Posts filed under 'Minor Leagues'

It’s Not Over Yet: Rookies in Postseason

September 29, 2008 — Just a couple of short updates to announce. The biggest news is Kevin Jepsen has notched another career first, by getting named to the postseason roster for the Los Angeles Angels. With nine of the ten pitching slots spoken for well in advance, it was a tough battle for that last opening among Jepsen, Jason Bulger, Shane Loux and Justin Speier. Brandon Wood and Kendry Morales also secured spots for the playoff run. According to an article in the LA Times, Sean Rodriguez and Bobby Wilson will travel with the team in the event the Angels decide to make a roster change. Teams are allowed to make changes between series if they advance. Go get ‘em!

A bit of not-so-good news from the same LA Times article, Darren O’Day has been diagnosed with a labrum tear and will try rehab rather than surgery. Take care…

Lastly, the Angels announced their minor league organizational awards for 2008. Freddy Sandoval won Player of the Year and Anthony Ortega was named Pitcher of the Year. Efren Navarro (Cedar Rapids Kernels/Rancho Cucamonga Quakes) was named Defensive Player of the Year. Nice!

Bye for now!

Add comment September 29th, 2008

Update: ‘American Pastime’ Gets to the Big Leagues

Read the original post: American Pastime

• UPDATE •

September 26, 2008 — Exciting news for yours truly chimed into my email inbox this morning. ‘American Pastime‘ is scheduled to be broadcast this evening on ESPN Classic Films. Many thanks to Kerry Yo Nakagawa for sending the following press release information. Bye for now!

———————-

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Kerry Yo Nakagawa
September 19, 2008 559-824-3210
nbrp@comcast.net

ESPN CLASSIC TO AIR BASEBALL FILM “AMERICAN PASTIME”
Award-winning movie details baseball in WWII Japanese American Internment Camps

FRESNO, Calif., (September 19, 2008) – In partnership with ESPN, Inc., The Worldwide Leader in Sports, the Nisei Baseball Research Project (NBRP) is pleased to announce that ESPN Classic Films will debut the award-winning film “American Pastime” on Friday, September 26 at 9 p.m. Eastern, 6 p.m. Pacific.

Released by Warner Brothers Films in 2007, “American Pastime” is a powerful story about the dramatic impact WWII had in the home-front as Japanese American families were uprooted from their every day lives and placed into internment camps in Western US in the early to mid-1940s.

Faced with a country that now doubted their loyalty and struggling with their new situation, they turn to baseball as a way to handle their plight and find the strength to stand up for themselves becoming a true symbol of honor and pride.

The movie was written and directed by Desmond Nakano (White Man’s Burden) and the cast includes such notables as Gary Cole (Talledega Nights, Dodgeball), Aaron Yoo (Disturbia, The Wackness), Masatoshi Nakamura and Judie Ongg (renowned actors/singers in Japan) and Jon Gries (Naploeon Dynamite). Also making a cameo role is former major leaguer and host of ESPN’s Baseball Tonight, John Kruk.

NBRP founder, Kerry Yo Nakagawa, served as associate producer of the film and also played a ballplayer on the internment camp baseball team with his son Kale.

Despite the serious subject matter of war-time incarceration, fans and critics describe “American Pastime” as “funny, sad, and even romantic” and ultimately as “life-affirming, spiritually-uplifting and entertaining.” Fans of inspirational sports movies, historical fiction, and even comedies will enjoy watching “American Pastime.”

Entertaining and Educational
The film is also used by history and social studies teachers in classrooms across the nation. A teacher’s guide for ‘American Pastime’ is now being implemented with many school districts around the country becoming educated on Japanese American internment through the prism of baseball. While everyone is encouraged to learn about this important chapter in U.S. history, the film will be of special interest to those in the states where the ten internment camps were housed. In 1942 the U.S. Government sent approximately 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry, the majority of them U.S. citizens, to camps in Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Utah, and Wyoming. This year, 2008, marks the 66th anniversary that Japanese Americans first played baseball behind barbed wire.

– more –
The Fact Behind the Fiction
The main character of the film, Kaz Nomura, is loosely based on the real-life Kenichi Zenimura, the Japanese American baseball pioneer who competed on the same diamonds with Hall of Famers Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, and Biz Mackey and Andy Cooper of the Negro Leagues during the 1920s and 30s.

As an international baseball ambassador during this same period, Zenimura was also instrumental in exporting the American pastime to Japan as well. The fruits of his baseball-ambassador efforts are now reflected in the major league presence of Japanese players like Ichiro Suzuki of the Mariners, Daisuke Matsuzaka of the Red Sox, and Kosuke Fukudome of the Cubs, just to name a few.

For more information about ESPN Classic Films, visit www.espn.com. For more information about Japanese American baseball history, visit: www.niseibaseball.com or email: nbrp@comcast.net.

About the Nisei Baseball Research Project
The Nisei Baseball Research Project (NBRP) is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization founded in 1996 by Kerry Yo Nakagawa to preserve the history of Japanese American Baseball. In Cooperstown they have a saying that Baseball is a game of Dreams and Memories. It is for both those reasons that the NBRP was developed. The ultimate goal of the NBRP is the permanent inclusion of Japanese Americans in Baseball into the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown and continue to educate about internment baseball during WWII.

About “American Pastime”
The American Pastime screenplay is by Desmond Nakano & Tony Kayden. Barry Rosenbush, who executive produced the 6-time Emmy-nominated hit “High School Musical,” produced along with Tom Gorai and Terry Spazek. David Skinner and Arata Matsushima are executive producers and Kerry Yo Nakagawa, associate producer. American Pastime is a Warner Home Video presentation of a T & C Pictures, ShadowCatcher Entertainment, Rosy Bushes production of a Desmond Nakano film.

Add comment September 26th, 2008

Baseball Veeckonomics

September 24, 2008 — OK, confession time. Hard as it may be to believe, I go to the ballpark for the baseball and not the free giveaways or celebrity appearances. Yeah, I know, I know, I preached the Holy Gospel of Veeckonomics in my About page. To atone for my sins, today’s post is dedicated to the lifeblood of minor league baseball, Game-Day Promotions.

The one-stop-kiosk for Minor League Baseball promotional happenings across the country is Ben’s Biz Blog at MiLB.com. One particularly creative event is the annual Awful Night hosted by the Altoona Curve, with my fave feature of the evening being the post-game “Laaser Light Show.” Or how about this lip-smacking crowd-pleaser? A mascot race featuring Pork Roll, Fried Egg (sunny side up) and Cheese (hmmm, looks like cheddar). If the Salt Lake franchise offered a Big Poppy giveaway to honor the popular slugger who spent all of 1999 at Triple-A with us, I bet people would be camped out overnight. (Well, OK, maybe not.) But check it out. How cool is this?

As an added bonus. . .
Thanks to several minutes of intensive “Google” research referenced against the newly unearthed Ro-sabr-stone of baseball archeology, you dear readers, can bear witness to the first-ever complete translation of the original commandments of baseball promotions.

Ten Commandments

of Minor League Promotions

ONE: I, Baseball, am the Lord your God


Photo credit | FutureAngels.com | Used with permission.

TWO: Thou shalt have no other football, basketball, hockey, soccer, NASCAR or curling before me

THREE: Thou shalt make for your worshippers as many Bobbleheaded idols as possible

FOUR: Thou shalt willfully make wrongful use of the names of MLB ballplayers and turn them into Zooperstars

FIVE: Remember the 144 Sabbaths of Summer and keep them holy by getting your a*s to the ballpark

SIX: Honor thy Groundskeeper Father and Ticket-Sales Manager Mother

SEVEN: Thou shalt not murder Bee Gees and Commodores albums, a.k.a. Disco Demolition Night

EIGHT: Thou shalt not commit adultery with your neighbor’s wife, unless doing so boosts ticket sales by 10%

NINE: Thou shalt at every opportunity bear false witness against your Major League neighbor and steal his fanbase

TEN: Thou shalt not covet your Major League neighbor’s house because you know Minor League Baseball is a better product

TEN: If thou desirest the job done right, send a midget to the plate

(Yes, there are two Tenth Commandments. So sue me. ) Bye for now!

7 comments September 24th, 2008

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