto Clark Avenue eventually. Scott Rolen made the play of the game, a diving stop followed by a strong throw from his knees to first. Rolen also hit the two-run double that put the Cards in front for good.

But in the end, the first game at New Busch Stadium was about the fans and about Mulder.

More links:

Don Surber Blogs Baseball

Monday, April 10th, 2006, by Fred (, No Comments »
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Don Surber is Baseball Blogging. Hopefully, he’ll keep it up for the remaining weeks of the season. I’m going to limit my blogging to the Cardinals, but deep down inside I’ll remain a long-suffering Tribe fan, so it’s nice to see another one praising Pronk.

Cards swept by Cards, head home to Busch

Monday, April 10th, 2006, by Fred (, No Comments »
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Just days after sweeping the Phillies in decisive fashion, breaking Jimmy Rollins‘ 38 game hitting streak in the process, the Cards found themselves on the other end of a sweep, losing to the Cubs 5-1 on Friday, 3-2 on Saturday and 8-4 last night.  The story of this series was pitching. Friday afternoon at Wrigley, the cards couldn’t sustain a rally against the aging (or ageless?) Greg Maddux, managing only four hits and a seventh-inning solo homer by Jim Edmonds against the right-hander, who celebrates his 40th birthday on Friday.

The weekend games featured blown opportunities by the cardinals bullpen. After Chris Carpenter pitched excellently for six innings, giving up only 4 hits and striking out 9, Josh Hancock dished up a game-tying two-run homer to pinch hitter Michael Barrett in the seventh, and Brad Thompson allowed the game-winning homer to Derrek Lee in the eighth. Yesterday, Sidney Ponson pitched adequately for five innings, only to see a 4-3 Cardinals lead turn into an 8-4 loss when Ricardo Rincon and Jason Isringhausen couldn’t hold the lead in the eighth, including three walks between them and Barrett’s grand slam off Isringhausen.

The Cards look to put this weekend of missed opportunities behind them at today’s opener of the new Busch Stadium against the Milwaukee Brewers, winners of five of their first six games. This will be the Brewers’ first road game following a six-game season opening homestand. Mark Mulder (0-0, 3.86) pitches for the Cards against the Brewers’ Tomo Ohka (0-0, 1.29). Ohka had a 8.10 ERA in two appearances at the old Busch.