Jesus, Mary and the Devil [Rays]


Alternate Headline: RAYS PATCH HOLES WITH OLD SOX
My cousin, John, once referred to Manny Ramirez as “Jesus in Cleats”. At the time, Manny was being Manny in a Red Sox uniform.
After Johnny Damon rudely departed for the Yankees, it was said that he looks like Jesus, acts like Judas and throws like Mary.
Well, it’s reunion time at Tropicana Field for our former “idiot” friends, Manny and Johnny. They will be reunited as teammates but, this time, wearing the uniform of the Tampa Bay Rays. The former Devil Rays, that is, and how appropriate. Good luck boys — and don’t forget to say your prayers — especially before you face the Red Sox.
P.S. Any bets on how long it takes Manny to wear out his welcome?

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Jesus, Mary and the Devil [Rays]


Alternate Headline: RAYS PATCH HOLES WITH OLD SOX
My cousin, John, once referred to Manny Ramirez as “Jesus in Cleats”. At the time, Manny was being Manny in a Red Sox uniform.
After Johnny Damon rudely departed for the Yankees, it was said that he looks like Jesus, acts like Judas and throws like Mary.
Well, it’s reunion time at Tropicana Field for our former “idiot” friends, Manny and Johnny. They will be reunited as teammates but, this time, wearing the uniform of the Tampa Bay Rays. The former Devil Rays, that is, and how appropriate. Good luck boys — and don’t forget to say your prayers — especially before you face the Red Sox.
P.S. Any bets on how long it takes Manny to wear out his welcome?

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Photo of the Week: 2011 (Week 3)

There's nothing like making a new friend!

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Sunday Bloody Sunday

In a shocking turn of events, the Patriots lost to the Jets last Sunday. In doing so, they abruptly ended their season and New England’s dream of a 2011 Super Bowl. It turns out that Tom Brady is not God after all. Neither is Bill Belichick. Perhaps Rex Ryan is not even the devil. While Patriots Nation is still stunned and sports radio tries in vain to figure out what happened, I am reminded not to celebrate before events completely unfurl. Didn’t the Bruins 2010 playoff collapse teach us that lesson? Or Papelbon’s 9th inning meltdown in the 2009 AL playoffs? Haven’t we seen enough blooper reels of poor Bill Buckner to know that it’s not over until it’s over?

A couple of months ago, I found myself wringing my hands and grinning with evil delight at the news of Adrian Gonzalez and Carl Crawford in Red Sox uniforms. Egged on by the press, I already started celebrating a 2011 World Series win. Like an icy cold slap across the face, Bloody Sunday was a reminder that it’s only January.

Watching Theo Epstein spend like a drunken sailor while Brian Cashman and the Steinbrenner heirs were busy insulting Derek Jeter, it was easy to forget that games actually have to be played and won before the World Series rings are handed out. Unlike my friend who considers the quilts in her head “all done except for the sewing”, athletes actually have to follow through to the bitter end before the celebration — or devastation — begins.

During Theo’s Christmas shopping spree, I posted what was supposed to be a funny (albeit snarky) message on my New York cousin’s Facebook page. He did not respond and the silence spoke louder than words. Atoning for my bad and unsportsmanlike behavior, I posted another message after the Pats/Jets debacle and sent my congratulations to him for the Jets win. I added that Pats fans humbly and graciously accept the “agony of deFEET”. I couldn’t let Rex Ryan completely off the hook, you know. Just because Wes Welker got benched for accidentally mentioning the word “foot” a few times, doesn’t mean I have to remain silent! I don’t work for Belichick.

Living in the moment, I will turn my attention to the Celtics quest for championship #18. I will remember that while someone wins, someone else must lose. As Larry Bird once said, someone is the hero and someone else is the goat. I will wait impatiently for baseball season to begin, but will remind myself that there are no guarantees. Even when your quarterback is Tom Brady and your new first base stud wisely states in his press conference that he’s “ready to beat the Yanks”.

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Photo of the Week: 2011 (Week 2)

Continue reading

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Friends, Quilts, Baseball and Other Comforts

“A true friend is someone who thinks that you are a good egg even though he knows that you are slightly cracked.” – Bernard Meltzer, radio talk show host of “What’s Your Problem”
***********
This amusing and truthful quote got me to thinking about the diverse group of friends in my life. My friends seem to be lined up in categories, like aisles of similar foods in a grocery store. There are the Sports Friends, the Quilting Friends, the Work Friends, the Childhood Friends, and the [former] Single-Life Friends.

Chips and Dip Aisle: Some of the above-named categories merge and intertwine as time passes such as the former Work Friend who has turned into my Sports Friend. Like me, she is always ready and eager to say yes to a trip to Fenway Park. When she left our place of employment, we lost that work connection but discovered that we were bonded by our mutual love for the Red Sox.

Cookies and Candy Aisle: My Quilter Friends spun off a smaller group that I reverently refer to as “The Quilters”. For over 20 years, The Quilters met every Wednesday evening to quilt and socialize. Over time, The Quilters lives changed and shifted; and we now get together only occasionally. Whenever we are together, we seem to pick up where we left off. We always seem to be held together by that quilting thread, no matter that many have abandoned the quilting needle. I know hundreds of other quilter acquaintances through various guilds, but only a few have become my Quilting Friends and fewer still are “The Quilters”. Lately, I have been feeling the familiar pull of a new handful of Quilting Friends that are just beginning to get to know each other. It is like finding the prize in a box of Cracker Jacks. (A good prize, like when you were a kid — not just one of those crappy ones tucked away in today’s bags of Cracker Jacks.)

Nuts and Raisins Aisle: Work Friends are easily bonded by convenience and jurisdiction. We all complain about the same thing which creates a sort of alliance. The mark of a true Work Friend is a friendship that continues after one or both parties have moved on from the job. At some point you happily discover that there is still something to talk about after the workplace gossip is covered.

Fruits and Vegetables Aisle: Childhood Friends and friends of your youth are a different breed. These are the first to know that your egg is truly cracked. They are likely to be witnesses to the scars of your childhood. Sometimes these are the first friends that you have to let go. Perhaps it is a loss of common ground over time. Perhaps it is a way to break the ties to a past one would rather forget or a past from which one has grown.

Kleenex and Paper Goods Aisle: There are Single Friends that can fade away with changes in marital status of either party. Those that remain after the marriage (or the divorce) are stuck together by the secrets from a former life forming a tight Gorilla Glue bond. “I won’t tell if you won’t tell” is the undercurrent of these friendships.

Dairy Aisle: Can a family member be a friend? Under which category would he/she fall? If you can imagine meeting your family member in a social situation and hitting it off with him/her, then the answer is yes. My sister is certainly my friend in many, but not all, aisles. She may not quilt or knit but she is an appreciative audience and supporter of my crafts. We complain about work together although we work in separate fields. We know where to find each others cracked eggshells, that’s for sure! I guess my sister is in an aisle all to herself — A hybrid Childhood Friend, bonded together by history, genetics, love, and the heartbreak and elation of years at the mercy of the Red Sox, Celtics, Patriots, Bruins, and our parents.

New sub-categories emerge through the years. Since I picked up a new hobby, there are now Knitting Friends. There are Quilting Friends that share an obsession with the Red Sox. In an interesting twist, a couple of my Knitting Friends are also Quilting Friends as well as Sports Friends. One is also a member of The Quilters — a perfect four-aisle friendship. But should the cookies and candy be in the chips and dip aisle? It gets very complicated.

When it comes right down to it, it is all about what you need on any given day. One day, you need milk; another day you need a healthy dose of fruits and vegetables. But on another day, you just need something sweet and familiar. In the end, we all need the right friend for the right occasion, and that friend may also need you on a different occasion.

Always be ready for the call. “Cleanup on aisle 5!”

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Photo of the Week: 2011

I am challenging myself to post a photo a week in 2011! Here is installment #1 of 52.
Celtics 105 Spurs 103

January 5, 2011 at the Garden. The best game of the year, so far!

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New Year’s Resolutions

It’s that time of year again.  The Christmas tree has been rudely stripped and tossed outside, waiting to hitch a ride on the next trash truck.  The vacuum cleaner will continue to exude the scent of pine needles as a cruel reminder of the festivities now in the past.  The candy canes are just a sweet memory.  This is the first work day of the new year – a “Monday mourning” for sure.  No day off this week; no office frivolity.  Just five days of serious, keep-your-head-down work.  Thoughts of new year resolutions dance through my head instead of sugar plums.  This is where the rubber meets the road.  I don’t usually make resolutions.  As a result, my life seems to remain static year after year.  Maybe 2011 will be different.  From my little corner of the world, here is my stab at a few things I have the power to change. 

  1.  I WILL lose weight this year.  This time, I really mean it.
  2. I will go to the gym more regularly.  (See #1)
  3. I will use my treadmill for its intended purpose and not as a clothing rack and nifty place to store my tote bags full of quilting works-in-progress.  (See #1)
  4. I will finish some of the many quilts I started – especially that Red Sox quilt that I started in my head.  (A friend of mine likes to say, “It’s all done except the sewing…”)
  5. I will stop thinking of the Bruins as the ugly step-children of the Boston sports scene (but only if the Bruins stop thinking of themselves as such).
  6. I will not be a fair-weather fan of the Celtics.  I really and truly believe in them this year.  (Disclaimer:  All bets are off if K.G. and Rondo miss too many games due to injuries.)
  7. I will try to come around to the local theory that Tom Brady is God.  (Even though with the hair-thing he has going on, I’m kind of leaning towards the J.C. theory.)
  8. I will not get all over Big Papi if he has a bad April.  (But, please David, don’t make it too hard for me to keep this resolution.)
  9. I will be patient with Adrian Gonzalez and Carl Crawford if they have slow starts when they hit the spotlight of Boston.  After all, they’re only human, despite what the press wants us to believe.
  10. I will try to forgive Theo Epstein for letting Victor Martinez get away in consideration of the whopping deals he made in the aftermath of The V-Mart Incident.
  11. I will not gloat [outwardly] to my New York, Yankee-loving cousins and will refrain from wise-ass comments about all the old guys on the field drooling on their pin stripes.
  12. This year I will live the dream and go to spring training instead of just dreaming about it.  Fort Myers, here I come!

 Happy new year!  What will you do to make 2011 a “wicked good year”?

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Merry Christmas, Red Sox Nation!

Just for fun, here’s a little holiday song about an imaginary Red Sox game on Christmas day.  Sing along to the tune of “Sleigh Ride”:

Just hear those cleats a-jingling

Bats ring-tingling, too            

Come on, it’s lovely weather

For a ballgame together with you.

Outside the snow is falling

The fans are calling for “Yoooouk!”

Why wait for April weather?

It’s Christmas at Fenway with you.

Giddy-yap, giddy-yap, giddy-yap

Jacoby goes

He’ll put on a show

Stealing home in a Fenway full of snow.

Giddy-yap, giddy-yap, giddy-yap, grand slam

To the outfield stands            

Pedey’s gliding along to the song                              

of a Fenway Park Bullpen Band.                   

Our cheeks are nice and rosy

and comfy cozy are we.

We’re snuggled up together like Jerry and Don

and Wally.                                          

Let’s take the Sox before us

And sing them a chorus or two.

Come on, it’s lovely weather

For a ballgame together with you.

There’s a Christmas party upstairs in the broadcast booth

It’ll be the perfect ending to the Curse of Ruth

We’ll be singing the song “Sweet Caroline” without a single stop

From the bleachers while we watch Big Papi’s pop

Pop! Pop! Pop!

There’s a happy feeling even those ol’ Yanks can’t buy

When the first few chords of “Dirty Water” fill the sky

It’ll be just like a re-run of the ‘04 series high

These wonderful games are the games

We remember all through our life.

Repeat verse 1, 2, 5, 6.

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Cliff Lee: My Hero

I first fell in love with Cliff Lee in the 2009 World Series.  While pitching for the Phillies, a Yankee batter hit a quick “chuck & duck” back to the mound.  Cool Cliff stuck his gloved hand behind his back and effortlessly caught the ball.  He then proceeded to stroll around the mound, smirk in the direction of his third baseman, and shrug his shoulders as if to say, “Just another day in the World Series”.  How cool was that?

 In 2010, Cliff was back in the World Series, this time wearing a Texas Rangers uniform and pitching brilliantly to the Giants.  Although the end result did not go his way, he was still cool as a cucumber.

 When Cliff became a free agent in the winter of 2010, I hoped against hope that he would be wearing red socks in 2011.  Alas, it was not to be.  (Not the right red socks, that is.)  If only the Red Sox had not signed Lackey last winter… (Don’t get me started!!!)  However, being true to his cool guy persona, he did something almost as great as signing with the Red Sox.  He shocked the baseball world by turning down lucrative deals with the Yankees and the Rangers to follow his heart and return to the Phillies … for less money.  In December of 2009, the Phillies tossed him aside to make room for Roy Halladay.  Like a scorned lover, he expressed his shock, hurt and disappointment to the press – he loved the Phillies — but always kept his cool, of course.  By turning down the Yanks, Cliff reportedly left over $28 million dollars on the table.  Although not exactly chump change to you and me, how does that $28 million significantly change your life if you are already making money hand over fist?  How many big leaguers choose dignity over dollars?  How many will choose happiness over their ego-driven quest for “more – bigger – better”?  How many can turn their back to the “Evil Empire” of Gotham City?

By following his heart, Cliff Lee gave Red Sox Nation a Christmas gift that could have far-reaching consequences.  He took himself out of the American League and out of the Red Sox road to the 2011 post-season.  Should we thank the New York fans that spit on Mrs. Lee during the 2010 playoffs?  Maybe.  Will our glee over his stunning shunning of the Yankees come back to haunt us next year?  Possibly.  We can only hope to see you in the 2011 World Series, Cliff Lee!  Bring your friends, Halladay, Hamels and Oswalt (a.k.a. “H2O”).  In the meantime, stay cool, and know you have a place in the heart of at least one Red Sox fan … for now.

 December 15, 2010

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