League Updates Uncategorized

Let the Rosebuds Tremble

Last evening the Wolverines posted their first roster move of June — bumping the 40% 0f Muncy at OH to 2b, to uproot the replacement PAs that had sprouted there and already had 7 leaves; and bumping 40% 0f V0gelbach from the  bench to OH to replace the newly missing Muncy.  But you know those Old Detroiters.  They just cannot leave well enough alone.  They had to end ominously: “Let the Rosebuds tremble.”

.

At first I dismissed this as just more Wolverine bluster.  No one has ever paid any attention to it before. Why should I do so now? But there was something about this particular threat… it seemed familiar, like I’d heard it before.   It didn’t take me long to find the source from which Old Detroit was drawing.  Let me quote from the source, Antoine de St. Exupery, slightly edited:

Abruptly, without anything to lead up to it, and as if the question had been born of long and silent meditation on his problem, he demanded:

“A Wolverine–if it eats little bushes, does it eat Rosebuds, too?”

“A Wolverine,” I answered, “eats anything it finds in its reach.”

“Even flowers that have thorns?”

“Yes, even flowers that have thorns.”

“Then the thorns–what use are they?”

I did not know. At that moment I was very busy …

“The thorns–what use are they?”

The little prince never let go of a question, once he had asked it…  I answered with the first thing that came into my head:

“The thorns are of no use at all. Rosebuds have thorns just for spite!”

“Oh!”

There was a moment of complete silence. Then the little prince flashed back at me, with a kind of resentfulness:

“I don’t believe you! Rosebuds are weak creatures. They are naive. They reassure themselves as best they can. They believe that their thorns are terrible weapons…”

I should pause here to explain a problem I am having with the text.  De St. Exupery — these French, with their long pretentious names, so thoughtless of others who have to write them over and over. I believe God wants us all to have short names, preferably 4 letters or less, out of love for our neighbors. So we are going to call him St. Ex.  But that’s not the problem I was going to talk about.

.

The problem I have is St. Ex wrote this originally in French.  This was not all bad. I first read Le Petit Prince in French, and it remains the longest work I have ever read in French. Which, of course, qualifies me to translate it into accessible English.  The other English translations keep translating the Rosebud-eating animal as a “sheep.”  But we have no sheep in the EFL.  If I translate it as “sheep” how could you EFLers ever understand the text?  So I have adopted the less-common reading of the text, to depict the Rosebuds’ well-known vulnerability to Wolverines, which will make much more sense in our league context.

But now it is time to interrupt our little tale with some matters of consequence: the latest table of sums showing the EFL standings.

EFL Standings for the morning of June 15, 2019
EFL
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB RS RA
Portland Rosebuds 47 22 .682 418.9 287.1
Flint Hill Tornadoes 42 25 .634 3.6 434.2 329.6
Old Detroit Wolverines 38 29 .567 8 382.8 330.4
Peshastin Pears 36 33 .529 10.6 355.8 335.6
Canberra Kangaroos 36 33 .527 10.7 383.2 364.7
Pittsburgh Alleghenys 35 32 .515 11.6 314.8 304.3
Kaline Drive 33 36 .473 14.4 278.7 294.4
Haviland Dragons 32 37 .457 15.5 340.8 369.8
Cottage Cheese 30 38 .446 16.2 368.8 407.9
Bellingham Cascades 29 38 .440 16.6 322.2 367.8
Brookland Outs 27 41 .401 19.3 331.4 408.1
D.C. Balk 25 44 .360 22.2 290.3 386.8

.

Portland: “W”, 2 – 2. (37 PA, .194, .270, .355; 2.7 ip, 2 er, 6.75 ERA). As you can see, the Rosebuds are really tender little things, requiring care.

So, he (the little prince) tended the Rosebuds.

So, too, they began very quickly to torment him… One day, for instance, when they were speaking of their four thorns…,

Scholars have long wondered about these four thorns the Rosebuds are so proud of.  What do they refer to?  Perhaps literal thorns.  But if we look at yesterday’s numbers, we can see the four thorns are the four most dangerous Rosebuds, ie: Anthony Rendon (1 homer and a sacrifice fly in 4 PA, for an OPS of 1.583), Tommy Pham ( 2 for 4 with a walk, 1.100), Myles Straw (a walk, 1.000), and… Eduardo Escobar (1 for 4 with a double? 0.750 OPS)? Or maybe Blaine Hardy (2 scoreless innings)?  Sure, Rendon is a terrible sharp sword, and Tommy Pham can hurt… but the rest?  No wonder Wolverines for so many years munched contendedly on Rosebuds.

.
Flint Hill:  W 1, L 1; 12 – 17. (35 PA, .192, .400, .346; 4.3 ip, 4 er, 8.31 ERA).

“We are not at all afraid of Wolverines,” they went on, “but we have a horror of drafts.”

“A horror of drafts–that is bad luck, for a plant,” remarked the little prince.

Boy, is it ever, especially when you have a huge collection of violently swirling drafts bearing down on you.  Or, at least, in position to bear down on you if they could get a little better pitching than Tyler Mahle’s 4.3 ip, 4 er.

.
Old Detroit: W 2, L 0; 19 – 11. (62 PA, .382, .444, .745; 11 ip, 6 er, 4.91 ERA).

(The Rosebuds) said to the little prince:

“Let the Wolverines come with their claws!”

...(T)he little prince objected. “Wolverines do not eat weeds.”

“We are not weeds,” the Rosebuds replied, sweetly.

This passage is, in a way, admirable, considering by Rosebud standards the Wolverines have at least 10 thorn-class weapons: the 10 batters (out of 14) who OPSed 1.000 or better Friday: Ahmed, Bell, Contreras, Devers, Jimenez (the highest at 2.400, thanks to his two homers), Muncy, Reynolds, Riley, Smith, and  Trea Turner.  Toss in Austin Hedges (!) at .929, and Andrew Heaney’s 5 ip, 1 earned run, and you have 12 Wolverine claws more dangerous than the fourth — or maybe even the third — Rosebud “thorn.”  And, in the face of all those terrible pointy weapons, the Rosebuds say “Let the Wolverines come with their claws!”  How touching.
        But their confidence is not shared by their little prince, as we can see from another passage:

…The little prince was now white with rage.

“The Rosebuds have been growing thorns for millions of years. For millions of years the Wolverines have been eating them just the same. And is it not a matter of consequence to try to understand why the Rosebuds go to so much trouble to grow thorns which are never of any use to them? Is the warfare between the Wolverines and the Rosebuds not important? Is this not of more consequence than a (ed. note: ever-so-slightly) fat red-faced gentleman’s sums? And if I know–I, myself–one Rosebud which is unique in the world, which grows nowhere but on my planet, but which one little Wolverine can destroy in a single bite some morning, without even noticing what he is doing–Oh! You think that is not important!”

Who is likely to know better: the brave but naive Rosebuds, or their wise prince of a manager?
.
Canberra: W, 8 – 5. (50 PA, .295, .360, .614; 15.3 ip, 7 er, 4.11 ERA).  One might argue I should have rendered the French word for sheep (or wolverine) as “kangaroo” since kangaroos are more likely to eat plants like sheep do.  But there were so many problems with that option, I could not adopt it.  First of all, the K’s only showed 7, maybe 8 “claws” Friday (Abreu, Anderson, Bregman, Garver, Hoskins, and Senzel OPsing 1.000 or more; Starling Marte OPSing .900; and Drew Pomeranz hurling 5 scoreless innings). And Pomeranz is only allocated 50%.  Second, the K’s are still over 10 games back.  Admittedly, the Wolverines are terrified of the Kangaroos. But the K’s are not likely to be very fearsome to someone as far off as the Rosebuds. And third, consider this drawing of the animal threatening the Rosebuds:
It’s not a great likeness of a wolverine. But one of the motifs in Le Petit Prince is St. Ex’s lack of drawing skills. When he encounters the little prince, St. Ex only knows how to draw this:
which everyone thinks is a hat.  Only the little prince recognizes it immediately as this
drawn from the outside, without the cutaway view. So St. Ex’s drawing cannot be taken as photographically accurate.  (Not even if you translate the French description of the drawing as “tiger” rather than “wolverine”, as some English editions do.  Where are the tiger’s stripes?).
         It may not be a perfectly drawn wolverine, but anyone can see it’s not a kangaroo.
.
Peshastin: “W”, 4 – 5. (36 PA, .265, .278, .353; 1 ip, 0 er , 0.00 ERA).  And it practically goes without saying that Rosebuds would never be afraid of Pears.  Pears have no mouths or teeth with which to munch Rosebuds.  Pears have no fearsome claws with which to shred them.  Even though the Pears have four true thorns (guys OPSing 1.000 or better Friday:  Albies, Forsythe, C. Frazier, Vazquez)…
.
Pittsburgh: “L”,  12 – 9.  (42 PA, .344, .500, .719; 5 ip, 4 er, 7.20 ERA).  A range of mountains appears in Le Petit Prince.  Very dangerous looking mountains:
Far scarier than the wolverine, if you ask me: bigger, pointier, less tender.  But this is clearly an old picture.  Currently the Alleghenys look more like this:
There may be a JD Martinez out there somewhere, looming large with his 3 for 4 with 2 homers and 2 walks at an altitude of 3.083 OPS.  But with even a little care, getting through the modern Alleghenys is more like a pleasant hike than a desperate, perilous ordeal.
.
Kaline: L, 2 – 10. (44 PA, .400, .455, .800; 5 ip, 6 er, 10.80 ERA).  I considered whether to translate “draft” as “drive”, making the Rosebuds suffer in horror of the Drive. After all, no other team fielded three batters Friday OPSing over 2.000, as the Drive did (Kris Bryant, Omar Narvaez, and especially three-homer Hunter Renfroe).  After all, our Tornados, supposedly comprising thousands and thousands of horrifying drafts, looked a lot tamer than the Drive on Friday.  And perhaps one day I will switch the translation to “Drive.”  But I think I should wait at least until the Drive are back above .500 or the text won’t make any sense.
.
Haviland: W, 12 – 4. (47 PA, .350, .447, .550; 4 ip, 0 er, 0.00 ERA).  I am a little shocked that Dragons don’t appear as a threat to Rosebuds in Le Petit Prince.  Their sharpest talon Friday was awesome — Kolten Wong (2 for 2 with a homer, for a 3.500 OPS!) and four other claws (B Lowe, Puig, Severino, Tatis) OPSed over 1.000.  We all remember days when we all trembled at the sight of the Dragons.  Those days are likely to return. But for now…
.
Cottage: “W”, 6 – 9. (32 PA, .310, .375, .345; 3 ip, 1 er, 3.00 ERA).  The Cheese sprouted 3’s all over their stat line Friday.  But only Yandy Diaz exceeded 1.000 OPS.  Drew Smyly took one step toward resurrecting his career (3 ip, 1 er), but performed his labors for the Corvallis Curds rather than the big league team.
.
Bellingham: W, 8 – 7. (31 PA, .323, .364, .774; 2 ip, 1 er, 4.50 ERA.)  The Cascades welcomed JP Crawford back to action, adding his 2  doubles in 5 trips (1.200 OPS) to their list of SIX sharp weapons (over 1.000 OPS), topped by Charlie Culberson latest pinch hit extra-base hit (a triple) and his resulting 4.000 OPS.  (Acuna, Harper, McCann, and Justin Turner were the other 1.000 or better OPSers.)
        Actually, the Cascades appear in Le Petit Prince.  On his home planet, the little prince has three volcanos, which he cleans out every day to keep them from exploding — even the extinct one, because one never knows. However, the volcanos don’t look like this:
or this
They look more like this:
.
Brookland: W, 9 – 8. (33 PA, .357, .455, .643; 1 ip, 0 er, 0 ERA). We’ve had peaks over 3.000 OPS, and even 4.000 OPS.  The Outs top them all: Jose Martinez not only homered in his pinch hit appearance to generate a 5.000 OPS, he drove in three runs crucial to the Outs’ win. Five other Outs also met or exceeded the 1.000 OPS mark: Bellinger, Guerrero, Jones, Machado, and d’Arnaud.
.
DC: W (-1), L 2; 5 – 18. (46 PA, .24, .326, .366; 2.3 ip, 7 er, 27.000 ERA). Alas. The magic of Le Petit Prince didn’t seem to reach DC.  Matt Chapman (2.083) led a gang of 4 thorny 1.000 and better OPSers (including Holt, Kiermaier, and Riddle), but the rest of the offense was dormant, and the pitchers behaved like a pair of poorly-tended volcanoes, spewing a triple chulk all over the Balkans.
.
Combined MLB + EFL Standings for 2019
AL East
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Flint Hill Tornadoes 43 26 .625
Tampa Bay Rays 42 27 .609 1.1
New York Yankees 41 27 .603 1.6
Old Detroit Wolverines 40 29 .575 3.5
Boston Red Sox 37 34 .521 7.1
Toronto Blue Jays 25 44 .362 18.1
Baltimore Orioles 21 48 .304 22.1
NL East
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Atlanta Braves 41 29 .586
Philadelphia Phillies 38 31 .551 2.5
Canberra Kangaroos 37 33 .530 3.9
New York Mets 33 36 .478 7.5
Washington Nationals 32 37 .464 8.5
Miami Marlins 24 43 .358 15.5
D.C. Balk 24 46 .349 16.6
AL Central
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Minnesota Twins 46 22 .676
Pittsburgh Alleghenys 35 33 .516 10.9
Cleveland Indians 35 33 .515 11
Chicago White Sox 34 34 .500 12
Bellingham Cascades 30 38 .442 16
Detroit Tigers 25 41 .379 20
Kansas City Royals 22 47 .319 24.5
NL Central
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Milwaukee Brewers 39 30 .565
Chicago Cubs 38 31 .551 1
St. Louis Cardinals 35 33 .515 3.5
Pittsburgh Pirates 31 38 .449 8
Cincinnati Reds 30 37 .448 8
Cottage Cheese 31 38 .444 8.4
Brookland Outs 28 41 .405 11.1
AL West
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Houston Astros 47 23 .671
Texas Rangers 37 32 .536 9.5
Oakland A’s 35 35 .500 12
Los Angeles Angels 34 36 .486 13
Kaline Drive 33 37 .478 13.6
Haviland Dragons 33 37 .466 14.4
Seattle Mariners 30 43 .411 18.5
NL West
TEAM WINS LOSSES PCT. GB
Portland Rosebuds 48 22 .682
Los Angeles Dodgers 47 23 .671 0.8
Peshastin Pears 37 33 .527 10.8
Colorado Rockies 36 33 .522 11.3
Arizona Diamondbacks 37 34 .521 11.3
San Diego Padres 34 36 .486 13.8
San Francisco Giants 29 38 .433 17.3