Joe Sheehan on Hamilton and a LSB HRD Poll
I'm of the opinion that what Hamilton did last night far outweighed what would have happened had he just hit 8-9-5 like Morneau to win. Joe Sheehan, who hates the Home Run Derby, agrees.
Below are his words. And below that is a poll to see if I'm alone.
Josh Hamilton is Good at Baseball
From my “Sent Items” folder:
Subj: Derby
Time: 9:12 p.m.Futures Game: cool
All-Star Game: probably cool
Home Run Derby: sapping my will to live
Yeah, about that…
I sent that just as Justin Morneau was wrapping up his turn in the first round, one that had seen very few memorable moments. In fact, the biggest cheer of the first hour or so of the Home Run Derby was for one of the kids shagging flies, who made a sweet running catch in right-center field. The pace was slow, with regular breaks for television, for awards ceremonies and other sponsored elements. With the humidity and the lack of action, it was something short of an electric evening.
Then Josh Hamilton stepped in, and on the first pitch he saw hit a bomb about halfway up the right-center bleachers.
Jason Grey of ESPN turned to me and said, “This could get interesting.”
A few minutes later, Hamilton reached the back of those same bleachers, a place few hitters ever get. Before my jaw resumed its upright and locked position, Hamilton hit a ball off of the bank advertisement that sits on the wall above the bleachers. He then hit one that came just short of the DiamondVision board at the right edge of the bleachers. In two minutes, Hamilton had hit three of the longest home runs I’ve ever seen in this park.
He was just getting started. Over the next 20 minutes, Hamilton hit a total of 28 home runs, including 13 in a row at one point. He hit a series of blasts into the upper deck, a few more scattered through the right-center bleachers, a pair of balls into the “black seats” in center field. Along the way he converted a crowd that had been fairly apathetic to that point-largely ignoring Michael Kay’s repeated requests that they cheer one guy or another on-into Josh Hamilton’s 50,000 biggest fans. Chants of “Hamilton” and “MVP” spread from the bleachers to the crowd, each bomb off of Hamilton’s bat raising the volume a bit more. Hamilton batted for so long that he needed a water break, as did his personal pitcher, Clay Counsil, who might well end up in “Under the Knife” after throwing more than 50 pitches in his inning. He batted for so long that Milton Bradley toweled him off twice, getting more camera time than Erin Andrews. He batted for so long that he set the record for homers in a single round, shattering the previous mark, 24, held by Bobby Abreu.
He batted so long that he saved the Home Run Derby.
No one is going to remember that Josh Hamilton didn’t win this event, or that Justin Morneau did. Hamilton hit a handful of homers in an abbreviated second round, then just three in the finals, losing to Morneau’s five. After getting into rhythm during his streak, the way BP should work, he was pickier about pitches and stepping out a lot more in the finals, arguably trying a bit too hard. The crowd wanted no part of a Morneau victory, cheering him tepidly during his turn and during his acceptance speech.
It doesn’t matter; the Home Run Derby has never been about who wins. It’s about a player doing something people will remember, and it was Hamilton who did that on Monday night. The player whose story has been getting better by the day reached a peak as high as the arc on his homers, and in doing so he provided a signature moment to this week’s twin celebration of the game’s greatest players and its most hallowed venue.
The House That Ruth Built, 85 years old, goes out as The House That Hamilton Knocked Down.
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24 comments
Comments
Who voted yes?
Seriously. Or did you get confused by the question.
Bryan Smith (12:17:17 PM PT): Justin Smoak and Josh Hamilton. The AL West might just have found their Bash Brothers, v. 2.0.
by bigsteve on Jul 15, 2008 2:11 PM CDT reply actions 0 recs
They had to of gotten confused...
"Sooner or later, prospects kill you, because you hang onto them." - Greggo, 11/22/2005
by Agreen07 on Jul 15, 2008 2:13 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
4 were confused
not a good sign for the IQ around here.
heh.
"Do they know who I am? Do they know my status? Thats what I thought."
-Miles 6/21/08
.501 or bust!
by Jayslick on Jul 15, 2008 2:38 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
Now...
11 people have voted yes? Seriously?!
I want those who voted yes to name the last 5 winners of the Derby (and no cheating). Go.
"The only good is knowledge and the only evil is ignorance."-Socrates
by slc ranger on Jul 15, 2008 5:17 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
It seems
Baseball writers are trying to one up each other in the eloquent speech they use to describe the undeniable talent and unfathomable redemption of Josh Hamilton, and while the story might be getting old for some, I doubt I will ever get tired of reading it.
I was trying to explain to my fiancé how amazing last night was while we watched it, and why it was worth waiting an extra 20 or 30 minutes to start our next Sopranos DVD. I said that when Newberg and all the other Rangers internet pundits went to Spring Training this year and heaped their hyperbolic praise on a Hamilton batting practice session, I scoffed it off, despite their "wait and see for yourself" pleas.
And then I saw for myself.
by clark on Jul 15, 2008 2:15 PM CDT reply actions 1 recs
Stunning read
Thanks for that, clark. i haven’t yet watched the Derby, but hopefully will tomorrow. As much as I tried to avoid any reference to it on radio/tv…my insomnia got the better of me. While trying to sleep about 1:30am, I flipped on the radio, and listened in rapt attention as David Stein completely lauded Josh’s feat. I ended up listening to a good part of the show, just because everyone was so blown away by what he did, and his story.
I can’t wait to watch!
"...my balls are really like a veiny flesh color" blueballlefty on Jun 4, 2008 7:44 PM EDT
"you gonna lose your horse. seriously." FX2
"If you ain't got no money, ain't nobody calls you honey," Bo Diddley
by Rodney on Jul 15, 2008 2:32 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
Oops, wrong poster
I meant, thanks for that, Kid from Phil!
"...my balls are really like a veiny flesh color" blueballlefty on Jun 4, 2008 7:44 PM EDT
"you gonna lose your horse. seriously." FX2
"If you ain't got no money, ain't nobody calls you honey," Bo Diddley
by Rodney on Jul 15, 2008 3:05 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
I'm not from Philly.
Just to make things very clear.
;)
But YW.
by philkid3 on Jul 15, 2008 4:35 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
Word to that
I certainly know I’m trying.
by jamcadbury on Jul 15, 2008 5:09 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
Thanks for that, sir!
I have 1.45Gb of sweet clean HR Derby goodness coming at me from Demonoid :)
"...my balls are really like a veiny flesh color" blueballlefty on Jun 4, 2008 7:44 PM EDT
"you gonna lose your horse. seriously." FX2
"If you ain't got no money, ain't nobody calls you honey," Bo Diddley
by Rodney on Jul 15, 2008 5:44 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
That was probably the coolest sporting event I've ever been to...
and it was 1000% because of Hamilton. I have to give the NY fans this…they may be dicks (like when they booed the kid who dropped the ball or the umpire that was booed unmercifully after correctly calling the non-hr that was caught when Hamilton was up) but they sure as hell give credit when it’s due. The fans kept starting up Hamilton chants on the way out of the stadium and into the subway.
I almost felt bad for Morneau as no one in the stadium gave a shit that he had won. The coolest part of the night…after Hamilton put on that display in the first round, the crowd was dead silent (they didn’t really cheer any other guy after that point) almost like they were gearing up for Hamilton part 2. It never really came really, but no one really cared. He put on a show that no one expected and or had ever seen and the fans had already crowned him the winner.
by slimshadty12 on Jul 15, 2008 2:34 PM CDT reply actions 0 recs
the fans should decide the winner
the silliest part about the derby is thaft that some half-ass performance (sorry justin, it aint your fault, your awesome) ended up beating out one of the single greatest moments in AS history. Good to hear the fans saw hamilton as a baseball god while morneau was justt the winner of a derby.
i think most people watching that walked away thinking the hamilton performance was an unforgettable moment in this decade for baseball and that whatever the rules of the derby were they were bad and silly rules b/c giving the trophy to any1 else would be just unthinkable. i was half surprised morneau didnt just give the trophy to hambone in tribute.
MLB didnt do much for that derby to make it work, but Hamilton and the players immense talent more than made up for it.
and i dont even like homerun derbies.
"Do they know who I am? Do they know my status? Thats what I thought."
-Miles 6/21/08
.501 or bust!
by Jayslick on Jul 15, 2008 2:48 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
The House That Ruth Built, 85 years old, goes out as The House That Hamilton Knocked Down
I already had goosebumps reading the story and remembering last night but his sentance almost brought tears to my eyes. That is why last night was better than his walk off HR against KRod, or his HR off Putz, or any of the other memorable moments this year. Last night wasn’t just on FSN and a 30 second recap on Sportscenter. Last night was all of America watching what we have been watching for 4 months now. It was on a national stage, in NYC, and the whole country today is talking about our boy. Our team. Thats why its so special
Bryan Smith (12:17:17 PM PT): Justin Smoak and Josh Hamilton. The AL West might just have found their Bash Brothers, v. 2.0.
by bigsteve on Jul 15, 2008 2:48 PM CDT reply actions 0 recs
slow down, bigsteve
while it was impressive and glorious to watch, I’m pretty sure that I was more (like 100X more) excited to see Hamilton take KRod deep.
Greatest Inventions Ever? 1. TiVO, 2. Boobs, 3. Baseball
by willamos2 on Jul 15, 2008 3:53 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
National level
His HR off KRod was an awesome sight. No doubt about it and one of the best highlights of the season. But how much attention did that get nationally? Maybe 1 minute of air play on Sportscenter the next day and thats it. Last night will be replayed for a long time. A loooooooooooooooooooong time. Every year when the HR derby happens this will be replyed. How many articles were written after that Angels game? How many today? Its the national stage that makes last night so great.
Bryan Smith (12:17:17 PM PT): Justin Smoak and Josh Hamilton. The AL West might just have found their Bash Brothers, v. 2.0.
by bigsteve on Jul 15, 2008 4:08 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
A loooooong time.
You can get the 2008, 2006, 2000, and Mays-Mantle if you want, and then some:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=home+run+derby+torrent&btnG=Google+Search
"...my balls are really like a veiny flesh color" blueballlefty on Jun 4, 2008 7:44 PM EDT
"you gonna lose your horse. seriously." FX2
"If you ain't got no money, ain't nobody calls you honey," Bo Diddley
by Rodney on Jul 15, 2008 5:50 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
Reading that reminded me
of that long Andres Galarraga home run a few years ago into the upperdeck in LF at the Florida Marlins’ stadium. I wondered how it compared to the 500+ foot shots Hambone was cranking last night.
Found this brief article. Kinda interesting read.
by shroomer on Jul 15, 2008 3:13 PM CDT reply actions 0 recs
i remember when he hit that and saying oh my god
then again i think i said it about 20 times last night too. i need to go watch the rangers take batting pratice sometime.
by jas003 on Jul 15, 2008 4:53 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs
i hope
he dose something good in the game so we can vote for him for the mvp, i bet last nights preformance will get him a lot of votes alone.
by jas003 on Jul 15, 2008 4:47 PM CDT reply actions 0 recs
The 2009 All-Star Game is in St. Louis...
Think they’ll have any trouble selling tickets to the HR Derby?
II Cor. 4:17-18
by TedFord on Jul 15, 2008 5:06 PM CDT reply actions 0 recs
got a buddy in st louis
we have been going back and forth with texts during the derby and now during the game. Anyone know how you can get tickets to either the game next year and/or the derby? I have a place to stay, but I need to find a way to get tickets.
I'm sorry my parents never had me sarcamsized.
by rchawk12 on Jul 15, 2008 9:27 PM CDT up reply actions 0 recs

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