04.19.10

Tampa Bay Rays lead AL East after sweep of Red Sox

Posted in Blogging about Sports, MLB, Tampa Bay Rays at 3:24 PM by Administrator

Black Ray

The Tampa Bay have won seven straight games, all on the road, and match the club’s best winning streak away from Tropicana Field in one season. The Rays last won seven in a row in June of 2004.

Feel the heat!!!

Check out the news….

http://tampabay.rays.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20100419&content_id=9417360&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=tb

04.08.10

The Florida Writer Sports Blog 2010 MLB Predictions

Posted in Blogging about Sports, MLB, Tampa Bay Rays at 2:55 PM by Administrator

Going out on a limb this year, but I feel the Hot-Lanta Braves are going to do something special this year. I think they will win their division. I also think they win the NL pennant. They will make it to the Big Show, where they will try and win one last World Series for Bobby Cox before he retires. But here is where they run into the hungry Tampa Bay Rays. It will be a great WS, and both teams will play their hearts out. But Tampa Bay takes the trophy home this year. If I’m wrong, and none of this comes true, it won’t bother me at all, unless those stinking New York Yankees win another one! Anybody but them! Please!
busch
O.K. Right off the bat I’m going out on a limb here, but I feel the Hot-Lanta Braves are going to do something special this year. First off, I think they will win their division. I also think they will win the NL pennant. They will make it to the Big Show, where they will try and win one last World Series for Bobby Cox before he retires. But here is where they run into the hungry young Tampa Bay Rays. It will be a great WS, and both teams will play their hearts out. But Tampa Bay takes the trophy home this year.

If I’m wrong, and none of this comes true, it won’t bother me one bit, unless those stinking New York Yankees win another one! Anybody but them! Please!

Anyway, here we go…read em a weep.  And the winners are……..

AL East – Tampa Bay Rays
AL Central – Minnesota Twins
AL West – LA Angels
NL East – Atlanta Braves
NL Central – St. Louis Cards
NL West – Colorado Rockies

World Series: TB Rays vs Atlanta Braves

Winner: TB Rays in 6.

Charles J Asbury II
The Florida Writer
cja@flawriter.com

How can you not like the Tampa Bay Rays?

Posted in Blogging about Sports, MLB, Tampa Bay Rays at 3:35 AM by Administrator

feel the heat

The article below is  just one of the many reasons that I pull for the Tampa Bay Rays. The lowest paid team in baseball constantly gets the job done. They are All-Stars playing for peanuts. Well, maybe not peanuts, but playing because they love the game. These guys are a throw back team. This is the way baseball used to be. Playing because you love the game. It’s what made baseball America’s favorite past-time. Day after day they give 100%. These guys always give their fans something to cheer about. The fans always get their money’s worth.

This team is one of the only teams that come close to resembling the Atlanta Braves of the 1990’s. Young, talented, and hungry! Enjoy the Rays this year while you can. Because next year, this team might not be around. Free agency will steal away some of the better players. Then some rich team like the New York Yankees will shell out big bucks, and break up this young ball club. Thankfully they have the best farm system in baseball. So at least their are more young kids waiting for their shot at the big leagues. Just like the Braves used to have. Anyway, go see them while they’re still around. Go Rays!!!

Enjoy the article.

Crawford, Rays commiserate in the poorhouse

The scene, so familiar the past two years, played out again Tuesday night. The Tampa Bay Rays, an unparalleled collection of young baseball-playing talent, hugged and jumped and celebrated together. They won their first game of the season in dramatic fashion, and their whooping included no pretense. They were thrilled for the fans, for each other and for the man in the middle of their makeshift mosh pit.

Carl Crawford, the heart of the Rays, will be a free agent after the season.

His name is Carl Crawford(notes), and he is, very simply, the Tampa Bay Rays. Crawford is a 28-year-old left fielder for the Rays. He has won four American League stolen-base titles, hit .300 or better four times and is generally considered the best defensive player at his position in the major leagues. Crawford remains the lone link between the historically disastrous Rays of the early 2000s and the wildly talented Rays of the new decade – a team that, despite limited resources, fields a lineup with almost every bit the talent of their top American League East foes, the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox.

“I’ve seen it grow from nothing to something, and I’ve been fortunate to be a part of that,” Crawford said. “When something like that happens, it has a special place inside you. So, you know, you remember that.”

Crawford paused. He knew the next sentence needed to escape from his lips. It still pained him to say it.

“And then,” he said, “you do what you have to do.”

Because he epitomizes the Rays, and because the Rays players and executives revere him, they don’t want to think about what he will have to do seven months from now. The World Series will be over, and Crawford will officially be a free agent. Tampa Bay’s payroll clocks in around $70 million this year, and it’s a number for which franchise owner Stuart Sternberg is stretching. It likely won’t stay that high. Crawford will command $15 million a year, minimum, on the open market. Never has a pending divorce been so obvious.

Each side dances around the subject. Crawford wants to stay. Rays general manager Andrew Friedman wants him to stay. Only baseball isn’t a game with a socialistic bent. The sport’s poor get insulted and injured, and everyone goes about their merry, money-making way.

“We expect him to be a big part of it this year – and, hopefully, for many more years to come,” Friedman said. “But we understand the situation.”

Which is that come opening day 2011, Carl Crawford, heart of the Rays, will be just the latest mercenary on a big-money team – and the first in a long line of Rays who could chase green in other pastures. First baseman Carlos Pena(notes) hits free agency next year. Shortstop Jason Bartlett(notes) follows in 2011, center fielder B.J. Upton(notes) and relief ace J.P. Howell(notes) in 2012. Starter Matt Garza(notes) and super utilityman Ben Zobrist(notes) could hit paydirt in 2013.

Even though Friedman maneuvers deftly in almost all respects of his job – he locked up the team’s best player, Evan Longoria(notes), through 2016, circumvents service-time problems with aplomb and built the best farm system in the minor leagues – he alone cannot stop the inevitable. In less than a year, the Rays will bleed talent. To cauterize themselves would take a miracle.

“It’s too bad,” said Scott Kazmir(notes), the former Rays ace whom they traded to the Los Angeles Angels last year. “I really hope they don’t turn into a situation like Oakland, where everyone says, ‘All those guys used to play for them?’ It’s going to, though. All that talent is going to go, and there’s nothing they can do about it.”

As much as Kazmir’s prediction sounds like doomsday, Crawford agreed: “He might have a point.” And as the Rays compete in the best division since baseball realigned in 1994, they face a reality nothing can change.

Well, almost nothing.

Baseball is readying for a labor war next year. The union on Tuesday alluded to a potential collusion claim from the most recent free-agent class. Major League Baseball wants to expand the draft internationally and institute a hard slotting system. The players are tired of the service-time manipulation that keeps them from millions of dollars. The ever-present drug-testing issue lingers. Big-market owners hate subsidizing smaller-market teams which refuse to spend their share of revenue sharing.

And gathering more than any of those issues is MLB commissioner Bud Selig’s suggestion of realignment, which might as well be called The Plan to Rescue the Rays. Selig is not pushing realignment out of any particular affinity for Tampa Bay. More than a decade after the team arrived, it’s still an area masquerading as a big-league city, with tickets remaining for opening day less than a week out and a local radio station airing Yankees games 1,000 miles from the Bronx. Neither Tampa nor St. Petersburg, Fla., seems particularly inclined to publicly fund a new stadium, and without such revenues, the Rays will continue to take the Yankees’ welfare money and troll around baseball’s thrift store.

“We can’t pretend like we’re someone we’re not,” Friedman said. “We have to understand and appreciate our challenges and limitations and operate within them. We’re confident we can do so in a manner that allows us to remain competitive for as long as we can in this division. It’s a big distinction.”

Still, it’s that very act of competing – and, in 2008, prevailing – that serves as the impetus behind Selig’s final big act as the sport’s overlord. He owned the Milwaukee Brewers. He understands the perils of small markets. He realizes the union never will agree to a salary cap, and if there’s anything within his power to balance competitiveness, he’ll do it.

The solutions are thin. Splitting up the Yankees and Red Sox is a non-starter. The floating realignment concept – offered by a panel Selig hand-picked to suggest improvements for the game – is ludicrous, something Selig full well realizes. Adding another wild card increases revenue but doesn’t get rid of an unbalanced schedule that forces the Rays to face teams with budgets two and three times their size – literally – 18 times while other American League teams get the Yankees and Red Sox as few as six times.

Center fielder Desmond Jennings is the top prospect for the Rays and draws comparisons to Crawford.

Everyone in baseball is cognizant of the sport’s flaw: For the Rays to compete, they must overcome themselves and their limitations. They can scout and develop players better than any team in baseball – “It has almost become a cliché at this point,” Friedman said, “but it’s more important to us than any other team in baseball with whom we’re competing against” – but it guarantees them nothing, certainly not a year-in, year-out chance.

One reason Tampa Bay feels comfortable with Crawford’s imminent departure is Desmond Jennings(notes), a 23-year-old who – because he is black and owns a football player’s build – draws immediate comparisons to Crawford. Jennings is the top prospect in a Rays system that is the envy of 29 teams. Wade Davis(notes) made the team as the No. 5 starter; right-hander Jeremy Hellickson(notes) will arrive midsummer at the latest; the Rays love Alex Torres (acquired in the Kazmir deal) as a left-handed specialist; and another wave, led by former No. 1 overall pick Tim Beckham(notes) and minor-league strikeout leader Matt Moore, should arrive by 2013.

It keeps Friedman hopeful that the Rays can survive in the AL East even if realignment fails to place them in a better situation – “better” ever subjective, of course. Howell said the Rays “are who we are because of the Yankees and Red Sox. They make us better. I like going against that money. This organization can actually do that, and it’s rare.”

Still, the implication in the Tampa are and other small markets is stark: Money wins, and baseball ought do to whatever it can to even out finances and reward teams such as the Rays for winning thanks to talent-acquisition acumen that doesn’t involve eight- and nine-digit contracts.

“Anything you do that you feel strongly improves the game, you should be aggressive to do it,” Friedman said. “We’ll debate a lot of different things. If there are things that genuinely have a good chance to improve the game, we should do it. If not, we shouldn’t. I’m very biased on the subject. “I mean, look at us.”

For those who looked at the Rays on Aug. 29, 2009, confusion set in. Kazmir was the pitcher around whom Tampa Bay built its staff, twice an All-Star, four straight years with an ERA below 4.00, and here they were, only 4½ games back of Boston for the wild card, trading him.

The deal, even more than Crawford’s likely exit, typifies the Rays’ existence: When a player does not produce for what they’re paying him – Kazmir was due at least $22.5 million for this year and next – they get rid of him. Friedman, a 33-year-old who worked at Bear Stearns before becoming a baseball executive, forces himself to treat players like commodities because doing otherwise may compromise what little margin of error he is allowed.

“That’s the business part,” Kazmir said. “You have to understand what situation they’re in and what situation you’re in. It took awhile to come to terms with it. You never want to get traded but, at the same time, I couldn’t pick a better situation.”

The Angels were the perfect trading partner for Friedman. They’ve got the financial wherewithal to swallow a contract like Kazmir’s if he bombs out, and they were willing to offer Tampa Bay three prospects, each of whom offers six years before free agency. If even one of them hits – and based on spring training, Sean Rodriguez(notes), a utilityman in the Zobrist mold, looks like a winner, while Rays executives love Torres and third baseman Matt Sweeney as well – the trade was worthwhile.

But Kazmir is right when he alludes to the reload-and-unload philosophy Oakland perfected during its early 2000s heyday. Jason Giambi(notes), Miguel Tejada(notes), Tim Hudson(notes), Mark Mulder(notes), Barry Zito(notes), Dan Haren(notes), Rich Harden(notes), Ted Lilly(notes), Jermaine Dye(notes) and plenty more passed through. The only star left from those teams is third baseman Eric Chavez(notes), whom the A’s chose to sign to a long-term deal, and he has played in 121 games the past three years. Oakland last finished over .500 in 2006.

“We’re not going to become this factory where we nurture these young players and give them away,” Rays manager Joe Maddon said. “I don’t see that. I just don’t see it.”

So he tries to appreciate what he has now. With the Rays trailing 3-2 in the bottom of the ninth inning Tuesday night, with Baltimore Orioles closer Mike Gonzalez(notes) pitching, Crawford ripped a bases-loaded double down the right-field line. The team spilled out of the dugout, mobbed catcher Kelly Shoppach(notes) at home and then made its way to Crawford.

If Longoria is the heart of the Rays going forward, Crawford is at least the blood, the thing that shows up everywhere. The players talk about him privately and lament what November will bring. They think winning will keep the Rays together. They are naïve.

“They can’t get rid of him,” Kazmir said. “They can’t.”

“Everything you see around here,” Howell said, “is a reflection of him.”

“It’s not a comforting thought,” Maddon said, “to think you may lose him.”

Crawford said he won’t talk about his future now that the season has started. His agent, Brian Peters, doesn’t plan on negotiating with the Rays during the season, which ensures Crawford will hit the open market and see the riches that don’t exist in Florida – where, if they even bother with a contract proposal, it will end up near half of his biggest offer.

“You just want to get what you deserve, market value or whatever it is,” Crawford said. “I’m definitely not in a rush to leave. It’s not a guarantee I’ll leave, but it’s the way things are sometimes.

Baseball’s crossroads is quite treacherous. Carl Crawford and the Rays deserve each other, and their relationship is practically forbidden under the current system. Then again, no viable alternative exists, nothing that will help this great team stuck in a meat-grinder division because of its geographical location. Which means Crawford will steal some bases, rap some hits and help the Rays contend this year.

And then he’ll do what he has to do because the sport gives him no other choice.

- Yahoo Sports

The scene, so familiar the past two years, played out again Tuesday night. The Tampa Bay Rays, an unparalleled collection of young baseball-playing talent, hugged and jumped and celebrated together. They won their first game of the season in dramatic fashion, and their whooping included no pretense. They were thrilled for the fans, for each other and for the man in the middle of their makeshift mosh pit.
Carl Crawford, the heart of the Rays, will be a free agent after the season.
His name is Carl Crawford(notes), and he is, very simply, the Tampa Bay Rays. Crawford is a 28-year-old left fielder for the Rays. He has won four American League stolen-base titles, hit .300 or better four times and is generally considered the best defensive player at his position in the major leagues. Crawford remains the lone link between the historically disastrous Rays of the early 2000s and the wildly talented Rays of the new decade – a team that, despite limited resources, fields a lineup with almost every bit the talent of their top American League East foes, the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox.
“I’ve seen it grow from nothing to something, and I’ve been fortunate to be a part of that,” Crawford said. “When something like that happens, it has a special place inside you. So, you know, you remember that.”
Crawford paused. He knew the next sentence needed to escape from his lips. It still pained him to say it.
“And then,” he said, “you do what you have to do.”
Because he epitomizes the Rays, and because the Rays players and executives revere him, they don’t want to think about what he will have to do seven months from now. The World Series will be over, and Crawford will officially be a free agent. Tampa Bay’s payroll clocks in around $70 million this year, and it’s a number for which franchise owner Stuart Sternberg is stretching. It likely won’t stay that high. Crawford will command $15 million a year, minimum, on the open market. Never has a pending divorce been so obvious.
Each side dances around the subject. Crawford wants to stay. Rays general manager Andrew Friedman wants him to stay. Only baseball isn’t a game with a socialistic bent. The sport’s poor get insulted and injured, and everyone goes about their merry, money-making way.
“We expect him to be a big part of it this year – and, hopefully, for many more years to come,” Friedman said. “But we understand the situation.”
Which is that come opening day 2011, Carl Crawford, heart of the Rays, will be just the latest mercenary on a big-money team – and the first in a long line of Rays who could chase green in other pastures. First baseman Carlos Pena(notes) hits free agency next year. Shortstop Jason Bartlett(notes) follows in 2011, center fielder B.J. Upton(notes) and relief ace J.P. Howell(notes) in 2012. Starter Matt Garza(notes) and super utilityman Ben Zobrist(notes) could hit paydirt in 2013.
Even though Friedman maneuvers deftly in almost all respects of his job – he locked up the team’s best player, Evan Longoria(notes), through 2016, circumvents service-time problems with aplomb and built the best farm system in the minor leagues – he alone cannot stop the inevitable. In less than a year, the Rays will bleed talent. To cauterize themselves would take a miracle.
“It’s too bad,” said Scott Kazmir(notes), the former Rays ace whom they traded to the Los Angeles Angels last year. “I really hope they don’t turn into a situation like Oakland, where everyone says, ‘All those guys used to play for them?’ It’s going to, though. All that talent is going to go, and there’s nothing they can do about it.”
As much as Kazmir’s prediction sounds like doomsday, Crawford agreed: “He might have a point.” And as the Rays compete in the best division since baseball realigned in 1994, they face a reality nothing can change.
Well, almost nothing.
Baseball is readying for a labor war next year. The union on Tuesday alluded to a potential collusion claim from the most recent free-agent class. Major League Baseball wants to expand the draft internationally and institute a hard slotting system. The players are tired of the service-time manipulation that keeps them from millions of dollars. The ever-present drug-testing issue lingers. Big-market owners hate subsidizing smaller-market teams which refuse to spend their share of revenue sharing.
And gathering more than any of those issues is MLB commissioner Bud Selig’s suggestion of realignment, which might as well be called The Plan to Rescue the Rays. Selig is not pushing realignment out of any particular affinity for Tampa Bay. More than a decade after the team arrived, it’s still an area masquerading as a big-league city, with tickets remaining for opening day less than a week out and a local radio station airing Yankees games 1,000 miles from the Bronx. Neither Tampa nor St. Petersburg, Fla., seems particularly inclined to publicly fund a new stadium, and without such revenues, the Rays will continue to take the Yankees’ welfare money and troll around baseball’s thrift store.
“We can’t pretend like we’re someone we’re not,” Friedman said. “We have to understand and appreciate our challenges and limitations and operate within them. We’re confident we can do so in a manner that allows us to remain competitive for as long as we can in this division. It’s a big distinction.”
Still, it’s that very act of competing – and, in 2008, prevailing – that serves as the impetus behind Selig’s final big act as the sport’s overlord. He owned the Milwaukee Brewers. He understands the perils of small markets. He realizes the union never will agree to a salary cap, and if there’s anything within his power to balance competitiveness, he’ll do it.
The solutions are thin. Splitting up the Yankees and Red Sox is a non-starter. The floating realignment concept – offered by a panel Selig hand-picked to suggest improvements for the game – is ludicrous, something Selig full well realizes. Adding another wild card increases revenue but doesn’t get rid of an unbalanced schedule that forces the Rays to face teams with budgets two and three times their size – literally – 18 times while other American League teams get the Yankees and Red Sox as few as six times.
Center fielder Desmond Jennings is the top prospect for the Rays and draws comparisons to Crawford.
Everyone in baseball is cognizant of the sport’s flaw: For the Rays to compete, they must overcome themselves and their limitations. They can scout and develop players better than any team in baseball – “It has almost become a cliché at this point,” Friedman said, “but it’s more important to us than any other team in baseball with whom we’re competing against” – but it guarantees them nothing, certainly not a year-in, year-out chance.
One reason Tampa Bay feels comfortable with Crawford’s imminent departure is Desmond Jennings(notes), a 23-year-old who – because he is black and owns a football player’s build – draws immediate comparisons to Crawford. Jennings is the top prospect in a Rays system that is the envy of 29 teams. Wade Davis(notes) made the team as the No. 5 starter; right-hander Jeremy Hellickson(notes) will arrive midsummer at the latest; the Rays love Alex Torres (acquired in the Kazmir deal) as a left-handed specialist; and another wave, led by former No. 1 overall pick Tim Beckham(notes) and minor-league strikeout leader Matt Moore, should arrive by 2013.
It keeps Friedman hopeful that the Rays can survive in the AL East even if realignment fails to place them in a better situation – “better” ever subjective, of course. Howell said the Rays “are who we are because of the Yankees and Red Sox. They make us better. I like going against that money. This organization can actually do that, and it’s rare.”
Still, the implication in the Tampa are and other small markets is stark: Money wins, and baseball ought do to whatever it can to even out finances and reward teams such as the Rays for winning thanks to talent-acquisition acumen that doesn’t involve eight- and nine-digit contracts.
“Anything you do that you feel strongly improves the game, you should be aggressive to do it,” Friedman said. “We’ll debate a lot of different things. If there are things that genuinely have a good chance to improve the game, we should do it. If not, we shouldn’t. I’m very biased on the subject. “I mean, look at us.”
For those who looked at the Rays on Aug. 29, 2009, confusion set in. Kazmir was the pitcher around whom Tampa Bay built its staff, twice an All-Star, four straight years with an ERA below 4.00, and here they were, only 4½ games back of Boston for the wild card, trading him.
The deal, even more than Crawford’s likely exit, typifies the Rays’ existence: When a player does not produce for what they’re paying him – Kazmir was due at least $22.5 million for this year and next – they get rid of him. Friedman, a 33-year-old who worked at Bear Stearns before becoming a baseball executive, forces himself to treat players like commodities because doing otherwise may compromise what little margin of error he is allowed.
“That’s the business part,” Kazmir said. “You have to understand what situation they’re in and what situation you’re in. It took awhile to come to terms with it. You never want to get traded but, at the same time, I couldn’t pick a better situation.”
The Angels were the perfect trading partner for Friedman. They’ve got the financial wherewithal to swallow a contract like Kazmir’s if he bombs out, and they were willing to offer Tampa Bay three prospects, each of whom offers six years before free agency. If even one of them hits – and based on spring training, Sean Rodriguez(notes), a utilityman in the Zobrist mold, looks like a winner, while Rays executives love Torres and third baseman Matt Sweeney as well – the trade was worthwhile.
But Kazmir is right when he alludes to the reload-and-unload philosophy Oakland perfected during its early 2000s heyday. Jason Giambi(notes), Miguel Tejada(notes), Tim Hudson(notes), Mark Mulder(notes), Barry Zito(notes), Dan Haren(notes), Rich Harden(notes), Ted Lilly(notes), Jermaine Dye(notes) and plenty more passed through. The only star left from those teams is third baseman Eric Chavez(notes), whom the A’s chose to sign to a long-term deal, and he has played in 121 games the past three years. Oakland last finished over .500 in 2006.
“We’re not going to become this factory where we nurture these young players and give them away,” Rays manager Joe Maddon said. “I don’t see that. I just don’t see it.”
So he tries to appreciate what he has now. With the Rays trailing 3-2 in the bottom of the ninth inning Tuesday night, with Baltimore Orioles closer Mike Gonzalez(notes) pitching, Crawford ripped a bases-loaded double down the right-field line. The team spilled out of the dugout, mobbed catcher Kelly Shoppach(notes) at home and then made its way to Crawford.
If Longoria is the heart of the Rays going forward, Crawford is at least the blood, the thing that shows up everywhere. The players talk about him privately and lament what November will bring. They think winning will keep the Rays together. They are naïve.
“They can’t get rid of him,” Kazmir said. “They can’t.”
“Everything you see around here,” Howell said, “is a reflection of him.”
“It’s not a comforting thought,” Maddon said, “to think you may lose him.”
Crawford said he won’t talk about his future now that the season has started. His agent, Brian Peters, doesn’t plan on negotiating with the Rays during the season, which ensures Crawford will hit the open market and see the riches that don’t exist in Florida – where, if they even bother with a contract proposal, it will end up near half of his biggest offer.
“You just want to get what you deserve, market value or whatever it is,” Crawford said. “I’m definitely not in a rush to leave. It’s not a guarantee I’ll leave, but it’s the way things are sometimes.
Baseball’s crossroads is quite treacherous. Carl Crawford and the Rays deserve each other, and their relationship is practically forbidden under the current system. Then again, no viable alternative exists, nothing that will help this great team stuck in a meat-grinder division because of its geographical location. Which means Crawford will steal some bases, rap some hits and help the Rays contend this year.
And then he’ll do what he has to do because the sport gives him no other choice.
- Yahoo Sports

04.04.10

It’s Been A Long Time Since I Rock-n-Rolled

Posted in Blogging about Sports, MLB, Tampa Bay Rays at 1:14 AM by Administrator

Led Zepplin – “Been a Long Time Since I Rock and Rolled”

MLB_LogoA

One of my favorite rock-n-roll songs growing up, still is, and always will be, “It’s Been A Long Time Since I Rock-n- Rolled”, by Led Zeppelin. Yes it has! Well it’s time to “Rock – and – Roll” again. I’ve been away, but now I’m back. It’s time to bring The “Florida Writer Sports Blog” out of the garage, clean it up some, and take it for a ride once again. Lets drive it as fast and furious as possible, and try not get a ticket. Or, for lack of a better another analogy, me not getting hate mail. Well maybe some will be o.k. It keeps me writing, inspires me to respond, and pushes me to be passionate about it as well.

There is no better way to jump start this sports blog, than by firing it up at the beginning of the 2010 Baseball Season.  As a native Floridian, I can get excited about baseball for good reason. First of all, it’s still in my opinion, one of America’s favorite past-times. But secondly, is the fact that here in Florida, we have two of the best clubs in the MLB to root for. The Florida Marlins, and the Tampa Bay Rays. Both teams have the capability to make a run at the playoffs again this year, and possibly even further than that.
The way I write, might offend some people at times. All I can say about that,… is good! But let me explain.

If you agree with everything I write all the time, it would become a bore for me and you. Sometimes I write with a hook, to get solicit a response, and that hook is meant to sting some. If you’re curious what I’m talking about, research an article of mine entitled, “Is Dale Earnhardt Jr. becoming another Kyle Petty?” You can read it here actually, if you want. Just search the title. Anyway, it ran, on the Bleacher Report, Fox-Sports.com, ESPN.com simultaneously, and got lots of attention. I pushed a lot of buttons, and loved every minute of it. Ironically, I like Dale Jr.
This is “The Florida Writer Sports Blog” and I’m not writing for anyone else, so I can write how I want. That includes being blatantly obvious that I like this or that team, player, etc. Or what team, player, etc., that I don’t like. For example: The New York Yankees.

When I write for someone else’s publication for profit, most times I must remain neutral. Not so, here on this blog.
Remember, I’m writing about sports, not your Mama. Don’t get offended, if I call you out, after you’ve called me out about my article, team,player, or whatever. Real men don’t punch and run! So lets Rock-n-Roll. Please, no profanity on this site.

Is anyone else excited about the baseball season starting? Who is your team? What are your expectations of that team? Who is your favorite player? Does he use steroids too? And what is your predictions on who will be the next world champion.

Gentlemen, start your engines………………………………………………….

Charles J Asbury II
The Florida Writer
cja@flawriter.com
Charles J Asbury II
The Florida Writer
cja@flawriter.com

05.09.09

Some Florida Teams, and their fan websites

Posted in Blogging about Sports, College Football, MLB, Misc., NFL, Tampa Bay Rays, florida gators at 7:25 PM by Administrator

  

Florida MLB Sites

Tampa Bay Rays Fan Site – http://tampabay.majorleaguebaseballfansite.com

Florida Marlins Fan Site – http://florida.majorleaguebaseballfansite.com

Florida NFL Sites

Jacksonville Jaguar Fan Site – http://www.jacksonvillejaguarsfansite.com

Tampa Bay Bucs Fan Site – http://www.tampabaybuccaneersfansite.com 

 

Florida NBA Sites

Orlando Magic Fan Site – http://orlando.nbabasketballfansite.com

Miami Heat Fan Site – http://miami.nbabasketballfansite.com

Florida NCAA Sites

Florida Gator Fan Site – http://www.floridafansite.com

Florida State Noles Fan Site – http://www.floridastatefansite.com

Miami Hurricane Fan Site – http://www.miamifansite.com