Cotton Jones
Just came across these guys, courtesy of a great review at Aquarium Drunkard. "Diner juke tunes" was the bit in the review that sold me. I've since picked up their album, Paranoid Cocoon. Great stuff.
Here's Cotton Jones playing "Gotta Cheer Up" on KEXP. Enjoy.
Induct The Hawk: The Andre Dawson HOF Case
On January 6th, 2010 the Baseball Writers Association of America will announce their selections for the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY. 2010 represents the best chance for one of the most overlooked players in the history of the game: Andre Dawson.
Below you'll find a compelling analysis of Dawson's HOF case by a longtime Harpoon Harbor associate. Before we lay out the case for Dawson, I'd like to share a little story which everyone should know about him. In an era of greed, holdouts and business becoming more important than the game we sometimes forget that there are the rare breed of athletes who play to play. Andre Dawson was one of those guys and demonstrated it when he came to Chicago.
From the Andre Dawson Wikipedia page:
He played for the Expos until after the 1986 season, when he took a pay cut to sign with the Chicago Cubs. Dawson's knee injuries were aggravated by playing on artificial turf in Montreal, and he hoped playing home games on grass at Wrigley Field would prolong his career. Dawson had campaigned for the Cubs to sign him during the offseason, but general manager Dallas Green resisted, insisting that the Cubs would start Brian Dayett in right field (Dawson had moved from center field to right field in his final two seasons as an Expo, due to the condition of his knees), and that one player could not make a 71-91 team a 91-71 team. When the Cubs opened camp in Mesa, Arizona that spring, Dawson and his agent Dick Moss arrived in an attempt to secure a contract with the Cubs. Dawson and Moss' stunt was derided as a "dog and pony show" by Green, who still wouldn't make an offer to Dawson. Two weeks into spring training, Dawson turned the tables on Green and the Cubs, presenting Green with a blank contract. Green filled in the contract with lean figures: a $500,000 base salary with $250,000 in incentives if Dawson made the All-Star team, started the All-Star Game, or won the National League MVP award.
He did all three, enjoying one of his finest seasons in 1987 in terms of raw statistics. He became the Cubs' starting right fielder, and hit 49 home runs and was named the league's MVP, finally winning after the two years as runner-up in Montreal. Sadly, Dawson wasn't able to turn around the Cubs' fortunes: although the team contended for the first half of the season and were even in first place in early May, they finished the 1987 season at 76-85, last in the National League East.
I love that story. Handing the GM a blank contract? Has that been done since? Maybe, but certainly not in an MVP season. The "blank contract" story coupled with the strength of his arm are two of the biggest reasons that I love Dawson. Whenever I see an outfielder throw a two, three or four-hop attempt to get a runner at the plate I remember The Hawk's arm. In 1987 I saw him throw a perfect strike from the right field wall. No hops. I dont even think the catcher had to move his glove an inch. A 350 ft laser from Sheffield to Clark.
The Hawk was the first player to win MVP on a last place team. No small feat and since been done only by A-Rod in '03 with the Rangers.
During his own HOF induction speech in 2005, Ryne Sandberg helped make the case for Dawson:
"No player in baseball history worked harder, suffered more or did it better than Andre Dawson. He's the best I've ever seen. I watched him win an MVP for a last-place team in 1987 [with the Cubs], and it was the most unbelievable thing I've ever seen in baseball. He did it the right way, the natural way, and he did it in the field and on the bases and in every way, and I hope he will stand up here someday."
Andre Dawson's HOF case, as presented by Harbor Associate Dan:
I have long believed that Andre Dawson is among the very finest ballplayers of his generation. Though his numbers fail to earn the respect of the Bill James set, they're HOF-worthy.
Consider:
- 438 home runs in a dead ball era (Winfield, 465; Rice, 382; Puckett, 207)
- 1591 RBI (Winfield, 1833 ; Rice, 1451; Puckett, 1085)
- 1987 MVP; runner-up in 1981 and 1983 (Winfield, no MVPs, never runner-up (amazingly) ; Rice, 1978 MVP, never runner-up; Puckett, No MVPs, runner-up 1992)
- 8 Gold Gloves (Winfield, 7;Rice, 0;Puckett, 6)
- .277 career average (Winfield, .283; Rice, .298; Puckett .316)
- 314 SB (Winfield, 223; Rice, 58; Puckett, 134)
- .323 OBP (Winfield, .352; Rice, .353; Puckett .360)
I chose the contemporaries above for a few reasons: 1. They're all in the HOF. 2. They played in roughly the same time period as Dawson. 3. They were all outfielders who were roughly similar in style of play to Dawson. Obviously this is an imperfect comparison, but they're closer to Dawson's style than Tony Gwynn or Rickey Henderson (both worthy HOF'ers).
The biggest knocks from Rob Neyer and his gang of stats nerds is that Dawson's OBP is too weak for inclusion in the HOF. However, the balance of the rest of the statistics demonstrate that Dawson is among the best from his era-- and it's my position that "best of your peers" should be the measure for the HOF. It's one way to make sure that each era is properly judged. You judge the players against their contemporaries.
I think it's also important to consider the intangibles-- the things that aren't included in the numbers. Dawson was a 5-tool player. He was a fantastic CF before his knees forced him into RF, where he continued to play stellar defense. He had a cannon for an arm. He could steal bases for half of his career, and did so in more prodigious fashion than the contemporaries above. He was well-respected and feared by opponents.
He hit for power (his 49 home runs in '87 are the single-season high for the 1980s; 250 in the '80s (5th highest total in all of baseball for that time period). He fielded better than his peers. He could run-- on the bases and in the gaps of the OF.
If you look at baseballreference.com (and I recommend you do), his closest statistical contemporary is Dave Winfield.
Is Winfield better? Yes. No shame in that.
Is Jim Rice? Hell no. Had Dawson played in Boston during his prime he would have been in by now. While Rice was a very good player, he is not Dawson's equal.
Puckett? Tough to say. His career was obviously cut short.
Hopefully this will be the year that The Hawk gets his rightful acknowledgment as one of baseball's greatest. With a year over year increase to 65.9% of the votes last year - roughly 10% short of the required 75% - his chances look good. With the steroid era putting the legitimacy of many potential first ballot guys in question, the stars are aligned for Dan and I to follow up on our 1995 promise to drive to Cooperstown when Andre Dawson is inducted.
Good luck, Hawk. This is your year.
Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!
Hope everyone has a great holiday.
A relatively sober Der Bingle and David Bowie sing Little Drummer Boy:
Great Lake Swimmers – I’m Going Down (Springsteen Cover)
About 6 years ago, I drove to Madison to see Great Lake Swimmers at a small club. There were roughly 20 people in the crowd that night. At that show, Tony Dekker played a fantastic cover of Springsteen's "I'm Going Down." Since that night, I've been looking for a recording of this cover by GLS and had not found one until recently. Below is Tony and Erik Arnesen playing it at the Winnipeg Folk Festival this past summer. What they've done with the song blows me away.
Enjoy.
Tony Dekker & Erik Arnesen - I'm Going Down
The Hedgehog Concept

I recently finished Jim Collins' Good to Great. Throughout the book I wanted to immediately get on here and start preaching about the brilliance of the ideas. Knowing that I would only log on and fill a raving post with tons of superlatives, I decided to digest it a bit before sharing my thoughts. It's been a long time since a business book has resonated so profoundly with me. The last one I can remember having a similar impact was Chris Anderson's The Long Tail. Having said that (yes, I saw the CYE finale), Good to Great is head and shoulders above anything I've read to date. The hybrid of brilliance and simplicity, coupled with the empirical data gathered to support the findings has convinced me of its genius. The book is not new, I'm just late to the game.
Good to Great is a study in what characteristics are found in companies which outperformed their competitors and comparison companies. The basic tenant is that there are plenty of "good" companies out there, but "great companies" are far less common. The most surprising thing that I take away from the book is the basic and fundamentally sound concepts which differentiate the two. Expecting lots of jargon, terms and theory way above my head - Good to Great is anything but that.
There are more comprehensive reviews and summaries available on blogs which are written better than I could hope to, so I've included some links below if you're interested in learning more. All I'll try to do below is summarize one piece of the Good to Great puzzle - "The Hedgehog Concept." "The Hedgehog Concept" is one of the core differentiators between "good" and "great" companies.
"The Hedgehog Concept" is similar in it's idea to Aesop's fable "The Tortoise and the Hare":
One day a hare saw a tortoise walking slowly along and began to laugh and mock him. The hare challenged the tortoise to a race and the tortoise accepted. They agreed on a route and started off the race. The hare shot ahead and ran briskly for some time. Then seeing that he was far ahead of the tortoise, he thought he'd sit under a tree for some time and relax before continuing the race.
He sat under the tree and soon fell asleep. The tortoise, plodding on, overtook him and finished the race. The hare woke up and realized that he had lost the race.
Collins uses a fox and a hedgehog. The basic concept is that a fox will try anything and run all over the place to protect itself and thrive in its environment, while the hedgehog does one thing really well: the hedgehog curls up into a ball and is confident in its ability to do that.
Collins and the Good to Great research team (which he credits early and often throughout the book) suggest that for companies to make the leap from "good" to "great," they must first recognize their "Hedgehog Concept." How you get to your "Hedgehog Concept" is not easy, but it revolves around answering three questions:
What can we be the best at in the world?
What drives our economic engine?
Where is our passion?
While perhaps simple questions, it is not possible to just answer them and declare that you have a "Hedgehog Concept." It takes long and careful deliberation with advisors and stakeholders to truly establish one. I love the idea of taking all the complexities of business and focusing on one core idea. The simplicity is genius. Good to Great certainly does not ignore the execution, management and attention to detail which are also obviously required to make this work. However, having that one simple concept is what I truly believe should be the driving force for most companies.
One example of a "Hedgehog Concept" that Collins discusses is Walgreen's. Walgreen's (a company I love, and in hindsight it has a lot do with their simplicity) has a "Hedgehog Concept" which is to "to run the best, most convenient drug stores with high profit per customer visit." Easy, right? Easy to say, difficult to execute, particularly on the scale they do. That's where the remainder of the book's ideas come in. I wont attempt to outline this any further, but hopefully you're interested in learning more...
If you enjoy business ideas and learning more and more about what makes companies "great," do yourself a favor and check out Good to Great. I'll warn you now that Collins and his team use Fannie Mae as an example of a "great" company, do not be discouraged given the events of the last two years. The ideas are valid.
Below are some resources for more information on the ideas of Good to Great:
Citrix Blogger - The Hedgehog Concept
Jim Collins - The Hedgehog Concept and more (audio/video)
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