July 28, 2010

Oh Happy Day

Twenty-six years ago today, everything changed.

In a little hum-drum town in northeast Ohio, Everyone’s Favorite Man was born into this world.

And oh! What a wonderful world is has been since that day. Food tastes better, colors are brighter. Carl Pavano remembers how to pitch.

For all that you’ve done for me, for the world and for the Darling Asteroids, Chad, I’m going to do my best to give back to you on this, your special day.

Here are twenty-six reasons why you are, simply put, the greatest thing ever invented ever.


1. The only logical place to start is your first name. Chad: cool and hip, yet unpretentious. Not like a Brent, or a Tyler or, heaven forbid, a Guy Fieri.

Nope.

Simple. Concise. Chad.

2. Billingsley: Regal and refined, like and old English king.

3. Your curveball. What can I say? Some gentlemen prefer blondes. Some men prefer wide backsides. I’m a curveball man.

Give me a good breaking ball and I’m yours forever.

4. Your fastball. It tops out in the 95 MPH range and rarely dips below 90 MPH. No showing off from ‘ole Chad. He’s so humble.

5. Your career ERA of 3.62...not bad at all, but like my self-esteem after a night cruising for chicks, we know it’s coming down.

6. Because after your first career plate appearance (a HBP), a weaker man would have surrendered. Would have thrown in the towel and and walked away.

“Baseball is too hard. I’m scared,” this hypothetical mama’s boy would have whined.


Not you, Chad. In your next at-bat you stood tall like the man among men that you are and drove in two runs of your own. You are truly an inspiration.

7. Because you were born in Defiance, Ohio.

Defiance, Ohio?! Are you kidding me?

The only way that’s more prefect is if there’s a Completegameshutoutville, Missouri...and I checked.

There isn't.

8. Because of your one career homerun, a majestic shot off a hanging slider from San Diego's Josh Banks.

You could easily pull a Steve Nebraska and hit one every time up but, as we’ve seen, that just ain't your style.

9. The number of wins you have this season. Also the number of times a day you make me smile.

10. Because you never rush into things. You debuted on June 15, 2006 yet didn’t make the All-Star team until 2009.

I’m glad we waited, Chad. It made that night all the more special.

11. You’ve given up 324 runs in your career, 301 of which were earned.

324 - 301 = 23, the number of Chicago Bulls great Michael Jordan.

Coincidence? No such thing.

12. According to my twelfth favorite website, baseball-reference.com, your career Rrep is 433 and your career Rdef is -2. I am unsure what that means, but it sounds fantastic.

13. The number of runs you’ve surrendered in two playoff starts against the Phillies. Sorry for being so selfish about this, buddy. I’m not a perfect person.

14. Because a few weeks ago, I was in a bad way.

The love of my life, country music star Carrie Underwood, had just gotten married and the Darling Asteroids were on a terrible losing streak.

You were the only one who was there for me. You calmly listened, never judged. You were a shoulder to cry on.

And afterward you took me to Applebee’s. I’ll never forget that.

15. The number of consecutive scoreless innings you’ve thrown. Look out, Orel Hershiser. There’s a new sheriff in town.

16. The number of games you won in 2008, a career best. But heck, we all know a 20-win season is on the horizon someday. Maybe even 30 wins.

That’s what I like about you, Chad. You’re unpredictable.

17. Those impossibly dark brown eyes of yours. I’ve been trying to contact Van Morrison about re-writing his classic hit just for you.

“Brown Eyed Chad” would win so many Grammys. It’s a shame he won’t return my calls.

18. Because of that winning smile.


*ping!*

19. Your west coast games finish too late for me to watch, usually. But it’s always a special treat to wake up and see a “W” by your name. Really starts the morning out right.

20. Dodger Blue. It’s always been my favorite color, yet I never knew why. In retrospect, it seems so obvious.

21. Because of this incredible statistic: Every time you win, the Dodgers are undefeated.

Think about it.

22. That’s how many years it’s been since Jack Buck couldn’t believe what he just saw...Kirk Gibson taking Dennis Eckersley deep in Game 1 of the World Series, hobbling around the base paths, fist pumping like a champ.

That was Dodgertown’s last title, Chad. But with you, that kid Kershaw, the perfect Matt Kemp and company, something tells me it won’t be much longer.

23. Because whenever I’m feeling down, whenever The Man is cramping my style, whenever I feel like pulling a Zack Greinke and freaking out on everyone...I think of your three career complete games. And suddenly, I’m at peace.

24. Because, while I have no way of confirming it, my heart tells me that your favorite song is “My Baby Takes The Morning Train” by Sheena Easton. And that’s just awesome.

25. Because of our past. We’ve been through a lot, you and I have, big guy. But I’ll always keep a spot open for you, and I know my faith will be rewarded.

26. Because of the future.

You have ace potential, Chad. I know it. You know it. Everyone knows it.

In auction drafts, I’ll continue to spend ten dollars too much on you. In regular drafts, I’ll continue to select you three rounds too early.

Why?

Because you have the magic. Because I need to see that smiling face in my lineup every five days.

Because you’re my boy.

Happy birthday, Mufasa. You the man.

July 24, 2010

The Curious Case of Aubrey Wigginton

Until earlier this year, I wasn’t sure if Ross Gload actually existed.

Oh, don’t get me wrong. I had heard his name before. I had seen “Gload” scrawl across the bottom of my TV screen, followed by “Pinch hit something or other” a time or two.

But I had never actually seen him with my own eyes.

Gload was just like Sasquatch, or a scoreless inning from Trevor Hoffman: others assured me it existed, promised me it had happened, and I had no choice but to take them at their word.

But a few months back, on a lazy Saturday when Placido Polanco got the day off, seeing became believing.

Midway through the Phillies lineup, a nondescript, generic-looking gentleman stepped into the box.

My brow furrowed.

A name appeared on the screen and, as if seeing a new color for the first time, equal parts confusion and excitement washed over me. I turned to my roommate Geoff, who was similarly puzzled.

Half surprised, half questioning, I said/asked, “Oh, that’s Ross Gload?”

Geoff stared quizzically.

“I guess so.”

Ross Gload, apparently.

I can hardly be blamed for never seeing Ross in his natural habitat. After all, he is a member of an exclusive and unique club, one which can only exist in the baseball world.

He is one of the many versatile, middle of the lineup or back of the rotation guys who consistently hit .270 or post mid-4.00 ERAs.

These players are good enough to endlessly bounce from team to team, yet rarely find a permanent place to rest their underwhelming heads.

Cody Ross and Wes Helms were charter members before joining forces in Florida a few years ago.

In an emotional ceremony, about twenty-six teams retired Shea Hillenbrand’s jersey after the 2007 season.

Mark DeRosa is the team’s captain and spiritual leader, and Jeff Conine is still spoken about in reverential tones.

It’s an incredible skill to have, being just effective enough to earn a shot ...yet lousy enough that no one will mourn your departure.

And among these mediocre nomads, two men stand above the rest.

Two men who consistently put up numbers that make you say, “Sure. Fine. Whatever.” Two men who, if you saw walking down the street, you wouldn’t even blink.

Yes, there is a tie atop the Lifelong Lousy Leaderboard between two men.

Or so I thought.

The careers of Aubrey Huff and Ty Wigginton have been consistent and unspectacular, and I mean that as a compliment.

They have bounced around both leagues, and have even played on the same team a time or two.

And this is where things get interesting.

Dig deeper my friends, and you’ll find a truth that Mr. Allan Huber “Bud” Selig doesn’t want us to talk about.

He has been pulling the wool over our eyes for far too long, and like Tom Hanks in “The Da Vinci Code,” it is my job to make sure this conspiracy sees the light of day.

Brace yourselves, friends. This bombshell will knock your socks off.

Are you sitting down? Good. Here it is:

Aubrey Huff and Ty Wigginton are the same person.

Busted.

I know, I know. I didn’t believe it at first. But the evidence is overwhelming.

First off, when was the last time you saw Aubrey Huff or Ty Wigginton at all...let alone together?

And isn’t it a little curious that “Ty Wigginton” and “Aubrey Huff” have both “played” for Tampa Bay, Toronto, Houston and Baltimore.

You must admit, the odds of two men sharing such similar resumés is a little peculiar.


Or is it?

Or perhaps “they” have to keep moving, always on the run, because the second “they” stay put for too long someone will catch on to their dirty little secret.

“But Jake, Huff and Wigginton both played for the Baltimore Orioles last season,” I pretend you’re thinking in order to move the plot along.

Don’t be so blind.

“Ty” was a bench player for much of the season. When he did start, he DH’ed or played first base. Do you know who got the day off on those occasions?

Bullseye.

Also, “Aubrey” had a bit of a down year statistically last season, hitting only .253 with 13 homeruns before being “traded” to “Detroit.”

Perhaps he had trouble adjusting to the tough AL East.

Maybe he just had an off year. That happens, right?

Or maybe he had to make quick outs so he could run into the clubhouse, switch jerseys and come back to the plate as a certain Wiggly utility man.

It’s all just so obvious, people. Open your eyes!

I’m sure “Bud” Selig is in his ivory tower right now, wading Scrooge McDuck-style through the $3M that MLB is paying “Aubrey Huff” this season.

Well now the secret it out.

Selig’s goons are probably on their way to my apartment right now, ready to silence me by any means necessary. Well you can silence me...but you can never silence the truth.

Go on and fight the good fight, friends. It’s too late for me.

Goodbye...and good luck.

July 21, 2010

New But Hardly Improved

Whenever I get an idea of something I want to write about, I jot it down.

Usually in Google Docs, sometimes on scrap paper, occasionally carving into my coffee table if a sticky note isn't at the ready.

And along with the initial idea, I include a few of the major points I want to touch on.

For example, when I wrote about Ubaldo Jimenez's assault on history last month, my notes looked something like:

"Chasing Bob Gibson...baseball harder now than in 60s...evolution of modern athletes...Jon Hamm = dreamy."

You get the idea.

Now I'm not telling you this just to give you a glimpse into the genius mind of the Hemingway of Hardball. That's one goal, but I have ulterior motives.

(By the way, you're welcome)

No, I'm telling you this because a few weeks ago I decided I wanted to write about GameDay, the animated, live-update scoreboard offered by MLB.com to help you track games on your computer.

But when it came to scribbling a few notes, a few key ideas, a few topic sentences or what-have-you, all I could come up with was, and I quote:

"It F*$^%&# sucks"

More like LameDay...am I right, people?!

It used to be so glorious.

You clicked the game you wanted to watch and a concise, well-organized window opened up.

In the center was a silhouette of a batter, and little colored dots appeared intermittently to indicate if the pitch was a ball, a strike, a hit or an out.

Box scores and lineups were to the right, the current pitcher and batter to the left.

That was it. It wasn't complicated and it wasn't flashy.

Much like David Eckstein, it showed up when you needed it, got the job done and left.

Those days, sadly, are over.

Open GameDay now and it gets its own tab in your browser. The days of it being a separate, compact window are long gone.

This was probably written into GameDay's new contract, and I imagine GameDay is represented by Scott Boras.

But wait, there's more.

Where the original GameDay was beautiful in its simplicity, new GameDay is bogged down with pointless animations and an overload of information more useless than Kyle Farnsworth.

First off, it's now in 3D. Hip hip frigging hooray, everything is in 3D now.

And no silly glasses required? You're too good to me, GameDay.

Don't like 3D? You're only kind of screwed.

GameDay throws you a sort-of bone by giving you the option---and I swear to Cal Ripken Jr. I'm not making this up---of switching between "Full 3D" and "Light 3D."

Go ahead and switch between the two when you get a chance. You won't notice the change immediately.

In fact, you won't notice the change at all.

On to the pitcher now...who does not exist.

Seriously, GameDay?

You make all these idiotic changes, yet the ball is being fired from some dark abyss of nothingness?

In terms of good ideas, that ranks just above New Coke and just a hair behind Melky Cabrera.

Well played, indeed.

The Infinite Chasm of Space and Time's pitches now come with a little red or blue line so you can see where they started from (Heaven?) and where they wound up.

(Spoiler alert: If Mark Reynolds is batting, it wound up in the catcher's mitt)

And in case you're interested (which you aren't), you can check each pitch's type, release speed, result speed, pFX and break.

So now I know everything I never wanted to know about Dan Haren's cutter, and I can watch Prince Fielder hit it from any angle I please?

Darn right, I can. This is America.

USA! USA!

I'm sure I sound like some old curmudgeon railing against kids these days with their tight jeans and rock music, but I just loved the old GameDay so much more.

I suppose I'm not angry, baseball. I'm just disappointed.

You're losing popularity, and it just perplexes me how you can continue to make such boneheaded, self-destructing decisions.

Last week's Homerun Derby was kicked off with a performance by the band Train. At least four people probably had to greenlight that move, and they should all be fired.

You take any and all classic clips off of YouTube in an attempt to control the copyrights.

Add it all up, throw in a dash of playoff games not starting until 8:30pm and ending before midnight if we're lucky, and how exactly is the game supposed to attract new fans?

How is any ten-year-old boy supposed to fall in love with David Ortiz if said boy is in his pajamas before the third inning of Game 7?

You've got some work to do, baseball, but I believe in you. Fixing GameDay so its "improvements" don't slow my computer to a crawl is a start.

But beyond that, you need some rebranding. You need to paint yourself in a new and exciting light.

You need some fresh ideas to help rekindle America's love affair with its national pastime.

I know just the man for the job.

You're welcome, baseball.

July 16, 2010

Just Dance

I know what you're thinking.

You're thinking the Darling Asteroids start the second half with a 76-87-5 record, good for ninth in the league.

You're thinking that we have one win in the last two and a half months, which is downright embarrassing.

And you're thinking that the only way out of this funk, the only way to shake the cobwebs from the Darlings, to rattle their cages, to make them feel alive...is with a three-act interpretive dance.

You're right, my friends. I was thinking the same thing.

This can't fail.

Act One, "A Love Letter to Opening Day," begins with a flourish. A low rumble in the distance slowly grows, finally exploding with trumpets as hope springs eternal for our baseball heroes.

Ryan Sweeney prances about with sweeping hand gestures and leaps galore as the energy of a new year flows through his veins. He has never been happier, and cannot contain himself.

Ted Lilly and Matt Wieters stand face to face. A testament to the bond between pitcher and catcher, they are one.

Lilly raises his left hand, the hand that guides his fate and the fate of the Cubs. He stares at Matt.

They are one.

Wieters raises his right hand, which will throw out baserunners for years to come. He stares at Ted.

They are one.

Jon Rauch emerges behind Lilly, Orlando Hudson behind Wieters. All four men stand silently for what seems like an eternity.

Suddenly, without warning and all of a sudden, they break dance. A glorious blur of popping, locking, moving and shaking.

Rauch busts out a mean robot. Someone had to.

Through the magic of dance they have come to understand and respect each other.

However, the end of the act closes with a jolt. The music stops as Sweeney is mid-pirouette. He stumbles.

The stage goes dark. A man arises from the darkness, bringing with him a bloated ERA and damaged ego.

Thus begins Act Two, "The Death of Frank Francisco."

Frank rises achingly, painstakingly, heart-breakingly slow. Each movement is a triumph of will power.

Sirens wail. Red lights, the color of passion, flash like a discotheque.

All the while, our hero moves slowly. He is unaware of the chaos and destruction around him. It's all very meaningful. You probably don't get it.

Pictured: symbolism.

The music stops. He comes set, winds up, and delivers a pitch. We hear the crack of the bat, followed by slow, melancholy violin strings.

Bathed in purple light, our hero is wounded. He crawls slowly toward stage left as the strings build.

Finally, he collapses. The strings fade away. The spotlight is off.

After what feels like forever, we see movement. A soft light appears at center stage.

On all fours, our hero crawls into the light and into Act Three, "The Ballad of Ryan Howard."

This act, like Mr. Howard every season, begins slowly. Our hero rises. His wobbly knees make us nervous...but do not fear, friends.

A career resurgence is in the works for our new hero, Mr. Vladimir Guerrero.

Suddenly horns are blaring from every direction.

He bounces around the stage, violently kicking and punching through the music, beating back the midsummer slumps that threaten to derail a season.

After minutes of flailing about, the tension builds. Vlad has burst through the dog days of summer and emerged in a groove. Nothing gets by him.

In a brilliant crescendo, more and more horns roar as he stands, defiant and victorious, socking each fastball, each curveball, each hanging slider back from whence it came in a tornado-like spiraling of energy.

He flips, he lunges, he dives around the stage.

Lovers cry. Poets dream. Pablo Sandoval wails with joy like a housewife at Oprah's "Favorite Things" special.

"It's a tale of redemption...and you're all getting one!"

The music builds and builds and builds until finally exploding with one loud, resounding note as confetti rains over our hero.

Evan Longoria and Stephen Strasburg, our hope for the future, descend from the heavens. Each carries a World Series trophy.

Drenched in sweat and victory, the three round the bases together.

When they reach home, the rest of the Darlings roster is waiting for them.

Our three heroes throw off their helmets and leap triumphantly into the joyously bouncing mob. Order has been restored, the battle has been won.

You were right, friends. That was just what the Darling Asteroids needed.

July 13, 2010

The Non-All-Stars

The great thing about baseball is that something new happens every night. Something historic, something you won't ever see again.

Something that makes Buster Olney and John Kruk chest bump each other.

Take Saturday night for example. Travis Wood, in only his third major league start, was thiiiis close to throwing a perfect game against the Phillies.

Problem was, nine perfect innings wouldn’t have even notched him a win...not with Doc Halladay toeing the rubber for Philly and tossing up zeroes of his own.

So this 23-year-old kid is outs away from doing something only 20 other men have done, and one of those 20 men just happens to be trying to stop him.

What are the odds?

Wood falls short, and the Phillies go on to nab their third straight extra-inning walkoff win, the first time they’ve ever done that...and they’ve only been around since 1883.

Baseball’s the best, I don’t care what you say.

And as we all settle in to watch the All-Star Game tonight, it’s time for the best game to honor its best players.

And Omar Infante, for some reason.

Festivities got off to a redundant start last night as baseball’s greatest sluggers vied for the homerun derby crown.

I just hope you all set your DVR.

You’ll always want to remember the night immortals like Nick Swisher, Corey Hart and Chris Young waged an epic battle for the absolute worst trophy in sports.

"How long do I have to hold this thing?"

But tonight, it matters.

The stars are out in (sort of) LaLa Land as MLB presents FOX Presenting the 13th Straight American League Beatdown Except for That One Tie And It’s Also Probably Sponsored by Sbarros or Something.

Hey, you know who probably won’t make an All-Star team any time soon? These guys.

In the much anticipated follow up to the best fantasy team ever, I submit to you baseball’s worst Starting Nine.

First base: Daric Barton, Athletics: Mr. Barton’s numbers are actually pretty solid. Overall, this position is probably the strongest in the game, so it makes sense that the worst everyday first baseman is still decent.

Consider yourself the Ringo of baseball, Daric: Maybe not the most talented or the most handsome, but hey...you’re still in the show.

Second base: Chone Figgins, Mariners: I picked the Mariners to win the AL West and the signing of Figgins was a big reason why.

Three months and a .235 batting average later, I’d like to humbly offer you all a “My bad.”

Team him up with Daric Barton and we’re on our way to the least productive, worst-spelled infield imaginable. Don’t even act like you aren’t having fun.

Shortstop: Everth Cabrera, Padres: Although a quick Google search reveals no relation between Cabrera and the infamous Mario Mendoza, a look at his box scores tell a different story.

His .199 batting average is laughable, but wait, it gets better.

Jerry Hairston Jr. is second on the SS depth chart but happens to start RF, meaning we’ll soon see the day when the Padres get fed up with Everth’s ineptitude, start Hairston at short and leave right field empty for the whole game.

That’s how depth charts work, right?

Third base: Aramis Ramirez, Cubs: There was a time long, long ago when Ramirez was one of the more feared hitters in the game.

No, it’s true. You have to believe me.

Now his .207 average and ten homeruns make his $16M salary look like highway robbery.

Hey Sweet Lou, I have an idea: Sign me to replace him.

I’ll play for 1/16th his salary, will laugh at all of Ryan Dempster’s lame jokes, and even help sneak Starlin Castro into R-rated movies.

Think about it.

Catcher: Jason Castro, Astros: Who?

Exactly. Let’s move on.

Left field: Melky Cabrera, Braves: Boy, this is awkward.

So, how have you been, Melky? Uh huh, yeah. A five-game hitting streak back in June, you say?

That’s great. We’re really happy for you.

Oh, hang out this Friday? Gee, we can’t...we have a thing. Maybe some other time.

Nice seeing you, though. Tell Bobby Cox we said “Hello.”

He drunk-dials us at least once a week. It's not OK.

Right field: Randy Winn, Cardinals: A .220 average, one homerun, and Randy isn't even his real name.

His full name is Dwight Randolph Winn. Let this be a lesson to you, "Randy."

Nobody likes a liar.

Center field: Trevor Crowe, Indians: I’d regale you with tales of his one homerun and 20 RBIs, but Cleveland has had a rough week. The poor things.

Pitcher: Carlos Zambrano, Cubs: A 3-6 record, a 5.66 ERA, a demotion to the bullpen and finally, mercifully, being indefinitely suspended.

He even guest starred on the Darlings for a few weeks, taking the place of an injured Chad Billingsley. And like dating the bad boy in high school, it was exciting for awhile.

Him in his leather jacket. The long motorcycle rides. Bar fights, posting bail, staying out late.

Ultimately, though, it just wasn’t for us. The Darlings aren’t that kind of girl.

Closer: Goodness. Where to start?

Chad Qualls is somehow still throwing the 9th for Arizona despite an 8.60 ERA. Brad Lidge’s ERA is about half that, but Philly fans are still twice as nervous when he shows up.

Frank Francisco ceded his job to Neftali Perez after about a day, and David Aardsma is 0-6 and showing glimpses of his true, mediocre self.

So give any of these fellas the benefit of the doubt. Give them your undivided attention.

Gladly give them one dollar tomorrow for a hamburger today.

Give them your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.

Just don’t give them the ball.

July 8, 2010

Double Dipping

The dog days of summer have barrelled into the baseball season with the force of a Prince Fielder home plate collision.

As the sun hangs higher and the nights grow shorter, July brings two things with it: squelching, suffocating, ungodly heat...and the truth.

The heat is one thing.

Those poor millionaires play in thick wool uniforms. To even wear those things for three hours in the Cincinnati night---let alone in the Texas sunshine---is punishment at its cruelest.

The heat is bad...but the truth can be so much worse.

Eventually, the heat will subside. August will slide briskly into September. Leaves will change, and parkas will become the norm.

But the truth and it's cold, indifferent apathy is constant.

And the truth that has been revealed about our team stings worse than any sunburn.

The truth, I’m afraid, is that the Darling Asteroids suck.

Last week’s 10-1 victory over Joba Rules, our first win in eight weeks, catapulted the Darlings from tenth place all the way to ninth place.

Matt Kemp is hitting .266.

Felix Hernandez has six measley wins.

And only three of our players (Evan Longoria, Vlad Guerrero and Hanley Ramirez) made the All-Star team.

So while those three jet to L.A. in a few days to pretend that the All-Star game somehow matters, the rest of the roster sits at home embarrassed, confused and ashamed.

If the Darlings were a real team, we could swing trades, dump veterans and build toward a brighter future.

But the Darling Asteroids are not a real team.

We’re more like Old Yeller...and Pa’s cleaning his rifle, soon to be taking that long walk behind the shed.

So you might be asking yourself, “Why isn’t Jacob more upset about all this?”

That’s an excellent question. You’re so smart. I always liked you.

The reason, friend, is that I have a dirty little secret I’d like to share with you. Come a little closer. If Pablo Sandoval hears me, he’ll be heartbroken.

Here it is:

I have another fantasy team.

"Did he say we're getting ice cream?!"

My other team is called The Fellowship, named for it’s nine warriors bravely uniting behind a common, noble goal...and also for its GM’s hobbit-like appearance.

Anchored by Captain America Josh Hamilton and homerun machine Ryan Howard, The Fellowship sits in fourth place in an 11-team rotisserie league.

Now, I’m not saying that managing The Fellowship makes me appreciate the Darlings any less. I love them both, in the same way parents claim to love their children equally.

(Side note: Cut the nonsense, Mom. Court’s your favorite. You’re not fooling anyone)

But the Fellowship is in the top tier of their league, has six All-Stars, and Ryan Howard’s eventual second half surge promises to yield championship dividends.

Most importantly, having two fantasy teams opens up the “In My Other League” phenomenon, which is one of my favorite aspects of fantasy sports.

Basically, if I’m King of the Fake Sports Mountain in one league, I’m a bottom-feeding lottery team...in my other league.

If Jorge Cantu has a big week for the Fellowship, he’s probably killing me as a member of this week’s opponent...in my other league.

Best of all, if you have at least one friend who has two fantasy teams, every single Baseball Tonight highlight elicits joy from someone.

Bro #1: “Oh, yeah! Jose Reyes scored two runs and stole two bases!”
Bro #2: “Dude, Billy Bob has Jose Reyes, not you.”
Bro #1: “I have him in my other league.”

It never fails. When one team is up, the other will be down.

Owning two fantasy teams means straddling dimensions, caught between the real and Bizarro worlds where things are always backwards and nothing is as it seems.

Of course, the prospect of owning players on both teams, while enticing, is extremely dicey. When the flourish, you’re the man.

When they flounder, it’s a double whammy.

Both Jon Rauch and Everyone’s Favorite Man occupy roster spots on both my teams.

Wins and saves double my pleasure and double my fun, but crooked numbers leave an extra sour taste in my mouth.

And only the most vigilant of GMs can juggle two separate lineups, and it requires an intense amount of dedication...dedication which could be put to use elsewhere, say, I don't know...a social life?

Trust me, the confusion that results from forgetting who’s on what team, who’s on the DL and what pitchers are throwing today rivals some zany plot from a “Boy Meets World” episode.

Your attempt to acquire Topanga has been rejected.

The best part of this phenomenon is it has few real-world parallels.

No one ever says, “It’s fine that Spot ran into on-coming traffic. I have another dog...in my other family.”

Just know, Darlings, that it’s nothing personal. I had the choice of chronicling either team at the season’s outset, and like my favorite Pokemon, I chose you.

The Fellowship isn’t a backup, isn’t a rebound team, isn’t a late night fantasy booty call waiting to happen.

You will always be my number one, fellas.

So, to recap: I have two fantasy teams, one blog writing about said teams...and zero girlfriends.

There are no such things as coincidences.