When It’s Not A Game

Very nice article today by Juan C. Rodriguez, the Marlins writer with the Sun-Sentinel. The article gives a difficult story — about an 18-year-old brain tumor victim, Amy Donnelly, daughter of former Marlins coach Rich Donnelly — a local connection. It explains how Donnelly and current Marlins pitcher Anibal Sanchez made a connection. Sanchez also has lost a child. In his case, an infant son named Alan Sanchez, to a viral disease. Alan had been born exactly one year after Sanchez had pitched a no-hitter on Sept. 6, 2006.

Stories like this make me care less about the outcome of games and more about the people who play them. Despite our perceptions about their health and wealth, even athletes at the top of their sports are not immune from tragedies and heartaches, especially those involving children. Off the top of my head, just those with Marlins connections, the list includes Preston Wilson, Derrek Lee, Ryan Dempster and now Anibal Sanchez.

Something else about the list of ex-Marlins, decide for yourself if you note anything ironic, bittersweet or just evidence of faith. I’ve cut & paste a portion of their Bio’s from MLB.com:

  • Derrek Lee – Created a foundation in 2006 to fight Leber’s Congenital Amaurosis (LCA), a degenerative disease that results in loss of vision … the effort, entitled “Project 3000,” includes a plan to raise money to provide state-of-the-art genetic testing for every man, woman and child in the United States with LCA – about 3,000 individuals in all. … Recognized as the Cubs Roberto Clemente award winner in 2007, an award given annually to players who combine outstanding skills on the field with devoted work in the community. … Awarded the Major League Baseball Player’s Association “Heart and Hustle” award for the Cubs in 2006 and 2007. … Also works to bring baseball to the Chicago community through RBI Baseball (Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities).
  • Preston Wilson – Began the “Preston’s Pals” program in South Florida when he was a member of the Marlins…won the 2003 Rockies Good Guy Award as voted by the local BBWAA…was the recipient of the Marlins 2000 All-Heart Award, presented to the player who best exemplifies the team’s commitment to the South Florida community…during his tenure with the Marlins, Wilson founded “Preston’s Pride” and “Preston’s Operation: Back to School,” programs to provide for under-privileged and at-risk children…served as a spokesperson for the South Florida Blood Banks Sickle Cell Program…created a scholarship at his high school to help students pay for college…has also helped various programs such as the African American Council of Christian Clergy’s “A Dream Come True” program, Sharon Robinson’s “Breaking Barriers” program, Adopt-A-Classroom and Make-A-Wish Foundation…is the stepson of former New York Mets outfielder Mookie Wilson and is the godson of former Reds and Mets star George Foster.
  • Ryan Dempster – Was named one of the 99 “Good Guys” in professional sports by The Sporting News in 2001. © Received the 2000 James “Tip” O’Neill Award, presented annually by the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum to the Canadian baseball player judged to have excelled in individual achievement and team contribution while adhering to the highest ideals of baseball. Was the Chicago Cubs nominee for the Roberto Clemente award in 2006 and 2008, which is given annually to the major league baseball player who combines outstanding skills on the field with devoted work in the community. His charitable endeavors in 2003 included assisting the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation and Garth Brooks’ Teammates for Kids. Following the 2001 season, he was presented with the All Heart Award by the Florida chapter of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America – given to the Marlins player who best exemplifies the team’s commitment to the South Florida community by making a positive impact and by serving as a role model for others.

Romans 8:31-39:

What then shall we say to this? If God is for us, who is against us? He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, will he not also give us all things with him? Who shall bring any charge against God’s elect? It is God who justifies; who is to condemn? Is it Christ Jesus, who died, yes, who was raised from the dead, who is at the right hand of God, who indeed intercedes for us? Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? As it is written, “For thy sake we are being killed all the day long; we are regarded as sheep to be slaughtered.”

No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am sure that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Here’s a link to another article about Amy Donnelly from Tim Kurkjian.

Juan C. Rodriguez’s article is copied in full at end of post.

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Bound by tragedy, ex-Marlins coach Donnelly supports Sanchez from afar
Both know heartache of losing a child

By Juan C. Rodriguez, Sun Sentinel

4:33 PM EDT, May 24, 2010

On Wednesday morning, a 63-year-old former big league coach from Steubenville, Ohio, will scan the box scores. Among the first names he’ll look for is that of a 26-year-old Venezuelan right hander.

Rich Donnelly hasn’t spoken with Anibal Sanchez since April 2009, when the Marlins played in Pittsburgh. The encounter was brief, but powerful enough for Donnelly to feel like he gained a son.

These two baseball men from divergent backgrounds are forever linked because of the tragedies they endured. Both lost a child.

Sanchez, who will start Tuesday’s series opener against the Braves, in 2007 watched his infant son, Alan, succumb to Dengue fever, a viral disease spread by mosquitoes. The following spring Sanchez was speaking with former Marlins coach and fellow Venezuelan Luis Dorante, and Donnelly came up.

In 1992, Donnelly’s 17-year-old daughter, Amy, was diagnosed with a brain tumor. During the playoffs, Amy attended one of the National League Championship Series games between her Dad’s Pirates and the Braves and took note of his unique crouch and cupped hands over his mouth when directing baserunners.

Amy later asked her father if he was yelling, “The chicken runs at midnight.” Amy died that January.

Five years later, Donnelly was the third-base coach for the Florida Marlins. Craig Counsell was known as the chicken in the Donnelly household because of the way he flapped his right arm in the batters’ box.

When Counsell scored the World Series-winning run, Donnelly’s son, Tim, told his Dad to look at the clock. It was 12:01. Just as Amy predicted, the chicken ran at midnight and Donnelly got the World Series title he was unable to share with his daughter in 1992.

“Luis Dorante told me and I said I’d like to see the DVD and he got it for me,” said Sanchez, of a Lifetime special on the Donnelly story. “I saw it and it made an impression on me, that a child could predict the future. It was practically predicting what was going to happen…It’s amazing. I went through the same thing [losing a child] and know what you feel.”

During spring training 2008, Donnelly and Dorante were roommates. One night Sanchez happened to call Dorante, who took the opportunity to pass the phone to Donnelly.

“We talked and he said he watched the video and it really helped him and his wife during this tough time,” said Donnelly, who now resides in Los Angeles. “My job the next year was to be in the dugout for every home game with the Pirates. When the Marlins came into town I told Luis I wanted to meet him.”

That meeting occurred at PNC Park last April. Sanchez was jogging when Donnelly introduced himself.

“I popped out and just said, “Hey, I’m Rich Donnelly,'” he said. “When I said that, boy, he teared up real bad and we both hugged. He thanked me for that video. He told me about his son and pulled of his shirt and showed me a picture of his son on his right shoulder. He said, ‘Every day I pitch my son is with me.’

“I told him, ‘It’s wonderful I got to meet you. I will be a fan of yours forever. Every time you pitch it will be like my son pitching.’…Because we both lost our kids and through these times we went through, we said we’ll be bonded forever by this.”

Added Sanchez: “He’s a great person. We spoke about the loss of a child and what comes next. It’s not easy to pick yourself up from that, how to start your career again. He told me to keep working and he would keep tabs on my games.”

Donnelly stays busy with public speaking engagements, but he really wants to return to coaching. He emphasized to Sanchez carrying on his son’s spirit through pitching. Alan would have wanted him to be a great competitor.

In addition to the trauma of losing a child, Sanchez went through the career uncertainty associated with undergoing shoulder surgery. He gave some thought to quitting baseball, but now he realizes he honors his son’s memory every time he takes the mound. Donnelly drove home that point.

“It’s difficult to continue in a moment like that,” Sanchez said. “If I left it I wasn’t going to come back. I decided to take the step forward.”

A 63-year-old coach from Steubenville, Ohio couldn’t be happier.

Juan C. Rodriguez can be reached at jcrodriguez@SunSentinel.com

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The Pinto Chronicles: Griping about PLIQ wrath

I have a dilemma. I possess knowledge about a certain group of people who have a condition which they may be unaware of. While I assume they may ‘suffer’ from this condition, it is not obvious they would would choose to combat it were they to become aware of it. The group I speak of is Purposely Low-IQ [PLIQ] baseball fans.

As I had noted in an earlier post [click here], Renyel Pinto is one of their favorite local targets. PLIQ’s are typically extremely easy to identify. Any failed appearance by a relief pitcher will likely trigger an episode.

The easy and gut level reaction is to just confront PLIQ’s and methodically and mercilessly poke holes in their baseball knowledge, as it were. But what if I would just be ruining a rare and simple pleasure in their lives. [Actually, all their pleasures are likely simple]. Where’s the honor in that?

Here’s where dreams and a working knowledge of 24 can be useful.

The following takes place between 8:35 am and 8:37 am outside a McDonald’s in Miami-Dade County. Events occur in real time.

Jack Bauer – Sabermetrics Division: You criticized Renyel Pinto last night didn’t you?
PLIQ Fan Martinez: Who are you? How do you know that?
Jack Bauer – Sabermetrics Division: Sir, you DO NOT want to play with me?
PLIQ Fan Martinez: OK, jeez
Jack Bauer – Sabermetrics Division: Why did you criticize Renyel Pinto?
PLIQ Fan Martinez: He was brought in to face one guy and he hit hit that guy and cost the Marlins the game OK.
Jack Bauer – Sabermetrics Division: You really think life is that simple son.
PLIQ Fan Martinez: Hey, I gotta go. I was late twice last …
Jack Bauer – Sabermetrics Division: Son, we live in a world that has lefty-righty matchups, and those matchups have to be managed by men with no real job security. Who’s gonna do it? You casual fan Martinez? [Comments now directed to crowd gathering to listen to the exchange]. You chronic sports radio show caller? You Mr. Anonymous profanity-laced blog post commenter? Middle relievers have a greater responsibility than you can possibly fathom. You weep for the complete game and you curse the lefty-righty matchups. You have that luxury. You have the luxury of not knowing what I know — that Pinto’s appearance, while tragic, probably saved runs; and the existence of lefty-righty matchups, while grotesque and incomprehensible to you, saves runs.
PLIQ Fan Martinez: Look man, if you’re related to Pinto, my bad OK?
Jack Bauer – Sabermetrics Division: Son, do you even know what a WHIP represents? How about P/PA?
PLIQ Fan Martinez: Whatever, look I’m more of a Dolphin fan. Football’s my sport.
Jack Bauer – Sabermetrics Division: [Shaking his head] Classic PLIQ profile. Take care and remember; like some whacked out Tom Joad, I’ll always be listening.

Tom Joad’s monologue is copied in full at end of post.

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Tom Joad monologue:

After becoming idealistically radicalized by what he has witnessed, Tom – in a famous monologue – describes how he will carry on Casy’s mission in the world – by fighting for social reform. Going off to seek a new world in a place unknown, he must leave his family to join the unspecified movement (“the one big soul”) committed to struggling for social justice. In a more optimistic ending than the one in the novel, he has benefited from Casy’s wisdom about the sanctity of all life, and a belief in universal love which comes from respecting all of humanity. He also has intelligently realized the unified power of working people speaking up for their rights – a revolution that people must adjust to:

Well, maybe it’s like Casy says. A fella ain’t got a soul of his own, just a little piece of a big soul – the one big soul that belongs to ever’body. Then…then, it don’t matter. I’ll be all around in the dark. I’ll be ever’-where – wherever you can look. Wherever there’s a fight so hungry people can eat, I’ll be there. Wherever there’s a cop beatin’ up a guy, I’ll be there. I’ll be in the way guys yell when they’re mad – I’ll be in the way kids laugh when they’re hungry an’ they know supper’s ready. An’ when the people are eatin’ the stuff they raise, and livin’ in the houses they build – I’ll be there, too.

http://www.filmsite.org/grap3.html
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U2: Practicing What They Preach?

Originally posted Oct 3, 2009
Update: No reply to date

Jack Woltz, prior to Khartoum losing his head

… a man in my position can’t afford to be made to look ridiculous

U2 – I’ll Go Crazy If I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight

Pity the nation that won’t listen to your boys and girls
Cos the sweetest melody is the one we haven’t heard
Is it true that perfect love drives out all fear?
The right to appear ridiculous is something I hold dear
Oh, but a change of heart comes slow

Point to U2 — with an assist to Tom Hagen and the Husqvarna Group — lesson learned.

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Letter mailed on October 7th
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U2 – Attn Larry Mullen, Jr.
Principle Management
250 West 57th Street
Suite 2120
New York, NY 10107
USA

October 7th, 2009

Dear Mr Mullen, Jr.

I turned 50 earlier this year and put off having a party to mark the occasion until I lost 30 pounds or thought of a good idea to justify the party. Gratefully, the idea came quicker than the weight loss, which is proving problematic, but that’s a whole other letter.

I would appreciate it if your band would come and play at my birthday party. When I say ‘your band,’ I’m not down on any of the others, but hey, it was your idea, your ad and y’all met at your house, please…. So in a sense, the only thing pro-Bono about this request would be your fees [joke].

I have tentatively selected the date of March 18th, 2010. It’s the Thursday right before Spring Break [I wanted to make sure my kids could make it] and thankfully coincides with a fairly limited NHL and NBA schedule for that night. I checked and your band doesn’t have a concert that date, so hopefully there won’t be conflicts at your end. But I know these things can change [I have a cousin who once dated a roadie].

We would be incredibly grateful and appreciative if your band could make it. Of course, there would be no restrictions on what you chose to play. But if, and truly only if no one if offended, please stay away from the Zooropa period material.

God Bless

Jorge Costales

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Is Your Religion About Love And Service?

Fr Valle makes his usual interesting points in this week’s homily. An excerpt:

Jesus tells Peter: “When you were young, you fastened your own belt and went where you pleased. When you are old , others will tie you fast and lead you where you would not go.” This is what “to feed the sheep” means; it means that we must sacrifice: sacrifice our autonomy: sacrifice our superficial desires; ultimately, sacrifice our lives. We must make these sacrifices, not to suffer for suffering sake but to make the sheep holy. This is precisely what the word sacrifice means. It comes from two Latin words: sacrum, meaning holy and facere, meaning to make.

There is a quote from Rabbi Hillel I read this week which really struck me. He said: “If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am not for others, what am I?” I don’t know! But this much I am sure of: If I am not for others, for the lambs and the sheep, I am not a follower of Jesus Christ, no matter what Church I belong to or what creed I profess. We must not only hear the call to follow Him. We must, also, think and pray constantly on what that call means. I imagine Peter only, finally, fully understood what it means as he was being crucified up-side down on a street in Rome.

The email address to request to be put on Vallee’s email distribution list is Cioran262@aol.com. To see the entire homily click on ‘read more.’ Search for other Fr Vallee homilies in this blog by entering ‘Vallee’ in the search box in the upper left hand corner or look for Fr Vallee in the Labels.

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Fr Vallee Homily — April 18 2010

I. Soap opera?
At first glance, today’s Gospel reads like a bad soap opera with Jesus in the role of the insecure teenage girl: “Simon, Son of John, do you love me? Do you love me? Do you love me?” You can almost feel the frustration for Simon. “Yes, Lord, I love you! But why do you keep asking the same thing?” Of course, Jesus is not am insecure teenage girl with a crush on Peter. The text is more subtle and more interesting than that.

II. No, not the same question
First of all, the question is not the same question three times. The first question is: “Simon, son of John, do you love me more than these?” Jesus may have been referring to the other disciples, after all, at the Last Supper, Peter said he would never leave if even all the others left – just before he denied him three times. This is perhaps the first and most obvious meaning of, “Do you love me?” Also, he is having Peter make up for the three denials. The second meaning may be Jesus sweeping his hand over all the stuff — the boat, the fish, all the things they have — and asking Peter if he loved him more than all these things. The third meaning , is for me at least, the most interesting. Peter has seen Jesus perform all sorts if miracles. In fact, he has seen that Jesus has risen from the dead. Jesus is asking Peter if he loves him more than all that power. Peter will have to make the choice that every single Christian faces – everyone from the Pope in Rome to the poorest baby baptized two weeks ago: “Is religion, for you, about love and service or about power and status?

III. Not the same command
I think this is very clear from the three-fold command that Jesus lays on Peter. Notice, like the questions, this is not a pure repetition. First Jesus says: “Shepherd my lambs.” Lambs are baby sheep. He is saying that Peter must care for the smallest, the weakest and the most helpless of his brothers and sisters. Of course, by extension, so must we all if we really want to follow Jesus. Second, Jesus says, “Shepherd my sheep.” Sheep are grown up lambs. Jesus means we are not just supposed to care for the cute little lambs who are easy to love. We must, likewise care for the sheep — the grown lambs, the ones who are much harder to love. Sheep are smelly, noisy and not so attractive. People can be hurt, hostile and angry, We have to care for them, too. Third Jesus says, “Feed my sheep.” We must try to feed all the sheep. But what does that mean? It is not so easy to understand. So Jesus goes on to explain to Peter, and to us, what he means and what he wants of us.

IV. Another will tie you fast–
Jesus tells Peter: “When you were young, you fastened your own belt and went where you pleased. When you are old , others will tie you fast and lead you where you would not go.” This is what “to feed the sheep” means; it means that we must sacrifice: sacrifice our autonomy: sacrifice our superficial desires; ultimately, sacrifice our lives. We must make these sacrifices, not to suffer for suffering sake but to make the sheep holy. This is precisely what the word sacrifice means. It comes from two Latin words: sacrum, meaning holy and facere, meaning to make.

V. Hillel: conclusion
There is a quote from Rabbi Hillel I read this week which really struck me. He said: “If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am not for others, what am I?” I don’t know! But this much I am sure of: If I am not for others, for the lambs and the sheep, I am not a follower of Jesus Christ, no matter what Church I belong to or what creed I profess. We must not only hear the call to follow Him. We must, also, think and pray constantly on what that call means. I imagine Peter only, finally, fully understood what it means as he was being crucified up-side down on a street in Rome.
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Meet the New Plantation Owner, Blanche Obama

Uh oh. The new master of the house, he ain’t happy folks. Woe unto us.

“Why aren’t these people thanking me”

or

“It’s not about me”

The former are the thoughts of President Obama, while the latter thought paraphrases the first words in Rick Warren’s mega-best-seller, The Purpose Driven Life. The thought behind those words is that the key to a leading a Christian-based life lies in our ability to focus more on others rather than ourselves. It is a beautifully counter-intuitive message; Want to guarantee your eternal salvation? OK, first stop thinking about yourself.

I thought of those words when I heard President Obama’s comments in Miami regarding Americans protesting the current and coming levels of taxation [loyal blog readers will recall the blog’s previous visit to the Arsht Center]. This from an AP article:

President Barack Obama said Thursday he’s amused by the anti-tax tea party protests that have been taking place around Tax Day.

Obama told a fundraiser in Miami that he’s cut taxes, contrary to the claims of protesters.

“You would think they’d be saying thank you,” he said.

Why the connection with the Warren quote? Just a little wishful thinking on my part. After all, which thought would you prefer to be running through the head of the President of the United States?

It is odd that a man whose main source of income during the majority of his adult life has always depended — like some politically-correct latter day version of Blanche DuBois — “on the kindness of strangers” [i.e. Americans who own businesses or those who work for companies which try and earn a profit] would choose this topic to express his sense of entitlement. Let’s just hope these comments don’t mean that the President is getting in touch with his inner plantation landlord.

In my opinion, a degree of humility and good politics would seemingly dictate that the president be especially deferential in this area [taxing Americans who work]. That he felt emboldened enough to chide us [working Americans] is very telling either about the man’s ego or his political philosophy. The political equivalent would be for Clinton to joke about draft dodgers or Bush II to joke about nepotism.

My only explanation is that the concept of humility is as foreign to this president as the concept of working for a living outside of government. I’m not against the concept of thanking the president, but when it comes to taxes and this ‘Cesar,’ rendering thanks unto a leech [taxfully speaking] strikes me as too 1984-ish.

Update: Tom Bevan from Real Clear Politics points out that Obama may not be so amused about tax protesters come November:

Maybe President Obama should stop doing fundraisers. Or maybe he should at least keep them closed to the media. Because it seems when President Obama is in front of a group of friendly Democrats, he just can’t help himself from playing the Comic-in-Chief and ridiculing his opponents. It’s good for a laugh from the partisan crowd, sure, but it often comes across to average folks (and, of course, to the opposition) as petty and/or unpresidential.

Obama may have fun mocking the Tea Party activists today,but if the political winds keep blowing the way they have recently (Virginia, New Jersey, Massachusetts) he probably won’t be nearly as ‘amused’ in November when they go from turning out at Tax Day protests to turning out at the polls.

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A Child’s Life May Depend On It

Jorge Plasencia, co-founder and chairman of Amigos For Kids, highlights the need for all of us to be proactive about possible child abuse or neglect which we may become aware of.

An excerpt from his column in the Miami Herald:

According to the U.S. Advisory Board on Child Abuse and Neglect, 41 percent of child fatalities, because of abuse or neglect, occur to children less than a year old. Seventy-five percent are children under the age of 4. These are not children who can escape their abusers. These are not children who can simply call 911 or file a restraining order or run away from home.

Please, please get involved. A child’s life could depend on you. Know some of the signs of abuse or neglect. Keep an eye out for: nervousness around adults, aggression toward adults or other children, inability to concentrate, dramatic changes in personality, interest in sexual activities that are not appropriate for the child’s age, frequent or unexplained bruises or injuries, low self-esteem and poor hygiene.

If you suspect abuse or neglect, report it! You can reach the Florida Abuse Hotline at 1-800-96-ABUSE (1-800-962-2873), or dial 911 to reach the police department if you sense a child is in immediate danger.

Article referenced is copied in full at end of post.

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A child’s life could depend on you

BY JORGE A. PLASENCIA – amigosforkids.org

April 9, 2010

Each year in the United States, almost one million children are abused or neglected by those most close to them. Almost 2,000 of these children die. In 1990, the grim reality of this abuse confronted our community.

The small body of Lazaro Figueroa, known as Baby Lollipops, was found beaten and malnourished in a cherry hedge on Miami Beach. Lazaro’s story inspired us to create Amigos For Kids, in 1991, an organization dedicated to preventing child abuse.

April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month. Amigos For Kids spearheads awareness efforts in our community, partnering with numerous entities including Miami-Dade County Public Schools. It is encouraging that we, as a community, designate this month to remind us to protect those who are most vulnerable and defenseless, though it is indeed tragic such a need exists.

The Department of Health and Human Services reports that the majority of abused children face neglect; the remainder withstand physical, sexual and emotional abuse. More than half of those children are abused by people whom they trust. Abusers can be parents, relatives, babysitters, teachers or coaches.

Child abuse does not discriminate and transcends gender or race. According to the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System, four children die each day as a result of neglect or abuse. Of the children who do not suffer fatal injuries at the hands of their abusers, many grow up to become, themselves, abusers — violence begetting violence in a cycle that many in America are all too familiar with.

According to the U.S. Advisory Board on Child Abuse and Neglect, 41 percent of child fatalities, because of abuse or neglect, occur to children less than a year old. Seventy-five percent are children under the age of 4. These are not children who can escape their abusers. These are not children who can simply call 911 or file a restraining order or run away from home.

Be their voice

These are children who depend on us, their neighbors and teachers and bus drivers and friends, to be a voice for them when they cannot speak. They depend on us to protect them, to recognize signs of abuse and take action to end this injustice.

Each week in this country, child-protection agencies receive more than 50,000 reports of suspected child-abuse cases. Child-protective agencies like Florida’s Department of Children & Families tell us that more than two-thirds of those reports provide sufficient cause for an investigation to be performed. But if we are reporting every case of child abuse, why do 2,000 American children still die at the hands of their abusers? Because we look the other way. We are busy. We do not want to get involved or overstep boundaries or tell someone else how to parent their child.

Please, please get involved. A child’s life could depend on you. Know some of the signs of abuse or neglect. Keep an eye out for: nervousness around adults, aggression toward adults or other children, inability to concentrate, dramatic changes in personality, interest in sexual activities that are not appropriate for the child’s age, frequent or unexplained bruises or injuries, low self-esteem and poor hygiene.

If you suspect abuse or neglect, report it! You can reach the Florida Abuse Hotline at 1-800-96-ABUSE (1-800-962-2873), or dial 911 to reach the police department if you sense a child is in immediate danger.

While reporting suspicions is imperative to halting child abuse, I firmly believe that we can do more to prevent it from occurring in the first place. We can call or write our elected officials to educate them about the abuse issues in our community. We can work with our school districts and faith-based communities to support programs for new parents. We can reach out to the families in our communities. We can keep a watchful eye out for families that abuse drugs and alcohol, have difficulty controlling anger or stress or appear uninterested in the care, nourishment or safety of their children.

We can provide a sympathetic ear, offer advice to those who turn to us, and, above all, trust our gut instincts. This is what Amigos For Kids works tirelessly to accomplish.

Save a life

Every child deserves to grow up in a happy home with loving and supportive caretakers. I was at a dinner a few years back in Washington, D.C., honoring Nancy Reagan. She was asked why she championed drug-free kids and made this her legacy with the “Just Say No” campaign.

She replied, “I felt if we made one child not try drugs, it was all worth it.”

While we sadly cannot ensure a happy home and loving parents for every child, I believe that after reading this, if one person decides to report a case of child abuse or neglect, we saved another life. After all, there is no excuse for child abuse.

Jorge A. Plasencia is cofounder and chairman of Amigos For Kids.

Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/04/09/v-print/1570449/a-childs-life-could-depend-on.html#ixzz0kjJXhoxO
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Renyel Pinto: The Fredo Corleone of relievers

At the risk of incurring great personal scorn, on this blog I have defended Fredo Corleone and the overall lack of GF knowledge rampant in our society.

Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more …

Renyel Pinto had a tough game in the Marlins win against the putrid New York Mets on Wednesday. He was predictably getting killed on the morning talk shows. The best line I heard came on the ESPN Deportes station [1450 AM] – Desayuno Deportivo – a caller said that he wanted he wanted Pinto to go far in MLB, … far away. Knowing that fans, like popular emails which are constantly forwarded, are almost never accurate, I wanted to get into the numbers.

There were 95 relief pitchers in the National League which logged more than 40 innings. Here is where Pinto ranked in various categories against those other pitchers:

  • Games pitched: 73 – 16th place
  • Strikeouts per 9 innings: 8.51 – tied for 30th place [with Tim Byrdak]
  • ERA: 3.23 – tied for 39th place [with Tim Byrdak]
  • Innings pitched: 61.1 – tied for 39th place [with Tim Byrdak]
  • HR’s allowed: 4 – Tied for 39th with numerous others [but not Tim Byrdak]
  • Pitches Per Plate Appearance: 4.05 – 73rd place [tied with Tim Byrdak]
  • Walks & Hits per innings pitched [WHIP]: 1.61 – 87th place

Of those 95 National League relievers who pitched more than 40 innings, only 19 were lefties. Here is where Pinto ranked in various categories against those lefty pitchers:

  • Games pitched: 73 – 8th place
  • Strikeouts per 9 innings: 8.51 – tied for 9th place [with Tim Byrdak]
  • ERA: 3.23 – tied for 11th place [with Tim Byrdak]
  • Innings pitched: 61.1 – tied for 5th place [with Tim Byrdak]
  • HR’s allowed: 4 – Tied for 6th with numerous others [but not Tim Byrdak – who inexplicably gave up 10]
  • Pitches Per Plate Appearance: 4.05 – 11th place [tied with Tim Byrdak]
  • Walks & Hits per innings pitched [WHIP]: 1.61 – 17th place

As usual, getting into the numbers led to something even more interesting, Pinto and fellow lefty Tim Byrdak practically had the exact same season in 2008.

Pinto’s WHIP is the one critical area where Pinto is as bad as local fans think he is [especially after a bad outing]. However, if Pinto’s control were to improve — he issued the most walks of any lefty NL reliever — he likely moves up from being an average reliever pitcher to one of the better ones. Better to have a pitcher who needs to improve his control rather than his ‘stuff.’

One other additional factor in Pinto’s favor. His age, he is 27. The average age for the lefty relievers was 30.5. Only five of the 19 lefty relievers were younger than Pinto. For two of those, D Herrera [CIN] & C Zavada [ARI], 2008 represented their first year as a full-time reliever. Another one, J O’Flaherty [ATL] missed most of 2008 with an injury. For W Wright [HOU], 2009 represented his 2nd year as a full-time reliever, as compared to 3 years for Pinto and S Burnett [PIT], the other younger lefty reliever.

Overall Renyel Pinto was an average reliever in 2008. Being a lefty, he has more value that an average right-handed relief pitcher and has showed good durability — between 58 and 64 innings pitched for the past 3 years. In addition, the fact that lefty relievers are typically older — indicating that pitchers need a lot of experience to handle that role properly — Pinto’s relative youth gives him even more of a comparative advantage.

Bottom line, Renyel Pinto is a valuable left-handed relief pitcher with excellent prospects for improvement given his age. So go ahead and boo, flog and request that he be traded every time he goes to a 3-1 count, but understand that you do so out of frustration rather than any appreciation about how pitchers develop to succeed in that role.

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The Moral Relativism of the DeWolf Perry Family

James DeWolf Perry VI – a Harvard University Ph.D. candidate concentrating on the Rhode Island slave trade – traveled to Cuba recently and saw “pure evil.” Alas, it had nothing to do with the Castro regime’s treatment of political dissidents or their abuse of Las Damas en Blanco. No, Mr. James DeWolf Perry VI saw pure evil in the 19th-century slave trade of his ancestors.

You see the DeWolf’s are making a movie and the price for filming in Cuba is to turn a blind eye to current events. Apparently, recognizing irony is not part of the Harvard Ph.D. program, so let’s spell it out for them.

To paraphrase the Bible, don’t point out the evil 19th century slave trader in your family’s history when you are making your own pact with another version of evil — a 21st century Gulag. At least we know what James DeWolf Perry XII will be doing. Documenting the sheer evil of his fellow traveling 21st century ancestors who sold out for the attention the academic equivalent of a Jerry Springer family throw down would bring [Incestuous twins bare all!].

Update: Posted April 9th: Mr. Perry [you will not be surprised] has a blog and responded [you should be surprised] to my post. He was kind enough to allow me to respond at length on his blog. Read the exchange, to date, here.

The Yahoo article referenced is copied in full at end of post.

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US family finds traces of slave-trade past in Cuba

By WILL WEISSERT, Associated Press Writer Will Weissert, Associated Press Writer
Mar 31, 2010

LA MADRUGA, Cuba – James DeWolf Perry VI’s great-great-great-great-great-grandfather used African slaves to grow coffee on this rocky hillside outside Havana, and to him its thorny weeds and small sugar plots feel haunted.

“Do you feel the ghost of James DeWolf out here?” asks Katrina Browne, Perry’s distant cousin.

“Yes,” he replies, drawing out the word in a long, awkward breath.

Both are descendants of the DeWolfs of Bristol, Rhode Island, who became the biggest slave-trading family in U.S. history, shipping well over 11,000 Africans to the Americas between 1769 and 1820. It was a business that made the family patriarch, James DeWolf, America’s second-wealthiest man.

The cousins came to Cuba this week as part of a visit by the U.S. replica of the 19th-century slave ship Amistad — which on Wednesday wrapped up a 10-day educational mission to the island.

For Perry and Browne it’s been a journey into their family’s troubling past that is far more personal than scouring genealogy records or government archives.

Between 1790 and 1821, more than 240,000 enslaved Africans were brought to Havana, according to customs data, including the 53 captives who rebelled aboard the original Amistad in 1839, seizing the ship and sailing up the U.S. East Coast. The Supreme Court eventually granted them freedom — an inspiring end to a shameful chapter in America and Cuba’s shared history.

Perry and Browne visited the sugar-growing, cattle-raising town of La Madruga, 30 miles southeast of the capital, hoping to find vestiges of what was once a family plantation called “Mount Hope.”

“To gaze at these hills, to be in his fields, on the land that was his holdings, it’s another way to make a tangible connection,” Perry, a Harvard University Ph.D. candidate concentrating on the Rhode Island slave trade, said of James DeWolf.

“There’s no hiding the reality when you see the land.”

Browne, who made a documentary of her ancestors’ rum-for-slaves business, noted how the royal palm trees swaying in the hot breeze matched drawings in the diary of one of the family’s overseers.

“It’s sheer evil,” she said.

Some of what likely encompassed Mount Hope is now land controlled by Cuba’s armed forces. But a dusty back road, deeply rutted by tractors and horse-drawn carts, leads to stony highlands described in family records.

There isn’t much there now, apart from scarecrows guarding cane fields and banana trees, and an occasional cow. A nearby village is known today as “La Esperanza,” or “Hope,” though locals are unsure whether the name has anything to do with the DeWolfs.

James DeWolf owned Mount Hope until his death in 1837. He represented Rhode Island in the U.S. Senate, and though the state outlawed the slave trade in 1787, it continued to profit enormously for decades afterward — belying the popularly held belief that slavery was strictly a southern phenomenon.

Most of the DeWolfs’ African captives were sold at auction in South Carolina or Havana. If prices in the U.S. fell, the family would work the slaves on at least five Cuban plantations producing coffee, sugar and molasses until they could fetch higher prices.

Perry said the Cuban operations were a key source of income, but mostly served as a side business to stoke the DeWolfs’ U.S. slave trade operation.

The U.S. banned the slave trade in 1808, but Browne said family letters indicate the DeWolfs continued dealing in African captives until the 1840s by going through Cuba. They also got help from a DeWolf brother-in-law, who served as a customs inspector in Bristol — thus ensuring family slave ships continued to come and go.

Browne wrote, co-directed and co-produced “Traces of the Trade,” a 2008 documentary detailing how her ancestors used a Bristol distillery to make rum, which they traded for African captives.

She learned of the DeWolf past 14 years ago, when her 88-year-old grandmother compiled a family history. Browne began digging and found she had been exposed to her family’s ugly secrets as a child. A favorite family nursery rhyme “Adjua and Pauledore,” she discovered, was really about child slaves James DeWolf gave his wife for Christmas one year.

“Everything I learned just got worse and worse,” she said, “and flew in the face of my image of my family as good, sensible northerners.”

For her documentary, Browne contacted 200 DeWolf descendants. In 2001, she, Perry and eight other cousins retraced the so-called “Slave Triangle,” traveling from Rhode Island to the coast of Ghana and then to Cuba.

While on the island, they used machetes to hack through jungle south of Havana, reaching ruined walls and other relics of another family plantation called “Noah’s Ark.”

For that trip, Browne hired a Cuban producer who put together a film crew, obtained necessary government permits and scouted locations.

This time, the communist government was even more cooperative — as it often is on U.S. historical projects, especially those exploring unsavory aspects of America’s past.

Authorities granted Browne and Perry special access to archives, and the pair was featured on state television. That support helped them search customs books for records of Bristol-registered vessels at Cuba’s National Archives and to screen her documentary. When shown the film, some Afro-Cubans choked back sobs.

Perry and Browne, both 42, say they did not inherit proceeds from the slave trade because family records indicate James DeWolf’s immediate descendants squandered the fortune within two generations.

“To that, I say, ‘Thank goodness.’ I would not want to find out that I grew up wealthy because of that,” Perry said.

Still, he said there is no doubt his family name and roots opened educational and professional doors. Other branches of the family did receive large inheritances, and establishing whether any of DeWolf’s thousands of descendants got slave proceeds is difficult.

Browne said 140 of the 200 relatives she contacted for the documentary didn’t respond. Many who did expressed concerns, including worries activists might demand reparations.

Browne supports payments to Americans of African descent to “level the playing field,” not “out of guilt, but grief,” though she is not in favor of cutting personal checks to individuals.

“The idea is ‘repair’,” she said. “And that is best done through more systemic efforts — public and private — to help people access the American dream.”

While both she and Perry have worked to uncover their family’s role, they say no Americans — even those whose descendants came to the U.S. after slavery was abolished — should feel unaffected. The early U.S. economy so relied on slavery that it fueled a boom, making America an attractive destination for immigrants, they maintain.

“None of us,” Perry said, “are untouched by the legacy of slavery today.”
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Unholy Currents

The current President of the United States is Barack Hussein Obama.
The current MLB champions are the New York Yankees.
The current NBA champions are the Los Angeles Lakers.
The current NCAA basketball champions are the Duke Blue Devils, who feature a coach who is simultaneously profane and sanctimonious.

Even The Book of Revelation is not this gloomy.

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Gaby Sanchez vs Johan Santana

Looking for a bright spot in the loss to the hated and gratefully-seemingly-cursed New York Mets, I found it in Gaby Sanchez’s at bats against Johan Santana.

As a Dodger fan long ago, I remember reading in Bill James 1985 Abstract about Orel Hershiser. Although he didn’t make it to the majors until he was 25, in his 2nd year he had a consecutive scoreless innings streak of 34 in 1984. Easy to see now that it was a predictor of things to come, with Hershiser setting the MLB record for consecutive scoreless innings of 58 in his glorious year of 1988.

But in the spring of 1985, Hershiser had his doubters. In the type of analysis which would make Bill James … Bill James, he warned [I paraphrase as I could not find my 1985 BJBA, no doubt pilfered by close friend and book hog / wanna-be E-bay vendor, J. Garcia] those doubters that the list of pitchers who had tossed more than 30 shutout innings in the history of MLB was very short indeed. In effect, average players rarely accomplish things which are rare in MLB history. The James style was to state that if Hershiser turned out to be an average pitcher, that would be unusual.

While Gaby Sanchez — pride of Miami Brito, a fine school, but no Christopher Columbus] — did nothing rare in yesterday’s game, but he did do something unusually good for a young player given the circumstances.

Playing in the season opener in New York, in front of a big crowd and facing one of the best pitchers in MLB in his first 2 at bats, Sanchez had the following results:

  • 3rd inning vs Santana, 11 pitch at bat with six foul balls and ended by hitting a sharp single up the middle.
  • 5th inning vs Santana, 8 pitch at bat with three foul balls and ended by hitting a fly ball to right.
  • 7th inning vs Nieves, doubled to left on the 3rd pitch of the at bat.
  • 9th inning vs Rodriguez, 5 pitch at bat with 1 foul ball and lining out out to center.

The at bat in the 7th is also interesting because it came after the Marlins defensively disastrous bottom of the 6th, in which Sanchez was also charged with an error. So after showing great patience and plate discipline with Santana, Sanchez showed that he could be aggressive if the situation allowed and that he did not allow his fielding miscue to affect his at bat.

My point is not that yesterday’s game means that Sanchez will be a good MLB hitter, it is to say that players who are not good MLB hitters rarely have the type of hitting game Gaby Sanchez had yesterday.

By the way, speaking of short lists. The list of MLB pitchers with 40 or more consecutive scoreless innings have the following characteristics [see list below]:

  • Streak has been accomplished 19 times in MLB history
  • Streak has been accomplished only 7 times since 1967
  • Streak has been accomplished only 3 times since 1969 [did MLB hitters wear black armbands as a protest in 1968?]. Those pitchers are:
  1. Orel Hershiser in 1988
  2. Brandon Webb in 2007
  3. Luis Tiant in 1972
  • Number of pitchers to appear on the list twice: Two
  1. Walter Johnson
  2. Luis Clemente (Vega) Tiant
    If you haven’t seen it, please check out the Farrelly brothers documentary about Tiant
    The Lost Son of Havana
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