Welcome to "This Week in SABR!" Click here to view this week's newsletter on the web. Here's what we've been up to as of May 6, 2016:
SABR 46: Marlins president Michael Hill to speak at Miami convention on July 28
We are excited to announce that Michael Hill, the Miami Marlins' President of Baseball Operations, will be a featured speaker at the SABR 46 convention on Thursday, July 28, 2016, in Miami.
SABR 46 will be held July 27-31, 2016, at the Hyatt Regency Miami. Discounted early registration rates are available now at SABR.org/convention. All baseball fans are welcome to attend.
Hill is in his third season as President of Baseball Operations for the Miami Marlins. He has been with the organization since 2002, and served as General Manager from 2007 to 2013. Before joining the Marlins, he was Director of Player Development for the Colorado Rockies and spent five seasons in the Tampa Bay Rays' scouting and player development departments. He graduated from Harvard University in 1993 and was drafted by the Texas Rangers. He spent two seasons playing in the Rangers organization before beginning his front-office career.
Please note: All speakers are subject to change depending on availability.
More details and the complete schedule will be announced soon. Find more information on SABR 46 at SABR.org/convention.
SABR 46: Want to throw out the first pitch at Marlins Park in Miami?
Want to throw out the first pitch at SABR 46?
Thanks to the generosity of the Miami Marlins, anyone who makes a donation of $1,000 or more to the SABR General Fund between May 1 and June 15, 2016, will have the opportunity to go on the field for batting practice before the Marlins game vs. the St. Louis Cardinals on Friday, July 29 at Marlins Park.
Participating donors will also be entered into a drawing to throw out the first pitch at the Marlins game on July 29. The drawing will be held during the Ross Adell Welcome Reception during SABR 46.
This special opportunity is only available for up to six SABR donors (or a guest of your choosing.) Following our SABR 46 ballpark session — highlighted by guest speakers Barry Bonds and Don Mattingly — SABR donors will be able to go on to the field during batting practice before the game. Each one-time donation is good for one on-field ticket.
In addition to the on-field opportunity at Marlins Park and the chance to throw out the first pitch, the SABR 46 donation package also includes two tickets to the SABR 46 Donors Breakfast, a SABR logo commemorative crystal baseball, and a one-year membership to SABR.
SABR is a 501(c)(3) organization and all donations are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law.
If you are interested in the SABR 46 donation package, please contact Jeff Schatzki at jschatzki@sabr.org.
Last call! Early registration ends Tuesday for 2016 SABR Jerry Malloy Negro League Conference
The 19th annual Jerry Malloy Negro League Conference will be held July 7-9, 2016, in Kansas City. The conference is open to all baseball, history and sports fans of all ages. Registration is now available.
To register: Click here to register online at the SABR Store. Or click here to download a printable registration form and information packet (PDF); you can mail your check or money order before June 20 to SABR Malloy Conference, Cronkite School at ASU, 555 N. Central Ave. #416, Phoenix, AZ 85004. The early registration rate for SABR members is $165 for adults (includes all activities) or $120 for students. (Non-members: $200 adults/$150 students). Single-day registration for Friday or Saturday is $75 for SABR members, $95 non-members. The Thursday education forum only is $15 for SABR members, $30 non-members. Optional sessions or guest tickets are also available. Please note: The early registration rate expires on May 10, 2016.
Book your hotel room: The Malloy Conference will be held at the Sheraton Overland Park Hotel at the Convention Center, 6100 College Boulevard, Overland Park, KS 66211. Limited rooms are available at a special discounted rate of $119/night (plus tax) for singles/doubles or $129/night (plus tax) for triples. Click here to reserve your room today or call (866) 837-4214 and mention the Jerry Malloy Conference. Please note: The cutoff date to book your room at the SABR discounted rate is June 13, 2016.
The 2016 Jerry Malloy Negro League Conference will celebrate "Barnstorming in the Negro Baseball Leagues." Barnstorming has always been a central part of the life of Negro League ballplayers. All Negro Leaguers took part in barnstorming games across the country and in cities like Kansas City. Monarchs great Satchel Paige, whose 110th birthday is being celebrated during this conference, did his fair share of barnstorming. Presentations may focus on any topic related to the theme, or other Negro Leagues issues.
Visit SABR.org/malloy for information on the 2016 Call for Papers, Essay Contest, Art Contest, and Library Grant Program.
Leslie Heaphy elected as SABR Vice-President; Chris Dial, Bill Nowlin as Directors
Members of the Society for American Baseball Research have elected three incumbents to the organization's Board of Directors in 2016.
Leslie Heaphy was elected as SABR's Vice-President in an unopposed race, receiving 825 of 845 first-preference votes.
Former Vice-President Bill Nowlin was elected as a SABR Director, receiving 409 of 903 first-preference votes.
Chris Dial was re-elected as a SABR Director, receiving 164 of 903 first-preference votes.
Barry M. Bloom finished runner-up for a Director's seat with 129 first-preference votes, while George Skornickel received 76, Dennis Degenhardt 72, and Barry Deutsch 51.
Special thanks go out to Tellers Committee members Mort Bloomberg, Annie Chaloupka, and Michael Holden for certifying the results on May 4 at the SABR office. The 2016 SABR elections featured online voting for the seventh consecutive year as well as traditional paper ballots. A total of 903 votes were received, constituting about 15.90 percent of the membership.
SABR members can find complete 2016 election results, including write-in candidates and voting totals, posted here. A historical list of SABR's Board of Directors can be found by clicking here. Past voting totals can be found here.
SABR Digital Library: Au jeu/Play Ball: The 50 Greatest Games in the History of the Montreal Expos
Add a championship book to your collection with the newest e-book from SABR Digital Library:
Au jeu/Play Ball: The 50 Greatest Games in the History of the Montreal Expos
Edited by Norm King
Foreword by Dave Van Horne
ISBN (paperback): 978-1-9438-1615-6, $12.95
ISBN (ebook): 978-1-9438-1614-9, $5.99
149 pages, 8.5" x 11"
This volume by members of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) presents the 50 greatest games in Montreal Expos history. The games described here recount the exploits of the many great players who wore Expos uniforms over the years — Bill Stoneman, Gary Carter, Andre Dawson, Steve Rogers, Pedro Martinez, and others.
The book details games from the earliest days of the franchise, to the glory years of 1979-81, the what-might-have-been years of the early 1990s, and the sad, final days. It describes the famous first game at Shea Stadium on April 8, 1969, when the Expos defeated that year’s eventual world champion New York Mets. It also details the first regular season major league game ever played outside the United States, when fans jammed little Jarry Park and began a love affair with the team.
These game summaries don’t just retell the runs, hits, and errors. They give a context to the times and individuals involved. The article about Dennis Martinez’s perfect game also describes how he overcame his struggle with alcohol to resurrect his career. The piece about Curtis Pride recounts how he reached the major leagues despite the disadvantages of deafness, and what it felt like when 45,000 fans cheered as Expos coach Jerry Manuel spurred him through gestures to acknowledge the crowd.
SABR members, get this e-book for FREE!
E-book: Click here to download the e-book version of Au jeu/Play Ball: The 50 Greatest Games in the History of the Montreal Expos for FREE from the SABR Store. Available in PDF, Kindle/MOBI and EPUB formats.
Paperback: Get a 50% discount on Au jeu/Play Ball: The 50 Greatest Games in the History of the Montreal Expos paperback edition for $7.95 (plus shipping) from CreateSpace.
Having trouble downloading our e-books? To view PDF files on your computer, click here to download the free Adobe Reader software. Having trouble downloading e-books to your Kindle, Nook, Sony Reader or iPad? Click here for additional help.
SABR members will get discounted rates for all Digital Library publications, including many for free. To download all past titles, visit SABR.org/ebooks.
Read articles from the Spring 2016 Baseball Research Journal online at SABR.org
Good news! The Spring 2016 edition of the Baseball Research Journal has been mailed out to all SABR members.
Those of you who receive the print edition should find your BRJ arriving very soon, although we hear many have already arrived. For digital subscribers, the e-book edition was delivered to your inboxes on April 7.
All articles from the Spring 2016 Baseball Research Journal are now available to read online at SABR.org.
Click here to download the e-book edition of the Spring 2016 Baseball Research Journal.
The print edition of the Spring 2016 Baseball Research Journal is also available for purchase at the SABR Bookstore.
To learn more about contributing to a future SABR publication, click here.
Having trouble downloading our e-books? To view PDF files on your computer, click here to download the free Adobe Reader software. Having trouble downloading e-books to your Kindle, Nook, Sony Reader or iPad? Click here for additional help.
We hope you enjoy reading the Spring 2016 Baseball Research Journal!
Early registration discount still available for SABR 46 in Miami
We hope you'll join us for what promises to be a spectacular SABR 46 convention, July 27-31, 2016, at the Hyatt Regency Miami in downtown Miami, Florida.
Registration: Click here for complete information on SABR 46 registration rates, all-inclusive packages, and optional sessions. Or click here to register for SABR 46! More details on guest speakers, panelists, and presenters will be announced soon. We're again offering a special all-inclusive rate for the annual SABR convention. SABR members can pay $269 for an all-inclusive package that includes full registration to SABR 46, a premium Home Plate Box ticket to the Miami Marlins game on Friday, July 29 (includes special pregame ballpark session/tour and roundtrip bus transportation), and one ticket to the Awards Luncheon — the package is a savings of $40 off the regular rate. Non-members can pay $299 for the all-inclusive rate. The deadline to register at the all-inclusive rate is Monday, June 13, 2016.
Hotel: Don't forget to book your hotel room at the Hyatt Regency Miami; our room block usually goes quickly. Click here to book your room online. The deadline to book your room at the SABR group rate of $129/night (plus tax) is Monday, June 13, 2016. If you have any questions about your reservation, please call the hotel at (305) 358-1234.
Pregame ballpark session/tour: SABR 46 attendees will have a special opportunity to visit Marlins Park for an exclusive pregame ballpark session with Miami Marlins executives and players. Before the Marlins 7:10 p.m. game against the St. Louis Cardinals on Friday, July 29, a special SABR 46 ballpark session with guests Barry Bonds, Don Mattingly, and more speakers will take place at Marlins Park followed by a ballpark tour for convention attendees. Purchase of SABR 46 conference registration AND a game ticket will be required to attend this special session. A SABR 46 Marlins game ticket also includes roundtrip bus transportation. Click here to learn more.
Pre-order your SABR logo shirts, caps, or souvenir baseballs: Avoid the rush at registration, and pre-order your SABR logo polo shirt, T-shirt, baseball caps, or souvenir crystal baseball online when you register for SABR 46. Please indicate shirt size (adult S to XXXL) when you register. Caps are one-size-fit-most. Your items will be available to be picked up when you arrive at the SABR convention. The souvenir baseballs are crystal paperweights measuring about 3 inches around, with an embossed SABR logo in the center. Deadline to pre-order: Monday, June 13, 2016.
Featured speakers: The SABR 46 convention will include top featured speakers from around the baseball world — front office executives, players, managers, scouts, writers and analysts — including former MLB All-Stars Barry Bonds and Don Mattingly, Miami Marlins President of Baseball Operations Michael Hill, World Series-winning manager Ozzie Guillen, Emmy Award-winning broadcaster Ernesto Jerez, ESPN Deportes' Enrique Rojas, author/historians Adrian Burgos Jr., Cesar Brioso, Peter C. Bjarkman, and many more.
View a special screening of Fastball documentary: Attendees at SABR 46 this summer will have a chance to see a special screening of the new Fastball documentary film, directed by the Emmy Award-winning Jonathan Hock and narrated by Kevin Costner, on Thursday, July 28 at the Hyatt Regency Miami. Click here to learn more.
All SABR 46 attendees will also receive a souvenir print edition of The National Pastime, our annual convention journal, focusing on baseball teams, players and events in the Miami area. All SABR members, whether you attend the convention or not, will receive the expanded e-book edition of The National Pastime in their inboxes later this summer. Click here to register for SABR 46.
SABR 19th Century Grave Marker Project to unveil first plaque for James Whyte Davis
SABR’s 19th Century Baseball Grave Marker Project is pleased to announce a special ceremony to dedicate the newly installed marker for New York Knickerbocker pioneer James Whyte Davis.
Join us at 10:00 am on Saturday, May 14, 2016, at the main entrance of Brooklyn’s historic Green-Wood Cemetery (500 25th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11232) as celebrants take a trolley tour, hosted by historian Tom Gilbert, through the story of early baseball. The journey will begin at the burial site of “Too Late” Davis, where the first marker installed by the young Project will be unveiled.
The grave marker unveiling is free and open to all cemetery visitors. A ticket for the trolley tour is $20 and must be purchased in advance.
To register for the trolley tour, click here
Inspired by an idea proposed by official Major League Baseball historian John Thorn at SABR's 2015 Frederick Ivor-Campbell 19th Century Base Ball Conference, the committee was formed last year in an effort to correct some of the slights of history. The game’s pioneers spent their early working lives dedicated to a sport that, even at the highest level, had not yet become the lucrative opportunity we think of today. Many of them died without the funds to mark the ground where they were laid to rest. With the help of donations from SABR members as well as a generous grant from Major League Baseball, the Project intends that James Whyte Davis — pictured at right, with Doc Adams — is just the first of many afforded the honor they were denied at the times of their deaths.
To learn more about James Whyte Davis at John Thorn's "Our Game" blog, click here.
Before the ceremony, guests will take a tour of the most famous final resting place in New York City. Through the Gothic spires of Green-Wood Cemetery lie more than 200 of the game’s early players, managers, executives, and notables. Hall of Famer Henry Chadwick and baseball’s first superstar, Jim Creighton, spend eternity not far from Davis, as do other former Knick teammates Louis F. Wadsworth, Duncan Curry, and William Tucker. The history of the early game is told in the stone of Green-Wood.
Graveside speeches by noted baseball historians will tell the story of Davis, a man that Doc Adams referred to as baseball’s first “fiend.” Please be a part of this historic event and celebrate the life of one of the men whose largely unknown history played such an important role in America’s Pastime.
For more information, please contact Ralph Carhart at thehallballproject@gmail.com.
Donate online: Click here to make a tax-deductible donation to the SABR 19th Century Grave Marker Project
Submit your entries for 2016 Women on the Diamond art competition
SABR's Women in Baseball Research Committee is teaming up with the International Women's Baseball Center to sponsor the 2016 Women on the Diamond art competition.
The winning entry and runner-up in each category, professional and amateur, will have their art displayed during the third annual Women’s Baseball Symposium in September 2016 at the Louisville Slugger Museum in Louisville, Kentucky. The winning entry in the professional and amateur category will also receive a $200 prize. Photos of the winning entries and runners-up will also be included in an upcoming issue of SABR's Women in Baseball newsletter.
Deadline for all entries to be received is May 23, 2016. Entry fee: $30 (includes up to three entires per category); make all checks out to "International Women's Baseball Center." JPG images may be e-mailed to Lheaphy@kent.edu or photocopies/entry fees mailed to: Dr. Leslie Heaphy, Kent State University at Stark, 6000 Frank Rd., No. Canton, OH 44720. For sculptural works, multiple pictures in jpeg format may be entered. All entries must be "by the hand of the artist." For complete criteria, click here to download the application form.
A Youth Art Contest is also being held, with an entry fee of $10. The winner will receive a $150 prize. All schools that enter students will have their name placed in a drawing and two winners will be chosen. The winning schools will each receive $250 worth of age-appropriate books about women’s baseball for their libraries. Click here to download the Youth Art Contest application form.
Judges include graphic designers and artists Miranda Bowman, Gary Cieradkowski, James Fiorentino, and Debbie Sampson.
For more information on the Women in Baseball Research Committee, click here.
Another hero in the family? The World War II history of Dix Ishikawa
This article first appeared in the SABR Asian Baseball Research Committee's Spring 2016 newsletter. To learn more about the Asian Baseball Committee, click here.
Throughout the course of history there have been two types of American heroes to defend the U.S. Constitution; those who pick up a gun and fight a foreign enemy, and those who take a stance against the U.S. government itself to shed light on an unjust law or practice. The grandfather of MLB slugger Travis Ishikawa falls into the latter group and, even though his actions were unpopular during and after World War II, I think he too is worthy of being called a hero. Let me explain why.
"Dix" Ishikawa (1916-2009) was just one of hundreds of Nisei men imprisoned by the U.S. government for resisting the draft during WWII. They were also pardoned by President Harry S. Truman in 1947. Ishikawa appears to be among the least vocal members of the resisters. He gave no interviews about, and left no trace of, his act of civil disobedience. In fact, his family says they know little to nothing about his personal WWII history.
Through court records obtained from Eric L. Muller, Professor of Law in Jurisprudence and Ethics at the University of North Carolina, and author of Free to Die for their Country: The Story of the Japanese American Draft Resisters of World War II (University of Chicago Press, 2001), we now have insight into Ishikawa’s war-time story.
To read the full story, click here.
— Bill Staples Jr.
5 new biographies published by SABR BioProject
Five new biographies were posted this week as part of the SABR Baseball Biography Project, which brings us to a total of 3,750 published biographies. Here are the new bios published this week:
Trevor Hoffman, by Max Mannis (first-time author)
Roy Luebbe, by David Jepsen (first-time author)
Strick Shofner, by Bill Nowlin
Jimmy Stewart, by Charles F. Faber
Harry "The Hat" Walker, by Warren Corbett
All new biographies can be found here: http://sabr.org/bioproj/recent
Search for any SABR biography: You can now visit sabr.org/bioproj_search to search for any player — or manager, executive, scout, spouse, broadcaster, or umpire — who appears in the SABR BioProject. You can also browse all of these BioProject categories and a lot more, including 300-game winners, Hall of Famers, 1960s All-Stars, or Negro Leaguers, at our Browse page: sabr.org/bioproj/browse.
1954 Cleveland Indians biographies now posted online: In SABR's Pitching to the Pennant: The 1954 Cleveland Indians, edited by Joseph Wancho and published by University of Nebraska Press in 2014, we celebrated the record-setting Tribe, one of the most memorable teams in baseball history. Their mark for most wins (111) fell only when the baseball schedule expanded, and their winning percentage, an astounding .721, is still unsurpassed in the American League. Though the season ended with a heartbreaking loss to the New York Giants in the World Series, the 1954 team remains a favorite among Cleveland fans and beyond. The SABR BioProject biographies that appeared in Pitching to the Pennant can now be read online at: http://sabr.org/category/completed-book-projects/1954-cleveland-indians. You can also purchase the book from University of Nebraska Press by clicking here.
Listen to Behind the Numbers: Baseball SABR Style on SiriusXM on Sunday nights
Behind the Numbers: Baseball SABR Style on SiriusXM, a radio show hosted by SABR President Vince Gennaro, will air this weekend at its regular time, 7:00-8:00 p.m. ET on Sundays, on MLB Network Radio.
This week's guests are Daron Sutton, on the new MLB Plus/Statcast broadcast, and Andrew Perpetua, a Statcast researcher and the creator of @CitiFieldHR.
Now, you can also watch video highlights of Behind the Numbers: Baseball SABR Style on SiriusXM on MLB.com and you can also listen to all recent episodes on-demand on the SiriusXM Internet Radio App.
Video highlights: Craig Edwards of FanGraphs discusses Aledmys Diaz's hot start (MLB.com)
Audio highlights: Vince Gennaro wonders what the incentive is for players not to use PEDs (SoundCloud)
Click here to watch more video highlights of Baseball SABR Style from MLB.com.
Behind the Numbers: Baseball SABR Style on SiriusXM focuses on examining and interpreting the statistical analysis that plays a critical role in baseball today. It airs weekly throughout the year on MLB Network Radio, available to subscribers nationwide on XM channel 89, Sirius channel 209, and on the SiriusXM Internet Radio App.
For more information, click here.
ESPN launches "1927: The Diary of Myles Thomas" historical fiction project; SABR members can help contribute
It's been almost a year since John Thorn, Steve Wulf, and I had the honor of presenting our vision for "1927: The Diary of Myles Thomas" at the SABR 45 convention in Chicago — finally, last month our project launched on ESPN.com.
"1927: The Diary of Myles Thomas" is a novel written in the form of a diary by a pitcher who really did play for the legendary '27 Yankees team, which starred Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig and the rest of Murderers’ Row. Almost all of the action in the diary takes place off the field—in speakeasies, brothels and gambling dens, in Harlem night clubs and rent parties, and on the Long Island estates of Wall Street and entertainment tycoons.
Sign up for updates: Click here to sign up for the "1927: The Diary of Myles Thomas" newsletter, to receive an e-mail with each new entry in the project
Set in the height of the Roaring Twenties, it chronicles the adventures of white and black baseball immortals, Jazz pioneers, Prohibition entertainers, bootleggers, gamblers and swindlers—all part of Myles’s exploration of youth, greatness, morality, sex, race, and the meaning of heroes. Most of all, it's a deeply intimate journey through the worlds of Baseball, Jazz and Prohibition—three worlds that really did come together in 1927.
In addition to the Myles Thomas diary, the project also includes wonderful letters written by Steve Wulf, under the name of Ford Frick, who was a Yankees beat writer that season (as well as Babe Ruth's ghostwriter), and historical essays about baseball in the Roaring Twenties by John Thorn. Visit medium.com/1927-the-diary-of-myles-thomas to check out the full project.
SABR has been a big part of our project, especially the SABR BioProject, which has been a tremendous source for our research. We hope to continue our conversation with SABR members over the course of the summer. In fact, we're hosting the project on a platform (Medium.com) that easily enables online conversations. Additionally, we also have set up an ESPN 1927 Google Group exclusively for SABR members to contribute to the conversation. If you'd like to sign up, please contact Jacob Pomrenke.
Finally, our team is in a permanent state of research — so if there are any new facts, stories, or discoveries, including images of ephemera of the Yankees of that era that you would like to share with us, please don't hesitate to send it to us at Douglas.Alden@espn.com or ping our Facebook page.
— Douglas Alden
Would you like to help decide the winners of SABR's research awards?
Each year, the SABR Board of Directors appoints more than a dozen members to small committees that choose our research award winners.
Now is the time to let us know if you would like to be considered for one of these positions. To apply, please send an e-mail to SABR Director Ty Waterman indicating which award you would like to judge, and providing answers to these questions: (1) why you are interested in serving (2) any relevant experience (3) what your research interests are. If you choose to weave these questions into one answer, you may do so.
For a complete list of SABR research awards, click here.
Calling all User Interaction and Big Data Geeks
Perhaps a camel is a horse designed by committee, but small groups can deliver outstanding apps in short order with the right combination of people. Imagine you could sit in front of the 120,000 index cards The Sporting News kept on every player who signed a professional baseball contract during the 20th century and use them to complete the information missing from the master database of major and minor league players.
Soon, SABR members will be able to do this — if we build them a great app. In conjunction with the LA84 Foundation, SABR is imaging the cards and digitizing the contents into full text records with integrated image mapping in XML files.
If this intrigues you and you think you may have expertise to bring to the table, please contact SABR Treasurer F.X. Flinn, who is coordinating the project.
ICYMI: Highlights from last week's This Week in SABR
We've heard your feedback: Some of you have said you look forward to "This Week in SABR" every Friday, but sometimes there are just too many compelling articles and announcements to read every week. We're not complaining — hey, keep up the great work! — but we know the feeling. So in an effort to make the length of this newsletter more manageable to read, we'll summarize some of the repeating/recurring announcements in a special "In Case You Missed It (ICYMI)" section of "This Week in SABR".
Here are some major headlines from recent weeks that we don't want you to miss:
Check out complete highlights from the 2016 SABR Analytics Conference
ESPN launches "1927: The Diary of Myles Thomas" historical fiction project; SABR members can help contribute
Charles Leerhsen's Ty Cobb biography wins 2016 Larry Ritter Book Award
Download the SABR e-book honoring Mike Sandlock, baseball's oldest former major-leaguer
Jeff Long wins fourth annual Greg Spira Baseball Research Award
Bak, Goldman, Lamb win 2016 McFarland-SABR Baseball Research Awards
Bjarkman, Steinberg, Spatz, Wheeler win 2016 SABR Baseball Research Awards
Seamheads.com updates Negro Leagues Database with 1940 stats
SABR welcomes Official Scoring and Games Project committees
Save the date! 2016 SABR Philadelphia 19th Century Baseball Interdisciplinary Symposium
SABR Digital Library: 1986 Mets/Red Sox: There Was More Than Game Six
Students, submit entries for 2016 Jack Kavanagh Memorial Youth Baseball Research Award
Help support SABR's 19th Century Baseball Grave Marker Project
All e-books in SABR Digital Library available for free to members
All previous editions of This Week in SABR can be found here: http://sabr.org/content/this-week-in-sabr-archives.
Welcome, new members!
We'd like to welcome all of our new SABR members who have joined this week. You can find all Members-Only resources at members.sabr.org and the Membership Handbook can be downloaded here.
Please give these new members a warm welcome and help them make the most of their membership by giving them the opportunity to get involved in their local chapter or a research committee.
You can find contact information for any SABR member in the online membership directory (SABR.org/directory).
Name
Hometown
Name
Hometown
Paul Burka
Austin, TX
Joseph Kurrasch
San Juan Capistrano, CA
Homer Bush
Southlake, TX
Jeffrey Mathys
Brecksville, OH
Justin Cabrera
Hackensack, NJ
Gary Moore
La Crescenta, CA
James Dillard
Columbia, MD
Kevin Plummer
Burnaby, BC
Philip Fickling
San Diego, CA
John Pound
Santa Fe, NM
Charlie Fouche
Dalton, GA
Eric Romero
Riverside, CA
Mike James
Lyme, CT
Richard Spiegel
Phoenix, AZ
Chris Kimball
Kamas, UT
Matthew Trumbull
Brooklyn, NY
Nicholas Kitson
Buffalo, NY
Brian White
Roaring Spring, PA
Research Committee news
Here are the new SABR research committee updates this week:
SABR 46 committee meetings: All committee leaders should have received an e-mail this week from Jacob Pomrenke and Deb Jayne requesting your preferred timeslots and A/V needs for the SABR 46 convention in Miami. You must respond by Friday, May 13 in order for your committee meeting to be included on the SABR 46 schedule. Thanks!
Asian Baseball: Spring 2016 newsletter
Collegiate Baseball: The Collegiate Baseball Committee is asking all members to fill out our survey and help determine the direction the committee takes in trying to improve communication and make more collegiate baseball information accessible. Click here to complete the brief survey.
Women in Baseball: Click here to learn more about the 2016 Women on the Diamond art competition
Find all SABR research committee newsletters at SABR.org/research.
Regional Chapter news
Here are the new regional chapter updates this week:
Juan Marichal Chapter meeting recap (April 28; Santo Domingo, DR)
New Best Practices handbook: Chapter leaders, download the new Chapter Leaders Best Practices Handbook, compiled by SABR staffer Marisa Elliot, on the Admin Tools page at admin.sabr.org. The handbook offers suggestions and guidelines for meetings, speakers, revitalizing a chapter, and getting publicity for SABR and chapter events.
Visit SABR.org/chapters for more information on SABR regional chapters.
SABR Events Calendar
Here is a list of upcoming SABR events:
May 7: Halsey Hall Chapter Hot Stove Saturday Morning (Minneapolis, MN)
May 7: Quebec Chapter spring meeting (Montreal, QC)
May 7: Hank Gowdy Chapter book club meeting (Columbus, OH)
May 7: Talkin' Baseball: Al Arrighi (Columbia, MD)
May 7: Rio Grande Chapter meeting (Albuquerque, NM)
May 10: Joe Territo: "Early Rochester Baseball History" (Rochester, NY)
May 11: Bob Davids Chapter Monthly Hot Stove Dinner (Arlington, VA)
May 12: Paul Goodson: "History of the 1941 Cheyenne Indians" (Cheyenne, WY)
May 12: Bergino: "The Only Rule Is It Has To Work" with Ben Lindbergh (New York, NY)
May 14: Emil Rothe Chapter meeting (Chicago, IL)
May 14: Baltimore Babe Ruth Chapter ballgame/meetup (Baltimore, MD)
May 14: Jon Leonoudakis: "Hano! A Century in the Bleachers" film screening (Minneapolis, MN)
May 14: 32nd annual Pacific Coast League reunion (Huntington Beach, CA)
May 14: Dayton Chapter meeting (Dayton, OH)
May 14: SABR 19th Century Grave Marker Project: James Whyte Davis dedication ceremony (Brooklyn, NY)
May 14: Maddux Brothers-Las Vegas Chapter meeting (Las Vegas, NV)
May 14: Smoky Joe Wood Chapter breakfast (Hamden, CT)
May 16: Larry Dierker Chapter monthly meeting (Houston, TX)
May 16: Bob Broeg St. Louis Chapter monthly meeting (St. Louis, MO)
May 16: Halsey Hall Chapter: Hans Van Slooten/Baseball-Reference presentation (Roseville, MN)
May 17: Bob Davids Chapter Maryland Hot Stove dinner (Silver Spring, MD)
May 18: Banks-Bragan Chapter meeting (Arlington, TX)
May 18: Rocky Mountain Chapter monthly luncheon (Denver, CO)
May 19: Magnolia Chapter "Third Thursday" meeting (Tucker, GA)
May 22: Yogi Berra Museum: "Reign Men: Baseball's Greatest Dynasties" (Montclair, NJ)
All SABR meetings and events are open to the public. Feel free to bring a baseball-loving friend ... and make many new ones! Check out the SABR Events Calendar at SABR.org/events.
Around the Web
Here are some recent articles published by and about SABR members:
Alex Speier: To learn about himself, Ben Cherington decided to teach (Boston Globe)
Eric Newland: A singular honor for a Pittsburgh legend, Cum Posey (Home Plate Don't Move)
Mark Armour: The great Topps baseball card monopoly: Rookie cards (The National Pastime Museum)
Benjamin Hill: Through the decades, building new minor-league parks a constant (MiLB.com)
Richard Sandomir: Electronic umpires? Baseball tried it in the 1950s (New York Times)
Bob McGee: This year in baseball, 1978 (The National Pastime Museum)
Devin Shaw: The 1981 split season still speaks to us (The Hardball Times)
Tim Bannon: Jake Arrieta, Mordecai Brown, and the farming accident (Chicago Tribune)
Owen Watson: How to score runs off Noah Syndergaard (FanGraphs)
Jay Jaffe: Bartolo Colon is the gift that keeps on giving (Sports Illustrated)
Eno Sarris: Dallas Keuchel's attempts to battle back (FanGraphs)
Meg Rowley: Upon further review, we will never be happy with instant replay (Baseball Prospectus)
Trevor Strunk: The cost of saving money in baseball (Baseball Prospectus)
William Sapolsky: Improving projections with exit velocity (The Hardball Times)
Russell Carleton: The case that the shift doesn't work (Baseball Prospectus)
John Dewan's Stat of the Week: Why shifting does work (ACTA Sports)
Bob Klapisch: How would Babe Ruth fare in 2016 MLB? (The National Pastime Museum)
Jonathan Judge: The return of Deserved Run Average in 2016 (Baseball Prospectus)
Jerry Crasnick: A brief history of baseball farewell tours (ESPN.com)
Terry Cannon: Don Newcombe, Bo Jackson, Arnold Hano elected to Shrine of the Eternals (Baseball Reliquary)
Rob Mains: Praising quality starts, not burying them (Baseball Prospectus)
Todd Radom: The A's and their elephants, together since 1902 (Radom Thoughts)
Bill Young: Manny McIntyre, breaking through baseball's color barrier (Montreal Gazette)
Bryan Soderholm-Difatte: Aparicio's first of 506 stolen bases (Baseball Historical Insight)
Derek Bain: Taking the extra base: The teams (Seamheads)
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