IN PHOENIX
nothing could distract Mets rookie righthander Alay Soler in his fourth major
league start last Saturday--not even the injured pigeon that fell from the sky
and landed in the infield as he warmed up for the seventh inning against the
Diamondbacks. "I just saw a bird land behind the mound," said plate
umpire Jim Reynolds, who scooped up the suffering squab and carried it off the
field in his mask. "It looked like it had a broken wing." Soler went
back to making the D-Backs look bird-brained: He pitched a complete-game
two-hitter for his first big league shutout.
Soler was lucky.
Six days earlier an errant seagull had cost Durham Bulls pitcher Jason Childers
a strikeout. In a Triple A game against the Buffalo Bisons, a Childers offering
hit a bird (right). For a while it seemed that the pitch was nevertheless a
strike: The Bisons' Ramon Vazquez swung at it (the ball, not the bird) and
missed for strike three. But after a conference the umpires ruled the play
should have been ruled dead when the gull was hit and gave Vazquez another
chance to hit. (He grounded out.) The bird? It wasn't ruled dead either; it was
carried off the field and later flew away.
IN GERMANY the
world's best soccer players got their first kicks at the +Teamgeist, the
official World Cup ball (left). Engineered by Adidas, which has made World Cup
balls since 1970, the +Teamgeist looks like your average soccer orb. But Adidas
insists it's rounder than any of its predecessors--because its panels are glued
together rather than stitched--and thus more aerodynamic and easier to sneak
into the net. That's good news for FIFA, which wouldn't mind seeing more of the
high-scoring games that fans love during the World Cup. International goalies
agreed with Adidas that something was different. According to England's Paul
Robinson, the +Teamgeist behaves "more like a water polo ball or
volleyball" and "moves about all over the place."
IN CINCINNATI
anyone brave enough to leave the house and head to River Downs racetrack on
June 6--6/6/06, to paranoid numerologists--witnessed a Twilight Zone moment.
Cinnamon Bay, the number 6 horse in the sixth race of the day, finished ...
sixth. Fortunately the eerie result had few bettors deep-sixing their tickets.
Cinnamon Bay (right) went off as a 30--1 long shot.
