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Like radio addresses from the presidents, and urgent messages sent by telegraph, Glenn Beck's time on Fox News has at last come to an end. Confirming rumors that his departure was imminent, the conservative talk show host, had his finale on Thursday, leaving Fox News behind to start his own 'fair and unbiased' network.
Beck will next try his hand at internet television, as the vivacious commentator will be starting GBTV, for paying subscribers this September.
He couldn't end his show without one more impassioned speech from his trademark chalkboards, where he often wove tales of vast world conspiracies; including the claim that the political unrest in Egypt will lead to an Islamic Caliphate taking control of the Middle East.
Beck took stabs at all his critics, most notably his erstwhile foe from the Daily Show, Jon Stewart, saying he produced his show with only two writers while Stewart needed a team for his shorter show. Perhaps having a team of writers would have kept Beck from spewing the comments about the President's 'deep-seated hatred of white people' that lost his show most of its sponsors.
The Freed Press
A site developed for discussing geopolitical events and coverage of the San Francisco Giants.
July 1, 2011
June 30, 2011
Ex-Giant Brad Penny to Start Series Against Former Team
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A year after watching the team he spurned in favor of the St. Louis Cardinals win a World Series, Brad Penny is set to take on his former team yet again, when the San Francisco Giants come to Detroit to play a three game set with the Tigers.
After going 4-1 with a 2.59 ERA, in six starts with the Giants in 2009, the journeyman right-hander, reject their offer to bring him back in 2010, signing the Cardinals' one-year offer instead. He went 3-4 with a 3.23 ERA in 9 starts for St. Louis including eight shutout innings against the Giants.
In the 2011 offseason, Penny inked another one-year deal, this time with the Detroit Tigers after St. Louis declined to invest in him and his bad back for another season. Penny is rebounding from the back injury that limited him to only 9 outings in 2010 and this season is 5-6 with a 4.66 ERA in 16 games for the Tigers.
Ironically, Penny's departure from the Giants paved the way for the pitcher opposing him, Madison Bumgarner (4-9 3.84 ERA), to get both a spot in the starting rotation and a World Series ring.
Penny has been inconsistent for the Tigers this year and since his 2009 sting with San Francisco, his ERA has climbed by nearly two points, his WHIP rose half point, and he now averages one more walk per game than during his time with the Orange and Black.
Despite his record, Penny's counterpart Madison Bumgarner has proven that his success last year wasn't a fluke, and with a bit more run support could easily have one of the National League's top records. Bumgarner rebounded from a historically bad start against the Minnesota Twins, which saw him surrender 8 runs before finishing one inning; to pick up a career high 11 strikeouts in seven stellar innings against the Cleveland Indians Sunday night.
Coming off two straight walk-off losses to the Chicago Cubs, the Giants—who won't face Tigers' ace Justin Verlander—could use another gem from the 21 year-old Bumgarner.
The Tigers will follow Penny with Max Scherzer (9-3, 4.47 ERA) and Rick Porcello (6-6, 5.06 ERA) and the Giants will counter with Barry Zito (1-1, 4.95 ERA) and Ryan Vogelsong (6-1, 2.09 ERA).
Zito is coming off a superb effort against the Cubs, while Vogelsong struggled but benefited from a rare offensive explosion to get the win. Both will be watched closely to see how they rebound from their last outings, with Zito still auditioning for another chance at the starting rotation, and Vogelsong maybe looking to prove that his last outing was an anomaly. On
Maybe most importantly: the Giants offense has to come out of its slumber and support the masterful pitching if they expect to stay in first place in the NL West, for long. The Giants made first 20 then 31 outs without recording a single hit in the final two games of the series at Wrigley.
The first game of the weekend set of three will be Friday at 4:05 pm PDT on CSN Bay Area for television and KNBR 680 for the radio.
A year after watching the team he spurned in favor of the St. Louis Cardinals win a World Series, Brad Penny is set to take on his former team yet again, when the San Francisco Giants come to Detroit to play a three game set with the Tigers.
After going 4-1 with a 2.59 ERA, in six starts with the Giants in 2009, the journeyman right-hander, reject their offer to bring him back in 2010, signing the Cardinals' one-year offer instead. He went 3-4 with a 3.23 ERA in 9 starts for St. Louis including eight shutout innings against the Giants.
In the 2011 offseason, Penny inked another one-year deal, this time with the Detroit Tigers after St. Louis declined to invest in him and his bad back for another season. Penny is rebounding from the back injury that limited him to only 9 outings in 2010 and this season is 5-6 with a 4.66 ERA in 16 games for the Tigers.
Ironically, Penny's departure from the Giants paved the way for the pitcher opposing him, Madison Bumgarner (4-9 3.84 ERA), to get both a spot in the starting rotation and a World Series ring.
Penny has been inconsistent for the Tigers this year and since his 2009 sting with San Francisco, his ERA has climbed by nearly two points, his WHIP rose half point, and he now averages one more walk per game than during his time with the Orange and Black.
Despite his record, Penny's counterpart Madison Bumgarner has proven that his success last year wasn't a fluke, and with a bit more run support could easily have one of the National League's top records. Bumgarner rebounded from a historically bad start against the Minnesota Twins, which saw him surrender 8 runs before finishing one inning; to pick up a career high 11 strikeouts in seven stellar innings against the Cleveland Indians Sunday night.
Coming off two straight walk-off losses to the Chicago Cubs, the Giants—who won't face Tigers' ace Justin Verlander—could use another gem from the 21 year-old Bumgarner.
The Tigers will follow Penny with Max Scherzer (9-3, 4.47 ERA) and Rick Porcello (6-6, 5.06 ERA) and the Giants will counter with Barry Zito (1-1, 4.95 ERA) and Ryan Vogelsong (6-1, 2.09 ERA).
Zito is coming off a superb effort against the Cubs, while Vogelsong struggled but benefited from a rare offensive explosion to get the win. Both will be watched closely to see how they rebound from their last outings, with Zito still auditioning for another chance at the starting rotation, and Vogelsong maybe looking to prove that his last outing was an anomaly. On
Maybe most importantly: the Giants offense has to come out of its slumber and support the masterful pitching if they expect to stay in first place in the NL West, for long. The Giants made first 20 then 31 outs without recording a single hit in the final two games of the series at Wrigley.
The first game of the weekend set of three will be Friday at 4:05 pm PDT on CSN Bay Area for television and KNBR 680 for the radio.
Giants Lose 2nd Straight Game in Walk-Off Fashion
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The San Francisco Giants seem to only know how to play heart-attack baseball, and who can blame them, with the miraculous ways they seem to win baseball games.
But, for the second night in a row, the Giants watched as their opponent came up with late-inning magic as the Cubs pick up a dramatic 5-2 walk-off win in 13 innings.
Geovany Soto hit the game winner off Ramon Ramirez to give the Cubs their second straight walk-off win in as many games.
Cubs starter Carlos Zambrano, left the game after just one plus innings with back soreness, but the bullpen picked him literally, flawlessly. Marcos Matteo cam in and didn't give up a hit in five relief innings as part of a 10 innings of no-hit ball from the Cubs bullpen.
Cain, gave the Giants another gem but only got a no decision to show for his dominance. The right-hander tossed seven innings of four hit ball with a walk and six strikeouts—finishing the day with 1,001 for his career. But, for the second night in a row, the offense failed to deliver, tallying just one run until the 13th inning.
Despite watching the offense fail to get a hit after the third inning; Cain's 111 pitches held the Cubs in check for seven; and Sergio Romo rebounded from his first loss of the season, with a strong eighth inning.
The Giants nursed a 1-0 lead through eight frames before turning to Brian Wilson, hoping to seal the victory and leave the Windy City having taken three of four from the struggling Cubs. They followed the formula for winning tight, low scoring games to the letter, but unlike most nights, the recipe didn't work.
Wilson entered the game leading the Majors with 24 saves in 26 chances. The bearded closer got Starlin Castro to groundout to lead off the ninth before Aramis Ramirez stepped in. He waited as Wilson struggled to a 3-1 count, then became the first to take him deep this entire season, tying the game at 1.
Wilson would get out of the ninth with no more damage, and the game stayed deadlocked until the top half of the 13th. Pablo Sandoval stood in against John Grabow with two down and the Giants' lineup still suffocated by the Cubs' bullpen.
Grabow threw Sandoval two straight hittable changeups before the third one deep was planted deep into the left center field seats; ending the 10 inning hitting and scoring drought with one swing, and giving the Giants a 2-1 lead.
After the brief breakthrough, San Francisco turned to right-hander Ramon Ramirez(2-1 2.51 ERA), who got the first two outs on just five pitches.
With the Cubs down to their last strike, Jeff Baker, whose earlier double-play ball killed a 10th inning Cubs rally, came to the plate and smashed a double to deep center field. Next came Darwin Barney and the Giants' outfield came in to keep a shallow base hit from bringing Baker home from second.
Down 1-2 in the count, Barney came through with a clutch ground ball single through the left side of the infield, that Cody Ross fielded before Baker rounded third. Ross had a chance to get Baker at the plate, but his throw was several feet over catcher Chris Stewart's head and the game was tied at 2, with Barney taking second on the throw.
After intentionally walking Starlin Castro, pinch-hitter Geovany Soto belted Ramirez's 3-2 changeup over the left field wall to seal it for Chicago.
The loss drops the Giants to 46-36 on the year, but they still lead the National League Western Division by a full game over the second-place Arizona Diamondbacks.
The walk-off loss was San Francisco's second in as many days and second in a row after winning seven straight. The normally stellar bullpen couldn't carry the offense to another heart-stopping win, as the Giants twice blew saves in Thursday's game.
The only silver lining in the defeat was the brilliance of Matt Cain. Cain joined teammate Tim Lincecum in the Giants' 1,000 strikeout club with a fifth inning punch-out of Koyie Hill, becoming the fourth San Francisco Giant and twelfth overall Giant to fan at least 1,000 in a career.
After leaving Chicago with a split of a four game series, San Francisco's next series is against the Detroit Bumgarner with Madison Bumgarner (4-9 3.84 ERA) on the mound against former Giant Brad Penny from Comerica Park in Detroit.
The San Francisco Giants seem to only know how to play heart-attack baseball, and who can blame them, with the miraculous ways they seem to win baseball games.
But, for the second night in a row, the Giants watched as their opponent came up with late-inning magic as the Cubs pick up a dramatic 5-2 walk-off win in 13 innings.
Geovany Soto hit the game winner off Ramon Ramirez to give the Cubs their second straight walk-off win in as many games.
Cain, gave the Giants another gem but only got a no decision to show for his dominance. The right-hander tossed seven innings of four hit ball with a walk and six strikeouts—finishing the day with 1,001 for his career. But, for the second night in a row, the offense failed to deliver for Cain, tallying just one run until the 13th inning.
Cubs starter Carlos Zambrano, left the game after just one plus innings with back soreness, but the bullpen picked him literally, flawlessly. Marcos Matteo cam in and didn't give up a hit in five relief innings as part of a 10 innings of no-hit ball from the Cubs bullpen.
Cain, gave the Giants another gem but only got a no decision to show for his dominance. The right-hander tossed seven innings of four hit ball with a walk and six strikeouts—finishing the day with 1,001 for his career. But, for the second night in a row, the offense failed to deliver, tallying just one run until the 13th inning.
Despite watching the offense fail to get a hit after the third inning; Cain's 111 pitches held the Cubs in check for seven; and Sergio Romo rebounded from his first loss of the season, with a strong eighth inning.
The Giants nursed a 1-0 lead through eight frames before turning to Brian Wilson, hoping to seal the victory and leave the Windy City having taken three of four from the struggling Cubs. They followed the formula for winning tight, low scoring games to the letter, but unlike most nights, the recipe didn't work.
Wilson entered the game leading the Majors with 24 saves in 26 chances. The bearded closer got Starlin Castro to groundout to lead off the ninth before Aramis Ramirez stepped in. He waited as Wilson struggled to a 3-1 count, then became the first to take him deep this entire season, tying the game at 1.
Wilson would get out of the ninth with no more damage, and the game stayed deadlocked until the top half of the 13th. Pablo Sandoval stood in against John Grabow with two down and the Giants' lineup still suffocated by the Cubs' bullpen.
Grabow threw Sandoval two straight hittable changeups before the third one deep was planted deep into the left center field seats; ending the 10 inning hitting and scoring drought with one swing, and giving the Giants a 2-1 lead.
After the brief breakthrough, San Francisco turned to right-hander Ramon Ramirez(2-1 2.51 ERA), who got the first two outs on just five pitches.
With the Cubs down to their last strike, Jeff Baker, whose earlier double-play ball killed a 10th inning Cubs rally, came to the plate and smashed a double to deep center field. Next came Darwin Barney and the Giants' outfield came in to keep a shallow base hit from bringing Baker home from second.
Down 1-2 in the count, Barney came through with a clutch ground ball single through the left side of the infield, that Cody Ross fielded before Baker rounded third. Ross had a chance to get Baker at the plate, but his throw was several feet over catcher Chris Stewart's head and the game was tied at 2, with Barney taking second on the throw.
After intentionally walking Starlin Castro, pinch-hitter Geovany Soto belted Ramirez's 3-2 changeup over the left field wall to seal it for Chicago.
The loss drops the Giants to 46-36 on the year, but they still lead the National League Western Division by a full game over the second-place Arizona Diamondbacks.
The walk-off loss was San Francisco's second in as many days and second in a row after winning seven straight. The normally stellar bullpen couldn't carry the offense to another heart-stopping win, as the Giants twice blew saves in Thursday's game.
The only silver lining in the defeat was the brilliance of Matt Cain. Cain joined teammate Tim Lincecum in the Giants' 1,000 strikeout club with a fifth inning punch-out of Koyie Hill, becoming the fourth San Francisco Giant and twelfth overall Giant to fan at least 1,000 in a career.
After leaving Chicago with a split of a four game series, San Francisco's next series is against the Detroit Bumgarner with Madison Bumgarner (4-9 3.84 ERA) on the mound against former Giant Brad Penny from Comerica Park in Detroit.
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