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Where Have You Gone, Albert Pujols?

Frank Murtaugh takes a look at some former Memphis Redbirds who’ve made it to The Show.

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From My Seat Sports

Memphis Redbirds: Where Are They Now?

On Sunday in Houston, the St. Louis Cardinals ended their first three-game losing streak of the season with an 8-1 bashing of the Astros. Two recent Memphis Redbirds — Allen Craig and Tyler Greene — drove in seven of the eight Cardinal runs. So it seems like a nice time to check in on a few other Redbirds alumni making news these days in The Show.

• Perhaps the biggest baseball news Sunday was something that had already happened 445 times . . . but not in the regular season since September of last year. Albert Pujols hit his first home run as a Los Angeles Angel, ending the longest homer drought of his career (28 games and 111 at bats this season; 33 and 139 going back to his final regular-season days as a Cardinal). For the Angels, who signed Pujols to a 10-year, $240 million free-agent contract during the offseason, this is ugly math. The most accomplished hitter of this century is now earning $148,148 per game. His home run and RBI totals (1 and 7) are lower than those of his teammate, Mark Trumbo (4 and 12), despite Pujols having 45 more at bats. Trumbo is being paid $3,086 per game.

Is The Pujols Slump merely a news-making adjustment period for the future Hall of Famer? Or is it a flashing red light for Angel (and Pujols) fans that a 32-year-old slugger is at the beginning of the downside of his career? In baseball, even 28 games is a tiny sample size. The guess here is that Pujols will go on seven or eight tears this season and have his stat line packed with the usual fat numbers. But I’ll say this as simply as I can: Hitting a baseball is the hardest thing to do in sports . . . when all distractions are removed. Add the distractions of a huge contract and the move from an iconic (world champion) team, and hitting a baseball for Albert Pujols becomes a proving ground. Proof that he’s worth the contract, and proof that he can hit anywhere, for anyone, anytime. The Pujols story will be fun to follow, even if his Angels remain in the American League West cellar.

• With eight more hits, the Philadelphia Phillies’ Placido Polanco will become just the second former Redbird to pick up 2,000 in the big leagues. (The first was the big guy discussed above.) Polanco played in 99 games for the Redbirds during their two-season stint at Tim McCarver Stadium (1998-99) and hit .279. If anyone tells you they saw 2,000 hits in Polanco’s future back then, they either confused him with J.D. Drew (1,437 career hits and currently without a contract) or spent too much time in the old stadium’s beer garden.

Polanco has played in two All-Star Games and won Gold Gloves at both second base and third base. He has a higher career batting average (.300) than the player St. Louis traded him to Philadelphia for (Scott Rolen, .281). Polanco will never get into the Hall of Fame without a ticket, but he’s been to the postseason with all three franchises for whom he’s played (St. Louis, Detroit, Philadelphia). He’s been a winner, and the kind of baseball player longtime Redbird fans can feel privileged for having seen on his rise to the majors.

• Adam Wainwright won Sunday’s game for the Cardinals, the righty’s finest trip to the mound since returning this season from Tommy John surgery. The win was the 68th of Wainwright’s career against only 38 losses. (Waino was 14-14 for Memphis in 2004 and 2005.) Should Wainwright reach the 100-win mark, he’ll be the second former Redbird to do so. Through Sunday, the Angels’ Dan Haren had a career mark of 108-86. A three-time All-Star, Haren has won at least 15 games for three different teams: Oakland, Arizona, and the Angels. He’s the only former Redbird pitcher to start the major-league All-Star Game (2007) and is 22 strikeouts shy of 1,500 for his career. Haren was the ace for the 2004 Memphis team, when he went 11-4 and led the Pacific Coast League with 150 strikeouts. (And the player St. Louis acquired in dealing Haren to the A’s? Mark Mulder hasn’t thrown a pitch in the big leagues since 2008. Ouch.)

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“Noises Off”

Theatre Memphis tackles the wacky farce, Noises Off. Chris Davis has a review.

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News

Clips Nip Griz, 87-86

It was another frustrating one-point loss for the Grizzlies. Chris Herrington has game analysis and some thoughts.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Grizzlies-Clippers: Quick Thoughts on Game 3

With a frustrating 87-86 loss yesterday afternoon, the Grizzlies now find themselves in the same place they put the Spurs and Thunder in last spring: Down 2-1 on the road.

The Spurs lost Game 4 on the road to the Grizzlies before finally falling in Game 6. The Thunder rallied to win their Game 4 roadie — in triple overtime — on the way to taking the series in seven games. So the Grizzlies have a couple of potential templates for which way this series might head. Game 4 Monday night isn’t “must win” — I’m pretty sure Wednesday’s Game 5 will still be held regardless of Monday’s outcome — but it will profoundly impact the series odds the rest of the way: Even the series up with two of three remaining on their homecourt and the Grizzlies will become the favorites again. Lose, and the odds become very steep of getting out of the first round again.

Through three games, the Grizzlies have outscored the Clippers 289-284. Much more meaningful, however, is that the Clippers have outscored the Grizzlies in the final six minutes 50-27. This included a 13-1 Clippers run in the final minutes Saturday afternoon to turn a six-point deficit into a six-point lead before Rudy Gay’s two late three-pointers gave the Grizzlies a final shot to win it, with Gay’s desperation heave unable to give the Grizzlies a miracle win to (kinda, sorta) match the Clippers’ from Game 1.

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Memphis Islamic and Christian Churches Create Park Together

Two Cordova congregations — one Muslim, one Christian — are joining forces to create an 8-acre park. Bianca Phillips has more.

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Letters, We Get Letters …

From Tommy V to CHG, the opinions are flyin’ in this week’s letters to the editor.

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“Modern Dialect” at the Dixon

Modern Dialect: A collection of regional painters from the John and Susan Horseman Collection is showing at the Dixon Gallery & Gardens.

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News

Grizzlies and Clippers Face Off in Game 3 Today

The Grizzlies and Clippers play at 3:30 today in Game 3 of their first-round playoff series, tied 1-1. At Beyond the Arc, Chris Herrington gives Ten Takes on where the series stands as it moves to Los Angeles.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Ten Takes: Grizzlies-Clippers Game 3 Preview

Rudy Gay got to his spots in Game 2. Will the Clippers adjust today?

  • LARRY KUZNIEWSKI
  • Rudy Gay got to his spots in Game 2. Will the Clippers adjust today?

Game 3 between the Grizzlies and Clippers begins at 3:30 p.m. on Saturday in Los Angeles. Before the tip, 10 things on my mind as the series moves West:

1. Grizzlies in Control?: While that whole “giving away Game 1” thing has imperiled the Grizzlies chances of winning the series, they’ve clearly looked like the better team through two games with the Clippers. The Grizzlies have controlled six of eight quarters so far, only faltering in that disastrously complacent Game 1 fourth quarter and in the Game 2 first quarter, where it took them a little while to adjust to the Clippers’ increased physicality. Through 96 minutes of basketball so far in this series, the Grizzlies have led for 80:08.

2. Defending Rudy Gay: With Caron Butler out with a hand injury and journeyman Bobby Simmons and slight scorer Nick Young as his primary defenders, Rudy Gay was very strong in Game 2. He missed his first three shots — a contested 17-footer and a couple of strong drives where lay-up attempts rimmed out — and was then 9-10 from the floor the rest of the game.

That opening shot was the only long two-pointer Gay took the entire game. Gay’s lone three-point attempt — his only miss from the mid-first-quarter on — came when Kenyon Martin switched onto him on a pick-and-roll and pushed Gay out with the shot-clock about to expire, forcing a 35-foot prayer. Gay’s other 12 shots — including a fastbreak lay-up attempt where he was fouled — all came within 15 feet. All game long, Gay used his size and strength advantage to drive or back down Simmons (against whom Gay was 4-7) and Young (a perfect 5-5) into the paint for a series of short jumpers and hooks.