Archive for March, 2008

Mar 30 2008

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Greg Sailors

ESPN’s Jason Stark Projects Braves as World Series Winners!

Filed under Ramblings

OK, so I have not been feeling very spiritual lately.. Like I said in the blog below about Saying Something, no use in saying something unless you’ve got something to say. I have felt very connected to God and He has been doing some good things in my life but nothing really bloggable. However, Kryssy and I got to see the Braves while in Florida over Easter and I was like.. wow.. they’re back and then a ran across this article and I had to attach it.. take a look!

Unsung Braves built for October glory

Stark

By Jayson StarkESPN.com(Archive)

Updated: March 30, 2008

We take you back in time to the first week of March. The 2008 Grapefruit League was only a few days old. But a National League scout already had caught on to something that hadn’t yet dawned on the rest of the hemisphere.

He’d just returned from watching the new, improved Atlanta Braves. It didn’t take him long to make this important announcement:

“They’re back.”

[+] Enlarge

Mark Teixeira

AP Photo/Tony Dejak

In only 54 games for the Braves in 2007, Mark Teixeira slugged 17 home runs, drove in 56 runs, and had an 1.019 OPS.

And they are. Consider this a warning — to you and the rest of the National League East. They’re back.

It’s been 2½ years since the Braves last played a postseason game. It’s been 13 years since they won the only World Series of their 14-year rampage as division champions. It’s been 17 years since the Braves of John Smoltz, Tom Glavine, Steve Avery and Charlie Leibrandt made their first foray into October in the Bobby Cox-John Schuerholz era.

But it wouldn’t shock anybody — anybody — who has seen them this spring if this Braves team turns out to be as good as any of those teams. And by that we mean: The Braves — yeah, the Braves — are our pick to win the World Series.

Go ahead. Call us nuts. Start typing those e-mails lecturing us on why the Red Sox, Yankees, Indians, Tigers, Mets, Phillies, Cubs, Rockies, yada yada yada are better than this team. Maybe they are. All we know is, while 98 percent of the planet was busy obsessing on those clubs, the Atlanta Braves built themselves a tremendous team.

Everywhere we went this spring, we asked the same question: What team has opened your eyes? Everywhere we went, we heard the same answer: The Braves. Take a listen:

“People are wayyyy underestimating that club,” said one NL executive. “It’s amazing how far under the radar they’ve been. But you might think that till you see them play. Then you say, ‘Shoot, this team’s dangerous.’”

“I don’t think anybody should be looking forward to going into Atlanta this year and facing [Tim] Hudson, Smoltz and Glavine,” said Nationals manager Manny Acta. “And [Mike] Hampton, too. That’s a bunch of tough hombres to go up against. And as long as Bobby Cox is over there, I don’t think anybody should overlook that team.”

“They’re good,” said the voice of the Phillies, Jimmy Rollins. “They’ve got the swag back. There’s no doubt about that.”

Hey, funny he should mention that. The Braves, after all, have Rollins to thank, in part, for their exclusion from the NL East conversation. When he launched that raging who’s-the-team-to-beat debate last year with his good friends, the Mets, he did more to redirect the floodlights away from the 404 area code than any other living human.

Well, it was fun while it lasted — that Phillies-Mets talk. But even the man who kicked it off thinks people have been much too inclined to forget That Other Team.

“You know how people are,” Rollins said. “It’s refreshing to talk about something different. And we got to talk about two new teams after talking about the same team for 14 years. But no one’s forgotten about them. Just the light isn’t on them because they haven’t won the last couple of years.”

Nope. Sure haven’t. And that’s part of it. But it’s not as if they were going 65-97 the last two years, either. In fact, the Braves (163-161) actually won more games during those two seasons than the Cardinals, Cubs, White Sox or Brewers.

Meet The Braves

The Braves’ projected lineup and rotation for the 2008 season. For more, see the Braves’ team capsule:

Kelly Johnson, 2BYunel Escobar, SSChipper Jones, 3BMark Teixeira, 1BBrian McCann, CJeff Francoeur, RFMatt Diaz, LFMark Kotsay, CFTim Hudson, RHPJohn Smoltz, RHPTom Glavine, LHPMike Hampton, LHPJair Jurrjens, RHP

So let’s face it. What really has helped them stay out of that team-to-beat chatter is that the Braves just aren’t yappers. They don’t teach that Yapping 101 course at Robert Cox University, apparently.

“We’ve never been in that situation, where we’ve been able to do that,” said Smoltz, now in his 21st season of eligibility at this fine institution. “I mean, think about it. We won 14 years in a row. So what are we going to do — (say we’ll) add on? It was hard enough to win one in a row or two in a row. So if they want to talk, that’s fine.”

But to be honest, it wasn’t really that fine with every resident of Coxville. With a little intrepid reporting (alert the Pulitzer committee), we finally uncovered one Brave who admitted he couldn’t suppress his urge to speak up one minute longer.

“For a while,” said right fielder Jeff Francoeur, “you just want to be professional and stay out of it. But you know me, with my football mentality. After a couple of weeks of that (Phillies-Mets talk), it started getting to me a little bit. I wasn’t going to shoot out there and say we’re going to win the division. But I’ll say this: We’ve got a damn good team. … I think we’ve got the best team in this division, if we stay healthy.”

Uh-oh. Was that a brand-new war of words we just heard rise up out of the southland? Well, not exactly. Francoeur said this stuff so matter-of-factly, we’d be hard-pressed to call it a skirmish. Or a fray. Didn’t even feel like isolated sniper fire.

The fact is, no matter how much or how little they say, this edition of the Braves knows exactly what it is — a team that can play baseball with anybody.

“I really believe,” said catcher Brian McCann, “we’ve got every piece of the puzzle in place.”

So do they? Let’s break them down.

The lineup: Do they have enough offense? No question about that. The only teams in the league who scored more runs than they did last year (810) were two clubs that play in official hitters’ paradises — the Phillies and Rockies. But this year, even though the Braves will start five players 26 or younger, they should be even better — now that they’ll get a full season out of first-base mega-force Mark Teixeira.

Want to know how much that matters? After Teixeira showed up in the final two months of last season, the Braves’ batting average at first base went up 100 points (from .212 to .312), their slugging percentage went up 242 points (.363 to .605) and their OPS went up by a ridiculous 371 points (.633 to 1.004). My colleague, Keith Law, estimates a full season of Teixeira represents about a 60-run upgrade just at that one position. So this lineup has a chance to score as many runs as any team in the NL — the Phillies included.

The leather: Do they catch the ball? Yep, they do that, too. In last year’s defensive-efficiency ratings by the Hardball Times, the Braves led the National League in fielding plus-minus (plus-58 plays made that an average fielder doesn’t make) and outs made outside a fielder’s “zone” (454). And, for those who still might believe that Andruw Jones was single-handedly responsible for those ratings, they raked in the second-most infield outs (only two fewer than the Cardinals) outside the “zone.”

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John Smoltz

AP Photo/David J. Phillip

When healthy, John Smoltz, 40, is still among the most effective starters in the National League.

True, the Braves have subtracted Jones and Edgar Renteria. But they’ll be replaced by Mark Kotsay andYunel Escobar. And, given Teixeira’s Gold Glove abilities at first, it’s not a stretch to argue this team will be at least as good defensively now as last year, if not better overall.

The arms: Finally, can this team pitch? A year ago, even they knew they didn’t have enough pitching. The proof was that, halfway through the spring, they went out and signed a free-agent pitcher who was still sitting at home in March (Mark Redman) — and plugged him into the rotation the day he got off the plane.

For a team that not so long ago produced seven NL Cy Young winners in eight years, and finished first or second in the league in ERA 11 years in a row, that was the baseball equivalent of a billboard on the side of a highway, flashing this message:

You need more frigging pitching.

“We’ve talked about that the last two years,” said new GM Frank Wren, hand-picked successor to the legendary John Schuerholz. “John and I talked about it at length, that we had to get more pitching depth.”

So they did what they needed to do. Now we look up, just a year later, and here’s what we find:

They’ve added Tom Glavine (free agent), the electric Jair Jurrjens (centerpiece of the Renteria deal) and Mike Hampton (freed from captivity in the trainer’s room) to the rotation behind Smoltz and Hudson. That means they’re so deep in potential starters that Chuck James, Jo-Jo Reyes, Buddy Carlyle and Jeff Bennett — who combined for 23 wins and 62 starts last year — will start the season either in Triple-A or the bullpen.

And, with the addition of left-hander Will Ohman (trade) and 98-mph flameball launcher Chris Resop (waiver claim), they have so much bullpen depth that they had no room for Tyler Yates. That might not seem like a stop-the-presses development. But Yates (just traded to the Pirates) was such an integral bullpen cog last year, he finished second on the team in appearances (75) and struck out 69 in 66 innings.

“The feeling here last year was, we had to have our two studs, Smoltzie and Huddie, go and go big,” Francoeur said. “But the feeling this year is completely different. I think the feeling is, if Smoltzie misses a start or two this year, we’re covered. If Hampton needs a couple of starts off, or anybody, it’s OK now, because we have that depth to fill that in. Last year, if we didn’t have our two big guys going, we had to score six, seven, eight runs a game.”

We understand, of course, that the top four starters will all be 33 or older by midyear. And that by Memorial Day, Smoltz and Glavine will be 41 and 42, respectively.

We’re aware that Smoltz has had shoulder issues already (though he’ll miss just one start). And that Glavine went 0-3, 14.81 in his final three starts with the Mets. And that if Hampton wins even 10 games, he would be the first pitcher to do that at his age (35) after missing two full seasons since Schoolboy Rowe in 1946.

But we should also point out that Smoltz, Hudson and Glavine finished second, fourth and fifth, respectively, in the league in quality starts last year.

And having nine legitimate starting pitchers — when the Mets and Phillies can barely find five — is no small factor when you consider that the average NL team last year needed to get 42 starts out of pitchers who weren’t in its original rotation.

So the Braves have enough arms to survive the marathon. For them to win that marathon, “this is one of those seasons where health will be huge,” said Smoltz.

Will Smoltz stay healthier than Pedro Martinez? Will the closer, Rafael Soriano, have a healthier year than new Phillies closer Brad Lidge? Who will come back and make the bigger contribution after major surgery — Mike Gonzalez (Braves) or Kris Benson (Phillies)? The NL East could well be decided by all of those questions.

But if this does turn into a war of attrition, remember this: The Braves are younger than the Mets and Phillies, deeper in most respects than the Mets and Phillies and have a better farm system to mine for reinforcements than the Mets and Phillies.

Plus, the Braves have a quality that struck everyone who saw them this spring. When we say they’re back, we don’t just mean on the field. We mean in their minds.

Just because they’re not swapping we’re-the-team-to-beat diatribes with the Mets and Phillies doesn’t mean the Atlanta Braves don’t believe it. It just means that as long as the remarkable Bobby Cox has been their manager, they’d rather do it than say it.

“It comes from Bobby,” said Wren. “Bobby has a way of making these guys feel like good things are going to happen.”

We haven’t been in this position for a while. Well, it’s time to change that. It’s time to make it happen.

–John Smoltz

Cox wasn’t able to work his customary miracles the past two years. But all of a sudden, the Braves have that mojo back that they rode into 14 consecutive Octobers.

“When I walked in here for the first time, in spring training of 2000, there was a clear difference [in attitude] from any place I’d ever been,” said Wren. “I’m not sure we had that feeling in our clubhouse last year. But I think we have it again.”

If they do, and if this is The Year, think about the story they’re about to write for themselves. How unbelievable a tale would that be?

Which would make less sense — 14 straight division titles that led to only one parade? Or a season that started with all the cameras and microphones pointed somewhere else, and then ended the way 13 of those championship seasons didn’t end?

“You know, you get to my time frame, and there’s kind of a desperation,” Smoltz said. “If I had to write my perfect scenario — along with Tommy and Chipper, who have been here and endured it the most — I think it would be to just kick off the next generation with guys who are starting their run. I’d like to say, ‘I was along for the ride, I got one more sweet taste of it, and now it’s their chance to run off a string of championships.’ …

“I think these guys have the right mind-set. They’re basically saying, ‘The heck with a playoff string. We’re going to win championships.’ Not that that playoff string didn’t mean something. But I sense that these guys are saying, ‘We’re going to change the way things have been viewed here over the last four or five years.’”

It’s too late to rewrite the history of the teams that ran off those 14 titles. But the great thing about sports is that the next chapter in the history books always can look different than the chapters that came before it. So don’t let the lack of clubhouse volume fool you. This is a team talented enough to resculpt history.

“We haven’t been in this position for a while,” said John Smoltz. “Well, it’s time to change that. It’s time to make it happen.”

Jayson Stark is a senior writer for ESPN.com. His book, “The Stark Truth: The Most Overrated and Underrated Players in Baseball History,” was published by Triumph Books and is available in bookstores. Click here to order a copy.

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Mar 29 2008

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Greg Sailors

NCAA Proejection

Filed under Ramblings

I am projecting a winner!

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Mar 17 2008

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Greg Sailors

It’s really Natural

Filed under Exaltings

I have always had a deep seated feeling that there were more out there, more going on than I know about. Now I am not talking about aliens although that would be a fun topic, we will leave that for another time. Growing up, I was never really exposed to the idea of the supernatural. We talked about it, from time-to-time. You know, angels, the Holy Spirit and our enemy Satan, but we didn’t really live in a manner that made them an every day part of our world. Truth be told, although I think my heart of hearts knew something, I always thought intellectually that it was a little hokey just letting the charismatics take care of the Holy Spirit and such.

Boy was I wrong.

Take a look at the Daily Devotion from Ransomed Heart & John Eldredge

Things Are Not What They Seem

What do all the great stories and myths tell us? What do they have in common? What are they trying to get across? Wherever they may come from, whatever their shape might be, they nearly always speak to us Three Eternal Truths. First, these stories are trying to remind us that things are not what they seem. There is a whole lot more going on here than meets the eye. Much more. After the tornado sets her down, Dorothy wakes and steps out of her old farmhouse to find herself in a strange new world, a land of Munchkins and fairies and wicked witches. The Land of Oz. How brilliant for the filmmakers to have waited for this moment to introduce color in the movie. Up till now the story has been told in black and white; when Dorothy steps out of the house, the screen explodes in color, and she whispers to her little friend, “Toto . . . I don’t think we’re in Kansas anymore.”

Isn’t this the very lesson of the Emmaus Road? You recall the story—two followers of Christ are headed out of town after the Crucifixion, as dejected as two people can be, with every reason in their minds to be so and more. Their hopes have been shattered. They staked it all on the Nazarene, and now he’s dead. As they slump back toward their homes, Jesus sort of sneaks up alongside, very much alive but incognito, and joins their conversation, feigning ignorance—and they not seeing it is him.

We live in two worlds—or better, in one world with two parts, one part that we can see and one part that we cannot. We are urged, for our own welfare, to act as though the unseen world (the rest of reality) is, in fact, more weighty and more real and more dangerous than the part of reality we can see. The lesson from the story of the Emmaus Road—the lesson the whole Bible is trying to get across—begins with this simple truth: There is more going on here than meets the eye. Far more.

(Waking the Dead by John Eldredge, 26–27, 29)

Kryssy and I began to walk with God in a very intimate way in 2004 after I had New Wilderness come and do a Freedom and Life Boot Camp for the church I served. We began a relationship with Christ much earlier but our lives were turned upside down in 04. God brought some major disruption and challenged the status quo not only through NWA but through Ransomed Heart and John Eldrege in the books as well as RH’s Freedom and Life Boot Camp in Colorado.

But, I just didn’t exist in a world, or lead my family in a manner that was aware that there were 2 kingdoms at war with each other yet set in an amazing story of love and rescue with heros, heroines and villains, darkness. The kingdom of darkness (Satan) and the Kingdom of Light (Jesus). It was not on my radar.

As John says above, “We are urged, for our own welfare, to act as though the unseen world (the rest of reality) is, in fact, more weighty and more real and more dangerous than the part of reality we can see.” If we do not live in the truth of this, we will miss out on a tremendous part of our reality. Most of us will live as though we are just sleepwalking through life. It’s time to wake up. The Supernatural is not “uncommon” or “extra ordinary” but is in reality Natural. It is not just for the super spiritual or the charismatics but rather for all that are in Christ. We have experienced it in many ways. It is not just for the people in the Bible but for us, everyday.

What am I talking about? Some of you my be thinking about! Do I see angels or demons? Do I see Jesus Himself or the manifestation of evil or light. Well in two words.. yes and no.. There is not near enough time nor do you want to read what stories I would bring forth about this subject and quite frankly most of you might think I’m crazy which is ok, because either I am absolutly delusional or I know what I am talking about.

This past weekend NWA had a Guide Network training. God brought some major “Supernatural” work in one of our guide’s life. He felt as though his heart was in a prison and God did an amazing deliverance work in his life. The enemy hated it but we stood against it and the Holy Spirit showed up in a mighty way.

1 Peter 5:8-9 Says:

Be self-controlled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour. Resist him, standing firm in the faith, because you know that your brothers throughout the world are undergoing the same kind of sufferings.

If you would like to know more about the Supernatural that is Natural… then reply away or take me to lunch.. There are many resources out there as well that I’d love to talk with you about, first starting with Neil Anderson’s Book’s… Go to the Ransomed Heart website as well for more information on living a Supernatural life.  Ransomed Heart

Think I’m crazy? If so, I must be certifiable.

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Mar 09 2008

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Greg Sailors

Just Say Something

Filed under Creatings, Exaltings, Lovings

I’ve always wanted to be heard. I am learning more and more that a lot of my life has been focused around that; sometimes with my actions, like playing baseball, performing, or being creative and sometimes with my words, like preaching, teaching or writing. Now being heard is not necessarily a bad thing. But for many years I had not earned the right to be heard and most importantly I had not learned to listen.

God has been changing my life. He has done a mighty work and taught me (once I became teachable) to listen and to speak when He wants me to. It’s funny now, like today in home church; someone was sharing about their life and I was doing an inventory in my head about what I could say. I wanted to say something that would sound smart, sound insightful and meaningful, something that would bring change (none of these things bad) but I in no way had God’s permission to speak. So, unlike other times in my life, I kept my mouth shut and listened. Near the end of home church God finally gave me something to say and I was able to contribute in a meaningful way.

Friends this has been a hard lesson to learn. I was sitting in front of this computer screen tonight thinking, “I need to blog something.” I began to go through the same emotions again as above at home church. I started to surf the net, to facebook and chat on aim. I was still thinking. I felt like I should pick a scripture or something and explain it and I began to chuckle. I was thinking- JUST SAY SOMETHING.

I am blessed to be able to work around people that say something without saying anything. Mark, Jamie and Barry, not to mention many other friends and family, are great listeners. I might spill my guts and then I’m screaming, “JUST SAY SOMETHING!” It is really funny now, but they listen and listen and after sometime they might ask a simple question or just say something like “well, I think you have your permission!” Bam.. that was all I needed to hear.

God is an amazing God and I want to be more like Jesus. No more idle words. Now I’m not talking about joking here. Joking around is good so don’t take this out of context, but I’m talking about saying something just to be heard. Christ was heard. He was to the point and was not swayed from saying the truth in love. I don’t want to beat around the bush or put icing on something. I want to say something from a quiet strength that comes from my powerful God.

I have something to say now. God has done such a restorative work in my life. He still is changing it daily and I welcome His shaping. I want to tell what God has done in my life, for really what else do I have to say?

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Mar 02 2008

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Greg Sailors

Family

Filed under Blessings, Exaltings, Lovings

I can’t sleep and I find myself reflecting on my time in Nicaragua and on my family.

I love my family.  It is such a joy to be a father and to have such a wonderful wife to be husband to.  They bless me with their love and honor me with their actions.  It’s amazing; however, it never fails that when I am away, I not only miss them, but want them to be experiencing what I am experiencing.

Being a missionary with NWA has afforded me many opportunities to serve God in some of the most beautiful places on earth.  Not only the physical beauty of God’s creation, like being in Colorado, or throughout NC, not to mention our time in Nicaragua, but also the people.  I have no doubt.  We have a amazing creator God!

God is an amazing intricate creator.  There is so much detail to us humans.  From the shapes of our bodies to the depths of our minds and hearts God is involved in our intricacy and invites us to be co-creators.

Jackson is 18months.  Already we see so many signs of his personality.  His likes and dislikes and his future glory.  It is exciting to see.  I saw this also written on the people in Nicaragua.  However there is much diminishment and resignation with little hope.  It seems they have lost the ability to dream.

One young man was very bright.  He was 17 and accepted the Lord as his savior while at our Boot Camp.  He had also been accepted into one of the universities in the area of Architecture.  As Mark was talking about “Calling” afterward he immediately came up to talk with us.  You could see the pain in him.  Although he had a passion and a calling for architecture he had been beat down by the society he lived in and his family and friends that there were no jobs and he was been silly to dream of being an architect.

This was common.

We offered him hope and encouragement and stood against the things that would steal a God given glory!

Our interpreters became like family to us.  They remind me of the quote:  Families are like fudge… mostly sweet with a few nuts. — Author Unknown…. Carlos was the nut for sure…although I’m sure he’d say I was.. anyhow, one of the husband’s of our female interpreters pumped gas as a job in Jinotega.. and when asked what he dreamed about being as a little boy he said that he stopped thinking about that.  When you get a job you keep it.

There are no dreams in Jinotega Nicaragua.  There is survival.  Dreamers get squashed and forced into resignation.  Hope is slim.  Abundance unheard of.

God blessed us with the opportunity to bring hope, not only through salvation, but also through abundance.  They, especially our dear interpreter friends, where able to see us as a team live out the fact that our hearts matter to God and to each other.  They began to open up and we were able to pour into their lives as they poured love into ours.  As a family pours into each other.

I love my family and I am so blessed now because it has grown and is much richer.

I’m excited about the opportunity to go back to Nicaragua.  We are still walking with many of the interpreters on an intimate level and are praying about the finances to continue our work there with local pastors around the villages.  Pray with us..go with us!  God will provide!

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