August 2008


Two Great Champions

 

The 2008 Olympics were great. With my daughter being an avid swimmer, we paid close attention to all of the swimming. I would like to acknowledge Peter Vanderkaay who is a local product from Rochester, Michigan. He won a gold medal in the 4×200 free relay (He won gold in the same event in 2004). He also won a bronze medal in the 200-meter freestyle. I have had the opportunity to meet Peter on a couple of occasions and he is a first-class individual.

My biggest pet peeve in all the media coverage was the singular focus on Michael Phelps and the Michael Phelps v. Mark Spitz comparisons. I saw the interview that Bob Costas held with Phelps and Spitz after Phelps won his 7th gold medal. When asked about a hypothetical race, Mark Spitz graciously stated:

“So I think if Michael and I were to have that chance, hypothetically, I certainly would know what made him tick and how to beat him, and he would know the same about me. So I would have to say now, we’d probably tie. But after tomorrow when he wins his eighth gold medal, I will take my hat off and be happy and glad to take second to Michael any day.”

The next day, I read on a headline linked on the Drudge Report that Mark Spitz stated “Michael Phelps couldn’t have beaten me.” They used this interview as the basis for that headline. Talk about some hack journalism.

What should Mark Spitz to say? Should he say that he can’t wear the same Speedo as Michael Phelps? That is simply not true. Let’s also not forget that neither one could have accomplished their feat if they swam for another country as they each won three relays with the help of nine world-class swimming teammates. Michael Phelps would not have won eight gold medals if it were not for 32-year-old Jason Lezak swimming the fastest 100m split in history.

Mark Spitz won seven gold medals (with seven world records) which is an incredible feat. He gave Michael Phelps a target. Spitz was every bit as dominating in 1972 as Phelps was in 2008. The 50m free was not an event in 1972 (it was added in 1988), Spitz could of won that event easily.

You cannot even compare times across eras as training methods, suits, technique, and technology have decreased times. My 13-year-old daughter, whose best 100m freestyle time is 1:10.70, would have been a world record holder until January of 1926. In 2008, that time isn’t good enough to make a 12-year-old Michigan State cut (1:09.89).

If history repeats itself, in 2044 someone will win nine gold medals in the Olympics, and no matter what 59-year-old Michael Phelps says, the media will make him out to be an ungracious petulant old man. In 2008, Mark Spitz deserves better.

Each 18 games represent 1 inning of a baseball season. The Tigers record for the first 7 innings in 2008:

 

        Starters:     Bullpen:

    W-L   RS –RA     HR-SB-AVG/OBA/SLG    W-L-IP-   ERA     W-L-S-ERA

1:  6-12  74 -112    15-10-262/345/404    3-9- 96.2-5.96    3-3-3-5.28

2:  9-9   98 -87     21- 6-261/350/426    5-8-105.2-5.11    4-1-2-3.61

3:  8-10  89 -75     19- 2-275/326/442    8-5-109.2-4.19    0-5-4-3.83

4:  11-7  85 -74     19- 8-268/350/416    8-4-113.0-3.27    3-3-5-5.17

5:  12-6  86 -78     25- 6-297/347/476    6-4-106.1-4.23    6-2-6-3.43

6:  9-9   118-96     25- 8-299/368/483    8-6-105.0-5.49    1-3-2-4.03

7:  7-11  93- 103    26- 8-265/353/455    7-7-104.0-4.67    0-4-4-4.92

 

In the 7th inning found the Tigers start the inning with a 5-game losing streak that seemed to drain the life and energy out of the team and their fans. The season thus far can be broken into 3 distinct segments: The abysmal 24-36 start that dug a huge hole, the 28-13 run that started June 7th with a Thames’ lead comeback win against Cleveland that got the team to 52-49, and the most recent 10-15 run that was started July 25th with Dye’s 2-run 9th inning homerun off of Todd Jones.

 

The starting pitching improved as a unit from Horrible to Mediocre, the exception being Galarraga who was great. Displaying from best to worst:

 

Name

GS

IP

W

L

K

ERA

WHIP

A Galarraga

4

26 2/3

3

0

19

2.36

1.16

J Verlander

3

18   

1

2

16

5.50

1.39

N Robertson

3

18   

1

1

12

4.50

1.72

Z Miner

4

18 2/3

1

1

12

4.82

1.82

K Rogers

4

22 2/3

1

3

22

6.75

1.81

 

In the Bullpen, the emergence of Fernando Rodney as a closer was a bright spot. Bobby Seay continued to do well and Gary Glover provided 2.2 innings of perfect work. Other than those 3, it was pretty much like throwing gasoline on a fire. Displaying from best to worst:

 

Name

G

IP

W

L

S

K

ERA

WHIP

F  Rodney

7

9 2/3

0

1

4

14

1.86

0.83

B Seay

9

8   

0

0

0

9

3.38

1.13

G Glover

2

2 1/3

0

0

0

2

0.00

0.00

F Dolsi

4

5 1/3

0

0

0

3

1.69

2.06

A Lopez

5

9 2/3

0

0

0

6

5.59

1.66

F Beltran

4

5 2/3

0

0

0

3

6.35

1.59

C Fossum

6

7 2/3

0

1

0

6

8.22

1.57

K Farnsworth

7

7 1/3

0

0

0

7

7.36

1.91

J Zumaya

5

4   

0

2

0

4

9.00

2.75

T Jones

1

 2/3

0

0

0

0

0.00

9.00

 

The offense did OK. The 93 runs do not match a 1,000 runs/season pace, but scoring over 5 runs per game should be sufficient. Overall, I would give the individual hitters in the 7th inning a passing grade except our Catching tandem (Inge and Sardinha), and the extremely cold Marcus Thames. Displaying from best to worst:

 

Name

G

AB

HR

RBI

SB

BA

OBP

SLG

M Cabrera

18

71

6

17

0

.282

.362

.606

P Polanco

17

69

3

9

2

.319

.390

.565

C Granderson

18

74

4

11

2

.270

.372

.554

E Renteria

17

59

2

6

1

.322

.385

.508

C Guillen

12

48

1

3

1

.292

.393

.438

G Sheffield

17

63

5

13

1

.254

.347

.508

M Joyce

16

42

2

6

0

.262

.311

.476

M Ordonez

17

68

1

10

0

.279

.380

.368

R Santiago

7

15

0

0

0

.267

.389

.267

R Raburn

12

32

0

2

1

.281

.324

.312

B Inge

18

60

1

8

0

.200

.314

.333

M Thames

8

27

1

2

0

.111

.111

.222

D Sardinha

6

14

0

0

0

.071

.133

.071

 

 

Even if the Tigers were to go 28-8 over the remaining 36 games to get to 90 wins, both Chicago and Minnesota would have to play at or below .500 to win the division. The Wild card is even more daunting as the Tigers are 11 games back and would have to pass four teams. The last two innings should tell a lot about 2009 and what kind of direction the team will take in the off season. That is the only reason to keep watching this train wreck at this point.