All Posts

The Meniscus – A Primer

A meniscus tear

A meniscus tear

Dunkirk NY – I had always heard about menisci from watching sports. It’s a common injury among athletes, especially as they get older. Apparently a meniscus is somewhat easy to tear. Quick lateral movements can easily do the job. It’s also one of the most common knee injuries around. According to WebMD, 40% of people over 65 have a meniscus tear.

The meniscus itself is a small piece of cartilage that acts as a cushion for the knee joint. Superficial tears of the meniscus can heal themselves if they are close to the body’s blood supply, but if the tear is deeper into the joint, then there is no blood supply to repair the tear. In that case surgery is warranted.

I have a feeling the one in my right knee has been around for some time. Since my 20s I’ve always been able to “pop” that knee. No pain was ever involved, but on occasion the knee would feel off. When that happened, a quick snap f the joint usually produced a popping sensation, and the knee would be fine. Physically it was never a problem. But when I took the fall (most meniscus tears are the result of accidents), the left knee became very painful, and the right knee just a little more aggravated. I remember last September being practically unable to walk by the time I had the surgery in October 2018. Today the left knee is fine, and I look forward to getting the right knee repaired as well.

BTW, Opening Night for the opera went off well. I’m still disappointed I didn’t get enough time to polish the staging in the finales for both acts, but I had a problem with people not showing up for rehearsals. Last night – opening night – was the first time everybody who was supposed to be on the stage was there. So it goes with semi-professional productions. Today is a day off for vocal rest for the singers, and tomorrow the matinee. Don’t forget to turn your clocks back.  -twl

 

Posted by poorplayer in All Posts, North of Sixty

NaBloPoMo 2019

Dunkirk NYNational Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) begins today, and so does its subsidiary, National Blog Posting Month (NaBloPoMo).  While NaNoWriMo has an organization behind it, NoBloPoMo has apparently petered out as a “thing.” Some people still take it up, and I’ve decided to do so as well. Why? Because on Nov. 7th, I will be undergoing some arthroscopic knee surgery to repair a torn meniscus in my right knee, and I will essentially be off line for most of the month of November. NaBloPoMo took as its idea sticking to some kind of theme to help generate writing material, and I figured with all of the down time I will be having in November recovering, using the knee surgery as the theme itself would be a decent enough topic to occupy the month.

I actually had this surgery done in October of 2018 on my left knee. The damage to both knees was the result of a small fall down the last two steps leading to my cement basement floor. At the time I actually took the fall, I thought I had done no damage other than a little pain. Over the last three years, however, the damage manifested itself via two MRIs, and so last year I had the left knee done, and this year the right. The right knee is not as damaged as the left one was, and does not cause as much pain, but my doctor said that eventually it would give out, so might as well get it done.

So be prepared this month for daily posts on my upcoming knee surgery. Tonight is opening night for La Cenerentola at Buffalo Opera Unlimited. It runs tonight and a Sunday matinee on Nov. 3. After that, it’s all about the knee. -twl

Posted by poorplayer in All Posts, North of Sixty

Natitude

Dunkirk NY – The run of the Washington Nationals to the 2019 World Series Championship was nothing short of improbable. Anyone reading this post will already know the story behind how the Nats won the championship, so no need to rehash that here. But man, what a ride.

The Nationals are not a team I ever pay much attention to during the regular season. Their collection of players is so eclectic as to defy explanation. I was pulling for the Brewers in the wild card game because I felt they had the best chance to beat the Dodgers. But when the Nats won in a comeback victory off Josh Hader, I got a little downcast. I was under the impression that they would be no match for the Dodgers. Continue reading →

Posted by poorplayer in All Posts, The Joy of Baseball

Gardner Maybe Doesn’t Suck (so much)

Dunkirk NY – I’ve never been a Brett Gardner fan. That’s mostly because of his overall demeanor. I’ve never seen a player work so hard to be mediocre. His vaunted intensity and approach to the game has always garnered a certain attention, as has his “veteran presence.” I much prefer the intensity of a player like D.J. LeMahieu. Continue reading →

Posted by poorplayer in All Posts, The Joy of Baseball

Attic of my Mind

Dunkirk NY – When it comes to writing, I am always of two minds. The first is that I feel I have something to say, and writing it down will help clear it up. The second is that I have nothing to say, and writing it down really won’t make a damn bit of difference. So I tend to dawdle, getting the urge to write, and then suppressing that urge. It leads to less posting.  But I’ve been cleaning my attic the last four days in anticipation of insulating it, and so perhaps this post will be the mental part of that, purging the attic of my mind (with apologies to the Grateful Dead). Continue reading →

Posted by poorplayer in All Posts, Essays, North of Sixty

Is Baseball Dying?

Dunkirk NY – I came across this article from the website Deadspin the other day, and it got me to thinking about the state of the game. I submitted a comment for the piece, and as I finished writing it, I thought it might work out to be a decent blog post. The articles discusses several theses for why baseball is not as popular today as it was in years past, and it mainly uses data to make its various cases. It’s a good article, but the one aspect of baseball I think it missed is the cultural aspect. Times have changed, and while baseball has made efforts to change with those times, in its essence it’s still a 19th-century pastoral sport that has a 150-year history behind it. To ask the question “What’s the matter with baseball?” may possibly come down to only one answer: nothing. It’s simply dying. Continue reading →

Posted by poorplayer in All Posts, The Joy of Baseball

Life @ 15 MPH

Dunkirk NY – The evening is cool. Today there was the faintest hint of the coming autumn. Since closing my last show, I have begun to ride my electric bike more and more as a form of exercise in an attempt to lose some weight. My ebike allows me to take rides of 20+ miles without becoming completely exhausted. My long ride is a 17.5 mile trip to Lake Erie State Park and back along Route 5. My short ride goes from home to Point Gratiot Park to Wright Park and back home, a 7.5 mile circuit. I have managed to find a combination of gearing and electric assist that allows me to maintain a steady cadence at 15 MPH. It’s been wonderful. Continue reading →

Posted by poorplayer in All Posts, North of Sixty, Ruminations

From Here to There and Back Again

Dunkirk NY – Monday August 19 marked the end of a stretch of time where my time was not my own. On Feb. 8th of this year, my wife and I set out for a vacation in Arizona. This was to be our second time trying to find out if snowbirding would become a thing for us, and spend some time looking at options. February is not the ideal time to drive, but we figured if we timed it right, we could get south fairly quickly and escape any harsh winter driving. We wanted to have our car available for side trips from my brother’s vacation house in Ft. Mohave, AZ, which we intended to make our base. Apart from a somewhat stressful stretch through Kentucky/Missouri, where we encountered rain, sleet, ice, snow, and clear skies, we did OK. The weather was mild, mostly in the mid- to upper fifties, and I had a nice day celebrating my birthday in Albuquerque NM. Our final day’s drive was through snow and rain, past Flagstaff and then on down to Ft. Mohave.

The day after we got there, we got a telephone call from our daughter’s partner to tell us that she had been in a car accident and was in a hospital with a lacerated right hand and a broken left leg. The driver that hit her ran a stop sign as she was traveling at about 60 MPH down a state road. Both injuries required some surgical repair; re-attaching tendons in the hand, and putting in plates and rods into the leg. We waited until we had word that the surgery was completed, and then took off for Olympia WA. It 2.5 days to get to the hospital, driving almost the entire length of Interstate 5.

The following 4 months from late February to late June were spent living with our daughter in a two-bedroom apartment in Lacey WA. We spent 11 days in a motel as we looked for a place to live with her. We could not bring her back to her own apartment because it is on the second floor of a house, with an outdoor staircase that she could not maneuver, as she was basically confined to a wheelchair in the beginning, unable to put weight on her left leg. One of her partner’s cousins had an apartment coming open that was actually designed to be handicap-accessible, so we moved in there. Her partner stayed at their place in Yelm as he had to work. We were basically live-in aides, doing all the cooking, cleaning and transporting as she began her recovery. She is fine now, about 90% recovered, still walking with a cane in public, but back at work and her own place. The car, a Suburu Forester, was totaled. We are very lucky, blessed, and fortunate to have her still with us.

We were able to leave on June 23, racing across the country in 5 days. I started rehearsal for Love’s Labour’s Lost at Shakespeare in Delaware Park on July 1, three days after I got back. To stay out in WA I had to drop out of a show I had booked at the Jewish Repertory Theatre for April-May. LLL closed on August 18.

Obviously I did not do much writing during all this time. I hope to get some more writing done now that things have settled down for now. I have some plans for a few small projects, and I begin rehearsals for Buffalo Opera Unlimited’s production of La Cenerentola beginning Sept. 8. It does seem to me that in the past 13 months, events have dictated my approach more than any choices I have proactively made. I’ve been reacting to circumstances more than I have been pursuing any personal goals or plans. It’s made me realize how much of life can be simply out of your control, and how tenuous living can be. It’s also possible that the universe is telling me that snowbirding is not in my future.  -twl

Posted by poorplayer in All Posts, North of Sixty, retirement

Cold Stove Season

Dunkirk NY – Spring training is exactly two weeks away, and as of right now neither Manny Machado nor Bryce Harper have signed a contract to play baseball. Neither have other key free agents like Mike Moustakas, Dallas Keuchel, Craig Kimbrel, and others. There’s a new game in town, and by “new game” I don’t mean the game on the field. It’s the off-season of signing free agents that has changed dramatically.

This is the second year in a row where the off-season hot stove has chilled significantly to the point where teams wait out all the big free agents in the hope that they can sign them for much less money and years than they are demanding. The benchmark signing rate for both Machado and Harper was supposed to be 10-years/$300MM, and so far there is no indication that these numbers are being offered by anybody. Even a team like the Philadelphia Phillies, who have money to burn, could sign both players, and actually need both players, have not gone out and offered “stupid money” to either player.

It’s the players that seem to be behind in this game. Owners have amassed massive analytical teams that tell them that signing a player – any player – to a long-term high-dollar contract is financially a losing proposition. Players and their agents have not yet caught up to this reality; they continue to hold out for more years. Perhaps the most telling sign for this new reality came with the signing of Patrick Corbin, who went for the extra year offered by the Nationals rather than take the 5-year contract offered by his hometown team the NY Yankees. It was a real eye-opener when the Yankees, who have a long history of signing expensive free agents, refused to add the extra year on to their offer. They had the money, they had the need, but Cashman would not move on the number of years. You would think that’s a trivial thing – what’s one more year on a contract to the Yankees? – but they did not go in that directions. They stuck with what their analytics team told them was the best value they could offer to a player.

We are now in a moment where the owners seem to hold all the cards. They have a contract arrangement which allows teams to control and repress salaries for seven years before a player hits free agency, because the players’ union tends to favor contracts for veterans more than for rookies. Owners have also figured out that they can make just as much money by putting players with league-average WAR values (about +2) on the field as they can with a Machado, who has something like a +6WAR over his 7-year career. Teams have also looked at other long-term contracts given out over the years and have the numbers to show that 10-year contracts generally do not end well for the team (Albert Pujols); there are few to no bargains out there for 10-year contracts, even when you’re talking about players like Harper and Machado, who are both only 26 and are hitting free agency at very young ages.

Contract negotiations will be coming up soon, and at this point it looks like owners really have no reason to bargain with players, because players have nothing really to offer owners in a deal. The current MLB contract gives owners a great deal of control, the ability to keep younger players’ salaries down, and the ability to use analytics to offer less money and years than in the past. About all the players have to offer to a cap on contract lengths, perhaps offering a 5-year cap on all free agent contracts in return for more money in the early years of their career. Or perhaps there is a way they can create a situation where contracts can easily be tied to clear benchmarks. Or perhaps contracts will become much more incentive-laden. At any rate, we are seeing a very seismic shift in how free agents are handled in this new market reality. It seems the burden is on the Players’ Union to get creative, or management’s analytical teams will continue to burn players during the hot stove season.  -twl

Posted by poorplayer in All Posts, The Joy of Baseball

Who Is A Book For?

Dunkirk NY – I often think about writing a book. I guess it’s what any retired academic is supposed to do. Being in the arts, a book was never expected of me in terms of getting tenure. Yet often, whenever I spoke about some of the ideas I’ve had about theatre and acting, I usually get encouraged to write a book. But every time I think about it, I always ask the question – who is the book for? Continue reading →

Posted by poorplayer in Academia, All Posts, North of Sixty, Theatre