Peter Schmuck
Just like yesterday for '83 O's
July 24, 2008
They came back, almost all of them, and it was easy to see why they were so good for so long.
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Ravens rookie QB not shying away from attention
July 22, 2008
If you wandered into the Ravens' training camp headquarters yesterday afternoon and witnessed the news conference to make official the signing of rookie quarterback Joe Flacco, it would have been hard not to come to the same conclusion that I did:
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For LPGA, score this one shooting itself in the foot
July 20, 2008
News item: Golf phenom Michelle Wie was disqualified from the State Farm Classic yesterday for failing to sign her scorecard after the second round. She was one shot off the lead after her third round when LPGA Tour officials notified her of the ruling.
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Team wavers on the brink
July 19, 2008
The Orioles came back from the All-Star break looking much like the team that went into it, which had to be weighing on manager Dave Trembley's mind when he arrived at the ballpark yesterday for the second game of a four-game series against the Detroit Tigers.
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Market changes complicate MacPhail's job
July 17, 2008
The question looms over Camden Yards like the big, antiseptic convention hotel that has blocked out the best part of the Baltimore skyline:
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Home Run Derby out of juice
July 15, 2008
First, a confession: There was a time when I thought the All-Star Home Run Derby was a great idea.
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Dilfer more than passing thought
July 13, 2008
News item: Quarterback Trent Dilfer, who helped the Ravens win the Super Bowl in the 2000 season, recently said he was retiring after 13 seasons in the NFL.
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Sour gripes about O's frustrating losses
July 12, 2008
If Glass-Half- Phil Gramm really thinks America has turned into a "nation of whiners," he might want to steer clear of Birdland for the next few weeks.
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The Favre option
July 10, 2008
The Ravens announced the names of their two newest additions yesterday, and you're not going to be happy if you were hoping one of those names would be Brett.
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Rays light way for Orioles
July 8, 2008
No, that's not a misprint at the top of the American League East standings. The Tampa Bay Rays - apparently no relation to the quickly forgotten Devil Rays of seasons past - own the best record in the majors and have put some distance between themselves and the teams they have been looking way, way up at for almost all of the franchise's brief history.
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Is A-Rod just a lucky star?
July 6, 2008
News item: The New York Daily News reported recently that Alex Rodriguez and wife Cynthia are splitting just months after the birth of their second daughter.
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Will Ravens' plan fly?
July 2, 2008
The Ravens probably have enough on their plate right now, what with a new coach and a new quarterback and Derrick Martin's recent citation for alleged marijuana possession and impersonation of a Cincinnati Bengal, but they still found time to run afoul of the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.
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Sabathia on way? Not likely
June 29, 2008
News item: Trade rumors continue to swirl around Cleveland Indians pitcher C.C. Sabathia, though general manager Mark Shapiro insists that he wants to re-sign the club's veteran ace.
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Tough call on Orioles' next moves
June 28, 2008
Let's have a show of hands. How many Orioles fans imagined in February that club officials would be scratching their heads and wondering which way to turn as the team enters the midseason trading period?
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Dave Johnson's split identity
June 26, 2008
There's one big advantage to having a ridiculous name: It isn't often you get confused with somebody else.
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O's fans should consider Cubs' drought
June 24, 2008
It's time for your annual visit from Dr. Perspective, which - not coincidentally - comes as the Orioles prepare to play their first-ever game tonight at historic Wrigley Field.
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Naked truth is hard to bear
June 22, 2008
News item: The Washington Nationals created a media buzz when a female usher ordered two bare-chested men to put their shirts back on.
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Orioles often ready with a reply
June 21, 2008
It's only a matter of time before some smart advance scout starts poking around and comes up with the formula to neutralize this new-age Orioles Magic, so there's no reason to keep it a secret any longer.
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A lost season for Woods, fans
June 19, 2008
Two days after taking golf fans on the ride of their lives, Tiger Woods took a knee for the rest of the season, which has got to register as one of the great letdowns in the history of the sport.
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Rooting for Rocco
June 17, 2008
No matter what happened in yesterday's U.S. Open playoff, it was going to be a great story. Either Tiger Woods would limp to an amazing victory in his first competition since knee surgery, or 45-year-old Rocco Mediate would climb up from triple-digit oblivion in the world rankings to make a little history of his own.
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Steroid era lessens achievements of sluggers like Ramirez, Robinson
May 31, 2008
If you were not paying close attention, you probably missed much of the countdown to Manny Ramirez's imminent entry into the once-exclusive 500 Home Run Club.
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Markakis gives O's push in right direction
May 27, 2008
Sometimes, you just have to marvel at the strange psychological dynamics at work in a major league ballgame.
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Stop with the complaining: O's lack of offense expected
May 25, 2008
News item: The Orioles were held to one run over a three-game span after scoring an uplifting 12-2 victory over the New York Yankees on Tuesday night at Yankee Stadium.
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Upon further review, limited system needed
May 24, 2008
Major League Baseball reportedly is preparing to experiment with video replay to affirm or overturn disputed home run calls, which got me to thinking.
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M. Ryan's deal is NFL's Exhibit A
May 22, 2008
It probably was a coincidence that NFL owners decided to knock two years off their collective bargaining agreement with the players union on the same day No. 3 draft pick Matt Ryan agreed to a $72 million contract with the Atlanta Falcons, but that doesn't mean the two top football headlines of the week were unrelated.
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Role reversal for O's, Yankees
May 20, 2008
The Orioles rode the train up to New York yesterday, undoubtedly hoping that everything everyone has been saying about the struggling Yankees is true.
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This time, racing could have savior it so badly needs
May 18, 2008
We've seen this before.
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It's legal; just don't get caught
May 18, 2008
News item: Former Patriots video assistant Matt Walsh said in an interview last week that he knew at the time it was wrong to covertly videotape opposing teams' signals for New England coach Bill Belichick.
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Psychic hot line on the Preakness
May 17, 2008
It's not as if I haven't done my homework over the years. I read Betting Thoroughbreds, which is one of the bibles of horse handicapping, and I've put in my hours at the rail trying to make sense of the Daily Racing Form, and pretty much all it got me was a little lighter in the wallet.
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Tip your caps
May 15, 2008
There comes a point when you just have to roll with it.
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Eye of the storm
May 13, 2008
This might be hard to remember with everything that's going on these days, but there was a time when the Preakness was just a famous horse race that drew thousands of revelers to Pimlico and set one Saturday aside each year for Baltimore to be the center of the sporting universe.
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Swing and miss on Cabrera
May 11, 2008
News item: The Orioles are 6-1 (plus an incomplete suspended game) in the eight starts this season by Daniel Cabrera, who pitched a three-hit complete game Thursday night in Kansas City.
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Collusion talk way off base
May 10, 2008
When the Major League Baseball Players Association confirmed the other day that it's investigating whether the 30 big league clubs are conspiring to keep Barry Bonds out of the game this year, I couldn't help but laugh.
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Despite losses, O's making progress
May 8, 2008
The Orioles have completed the second stop on their road trip back to reality, which has featured five losses in six games and a number of fine pitching performances delivered for naught.
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Gump was right
May 6, 2008
I'm pretty sure that if you got yourself a big federal grant and did a study, you'd find that professional athletes are not - on average - any less intelligent than the general population, but you'd never know that by the headlines.
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Bowls are way over capacity
May 4, 2008
News item: The NCAA has approved two more football bowl games - including one in Washington - to bring the total number of postseason bowls to 34.
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O's tired of defending good play
May 1, 2008
During the recent road series between the Orioles and Chicago White Sox, two former Orioles Cy Young Award winners were having a conversation about the surprise team in the American League East.
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Clemens in self-destruct mode
April 29, 2008
The next time you watch American Idol and fantasize about being a big celebrity, go stand in line at your local supermarket and think about how that's working out for whoever is on the cover of this week's edition of the National Enquirer.
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No. 1 pick not No. 1 thrill of watching this year's draft
April 27, 2008
News item: The Miami Dolphins drafted Jake Long with the first pick of the NFL draft yesterday.
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Loewen should just sit back
April 26, 2008
The Orioles placed prized left-hander Adam Loewen on the 15-day disabled list yesterday, and I'm guessing everybody is thinking pretty much the same thing I am right now:
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New drug policy puts Mitchell Report in rearview
April 12, 2008
It would be great if we could say that Major League Baseball put a big punctuation mark on the sport's long-running steroid scandal, but I'll settle for the right decision at the right time for the right reasons.
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He knows the score
March 25, 2008
On the first day of spring football practice, new Navy football coach Ken Niumatalolo was still answering the same questions that greeted him the day he was hired to replace Paul Johnson.
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Mora role model for young O's
March 20, 2008
For established major league veterans, dodging the long exhibition road trips is one of the rites of spring.
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Hear lyin' roar
February 14, 2008
OK, it's all becoming clear now.
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Steroid supplier's sentence shows no system to justice
February 10, 2008
News item: Former New York Mets clubhouse attendant Kirk Radomski will spend no time in jail for his part in baseball's far-reaching steroid scandal. He was fined and placed on five years' probation after cooperating with the federal government and Major League Baseball investigator George Mitchell.
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Super Bowl sideshow
January 30, 2008
I'm a sucker for a wedding dress.
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Harbaugh's Day One energy good sign as Job One nears
January 20, 2008
New Ravens coach John Harbaugh said all the right things during his introductory news conference yesterday, but the most important thing came out sounding like a well-worn cliche rather than a call to arms.
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Bisciotti gets back in game
January 19, 2008
So much for the mistaken notion that the Ravens did not have a Plan B.
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Remember '08?
December 31, 2007
In my continuing effort to show how sophisticated I am, I'd like to quote the French poet Paul Valery: "The trouble with our times," he said, "is that the future is not what it used to be." Never mind that he uttered that cynical little gem several generations ago; no truer words have ever been spoken, particularly when 2007 is going to be such a tough act to follow.
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Clemens' denials get boost from Grimsley affidavit
December 22, 2007
If the original release of the infamous Jason Grimsley affidavit - with the names of the alleged steroid and amphetamine users blacked out for public nonconsumption - helped pull the cover off baseball's performance-enhancement scandal, the release of the unredacted version Thursday might have been an even bigger blow to the integrity of the sport.
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More O's woes
December 17, 2007
The great hope that blossomed around the Orioles organization with the arrival of new president Andy MacPhail was that - finally - it appeared there was a real sign owner Peter Angelos recognized that the revitalization of the franchise would require a totally new way of doing business.
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Elusive football lets baseball take steroid hit
December 15, 2007
During the news conference Thursday in which former Sen. George Mitchell unveiled his 409-page report on baseball's performance-enhancement scandal, I kept waiting for him to announce that he had been hired by the NFL to perform a similar investigation to root out the cheaters in America's most popular television sport.
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Baseball will long be haunted by steroid era
December 14, 2007
Not to get all biblical on you, but if the just-released Mitchell Report is any indication, the truth will not necessarily set you free.
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Modell's Hall snub has analogy in baseball's O'Malley
December 10, 2007
Though it didn't garner giant headlines in Baltimore, the news last week that the late Walter O'Malley will be inducted into baseball's Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., in July couldn't help but make me wonder anew when they'll get around to enshrining Art Modell in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio.
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Schmuck: O's run of the Hall about to hit a wall
July 31, 2007
There are several possible reasons Sunday's Hall of Fame induction ceremony drew an estimated crowd that was 50 percent larger than any other.
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Schmuck: With glow, hope for a brighter day
July 30, 2007
Soon after Tony Gwynn and Cal Ripken Jr. overcame their fear of public speaking, somebody tried to usher them back into the sad reality of sports in today's society.
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Schmuck: With Ripken, Gwynn, town has true legends
July 28, 2007
It is the pleasant nature of this quaint little upstate village that makes it so easy to overlook the disconnect between truth and legend that allowed it to become the hometown of baseball history.
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Schmuck: Ripken joy is a respite amid list of scandals
July 26, 2007
Orioles president Andy MacPhail has always looked young for his age, but don't mistake that for being short on perspective.
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Schmuck: A life in the spotlight
July 22, 2007
It must have been terribly frustrating. Cal Ripken Jr. spent his entire Hall of Fame career trying to convey something that was so basic we all just assumed there had to be more to it.
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Schmuck: Enough facts are known for indefinite suspension
July 19, 2007
Welcome to the ultimate test of the Roger Goodell Doctrine.
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Baseball's hallowed ground no shelter from steroid talk
May 11, 2007
Cal Ripken Jr. seemed to enjoy his orientation trip to upstate New York this week, but even in the idyllic small-town setting of the National Baseball Hall of Fame, he could not escape the big-city questions about the troubling state of the game.
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Bonds' excuses positively pathetic
January 12, 2007
Of all the days of all the weeks of all the months that have been tainted by baseball's performance-enhancement scandal, Barry Bonds had to stumble back into the drug spotlight on the same day that new Hall of Famers Cal Ripken and Tony Gwynn were taking their post-election bows at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in Manhattan.
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For fans in '95, Ripken's pen was mightier than his bat
January 10, 2007
Cal Ripken Jr.'s career speaks for itself.
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McGwire might not mind being skipped in Hall's order
January 7, 2007
Sometime in the early afternoon on Tuesday, Cal Ripken will pick up the phone in Baltimore and Tony Gwynn will pick up the phone in San Diego, and it won't be to make a bet on the AFC championship game.
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This sportswriter can relate to Barbaro's snacking habits
June 30, 2006
Can't tell you how great it was to hear that Barbaro is up and around and - according to a report in The Sun yesterday - getting protective of his snacks.
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When did Bay Area relocate here?
June 20, 2006
It just keeps hitting home.
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Throwing off players association, Grimsley hurls hGH into spotlight
June 11, 2006
Welcome to the worst nightmare of the Major League Baseball Players Association.
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Dry spell over as juicy story hits home
June 9, 2006
Don't know about you, but I was feeling a little bit left out while Barry Bonds bore down on Babe Ruth the past couple of months. How could you help but pine for those halcyon days when Baltimore was -- for a couple of months -- the center of the steroid universe.
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Hendricks' 'Oriole Way' gone, current O's are just wayward
December 30, 2005
It was an appropriate sendoff. Elrod Hendricks was remembered fondly by his family, friends and former teammates in a heartfelt and spiritual memorial service yesterday that drew 1,000 mourners to the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen. What else would you expect for a man so loved and respected in this close-knit community?
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By reaching out to others, Hendricks touched us all
December 23, 2005
Maybe Elrod Hendricks could only have happened in Baltimore, where our heroes don't have to be bigger than life. They just have to be like us ... or, in Elrod's case, they just have to like us as much as we like them.
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In a ballpark divided, reactions from fans provide potent mix
August 15, 2005
IT WAS the anabolic equivalent of "Tastes Great!" ... "Less Filling."
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Wasted words hang over return and leave little worth hearing
August 12, 2005
HE COULD have had us at "Hello" ... but that was 10 days ago.
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Silence speaks volumes in age of lost innocence
August 11, 2005
THE GREAT THING about being innocent is that you never have to make up a story to prove it.
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Palmeiro didn't provide hard truth, but Congress asked soft questions
August 7, 2005
WHILE WE WAIT for Congress to figure out what it is going to do with Rafael Palmeiro and Major League Baseball's flawed drug policy, it might be a good time to point out something very important.
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He may not fit the bill, but he will pay price
August 2, 2005
THE IMAGE still lingers. Rafael Palmeiro, called to testify before a congressional committee on March 17, pointed his finger at committee chairman Tom Davis and denied that he had ever used illegal performance-enhancing drugs.
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Robinson still knows how to bring heat when needed
June 16, 2005
SO MUCH FOR the myth of the mellow Frank Robinson. So much for the kinder, gentler Washington Nationals manager who used to have every kind of sharp edge as a player -- and a few in his early incarnations as a manager -- but was widely believed to have gotten in touch with his softer side.
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Orioles' Bancells earns huge save for waving Hendricks to hospital
April 18, 2005
IT WOULD have been so easy to make the wrong decision. The Orioles were getting ready to return home from St. Petersburg, Fla., on Thursday night, and longtime bullpen coach Elrod Hendricks just didn't feel right.
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Of course, Phelps should grab pot of gold; why settle for anything less?
August 15, 2004
NOW THAT Michael Phelps has won the first of a possible eight gold medals, isn't it time to dispense with the ridiculous notion that the expectations surrounding America's top Olympian are more inflated than the Goodyear Blimp? I read Kevin Cowherd's column on that subject the other day, and I have only one thing to say, baby:
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