Rickwood Field is on the air….

The San Francisco Sea Lions’ Heliot Ramos watches the flight of his three-run homer against the St. Louis Stars in the third inning at Rickwood Field in Birmingham the Negro Leagues and Willie Mays Tribute on Thursday June 20, 2024 (AP News photo)

By Morris Phillips

BIRMINGHAM–Nobody got a day off. And nobody got to see all the different bounces in the outfield area either. Well, third base coach Matt Williams did try to show his outfielders what to expect by peppering batting practice balls in off the showy, TV friendly fences. He did that.

Rickwood Field is television. And television is Rickwood Field.

And baseball, for one day, is only slightly more important than spectacle. Forget for a minute that the Giants as well as the Cardinals are fighting for their lives in a crowded, flailing group of National League underachievers.

“Today it feels like it’s a little bit more than baseball,” said Masyn Winn of the Cardinals.

The Giants needed a win, but the Giants organization needed to grieve. Willie Mays has died. It makes for a tough balance, even with a dream-like setting, a national audience, and more in-house historians than you can shake a stick at. Juneteenth, summer solstice and locals beaming with pride round out a very dense mix.

The baseball history in Birmingham begins with Rickwood Field in 1910. The players came soon after. They were black ballplayers with skill and showmanship. Black Birmingham adored those players. Blacks had to envelop those players because white Birmingham wanted to harm them and get them to disappear.

Reggie Jackson came the year after Bull Connor left. He hated the attitudes in the Magic City. He admitted with brutal honesty on FOX’s pre-game show that his temper could have gotten him strung up.

“The nigger can’t stay here. The nigger can’t eat here,” an angry Jackson said of the typical reception he would receive. At the end of his rant about the blatant racism in 1964, Jackson had hto be consoled by Alex Rodriguez on air.

An hour later, Jackson was good again, talking to FOX’s John Smoltz and Joe Davis, and remembering Mays.

“I was honored that he wanted to know who I was.”

Yes, Birmingham is uplifting. It’s also frustrating. And at night, Birmingham is dangerous. Young people here don’t necessarily fall into savory occupations and lifestyles. This keeps things on the edge in 2024.

“Our people are apathetic,” Jeff Drew said.

No Fortune 500 businesses, the prevalence of drugs, a below average school district, and the percentage of single parent homes are all problems for Birmingham.

Businessman Jeff Drew is trying to maintain hope for the future of his town. His family maintained a storefront office in the downtown district beginning in 1950. They had as many as six employees there. But Drew went years without interviewing any black men for a job. And when a particularly callous couple used colorful language around Drew he was disturbed. Soon after, he closed his office and began working from home.

Drew already had issues. Martin Luther King picked Birmingham to give his movement its biggest showdown. Essentially, Martin against Bull Connor and his boys. There were water hoses, embarrassment and pain. Black people suffered and they learned. Drew learned. Martin learned too when he was thrown in jail for “parading without a permit.”

What Drew learned was Martin’s non-peaceful, peaceful ways. When Martin told the Kennedy brothers, “We think you support Bull Connor and segregation,” a line was drawn across the South. Martin would then hang up the phone on the Kennedys. President Kennedy changed his tune after Martin hung up, and provided his full support to the movement.

“He couldn’t beat us,” Drew said of JFK. “He had to join us.”

Great baseball teams did the same in Birmingham. They joined, and people, fans, joined too to support these teams and players. Willie Mays joined the Barons as a teenager. He wasn’t the only name on the marquee. Mays was just getting started, but he already knew who he was.

Tuesday’s minor league game and Thursday’s big league game between the St. Louis Stars and the San Francisco Sea Lions were reminders. They also brought hope that MLB will return soon. Maybe next year.

“I think there should be a three-game series with an off-day,” said Sea Lion Mike Yastrzemski, a visionary for future events at Rickwood Field.

And third base coach Williams just wanted his Sea Lions outfielders prepared. Hitting baseballs pre-game off the colorful, outfield panels displayed the bounces, the nuances.

“I was prepared,” Yastrzemski said.

Willie Mays, the Giant of the Game, has passed away at age 93

The late great Willie Mays is seen here Aug 19, 2016 during a New York Mets and San Francisco Giants game at Oracle Field in San Francisco. Mays passed away on Tue Jun 18, 2024 at 93. (AP file photo)

By Morris Phillips

ATLANTA—Broadcaster Bob Costas told it first tonight, and said it best tonight:

“If you reduced the Hall of Fame to just 10 people, Willie Mays would be one of them. He was a giant of the game.”

Willie Mays, the pre-eminent New York Giant and San Francisco Giant, has passed away at age 93.

Presumably, Mays was at home on the San Francisco peninsula, unable to attend this week’s festivities in his honor, at Rickwood Field in Birmingham, Alabama when he died. The Giants face the St. Louis Cardinals there in a nationally-televised game on Thursday.

Mays, the “Say Hey Kid,” was remembered by his son, Michael Mays, who said, “I want to thank you all from the bottom of my broken heart for the unwavering love you have shown him over the years. You have been his life’s blood.”

Mays’ greatest play, the catch in Game 1 of the 1954 World Series, in which he furiously retreated to the center field wall and made an over the shoulder catch, followed by a throw to the infield, is the greatest baseball play ever that doesn’t involve a home run.

But, of course, Mays did more than that play. He hit 660 home runs, compiled 3,293 hits and scored 2,068 runs.

Wednesday’s Giants game in Chicago, as well as Thursday’s game against the Cardinals In Birmingham will be instant memorials for the greatest Giant.

“In the pantheon of baseball greats, Willie Mays’ combination of tremendous talent, keen intellect, showmanship, and boundless joy set him apart,” said Giants Chairman Greg Johnson in a statement.

Giants’ Saturday Post-Game Notes & Quotes

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–When was today’s 4-3 loss to the Angels decided? When Luke Jackson, the Giants’ third pitcher of the afternoon took the mound, and after he recorded the first two outs of the inning. At that point, Jackson walked Nolan Schanuel in a lengthy eight-pitch at-bat. With Luis Rengifo batting, Schanuel stole his first major-league base, and advanced to third on Curt Casali’s throwing error. Rengifo followed with a base-hit that gave the Angels their first lead of the afternoon.

“(The steal and then the error) gave Rengifo a chance to put the ball in play, which he does. And he found an open space — and ended up scoring a run that ended up being the winning run.” manager Ron Washington said.

The Giants have lost 19 games this season in which they had a lead at some point during the game. Those 19 games are the fifth most in MLB.

Casali’s throwing error was the 45th Giants error of the season. That number 45 ranks them second in errors committed in the NL only to the Marlins (48).

Schanuel’s stolen base was the 73rd stolen against the Giants this season. That number 73 leaves them tied for the most allowed in MLB with the Mets.

Heliot Ramos homered for the second straight day to give him eight homers on the season. It’s the second time this month he’s homered in consecutive games.

“He needs some help, too,” manager Bob Melvin said of Ramos. “He knocked in all three runs today and we left some out there.”

The Giants fell to 2-3 on their current homestand (Astros, Angels) with only Sunday’s series finale remaining. The Giants are now 26-18 all-time versus the Angels, excluding their World Series together in 2001.

Washington, 72, gave his thoughts on the Giants’ upcoming appearance against the Cardinals at Rickwood Field in Birmingham, AL: “Baseball as a whole is bringing this thing back together in the way that it should.”

Washington never played in the Negro Leagues. He spent 10 seasons playing in the minor leagues for three different organizations (Royals, Mets and Dodgers). “Wash” expressed his gratitude that the Giants have vowed to bring all of their African-American players to Birmingham for the experience, regardless of whether they are currently on the active roster. LaMonte Wade, the Giants’ injured first baseman, has a chance to make his return to active duty at Rickwood Field on Thursday with that decision to be made early next week. Washington also lit up when retelling the stories of Josh Gibson and Cool Papa Bell, two of the Negro Leagues’ biggest superstars.

A Bruin in a Bear’s Lair: Bill Walton in Berkeley, California

By Morris Phillips in collaboration with Michael Duca

(photo courtesy of Sports Illustrated)

I knew Bill Walton.

Actually, a lot of people knew Bill Walton, so me saying I knew him isn’t a great distinction. But it is a great distinction for Walton, arguably the greatest college basketball player ever, an NBA MVP, a two-time NBA Champion, and also an NBA Finals MVP.

If you were to make the argument that Bill Walton wasn’t the greatest college basketball player ever, and Lew Alcindor was, you would also have to admit that Walton was the more well-rounded player of the two. If not, your basketball IQ would be in question.

And one other thing: Bill Walton’s humanity was bigger than any of his accomplishments on the hardwood. Almost every single person that knew Bill Walton, knew him fondly. So in reality, the Bill Walton story is so big, it’s too big for one journalist to handle. The City of Berkeley, CA and the University of California–enemy territory for the UCLA alum–knew Bill Walton. So here’s the Walton story just from the vantage point of the well-known Northern California college town.

“He just defiantly competed for every moment in life to be the greatest it could possibly be,” Walton’s former Boston Celtics’ teammate Rick Carlisle said. “That’s the best way to describe it. What an amazing man.”

“What a journey he lived,” former Cal coach Ben Braun said in remembrance of Walton, who died Sunday from complications of a battle with colon cancer. “We lost a good one.”

Walton’s first visit to Harmon Gym came on March 3, 1972. Accurately listed at 6’11”, 210 lbs. he wasn’t fast, but he was quick in the painted area, decisive once he got the ball, and extremely confident in his play. As a sophomore, playing his 24th college game that night, he was in supreme control as UCLA cruised 85-71 over Cal.

His style of play? In those days, Bill Walton was completely healthy. He wouldn’t miss a game as a collegian until his senior year, when he missed three. For those not old enough to have seen him play in 1971 through 1974, a comparison to modern day basketball players might go like this. Take the activity, relentless energy and desire to grab every defensive rebound, like Sacramento’s Domantas Sabonis. Combine that with the court vision and playmaking of Larry Bird. And kick it all off with the humility and savoir faire of Len Bias. Yeah, now you’re talking about the youthful Walton.

Walton’s second visit to Berkeley’s Harmon Gym came on January 13, 1973, when he captured his 42nd consecutive collegiate game without loss, as the Bruins cruised again, 69-50, and remained ranked No. 1 nationally on their way to 1973 title.

In the championship game that year, Walton did the near impossible in making 21 of 22 shots in 33 minutes on the floor, as UCLA raced past Memphis State, 87-66 in St. Louis.

Walton’s senior year was troubled by UCLA’s standards as they saw their incredible win streak snapped at Notre Dame in January 1974. After losses at Oregon and Oregon State, the Bruins righted the ship the following weekend at Pauley Pavilion with resounding wins against Washington and Washington State. Next, Walton and UCLA came to Berkeley with a modest two-game win streak and won again at Harmon, 83-60, to improve to 21-3.

At this point, I would be remiss if I didn’t defer to well-known Cal basketball journalist Jeff Faraudo, who penned a story about Walton and his legendary college coach John Wooden. In 1960, Wooden could have ended up at Cal, but instead was tabbed to coach at UCLA. Faraudo wrote a “what if” piece that captured that moment, which all should read. Walton weighed in and was extremely enthusiastic.

“He would have done perfect in Berkeley,” Walton said. “If he had been there, they’d probably have a brand-new beautiful gym instead of playing in Harmon.”

The Big Redhead’s journey through the NBA, and professional basketball was terrific, then ultimately arduous. He did not cross paths with Berkeley during this period. Instead, he started in Portland, moved to San Diego, spent one season in Los Angeles, and relocated again to Boston. As a 24-year old, he led the Blazers to their first World title in 1977 in a titanic Finals matchup with Dr. J, Julius Erving and the 76ers. The next season, the Blazers started 50-10, and their back-to-back title push was in full bloom. But in that 60th game, Walton was hurt, playing 13 minutes and taking just three shots from the floor. The Blazers still prevailed to improve to 50-10, but February 28, 1978, was a true moment in time. It essentially marked the end of Walton’s career as an elite player.

While Walton’s career was faltering because of injuries, his bank account naturally grew. And during the following six seasons, in which he would miss three of them in their entirety while playing for his hometown San Diego Clippers, his passions outside the game took off. One of those passions was the Greatful Dead, the legendary rock group, which captured Bill’s soul and his attendance at many of their shows.

While I can’t say when, what show, or what setlist, just know that Bill Walton saw the Greatful Dead numerous times at Berkeley’s Greek Theatre. I only went once to see the Dead at the Greek, and he wasn’t there that afternoon. I wish he was.

Boston, MA was the site of Walton’s rebirth. Now, 34, and a decade removed from his glory moments, the storied Celtics sensed an opening: a place for a great player to help a great team. Walton was signed with one objective in mind, which was to bring another title to the rafters at the Garden. And Coach K.C. Jones was given the guy with which he could save critical minutes from Larry Bird and Kevin McHale, his workhorses. The plan was executed flawlessly.

In Game 1 of the Finals against the Houston Rockets, Walton was a winner, contributing 18 minutes off the bench, and a flawless shooter, finishing 5 of 5 from the floor, eight rebounds, three assists and a block in the pivotal game of a series that would be decided rather quickly. He was–even for one last moment in time–Bill Walton.

For the series, Walton would play 117 minutes and grab 48 rebounds total. It was not pretty. He played on feet that he treated gingerly, he often had a bend in his legs, when he previously always played straight up, and grimaced frequently during play. I saw it on TV. He gutted it out, and the Celtics used him masterfully, saving him, essentially for the one moment of the season when he could make the biggest impact.

“It’s a legend lost, ” said Dallas Mavericks coach Jason Kidd, who had those “crystal green eyes.”

Walton played one more season for the Celtics and retired. The plan to have him be the guy to get the Celtics over the top a second time failed. Walton played just 24 minutes and scored six points in his final six games as the Celtics fell to the Lakers in the Finals in six games. His tired body was broken, and it was time to move on.

Broadcasting came next for Bill Walton, and “Redwood” was the best thing–refreshing, irreverent, passionate–from the start. First with ABC, ESPN and then finally with the Pac-12 Network, he frustrated viewers that didn’t get it, and blew away those that did get it with his endless stories, tangents, set asides, frequent switches, sometimes within one dead-ball break in a broadcast.

Roxy Bernstein, the Cal grad, and the former voice of California Golden Bears basketball was Walton’s biggest co-star, along with the often-confounded Dave Pasch. While Pasch would often have moments (early on) where his composure was tested during broadcasts with Walton, things were more seamless with Bernstein. The jokes hit closer to velvet smooth, and the transitions were elite as the two men took viewers on a journey with each two-hour performance.

What was immediately noticeable was that Bernstein adored Walton. What wasn’t always clear was that Walton loved Bernstein too, even as he was testing every fiber of his play-by-play expertise. The two grew close. It was undeniable as they gained more experience together. And when their later broadcasts hit the air, their chemistry was tight, even in the game’s opening tease, as both would smile ear-to-ear.

Walton welcomed the circus-like environment he created before and after games. Engaging as many people as could as the support staff packed up equipment around him, his mid-court perch became his office, as he counseled players, engaged coaches, and answered to journalists like me.

When Jaylen Brown made the last-minute decision in his recruitment to join coach Cuonzo Martin and the Bears from his far-away hometown of Atlanta, Walton took to the whip smart youngster immediately. They talked before games, sometimes while Brown’s teammates warmed up. They talked after games too, when Brown would challenge himself, and come back out of the locker room to get up extra shots by himself in a now-empty Haas Pavilion. Walton had discovered a star, essentially before he became one. They grew close, and Walton talked about the young man often during the broadcasts.

“I would talk to him before every game,” Brown said. “He was proud of me.

“My family loves Bill Walton.”

The last time I spoke to Walton was at Pac-12 Media Days. He was alone, on the rooftop lunch area, sitting on a table with donuts in the colors of each of the 12 schools next to him. He was visibly tired, having likely had 100 conversations in 75-minute cram session during the lunch break.

“Bill, get away from those donuts. Does your doctor let you eat that stuff?” I asked.

He was little slumped, but looked up at me, and said, “Dr. Leary is my doctor.”

“He grabbed every defensive rebound. He was like a coach on the floor,” said Cal coach Ben Braun, who made it clear that he would have done anything to recruit Walton away from television to join his coaching staff at Cal.

‘How is your life?

Is THIS the life you want?

Are you living like you talk?

Are you dreaming as if you’re going to the top?

Are you passionate?

Do you love what you do?

Do you love who you are?

Do you love your “team”?

Seems like all of life has been just a dream.

But without loving that dream, it’ll never come true.

And when you learn the ultimate lessons in life…like

tolerance…patience…perspective and relativity, you’ve got a CHANCE.

Good luck everyone…thank you for your patience and kindness.

And may the four winds, blow you safely home.”

Bill Walton

1952-2024

For the Giants, the Best Weekend of the Season Thus Far

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–When manager Bob Melvin regally hopped off of the clubhouse steps into the Giants dugout on Saturday morning at precisely 11:15am, it didn’t feel like he was completely honest.

“I’m not very good in the mornings,” he said to the media gathered for his pre-game presser.

For the next 15 minutes, Melvin was very good, first updating everyone on Blake Snell’s outing Friday in Sacramento, then dialing back expectations for his availability in the coming week. Melvin hinted that some shoulder discomfort could keep the 2-time Cy Young award winner away from the club for another week, but not much more. He smiled when saying Snell threw 75 pitches and was able to execute his entire repertoire.

Randy Rodriguez perked Melvin up as well, when he was asked about the intriguing 24-year old reliever who struck out Colorado’s Brendan Rogers in the ninth inning of Friday’s game. Melvin was impressed with the youngster’s ability to pepper Rogers with 98 and 99 mph fastballs, before freezing him on 3-2 slider clocked at 84 mph.

When asked if a couple of wins–Wednesday over the Dodgers, after five-consecutive losses to the perpetual NL West division champs, and an offensive breakout against the Rockies Friday–signaled a change for the 21-25 club that has scuffled to generate offense, Melvin spoke confidently.

“We’re going to be OK,” he said. “We haven’t won three in a row, so this would be an important win for us today.”

That win materialized a few hours later in a 14-4 eye-opener, then the Giants doubled down on Sunday with Jordan Hicks holding the Rockies at arm’s distance in a breezy 4-1 win. Now the Giants can hit the road to Pittsburgh and Queens, New York with momentum, really for the first time all season.

For a team finished opening week 2-5, and was 15-21 after being throttled on their previous trip to Boston and Philadelphia, this is new beginning. Through the numerous injuries, including the loss of their prized acquisition, Jung Hoo Lee, for the remainder of the season, the belief hasn’t disappeared, at least within the clubhouse.

“We’ve had a lot of guys who are off to a slow start,” Melvin said, stating the obvious.

Two guys who weren’t in the Opening Day lineup–Heliot Ramos and Luis Matos–aren’t off to slow starts. They both made huge strides on the homestand with Matos going 10 for 22 over five games, and Ramos going 6 for 20, with two doubles and a walk over the same stretch. Just that quickly, Ramos and Matos are two-thirds of the new-look outfield with perfect timing following the loss of Lee.

Matt Chapman and Thairo Estrada have picked up their offensive games as well–after slow starts–and the re-emergence of Michael Conforto, who’s on the injured list with a hamstring issue, could eventually mean that the Giants will be finally ready to fight with both hands and show their promise.

Meanwhile, the big picture still hasn’t gotten too big. Yes, the Phillies (34-14) are on a torrid pace with the National League’s best record, and the Dodgers (32-17) are running away with the NL West, but everything else is completely in reach for the Giants.

The Padres are currently a game ahead of the Giants, having reached .500 with an impressive pair of wins over the Braves this weekend, and those two clubs comprise the front of the pack for the sixth and final playoff spot. Trailing by a stride or two are Diamondbacks (22-25), Pirates (22-26) and Mets (21-25).

Slow start? Yes. But having an optimistic, hopeful manager and few, capable options can overcome that. At least that’s what the Giants are hoping.

March 30, 2009: Big Jayne’s Big Night Was Sydney Beau’s Big Night Too

By Morris Phillips

This is the week to tell Tara VanDerveer stories. The unquestioned titan of college basketball coaching retired after 38 seasons at Stanford with an all-time record 1,216 wins overall. VanDerveer arrived on the Farm in 1985 and turned a fledgling program into a national powerhouse in her first five seasons, then never took her foot off the gas. Great players, national title contending teams, and big crowds became the norm, and I watched it all unfold in person.

I have Tara VanDerveer stories on demand for my most qualified audiences. This is easily the best one.

On March 30, 2009, VanDerveer and her Cardinal team were riding a 19-game win streak, just another sign that VanDerveer had recaptured the magic that disappeared when her teams went an unprecedented decade without a Final Four appearance, a dry spell that ended a year earlier in March 2008. Led by 6’4” Jayne Appel, the Cardinal were better known for their supporting cast than Appel, who dominated other Pac-12 post players without putting up eye-popping numbers or drawing attention she deserved as the best player on the West Coast’s best team.

Ironically, the best example of Appel’s flying under the radar came earlier that season in Hawaii when Stanford routed Iowa State–their March 30th opponent–by 38 points with Appel scoring just six. For Iowa State coach Bill Fennelly that rough loss was the impetus for his strategy in the rematch: leave Appel one-on-one in the paint and implore his Cyclones to clamp down on the numerous Stanford 3-point threats.

“Tara told me she was pretty sure they weren’t going to double me, so we knew immediately that we were going to go inside,” Appel said of the approach heading into the Elite Eight rematch. “That was our game plan from the very beginning.”

On March 30, 2009 my daughter, Sydney Beau, was a precocious 18-month-old child who had already grown accustomed to her dad’s many day adventures, both inside and outside of the daily realm of a working parent. With mommy Sysha busy after her senior year of college at the Academy of Art, Sydney and I bonded through my ability to bring her with me during the work day, as I filed—and served–legal papers for a number of San Francisco attorneys.

All weekend leading to Monday the 30th I knew the 6pm tip time to see Iowa State-Stanford in Berkeley (of all places!) would be challenging after a 9am-5pm work day. And I knew that Sydney Beau would be along for the ride, and the adventure. Our key, third component—Syd’s do-it-all stroller—would miss the trip to Berkeley due to crowded, rush hour BART trains that would undoubtedly test Sydney and daddy’s patience.

I attended my first women’s basketball game in 1980. Within a month I saw Machine Gun Molly Bolin of the WBL, Nancy Lieberman and USF’s All-American Mary Hile play in person. To see both games, I traveled fewer than 15 blocks from my house. It was as if the women’s game had come by my house looking for me. At San Francisco’s Civic Auditorium, Bolin wowed me with her pull-up jumpers in transition that seem to settle in the rim as if she had the basketball on a tether. In that 1980 season, Bolin would establish records for points in a game (55) and average points per game (32.8). Just 23 years old, Bolin had polish on her game that few of her competitors could match.

Lieberman, a college player at Old Dominion, was better known than Bolin. She developed quite a reputation in Queens for playing with the boys and schooling them as a teenager on the New York hard courts. It wasn’t until she was a high school sophomore that she settled into competing against other high school girls and teams she would dominate. Lieberman’s story appeared in the Chronicle in the days leading to her appearance at USF to face Hile and the Lady Dons. I read it and knew I had to get parental clearance to ride the bus alone at night—maybe for the first time–and see the game.

Hile is simply the greatest women’s basketball player ever with a San Francisco background. As a prep, she developed as a Jill of all trades, playing four sports at her Sunnyvale, CA high school. But once she landed at the University of San Francisco, Hile settled into rewriting the record book by scoring 2,324 points and grabbing 1,602 rebounds in her four years on the Hilltop. Her records still stand, and her point total is greater than Bill Russell, K.C. Jones and Bill Cartwright, the better-known men basketballers that played at USF.

Unfortunately, January 9, 1980 didn’t live up to the billing. With Lieberman and future Olympian Anne Donovan forming an incredible duo, USF was left by the side of the road on its biggest night of women’s hoops ever. The Monarchs ran away and hid, winning 70-46. But I was forever changed, wanting to see what great women’s players I could run into next.

Five years after Old Dominion tore up San Francisco, coach Wendy Larry and the Monarchs were still at it. Led by Medina Dixon and Tracy Claxton, Old Dominion captured the 1985 NCAA Tournament, winning 70-65 over Georgia in the championship game. Along the way to the title, ODU got past Ohio State in the East Regional final, winning 72-68. That would be the last game Tara VanDerveer would coach at Ohio State.  In a stroke of genius, athletic director Andy Geiger convinced the 31-year old VanDerveer to leave OSU for Stanford, which at the time was coming off a 9-19 season and playing in front of 300 fans a night.

“My dad told me I was crazy to take this job. He said, ‘You’ll be unemployed and coming home to live with us in three months’,” VanDerveer recalled.

VanDerveer captured her first national title at Stanford, winning it all in 1990. Then again in 1992, Stanford was crowned champion. VanDerveer was well on her way to turning a three-month, crash-and-burn job into the most superior 38 years of college coaching the sport had ever seen.

Stanford’s 2007-08 team didn’t come out of nowhere. I know. Now 22 seasons into my love affair with VanDerveer’s basketball dynasty, I’d already seen more great players than I could ever imagine. Starting with Jennifer Azzi, VanDerveer rolled out All-Americans seemingly two and three at a time. I saw Val Whiting, Kate Starbird, Rachel Hemmer, Olympia Scott, Kristin Folkl, Lindsey Yamasaki, Nicole Powell and Candice Wiggins all play in person at Maples Pavilion, right in the middle of Stanford’s sprawling campus. I caught the train, drove, and rode my bike to Palo Alto. By any means I had to see Stanford play and VanDerveer coach. To this day, I’m not sure if I’ve ever seen Stanford lose in person. Maybe once? I’m not sure, but for the purposes of this story, I’ve been to 65 Stanford games in person, and seen them win every time. Amazing.

That 2008 team featuring Wiggins, VanDerveer’s self-proclaimed favorite player to ever receive her coaching, broke the dry spell as Stanford qualified for the Final Four. But local high school McDonald’s All-American Appel, Kayla Pedersen, Ros Gold-Onwude, Jillian Harmon and Jeanette Pohlen were also on that team as non-seniors. Subsequently, Stanford started the 2008-09 under the hardly mysterious, absolutely attention-grabbing moniker of “loaded.”

Sydney and I were destined to be a sports consuming father-daughter duo from the start. My father, Morris Jr. and I bonded over our frequent attendance at Stanford and Cal football games, Giants games, and the A’s. In fact, my father took me to four World Series games between 1972 and 1974 at the Coliseum and in Los Angeles for the first A’s-Dodgers World Series.

Sydney had been to games previously, but on both occasions with Sysha with us as well. Too young to actually watch a game, Syd was content to sit on one of our laps, watch, and listen to all that was going on around her. While oblivious, my child was already on the fast track, having “watched” Stanford play at home in the NCAA Tournament (March 24, 2008 vs. UTEP) and experienced Sacred Heart Cathedral’s No. 1 nationally-ranked high school girls team (January 2008) in their home gym.

I can’t say that Sydney ever became a fan of the game. Now 16 years old, she’s a surfer, a swimmer, and a student. My deceased father would scratch his head knowing that his grandchild’s high school football team won a California state championship, played 15 games, and she didn’t attend any of them. But ultimately, none of that matters. She’s our child, we love her and support any healthy activities she wants to pursue.

Not only did Tara VanDerveer predict that Iowa State would leave Jayne Appel one-on-one in the paint on March 30, 2009, she also felt the result would be a 50-point night for her star player with the game being played just 19 miles from Appel’s high school in Concord, CA. Drake’s Lori Baumann holds the record for individual scoring in the NCAA Tournament with a 50-point game in 1982, and Sheryl Swoopes is second with a 47-point game in 1993. The normally tight-lipped VanDerveer kept tight-lipped, mentioning her forecast only to Appel minutes before the game tipped off. I walked into the arena that night, unaware of what the Stanford sideline had in store. An NCAA-record scoring performance in an Elite Eight game was a lot, even in 2009, some 15 years prior to the Caitlin Clark supernova striking planet Earth.

But almost immediately, that’s exactly what transpired. Appel scored 27 points in the first half, made 13 shots, missed just six, and outscored Iowa State single handedly. In her junior year season, Big Jayne was injury free, in top condition, and way too nimble with her feet, arms, and hands to be contained. An All-American on her best night, she blew past her previous high that season of 29 points by scoring the first six points of the second half, and the rout was on. With 46 points, 16 rebounds in 35 minutes on the floor, Appel settled into third place on the Tournament game scoring list, a spot she still holds today.

“I wasn’t concerned about how many points [Appel] scored,” Iowa State coach Bill Fennelly said. “Our plan was to make 10 or 11 3’s, and take away the 3 from them.”

“I came into the gym with the mind-set that I wasn’t going to leave without the net,” Appel said of the 74-53 victory. “We weren’t going to leave here without cutting down those nets. It just wasn’t an option.”

Sydney didn’t know Jayne Appel was having a big night. Sydney was having a big night. First of all, she looked great in a billowing, red dress with tights underneath. As soon as we arrived at the game (fashionably 20 minutes late), the compliments started, as my daughter loved being around 9,000 other people, many realizing what a dashing 18-month old child could be. In exchange for the compliments, she put on a show, prancing in several directions at once, unconstrained by me or her stroller. I knew my daughter, I could keep an eye on her and the game. So I thought…

Once we settled into an area of the bleachers behind one of the baskets that allowed us appropriate space for a daddy-daughter combo, I was immediately on alert. Sydney, I later found out, had napped much of the day while I was at work. That following a big breakfast, and preceding her entrance at the game. My beautiful daughter started climbing in and through the bleachers at a furious pace, not caring about messing up her clothes.

Quickly, I positioned myself to grab her at any moment. People were watching me, and both of us, as I played a dangerous game of sports fan and parent trying to prevent my child from falling through the bleachers into the metal supports and hardwood below. I’m sure some watching thought I was foolish enough to let Sydney harm herself.

I wasn’t that foolish.

While Appel racked up the points, I just stopped watching. Thanks to Tara VanDerveer, I’d never been at a Stanford game and worried about them possibly losing. So the crowd, heavily populated with Stanford fans, let me know that things were going well, and I just focused on Sydney.

So on the night Big Jayne Appel scored a Stanford-record 46 points, I probably saw her score 18. I’m okay with that, I got a lifetime memory instead.

Florida Gulf Toast: A’s outclassed, shutout again 11-0 by the Rays

By Morris Phillips

For the A’s, it has to get better because it can’t get worse.

In losing 11-0 for the second consecutive day the A’s did absolutely nothing of note except appear on the injury list with a significant issue regarding Seth Brown. Given that, saying the right things after the game carries some weight.

“The ball didn’t roll our way today, and we’ve got to shore up some things,” second baseman Tony Kemp said. “It’s good to get the bad things out of the way now. It was a tough series for us. We have stay positive, stay confident and keep moving forward.”

The A’s were swept in three games by the red-hot Rays, who set a couple of impressive records in starting the season 9-0. Run differential is one of those records that was merely enhanced by Tampa Bay outscoring the A’s 31-5 across the series.

“When you’re rolling as a team, you just keep it going. You don’t question anything,” said Brandon Lowe.

As outstanding as the Rays were, it still felt the A’s were trying to draw greater attention to themselves with their poor play. The A’s managed just one hit–Ramon Laureano’s single–and two baserunners. Only five A’s reached base on Saturday night, another snoozefest for the visitors.

James Kaprelian’s start was rocky, but it looked like almond butter until the fourth when Brandon Lowe’s grand slam put things out of reach at 5-0. The Rays struck for four more in the sixth, and single runs in the eighth and ninth.

The A’s pitching staff proved plenty helpful by issuing seven walks and hitting two batters.

Brown was injured in Saturday’s game on a check swing. The injury became serious when it was diagnosed as an oblique issue that will land Brown’s critical contributions on the disabled list.

The A’s visit Baltimore on Monday, another team on the rise. JP Sears will face Kyle Gibson in the series opener.

Giants Homer Happy Again: SF sets team record in 16-6 romp over the White Sox

By Morris Phillips

On three occasions, the Giants have transformed into an unforgiving row of home run sluggers. On three other occasions, they’ve been just as noticeably quiet offensively.

At 3-3, the Giants have survived an opening week against formidable opponents in New York and Chicago because of the homers with the opening home stand against the Royals and Dodgers on tap.

What can expected going forward?

“From start to finish, we kind of kept the gas pedal down from an offensive perspective,” manager Gabe Kapler said. “That’s going to be critical to our success long-term.”

According to Giants President of Baseball Operations Farhan Zaidi, this season’s team would again be among the industry’s best at hitting home runs, even without Aaron Judge or Carlos Correa. Zaidi’s proven himself correct as the Giants lead MLB with 15 home runs after six games. The only troubling aspect is that 12 of those have come in just two games, most recently Thursday afternoon in the 16-6 rout of the White Sox.

“They just didn’t miss the pitches they were looking for,” Chicago’s Seby Zavala said. “A couple balls down the middle, and they didn’t miss today. They didn’t miss much this week.”

“Every mistake we made, they squared it up,” White Sox manager Pedro Grifol said. “I don’t know if that’s who they are or they came in hot, I’m not sure. We’ll find out.”

On Thursday, starter Lance Lynn was left despondent by allowing a first inning blast to Michael Conforto and a second inning job to Blake Sabol. With the Giants already comfortably ahead 6-3 in the fifth, Mike Yastrzemski touched Lynn with a two-run shot to go.

Later against a beleaguered Sox bullpen, Wilmer Flores and J.D. Davis also went deep.

“These guys have power and can hit the ball in the air, and this is the type of stadium that’s going to reward them for taking good swings,” Kapler said.

Lynn allowed eight runs, nine hits in 4 1/3 innings. For the Giants, starter Alex Wood allowed three runs and was lifted when allowed the first two batters of the fourth inning to reach. Jakob Junis came on for Wood, and chaos subsided during his four scoreless innings that earned him the win.

The Giants hit seven homers on Monday, one on Wednesday, and five more Thursday to tie a team record for home runs in a series that dates back to 1961.

The Giants were without Brandon Crawford, with Thairo Estrada in his place at shortstop. That resulted in a pair of mishandled balls that hurt Wood’s cause but didn’t diminish the overall product, which was overwhelming.

The Giants open their home schedule on Friday afternoon with Alex Cobb facing Kansas City’s Brad Keller at 1:35 pm.

South Side Homer-cide: Giants hit 7 home runs in 12-3 rout of the White Sox

By Morris Phillips

Michael Kopech and the White Sox need a day off. Lucky for them, they’ll get one on Tuesday.

Kopech might need to get his neck checked and the Sox just need a reset after the visiting Giants ruined Opening Day on the South Side with seven home runs, including four off Kopech in the fifth inning alone.

Kopech was rendered to some incredulous reactions as he became the first pitcher to give up five home runs to the Giants in one game since 1987. The Giants went on to win easily, 12-3 at sold-out Guaranteed Rate Field.

The occasion was no doubt unexpected after the Giants were shut out on Thursday and Sunday at Yankee Stadium. But the outburst made it clear the Giants will be home run happy again in 2023 despite not landing home run king Aaron Judge in the off-season.

“That Sunday loss really left a bad taste in our mouth,” said David Villar, who connected twice. “We wanted to come out here and get things rolling.”

Villar was joined by Michael Conforto, Mike Yastrzemski, Joc Pederson, Thairo Estrada, and Bryce Johnson in the homer deluge. Johnson’s was the first of his Major League career, and Conforto’s his first as a Giant after missing the entire 2022 season due to a shoulder injury.

And even more impressive than the seven home runs by the visitors? The return of Anthony DeSclafani, who pitched six, scoreless innings to secure the win. DeSclafani appeared in just five games last season before he was shut down due to an ankle injury and won for the first time since October 2021.

“It felt like I was just throwing strikes with everything,” DeSclafani said. “The two-seam, the slider, I guess you could call them the keys to the game.”

DeSclafani even had time for an ego-driven argument/non-argument with Andrew Vaughn, who may have disagreed with the pitcher’s pitch selection on a 3-0 count with a runner on in the second inning. All we know is DeSclafani was quick to defend his choice of a slider that resulted in a harmless ground-out by Vaughn.

The White Sox were left to provide almost all the answers afterwards as their clunker followed an impressive weekend in Houston against the World Series champion Astros in a four-game split.

Manager Pedro Grifol promised his staff would look to see if Kopech was tipping his pitches or was hurt by a decrease in velocity within his pitching stint, which may have led to the five homers he allowed. Either way, the Giants have reclaimed their personality of a homer-hunting ball club with or without a crew of name-brand sluggers in their lineup.

The three-game series resumes Wednesday with a marquee matchup of Logan Webb and Chicago’s Dylan Cease.

Open But Not Ready For Business: A’s go down quietly in 6-0 loss to the Angels

By Morris Phillips

OAKLAND–In 2022, the A’s were last in the American League in hits, and second to last in runs scored. If nothing else, rule changes instituted to perk up offenses throughout the industry figured to give the A’s a needed boost.

That boost hasn’t kicked in yet.

The A’s concluded an implosive, opening weekend by being shutout 6-0 by the Angels in which they managed just two occasions with runners in scoring position. In the three game series, the A’s lost twice, while compiling three runs, one homer three doubles while striking out 26 times.

Not good.

Four of the A’s five hits on Sunday were singles, and none of the four exited the infield at above 90 mph. Esteury Ruiz, the promising infielder with top-of-the-order potential, had a slow weekend with just one hit. Jesus Aquilar, who hit 35 home runs with Milwaukee in 2018, did a little more. But the total wasn’t enough, not with the pendulum swinging back towards offense.

“Offense is momentum, and we haven’t been able to put it together and string hits together,” manager Mark Kotsay said. “We haven’t had a big inning yet this year.”

The A’s again looked for signs of improvement from starting pitcher Ken Waldichuk, who had a rough spring in which he struggled with his pitch command. On Sunday, Waldichuk produced three scoreless frames and then saw things unravel with three Angels’ homers over the next two innings.

As an illustration of how far the A’s must travel, Los Angeles superstars Shohei Ohtani and Mike Trout homered back-to-back in the fifth to put the visitors up 6-0. Both had gone homeless in the series before they connected against Waldichuk.

The Angels were clearly frustrated on Thursday after they squandered Ohtani’s pitching performance and fell 2-1 to the A’s. But the response was to score 19 of the remaining 20 runs in the series and win easily on Saturday and Sunday.

“We’re swinging at the right pitches,” Angels’ manager Phil Nevin said. “That’s the thing. I like the way we’re controlling the zone. Keep hitting balls on the barrel, and we’re gonna score a lot of runs. We’re deep and want to be relentless and keep coming at you.”

Adrian Martinez stood as the A’s bright spot. The A’s reliever threw the final three innings scoreless, allowing just one hit.

On Monday, the A’s get a second difficult opponent in the Guardians to begin the season. Cleveland’s Zach Plesac and Oakland’s James Kaprelian are the announced starters.