Precure Day 148
Episode: Futari wa Precure Splash Star 49 - âIn Top Form! Forever Friends Under the Starry Sky!â
Date watched: 29 July 2019
Original air date: 28 January 2007
Screenshots: https://imgur.com/a/LingrF5?
Project info and master list of posts: http://tinyurl.com/PCDabout
words donât do this justice
note: I may revise this later if i look back and think of more to say. I probably will, bit i wanted to push this out now for personal reasons.
This is it. The finale. We finally made it! From November to now, Splash Star has been a long road plagued by personal difficulties and stubbornness and some lost sleep along the way, but I made it! And boy do we have a lot to discuss!
The Plot
When we left off, Saki, Mai, Michiru, and Kaoru, were infused with the power of spirits and transformed into Cures Bloom, Egret, Bright, and Windy. Gohyaan mocks their resolve and points out how all life is gone and thereâs no light, no wind, nothing. Itâs a world of ruin, except for the four of them, and heâs about to fix that. They battle, and as the girls again try to explain why they consider life so valuable, Gohyaan explains his backstory. He is an existence predating the universe, and he doesnât like the commotion of life, so he wants to go back to the quiet. The girls wonât let that happen, because they have so much to live for. Gohyaan destroys the entire Earth, and thinks this is the end for them, but no! Saki explains how she needs to lead the softball team to victory. Michiru wants to try baking bread, because Sakiâs is so delicious. Kaoru wants to draw with Minori and Mai, Choppi wants to live in the Land of Fountains, Flappi wants to confess his feelings, and Mai wants to keep drawing everyoneâs smiles. They stand up, gather their power, and all together they perform a brand new four-person finishing attack: Precure Spiral Heart Splash Star!
This is too much for Gohyaan to handle and as the girls proclaim the strength of their hopes and futures, he is blown away.
The spirits of the various fountains and the Fairy Carafe reappear, and they restore everything to its original, beautiful state. We see all six fountains one final time, as the girls stand in front of the Sky Tree as they realize that itâs connected to the World Tree in the Land of Fountains. Princess Filia is fully restored to power, and Korone returns to being a normal, non-talking cat. However, Michiru and Kaoru have exhausted the last of their remaining energy, and they begin to fade away. Saki, Mai, Flaapi, Choppi, Moop, and Foop all cry deeply, not wanting to let their friends go, and even Filia seems sad but unable to do anything. However, a miracle occurs as the spirits of the Land of Greenery flow into the two, and Filia deduces that the spirits themselves want to live with the Michiru and Kaoru. Theyâre restored to life, and Princess Filia finally returns to her place in the Tree of Life.
At this point the first ending theme begins to play as we get a montage of events: All four girls visiting the Fountain of the Sky at long last, fulfilling that promise. Waving a tearful goodbye to their fairies. Mai and Kaoru drawing in school. The girls sitting on Gourd Rock in the spring. Saki and Michiru baking. And then, the softball tournament. Kaoru and Minori have drawn a picture to support Saki, while Michiru baked some bread in the shape of Sakiâs head. Kaya, Miyasako, Kenta, Hitomi, Yuuko, and Mai are all in the stands anticipating the game. Saki looks into the stands and sees Izumida, the former captain, and suddenly gets nervous. She walks out of sight, and Mai walks up to her. They hold hands and Saki comments about how holding hands lets Maiâs energy flow through her, a callback to an earlier episode.
Then Saki walks out onto the field. Next thing we know, weâre treated to a few of Maiâs drawings: Saki holding the championship trophy, indicating they won. Everybody gathered together with Saki: Mai, Michiru, Kaoru, Kenta, Miyasako, Kaya, Hitomi, Yuuko, Izumida, Ms. Shinohara, Sakiâs parents, Maiâs parents, Minori, Kazuyua, Korone, and all the fairies. Basically, every major character in the series. How nobody saw the fairies is not answered, and I have to assume itâs actually a photograph that Mai copied but details aside, itâs a great picture.
We zoom out to see Saki and Mai sitting beneath the Sky Tree, closing the sketchbook, and the real credits roll.
The Analysis
I absolutely love every minute of this. Even with the powers of all four spirits, Gohyaan is a formidable opponent, but the girls hold their own and manage to overcome him in the end. What is the power of destruction next to an indestructible will? He underestimates the power, the value, of life, and that is his ultimate undoing. He gets the peace and quiet he wants.... at the cost of his existence. And, indeed, this explains the Uzainaaâs name. Itâs derived from âUrusai naâ, which means âitâs annoyingâ. Gohyaan is an existence that predates the universe, and he doesnât like the commotion created by life. Itâs a darkly mundane reason to want to try to destroy everything, and frankly he should find a new hobby, but maybe in the end he learned that life is precious. Doesnât seem like it, though. Honestly I donât have much to say about the battle itself. Thereâs some good scenes, like this part where the cures all flip Gohyaan, but itâs more of an exchange of wills than a physical fight. Both are important aspects, as Iâve commented many times, I just want to note that the physical stuff was done last episode.
Letâs talk Michiru and Kaoru. Officially, they donât get new designations even with the powers of Moon and Wind, because the idea at the time was still that Precures were only ordinary girls, but I think they deserve to be called Cure Bright and Cure Windy. Their journey is heartbreaking, even if their death was an inevitability and they were given a new lease on life very quickly. They never deserved what they got, but their tragedy is a part of this show I honestly forgot about, and I think it makes it more powerful. I knew Splash Star was an underrated gem but I had forgotten the depths of tragedy the Kiryuus were in, I kind of thought everything was pretty hunky-dory when they got back. Their journey escalates this show to a higher tier in my view, and Iâll have to remember that when making recommendations.
Obviously, they already had powers from being Dark Fall denizens, and getting Cure abilities doesnât make them innately better, but itâs a great next step for them, epitomizing the journey theyâve undergone from mindless servants of Akudaikaan to friends and sisters who have a network of people who care about and support them, discovering their own interests, and getting to live life. They are every inch heroes in the way that Saki and Mai are and they have been done dirty by the franchise writ large.
The epilogue gives us a lot of things I really wanted. Michiru and Kaoru finally get some casual clothes, and they are really stylish.
Also, we fast forward to spring and see them in spring outfits and Michiruâs outfit is extremely similar to Nagisaâs spring clothes.
Iâm happy to see them living normal lives, practicing baking and art and getting to experience life, finally. They seem so happy and Iâm sure they have a bright future ahead of them and GOD DAMN IT TOEI WHY DO YOU IGNORE THEM. They were lucky to get Figuarts.
The softball championship game is something else I honestly forgot happened. I commented back in the last softball episode (35 I think) that we would never see Saki lead the team to victory the next year, because the show didnât get a second season. Well, they took care of that here, and Saki did live up to her promise to Izumida by winning the championship.
In general itâs a lot of tying up loose ends that I really appreciate. Flappi finally confessed his feelings to Choppi and theyâre a couple now, Kenta and Miyasako are still going strong as a manzai duo, Yuuko feels inspired by his encouragement even if they donât seem to be a couple, and... well, the last closure we got on Saki and Kazuya was in the Christmas episode, but thatâs just as well because Sakiâs only love is Mai. For real though I love that the episode closes out on them being close, and you can choose to interpret their friendship any way you choose. Itâs just perfect for this show.
Oh and thereâs a little epilogue after the ending theme. On the TV broadcast it was probably a preview for Yes! 5, but we donât get that here. Instead we get , some stills of Saki and Mai thanking everybody for watching, and saying that Precure will continue for a long time! And boy, truer words were never spoken.
Next time on precure Daily, Iâm going to revisit a little Splash Star something that I forgot to do sooner. After that, Iâm going to try to push out a retrospective on the entire Futari wa era, before we change up the formula big time with Yes 5. My goal is to finish Yes 5 by the end of 2019, but if Iâm really good I might even be able to start GoGo this year. I donât want to drag another show out for 8 months, so weâll see where we end up. I hope to see all of you again soon!
Pink Precure Catchphrase Count:Â 1 Zekkouchou Nari!, in the title of the episode.
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While youâve been admiring ESPNâs MLB home page this season, youâve probably noticed the Ohtani Tracker. We even gave it its own place on the menu bar, right between âMLBRank Top 100â and âMore.â Itâs an auspicious presentation.
The Ohtani Tracker has been a little quiet lately, given that Sho-Babe Ruth-tani hasnât hit since June 4 or pitched since June 6. Worse, as of this writing, we donât know if heâs going to do either, both or neither again during the 2018 season. Itâs a limbo likely to dangle over us for the next few weeks.
The story of Shohei Ohtani has been unbelievably compelling. Here is a 23-year-old bidding not just to work regularly as both a starting pitcher and a designated hitter, but to do both at an elite level. This isnât a Brooks Kieschnick situation, where a fringe player is leveraging his unusual versatility to shore up two end-of-the-roster spots for a team, thus creating an opening for someone else. The hope for Ohtani was to be the offensive complement to Mike Trout the Angels sorely needed, while heading up a rotation that lacked an ace.
For two months, it went better than anyone could have expected. At the plate, Ohtani had a .907 OPS and six homers while displaying top-shelf power on contact and an advanced approach. According to Bill James Online, only three Angels have posted more offensive win shares than Ohtani, even though nine of them have had more plate appearances. Meanwhile, he has posted a 3.10 ERA on the mound with 61 strikeouts over 49 1/3 innings. Only Tyler Skaggs has more pitching win shares on Los Angelesâ staff.
Keep track of the Japanese phenomâs bid for greatness on both sides of the ball. Story Âť
Alas, Ohtaniâs unquestioned early success only whetted our appetites. We want more. We want it now. Can he win 10 games and hit 10 homers in the same season? Only Babe Ruth did that, and he only did it once. Now, though, Ohtani is injured and may be looking at surgery. His season might be done, leaving us with only a glimpse of what he mightâve otherwise accomplished in an unforgettable rookie campaign.
If Ohtani is done, the season is ruined. Except: Itâs not.
For years, as the popularity of baseball and its place in contemporary culture have been discussed, there has been a persistent line of thinking that MLB, like its NBA brethren, needs to do a better job of promoting its stars. Make the sport more personality-driven. We look at rankings of the most popular athletes and see how a retired player like Derek Jeter remains the most recognizable baseball player, and something seems askew.
There is something to that thinking. It would clearly be good for the game if its stars were a little more embedded in the collective cultural consciousness. However, itâs a challenge because of the nature of the sport.
For one thing, there is only so much any player, even Trout, can do on a nightly basis. In the NBA, if LeBron James is playing, you know youâre likely going to get 27 points, 9 rebounds and 9 assists. Thatâs an average, but itâs one that adheres closely to nightly reality. Maybe he goes off for a special night, maybe he has an off-night. Either way, as long as James is playing, you know heâs going to be a fulcrum on which the game teeters.
That is not really true in baseball, especially when it comes to position players. Trout might have a big night. Heâs more likely to have one than anybody else. But he might also go 2-for-4 with a walk, all coming with the bases empty and all resulting in a left on base. Itâs a good night, but it might not have impacted the game that much, because the impact is so dependent upon what the rest of the team does. And Trout may well have an 0-fer â he has had 25 hitless games already this season. And Trout is the best player in the world, having what could end up as the best season anyone has ever had. Itâs the nature of baseball.
After losing their way for a few years, the Braves went back to the formula that launched a dynasty â and itâs paying off in a big way.
Who leads the way for MVP and Cy Young? Which rookie has the brightest future? Our experts reevaluate their award picks at the almost-halfway point.
Phillyâs ace lost his cool about defensive shifts, but was his point accurate? Plus, a new way to track bullpen usage and remembering a Redbirds icon.
2 Related
In basketball, if you buy a ticket to a game because James is in town and you want your kids to see him play, but arrive at the arena only to find out heâs being rested, you feel hoodwinked. In baseball, star players are rested sometimes and star pitchers only go once every five days. People show up at the park for the atmosphere and the team. Obviously they want to see Trout or Ohtani or Aaron Judge or Mookie Betts or Sean Doolittle (hey, we all have our reasons), but the experience of attending the game is not all that dependent on who is playing in it. Bad teams are harder to watch than good ones, but that has to do more with the stakes of the game, not so much who is or isnât in the lineup on a given day.
In other words, relax, because whatever happens with Ohtani, the 2018 season will be fine. It will be incredible. The postseason will be one weâll never forget. There will be pennant races and great individual achievements and heartbreaking injuries.
Just off the top of my head:
⢠Races! The Yankees and Red Sox are poised to give us a real pennant race for the first time since, well, thatâs hard to say. Itâs all but impossible for two teams to win 100 games and one of them miss the playoffs. Before the second wild card, teams could win 100 games and not win the division but still make the playoffs. Now, though, winning a wild card puts you in that coin-flip game. Youâd rather be in that game than miss the playoffs, but if youâre going to the postseason, you want to skip the win-or-go-home game if you can. It might not be the Dodgers-Giants in 1951 or the Twins-White Sox-Tigers-Red Sox in 1967 or the Braves-Giants in 1993, but we could have a 100-win team playing the coin-flip game, and two 100-win teams trying like hell to avoid it. That should lead to some tense Yankees-Red Sox action down the stretch.
⢠Trout! Did I mention Trout might be on his way to the best season anyone has ever had? Weâve been discussing this for a month now, and his pace only hastens. Right now, Trout is on pace for 13.4 WAR, 54 homers, 106 RBIs, 131 runs and 31 steals. And if you think the RBI pace is low, consider that Trout has a 1.184 OPS with runners in scoring position but has been walked nearly a third of the time in those spots. Can you blame the pitchers?
⢠Scherzer! Putting pitcher WAR in historical context is tough because of the evolution of workloads, but Max Scherzer is second to Trout, with a pace of 11.0. His other per-162 paces: 25-5, 2.00 ERA and 354 strikeouts. We are watching a Hall of Fame career coming into full bloom.
⢠Trades! Manny Machado will most likely be playing for a non-Baltimore team two months from now, and the team he joins will tack a few points on to their probability of winning this yearâs World Series. Josh Donaldson could be on the move. So, too, might Jacob deGrom, or at least thatâs been bandied about lately in the whisper mill. DeGrom, about the only good thing going for the Mets, just reached the ace tier in my starting pitcher ratings, giving us a magnificent seven in that group.
Thatâs just the tip of the iceberg. Yes, we want Ohtani back, but if we donât get him, we will be just fine. Because we still will have baseball, and with that comes the magic of limitless possibility.
What the numbers say
Is Atlantaâs Freddie Freeman âcriminally underratedâ? Depends on who you ask. Jason Getz-USA TODAY Sports
Overrated ⌠and underrated stars
The other day, I wrote a story about the Atlanta Braves. It was a pretty long story, and even though Iâm the one who wrote it, there were a couple of words that stuck in my craw â âcriminally underrated.â
Those words were in reference to the Bravesâ Freddie Freeman, who has continued to climb the WAR leaderboard with another hot streak. Heâs currently second to Scherzer in the National League, putting him in contention for a serious run at the MVP trophy. Freeman also is the runaway leader in the early NL All-Star balloting, not just at first base but among all players. That would indicate Freeman isnât underrated at all, much less criminally so, but nevertheless, thatâs been Freemanâs calling card for a number of years. Underrated.
The âoverratedâ and âunderratedâ labels are an easy device for a sportswriter because they are inherently subjective. But can they be quantified? Can we know if a player crosses over from one to the other?
Part of it depends on who is doing the rating. If itâs a bunch of Atlanta baseball fans, chances are Freeman has not been underrated at all. If itâs the American baseball fan writ large, then we might be able to use All-Star voting to determine whether a player is appropriately recognized, though there are plenty of nonperformance factors at play. Alas, I canât really test this idea because, best I can tell, there isnât a good database for historical All-Star voting.
That leaves us with the other group that does plenty of rating: media hacks like me. While we do plenty of rating in the various forms of media, we also do some ratings that have real-world consequences: awards voting. And, thanks to the sublime Lahman database, I was able to grab historical awards voting.
After pulling up the voting data, I adjusted each seasonâs MVP votes to put it on the same scale of the current era, where we have two voters in every city and a first-place vote is worth 14 points, giving us a 420-point maximum for any player. I decided to focus strictly on the integration era, or since 1947.
Using Fangraphs.com, I created a database of WAR numbers for every player since 1947. This step wonât thrill everyone, but thatâs what I did. However, itâs important to acknowledge that this method does not imply WAR is a perfect metric for determining a leagueâs most valuable player. Itâs a tool, a good one, but should be looked at in conjunction with other factors.
For each season and for each league, I ranked the players by WAR and assigned them the number of MVP points they âshouldâ have had by using the 14-9-8 system, modified so the top 40 players in a league have at least one âshouldâ point. From there, it was just a matter of looking at the differences. If a player had more actual MVP points than he âshould,â then he has been overrated and vice versa. Now, for the results, or at least the highlights.
⢠On both a per-season and cumulative basis, the most underrated player since 1947 has been Willie Mays. Over his career, Mays should have had 5,198 MVP points. He actually had 2,550, a shortcoming of 120 points per season. Mays won the MVP award in both 1954 and 1965, but he led the National League in WAR nine times. In 1956, Mays ranked second in WAR but finished just 17th in the balloting. Yes, I realize WAR did not exist in 1956, but there were other subtle indications of Maysâ excellence that season, like 36 homers, 40 steals, a .557 slugging percentage and more walks than strikeouts.
⢠The most overrated player on a per-season basis is active: Coloradoâs Nolan Arenado. Do I agree with that? Not really, but this result did make me look at Arenadoâs Coors Field-inflated numbers with some fresh eyes. Iâd still like to have him on my team, especially doing his Brooks Robinson routine at third base.
⢠The most overrated player on a cumulative basis has been Juan Gonzalez, likely because WAR is not swayed by flashy RBI totals. I have no problem with this result.
⢠Among active players, the most underrated has been ⌠no, itâs not Freddie Freeman, the reason for all this trouble in the first place. In fact, this method suggests Freeman has been treated just about right by MVP voters over the years (207 expected points; 285 actual). No, on a per-season basis, itâs Clayton Kershaw. If you donât like a pitcher getting this nod, then itâs Chase Utley. Kershaw and Utley are also the answers for being underrated on a cumulative basis. Now, armed with that knowledge, Utley and Kershaw can sit together in their Dodger Stadium clubhouse and grumble.
Since you asked
First-year Braves GM Alex Anthopoulos joined a team embroiled in scandal, but brimming with young talent. AP Photo/David Goldman, File
A Brave new world
Braves general manager Alex Anthopoulos took the Atlanta job last fall either in the best of, or the worst of, circumstances. His predecessor, John Coppolella, along with a couple of his assistants, were banned from baseball for misdeeds in the international player market. And the Braves subsequently had to relinquish their rights to 13 prospects. Still, he joined an organization brimming with talent. Weâve seen some of that talent hit the ground running this season, as the Baby Braves remain in the thick of the playoff race into the middle of June.
Anthopoulos is a Montreal native who got his start with the Expos, before going on to become the 2015 American League Executive of the Year with the Blue Jays. After that, he became part of the braintrust in Los Angeles under Dodgers vice president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman. Now, Anthopoulos is tasked with returning the talented Braves to the glories of their 1990s and early 2000s predecessors. I had a chance to chat with him during my recent trip to Atlanta, a period in which he was hard at work with his staff in preparation for last weekâs draft.
When it comes to the draft, Iâm interested in how things evolve when it comes to someone whoâs been in your position for a while now. I assume that you develop certain traits that you identify in a younger talent that you are attracted to, but does it become easier or harder to filter through guys? Do you have to guard against becoming too set in the criteria that you use?
Alex Anthopoulos: In theory, the longer you do it, you should be better, just from experience. Youâve made more mistakes, so there is more to learn from. The only caveat to that is there is so much more information right now that can really paralyze your thought process. We can overcomplicate things. There have always been psychological tests and so forth, but now we just have more. On the one hand, it should only help you inform your decision. Youâre trying to separate guys, and having all of this data is great. But knowing how to weight it, thatâs really challenging. But it would be an interesting study: Are we [as an industry] better in the draft than we were 20 years ago or 10 years ago? Do we have a higher rate of return with the higher picks?
When you took over in Atlanta and had a chance to do an evaluation of the talent on hand, how did that inform the way you approached the offseason in terms of immediate objectives?
When I got the GM job in Toronto, I had been in the organization a long time. I was an assistant GM, I was in scouting, so I knew the organization up and down. I knew the players, I knew the staff. Even though, on one hand, I came into this job with experience, I had never experienced coming into a brand new organization with no ties, no relationships. The role of general manager and the responsibilities that come with it, I was familiar with that. I knew what to expect. But the new organization, I wasnât. So I actually reached out to a few GMs who had gone through the same thing, who had come to brand-new organizations, and asked if there was anything they would change, anything they would do differently in hindsight. I think I spoke to three of them. And all three of them told me, âYou know what, I just wish I had moved a little slower.â They all said they moved on a player more quickly than they should have because they didnât know the player as well as they could have.
âLook, young players â some perform, some get hurt, some regress. All of a sudden, we might have a lot more holes at the end of 2018 than we thought we did.â
Braves GM Alex Anthopoulos
Youâre always anxious. You want to make the team better. All I knew from the outside was that there was a lot of young talent here. All the previous regimes and scouting departments had done a fantastic job collecting and accumulating a lot of talent, even though the team wasnât winning at the big-league level. It was just a matter of, letâs make sure we are not too quick to dismiss ⌠someone. Letâs give the young guys as much opportunity as we can.
When I look at rosters, I always look at breakout and collapse potential, and even tried to incorporate that into my simulation model. How important is the variability that comes with young teams when you are talking about âsurpriseâ teams in one form or another?
When I talked to everyone in the organization, going through reports and on the phone, there wasnât really a consensus on every player. I could talk to 10 people, and five would say this player is going to be a star, and another five would say, âWeâre not sure, the jury is still out.â There was never really a consensus. So even though I didnât know the evaluators, wasnât necessarily familiar with the information that we had internally, there was still [much] undecided internally. So that was a big part of it, looking around and giving guys opportunity and saying, âWeâre going to find out who is part of this core and who isnât.â At least we would have a much better indication. We were going to want as much payroll flexibility as possible going forward because, look, young players â some perform, some get hurt, some regress. All of a sudden, we might have a lot more holes at the end of 2018 than we thought we did. We may have fewer. The hope is, and weâre still not there yet, is that we fill as many positions on this team as possible internally. That will just free up dollars for us to do other things, whether itâs in the free-agent market or the trade market.
Conversely, what if our young players donât take a step? What if they regress, or there are injury concerns? Weâve got an elite-level player like Freddie Freeman, a stud defender like Ender Inciarte â we have players that we still want to capitalize on. How can we continue on to take a step in 2019? Thatâs where the payroll flexibility is going to come in. Right now, two months in, [Ozzie] Albies looks outstanding. Dansby Swanson has been very good. Johan Camargo has been coming on. [Austin] Riley is in Triple-A, so we feel good about that spot. ⌠I can go through the whole team, but it could have gone the other way. We just didnât know, but 2018 was a critical year for us to find out what we had.
Coming right up
Isnât Mike Trout grand? EPA/PAUL BUCK
Hereâs to the next 1,000 âŚ
The Angels have six games scheduled between now and next Fridayâs column. If Mike Trout plays in them all, then when the Angels take on Toronto at home next Thursday, Trout will be making his 1,000th appearance in a big-league uniform. Suffice to say, itâs been a grand grand for Trout.
Including the 40 games Trout played when he broke into the majors in 2011, he has played fewer than seven full seasons and he missed 48 games last season because of an injured hand. (Please donât let your stars dive into a base.) Officially, though, heâs in his eighth season. According to baseball-reference.com, only Ted Williams, Albert Pujols and Mickey Mantle had more WAR than Trout over the first eight seasons of a career. If Trout maintains his 2018 pace, heâll easily pass Pujols and Mantle.
Williams (72.6 WAR) is safe, but because of the time he missed flying fighter planes in World War II, he was 30 by the time he finished his eighth season. Pujols was 28. Meanwhile, Mantle, like Trout, was just 26. What a player. Canât wait to see what happens over the next 1,000.
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