Friday, June 25, 2010

The Griswolds, we are not...

Ah, the relaxation of vacation...Or, broken down into more verbose terms...the stress and craziness of packing everything up, the uncomfortableness of a long car ride, the stress and craziness of getting settled into your vacation spot, a rush of a few days of grat fun, the stress and craziness of getting everything RE-PACKED, the uncomfortableness of another long car ride, then back to reality.

This year's adventure journey found us going tent camping in Pigeon Forge, TN for a week. The trip went pretty well...we had some stressful moments, like Noah picking this week to begin the typical 2yo tantrums, sleeping (the first couple nights were a bit rough, but by the last 3, I had a good routine down where we waited until 8:30-8:45 for bedtime routine and it went about as clockwork as it does at home. Napping was a different story), the campsite in general...but we had a lot of fun at Dollywood and Splash Country, we did a bit of random exploring which was cool, and the view of the Smoky Mountains was great pretty much EVERYWHERE you went.

I won't get too much into the play-by-play though...this blog entry is going to focus on two or three gripes that came up during the trip...

1. The Natural Bridge - This is, as the name says, a natural archway crated by Cedar Creek which is about 200 feet tall. You see a lot of signs for this coming down I-81, and we decided on the way there, how often are we really going to be here? Let's check this out. Well, after driving about 5 miles, you come to the "Natural Bridge Entrance Building", which is where you can buy your 18 DOLLAR ticket to see the Natural Bridge. Seriously??? In what world can you justify an 18 dollar price to see a natural landmark? I really want to know the justification for what the 18 dollars does, other than simply make money for someone. To make matters even MORE frustrating...so we decide nevermind, let's just head back to the road. As you drive past this big canyon where the bridge is, THEY PUT UP 10 FOOT HIGH FENCES to make sure people who didn't pay can't get a glimpse of this thing. Completely ridiculous! Especially when you read about the bridge, and how it was a sacred site for the Native American Monacan tribe. So, let's celebrate how sacred it was by charging an arm and a leg for someone to see such a thing of beauty.

2. Common decency - I've been to camp sites with a shared bathouse a couple times before, so this isn't new, but it just boils to the surface for me again. We were at this camp 6 days. Literally, every day, I came across at least once a toilet that hadn't been flushed. Really? In what world does it make sense to drop your business and then just walk out saying "That's how I roll!" I mean, HOW HARD is it to turn around once you've finished and hit a damn lever! And the one time both toilets were clean, the urinal had been used as an ashtray. It's just nasty and really gets me wondering the train of thought going through the mind of whoever did that..."Eh, we pay the campsite to clean the bathroom, so they will flush it for me...Too much work for me to do it". It wasn't just the toilets either. Once or twice, I came in to find someone had just left the shower on full blast. Because clean water is this thing that we can just demand whenever we want it, it'll NEVER run out.

I guess those were my only two soapbox things that came up on vacation. To balance out the negative, I have come to really appreciate places that have splash pads. I swear, Noah could've spent 8 hours straight at the splash pads at Splash Country.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Your Forgotten Orioles

Wow, I almost forgot about the big Orioles news that happened this past week. That's not a good sign, Orioles!

So Dave Trembley joins the League of Failed Oriole Managers...so I guess he can join Mike Hargrove, Lee Mazzilli, Sam Perlozzo, and Ray Miller in chomping on a cigar and laughing at the Oriole Front Office who are trying to figure out a way out of 13 seasons of losing baseball. I'd feel bad for him, but honestly, I think even Dave wanted out by the end...

I don't follow the Orioles very closely anymore, but I try to keep tabs and be analytical. So, the big question for EVERYONE is WHAT IS THE #$!#@ PROBLEM? How is it teams like Tampa Bay and Toronto can go through reboots and win within a year or two? I understand that a reboot is supposed to take time, but you are also supposed to IMPROVE! In the past 3 years under MacPhail, we have gotten WORSE EVERY YEAR!

So, what do you change?

The manager - It's a band aid on an amputation. Does anyone really expect Juan Samuel to have more luck than Dave Trembley? Does anyone really think if we kidnapped Joe Torre and made him manage here, we'd suddenly be a winning baseball team? Players make the plays, or in our case, SEVERLY SCREW UP the plays

The GM - AMP is the next one on the hot seat...but he hasn't done a lot wrong. Gonzalez was a bad idea, I'll give you that. Atkins hasn't worked out, but he was supposed to be a low risk, low reward stopgap. Tejada hasn't been bad, all things considered. So then you'd have to go after him for not bringing in top dollar talent. But, the great teams grow their players, not buy them. Even the stupid pinstripes have begun growing arms and bats more than buying them. And we've been stockpiling our minor league prospects. And then, look at our prospects last year...Wieters looked like he was putting it together, Adam Jones was a Gold Glover, Nolan Reimold was crushing the ball before his injury, Bergesen was pitching lights out, Matusz was looking good for a greenhorn...but then this year, they all fell apart.

The Players - See above...plus, we can't keep changing player strategy every 2 years. About 4-5 years ago, we went the route of buying the talent when we grabbed Ponson, Javy Lopez, Miguel Tejada, and Raffy. We traded for Sosa a year later too. That did us NO GOOD.

So what? What can be done? Because I can't figure out a damn thing. We don't even have a consistent problem. It used to be our pitching, but our starting pitching (until 2 weeks ago) was being solid. Our bullpen sucks too, but we've been moving failed starters there, so it should get better? Our hitting sucks, but what move do we take there? Brining in one big bat can't solve this. And we tried getting a ton of prospects, none of them are putting 2 and 2 together in the minors.

So, amidst this time of change for the O's, my hopes are bottoming out. All I can hope is this is just 13 years of bad luck stored up and brought on us all in one season. I remember in Brian Billick's last season with the Ravens, where we lost 9 straight, there was a quote from one of the players..."Last year, every bounce went our way...This year, every bounce is going the other way" That about sums up the Orioles. Anything that can go wrong for them, anything you can imagine, ends up happening. Can you even wrap your ahead around who we'll send to the All-Star Game? In all fairness to the rest of the MLB, we should be barred. No one on this team has played well enough to merit an All-Star nod.

So, best to you Juan Samuel. But don't unpack your stuff in the manager's office. As a matter of fact, for your sake, I would start calling other teams and ask for them to take pity and let you be their bench coach or something.

Port Discovery for a 2 Year Old

With the Curious George exhibit at Port Discovery closing this weekend, we decided to take Noah so he could play around with George and see the museum. Now, I had never been to Port Discovery, but I think Shannon had gone, or had gotten feedback from her mom, saying that she didn't think Noah would get too much out for it, definitley not the $13 admission price worth...But, since George was there, we were going to try it anyway. Even though little man is just 2, I think he gets a lot out of exhibits for 3 and 4 year olds too because...well, he talks like one :-P A lot of 2 year olds we meet are just putting 2 or 3 words together. Noah puts full sentences together! Anecdote to kick this off, they have a VW Bug on the 1st floor for kids to play with. I mean, a FULL SIZE VW Bug. So Noah climbs in to drive the wheel...What's the first thing he does? HE REACHES UP TO BUCKLE THE SEATBELT. I'm dumbfounded...Then, he moves to the radio and says "I'm going to turn on the radio" and starts turning up the volume knob and hitting buttons. Yeah, I think he's a bit of a smart cookie there...

So anyway, we parked, paid, and headed in. First floor has a couple of things, we skipped some stuff in the museum to try to prioritize what Noah would want to see...so from what we did/saw, the first floor has a big soccer court which Noah ran around on for awhile, didn't get much actual soccer in though but he was having fun. We moved onto the "store" exhibit, which was a Royal Farms setup with play food boxes, bottles, and cans, cash register, etc. Also had the VW Bug and gas pump. Thing we skipped in the first floor is "KidWorks". I'd probably say that is the "Crown Jewel" of Port Discovery, as it's a big jungle gym/learning stations which go through ALL 3 floors...like you go in at floor 1, go through the stations climbing upwards, and end up at Floor 3. The ages on that one is 4 and up, and 4-6 is meant to stick to the first floor, so...yeah, we skipped that.

Floor 2 greeted us with a train setup, with a crane type thing to pick up boxes. Noah's takeway from this...sitting on the train and trying to find a steering wheel. So, after finding the engine of the train and letting him get about 5 mins solid of steering a wheel, we headed to the "Sensation Station", which is designed for little ones. Things in this room are a little playset with a slide, climbing stuff, etc...appropriate for infant-4yo, water tubes with bubbles, ball pit, lots of toddler toys. Noah's takeaway from this..."Hey look...a LAWNMOWER". Yes, the toy he plays with all the time at home and daycare is the toy he spent about 10 minutes playing with in that place. You know, you can try to figure out toddlers all you want, but they know what they like...Eventually, I convinced him to try out the ballpit, which he proceeded to get buried in. He loved that a lot too.

Eventually, we pushed on and decided to just head to floor 3. This was supposed to be the big attraction...CURIOUS GEORGE. Now, I watch Curious George the cartoon on PBS with Noah in the mornings. Seeing the characters and things, I expected there would be lots of fun things he'd want to play with and we'd have a solid hour of him playing there. A lot of the exhibits though, went a little over Noah's head. Maybe he just wasn't in the mood, but the ones I can remember:

Shadow Wall - Noah liked this mainly for the spinning wheel for different light colors

Elevator/Mail Box doors (You could open these and see what was there) - Noah liked opening (and slamming shut) the elevator doors

Construction Zone (Big conveyor belt to carry blocks up about 7 feet, then roll down a series of rollers to come back to the ground) - Noah only like the wheel you turn to push the blocks up...And he wanted to DRIVE the wheel, not turn it in one direction only

Playing with Wind - Noah did like this one, you had big blowers which you could use to try to turn windmills and ring windchimes.

Build Your Own Windmill - Tinkertoys you could make a windmill out of and fans to test it, but a lot of tinkertoys were missing

Grocery Store - This would've been fun, you could take plush groceries and sort them, weigh them, etc. But they only had 3 plush groceries...2 watermelons and 1 pear. Guessing most of them were taken or moved or...idk

Make Your Own Pinwheel or Windsock - This place was a mess, it was a station where you could take paper, use scissors/holepunch/other tools, and make a craft project per directions on the station. But it looked like it'd been ravaged already, we just decided to skip it at that point

Stuffed Animals - They had little rabbit/bird houses which had stuffed animals. Also a big tree which had a squirrel's hole. Noah played with those a lot too.

So, all that considered, Noah got some out of the George exhibit, but for some reason I expected there to be more "play" stuff. A lot of the exhibits seemed to be geared a little older (Ding ding ding to Shannon, she was right...Fully admitted), so Noah didn't get interested in them. So, after about 15 mins or so, we moved on...

The thing Noah loved the most was the WATER ROOM. Holy crap, that could've been where we got our money's worth. So, in this water room, there are:

Big Spout Area - This was a raised floor, slatted to let water drain, with a bunch of small spouts sticking out of the floor where water was coming up. You could then take various pipes and build water fountains out of it. Noah just liked spilling the water all on himself (Disclaimer, they did have raincoats and crocs available for borrowing, we just let Noah go to it in his regular clothes). They also have a station with two water guns where you can shoot different music instruments to make different sounds, Noah liked this too.

Water Table - HUGE, about 20-25 foot long table which sloped downwards...Different areas...at the top was a raincloud which kept water flowing into the area. Right after this, you could build channels with little walls. After this, you could either dam up the water, or create a lock (I didn't get to play with...I mean, Noah didn't get to play with this, so we didn't get to see how cool it was.) After this were various toys you could play in the water with. At the end, there was a "1 and under" exhibit which was a shallow crate sitting right above the water. I can only guess you would put your 1 year old in the crate to let them experience the water, seemed weird to me. They also had spray bottles at the end of the table you could use to spray and then squeegie the windows of the Water Room right beside the Water Table.

Big Bubble - The thing we got to play with at the Gettysburg Explore&More museum...only this one was run by the person INSIDE the bubble. Also, you had to bring this one up VERY slowly to get it to work. But, was still fun.

Sink or Float - Whole bunch of items you can toss into an aquarium to see if it sinks of floats, you can then use a lever to lift a sifting pan to retrieve objects. Noah just liked throwing things in water and playing with the lever.

Building a Boat - Legos and a water table where you could try building a boat that floats. Only one boat that I could see, but Noah just wanted to throw Legos in the water anyway

BIG DRYER - Before you leave, they have a heat lamp and a wall of blowers to try to dry some water off you. I like that one.

After about 2 hours there, we knew Noah was hungry, Shannon wasn't feeling well, so we decided to wait for the 1pm "Meet Curious George" event then leave. At 1:05, no one had come yet. Not even a museum employee to say "We're running late". Noah didn't seem to care either way, so we just left.

Overall, my impression of Port Discovery...I think Noah will get a lot out of them in 2-3 years. As smart as he is for his age, some of these exhibits are just not that appealing to him right now. Until then, there's lots of other places which are not as expensive and crowded where we can let him explore and play. But, I will give them that they had a LOT of things to explore there. But, $13 is a pretty good chunk of change, so we'll probably wait a couple of years before taking him back there.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

The rush of the party

The buildup for Noah's 2nd birthday party has actually been like a month and a half long. It was supposed to be on the 15th, and we spent the week before that preparing...only for Noah to catch Foot and Mouth Disease the night before and we had to postpone two weeks. So, we then spent two weeks fixing up the living room with new paint and new furniture, and then re-cleaning the house.

This morning, our to-do list was mowing the lawn, cleaning, and then cold prep. We got up at 7am to start it all, for an 11am party. We worked ALL the way up to 11 to get things ready! Not sure if we're just inefficient or what, but it seemed like we just ran out of time to do everything, so we rushed getting things done up to 11. Then we enjoyed about the first 15-20 mins of greeting people and letting them see the house and backyard.

Then it was grilling time. I've never grilled for more than the three of us plus one guest. So now facing grilling for 20 people...yikes. So as a decision made way back, we decided to grab a big box of frozen Kunzler hot dogs and 2 boxes of Bubba Burgers from BJ's. So, first lesson learned...frozen hamburgers are easy to break off and throw on a grill...hot dogs not at all! I managed to "break" 2 or 3 off intact, then I had to run water over the whole package to get any more to thaw enough to seperate, and that took another 10 mins. Noah took a spill during this, so I ran to help him and we got him ice. So by the time I finally got everything ready to throw on the grill, it had pre-heated for about 20 mins. Uh oh...

So second lesson learned...Bubba Burgers must be pretty high fat content. As soon as I threw those things on the grill, LOTS of smoke started pouring out. If anyone took pictures of me during grilling, I must've looked like I'd had acid poured in my eyes. I couldn't see anything because of the smoke singing my eyeballs! I guess I'm just used to 80/20 or 93/7 ground beef fresh hamburgers. My first instinct was blaming the frozen hot dogs for causing the smoke, but it was definitley the effect of throwing 12 Bubba Burgers on the grill. I felt bad for anyone who had to walk past my towering inferno of a grill during this time. Quality wise, I think the Bubba Burgers dried out a bit more. That could've been because I was trying to juggle turning hot dogs really often, grill the burgers, and get the smoke out of my eyes at the same time. In hindsight, better to get the hot dogs done seperately of the burgers. Also better to focus on 3-6 burgers at a time, not 12.

But in the end, I fed everyone, we have leftovers, and no one complained about the food. Not sure if they were just being nice. If they are, please tell me, it won't hurt my feelings. I'm trying to work my way to becoming a grill master here. I also need to remember to clean the side of my grill, those Bubba Burgers left a TON of grease on the spatula, which was then transferred to the side pieces on the grill when I set the spatula down. Oh yeah, and I need to find the one hot dog that fell behind the grill before a ton of bugs take up residence on my porch.

In any case, a big step in my education of grilling.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Death of the Indie Kid's Dream...

I was inspired to write on this when I passed by the local Blockbuster...So, as I'm sure most of you know, Blockbuster hasn't been doing so well lately. Netflix has eaten them alive. The business model for Netflix took off like a rocket and Blockbuster just reacted too late. In fact, the last time I remember going to a Blockbuster was before we got OnDemand. And when we lost OnDemand, it made more sense to go with Netflix anyway. But to get back on point, the local Blockbusters in Westminster is shuttered with a sign out in front, saying some spiel about how you can still go online to Blockbuster's website to order movies and get them in the mail and stresses in big letters "WE ARE NOT CLOSING"

So the first thing that hit me was the irony of the statement. "We are not closing"...but this store is closed. The next thing that hit me was wondering who had to put that sign up. Was it a chump from Corporate (side note, I'M corporate, so I guess I would also be a chump from corporate) who was sent out to shut it down? Or was it the store manager, in his last act before locking the store down? (My last act would be raiding the good movies, games, and snacks). Thinking about if it was the manager, I started wondering why anyone would want to work at a Blockbuster store that's CURRENTLY open. You can see the writing on the wall...In a couple years, the only way that chain is going to stay alive is to go with online business or the gas station rental kiosks.

And that's what this whole post is about. No one can deny these kiosks work well, it's just the way the world is now. It's a lot easier to shop online during a lunch break, or while you're eating breakfast in the morning, or make a quick run to get snacks from the convenience store and pick out a movie for a weekend date night in. But it got me thinking about R&TT...that's Record and Tape Traders. When I was but a young lad in Catonsville, that used to be something to do on a day home. "Hey, going to go up to the Record and Tape Traders...what for? Nothing really, just want to browse, maybe listen to some CDs, soak up the aura" It wasn't just them, you could definitley find a local music store where you'd just go in to soak up the ambience, if you will. It's not like I spent hours and hours there, but I enjoyed going there to get music as opposed to an FYE or Circuit City (Avoiding the Walmart and Target references for something later) because the people there weren't just working a job, they were people that worked there because they loved music. You always felt like an FYE or Circuit City was more...generic?

So, now applying this Blockbuster thought to music stores...I can't name ANY music stores in Westminster. There's an instrument store on Main Street, but I've never seen any "local record shop" type stores. What we have really? Walmart, Target, FYE. And that's just how it is today. If you did a random poll, I bet you the #1 source of music sales would be "iTunes\Amazon\Website", #2 would be Target/Walmart/Best Buy/FYE "generic stores" types. This is, in my opinion, due to that same shift in technology. It's so much "Easier" and "convenient" to buy music online, slap it right on your iPod/iPhone/MP3 player, and go. And if you want to stick to those "crazy" antiques known as "Compact Discs", you just burn a disc on your computer, off and gone. And if you REALLY need that CD in your hands, you most likely will buy it online and ship it (If it's a hard find) or go to Target/Walmart to grab it (if it's popular and you need it now).

Growing up as a teenager, as a "indie kid", I always harbored a secret dream to work at R&TT. Because, in your head, you'd get paid for listening to and selling music all day. Could there be a cooler job? And then you'd start looking at the movies that made it look so cool...Empire Records (crazy things that happened to them aside), High Fidelity...Now, I never did end up there. I worked at Charlestown to get a scholarship, then worked at my college, which worked out good for my career now. And I knew people who did work at R&TT, and while I wouldn't say it was bad, it was probably NOT like Empire Records and High Fidelity, where you're cracking Top 5 lists all day or burning holes in a CD you didn't like to play. But, it was still kind've an iconic place to think of. I feel a little sad that "indie kids" who come up today have no real place to put that label on. I mean, dreaming or working at an FYE seems like dreaming to work at a grocery store, or a gas station...there's nothing SPECIAL about it. And I don't mean that as an insult to anyone who works at an FYE or grocery store or gas station. Job is a job and money is money. But it's not something you're generally going to brag about to your friends. I guess in today's music scene, kids are probably dreaming of working in a band, or with a band, or maybe as a sound engineer.

But for a minute, I'm going to hold a minute of silence, and pour a 40 (of milk, which I am pouring for Noah) on the sidewalk for what I'm going to call "The Death of the Local Record Shop". I don't really think they will go away entirely, what you'll probably see if vinyl shops and local CD stores get combined. So there will always be somewhere to go for that aura/ambience. But there won't necessarily be one in every town, so for the young indie kids out there, time to pick a new local haunt to dream about working at, if only for a little while.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Since when did little man turn into a fraidy cat?

All of a sudden this week, Noah seems to be afraid of everything. Up until this point, he's had maybe one or two episodes where he got spooked by something, we couldn't figure out what, but sitting with him calmed him down...But then Mom had mentioned he's had a few times at daycare where he's been seemingly afraid of the ceiling fan in the room he naps in. For any of you who know, his first word was "round and round" because he likes watching fans. So, that was weird, but it only seemed to happen there...

Then Monday, everything seemed to hit the fan (no pun intended). Started out with a trip to Sakura. Noah LOVES them, especially "BIG FIRE". He calls it the fire place. So he was in a great mood, sitting in his high chair, eating soup. Chef comes over, starts setting up, lights the big fire...and Noah loses it. He immediately says "WANT TO GO BYE-BYE!!!!!!" Odd, but hey, a big puff of flame probably is a scary thing, so we calm him down. That night, we go up to his room for night night..."You okay then fan? YOU OKAY THE FAN???? I don't like my room!" At this point, I'm just dumbfounded. I turned the fan down, he seemed to be okay...weird.

On Wednesday, a new fear emerged...the shadow. Well, actually, it wasn't the shadow, but rather light coming through the back door. But since I don't know what to call that, it becomes shadow. This freaked Noah out, but I was able to mostly get over that one by taking him up to it and playing shadow games with it.

So yesterday, my stay at home day with him...he lost it big time. He discovered the front room, which was the office way back, now the guest room. It has a low ceiling, so no fan. Well apparently, he has fallen in love with this room because he stayed in it for about 2 hours yesterday. Any time I tried to get him to go to the more kid-friendly living room, no dice, he freaked out. When it came time for nap, he decided he wants to sleep in the front room. Not Noah's room, don't like Noah's room...Not Mommy and Daddy's room, don't like that room. I gave up on naptime after a bit of pouting and tantrum, finally got him to sit downstairs with me. He then goes to sleep, so I laid him down in his room.

It's just all very confusing to me. Half the time, he's fine with fans because he sits in the living room with us and the fan runs almost all the time there. I guess it's just discovering new things and seeing things in different ways. Just hope he doesn't let it flip him out too much, summer is coming soon and if he gets to the point with no fan, i'm not sure how he's going to sleep. Especially if he keeps trying that fan-less front room. Then again, he went to sleep tonight fine with the fan on.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Ravens: Do we have a draft in here?

It's been about a week since the draft, so I think it's about time to chime in on the rush of excitement which temporarily distracted me from the depression and funk that is the Baltimore Orioles (although, big props to them for getting a winning streak together...2 games does constitute a streak)...

Upon final review, once again, Ozzie outsmarted us all. Guys visiting, comments about what we were looking for, saying we were definitley going to add a CB...all to trade out of Round 1. I've dealt with a lot of...(struggling not to use the word idiots, clowns, and morons) opinionated people....who want to dump all over Ozzie for the decision to pass on Kyle Wilson and Jared Odrick to trade out of Round 1. Frankly, the move was anticlimatic, my emotions were built up so high from seeing Dez Bryant fall to the spot in front of us, and then seeing Dallas rush in to pump their fist, blow us a raspberry, and take him...trading just left you hanging. But it was ABSOLUTELY the right move. There's a video on BR.com I like watching where Steve B is in the war room talking about how with the trade, you can basically say we traded our first round pick for a mid 2nd rounder, a 5th rounder, and Anquan Boldin. Come onm that is a badass trade right there. THEN, you consider who we did get.

Sergio Kindle was a guy literally who all us diehard football draft beatniks expected to go in the middle of Round 1. On Friday morning, we were all still scratching our head as to why he fell, until we saw the knee report where he's had 4 operations on his knee. Look, injuries happen, guys have risks coming out of college. I trust the Baltimore Raven doctors and they all signed off on him and said "he doesn't need ANY surgery". So for now, you've got to think this is a risky, but possibly VERY rewarding pick. You get a guy with 1st round talent but only have to pay him like a 2nd rounder. That means the big money is out of play, he's getting a modest deal. So if he does crap out, you cut your losses and move on.

Terrence Cody...BEAST is the 2nd best word to describe him, besides his nickname...MOUNT. The guy is literally a mountain. The naysayers are going on and on about how he's so big he's only a role player...Hey, I have a few other "role players" to throw out there...Tony Siragusa and Sam Adams. Because that's what this guy is. A big body to get in there and literally block up the middle of the field. Another guy that's a bit risky because of his weight, but you know what you are getting with him already. We have his role carved out, he's going to replace Kelly Gregg. What does Kelly Gregg do? He doesn't rush the QB. He stops the run. Game set match...Point.

The next two picks were my only real head scratching moment. Early in the 3rd round, I'm thinking we could go WR with Brandon LaFell, maybe CB, maybe TE. And we do go TE with Ed Dickson, a nice receiving TE out of Oregon. Can't block much, but VERY good in the passing game. Great, we've got a Heap replacement, I'm happy. Then, our first pick in Round 4. A lot of good WRs went off the board ahead of our pick, but still some good playmakers out there, still some CBs....wait, what? TE again? Dennis Pitta. Now, once again, we got another great TE. Pitta has the NCAA RECORD for TE receiving yards. So you are definitley getting a good receiver. But again, another receiving TE, can't block much. I like both these guys as players, but taking them together? I just think we could've addressed a more pressing need. But this is where you either love or hate Ozzie's "Best Player Available" strategy. You can't really argue that Pitta wasn't worth the pick there, and most the other guys were reaches. I'll be ok with this pick, but only if we find a good way to use both on the field together. Otherwise, don't think it was wise to double up on TE.

The final three picks were really depth players who won't fill huge roles. David Reed seemed another anticlimatic pick to me because he wasn't a very prolific WR. Only two years at Utah, though he had a REAL nice final year. He can return too. The thing I like about him is he's sure handed, very good at running routes. Which always seemed like a silly thing to want, but think about it. You want a guy where Joe Flacco knows EXACTLY where he's going to be on the field. Arthur Jones could be a big gem I'm hearing. He was a very stout DT at Syracuse, but injury and inconsistency his last year dropped him. He should be the yin to Cody's yang. Good at rushing the passer, should be a guy to rotate in at NT or DE and replace Dwan Edwards. Ramon Harewood is just a big guy who can play OT. Not very experienced because he's from Barbados, never played until college. That one was a throwaway pick, no impact players in the 6th round anyway.

So overall, I'm excited for the picks we made. I'll still defend Ozzie to the detractors. At CB, we've got some guys who just need to come back from injury. If you're worried about how long it takes them to come back, then sign a free agent. Don't need to draft there right now.

As for the rest of the draft, I'll make a seperate blog about that...

Monday, April 19, 2010

Orioles: The Great Cal Mess of 2010

The Orioles 2010 season woes aside, things just got weirder for the Black and Orange...

So this weekend, former Sun reporter Ken Rosenthal posted a report on Fox Sports that Cal had approached Petey Angelos about a front office job with the O's, but Angelos had reportedly turned him down because he didn't want Cal to steal Andy McPhail's thunder when the Orioles eventually improve. Angelos came out right away and rebuked this, saying that Cal had never discussed a front office job, only affiliation with the Ripken Academy, that he would welcome Cal into whatever post he'd be interested, and that he doesn't see the need for McPhail to share responsibilities with anyone. In my Baltimore, Cal-loving frame of mind, I figured good ole Cal would give us the truth.

Cal released a statement today saying that Angelos never said anything about denying Cal credit, but made some cryptic remarks like "I am more excited now to explore all opportunities and find the right situation that could lead me to the next phase of my life." He did acknowledge that they have had discussion about baseball and the Orioles, with the direction steering towards Cal wanting to join the organization.

So, what do we think of this now? Well, Cal obviously didn't burn any bridges. And I do mean ANY bridges...He spoke nothing but positive spun sugar about Peter Angelos. So while I think that means he wants to keep a good relationship with the O's, it could also mean he doesn't want to get a label for throwing people under the bus if he'd be interested in, say, the Nationals FO...but, please please, before the collective city of Baltimore throws stones at me for even mentioning Cal going somewhere else, I only mean that if the Orioles were to stonewall him, I think he's keeping his options open for other jobs.

That said, I really can't believe that Angelos would be so stupid as to keep Cal at a 10-foot-pole's distance from the franchise. Granted, I can understand the notion about wanting to "protect" McPhail, because if anyone but McPhail rights the Orioles, Peter Angelos goes down as probably one of the worst owners in history. He took a team that had been very prominent and poised for greatness in 95/96, flushed them down the toilet due to personal gripes, and squandered every opportunity to rebuild. And bringing in Cal, who the majority of Baltimore desperately want to buy out Angelos as owner, could just server to make Angelos look more lame duck. But with Cal on board, it would also buy him a LOT of respect from fans, and probably some more leeway in terms of winning now versus soon.

I also think Cal's comments were worded such that I believe Angelos was stonewalling to a point, and Cal just, without throwing him under the bus, put the ball in his court. Now if Angelos doesn't make seomthing happen, he really looks bad since Cal still wants to come here and basically is just waiting for the phone call for a job.

And once again, kudos to Mr. Ripken. The Baltimore son still comes off as the golden boy for sticking with a franchise who so desperately needs a rebuild. It would be very easy for him to sniff around say the Phillies, who would be a little more win now. But once again, it appears Cal stays true to his hometown. And once again, Cal Ripken proves why he is an institution in this....institution.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Ravens: My big ramble on what will happen with the 2010 Draft

Let's break this down very simply for those of you who want the bulletin points and not the long winded explanation...

As usual, the Ravens have many places they could go in the draft, and as usual, it'll probably be the place we talk about the least. And as usual we'll probably scratch our heads, and as usual, Ozzie Newsome will end up being right. Savvy?

So in recounting my experiences with the Ravens and the NFL Draft, the first one I followed enough to know what player(s) I wanted us to get was 2005. I remember very clearly, I wanted us to draft David Baas, an OL out of Michigan. We drafted Mark Clayton instead and Baas went as the first pick in the 2nd round. Now granted, Mark Clayton is a debatable draft miss, but David Baas also never turned into the premier OL I had though he would either.

Looking back, the 2005 one was actually a pretty bad one for Ozzie...Clayton hasn't panned out the way we'd hoped, Dan Cody just had awful luck like the Orioles, Adam Terry sucked, Justin Green never amounted to anything...and Derek Anderson went to Cleveland. But in general, the trend would be that I trust Ozzie's decisions. Like last year, everyone was SO sure we'd go with a WR in Round 1 because our WRs were very lacking. Instead, he moves up and takes an OT? We're sitting here saying "but we HAVE our OTs...Willie Anderson and Jared Gaither". Oh but wait, the OT we drafted was Michael Oher, who played well enough in his first NFL year to make some sports writers' All-Pro ballot at RT. And to top it off, Willie Anderson announced his retirement about a month or so after the draft. Another situation for you...after drafting Joe Flacco (probably the only draft pick I've guessed correctly, though I had him going to Ravens in 2nd round), Ozzie drafts...a RB? But we have Willis McGahee and he's more than a decent RB. And who is this guy..."Ray Rice"? Two years later, Ray Rice has turned into a Pro-Bowl RB.

So, this year is pretty interesting in terms of needs. We have a solid QB, RB, OL, LB...our WR situation is set for this year at least, our DL is good enough to go with for another year or two, considering that Kruger is moving to DE, and after repairing from injuries, we've got a secondary set in Foxworth, Webb, Reed/Zbikowski, Landry/Nakamura. So we don't have any big pressing needs for fans to clamor that we ABSOLUTELY have to draft in Round 1. So instead, everyone is just guessing almost wildly at this point to figure out what we'll do...Draft a future #1 WR? Draft a replacement for Heap?....Draft a stud DL to take over for Pryce or Gregg?...Draft secondary to fill in at CB for now, and maybe play S eventually? As usual, we can almost go anywhere.

My take is that our most likely move is trading down. Because of the rumoured rookie salary changes coming, there are a TON of juniors coming out in this draft to get their money before it becomes unavailable. So this ends up being a VERY deep draft in terms of talent. So since we traded away a 3rd and 4th round pick to get Boldin, I think it's very likely Ozzie wants those picks back. With the number of good players we could get at the bottom of Round 1, I think it makes sense to try to trade back a few spots and get some extra picks to play with. The key to that happening is Jimmy Clausen's slide down the draft. If he falls to our pick, I've got to think we do a deal with a team hungry for a QB.

If no trade, I'd put the biggest odds on Jared Odrick, Demaryius Thomas, Devin McCourty, Terrence Cody, or Jermaine Gresham...in that order. But I also trust that the Ravens have done their homework well and will pick a player with good long term prospects. The last 4 1st rounders (ben grubbs, haloti ngata, joe flacco, and michael oher) have all turned into major pieces for the team.

In other NFL draft predictions, I say Tim Tebow goes mid 2nd round. Someone will get desperate for him, namely I think Jacksonville will start getting hungry if he gets to pick 47. That's the New England Patriots, who smartly built up a TON of picks last year. Jacksonville will want to get in before the Carolina Panthers, who I could see taking Tebow to groom. I think they promise a big ransom to move up from Round 3 to take Tebow and hope he boosts ticket sales.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

News Item: Officials want to close popular Woodlawn roller rink

Story seen on Baltimore Sun...

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/baltimore-county/bs-co-skateworks-survival-uncertain-20100416,0,4996403.story

Ok, so here's the gist. A Baltimore native wanted to open up a roller rink for kids to come hang out at instead of, you know, dealing drugs, killing each other, and generally everything else a Baltimore kid would end up doing, considering the city's track record. And it was a HUGE hit. LOTS of kids come and hang out on Friday nights. But, when the place closes at midnight, and everyone goes out, there's been reports of fights occurring nearby, kids trying to cross a 6 lane highway to get to a bus stop, and general crowd issues. So, Baltimore County has decided that the owners of the club need to decide by Wednesday on a plan to stop these issues, or else they will be shut down.

Granted, the incidents are an issue. But really???? Close down the club, that'll fix it all? I'll tell you EXACTLY what closing down that club will do...Kids won't have a spot to hang out on Friday nights, so here are their options...1) Sit at home until you get so bored you do one of the other options, 2) Stroll around the other prime hangouts in Baltimore, where by the way, our crime rate is still awesome, 3) Get involved with one of Baltimore's choice activites, such as gangs, murder, drugs, or assaults. Seriously, does Baltimore County really think kids won't fight each other if they don't have this spot to hang out? Instead, they'll fight each other spread out in different neighborhoods. But maybe the cops want that, since little 2-3 person fights aren't likely to be called in as a crime statistic, but a BIG fight...yeah, that's another mark against Baltimore.

I think the county needs to work WITH the club owners to figure out a good solution. How hard would it be to schedule an MTA bus stop on Friday nights on the other side of the highway, so you don't have the crossing issue. How hard would it be to provide some police to have on hand in case some bad apples want to spoil it for the good kids. One of the kids who goes there is quoted as saying "If this place closed down, I'd have no social life". That says it all to me...This isn't a raunchy club where kids come to drink, smoke, do bad stuff. This is the kind've place the county should be CELEBRATING, not trying to find a reason to close it down.

Reboot...again

Ok, I am firing this thing up again, this time as a full on blog. No rules, no limitations, I'm just going to open up my brain to the internet, digest it all, and see what comes out the other end...