Wow — I have no idea what I said, but there are so many of you coming over here from Drunk Jays Fans (well, DJF now to be more family-friendly) game threads and so on. Hi everybody! Thanks for stopping by.
In very related news, I’ve started a baseball-specific blog called Double Switching, so you should go check that out! It’s run on Tumblr, so please do follow if you are so inclined. Things will be virtually baseball-free over here from now on.
It’s Friday, April 20th, 2012. Nearby, a coworker just put on The Last Waltz, the remastered edition, and the waltz theme is floating around the room. Obits, remembrances and videos are making their rounds of the internet. Today is the world’s first day without Levon Helm, and we are all feeling it.
Levon Helm was one of my favourite musicians of all time. This sounds like the kind of thing people just say, a common hyperbole used only to emphasize the fact that they’re really into this guy right now, just really into him — but Levon’s the real deal.
I had the pleasure of witnessing his live show twice at Massey Hall, both within the past few years. His throat cancer had progressed pretty severely and the last time I saw him, he almost couldn’t speak. His daughter Amy held him up by singing his songs with him, and he never stopped smiling, even through all his coughing and rasping. His neat buttoned shirt looked boxy over his alarmingly small shoulders, but his time was impeccable and the joy coming from him was unmistakeable. Levon Helm was a man that drew you in, his love for the music radiating from behind the kit–the first time I saw him I was mesmerized by the way he held together a (ridiculously huge) lineup of amazing musicians having the time of their lives. It was the “Midnight Ramble” on tour, full of guitars and horns and voices, and I remember standing at the back of the main floor at Massey thinking to myself that if there was one gig I’d want, one job I’d love to have as a sax player, playing alongside Levon Helm would have to be it.
When his family posted a notice on Wednesday afternoon saying Levon was “in the final stages of his battle with cancer”, it felt like a punch in the gut. We knew it was coming, of course, but we didn’t really want to know or believe that we’d have to live without him one day. And only a handful of hours later, on Thursday afternoon, he passed away quietly (surrounded by friends and family, at least). The number of articles in celebration and memory of him before he passed on was really remarkable–I am glad that tributes were paid to him before he passed, because even if he never got the chance to see or read them, it feels right. People like this should be celebrated while we still have them, too.
There will be many screenings of The Last Waltz this weekend, I’m sure, and many listens to Dirt Farmer and The Band and Music From Big Pink. I hope that years from now we will continue to remember Levon as the legendary honey-voiced drummer that he was, and that we can continue to pay tribute to the indelible effect he had on us — on people like me, who will never be able to get enough of those songs. Thank you for all the joy and love and great times, Levon. Thank you for reminding us that being a musician is an inherently wonderful thing, and showing us just how wonderful it was. There will never be another like you. Rest in peace.
Jays fans are really experiencing the gamut of emotions here and it’s only three games into the season. 159 crazy days and nights to go (and more, if all goes according to plan … but it’s too early for that!).
We’ve played three games, and they’ve lasted the duration of four games plus an inning. Thirty-seven innings of baseball down at Progressive Field, and all of them with their fair share of high drama.
The first, a sixteen-inning marathon on Opening Day, looked like it was headed firmly and speedily downhill with Ricky Romero’s 43-pitch, four-run second inning. Joey Bats’ first homer of the season put the Jays on the board, but that was it until the ninth, when Toronto exploded to score three runs and tie it. It wouldn’t be resolved until the top of the sixteenth — J.P. Arencibia, with two runners on, thought he saw a bunt sign that wasn’t there, fouled off the bunt, and then crushed a home run to seal it 7-4 after five and a quarter hours. On the first day!
We expected nine innings in Game 2 (how naive); Morrow and Jimenez had a couple of perfect game bids going and then things blew apart in a hurry. JPA’s throwing error ended up allowing Kipnis to smack a two-run tater, and Jimenez ruined his bid by walking Johnson and Lind; Lawrie cashed in right away to tie the game. A lead, a blown save, some more extra innings, and the Jays took it with the same score the second game in a row.
Last night, of course, ended with the highest of dramas: down a run in the ninth inning, two outs, bases loaded, Jose Bautista at the plate. Unfortunately for wildly hopeful Jays fans (and very fortunately for Cleveland closers), he popped out, and the game ended in nine instead of stretching onward, with the Jays losing their first of the season.
TONIGHT: what will surely be a wild and crazy home opener at the ‘Dome versus the (hilariously) 0-3 Boston Red Sox, fresh off an extra-innings loss to the Detroit Tigers last night. Young Henderson Alvarez takes the mound for the Jays to face Boston’s Félix Doubront at 7:30. It’s gonna be loud!
For some reason I agreed to join my coworker’s fantasy league this season, even though I have no idea how to play fantasy baseball–if any of you have great tips, I’m all ears.
Tonight, a ridiculous start to the season (who’s counting those A’s/Marlins games in Japan? NO ONE): Kyle Lohse has a no-hit bid through six innings, and Jose Reyes — glad I drafted him — broke it up in the seventh. At Marlins Park. Those poor fans.
In “this doesn’t mean anything but I hope it totally means something” news, though, the Toronto Blue Jays finished off the preseason at a disgusting 24-7-1. That is a .774 record in spring training, destroying the Grapefruits and leading all of the Major Leagues. I know it’s spring training, but look at how awesome this is:
Note that St. Louis, who led the National League, finished at .640. Our rotation had better hold strong (happy thoughts, Drabek, happy thoughts), because it’s gonna be a good year. Also note the positions of New York and Boston. God, so wishful.
TOMORROW: The Blue Jays open the season at Progressive Field with Romero vs. Masterson, 3:05 PM ET! FINALLY!
Well, there’s always next year, right? Another year where we’ve had a mediocre draft pick and a mediocre end to the season. A late-season rally for a playoff spot ends in a skid … when are we going to make having Jarome Iginla worth it?