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DaveO

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Everything posted by DaveO

  1. The Strasburg deal has $80 million deferred and paid out 2028-2030. When mlb calculates for spending over the max is that based on actual spend or face value of contracts? It also suggests to me they have the money for Rendon. Lastly the opt out in Strasburgs 7 yr $175 million contract really paid off. He got extra years and $10 million more a year.
  2. Yeah....but I like Rendon. What is the worst that would occur? Ticket prices, beer and food costs go up. If you haven't noticed they have been on the rise in the last 10 years. What the hell. Its not my money to spend on a baseball player. Your big money long term gamble on a ball player could play out such as Scherzer (great free agent) or Chris Davis (orioles horrific long term signing)
  3. Report today is that Strasburg and the Nats have a 7 year $245 ;million dollar agreement. Earlier in the post season owner Mark Lerner suggested the Nats cannot afford both Strasburg and Rendon. I guess we'll have to wait and see. One down, one to go.
  4. I've dined at Sfoglina Rosslyn 3 times now, twice at the bar alone and once with a companion for dinner. Its convenient. Specifically its the most convenient bar for me in Rosslyn. My gut is that it is good not great. They will "get you" with the fancy touches, significantly very attentive service, all presented in a pretty pleasant dining room, but the mark ups--oh the mark ups they are high. I agree with the above on the squid Ink Linguine--very tasty--delicious. Calimari--also quite good. Other dishes a step below--but good.
  5. Well it was actually 3 conjoined office buildings, constructed between 1977-1982. The food court was the subterranean unified element of a 1.1 million square foot office complex. When built and for a long time it defined ground zero, for location, location, location in downtown DC, both for office and retail space. On the retail/restaurant side for a long time it was located in the densest most occupied portion of downtown Washington DC. The food court was available for breakfasts, lunch and up to about 5 or 6 pm for dining. It was a fast food emporium, never really distinguished with better quality dining, but certainly had a healthy number of places that pleased lunch customers. You could access the food court directly at 18th and I via metro, walk through the food court to 19th and K, all under cover and enhance the walk portion of a daily work day commute during bad weather. Anyway, it is closing at the end of the month. That is nostalgic for me. I lunched there a healthy number of times for close to two decades when I worked in that area. Can't say that any one of those meals was memorable. I also knew the original Italian food/pizza operator from a retail leasing perspective. Nice guys. Anyway, famous old Oliver Carr built International Square as part of his "empire of office buildings" in and around DC. At his peak he had to have had more office space in DC than any other developer/owner/landlord. The commercial real estate depression occurred in the late 80's /early 90's and he put most of his buildings in a REIT (real estate investment trust)-- and later sold it to Tishman Speyer in the latter 90's. Tishman Speyer still owns the property. Well I'm sure old Olly and Tishman Speyer both made a lot of money off that property, and I've got to add that my lunch purchases for about 2 decades contributed to those earnings. Can't say that its demise will alter or diminish the Washington DC food scene.
  6. Not only is he back, but he won ....(okay its not that big of a deal) NBA Western Division Player of the Week. What is interesting is that his +/- has been running positive and the Blazers are winning. Hmmmmmm
  7. I suspect the above is completely on target for the review # discrepancy. The Avenue restaurant at which we dined was large w/window lines on an avenue and street and beaucoup seats w/ lots of bar seating. The street restaurant was mid block and dramatically smaller.
  8. That article left me cold and unconvinced. Additionally the difference between those two averaged ratings seems insignificant to me, if not to the statisticians. OTOH, while in NY City a couple of weekends ago we ate at a street restaurant and an avenue restaurant (not that the characterization would ever have struck me as being significant). The "street restaurant" was far better than the "avenue restaurant". I'd rate the difference as being significant.
  9. Sad to report that the region lost what I considered one of it's technically best bartenders, Michael who worked behind the rail at Carmines and several other places. He was recruited to work there by a manager of his at a prior restaurant. A different manager described him as an 11 on a scale of 1-10, and co- workers appreciated and learned from him. He was great at masterfully handling and satisfying a large crowd, while also recognizing every regular. Florida just got a winner.
  10. So things have quieted down for the time being from the period when college conferences were growing, shrinking, changing members and dissolving their historical regional basis into a basis without logic. Adding West Virginia to that conference is the illogical step if one considers regionalism important. Additionally the historic names of conferences with numbers of members have changed...though the names have stayed the same. By example the Big 10 now has 14 full fledged members. Speaking of the Big 10, I've been chatting with an old friend who lives in Joisey, and along with his wife has been a Rutgers fan. Well Rutgers and Maryland joined the Big 10 the same year and their football teams have been destroyed by other members. My friend finally had it. He has been a fan and a contributor, knows the newish dean a little, and has exploded on the Rutgers mess (they are worse than U Maryland). Its all about the money these days. It has ruined the spirit of the old conferences.
  11. Great deal for the digital Washington Post: Black Friday--$30 for a year. That is $0.60/week.
  12. Meatballs the other evening. I like the @TrelayneNYC recipe, though substituted bread for breadcrumbs. Hmmm now I have 4 bags in the freezer of tasty meatballs for future consumption.
  13. I read elsewhere of the stunning impact of an immediate closing that shocked employees. They knew nothing of it. The offer to have jobs available in Alexandria or Rockville is probably valueless to most employees. Commuting is entirely different. These are not wealthy workers. Meanwhile in a different thread I saw immediate offers from other establishments, one being Medium Rare (that is the second time I've seen Medium Rare do this vis a vis closed places). On an entirely different note Java Shack had its last day Sunday, November 24. In several different ways they pre announced their closing. Still potential patrons were surprised at the closing in the last week and on yesterday. The owners of Java Shack were probably the exception rather than the rule with regard to informing employees of a closure. One long term employee knew of the struggling (going nowheres) negotiations with the landlord as far back as last December. This past June they announced the closing to all employees, basically 5 months in advance. They provided employees with severance pay. Consequently their employees stuck with them to the end. Needless to say Java Shack was making money and not in a horrible situation. They simply couldn't make a new deal with the landlord that was satisfactory to the ownership. And on another somewhat related note; I saw an article about a very small Manhattan hardware/everything store closing. I believe it had operated in the realm of 20 years. The store is at 26th and 9th Ave, less than 1,000 feet, packed with merchandise stored to the ceiling. The tenant was paying $120/foot. The new rent demand was $200/ft. $120/ft--$200/ft. Oh my my. I used to lease retail space in the DC area ranging from the priciest areas to areas renting at steep discounts off the prime. $120-200/ft. Those numbers confound me. I simply can't conceive of how business works with those fees. On the other hand I never leased space with a density of potential customers that might be 15, 20, 30, or 40 floors above the store. Completely different.
  14. The above reads like a wise post. I "overlap" with Steve R a bit; about the same age. But I grew up in Joisy, not NYC. I visited some of those neighborhoods when I was a kid and teenager visiting relatives in NYC. I heard about some great restaurants, and great ethnic fooderies but I was a poor kid and definitely not a foodie. Then from my teenage years into my mid 20's I spent a fair amount of time on the Lower East Side (what is this LES crap), sometimes working at a family business that must have started in the (I'm guessing) 1920's. It was on Grand Street, about 5 long city blocks South of Houston and about 3 blocks from Orchard Street, the busiest most crowded commercial street in the Lower East Side. This was the mid 1960's to latter 1970's. It was still a busy time for that area but it was probably already changing from its heydays in earlier decades. Clearly over that period I noticed the ever increasing expansion ) of influences from ChinaTown. Back to reference those "5 long blocks", I mention that because good ethnic food was part of the experience and there were dozens of great places infinitely closer and possibly better if not as well known or famous. Easily one to three dozen all far closer than 5 long city blocks and when you are working one doesn't have time to meander around. All of which to say that I knew nothing of Yonah Shimmel, but like Steve I knew of many fine places to get knishes back in the day (In NY and Joisy). But it seems to be a lost art, (with quite a few crazy miserable alternatives). Now one of my closest pair of friends relocated to NYC. An ever diminishing number of friends live in the area. Some are getting ill. I'll be up there to visit a number of times. Yonah Shimmel will be on my list of places to visit. There are very few places that stick to old recipes and dishes.
  15. Ooooh. I like that. I'm going up to NYC a couple of times this Winter. I'll note this to stop by.
  16. I believe the published prognosticators had them ranked around the bottom of the playoff teams (i.e. 7th or 8th) or out of the playoffs. I had them higher. Of course I thought Curry, Green and Russell would be playing. In any case the Warriors are starting a team of unknowns and undeveloped players. They do stink it up right now.
  17. Well..a couple of years have passed a few things have changed....and this aint your '15-'16 all time best NBA regular season team. This year's version of the Warriors are terrible. REALLY TERRIBLE. Curry out with an injury for a good part of the season, Durant now signed to play for a different team, Klay Thompson out all or almost all of the season, Green currently injured and out, Iguadala no longer playing for the Warriors. Even their big signing this year: Deangelo Russell is out with injury. This most definitely is not the team with the greatest record in NBA history. Last night they lost a little regular season game. Against the Dallas Mavs, currently not the best team in the league, but one with a winning record and high hopes. Meanwhile with that loss the Warriors are a miserable 3-13. Worst record in the West, worse than the Wizards, worse than the sad-sack Knicks. The Warriors have plummeted from ALL-TIME BEST to current worst. They didn't just lose--they were crushed. In the first period and it only got worse. 142-94. A complete smack down. Never close. Never a chance. When the season started and predictions were being made most of the experts suggested the Warriors would be real bad. I silently thought they would be competitive and in the playoffs. I was wrong. Big dead wrong. Well for the time being so much for what was once amazing Warrior basketball.
  18. Dean: Great great story. Worth 5 or 10 stars.
  19. Not much to say about Dock's Oyster Bar. I was there with a large convivial chatty/talkative group. No foody conversation among us. It did look to me though that everyone cleaned their plates and nobody complained. On the service side of things are original table of 9 was reduced to 7. The staff quickly and agreeably switched us from an oblong table to a round table, all the better for conversation. That was nice. My choices included crab cakes. Hmmm. Certainly not Maryland Blue Crab. These were large crab cakes, nicely done, but overwhelmingly tasteless. (reminder to self--always stick to Md Blue crab). On the cocktail side I saw something called a Rusty Sail, asked about it and was told it was a Rusty Nail. Now I like Rusty Nail Cocktails. Scotch, drambouie, very strong very tasty. This had neither taste, drambouie, or a scent of liquor. That one really disappointed me. On the other hand 6 other people left looking satisfied. It appears to be a typical sort of upscale business/visitor type place.
  20. While I watched a little I didn't see that play. In any case Morgan Moses responded for the lineman here. It was a 7 man defensive blitz. The Skins had 5 men blocking. It occurs. An experienced QB would probably have gotten rid of the ball quickly. I suppose that suggests it is part of the learning process.
  21. Thomas Boswell either joined the bandwagon or put an exclamation point on past commentary with his WaPo article stating that the Skins had lost Washington DC. I happened to watch a little of the game while waiting to return to DC. The Skins of course were horrible. Their offense is the worst I've have seen; Replacement level QB, weak line protection, mediocre at best receiving corps, mostly mediocre running backs. Essentially no talent on the 2019 version of the Skins. Meanwhile, the defense, acclaimed at the beginning of the season, is porous. They are weak, giving up a lot of points and putting the Skins in a hole virtually every game. The proof of "having lost DC" was not in Boswell's article but in the continued terrible attendance and incredibly low prices on the resell market for tickets. That has been going on for a while. Possibly this was the "worst case". Possibly its been this bad or worse earlier, possibly it will get worse in the next 6 games. Its a completely futile team. Meanwhile other local teams have won championships. Blame it all on Snyder. If he isn't the worst owner in professional sports its because other owners are inhabited by the Devil. Snyder needs to sell. Sell, Dan, sell. Retire to Florida. Get the H out of DC. Or wake up!!! Its been 20 years of stinkeroo. Don't you realize you are the cause!!!!
  22. I was there this past weekend. Eldridge Street, is a side street in a secondary less developed pretty ethnic neighborhood. Not much going on there. Still, even at its minor upgrade of some commercial activity it appears to be about 1000% more developed than what I recall from the 1970's/80's. It has a tinge of attractiveness versus bluchchchch. Sorry. Didn't get to try any dumplings.
  23. While visiting in NY we ventured down to the Lower East Side (LES)/Chinatown to check out what had become of the buildings that once housed my paternal grandfather's and his relatives business. My first cousins and I will be getting together next spring and I thought I'd bring photos of the old neighborhood that housed that business, the "store" that all of us visited, worked at, and knew intimately in our childhoods and beyond. The area/neighborhood is of course completely different and is mostly a function of the ever increasing Chinatown in NYC. The building that must have housed our grandfather's business for about 4-5 decades is now evidently owned by a Chinese gentleman. Upper floors are now apartments. The first floor is a restaurant, Noree Thai Bazaar, operated by a tenant. The restaurant markets itself as featuring Thai street food. My friends and I ventured in. Street food it is and utterly delicious. We didn't stay long, but shared Pad Thai and skewers of chicken and pork and a few beers. My goodness it was delicious. All of us were blown away and my upper East Side friends said they would come down there again. Light, extremely tasty. The young chef/cook came out (it was quiet) and asked us how it was. He got big hoorays and a high five. The place has terrific reviews on the standard web review sites. I can't speak for the entire menu but the small plates and apps we had were way over the top and very inexpensive. Stop by if you are in the neighborhood.
  24. Nice story. Large space, probably a lot of rent. I'll give it a shot.
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