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As the final All-Star votes are tallied, let the complaining begin

Picture via @Stuwass55, Twitter.

As the above photo indicates, Tigers take their baseball civics seriously.

But it’s easy to see why they might be miffed if Alex Avila, who trails the Yankees’ Russell Martin by about 500,000 votes, doesn’t land a starting catcher role in the All-Star Game.

Avila leads all catchers with a .304 batting average – 74 points above Martin. He has also thrown out 38 percent of prospective base-stealers, which sits 9 percent above Martin’s league average rate. Additionally, Avila touts a league best RBI total of 45, and his home run total of 10 is third in the league and bested only by those hitting at least 60 points below him.

Yes, as a huge Tiger fan (At age 7, I names my trio of pet snails Sparky, Mickey and Cecil), I’m hardly objective here. But I’m always frustrated when All-Star voting is driven by city size rather than performance.

Is there anyone out there who actually votes on merit? I try to. But I must admit that I tend not to vote for players, who, for mostly silly reasons, I’ve decided are jerk wads.

$4 million Harwell collection a rare, neglected gem

Before it’s too late, baseball history buffs may want to pilgrimage to Motown, home to a neglected and rarely discussed slice of America’s pastime’s past.

No, you can no longer cruise by the corner of Michigan and Trumbull and spot the white, boxy facade of old Tiger Stadium, which has now been put out of its misery.

You have to look a bit harder: into an often dark, locked room in the Detroit Public Library, where you can find $4 million worth of baseball memories compiled by legendary Tiger broadcaster Ernie Harwell during his 68-year career. It’s a collection that’s trumped only by the treasure housed in the Baseball Hall of Fame.

In the library you can find more than 2,500 rare baseball cards from as far back as the 1880s, the 106-year old letter that told Ty Cobb to report to the Tigers, and four decades worth of All-Star Game programs, among much more.

Harwell began donating his collection to the library in 1965. But, as the Detroit News reports, the mismanaged, understaffed library system has limited access to the collection, which was visited by just 500 people last year. What’s worse, thieves may have thinned out parts of the collection, much of which is not cataloged.

The paper reports:

“It’s a disaster,” said John King, the owner of John K. King Used & Rare Books. “I am worried they are just continuing the destruction of the library because they aren’t taking care of the collections. We are going to lose this history.

“Ernie wouldn’t be happy. This is an extension of him.”

Theft already has been an issue in the collection that includes thousands of baseball cards, Harwell’s 1968 World Series ring, rare letters, the guides he bought as a youngster with paper route proceeds and other one-of-a-kind artifacts.

Four years ago, a former library staffer was fired for stealing some of Harwell’s baseball cards. The cards were returned, but the employee wasn’t prosecuted, and officials acknowledge they can’t be certain if they got all of the cards back.

That should be heartbreaking to any baseball fan, especially those familiar with Ernie Harwell, whose huge talent in the radio booth (he was the only announcer ever traded for a baseball player, after all) was only overshadowed by his kindness.

So, while Ernie’s collection is still there, make an appointment to see it. And, if you’re still in the mood for more Ernie Harwell lore while you’re in the area, you may want to check out this out.

Was Sugar Ray Marimon Robbed of a No-hit Bid?

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa – As the sun set and the air cooled over Veterans Memorial Stadium on Wednesday, Kane County Cougar pitcher Sugar Ray Marimon (Low A-Royals) kept getting hotter. His fastball popped, his splitter vanished and the hometown Kernels, slogging under the weight of an eight-game losing streak, couldn’t connect. The 22-year-old Columbia native had held them hittless through seven innings, and it seemed to the few hundred fans still remaining that Marimon was on pace to notch a feat that’s sweeter than his first name: a no-hitter.

But after a Kernel reached on an overthrow by the third baseman with two out in the eighth, Kane County pitching coach Jim Brower abruptly pulled Marimon. The pitcher wasn’t hurt or tired – he had walked just two batters. But with only  four outs to go, he had barely eclipsed the 100-pitch limit that the Royals set for all minor league pitchers in the franchise.

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Playing LOL-ball: Funniest names in baseball history

What’s in a name? A great many syllables, if you’re Calvin Coolidge Julius Caesar Tuskahoma McLish. But while the former journeyman pitcher’s title is impressively weird, it has many rivals – most of them old-timey – for the goofiest name in professional baseball history.

I’ve compiled a brief, unordered list of those names. Who is the funniest? And whom, as I quickly scoured over a century of data, did I unjustly overlook?

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