Love, Life and APBA Baseball

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Books and Replays

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I was about 75 percent through reading “The Colonel and Hug,” the Steve Steinberg and Lyle Spatz book about Jacob Ruppert, Miller Huggins an...
Thursday, May 14, 2015

Two Doubleheaders: Sept. 4, 1950

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When you reach Labor Day in an APBA baseball replay, you know the season is drawing to a close and each game takes on more importance. Teams...
Friday, May 1, 2015

That Smell

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Ooooh that smell Can't you smell that smell Ooooh that smell. The smell of death surrounds you. That Smell, Lynyrd Skynyrd ...
3 comments:
Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Game No. 1,000

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After one year, one month and two weeks, I've reached game number 1,000 in my 1950 APBA baseball replay. It's one of those landmar...
Friday, April 17, 2015

Standing Obsession

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The seed for my obsession with standings may have been planted in the spring of 1969, the year baseball went to two divisions in each league...
Thursday, April 2, 2015

Streaks

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Baseball is a game of streaks and it's not been more evident than in the past few weeks of my 1950 APBA baseball replay. Obviously,...
Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Speed

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I crested a hill and saw the long straightaway on a highway in north central Arkansas this past weekend when I realized the last time I was ...
1 comment:
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About Me

Kenneth Heard
Jonesboro, Ark.
After working more than 35 years as a newspaper reporter, including nearly two decades as the northeast Arkansas bureau correspondent for the Arkanss Democrat-Gazette, Kenneth Heard now has a new vocation. He was laid off at the Democrat-Gazette in October 2017 and, in the era of journalistic economic demise, he found work at a local newspaper. Heard is not known for his brains. He later changed jobs, working as the communications director for a county prosecutor. During his tenure with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, he covered the 1998 Westside Middle School shootings; the West Memphis 3 murders, trial and subsequent release of the three defendants; was the weather reporter covering tornadoes, floods, drought and wildfires; and other mayhem. He has also taught English and journalism at two universities, been a television reporter and photographer, a golf course greenskeeper, a cable television installer and salesman, a junkyard worker, a repo man, a hotel desk clerk, a security guard, a lolligagger and a romantic dreamer. He has been rolling some form of APBA games since 1977 and will probably be buried clutching the iconic red and white dice of the game.
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