RINGOLSBY: Hamilton's honesty refreshing
By Tracy Ringolsby, Rocky Mountain News
Published July 18, 2008 at 12:05 a.m.
Chris McGrath © Getty
Josh Hamilton gestures during his record-setting first round of the All-Star Home Run Derby. Hamilton blasted 28 home runs in the first round.
MILE HIGH WATCH
* Eric Young, whose home run in the first home-field at-bat in the history of the franchise, will get a chance to officially retire as a Rockies player.
Young now works for ESPN, but plans are for him to sign a Rockies contract in September so he can have a day on which to officially retire. It's similar to what the Rockies did with Vinny Castilla, another fan favorite from the team's original roster.
* Right-handed pitcher Aaron Cook's three-inning effort in Tuesday's All-Star Game was the first time a pitcher worked more than two innings in the Midsummer Classic since 1994, when Greg Maddux pitched the first three innings in the National League's 8-7, 10-inning win in Pittsburgh, and only the second three-inning effort in an All-Star Game since 1988.
By contrast, in 1967, when the NL pulled out a 2-1, 15-inning win over the AL, four pitchers worked three innings - Juan Marichal, Ferguson Jenkins, Dean Chance and Gary Peters - and Catfish Hunter worked the final five innings for the AL and got the loss.
* Left-hander Daniel Schlereth, a Highlands Ranch High School graduate and the Diamondbacks' first-round draft pick out of the University of Arizona, has worked out details with the Diamondbacks and is headed to rookie-level Missoula. Schlereth is believed to have received slightly more than $1.3 million as a bonus. Some concerns were raised the day after the draft when Schlereth was unable to pitch for Arizona in the NCAA Super Regional. It turned out to be a strained lat muscle, however, and Schlereth got a green light from doctors after undergoing a physical Tuesday.
* Left-hander Mike Hampton is in the final year of the eight-year, $121 million deal he signed with the Rockies, and each day the future looks less promising. Out since August 2005, initially because of two elbow surgeries, he went on the disabled list this year after straining a pectoral muscle while warming up for his first start. Then, on Wednesday, making the sixth start of his minor league medical rehabilitation assignment, Hampton came out after two innings of his appearance with Double-A Mississippi because of a strained groin.
NUMBERS GAME
Seven players who were leading the majors in home runs have been left off an All-Star team, including Ryan Howard of Philadelphia this season, according to baseball info guru Bill Arnold. Howard had 28 home runs at the break. The other six leaders at the break who weren't an All-Star: Mickey Tettleton, Detroit, 24 homers, 1993; Jose Canseco, Oakland, 21, 1991; Dave Kingman, Oakland, 23, 1984; Frank Howard, Washington, 24, 1967; Al Rosen, Cleveland, 25, 1950; Hank Greenberg, Detroit, 25, 1935.
ALL-STAR TRIVIA
Among the oddities that the Elias Sports Bureau found in this year's All-Star Game:
* Florida second baseman Dan Uggla on Tuesday became the first big-leaguer to commit three errors, strike out three times and hit into a double play in a regular-season, All-Star or postseason game since 1940.
* Tampa Bay third baseman Evan Longoria was the first rookie to drive in a run in an All-Star contest since the Yankees' Tom Tresh in 1962.
* Matt Holiday and J.D. Drew joined Joe DiMaggio (1939), Willie Mays (1960), Stan Musial (1960) and Greg Luzinski (1977) as the only outfielders to homer in an All-Star Game at Yankee Stadium.
* All 63 available All-Stars were used in Tuesday's game, surpassing the previous record, set in 2002, of 60 players used.
HE SAID IT
"The older ballparks without great tradition, those aren't much fun to go to. But when you go to Yankee Stadium or a park like Wrigley or Fenway, you can put up with the bad clubhouses or the stench when you walk from the clubhouse to the dugout."
Dan Haren, Arizona right-handed pitcher, on experiencing Yankee Stadium on Tuesday.
Josh Hamilton is more than a baseball feel-good story. He's an old-fashioned success story.
He's a guy who came out of high school considered one of the most talented baseball players in history. He had a squeaky-clean reputation off the field to go with his high level of talent on it.
And then, like so many people in every walk of life, he ran into a potentially fatal detour. He fell in with the wrong crowd.
He got hooked on drugs and alcohol. His body became a tattoo emporium. He faded into the background.
The success is that Hamilton got a second chance, and not only is taking advantage of it, but is using his own story to help others, in less public walks of life, deal with similar mistakes.
He was out of baseball for three years. Now, two years after his return, he was not only in the All-Star Game earlier this week, voted onto the American League team by the fans, but he's got a shot at winning the season's MVP award, even if his team isn't a contender.
For all that is going right, Hamilton doesn't hesitate to talk about what went wrong. During his media moments in New York this week he never backed off telling anyone who would listen about eight trips to rehab, the 26 tattoos and the three years of his life that were wiped out.
A born-again Christian, he is not afraid to use his public exposure to speak of the ills that threatened his life in hopes that he can reach others who face similar challenges.
"I pray the more successful I am, the more people will listen," he said.
Hamilton understands what such bigger-than-life figures as Pete Rose, Mark McGwire, Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens have failed to grasp - the public wants to forgive. It wants to have a reason to care for its fallen stars. All it takes is the star to admit his mistakes, which Hamilton has done.
"I've been honest about everything," he said. "I've taken responsibility. I haven't made excuses."
He has, however, made an impact on the lives of others.
Infield chatter
* Minnesota, looking for a right-handed run producer, has approached Seattle about third baseman Adrian Beltre.
* Right-handed pitcher Brett Myers makes his fourth minor league start Friday for Single-A Clearwater with the plan that he will rejoin the Phillies on Saturday and return to the rotation Wednesday.
* Right-handed pitcher Freddy Garcia, who has spent the year recovering from labrum surgery, plans to work out for a dozen teams, including the Yankees and Mets.
The rotation
There have already been three managerial firings - the Mets, Seattle and Toronto - and one general manager dismissal.
There will be more as the season resumes.
Five management types on the hot seat:
* Mets general manager Omar Minaya. Manager Willie Randolph took the initial hit for the Mets' failings the last two seasons. If the Mets don't make a division-winning push, look for Minaya to be called on the carpet.
* Dodgers GM Ned Colletti has been allowed to spend as much money as anyone not on the East Coast, but has been haunted by deals that backfired. With the National League West a mess, a title is expected, and manager Joe Torre won't be the fall guy for failure.
* Toronto GM J.P. Ricciardi is on his fourth manager - Cito Gaston - and word is the decision to bring back Gaston was not welcomed by Ricciardi, who can't micromanage Gaston like he did the predecessors. General managers can survive one or two managerial firings, but rarely do they hang on long after a third.
* Washington GM Jim Bowden was linked in published reports to baseball's investigation into officials skimming money from their operations in the Dominican Republic. Bowden has denied the accusations, but the caution sign is flashing.
* Houston manager Cecil Cooper. The team is dysfunctional. Ed Wade is the third GM in four years, so ownership won't make him the scapegoat - yet. That puts Cooper on the ledge.
Out in left field
Dennis Mascari of Fans Forever Inc., has devised a fitting memorial for devoted Chicago Cubs fans, according to reports out of the Windy City.
Along with the operators of Bohemian National Cemetery on Chicago's North Side, Mascari is planning to build a 24-foot ivy-covered wall designed to look like the center field barrier at Wrigley Field. The wall will include 280 niches for urns containing the ashes of deceased Cubbie supporters. The grounds will include a stained glass scoreboard and a bronze baseball card with a photo of the deceased placed beside each "eternal skybox." There's even talk of piping in radio broadcasts of Cubs games so no one alive or dead need miss a game.
Closing statement
Spent the last week at Shea Stadium and Yankee Stadium, the two New York City ballparks that are in their final days.
Both the Yankees and Mets move into new digs next season. It's time. Shea Stadium is a sty. It's hard to believe it actually opened the year after Dodger Stadium. And when it comes to nostalgia, all that needs to be known is that the Mets spend most of their time talking about the 1969 team, and little else.
Yankee Stadium has outlived its usefulness, too. It has a bigger-than-life reputation, and it has been the site of many monumental moments, but the truth is the current facility underwent such a massive overhaul that the Yankees had to play at Shea Stadium in 1974 and 1975.
The dimensions are different than the original. The monuments were moved. Even the facade has changed. The stadium being built actually looks more like the original Yankee Stadium than the current one.
Post your comment
Registration is required. Click here to create your free user account, or login below.
Comments are the sole responsibility of the person posting them. You agree not to post comments that are off topic, defamatory, obscene, abusive, threatening or an invasion of privacy. Violators may be banned. Click here for our full user agreement.
Featured
-
Denver turns 150
Read about the city's history, look at old photos and see a list of influential Denverites.
-
Mount Crushmore
Which four Broncos greats should be immortalized on Mount Crushmore? Vote here.
-
Winter Escapes
Your insider’s guide to the copious joys of the coolest season.
-
Rocky Multimedia
The news comes alive in our videos and slide shows. Catch up on what's happening today.
-
Weekend plans?
Figure out things to do this weekend with the help of our entertainment calendar.
-
Bronco Dean's rant
Listen to Bronco Dean's pregame rant on the Raiders.
-
Season To Share
The Post-News Season To Share campaign provides grants to area nonprofits.
-
The Rocky @ 150 Years
The Rocky was there when Colorado became a state in 1876. Read our coverage.
-
A Dozen on Denver
And the winner is... Robert Ziegler! See the whole fiction series by clicking here.





July 18, 2008
12:36 p.m.
Suggest removal
arvada_mark writes:
Good piece, Cowboy. I really like what Hamilton said about making no excuses & taking full responsibility for his actions. Ultimately, being a man has a lot to do with those 2 mentalities. And he is one heck of a ball player to boot. He, alone, has given me a pair of losses in one of my fantasy leagues. I'm not overly impressed with his derby showing (it's too much like the dunk contest where the best just don't participate in it anymore), but I am impressed with the way he has looked his demons in the eye all while on a public stage. I'm glad he decided to cash that winning Lotto ticket that is his talent on the field. Good luck to him.
Also, I didn't realize Freddy Garcia wasn't on anybody's roster. If he is healthy, wow, that could be the push the Yanks need. Of coarse, the Mets, with Perdo's ever-changing health status, could also use the help.