Cameras caught San Francisco Giants player Pablo Sandoval talking to his bat just before hitting two home runs to help defeat the San Diego Padres, 7-2, at PETCO Park on Monday. If the footage of the Panda acting like some burn-out on Mission Street wasn't so cute, it would really be disturbing.
The cuddly 240-pound third baseman was spotted in the dugout sweetly addressing his bat before going deep in the first and fourth innings off Tim Stauffer. The Bat Whisperer's two homers backed Madison Bumgarner's 13-strikeout gem.
"Just get some hits," said Sandoval of his apparent one-way conversation. "That's what I told him."
Asked if the wood talked back after the motivational talk, the Panda said," Yeah, he said something when I hit it."
Not a nice way to treat a friend. Tony Robbins would not approve.
It was the 17th and 18 home runs of the season for the popular Giants player and his third two-homer game of his career.
Maybe Sandoval's Mark Fidrych routine could help the rest of the Giants players bats. The team is still seven games behind the Arizona Diamondbacks.
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Showing posts with label San Francisco Giants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Francisco Giants. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 6, 2011
Thursday, August 25, 2011
Abby Wambach and Megan Rapinoe Go Bear at Giants Game
While U.S. Women's World Cup soccer star Hope Solo is taking it all off for a magazine photo spread, teammates Abby Wambach and Megan Rapinoe are going bare too-- make that panda bear.
Wambach and Rapinoe were spotted at last night's San Diego Padres/San Francisco Giants game at AT&T Park wearing panda bear hats which were, hopefully, in support of the Giants third baseman Pablo Sandoval and not for the Chinese soccer team.
"Kung Fu Panda," as the chubby Sandoval was allegedly nicknamed by teammate Barry Zito, is a fan favorite in the city of the World Champions.
Not much has been seen of the star forward and mid-fielder since losing to Japan in the Women's World Cup championship game last month. Maybe it's because Wambach and Rapinoe, who hails from northern California, have been covered up by the floppy-eared panda hats.
If they were trying to go incognito, the two teammates missed their goal. Oops, too soon? They were pretty obvious in the crowd of over 41,000.
The Giants won 2-1, behind the pitching of Tim Lincecum.
Kung Fu Panda went 0-for-3.
Wambach and Rapinoe were spotted at last night's San Diego Padres/San Francisco Giants game at AT&T Park wearing panda bear hats which were, hopefully, in support of the Giants third baseman Pablo Sandoval and not for the Chinese soccer team.
"Kung Fu Panda," as the chubby Sandoval was allegedly nicknamed by teammate Barry Zito, is a fan favorite in the city of the World Champions.
Not much has been seen of the star forward and mid-fielder since losing to Japan in the Women's World Cup championship game last month. Maybe it's because Wambach and Rapinoe, who hails from northern California, have been covered up by the floppy-eared panda hats.
If they were trying to go incognito, the two teammates missed their goal. Oops, too soon? They were pretty obvious in the crowd of over 41,000.
The Giants won 2-1, behind the pitching of Tim Lincecum.
Kung Fu Panda went 0-for-3.
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
World Series Champs Giants Visit White House; President Obama Admits He Fears The Beard
The San Francisco Giants, 2010 World Series Champions, visited President Obama at the White House yesterday. The nation's number one baseball fan called the team, "Characters with character," then singled out out Giants closer Brian Wilson by asking," Where's the guy with the beard?" Obama looked at Wilson's Grizzly Adams-type facial hair, shook his head and said, "I do fear it."
Obama, taking a break from his budget battle, met with the Giants yesterday afternoon in the East Room of the White House and wished the team well in it's quest to defend it's World Series Championship unless it was against his beloved Chicago White Sox. "Which right now isn't a sure thing," he joked about his struggling home team.
The President shook hands with the players and mingled with a gaggle of San Francisco politicians including former mayors and House Minority Leader, Nancy Pelosi.
Besides seeking out the free spirit Wilson, Obama sounded like he feels a kinship with Tim "The Freak" Lincecum and the rest of the team's collection of castoffs and misfits.
"The Giants may be a little different, but know how to win," said Obama, a knowledgeable baseball fan.
Obama congratulated the Giants for their miraculous season, where they won their first World Series Championship since moving to San Francisco from New York 53 years ago.
The President got to hang with one of his idols once again, Willie Mays-- who was once a guest on Air Force One during a trip to the 2009 All-Star Game. Mays presented the Leader of the Free World with a Giants jersey signed by the team. Obama joked about his flight with the baseball great, Mays.
"Very rarely, when I'm on Air Force One, am I the second most important guy on there," he said. "Everyone was passing me by-- 'Can I get you something Mr. Mays?'"
The President lauded the team for efforts to support injured U.S. troops and praised the players for being the first American sports team to make an "It Gets Better" video to help gay and lesbian youths who have been bullied.
Giants manager, Bruce Bochy, summed up the visit by saying," Certainly, we were all honored to be there. It's quite a privilege."
He was probably more thankful the outlandish Wilson didn't wear a skin-tight Lycra tuxedo.
Obama, taking a break from his budget battle, met with the Giants yesterday afternoon in the East Room of the White House and wished the team well in it's quest to defend it's World Series Championship unless it was against his beloved Chicago White Sox. "Which right now isn't a sure thing," he joked about his struggling home team.
The President shook hands with the players and mingled with a gaggle of San Francisco politicians including former mayors and House Minority Leader, Nancy Pelosi.
Besides seeking out the free spirit Wilson, Obama sounded like he feels a kinship with Tim "The Freak" Lincecum and the rest of the team's collection of castoffs and misfits.
"The Giants may be a little different, but know how to win," said Obama, a knowledgeable baseball fan.
Obama congratulated the Giants for their miraculous season, where they won their first World Series Championship since moving to San Francisco from New York 53 years ago.
The President got to hang with one of his idols once again, Willie Mays-- who was once a guest on Air Force One during a trip to the 2009 All-Star Game. Mays presented the Leader of the Free World with a Giants jersey signed by the team. Obama joked about his flight with the baseball great, Mays.
"Very rarely, when I'm on Air Force One, am I the second most important guy on there," he said. "Everyone was passing me by-- 'Can I get you something Mr. Mays?'"
The President lauded the team for efforts to support injured U.S. troops and praised the players for being the first American sports team to make an "It Gets Better" video to help gay and lesbian youths who have been bullied.
Giants manager, Bruce Bochy, summed up the visit by saying," Certainly, we were all honored to be there. It's quite a privilege."
He was probably more thankful the outlandish Wilson didn't wear a skin-tight Lycra tuxedo.
Monday, July 25, 2011
San Francisco Giants Plan To Use Falcons To Halt Seagull Invasion
The invasion of seagulls swarming down into the stands at AT&T Park during San Francisco Giants games has gotten so bad the team is planning on using falcons to disperse the invading flocks.
The huge Western Gulls begin swooping down right around the seventh inning stretch to grab discarded food and even snag ball park treats from fan's hands.
By the ninth inning, the attacks in the stands sometimes looks like the scene from "The Wizard of Oz" when the flying monkeys dismantle the Tin Man and unstuff the Scarecrow. To some fans getting pooped on the head is a worse fate. I don't think seagull look-alike, Tim Lincecum, getting plopped on his cap would consider it good luck either.
Maybe the birds come late to catch a glimpse of closer Brian Wilson mopping up. Who knows what's nesting in his beard.
The nuisance has increased steadily over the past decade since the stadium opened in 2000, but now, the birds have fans literally running for cover. The giant bird's diet consists of garbage, eggs, other birds, fish and roadkill. Apparently they eat anything in their paths.
"We've seen an increase in the birds," said Jorge Costa, Giant's operations manager. "And the behavior seems to be more aggressive. They've started flying around and trying to go into the stands while the game's in progress. That's unusual for them."
Experts think the gulls are attracted to AT&T Park from nests on Alcatraz Island and by the activity of the fans.
"They probably see the lights on, or in the afternoon, they probably see the crowd," said Dan Murphy, Golden Gate Audubon volunteer. "When the crowd starts thinning, they just show up."
To combat the invasion, the Giants are considering hiring a commercial falconer company to ward off the pests. The cost to the team is estimated to be around $100,000 per year.
In San Francisco--the Ground Zero of politically correctness-- I'm sure the falcons will be used to only scare the invading scavengers. No dirty birds will be harmed in the process.
The huge Western Gulls begin swooping down right around the seventh inning stretch to grab discarded food and even snag ball park treats from fan's hands.
By the ninth inning, the attacks in the stands sometimes looks like the scene from "The Wizard of Oz" when the flying monkeys dismantle the Tin Man and unstuff the Scarecrow. To some fans getting pooped on the head is a worse fate. I don't think seagull look-alike, Tim Lincecum, getting plopped on his cap would consider it good luck either.
Maybe the birds come late to catch a glimpse of closer Brian Wilson mopping up. Who knows what's nesting in his beard.
The nuisance has increased steadily over the past decade since the stadium opened in 2000, but now, the birds have fans literally running for cover. The giant bird's diet consists of garbage, eggs, other birds, fish and roadkill. Apparently they eat anything in their paths.
"We've seen an increase in the birds," said Jorge Costa, Giant's operations manager. "And the behavior seems to be more aggressive. They've started flying around and trying to go into the stands while the game's in progress. That's unusual for them."
Experts think the gulls are attracted to AT&T Park from nests on Alcatraz Island and by the activity of the fans.
"They probably see the lights on, or in the afternoon, they probably see the crowd," said Dan Murphy, Golden Gate Audubon volunteer. "When the crowd starts thinning, they just show up."
To combat the invasion, the Giants are considering hiring a commercial falconer company to ward off the pests. The cost to the team is estimated to be around $100,000 per year.
In San Francisco--the Ground Zero of politically correctness-- I'm sure the falcons will be used to only scare the invading scavengers. No dirty birds will be harmed in the process.
Labels:
Brian Wilson,
San Francisco Giants,
Tim Lincecum
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Dodgers Hire Ex-NYC Police Commish To Assess Stadium Security
The Los Angeles Dodgers have hired former NYC Police Commissioner and LAPD Cheif William Bratton to evaluate security policies and procedures at Dodger Stadium after a 41 year-old man was severely beaten in the stadium parking on Opening Day.
Hundreds of people formed a prayer vigil outside County-USC Hospital in Los Angeles in support of the "critically-injured" San Francisco Giants fan while the announcement to hire Bratton was made.
Security at Dodger Stadium was questioned after Bryon Stow was set upon by two men on March 31. Stow, a paramedic from Santa Clara, is in a medically-induced coma, according to a spokesman from the LAPD. Stow suffered a fractured skull and trauma to his brain said his neurologist, Dr. Gabriel Zada.
The beating has outraged the community-at-large and has fans complaining that attending a Dodger home game has become very dangerous. L.A. officials have been calling for better security around the park for years.
Bratton, who has headed police forces in Boston, New York City and L.A. was hired to help the beleaguered franchise quiet the outcries and prevent the public relations nightmare from happening again.
Team owner Frank McCourt--who is already embroiled in a messy divorce involving the team with his wife Jamie--said that acquiring the expertise of Bratton is a step in the right direction. "Bill Bratton is widely credited with spearheading modern community policing in America," said McCourt. "There is no one better to lead a top-to-bottom review of our current practices and make recommendations to be implemented now and into the future."
Bratton was appointed as NYC Police Commissioner by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1994. For two years, Bratton was credited with being a major force in modernizing the force and turning the crime-ridden streets into safe havens.
The reward for the arrest of Stow's two Dodger-clad assailants has increased to over $100,000.
According to the LAPD, Giants fan Stow and his friends were leaving Dodger Stadium when two men taunted then hit Stow from behind. He was kicked while on the ground. The suspects are described as male Hispanics between the ages of 18 and 25.
According to L.A. County supervisor Michael Antonovich, the fright factor outside the ballpark is real. "For anyone to suggest security at Dodger Stadium is adequate is simply putting their head in the sand," he said.
Hundreds of people formed a prayer vigil outside County-USC Hospital in Los Angeles in support of the "critically-injured" San Francisco Giants fan while the announcement to hire Bratton was made.
Security at Dodger Stadium was questioned after Bryon Stow was set upon by two men on March 31. Stow, a paramedic from Santa Clara, is in a medically-induced coma, according to a spokesman from the LAPD. Stow suffered a fractured skull and trauma to his brain said his neurologist, Dr. Gabriel Zada.
The beating has outraged the community-at-large and has fans complaining that attending a Dodger home game has become very dangerous. L.A. officials have been calling for better security around the park for years.
Bratton, who has headed police forces in Boston, New York City and L.A. was hired to help the beleaguered franchise quiet the outcries and prevent the public relations nightmare from happening again.
Team owner Frank McCourt--who is already embroiled in a messy divorce involving the team with his wife Jamie--said that acquiring the expertise of Bratton is a step in the right direction. "Bill Bratton is widely credited with spearheading modern community policing in America," said McCourt. "There is no one better to lead a top-to-bottom review of our current practices and make recommendations to be implemented now and into the future."
Bratton was appointed as NYC Police Commissioner by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1994. For two years, Bratton was credited with being a major force in modernizing the force and turning the crime-ridden streets into safe havens.
The reward for the arrest of Stow's two Dodger-clad assailants has increased to over $100,000.
According to the LAPD, Giants fan Stow and his friends were leaving Dodger Stadium when two men taunted then hit Stow from behind. He was kicked while on the ground. The suspects are described as male Hispanics between the ages of 18 and 25.
According to L.A. County supervisor Michael Antonovich, the fright factor outside the ballpark is real. "For anyone to suggest security at Dodger Stadium is adequate is simply putting their head in the sand," he said.