Agnew's Mind He's got a long journey ahead of him.

6Jan/100

Crowbar

    by wganter

Marathon Haiku

Twenty Six Point Two
Relentless Runner Rubbish
Bruised Nails and Nips, Ouch

Dewitt: A Potrait of a Runner As a (Not So) Young Man

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12Oct/090

The Ballad of Terry the Fitz

    by wganter

"No, none of us will ever be the same, but we will be alright."

And so ended my first reading of, "Assumed the Watch. Moored as Before." Much like Plato's The Republic, God's The Bible, and Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment, this autobigraphical "memoir" will be regarded as one of those books that change the world. More similar in context to Notes from the Underground, Lieutenant Fitzgibbons writes as an embittered naval officer aboard various not-so-sea-going vessels. His prose and rhetoric border on insanity and his words like fire and brimstone curse every ounce of promises the navy and their propogandic poster's made to him. Like a scourned lover he revels in his dark, sarcastic, interior observations of the shining, sun kissed, clean, crisp, modern exterior of the U.S.A. navy. From observations both pre-naval career to his reminiscing post-naval career, we learn that, much like corporate america, the US Navy is not immune to the checks and balances that make up the daily life of the working man. Regardless of place, career, or status we all will have our documents, meetings, speeches, duties, and inspections to bear. Much like Jesus carried his cross, we all must die for our parents' and parents' parents' sins through never ending meeting after meeting and inspection after inspection in the eternal quest for the "good life." In the end we learn that we need to follow in LT Fitzgibbons' footsteps. We need to approach each day with the sarcasm and humor that he has. The laughter when confronted with such insanity will allow us to accept the truth and, my friends, the truth does indeed set us free.

I see Terry, one day in the not too distant future, joining some protest in an American city wearing a kaffiya and holding a sign the reads, "I Hate The Navy." During this daydream, half stolen from his book, throngs of people ask for his "Herbie Hancock" and tell him what his book meant, how his book changed their life, how life will never be the same. I would like to think that if even one navy hopeful manages to find this book in his/her hands and they can and do reconsider their options, Terry will have succeeded. All of those memories and stories he tells throughout his book about how the navy figuratively and sometimes literally put their foot up his ass will be paid back. He will have single-handedly been able to defeat the symbolic phallus of American might, the US Navy. In this grand scheme, Terry will have caused someone to balk at the navy and their promises and helped them see the light, reconsider, and go on to some better idea and future. This will be the victory Terry hoped to achieve, drunkenly, on the softball field that one game. This will be Terry yet again choosing Coldplay over duties and telling the navy to suck it.

"SWO...The only thing worse than today is...tomorrow" (T.Fitzgibbons, 2006). Through all of the pages the reader finds the underlying theme that those men and women who love the navy tend to have an eternal stick up their ass. This does not make them bad people, nor does Terry write this in a way that belittles their career choice. It merely states a fact. Much like Judas was a necessary evil and fulfilled his role perfectly, these career makers (for lack of a better word but I am sure Terry has a more fitting synonym) are comparable. This brings us to the lone sad tale of the memoir, this being the regretful ending of Terry's naval career. One could have only hoped that Terry would have given it a go and strove to make Captain or some other high rank. He would have been given command of some battleship. He would then be in the position to make the tomorrow's of today better. The officers, etc on his ship would be free to wear backpacks on their back, they would be able to run (if necessary), and they could rock out to Styx as often and as loud as any God fearing American should. Of course, as with all things, we see that each step up that ladder, whether it be corporate or military, comes the same ridiculous meetings and expectations. The same silly checks and balances are always there, no matter how high up you are.

I like to imagine a navy where Terry is XO or whatever rank it may be. One of his officers chooses to shirk their duties and go AWOL for a concert or a World Series or a Hall of Fame induction. They return to base with the full knowledge that he/she is in deep shit. They are told to be in Captain Fitzgibbon's chambers right away. The long, slow walk is surrounded with fear of the wrath of Captain Fitz and his iron fist (think Iron Curtain, St. Jude, circa 1996) while inside the officer is hiding the largest, stupidest grin ever, as is expected after such a great weekend. They knock, open the door, and enter. Terry is facing away, staring at the wall. The officer says good afternoon sir and sits. Terry still facing away, lets one rip, it is slow and steady and has a nice warmth to it. The officer holds back laughter but is struggling. Terry turns with the most deadpan face one can imagine, fake anger bursting from his eyeballs as he stares down the officer. He slowly sits and hands the officer an envelope. He tells said officer to open it. The officer slowly opens the letter and pulls out a 1982 Cal Ripken Jr rookie card. It is donruss and it is mint. It is glorious. He asks the officer to tell him what it is, "Cal Ripken Jr, sir, rookie card." "Yes it is," replies Terry, "I hope you take this to heart next time you decide to go AWOL and attend a Phillies World Series parade son." Confused, the officer says I will sir and leaves. He is competely confused and only years later realizes the meaning in this encounter. He spends the next 18 month tour loving every day of life aboard the USS Not-Quite-Sinking with Captain Fitz as his leader. Somehow, Captain Fitzgibbons is not of the same breed typical of the ship commander and life, although at times painful, does have it's up sides. He does not know Terry is the pride of Chalfont, St Jude's, and all things 18914. He does not know the Cal Jr. story and will not until two years later, upon leaving the Navy, when a friend tells him to check out this world changing book. He does, he reads it, he remembers his AWOL incident, laughs, and thinks of all the similarities between Terry and himself.

"Everybody plays the fool, sometimes, there is no exception to the rule. Listen baby. It may be factual, it may be cruel, but everybody plays the fool."

I was troubled thinking of how I could end this review. First and foremost because as most things I write it is scatter brained and does not follow any sort of order or "standard" writing format. Of course, I knew somehow an idea for a final paragraph would come to me and it did while driving home from dinner. Listening to Baltimore's WXPN 90.5 and completely content after eating a wonderful Mexican meal, Main Ingredient's Everybody Plays the Fool prophetically began playing on my car speakers. It is a wonderful song and completely ecompasses all of the emotions I felt while reading this book, both Terry's and my own.The song and book both have a very cheerful, upbeat, almost humorous rhythm to them while covering topics that are not exactly cheerful and upbeat. I completely picture Terry dancing with some of his darker complexion "brothers" in some far away country, completely out of place but somehow fitting in perfectly. The contrast between his complexion and theirs, his white boy dancing and their rhythm, and his pickup lines versus their smoothness only accentuates how he is fitting in. For me, the song comparison goes beyond this imaginary scene though. The lyrics, even just considering the title, give you a very clear idea of what the song is about. Somehow, in some way, we will all play the fool sometimes, there is no exception to the rule. "Falling is love is such an easy thing to do and there is no guarantee that the one you love is going to love you." Just as Terry did with the Navy way back when he saw those posters and their lovely images and heard their whispered promises. He worked hard to obtain that life only to realize that the grass is always greener and that beyond those beautiful images is the "real" navy or the "big" navy. Unfortunately for Terry, as much as he loved "his" navy, this navy was a bitter, cruel bitch and did not love him back. Many of us have worked hard in some aspect or another only to realize all that work was for naught and we changed direction. As hard as the times got at certain points, there always was an end. Sometimes, it beat us up and in some cases some of us did not walk away the happy, cheery, life loving souls that entered. Other times, as with Terry, we took the pummeling, iced and bandaged our wounds and day by day walked the fine line between complete and total hatred and sarcastic acceptance. This sarcasm, acceptance, and sense of humor allowed us to continue onward and overcome.

"Perhaps it was the lovely tulips by the statue in the brochure picture."

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11Oct/090

Two Things

    by wganter

I do actually have a long post with an official review of Terry's book but first I would like to detail the up and downs of my day:

UP - Boston getting swept. Not just swept but completely destroyed. All things Red Sox Nation suck today and that makes me happy. I know, I know, enjoying other's sadness is not a good thing and karma and all that but hey, it is Red Sox Nation and they deserve it. Of course I feel the pain of Benji (my good friend from college who I cheered with sitting next to on his sofa while Boston won the first World Series), but for the rest of those not from Boston, not from Massachusetts, not even from New England fans that consider themselves part of the Nation, I laugh and enjoy it. Also, to not just lose but lose the way they did, it couldn't have been written better. Ninth inning, 2 outs, 2 strikes, and one of the best closers in baseball on the mound. What followed: a single, walk, double, walk to load the bases, and Vladi singling to center to take the lead, that is pure playoff baseball brilliance, beauty, and any other similar word starting with b. Of course the fans might try and utter "curse, curse of the Babe is back." But really, honestly you just lost it happens. MLB.com articles to follow, including Teammate's Don't Pin Loss on Papelbon are amazing. Of course the fickle Boston fans booed Papelbon in the ninth, they blamed him. Of course, they are fickle, greedy, obnoxious, and just plain annoying. Thank you Los Angeles. Not only for beating the Boston Red Sox but for allowing me to stop cheering on the Yank's. I was cheering them on because Jeter (DON'T HATE) is not just a gentleman but an example of a modern day baseball legend and also because I felt they had the best chance to destroy the Sox. Thank you again Angels of LA. I am not trying to steal Mike's Boston hatred either, I hate the Nation. I have never been to Boston but hear it is a cool place, maybe I will hit it up sometime. Of course I will rock my 2008 World Series Champion Phillies hat.

DOWN - Trying for the last hour to upgrade my iPhone. I know, Apple is the greatest and can do no wrong but it has for some reason frozen my iTunes twice, had to be restored three times, and downloaded the 306 Mb software 3 times and still no luck. This is annoying and of course the damn thing is stuck in a black hole until the upgrade occurs. Oh and why is this upgrade happening. Because somehow the last software release had a bug that caused, among other thing, the cell phone to not search for new service if it loses service. In other words, I am driving to Manayunk, I lose service on Bells Mill Road, I get to the top of the hill and it says full service but until I turn my phone off and back on (an annoying process on an iPhone) it will only say it has service, it won't actual have service. Really annoying. If this was a Motorola product Dewitt would have found this issue before it was released and Agnew would have fixed it.

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7Aug/092

Showtime wins

    by wganter

Californication

Sorry HBO, Showtime has indeed won. Sure, you still have Curb Your Enthusiasm and Eastbound and Down is fun. But stop living in the past. The Wire is long gone, The Sopranos left you, and Entourage, as Jon so eloquently put it, is tired.

Showtime has Californication, Weeds, Dexter, and I hear Brotherhood is good as well, although I can not comment since I have never seen.

Dexter - Although the city of Miami is a negative, watching Michael C. Hall play a forensic investigator (blood splatter expert) by day and a serial killer who hunts criminals by night is pretty much amazing.

Weeds - Kevin Nealon, hilarious. The suburbs and a mother who is a pot dealer.

Californication - Incredible women, David Duchovny as an amazing writer trying to handle his love for his on again off again wife, his love for Cali beauties, and his love for his super cool daughter. Sounds simple, but an amazing show. If you still watch Entourage it is probably resting strongly on how many hot girls are on it. Californication has even hotter women and actually contains a plot.

Showtime has mastered the characters you should hate but end up rooting for. This includes the pot selling mother in weeds, the serial killer Dexter, and the womanizer/addict Hank Moody. Incredible writing and incredible shows.

Showtime 1 : HBO 0

Oh and this only includes the main characters, all these shows have such incredible supporting casts. I think you could have entire episodes without seeing the main character and they would still be strong.

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1Aug/091

The Truth is in the Numbers

    by wganter

I wanted my Roberto Clemente article to be the first Agnewsmind contribution I made but I am just too excited about Cliff Lee to consider anything else. Sorry Roberto, Phil’s trump you. On to the goods:

Phillies Giants Baseball

Cliff Lee throws baseballs.

I will admit, I was caught up in it. Considering the Halladay trade rumors dominated at least a months worth of our Phillie’s season for 2009, anyone who says they always wanted Cliff Lee is a bold faced liar.

That being said, deep in all of our minds, did we really think the Phillies would get anyone? So when Cliff Lee was picked up in what has to be the most one-sided trade in many years, you had to be ecstatic. I was. I did feel a small hint of defeat since it wasn't Halladay, but then I decided to be a respectable fan and look at the stats. And I must say, it looked pretty stinking good. We got the reigning AL Cy Young winner and a right handed outfielder. I will get into their stats later but consider who we gave up:

Carlos Carrasco: 6-9 with a 5.18 ERA in AAA Lehigh

Jason Donald: .259 BA with 3 AAA teams and 1 Gulf league team and 6 errors in 2009

Jason Knapp: 2-7 with a 4.01 ERA in A ball

Lou Marson: .307 in AAA ball

Besides Lou Marson, who we must remember is still a minor leaguer, we gave them nothing. Not a thing. Jason Knapp, Jason Knap!!! He is playing single A baseball. Give me a break. I haven’t played ball in 5 years but deep down think that there is the possibility that I could squander around in single A baseball for a season or two and maybe if the moon was orbiting closer to earth I would not make a complete fool of myself. Who knows, Agnew could join me and with his broken bat home run skills and pull off a miracle. Dan McGarry could get called in for relief and possibly strike out a few, we all know McGarry had a cannon. Dan Kim could like white people again and play a game or three at first base. McShea could be the single A version of Utley for at least a season, if the stars aligned correctly. Ry and Jon could be the single A Upton brothers, with a little help and not too many broken supersitions. All I am trying to say is that single A ball, not to discount that it is still professional baseball, is a very, very, very long way from the Big Show. And forget the rest of those schmucks. There are two pitchers who have no chance of making this rotation for many years. There is an outfielder who, now with the addition of Francisco, would not even get a backup roster spot in countless years for this all All-Star outfield. Even if they were incredible players in minor league ball, batting 550 with 38 dingers, they don’t have a chance of making the roster for a long time, so we indeed gave up nothing we needed.

And now on to the gem that we acquired and how Lee is just as impressive as Halladay or anyone else in the league for that matter. I heard 610 all week, I listen religiously and really need to ween myself off it sometimes. I heard it in Dewitt’s voice, the let down and disappointment in no Halladay. As Dewitt said, “I was told I was getting Olive Garden. Then when the time came to eat, Gags and Jenny said we were getting Mack and Manco’s. Even though Manco’s is the best pie on earth, I had my mind set on OG.”

The Truth Of Our Midseason Pickup

So the reigning AL Cy Young winner. To digress for a second. Are the Phillies the World Champions of Baseball? I think yes. Not because they have the best record this year, but because they won the World Series in 2008. I am not living in the past, I want to win it again, but we are the champs. So Cliff Lee, the Cy Young winner of the AL (a much more potent offensive league I might add) is now, in my mind, the best pitcher in the national league. Until the end of the season, when Lincecum wins it.

Take a look at the past 10 years of Cy Young winners in the AL:

1998    Roger Clemens             Toronto Blue Jays         20–6    0          2.65

1999    Pedro Martínez             Boston Red Sox           23–4    0          2.07

2000    Pedro Martínez             Boston Red Sox           18–6    0          1.74

2001    Roger Clemens             New York Yankees     20–3    0          3.51

2002    Barry Zito                     Oakland Athletics         23–5    0          2.75

2003    Roy Halladay                Toronto Blue Jays         22–7    0          3.25

2004    Johan Santana              Minnesota Twins          20–6    0          2.61

2005    Bartolo Colón               Los Angeles Angels      21–8    0          3.48

2006    Johan Santana              Minnesota Twins          19–6    0          2.77

2007    C.C. Sabathia               Cleveland Indians         19–7    0          3.21

2008    Cliff Lee                       Cleveland Indians         22–3    0          2.54

Take out the ridiculous years Pedro had in 1998 and 1999 and Cliff Lee has the lowest ERA. He also has the best record of 22-3, that is a win-loss percentage of .880. You have to go back to 1978 when Ron Guidry of the ‘Yanks went 25-3. Since the beginning of the Cy Young in 1956, only Ron Guidry has had a better record. No Cy Young winner in the NL has ever had a better win-loss percentage. Consider how impressive that is in the power house, home run happy, modern baseball era with the lively ball and that should be exciting for Phillies fans. But no, we say Roy Halladay is the best pitcher in baseball. Of course he is not a reigning Cy Young winner, nor has he won a Cy Young since 2003. That was 6 years ago and he was a spry 28 years old then. Cliff Lee was 30 when he won, last year. Remember that people.

On to this year, forget that Halladay has gone 1-3 since coming back from his injury this year. Broken goods? Cliff Lee came from Cleveland with a 7-9 record and a 3.14 ERA.  Jason Verlander, who is on a much better Detroit team, a Cy Young candidate, and league leader in wins with 12, has a 3.16 ERA. Do not let the record fool you. Lee has gone 9 games this year in which he has given up 3 runs or less and gotten either a no decision or a loss, this includes an 8 inning shutout to the Boston Red Sox. Shutting out a team whose veins are literally exploding with the likes of HGH, steroids, and other illegal performance enhancing substances is impressive enough, but taking a no decision and still respecting your abysmal Cleveland team is downright honorable. Include two more games in which he gave up 4 runs for either a loss or a no decision and that is quite possibly 11 games in which the Phillies dominant offense would have given him the “W.” As they did last night with 5 runs in support! But what about the ERA at 3.14? Take away his first two starts that he blew up in and his ERA becomes 2.40, I credit the Fightins for that stat calculation. He is also in the offensively powered AL and looking at the league leaders, I only see 5 pitchers with an ERA below 3. Actually, only 5 pitchers have an ERA below 3.14. So Lee, the reigning CY Young winner was tied for 6th in his league in ERA. His league that includes possibly 6 teams that could dominate the playoffs and take the World Series from the NL, who right now look to only have two contenders in the Phillies and the Dodgers. One of those contenders just got quite a bit better.

Oh and Ben Francisco ain’t too bad either.

For all of Phillies nation, after seeing last nights spectacular performance:

http://philadelphia.phillies.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20090731&content_id=6175446&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=phi

I hope we can now talk of how we have the best pitcher in baseball, and let us not forget the current World Series MVP in Cole Hamels. This is a special team right now. Let’s enjoy it.

Oh and just to get a jab in, take a look at what those lovely Met’s are doing since they can’t seem to win a game:

Mets Players Choice

400_Putzdouche

Other Mets Crap

Wow, it really couldn’t be any more perfect. You can’t make this stuff up.

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