Five hundred and twenty-one posts. Nine months. Started with a rant on Schilling and fittingly closed with Moose’s 20th and the Yanks missing the post-season. I made it. I made it through my first full season blogging. Nearly every day.
What started as some ‘experiment’ to see if I could get 10 people (besides my family) to read what I wrote has become something bigger than I could have expected. I’m still learning the trade but I have enjoyed it immensely.
I’ve gotten to interview an agent, an active pitcher and an assistant GM. And I’m not done!
For those of you who have become regulars, thank you. I take a tremendous amount of satisfaction that you guys choose to come here, hang out, write and debate with me. For those who come sporatically, also thank you.
For all of you, please share your criticisms, suggestions, complaints. I want to make this more of a collaboration than simply me riffing on the subject of the day. I’ve tried to get everyone involved, either via reader mail or someone like tadthebad who inspiried the Charity Challenge. Email me your thoughts. I want to hear them all.
In what will surely be a list with many omissions, I’d like to thank Craig from Shysterball for all of his help and advice throughout the year. Also, David & Aziz from Pride of the Yankees blog. Repoz & Co. from Baseball Think Factory. Tim Dierkes of MLBTradeRumors.com. Rob Neyer and Pete Abraham for their attention. Alex Belth, Bugs & Cranks, Tim Marchman, The Sports Hernia, Sliding Into Home, River Ave. Blues. High profile writers Tom Verducci, Buster Olney, Peter Gammons, Jon Heyman, Jayson Stark, Keith Law, Joe Posnanski; none of which I have ever spoken with but I remain grateful for their years of inspiring work. There are many, many more, so please don’t hate me for not naming everyone.
I’ll continue to write, turning towards the playoffs, a bit about football and before we know it, we’ll be warming up the Hot Stove for what should be another wild free agent season. I’m also going to do whatever I can to land more interviews with baseball insiders since the response from the three interviews was so overwhelmingly positive.
Best,
Jason

