While the faithful are waiting for tomorrow’s stars, a promotional delay has occurred one level away under general manager Matt Klentak of the Philadelphia Phillies.

Refining Expectations:

History records plans in pencil and reality in ink because the future is subject to change, while the past isn’t.

If you’re reading this sentence, you’ve survived a brutal stretch of scheduling with two more difficult games ahead, and the question is will it get easier? Yes, because 29 of the next 35 contests after this series will only be difficult when the Phils face a hot team. For instance, when the last two series began, the Texas Rangers had six consecutive victories, and the Pittsburgh Pirates had one loss in their previous five games. In other words, rebuilding organizations take their lumps against contenders and streaking clubs. However, one can only hope that after 32 of 42 contests with the cards stacked against them, they can bounce back quickly.

Records:

9-23: The Nationals, Mets (before injuries), Dodgers, Cubs, Rangers, Pirates and Rockies.

6-4: The Reds, Braves, Marlins and Mariners.

By comparison, the 1950 Philadelphia Phillies dealt with injuries, not a scheduling nightmare. Managers in those days ordered players to spike their opponent’s stars. And even if a teammate was at fault, you defended him against your foe.

According to an article by Ralph Bergen for the Society for American Baseball Research, middle infielder Eddie Stanky of the New York Giants jumped up and down and waved his arms when catcher Andy Seminick, aka Grampa Whiz, was at the plate during a mid-August contest. Seminick turned to the home-plate umpire but the rules provided no remedy. So, when it happened again the next day, the extremely annoyed Seminick let his bat fly directly at Stanky. Then, after he singled on the next pitch, he ran following an extra-base knock with an all-out effort on his way around third to the plate and through the in-the-baseline third sacker, who lost consciousness and departed the game on a stretcher. Finally, when Stanky again repeated his distraction for Seminick, the umpire – who had enough – ejected the fielder.

On the final week of the season, Leo Durocher, the Giants’ manager, didn’t like the way Seminick was blocking the plate long before the runner arrived. And when the game went into extra innings, the skipper of this hated rival told Monte Irvin to plow into Seminick if he was trying to score: Irvin knocked him four feet in the air. However, Seminick unknowingly suffered a broken ankle, received novocaine shots to stay on the field, and played a doubleheader the next day. Ergo, his hitting declined.