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07.16.2009 10:45 am

Share your favorite All-Star moment

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
THE WATER COOLER:
What will be your lasting impression from All-Star week in St. Louis? Here are a few from our writers, feel free to share your own in the comments field:
BERNIE MIKLASZ:
My lasting impression is that this is the best baseball town in America. I knew it before, but the outpouring of enthusiasm and support for all All-Star activities was really remarkable, and it reinforced the belief that there’s something unique and special about our town’s relationship with the national pastime.
RICK HUMMEL:
Any time Stan Musial and the other living Cardinals Hall of Famers are on the field, let alone the Clydesdales, is a good day for me.
TOM TIMMERMANN:
I’ll remember the All-Stars going out to shake hands and hug and do whatever with the Stars Among Us group before the game. I hope the players were sincere and meant it, but it’s great to see people who have done volunteer work thanklessly for years get thanks. I have to admit: That was the one part of everything that happened that made me cry.
LUKE THOMPSON:
As great as it is to see the best current players all in one place, my favorite part of All-Star weekend is seeing the MLB greats from yesteryear. Nowhere else can fans find Stan Musial, Ernie Banks, Juan Marichal, Cal Ripken, Jr., and so many more all in one place. It’s a shame all of the former legends were never really introduced together, especially because there was plenty of downtime during a fairly uneventful Home Run Derby Monday night. Still, with the way baseball treasures its history better than any other sport, it was wonderful to see how many legends remain proud representatives of the game and eager to interact with the fans.

DAN O’NEILL:
My favorite moment and lasting impression will have to do with Joe Torre. As always, Torre was genuinely tickled to be back in St. Louis. I covered the team when Torre was here as the manager and had not seen him in several years. It was great to catch up with one of the truly delightful people in the game.

And what I will remember is Torre’s wonderful gesture during the pregame ceremonies. Many people in St. Louis were disappointed that the All-Stars did not surround Stan Musial and embrace him in the manner they embraced Ted Williams 10 years ago. But the one All-Star who did was Torre. After President Barack Obama threw out his pitch and left the field, Torre made a point to leave the NL dugout and go over to Musialand giving him a big hug.

Torre was grossly underappreciated when he was in St. Louis. He managed teams that were built around players like Todd Zeile, Felix Jose and Mark Whiten, and he was provided a pitching staff that leaned on Bob Tewksbury as its “ace.” And in the three full seasons he had here, he averaged almost 85 wins. Yeah, what an awful manager he was.

There aren’t many people I might mention in the same breath with Stan The Man, but, at least for me, Joe Torre is one of them.

DERRICK GOOLD:

The All-Star Game has been — and likely always will be — a national holiday around my family. My father and I would watch them, tape them and then I’d watch them again until the tape wore out. The personal high point for me was seeing my father attend his first All-Star Game in person and on his lap was his 3-year-old grandson, my son, also taking in his first All-Star Game in person. The little man lasted the whole game and told me the next day that he liked the Game more than the Home Run Derby. Must be the genes. I got to share the Game with them, just as St. Louis got to share it’s love of the game with the world. While we all would have liked to see Stan Musial get a bigger moment — highlights of his career, anyone? — we shouldn’t discount all of the moments the All-Star Game allowed Musial to enjoy. He had the long chat with Albert Pujols, as deftly relayed by Rick Hummel. He attended the owners’ party. He exchanged handshakes with President Obama, saw fellow Hall of Famers and exchanged a point with friend Joe Torre. In St. Louis, it’s popular to say that we appreciate Musial as much as baseball should, and maybe the opposite is true, too. Maybe Musial appreciates St. Louis as much as baseball should. The All-Star Game gave him reason to get out and enjoy that part of the city. It was great to see him and hear about him everywhere. Like it was for my family, the best memories of the Game being here cannot be captured in a moment or in a video. It’s about sharing the Game with family, with fans, and wanting to do so again. It’s best summed up by the sentiment Musial expressed leaving the Cardinals clubhouse and photo shoot with Pujols: “I’m coming back every Sunday home game.”

KATHLEEN NELSON:
I was mystified at the contrast in fan response in the stadium to the words of Barack Obama and George W. Bush during the taped segment about the community heroes. For the current president, the crowd interspersed mild boos with mild cheers but gave a rousing hurrah to “W.” Their reaction when Obama took the field was surprisingly tepid, considering the cheers for Roy Halladay. It seemed a bit disrespectful to the president. It was a baseball game, not a political rally. I thought that people with the reputation as the classiest fans in baseball would have responded with more class, regardless of politics.

BRYAN BURWELL:
The streets of downtown bustling like a major city. That was the absolute best thing, even better than the parade.

REID LAYMANCE:
The best thing for me was something out of the spotlight that I only read about in the Seattle Times newspaper. Ichiro took time on Monday to visit the grave of George Sisler, the former St. Louis Browns star. Ichiro had broken Sisler’s single-season record for hits in 2004 and met the Sisler family then.

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03.19.2009 11:12 am

Beware of the underdogs

THE WATERCOOLER

PREDICTION: It happens every year, one or two totally unexpected teams sneak through the first weekend of NCAA tournament action to make the Sweet 16. Please tell us one lower-seeded team that you would not be surprised to see accomplish the feat this weekend.

BERNIE MIKLASZ
Mississippi State in the West. It’s the most underseeded team in the tournament, a No. 13 seed after sweeping through the SEC Tournament. Knocking off Washington in the first round and then Purdue or Northern Iowa in the second round is a relatively simple mountain to climb.

STU DURANDO
USC was nationally ranked in the preseason before hitting some hard times. But the Trojans won the Pac-10 Tournament and now appear healthy enough to make some noise. They were 9-9 in the conference but had their full allotment of players for only five games and won all five. The Trojans then swept through the Pac-10 tourney with a full squad. Boston College is a winnable game in the first round. And USC has rebounded well enough (plus 5.5 per game) to compete well with Michigan State, one of the country’s best rebounding teams, in the second round.

TOM TIMMERMANN
This is one of the most top-heavy NCAA tournaments in a while. I’d be surprised if anyone below a No. 3 seed made the Final Four, and even then only Kansas. But some will get to the second weekend. USC, the No. 10 seed in the Midwest, is on a roll after winning the Pacific 10 tournament and they get an unimpressive Boston College team in the first round. After that, they would get Michigan State, which seems to me to be the high seed most primed for an early fall. 6-9 forward Taj Gibson is the kind of guy with a game made for the tournament. Since USC got its injury-prone roster settled, the team has done pretty well.

JOE STRAUSS
Virginia Commonwealth University Rams (Colonial Athletic Association) … VCU is one of only four teams to win both their conference tourney and regular season title, they have one of the top five point guards in the country (Eric Maynor), play plus-defense and have a pedigree for pulling something unexpected (beating Duke and taking Pitt to OT in ’07 tourney). Plus, Bryan Burwell and President Obama picked them over UCLA. I can’t be wrong. Actually, so many folks have climbed aboard the RamBall bandwagon since pairings were announced that it’s scary. Major Hurdle: VCU likely plays Villanova in Philadelphia in the second round. Absurd.
Federally required TRUTH IN ADVERTISING: The ChatMeister (VCU, ’83, B.S., Mass Communications).

JEFF GORDON
VCU is a pretty popular 12-over-5 pick by many experts, for good reason. UCLA looks ripe for a first-round exit. VCU coach Anthony Grant has become one of the hot commodities in the country. He has a marquee player in guard Eric Maynor. Missouri fans should root the Rams on, since victories over the Bruins and then Villanova would make Grant that much more appealing to Alabama — one of the few schools that could coax Mike Anderson into leaving Mizzou this spring.

REID LAYMANCE
There are two teams in Boise to keep an eye on.

First is Utah State, which opens against Marquette at the bizarre time of 10:30 in the morning local time. That’s when a lot of the upsets occur. And Marquette is without point guard Dominic James. But for Utah State to make the Sweet 16, the Aggies would then have to get past Missouri. The Aggies have the type of team that could do that. They lead the nation in field-goal percentage and shoot well from 3-point range and only turn the ball over 11.3 times a game. Plus their leading scorers are big men (Gary Wilkinson and Tai Wesley) and could pose some problems for the Tigers.

Portland State is the other. The Vikings won at Gonzaga in December and have an experienced backcourt. Xavier hasn’t been that strong down the stretch and coming West to play could hurt them. If Portland State gets past Xavier, it would face either Florida State or Wisconsin, two teams that have been up and down.

BILL COATS
Mississippi State, the No. 13 seed in the West, is hot at the right time. It’s won six games in a row and took the SEC tourney title. Beating Washington and Purdue or Texas A&M is certainly possible. Wisconsin, No. 12 in the East, didn’t have a particularly good season, but Bo Ryan is a good tournament coach. The Badgers get Florida State first, then probably Xavier. That’s doable.

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