Shorebird of the Week – August 4, 2011

After being brought up for the second half, Joe Oliviera has provided punch for the Shorebird offense.

While the second half of the season has been a little disappointing record-wise, there are players who came on board that are standing out. Moreover, much of the time over the last several seasons the catching position has been a black hole offensively as those who donned the tools of ignorance for the black and orange have more or less been an automatic out. Not so with Joe Oliviera.

Joe came to us after a brief 9-game stay at Frederick where he was hitting .308 in 26 at-bats, and since his arrival he has made the catching position one where there’s offensive prowess. That’s a bit surprising given his 2010 stats in Aberdeen (.204/0/7/.574 OPS in 36 games) but many’s the time a player “gets it” in his second season after making the transition to professional ball from high school or college during his first go-round. A 15th round pick last year out of the University of the Pacific, the 23-year-old San Diego native has put together a nice 80 at-bat run for the Shorebirds, hitting .325 with a homer and 13 batted in. He’s appeared in 23 games since becoming a Shorebird at the halfway point.

In looking at his splits, one thing that jumped out is that Joe has been money with runners in scoring position, collecting 9 hits in the 19 situational at-bats and driving in 11 of his 13 runs. Guys who come through in the clutch are golden for a team, and given the offensive struggles the Shorebirds as a whole have endured (after hitting nearly .280 as a team early on, Delmarva has slumped to a .253 overall average) it’s clear Oliviera is providing a spark.

It’s been years since we could claim a catcher who hit much above the Mendoza line on a consistent basis. But with Joe and fellow backstop Michael Ohlman leading the way the catching position isn’t the easy out this time around.

Shorebird of the Week – July 28, 2011

Sent down for the second half, Garabez Rosa has helped out a moribund Shorebirds offense.

Believe it or not, in at least offensive area Garabez Rosa has surpassed the player he replaced, megaprospect Manny Machado.

Consider that Machado was hitting .276/6/24/.859 OPS when he was promoted for the second half of the season. Rosa doesn’t have the power numbers and isn’t drawing the walks, but has a higher average than Machado – his comparable numbers are .307/0/12/.731 OPS. Knowing that Machado is on the fast track in the Orioles’ eyes, Rosa was among the first players he passed on his way up the ladder. Everyone else is seemingly playing to be Manny’s eventual backup at the big league level. In fact, when Machado was promoted to Frederick Rosa was sent down to replace him.

If you set aside the Machado comparison, though, you can find that the 21-year-old Dominican signed by the Orioles in 2007 has his own bonafides. This is the second season in a row he’s gotten off to a good start in a Delmarva uniform – last year he flirted with .300 for much of the first half and parlayed it into a SAL All-Star selection. The long season and league may have caught up with him, though, since he ended 2010 with a .251/5/44/.632 OPS line. To be sure, Rosa wasn’t excelling at the Carolina League level, either, batting .212 in 53 games before the demotion to Delmarva.

Yet the free-swinging Garabez (just 30 walks in over 1,400 professional at-bats in five seasons) has an opportunity to improve on his 2010 numbers here and continue his quest up the ladder a step behind Machado. Staying at or above the .300 mark as we wrap up the season against familiar North Division foes will help his cause.

 

Shorebird of the Week – July 21, 2011

Brendan Webb started out the season slowly, but picked up steam and moved up in the batting order recently.

Brendan Webb returns back to the dugout after an inning in right field. That's generally where he's been placed by manager Ryan Minor.

He endured a start which had him flirting with the Mendoza line through the end of May, but Brenden Webb has moved up his average over the last few weeks and earned himself a higher place in the batting order.

As a 30th round pick (out of Palomar Junior College in California) the 21 year old outfielder may not have been expected to do well at this level, but he seems to be slowly figuring it out. Considering he only hit .186 in a brief stint in the Gulf Coast League in 2009 and .227 last year with Bluefield, one may assume he’d have a difficult transition to the full-season level – and they’d be right.

Webb had gotten his average close to the .240 mark before a recent slump pushed him back down below .220 (since the mid-season break Webb has a .240 average, which includes the 1-for-22 slump.) With a couple hits in his last two starts he’s back up to .223/3/22 and a .644 OPS. The Orioles may have seen some power in Brenden since he’s hit 8 home runs in just over 500 professional at-bats; meanwhile Webb has become a more adept base stealer as he’s swiped nine this year. Moreover, Brendan seems to be a good #2 hitter since he has a good .355 on-base percentage (based on drawing a team-leading 57 walks) but could be much better when he cuts down on strikeouts (where he also paces the team with 103.)

I don’t think it would hurt either the Shorebirds or his development for Webb to repeat at this level in 2012. Obviously Brenden needs to put together a season where he hits for average to have a chance to move up in the organization, and repeating at Delmarva to begin 2012 would give him that opportunity. In the meantime, hitting .300 in those last 150 at-bats this season would give him a nice round .250 mark – considering the hole he dug for himself early on, that would be very respectable. To mix sports metaphors, the ball is in his court.

Shorebird of the Week – July 14, 2011

Tim Berry has been a strong presence in Delmarva's starting rotation.

When you get down to the 50th round of baseball’s amateur draft you’re usually picking raw, projectable talent out of high school or a small college. Players coming from those rounds don’t often sign; if they do there’s not much of a bonus.

Yet that wasn’t the case with Tim Berry two years ago. While he received a bonus generally reserved for an upper round pick, he was only a 50th round pick by the Orioles in 2009. How could that be?

Well, the Orioles (and presumably other teams) knew Tim would have Tommy John surgery shortly thereafter, thus Berry didn’t make his organizational debut until last year – just 20 innings in the Gulf Coast League. In essence, Berry is a year behind the remainder of his draft class. The Orioles decided to take the chance that Tim could be an effective pitcher at the highest level after the surgery.

So it’s not surprising that Tim pitches no more than five innings per start. But lately he’s put together some solid outings, and that’s led me to pick him as a Shorebird of the Week. Over his last three starts (15 innings) Tim’s allowed just 9 hits and 3 walks (an 0.80 WHIP) while fanning 16. For the overall season, Tim is 3-5 with a 4.62 ERA in 17 starts. His 67 strikeouts are tied for the team lead; however, he’s pitched 16 1/3 fewer innings than Luis Noel, who also has 67 K’s.

There’s still an erratic streak in the 20 year old out of San Diego, as he’s walked 41 batters and has blown up in a couple starts that have grisly linescores (like 9 runs allowed in 2 1/3 innings against Kannapolis.) But he’s probably developing as nicely as the Orioles could have hoped. Given the fragility of his arm, it’s also likely that Tim will be shut down for the season shortly as he approaches the 100-inning mark.

It’s kind of a shame, as Tim seems to be hitting his stride. We may see him in 2012 but it’s also possible the Orioles will test him in Frederick.

Shorebird of the Week – July 7, 2011

Cameron Roth has been the swingman for the Shorebirds, pitching mostly in long relief with a spot start here and there.

Starters get the wins and closers get the saves, but any good pitching staff has that guy who can come in when needed for a spot start or eat a couple innings to keep the team in the game. For the Shorebirds, Cameron Roth seems to be that guy.

The lefty makes it two weeks out of three that a player from UNC-Wilmington has been selected as SotW (Michael Rooney was the other.) Roth was picked in the 29th round of last year’s draft and spent last season at Bluefield, where he went 2-4, 4.23 in 12 starts and compiled a 1.25 WHIP.

Cameron isn’t a stranger to starting, since that was his role with Bluefield, but for much of this year his role with the Shorebirds has been that of a long reliever – on average his relief stint was about 3 innings. Thus far his numbers have been reasonably good, as he’s compiled a 3-1 record with a 4.91 ERA, allowing 60 hits and 23 walks in 55 innings pitched, while fanning 39. Perhaps the highlight of his season was getting the start (one of three he’s made this year) at Hagerstown June 16, shutting out the Suns for 5 innings and picking up the win.

So what lies ahead for the 22-year-old Virginian? While he’s not thought of as a prospect yet, he seems to have potential once he leaves Delmarva – his home/road splits suggest he doesn’t much care for pitching here (6.46 ERA at Perdue Stadium, 3.73 in other parks.) He may be a nice addition to Frederick’s staff next year with a strong finish and solid spring.

Shorebird of the Week – June 30, 2011

Jarret Martin was pitching in relief when this was taken back in May, but he's established himself in the starting rotation now.

Because last week was a short week due to the All-Star break, one could argue Jarret Martin wasn’t all that deserving of the South Atlantic League’s Pitcher of the Week honors – after all, he made just one start. Granted, it was six innings of one-hit shutout ball against Lakewood in the first game back June 23, but that may have been a fluke.

So he followed that start up yesterday with six more shutout innings against Greensboro, allowing just four hits in that span before finally tiring in the seventh and allowing two runs. It was enough for another “W” in his column and should have silenced any critics.

Placed into the starting rotation for the May 21st contest at Kannapolis, Martin was roughed up for seven runs in 2 2/3 innings. He also struggled in one other start at West Virginia.

But Jarret has been “on” in his last two starts, which have pushed his overall record to 4-3 and lowered his ERA to 4.47 for the season. He’s reacquainted himself with starting duty over the last month, as Martin was a member of Bluefield’s starting rotation last season – there he went 3-5, 4.07 with a 1.49 WHIP.

Still, Martin has one thing to work on. In 116 professional innings, the 18th round pick out of Bakersfield (CA) Junior College has allowed 81 bases on balls. Allowing over 6 walks per 9 innings is not a formula for success at higher levels.

And oddly enough, statistically Jarret was a more effective long reliever than starter, although the two poor starts probably inflated those numbers to a degree.

We will probably see the native Californian who turns 22 in August for the rest of the season here. But if he can continue putting together good outings such as his last two and trim his walk numbers, there’s no reason to believe he can’t anchor Frederick’s starting rotation in 2012.

Shorebird of the Week – June 23, 2011

Rooney made his home debut June 9 against Hagerstown.

Not to be confused with another, similarly-named Shorebird infielder, Michael Rooney has set himself on a mission to return to Frederick by hitting the cover off the ball here at Delmarva.

Brought on board to replace Jonathan Schoop (who was promoted to Frederick) on June 5th, Rooney has managed 17 hits in 11 Shorebird games, sporting a gaudy .386 average so far. That which Rooney has accomplished in 11 games and 44 at-bats with the Shorebirds has pretty much matched his total output for Frederick in 26 games and 62 at-bats earlier this season. He was hitting .226 for the Keys prior to his demotion.

A 30th round pick out of UNC-Wilmington last year, Rooney is on the hottest streak of his nascent career since he only hit .234/0/11 for Aberdeen last season with a lackluster .613 OPS. (Compare that to a solid .890 OPS so far at Delmarva.) But one thing which pops out in looking at the 22-year-old Tar Heel’s stats is that he rarely strikes out or takes a walk – in 281 professional at-bats he’s fanned just 48 times and drawn 30 walks. Rooney tends to get wood on the ball, so it’s just a matter of how hard it was hit and where it was placed.

With megaprospect Manny Machado out of the way, manager Ryan Minor may well continue to go with the hot hand of Rooney in the infield for the foreseeable future. As there are four players listed as shortstops on the current roster (but none at second base,) Michael now anchors a crew which is radically different from the group that started the season here – of that four-player shortstop group, not one began the season with Delmarva.

But that doesn’t mean we’ll have any less success – particularly if Rooney can keep the average over the .300 mark.

Tracking the Shorebirds 2011

Written on the day of the annual South Atlantic League All-Star Game that marks the season’s midway point, each year I mention this is one of my favorite posts to write. It got even more exciting when I found this site because now I know the baseball fate for all of the over 100 players I’ve selected over the last 5 1/2 seasons as Shorebird of the Week. It also makes it easier to organize this post!

Let’s start by going back to 2006, when I picked my initial crop of 22 Shorebirds of the Week.

Out of that group, eight are still active and I’ll pick up their story in a moment. As for the other fourteen, most didn’t progress beyond class-A ball and were released after playing with Delmarva or Frederick in their final season. A few latched on to independent league teams in the Can-Am League (1), Atlantic League (1), and Frontier League (2.) Trevor Caughey even traveled as far as Australia to keep playing last year. The inactive group includes my 2006 Shorebird of the Year, Ryan Finan, who last played at Bowie in 2008.

The eight honorees from 2006 who are still active are all over the baseball map. Three are on major league rosters: David Hernandez was traded to the Arizona Diamondbacks in the Mark Reynolds deal, Brad Bergesen has bounced between Baltimore and Norfolk, starter and bullpen over the last three seasons, and Blake Davis was just called up on Friday to make his debut in The Show. Meanwhile, Brandon Snyder, who’s spent some time with the Orioles over the last two seasons, is back in Norfolk.

Two others have yet to crack the Orioles roster but are considered prospects to do so. Brandon Erbe, who I picked as my 2006 Prospect of the Year, is on Norfolk’s disabled list but also is on Baltimore’s 40-man roster, as is Chorye Spoone of Bowie.

That leaves two other active players. After being dropped by the Orioles organization Jon Tucker is now playing for Harrisburg, the AA affiliate of the Washington Nationals. Lorenzo Scott, Jr. spent several years in the Florida organization after they plucked him from the Orioles in the Rule 5 Draft. He also played briefly in the Mets chain and is now playing in the American Association for the Gary South Shore RailCats.

A group of 20 players made up the 2007 Shorebirds of the Week (two repeated from 2006.) Just seven of the 20 remain active.

Once again, most of the other thirteen inactives didn’t progress beyond class-A ball. As opposed to the 2006 group, only one of the 2007 crop eventually tried his luck in independent league ball, playing for a season in the Atlantic League. Notably, Chad Thall just voluntarily decided this month to hang up his spikes as a member of the Montgomery Biscuits of the Southern League, the AA team of the Tampa Bay Rays.

Active players from that 2007 group play everywhere from the bigs to the independents. Pedro Beato was taken by the New York Mets in the Rule 5 Draft and has been an integral part of their bullpen this season. Still with the Orioles and playing at Bowie are three of my 2007 choices: Billy Rowell, Tim Bascom, and Zach Clark; Miguel Abreu is now at Frederick.

The other two play against each other in the independent American Association: Brandon Tripp with the St. Paul Saints and my 2007 Shorebird of the Year Danny Figueroa with the Grand Prairie AirHogs. (Brad Bergesen, a repeat pick from 2006, was my 2007 Prospect of the Year.)

I had no repeat selections in 2008, so there were 22 players to track once again. And for the first time, the majority are active players and most others only wrapped up their playing days after last season. Again, most of that nine-player group didn’t advance past A ball while three played for a time with independent league teams. (I count Mick Mattaliano among the ‘inactive’ list simply because he was released by the Washington Wild Things of the Frontier League just a week ago.) Others played in the Northern or Atlantic Leagues last season but didn’t latch onto a team this time.

Two of that 2008 group have made it to the Orioles. Zach Britton has been one of the top rookie pitchers in the American League while Ryan Adams was just sent down after a cup of coffee in the bigs. (I definitely called Britton right as my Prospect of the Year for 2008.) Others are literally all through the Orioles organization: Matt Angle, Cole McCurry, and Tyler Henson with Norfolk; Pedro Florimon Jr. and Joe Mahoney with Bowie; Sean Gleason (my 2008 Shorebird of the Year) and Nate Nery with Frederick (Nery’s on their disabled list); and Luis Noel is back with Delmarva. Meanwhile, the oft-injured Tony Butler is back in organized ball, pitching for the Everett AquaSox in the Northwest League. (They are the rookie short-season Seattle Mariners affiliate.) I was happy to see that.

The other two are looking to catch back on with a big-league organization through independent league ball: John Mariotti with the Quebec Capitales of the Can-Am League and Matt Tucker with the Amarillo Sox of the American Association.

I had a record four repeaters in 2009, so the gaggle I’m following for that season is just 18 players. All but four are active, with three of those four not getting past class-A ball. Brent Allar was a minor league Rule 5 pick of the Florida Marlins but didn’t latch on with them, nor did the Orioles take him back after spring training.

The remainder all are still in the Orioles farm system. Kyle Hudson has broken into Norfolk’s lineup, but half the group is on Bowie’s roster: Richard Zagone, Ron Welty (my 2009 Shorebird of the Year), Eddie Gamboa (on rehab with Aberdeen), Xavier Avery, Greg Miclat, L.J. Hoes (my Prospect of the Year), and Brandon Cooney. One step up with Frederick are Oliver Drake, Ryan O’Shea, Nathan Moreau, Tyler Kolodny, and Jacob Julius.

Luis Bernardo is now a member of the Gulf Coast League Orioles, but the reason he’s regressed is a little different: after several seasons as a light-hitting catcher who progressed as high as Frederick this season, he’s attempting a new career as a pitcher. Maybe we’ll see him back in a Shorebirds jersey, but on the mound.

I broke my one year old record by having five repeat honorees last year, so it’s 17 players I’m following from a year ago. Needless to say, most are still active with Delmarva or Frederick.

  • With Frederick: Garabez Rosa, Ryan Berry (on DL), Josh Dowdy (on DL), Steve Bumbry, Kenny Moreland, 2010 Prospect of the Year Tyler Townsend (on DL), Bobby Bundy, and Nick Haughian.
  • Here at Delmarva: Mikey Planeta, Kieron Pope, Ryan Minor, Jesse Beal (on DL), Ty Kelly, and Justin Dalles.

James Brandhorst is pitching with Aberdeen.

The news hasn’t been so good for T.J. Baxter or Brian Conley, who I picked as my Shorebird of the Year for 2010. Baxter was let go by the Orioles after last season, tried to latch on with the Chicago Cubs system, and was cut after spring training. Conley started out the season here and I thought the Orioles would keep him around for a veteran presence; instead they moved him up to Frederick briefly then let him go. Conley didn’t quite set the record for release set by the hapless selectee who I think was waived literally the day after I picked him, but he was close.

As this process matures and the number of honorees grows, I can tell you that I will have a bumper crop of Shorebird of the Week Hall of Fame inductees this fall. The roster of three through 2010 explodes to at least seven this fall – and I wouldn’t be surprised to see double digits by the end of the season since the Orioles likely won’t be in the playoff hunt and several players may get their major league debut.

It’s something to watch in the second half; well, besides the chance for the Shorebirds to square off against Hickory in the SAL playoffs.

Shorebird of the Week – June 16, 2011

Mikey Planeta has solidfied center field for the Shorebirds since being added to the roster in May.

While he didn’t start the season on the Shorebirds’ roster, Mikey Planeta has returned to solidify center field for the Shorebirds.

It’s his second tour of duty with the team, and thus far Mikey has improved quite a bit on the .226/0/33 he posted in 117 games last season. In 38 games so far this year, the 27th round pick from 2009 is posting a .276/0/7 mark, improving his OPS from .545 to .658 in the process.

Planeta also has developed a reputation as an outfielder whose arm a runner shouldn’t challenge. He was near the league’s top in outfield assists last season and likely will be there again this year as he has a accurate arm. Perhaps he doesn’t have the blazing speed one would expect from a center fielder but he has stolen as many as 14 bases in a season (last year.)

The one knock on his game is needing to be more selective at the plate – Mikey’s struck out 42 times this season in 163 at-bats while walking just 6. Last year he had a 123:18 strikeout to walk ratio, so it’s likely the part of his game which needs the most work.

A native of Arizona, Mikey played at Glendale Community College before being drafted in 2009. And since he’s only 21, he could have a future in the organization as a corner outfielder based on his arm. It’s likely the Orioles will be in no hurry to move him up as they have a few talented outfielders in the system above him so should be able to enjoy Planeta’s game for the rest of this season, anyway. He should get plenty of at-bats to work on plate discipline.

A symptom or a disease? Part 2

Last month I made a post which pondered whether the economic situation was adversely affecting the Delmarva Shorebirds and their attendance, which seems to be markedly down from last year.

But in speaking with Shorebirds General Manager Chris Bitters on the subject, he protested that last season wasn’t a fair comparison because this year’s schedule is front-loaded with home games and attendance picks up once kids are out of school. I thought it was a fair critique so today I did a little research.

Looking back in time, the Shorebirds last had a comparable schedule in 2007. Like this year’s, it featured a long June break as the 2007 edition of the team was sent on the road to both complete the first half of the season and begin the second half – that season Perdue Stadium was dark for 2 1/2 straight weeks in June. (At least this year we have the SAL All-Star Game to break up the monotony.)

So I went back to the milb.com archives and looked up each home game of the first half of the 2007 season. In total, there were 31 home dates as four starts were rained out. Add it up and the 2007 first half attendance was 96,310, an average of 3,107 per game.

Fast forward to 2011. Going into last night’s scheduled contest, the Shorebirds had drawn 95,556 for 33 home games. On paper, the per-game average of 2,895 looks to be about 10 percent behind the 2007 clip and well behind last season’s full-season totals.

However, having attended the game I would venture to say that there were at least 5,000 people there last night for a game which was eventually suspended. It’s not counted in our attendance because the game wasn’t completed and will have to be finished next week in Hagerstown because the half is almost over. If you add that lost home date and the estimated 5,000 patrons in to the total of 95,556 which had previously attended so far in 2011, the average would have jumped to 3,104. It makes the comparison pretty much a wash.

In fact, given the fact there were two fewer weekend dates (Friday, Saturday, Sunday) on the schedule so far this year, it would appear the Shorebirds haven’t lost a step and could be headed for a pretty decent season as far as attendance goes. You can also add in the fact that the weather hasn’t been all that bad since the average temperature at the Shorebirds starts was 72 degrees vs. 71 degrees in 2007.

Still, my only concern is that attendance at weekday games has been fairly pathetic, as one game this season barely drew 500 fans. A good percentage of the crowds so far have been enticed by the free tickets given out for reading a certain number of books. (The tickets are paid for by the event sponsors.)

So perhaps I was a little hasty in predicting a down year for the Shorebirds, but that’s okay. I’d rather err on the side of caution.

Yet all is not sweetness and light. Today’s Daily Times featured a loving obituary for the Flavors restaurant which used to be on East Main Street downtown. Add to that the bankruptcy of Allen Family Foods last week, where its assets will likely be purchased by Mountaire Farms, and the impending closing of the local Super Fresh grocery store (with about 80 or so jobs lost) and it’s no wonder people may not be able to afford a ballgame soon. For every success story we seem to have two to three failures.

Allen Family Foods is a blow specific to the Shorebirds because they were longtime team sponsors, annually hosting an employee appreciation night. It’s one business which won’t be contributing to the community anymore. Even Flavors had a Shorebirds connection because they were the pizza vendors for one season a couple years back. (The pizza they have now is not as good.)

But there’s more to the story, and it’s about lost dreams in the last four years.

After the beginning of the rain delay that finished the game last night, Kim and I discussed where we should go to eat. I bemoaned the fact there were no close-by restaurants to the stadium and related to her that there once were grand plans to put up a business complex along Hobbs Road – a complex which would include restaurants, upscale motels, and office space. But that plan was shelved with our local economic collapse and may not be resurrected for a half-decade or more even though the signs are still there announcing the development.

Since I’m comparing our attendance this year to that of four years ago, let me close with this. Back in 2007, the dream of developing the land along Hobbs Road was on its way to becoming a reality as the plans were being drawn up and legal action taken to secure city water and sewer. We may have the same attendance at the old ball game, but we don’t have those grandiose schemes anymore.

And until we can straighten out the economic mess we are in, it may be a long while before we see attendance like we did in the early days of the Shorebirds franchise. To be quite honest, having the Shorebirds here was a key factor in my decision to relocate from Toledo because – to put it mildly – I’m a passionate fan of baseball and I wanted a team close by so I could go to games. While I’d seen “Delmarva Shorebirds” in the agate type of the transactions page on occasion, I had no idea they played in Salisbury until I came here for my job interview.

But even more than a regional drawing card like the Shorebirds, people need to have money to spend, and the lack of job creation hinders businesses of all sorts. Let’s keep capital in the private sector where it belongs so smart people can invest and create opportunities for themselves.

Odds and ends number 30

It seems like I’m doing these quick-hitter articles more frequently; whether it’s because I’m attracting more interesting news or getting the attention span of a 14-year-old is the question. Now what was I saying?

Oh yeah. Let’s start with the public service announcement that’s part of the “Keep Jim Fineran Occupied Act”:

Due to extreme heat and drought conditions, County Executive Richard M. Pollitt, Jr., has issued a burn ban order for Wicomico County effective immediately. Pollitt took the action on the advice of his Burn Ban Committee. The group is composed of representatives of the County Health Department, the Forestry Service, Emergency Management Services, fire fighters and a local meteorologist.

Of course, there are exemptions so one can still fire up the grill and watch the fireworks after Shorebirds games. (If the ban is still in effect next month the July 4th fireworks will go on.)

It seems to me that Rick Pollitt has wised up on that account, since I recall a few years back that fireworks displays were part of the burn ban and the Shorebirds had to scrub a couple slated shows.

Speaking of which – the next resolution the county needs is to provide an exemption from the 11 p.m. curfew on fireworks. It seems like several times a season the Shorebirds manage to play their extra-inning marathons on fireworks nights and if an inning starts after about 10:40 the fireworks can’t go on. That’s ridiculous.

Now it’s time to go national. For all his faults, Newt Gingrich can sometimes get to the heart of the problem:

To make Washington smaller, we as citizens must become bigger.

We must persuade one person at a time, one family at a time, and one community at a time that we have better solutions than the corrupted, collectivist policies we’ve seen from Washington.

Because the renewal of America can only begin with you, this will be your campaign.

As someone who has been in public life for nearly forty years, I know full well the rigors of campaigning for public office. I will endure them. I will carry the message of American renewal to every part of this great land, whatever it takes.

Next Monday, I will take part in the first New Hampshire Republican primary debate.

The critical question of how we put Americans back to work will be asked of me and the other Republican candidates.

It is the most important question of this campaign.

For Newt, though, a close second in “critical” questions will be who’s going to run his effort. There’s a lot to like about Newt, but perhaps his time has passed him by. I’ll still be interested to hear what he has to say about issues but his intangibles are a definite minus.

Now we come to an interesting dichotomy. This was an e-mail I received from the Barack Obama campaign – I like to get these for laughs. (My editorial comments are in bold.)

We’ve been working on bringing new people (illegal aliens and others dependent on government) into the political process. That will be the story of our campaign from start to finish. (Aside from the billion dollars you plan on raising.)

But right now there’s a concerted effort being made in states from New Hampshire to North Carolina to Ohio to make sure fewer people (Democrats) vote in 2012.

Here’s how they’re doing it: In some crucial battleground states, more than 50 percent of ballots are cast as part of early voting, which makes voting an easier and more flexible process. In 2008, a third of voters nationwide cast their votes before Election Day. (Something tells me this includes absentee ballots, which have nothing to do with early voting.)

These voters tend to be working families and young people, and a whole lot of them voted for Barack Obama — in some states providing our margin of victory. (If they’re still working families, they’re lucky. The young aren’t generally among the working.)

So Republican-controlled legislatures are cutting the amount of time people have to vote early, restricting when and how organizations like ours can register new voters, and making the voting process itself more difficult by requiring new types of identification, which lower-income voters are less likely to have. (So we can’t commit fraud as easily. ACORN screwed the pooch for us.)

They’re doing this because they have cynically concluded that they do better when fewer people vote. (We do better when more informed people vote.)

That’s the opposite of the kind of politics we believe in, and of the kind of campaign we want to run. (Obama believes in raw power and eliminating the field before the vote is held. See Illinois.)

So when we talk about the work this campaign will do to bring new people into the political process — registering new voters, training new volunteers, building an organization — it’s not just the right thing to do. It’s absolutely urgent.

Help us protect the right to vote for all. (Whether they are legally entitled to or not doesn’t matter as long as they vote the correct way, right? That’s why you don’t work too hard to make sure military votes count.)

Personally, I’d love to see 100% of the informed voters turn out. While I think early voting is a crock and didn’t support the concept, the numbers last year proved that not all that many people in Maryland came out to vote early anyway. A state which has “shall-issue” absentee ballots for the asking doesn’t need early voting.

And it looks like voter ID is a losing issue for Obama. Here’s the other, more important half of the dichotomy:

A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 75% of Likely U.S. Voters believe voters should be required to show photo identification such as a driver’s license before being allowed to vote. Just 18% disagree and oppose such a requirement. (To see survey question wording, click here.)

Eighty-five percent (85%) of Republicans support a photo ID requirement at the polls, as do 77% of voters not affiliated with either major party and 63% of Democrats. But then support for such a law is high across virtually all demographic groups.

Supporters of photo ID laws say they will prevent fraud at the polls; opponents insist the laws will discourage many including minorities and older Americans from voting.

By a 48% to 29% margin, voters think that letting ineligible people vote is a bigger problem than preventing legitimate voters from casting a ballot. (Emphasis mine.)

So how does that crow taste, Jim Messina?

Often I refer to the “nanny state” of Maryland, and a study released last week shows I’m pretty much right.

With a hat tip to my uncle Jay, I found out the Mercatus Center at George Mason University ranked all 50 states on a variety of issues related to personal freedom and civil liberties. (Or maybe he reminded me of something I forgot.)

While Maryland scores reasonably well in the category of fiscal freedom – surprisingly, we are 11th while Delaware is 43rd – once we get to regulatory policy the numbers are more of what most would expect: Delaware is 20th and Maryland 44th. Yet in the economic freedom ranking Maryland is again ahead of Delaware, but not by much (28th compared to 33rd.)

The scary part comes when authors William P. Ruger and Jason Sorens calculate the personal freedom index, where Maryland is indeed the ultimate nanny state as we rank dead last. Delaware’s not much better as they rank 44th.

So what states are the most free? South Dakota leads the pack in fiscal policy and economic freedom rankings, Indiana is the standardbearer in regulatory policy, and I was sort of amazed to discover Oregon was tops in personal freedom. Yet the overall winner was the state whose very motto of “Live Free or Die” would suggest they would be on top: New Hampshire. Delaware is 39th and Maryland 43rd.

I do have a few quibbles with the author’s recommendations for Maryland to improve its rankings, because their number one priority would be to legalize civil unions. I think that’s a little bit too radical of a position to make top priority as their number two and number three suggestions are sound regarding marijuana laws and occupational licensing. Their analysis of Maryland as a nanny state is otherwise very sound.

Finally, a personal note of sorts.

There was a blogger awhile back who believed so strongly in his Alexa ratings after a number of “record days” that he thought himself mainstream media. In truth, I haven’t had any “record days” lately because my years of experience tell me political blog readership tails off during the summer, only to rebound after Labor Day.

So I was pleasantly surprised to see that my rank among websites reached a new low for me last week (like golf, a lower score is better.) Yesterday my U.S. Alexa number declined to 61,383 while my world rank reached a new low of 357,454.

Of course, when I compare this to Pajamas Media (U.S. rank 1,402) or even local media outlets like the Daily Times (U.S. rank 22,686) or WBOC (U.S. rank 23,789) I harbor no delusions of grandeur.  (I am ahead of WMDT, though – their U.S. rank is 68,045. To me that’s sort of funny.)

But in the end I’m just a guy who writes and is blessed with a fairly solid readership. It’s the reason I write for Pajamas Media, because if I were a more obscure blogger no one would have read what I’d written and decided it was worth taking a chance on.

Unlike many in the writing field, I don’t have a journalism or English degree so I am essentially self-taught. God-given talent and years of practice and perfecting this craft got me to where I am insofar as ability goes, but it’s thanks to my readers that the word spread. It’s why I keep doing this day after day for not a lot of pay, because I enjoy putting together good things to read.

I have a lot of interesting items coming up over the next few weeks, so stay tuned. (No summer reruns here.)

Shorebird of the Week – June 9, 2011

Is Michael Ohlman's future so bright he has to wear shades? We don't know, but he is a SAL All-Star for 2011.

It’s traditional that I award a league All-Star the coveted Shorebird of the Week tag as soon as I can. Having picked four of the five All-Stars for SotW honors already, the last holdout was catcher Michael Ohlman.

Now Michael’s not been as much of an offensive threat as the other two Shorebird position players (Manny Machado and Ty Kelly) but when compared to Shorebird catchers of recent vintage Ohlman is head and shoulders above the pack. The 20 year old product of Lakewood Ranch High School in Florida is hitting .242 with a pair of home runs and 20 runs batted in. His .691 OPS is reasonably decent, too.

Ohlman is a Shorebird veteran, having spent part of the 2010 season here before being reassigned to Bluefield for the short-season summer. Michael was a little overmatched last time he was here at Delmarva, since he hit just .174 in 34 games here before turning in a .233/0/20 line with Bluefield.

Michael’s numbers this year, though, may represent a sign that he’s “getting it” because the 2009 11th round pick hasn’t hit much – his career average coming into 2011 was an anemic .207 mark. With this being only his second full season of play it’s hard to compare numbers but Ohlman should set a number of offensive highs for himself if he stays healthy. And he has that All-Star selection to help boost his confidence.