No one is really certain where the word came from. Paul Dickson, when researching his Baseball Dictionary (great book), could not nail down a reliable etymology for "bullpen". I realize this is frustrating, but that's baseball; sometimes it's just weird.
2007-05-26 14:44:23
·
answer #1
·
answered by Chipmaker Authentic 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
Jesse Crain. To me this guy is not a major league pitcher. Like the other day Francisco Liriano was going along strong for seven innings, with like about 10 strikeouts. Instead of leaving Liriano in for the 8th, Gardy brought in Crain. Two singles and a triple later, Liriano had a no-decision instead of a win. Twins were fortunate to come back and win the game anyway. There's a reason they call this guy Crainwreck!
2016-05-18 21:27:28
·
answer #3
·
answered by ? 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
The origin of the term bullpen, as used in baseball, is debated with no one theory holding unanimous, or even substantial, sway. Possible origins/theories about the term bullpen include:
1. During the Civil War in the United States, the notorious Andersonville prison camp featured a bullpen. "Though conditions were initially a vast improvement over Richmond detention centers, problems grew in proportion to the number of inmates. By late summer 1864, the prison population made Andersonville one of the largest cities in the Confederacy. At its peak in August, the 'bullpen,' built to lodge up to 10,000 enlisted men, held 33,000 grimy, gaunt prisoners, each one crammed into a living area the size of a coffin. Their only protections from the sun were 'shebangs,' improvised shelters constructed from blankets, rags, and pine boughs, or dug into the hard, red Georgia clay."[1] This wartime usage in the United States has occurred as recently as World War II. Tokio Yamane described conditions in Japanese relocation camps, referring to a bull pen within a stockade at Tule Lake, California: "Prisoners in the stockade lived in wooden buildings which, although flimsy, still offered some protection from the severe winters of Tule Lake. However, prisoners in the 'bull pen' were housed outdoors in tents without heat and with no protection against the bitter cold. The bunks were placed directly on the cold ground, and the prisoners had only one or two blankets and no extra clothing to ward off the winter chill. And, for the first time in our lives, those of us confined to the 'bull pen' experienced a life and death struggle for survival, the unbearable pain from our unattended and infected wounds, and the penetrating December cold of Tule Lake, a God Forsaken concentration camp lying near the Oregon border, and I shall never forget that horrible experience."[2]
2. Temporary holding facilities for rebellious hardrock miners trying to organize into unions were referred to as bullpens. These were sometimes literally pens normally used for cattle which were pressed into service by stringing barbed wire, establishing a guarded perimeter, and keeping large numbers of men confined in the enclosed space. Bullpens have been considered early versions of concentration camps, and were used by the national guard during the Colorado Labor Wars of 1903-04, and in Idaho in 1892 and 1899 during union miners' uprisings near Coeur d'Alene. In his autobiography Bill Haywood described Idaho miners held for "...months of imprisonment in the 'bull-pen', a structure unfit to house cattle, enclosed in a high barbed-wire fence."[3] Penned up in bullpens as a response to violence, many hundreds of union men had been imprisoned without trial. Peter Carlson wrote in his book Roughneck, "Haywood traveled to the town of Mullan, where he met a man who had escaped from the 'bullpen'. The makeshift prison was an old grain warehouse that reeked of excrement and crawled with vermin. Overcrowding was so severe that some two hundred prisoners had been removed from the warehouse and quartered in railroad boxcars."[4]
3. In the 1800s, jails and holding cells were nicknamed bullpens, in respect of many police officers' bullish features -- strength and a short temper. The term was later applied to bullpens in baseball.
4. The bullpen symbolically represents the fenced in area of a bull's pen, where bulls wait before being sent off to the slaughter. The relief pitchers are the bulls and the bullpen represents their pen.[citation needed]
5. The name may be a reference to rodeo bulls being held in a pen before being released into the main arena.
6. Latecomers to ball games in the late 19th century were cordoned off into standing-room areas in foul territory. Because the fans were herded like cattle, this area became known as the bullpen, a designation which was later transferred over to the relief pitchers who warmed up there.
7. At the turn of the century, outfield fences were often adorned with advertisements for Bull Durham Tobacco. Since relievers warmed up in a nearby pen, the term bullpen was created.
8. Casey Stengel suggested the term might have been derived from managers getting tired of their relief pitchers "shooting the bull" in the dugout and were therefore sent elsewhere, where they wouldn't be a bother to the rest of the team -- the bullpen. How serious he was when he made this claim is not clear.
9. Jon Miller, a baseball analyst with ESPN, said the term is derived from the late 19th century. The New York Giants first played at the Polo Grounds, which opened around 1880. The relief pitchers warmed up beyond the left-field fence. Out there in the same area was a stockyard or pen that had bulls in it.
2007-05-26 15:51:03
·
answer #5
·
answered by Mojo 2
·
0⤊
0⤋