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Suitcase causes bomb scare at Akron bus terminal
Akron City Council OKs higher speed on I-77
Chapel Hill isn't rolling right along
Motorcyclist killed, wife injured in Stark County crash
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New eateries expand menu of options
Patrick McManamon: Here's what the Browns should try the rest of the season
Louisville athlete commits to play for Boston College
Family found dead in Ohio home
Blogs:
Pets:
It Takes All Kinds
The Heldenfiles:
Tuesday Notebook
Patrick McManamon:
An interesting thought from a reader
Akron Zips:
Akron vs. Mount Union — Liveblog
Tribe Matters:
Indians announce spring dates
Cleveland Browns:
Mangini doesn't name a quarterback
Kent State Sports:
Flashes interested in another Cincinnati player
Cleveland Cavaliers:
Shaq: It’s All About Winning Championships
Buckeye Blogging:
Buckeyes Roll 100-60 / Season Outlook
Varsity Letters:
Report: Walsh baseball player commits
All Da King's Men:
More On The Fort Hood Jihadist
Blog of Mass Destruction:
Simply Incapable of Telling The Truth
Akron Law Café:
Health Care Financing Reform: (63) Commonwealth Fund Report on Primary Care
See Jane Style:
Muffle Your Muffler
Car Chase:
Clock Tender- Extending the Life of Collector Car Clocks
Let's Talk Real Estate:
Rumors: Akron Starbucks Closing
Ohio Travels with Betty:
Jack is looking for a trip to Southern Ohio the week of November 16.
Sound Check:
Aeromsith looking for new singer as Steven Tyler contemplates solo career
HRLite House:
Personal Rant – Why People Do Not Live in Northeast Ohio
Akron Gamer:
Video: 'Modern Warfare 2' hits the streets
By George M. Thomas
Beacon Journal sportswriter
POSTED: 11:30 a.m. EDT, Jul 03, 2008
With the baseball season in full swing and the only sport in the spotlight right now, FSN chose the right time to launch its original series Baseball's Golden Age, an entertaining look back at America's pastime.
The premiere episode, which airs at 8 p.m. Sunday, examines the allure of the sport that has been lost to recent generations because of labor strife, the perception at least in this corner that the best athletes no longer play baseball and constant questions as to whether some of the game's most hallowed records are tainted by the alleged use of performance enhancing drugs by some superstar players.
In the first episode, the series summarizes the attraction succinctly. Baseball is that rare sport that is better in person than television. While they romanticize the notion of attending the game through comments from Bob Costas, Larry King and others, baseball is one of those events where sitting, sipping on an overpriced tall cool one, biting a dog and cracking open peanuts makes sense and is relaxing.
The pacing feels different in person. Ever try to watch a non-playoff game on television? Turtle races and watching paint dry come to mind.
One of the more intriguing segments looks at two of baseball's greatest players, Joe DiMaggio and Ted Williams, who were contemporaries for some time. Two greats. Two styles, and the filmmakers highlight them. The best quote comes from the Indians' own Bob Feller, who said sneaking a fastball past Williams was akin to sneaking sunshine past a rooster in the morning.
What's appealing about many of these stories is that you see many of these athletes in glorious color. As narrator Anthony LaPaglia (TV's Without a Trace) states at one point: We only know many of these heroes in black-and-white. Courtesy of home movie footage from ballplayers' family members and fans, DiMaggio and Williams come to life in color. Kudos for that move that adds to the series' aesthetic value.
One curious move, the use of the charismatic LaPaglia, whose voice has an ever-so-slight New York accent. He's a great actor, but he hails from Australia. I guess it shows the international cachet that baseball has nowadays. That's of little matter, though, Baseball's Golden Age proves to be an entertaining half hour that will allow fans to connect to the game's storied past.
Breathe Buckeyes fans
Will it be a case of here we go again? Ohio State released the early part of the Buckeyes' football team TV schedule Wednesday, and the Big Ten Network claimed two of the first three games. Those must-see games: the opener Aug. 30 against Youngstown State and the Troy University game on Sept. 20.
I'm sure that plenty of fans are set to go ballistic over this, but I suggest patience more than prayer that Time Warner Cable and BTN will get a deal done. TW is the dominant cable company in Ohio, and it's because of a lack of a deal with them that this state has the lowest penetration in surrounding states.
With Comcast, the nation's largest cable company, reaching a deal in recent weeks, it forced TW back to the table. Having talked with folks on both sides, there's something tangible there that hasn't been in the past optimism.
If I were a betting man, I'd stake some Benjamins on a deal being done before the start of the season.
It could come down to the wire, but life's no fun without a little drama.
Gladiators: a TV hit
Northeast Ohioans yawned whenever the Arena Football League's Gladiators hit the airwaves locally during the regular season. Not so for their first playoff game. The team scored the highest rating for ESPN2 in a local market since the league and the Worldwide Leader's sibling began partnering with the AFL for broadcasts in 2007.
Speaking of ESPN
Congratulations to Akron Racers softball pitcher Angela Tincher. ESPN nominated the former Virginia Tech Hokie for best female college athlete in this year's ESPYs, the channel's yearly awards derby.
George M. Thomas can be reached at sportswriterabj@sbcglobal.net. Read his blog at http://www.ohiomm.com/blogs/sportsblitz/
With the baseball season in full swing and the only sport in the spotlight right now, FSN chose the right time to launch its original series Baseball's Golden Age, an entertaining look back at America's pastime.
The premiere episode, which airs at 8 p.m. Sunday, examines the allure of the sport that has been lost to recent generations because of labor strife, the perception at least in this corner that the best athletes no longer play baseball and constant questions as to whether some of the game's most hallowed records are tainted by the alleged use of performance enhancing drugs by some superstar players.
In the first episode, the series summarizes the attraction succinctly. Baseball is that rare sport that is better in person than television. While they romanticize the notion of attending the game through comments from Bob Costas, Larry King and others, baseball is one of those events where sitting, sipping on an overpriced tall cool one, biting a dog and cracking open peanuts makes sense and is relaxing.
The pacing feels different in person. Ever try to watch a non-playoff game on television? Turtle races and watching paint dry come to mind.
One of the more intriguing segments looks at two of baseball's greatest players, Joe DiMaggio and Ted Williams, who were contemporaries for some time. Two greats. Two styles, and the filmmakers highlight them. The best quote comes from the Indians' own Bob Feller, who said sneaking a fastball past Williams was akin to sneaking sunshine past a rooster in the morning.
What's appealing about many of these stories is that you see many of these athletes in glorious color. As narrator Anthony LaPaglia (TV's Without a Trace) states at one point: We only know many of these heroes in black-and-white. Courtesy of home movie footage from ballplayers' family members and fans, DiMaggio and Williams come to life in color. Kudos for that move that adds to the series' aesthetic value.
One curious move, the use of the charismatic LaPaglia, whose voice has an ever-so-slight New York accent. He's a great actor, but he hails from Australia. I guess it shows the international cachet that baseball has nowadays. That's of little matter, though, Baseball's Golden Age proves to be an entertaining half hour that will allow fans to connect to the game's storied past.
Breathe Buckeyes fans
Will it be a case of here we go again? Ohio State released the early part of the Buckeyes' football team TV schedule Wednesday, and the Big Ten Network claimed two of the first three games. Those must-see games: the opener Aug. 30 against Youngstown State and the Troy University game on Sept. 20.
I'm sure that plenty of fans are set to go ballistic over this, but I suggest patience more than prayer that Time Warner Cable and BTN will get a deal done. TW is the dominant cable company in Ohio, and it's because of a lack of a deal with them that this state has the lowest penetration in surrounding states.
With Comcast, the nation's largest cable company, reaching a deal in recent weeks, it forced TW back to the table. Having talked with folks on both sides, there's something tangible there that hasn't been in the past optimism.
If I were a betting man, I'd stake some Benjamins on a deal being done before the start of the season.
It could come down to the wire, but life's no fun without a little drama.
Gladiators: a TV hit
Northeast Ohioans yawned whenever the Arena Football League's Gladiators hit the airwaves locally during the regular season. Not so for their first playoff game. The team scored the highest rating for ESPN2 in a local market since the league and the Worldwide Leader's sibling began partnering with the AFL for broadcasts in 2007.
Speaking of ESPN
Congratulations to Akron Racers softball pitcher Angela Tincher. ESPN nominated the former Virginia Tech Hokie for best female college athlete in this year's ESPYs, the channel's yearly awards derby.
George M. Thomas can be reached at sportswriterabj@sbcglobal.net. Read his blog at http://www.ohiomm.com/blogs/sportsblitz/
