"Showing Their Scales" and "The Hockey Farmer"

We are pleased to introduce the works of local B.C. authors KP Wee and Farhan Devji to you:

"Showing Their Scales" contains three tales of lies, lust, and deception. These are short novels which deal with betrayal and revenge, with three main male characters and how they end up hurting the women in their lives.
**Catch an episode of BlogTalkRadio
here with KP's interview on his books, recorded Dec 29, 2008.**

"The Hockey Farmer" is a story about Logan Watt, who hails from Cochrane, Alberta, and has to decide whether to rehabilitate the legendary family farm or pursue an unlikely career in professional hockey. The story also shifts to Vancouver and contains numerous Vancouver Canucks references.

Help support a pair of B.C. authors by picking up your own copies today!
-- "The Hockey Farmer" can be purchased
here,
while "Showing Their Scales" can be bought
here. --

The Hockey Farmer / Showing Their Scales

The Hockey Farmer / Showing Their Scales

Saturday, June 14, 2008

Wouldn't you know it...Johnson's the hero, Rolen's not.

This has been posted on http://mvn.com/mlb-bluejays/
What do the friends on OA (House, Cliff, Rick, the fish) think about this J.P. and Rolen bashing? Discuss.

The Blue Jays fell 6-2 to the Chicago Cubs at Rogers Centre on Saturday, thanks to a former friend’s big three-run blast.

That would be ex-Blue Jay, Reed Johnson, who clubbed a three-run shot off Toronto ace Roy Halladay in the second inning.

Of course, Johnson was released in March thanks to the signing of Shannon Stewart, and he then signed on with the Cubbies.

In yesterday’s post, I’d already outlined the contributions of Stewart on this Jays team, so I’m not going to rehash it here.

But now it’s all clear: the man who made all these baseball decisions, trades, and so on, has to be held accountable.

That man would be general manager J.P. Ricciardi.

There is no way that a team with this much pitching depth should be just a .500 club after 70 games.

Of course, the Jays have the misfortune of playing in the AL East, where the Boston Red Sox are ahead of Toronto by 7 games, pending the outcome of the Boston-Cincinnati game.

The Blue Jays are in last place.

In Saturday’s game, Vernon Wells left after the seventh inning with an apparent wrist injury.

If this injury proves to be serious, the Jays are finished.

If the Jays still had Reed Johnson and Troy Glaus, and Frank Thomas, wouldn’t they be a better ballclub?

It’s all on the G.M.

How much longer can this team continue without a major shakeup?

J.P. Ricciardi has to go. None of his moves have really panned out. Lyle Overbay and A.J. Burnett haven’t worked out.

Overbay isn’t the worst first baseman in baseball, but come on? Just five homers and a .260 average?

Burnett, a .500 pitcher with that ugly ERA (4.90)?

And I haven’t talked about Scott Rolen yet.

The Jays were down 6-0 heading into the eighth, with Jason Marquis tossing a one-hitter.

The Jays, however, collected three straight singles to load the bases with none out, chasing Marquis in favor of Carlos Marmol.

Marmol got two straight strikeouts, before Matt Stairs walked on a 3-2 pitch to force in a run. Shutout broken.

Rolen, the No. 3 hitter, had a chance to make things interesting, but once again, could not deliver in the clutch.

Rolen hit a very easy popup to second, and the inning was over.

And the kicker? Kevin Mench, who subbed for the ailing Wells, tripled leading off the ninth.

What if Rolen had gotten a big hit in the eighth to prolong the inning and give Mench a shot?

Thanks a lot, Rolen.

I blame J.P. Ricciardi for this one. He was the one who acquired this star third baseman and No. 3 hitter.

Friday, June 13, 2008

Rolen finally hits one out

I'd originally posted this on http://mvn.com/mlb-bluejays/
What do the friends on OA (House, Rick, Cliff, the fish) think about this Rolen bashing? Discuss. And what do you think about Shulman? I personally disagree with a lot of the stuff he says, by the way, including his contention that the steroid issue in baseball > the alleged game-fixing situation in basketball.

Scott Rolen finally hit one out. Good riddance.

The Blue Jays third baseman ended 32-game homerless streak with a solo blast in the third inning, as Toronto edged the visiting Chicago Cubs 3-2.

Rolen’s blast came right after Matt Stairs had given the Jays a 2-0 lead with a clout of his own, a two-run job.

It was the first time Toronto had connected for back-to-back dingers this season, and the first time that the Blue Birds have had two homers in the same inning.

Though A.J. Burnett was shaky in his five-plus innings, he was much better compared to his last start versus Baltimore (8 R, 4.1 IP), and picked up his sixth win to even his record at 6-6. Even B.J. Ryan got the job done on this night, notching save No. 14.

But how about that Rolen-for-Troy Glaus swap now?

I don’t care what anyone says; despite the fact Rolen had been hitting .300 for much of the season before seeing it dip under in the last couple days, the Jays’ new third sacker and No. 3 hitter has been a bust.

Say what you want about his defense, but this ballclub needs someone who can hit the long balls and drive in big runs. The Jays have been struggling all year long in one-run ballgames and with driving runners across. And they can’t just rely on Vernon Wells alone.

Meanwhile, over in St. Louis, Glaus has been healthy all year long, missing only one game this season while being productive in the fifth spot in the Cardinals’ lineup.

Heading into Friday’s action, Glaus was hitting .262 with 8 homers and 40 RBIs in 229 at-bats for the Red Birds.

Rolen? After fracturing his right middle finger during spring training, Rolen missed the first few weeks before returning in late April. Yes, Rolen made a huge splash with his first home run in his third game. For good measure, he even added another over a week later.

But then no home runs for over a month–until Friday night. Rolen’s numbers going in: .293 with 2 home runs and only 16 RBIs in 157 ABs.

Unacceptable.

The Cards have gotten the better of the deal so far.

And what about Frank Thomas? Released by the Jays early in the season, Thomas rebounded and hit .319 with 4 homers in a month’s worth of action for the A’s before landing on the DL at the end of May.

Thomas’ success out in Oakland coincided with the Jays’ winning ways in May, but if Big Frank hadn’t been injured and had continued hitting for the A’s in June, once again the release would have looked real bad for Toronto.

Reed Johnson? Deemed expendable following the signing of Shannon Stewart, Johnson was released before the season began. While Johnson (.267, 2 HR), now with the Cubs, didn’t make an impact in this Chicago-Toronto tilt on Friday (he was sent in to pinch-hit in the ninth), he is at least active.

Stewart is now on the DL, and is expected to be gone at least a month, and was hitting just .240 with a homer before his ankle injury. Oddly enough, the timing of Stewart’s injury came just as Wells was coming off the disabled list.

Interestingly, former Blue Jays broadcaster Dan Shulman was quoted as saying the release of Thomas was the right thing to do given his attitude and the fact the DH was no longer an everyday player.

I could not disagree more.

The reality is the Jays need at least another bat in the lineup to protect Wells.

Rolen isn’t getting the job done with the long ball. Stairs is getting up there in age, and the Jays can’t expect him to do much more than what he’s been giving them so far.

Without those dumb moves in the Rolen deal or releases, this Jays team should be contending for the wild card, especially given the fact they boast the majors’ third-best ERA (3.49) and have the best rotation in baseball.

The Barry Bonds thing isn’t going to happen, so I don’t understand what direction this team is heading in. The Jays are way better than their 35-34, 6 1/2-game back, record indicates.

And I’m going to blame Rolen for this.

Is his next homer going to come in another month?

Brief Resume Highlights

Writing Experience
- Bleacher Report: contribute articles on the Vancouver Canucks, Boston sports, hockey, and baseball at least three times a week (2007-Present); edit sports-related articles from other posters (2008-Present)
- UCL: developed Career Planning curriculum (2007); consulted on for other curricula issues (2005-Present)
- Consumer Research: submitted unsolicited proposals for improvements on company operations (2005)
- B.U.D. College: developed Grammar curriculum consisting of five levels (2004); edited curricula for other courses (2004)
- KGIC: developed Career Planning curriculum proposal for Surrey campus (2004)
Writing Accomplishments
- Named Bleacher Report Bruins Community Leader (2008)