Today's links were run through a shredder, then reassembled with a DeShredder (patent pending).
• Patrick DiCraprio runs through the
10 ugliest uniforms of the 1970s
or rather,
his 10 ugliest uniforms. Actually, I like most of them.
• Question of the day: Which contract was more dunderheaded:
Gary Matthews' five-year, $50 million deal or
Juan Pierre's five years and $44 million? At the moment, Matthews is
doing his best to win that contest.
• Bob Timmermann reviews
a good-looking new baseball book, and Allen Barra reviews
a bunch of them.
• Via Joe Posnanski,
Bill James on the history and the future of newspapers. Bill on the current transition: "It's hard, but it's not a bad thing. It's a good thing." Well, maybe. Bill knows this, of course, but it's a bad thing for most of the people losing their jobs. And I don't think we
know it's a good thing, yet. What it is, is irreversible. The death of newspapers as we know them now seems inevitable, and the Internet is the murderer. I have no doubt that good things will result, along with bad things. All we can do is hope that in the long run, the former outweigh the latter.
• Ben Nicholson-Smith looks at the
remaining free agents. Unlike a month ago, there's just ain't much left (though
Ray Durham could probably help somebody).
• Batting the pitcher eighth is actually a pretty good idea. But
this headline rocks.
• If you've ever played Strat-O-Matic -- and especially the version with dice and paper cards -- you have to
read this (and if you don't have "time," just check out
Ken Phelps' card).
• Nationals Farm Authority
defenestrates Tom Boswell's case against signing Stephen Strasburg.
• Everyone who complains about kids not playing baseball "for fun" anymore should
read this.