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Introducing Teny Ymota and His Take on the Orioles + Salute to Columbia Baseball

I've decided to let the larger world of cyberspace meet one of my alter egos, Teny Ymota.
It is an acronym for The Earl of NY Your Man On The Aisle. The Earl of course is homage to the late great Hall of Fame Baltimore Orioles manager Earl Weaver. Your Man On The Aisle comes from my need for aisle seats at games and concerts and plays because of my osteo-arthritic knees. Forgive me if this is TMI.

The 2016 Orioles surprised us all with a seven-game winning streak to start the season. They have now cooled off and fallen a half-game behind the Red Sox as the first week of May begins.

Only overly emotional baseball-mad people agonize over early season standings - did someone call me? No, seriously folks, standings don't really mean anything until late summer. With the introduction of two wild cards in each league, they may mean even less. But you do see trends by May & as always solid starting pitching rotations is a big key.

The Orioles have gotten surprisingly good work from their young staff although none of them have yet pitched late into games. I like the idea of young right-handers Kevin Gausman, Tyler Wilson, and Mike Wright all getting chances to succeed in the rotation.

The shoulder issue of another right-hander free agent acquisition Yovanni Gallardo has given the youngsters their chance to step up. Veterans Chris Tillman and Ubaldo Jimenez round out the rest of the all right-handed staff.

Closer Zach Britton sprained his ankle Sat. night trying to make a great play on a drag bunt. It doesn't look serious enough to send him to the DL. Zach has vastly improved his defense on the mound and his loss for any length of time would be very serious.

The Birds were not so lucky with shortstop JJ Hardy who will be out for over a month.
He suffered a hairline foot fracture when he fouled a ball off of it. Hardy is a very underrated defensive shortstop whose bat has come alive again this year.

The Orioles do have in-house replacements. Manny Machado, the shortstop of the future who almost miraculously four years ago became a great third baseman with no experience at the position, can slide over to short. Supersub Ryan Flaherty can fill in at third which will probably be the first realignment that manager Buck Showalter tries.

I can also foresee former Reds shortstop Paul Janish coming up soon from Norfolk. He's a better shortstop than Flaherty and we know how well Manny can play third. I think Machado is a mature enough of a pro now to handle either position until Hardy's return.

There is also the possibility that another free agent pickup Pedro Alvarez could go to the hot corner. He's no defensive whiz - Pirate fans learned that - but he's kinda young to be a dh and he is beginning to hit a little. Alvarez could also switch positions for a while with first baseman Chris Davis who is a far better athlete and baserunner than people realize.

I have always loved Ryan Flaherty and what he has meant to the team but his long-term future as an Oriole seems very cloudy now. The Orioles must see what they have in Hyun Soo Kim, the new outfielder from Korea. Also playing time is needed for Nolan Reimold and Rule 5 rookie Joey Rickard in the outfield which means another newcomer Mark Trumbo goes to DH where Alvarez has been for most of the year.

Never a dull moment in Orioleland but the J. J. Hardy injury will mean more defensive uncertainty than anyone wanted.

ON THE COLLEGE FRONT - The Columbia Lions finished in a tie for second with Penn in the Gehrig Division of the Ivy League. They got bragging rights for second because they beat the Quakers three out of four this past weekend. But Princeton clinched the crown by winning four at Cornell. Dartmouth still could catch Yale for the Rolfe division crown. Winner of the Rolfe plays Gehrig winner Princeton with the NCAA bid on the line.

The 11 members of the Columbia Class of 2016 finished with the second most wins in school history, topped only by the Class of 2015 that won three Ivy League titles in a row and in 2015 won three games in the Miami regional.

The class of 2016 can still hang their heads high. Left fielder Robb Paller slugged many home runs and hit for a high average in the course of his final season. Starter Adam Cline pitched solidly as did Kevin Roy before he succumbed to elbow woes that curtailed his last college season.

If ever a save was gotten in the sixth inning of a game, it was provided by senior pitcher George Thanopoulos who struck out two Quakers with the bases loaded in the Lions 9-8 win in Saturday's second game. Senior Thomas Crispi got the win and seniors Logan Bowyer, John Kinne, and Nick McGuire went a combined 9-13 with 5 RBI and 7 runs scored in their final appearance as Lions.

Quite a legacy, fellows, and thanks for the memories.

NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT . . .
Here's a Teny Ymota tip from the arts - Check out "Born To Be Blue," a 97-minute film inspired by the tumultuous artistic life of jazz trumpeter-singer Chet Baker. It stars the very talented music-loving Ethan Hawke in the Baker role.

A marvelous actress from London of Nigerian-Scottish descent Carmen Ejogo shines in the role of a composite of the women in Baker's life. The film is directed by Robert Budreau. Its images and sounds have stayed with me despite seeing it a few weeks ago.

That's all for now - always remember: Take it but take it.
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Late April Reflections on Baltimore Orioles and Columbia Lions

Readers of this blog will know that I am passionate about one pro team the Baltimore Orioles and the teams of my two alma maters Columbia and Wisconsin esp. baseball and basketball. (It remains maddening that Wisconsin gave up baseball in the late 1980s and remains the only Big Ten (or Big Fourteen) school without a baseball team. And no real hope that situation will change in the foreseeable future.)

The Orioles started 2016 with seven wins in a row - a team record for the early going and the first 7-game winning streak for my Birds in many years. They have come down to earth now with an 11-6 record, but they still lead the AL East by three games in loss column over the Red Sox with the Blue Jays beginning to make some noises.

Though under .500, the Rays and Yankees should not be counted out because they have the pitching to compete (though the Yankee starters have been inconsistent so far and their bats largely missing in action).

I still feel that the only possible runaway team in MLB this year could be the Cubs - 14-5 as I post this blog. But the Pirates and Cardinals will have something to say about that.

We must wait until the end of May before any real assessment of the season can begin. And even that milepost doesn't mean as much anymore because major additions to rosters can be made via trades until July 31.

On the college scene, Columbia basketball celebrated its winningest season ever with a farewell banquet to its four remarkable seniors and coach Kyle Smith who is heading back to the west coast as head coach of the U of San Francisco Dons, coached at one time by Phil Woolpert and Pete Newell and alma mater of Bill Russell and KC Jones.

Senior forwards Isaac Cohen and Alex Rosenberg and guards Maado Lo and Grant Mullins
all spoke with humor and emotion at the banquet last week. Lo and Mullins are likely to continue their careers next year - the quick sharp-shooting Lo with a chance for the NBA and Mullins with one year of eligibility left because a concussion kept him idle for over a year.

Meanwhile, Columbia's chance for an unprecedented baseball four-peat in the Ivy League is hanging by a thread. They will need a lot of help from Cornell who will play division leader Princeton four times this weekend while Columbia ends the regular season with two at Penn on Friday and two at home on Saturday.

The Lions at least kept Princeton from celebrating on Columbia's Satow Stadium at Robertson Field this weekend. They won three out of four despite the presence of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie whose son Andrew is a senior catcher for the Tigers.
Princeton still leads Penn by one game and Columbia by three with four to go.

I must end on a melancholy note. Columbia and a remarkably wide swath of America are mourning the passing of Bill Campbell, 75, who succumbed to a long battle with cancer last week. He was a Columbia football captain - class of 1962, and a former Columbia football coach who moved to Silicon Valley to become a major player in the computer industry.

No Columbia athlete will ever Campbell's #67 again. And that number is now painted on the baseball field and of course will be on prominent display in the fall on Robert Kraft Field at Lawrence Wien Stadium at the Baker Field complex.

That's all for now. Always remember: Take it easy but take it!

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