Sons of Sam Horn

Sons of Sam Horn (SoSH) is a Boston Red Sox-oriented online baseball forum. It began in 1998 as an offshoot of the Red Sox forum at the Dickie Thon Fan Club, which itself was an offshoot of the message boards at the now-defunct fastball.com. The site's name was inspired by former major leaguer Sam Horn, who played for the Red Sox as a would-be phenom in the late 80s (and whose career was ultimately a disappointment), and is a wordplay on the notorious Son of Sam serial killer.
Rise to prominence
SoSH garnered national attention during the 2003-2004 Major League Baseball offseason, when it consistently "scooped" several mainstream sports media outlets such as ESPN and WEEI radio in reporting the Alex Rodriguez and Nomar Garciaparra trades, the Red Sox in general, and even the rival New York Yankees.
The site has been frequented by former Red Sox player Curt Schilling, who occasionally shares his thoughts and views with SoSH membership in an effort to directly communicate with the team's ardent fan base while bypassing what some perceive to be the jaded, embittered, agenda-driven members of the Boston press corps. However, more recently, Schilling has chosen to speak more directly via his own blog, 38pitches.com.
Red Sox executives and members of the Boston sports media have recently started using -- or at least reading -- the forum as well; readers welcome the brief but momentous comments of JohnWHenry (John W. Henry, Red Sox principal owner) and other sports figures. Henry has said that "Adults cannot get a better, more informed or timely discussion of important Red Sox issues anywhere."
SoSH also has frequent interviews and online chat sessions with prominent figures from the baseball world. Participants have included Red Sox GM Theo Epstein, sabermetric pioneer and Red Sox consultant Bill James, Baseball America editor Jim Callis, WBZ-TV sports director Bob Lobel, ESPN.com columnist Bill Simmons, Boston Globe writer Gordon Edes, baseball historian Rob Neyer, and Will Carroll of Baseball Prospectus.
Most recently SoSH was given top honors in a Sports Illustrated poll that asked the question [http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/mysi/polls/popup_generic.html?poll30781&teamred_sox "Which blog or fan site has the best Red Sox info?"]
Win It For
One celebrated thread from the site has even been published in book form. Member jacklamabe65 (real name, Shaun Kelly, a veteran Greenwich, Connecticut school teacher) began a thread titled Win It For during the 2004 American League Championship Series against the Yankees. The thread was started as a plea to the Red Sox to win the championship for family members, friends, and other long-suffering Red Sox fans. Eventually, the thread grew to over 1,000 replies and a book. After trailing in the ALCS, three games to none, the Red Sox launched the biggest comeback in Major League history to dispatch their archrivals and went on to sweep the St. Louis Cardinals in the World Series. The night after Boston won its first world's championship in eighty-six years, Peter Jennings ended his national broadcast of "ABC World News Tonight" with a two-minute report on the thread. Subsequently, the Win It For book was published by Sports Publishing with the proceeds going to charity. On October 19, 2006, a complete copy of the original thread was formally accepted into the rare books section of the Baseball Hall of Fame by its Board of Trustees. HOF President Dale Petroskey sent Shaun Kelly a certificate indicating that the thread would forever have a permanent home in Cooperstown. Acclaimed baseball author Leigh Montville, who featured the "Win It For" thread in his own book on the 2004 Red Sox, Why Not Us?, states, "At the very least, 100 years from now, 'Win It For' will be THE historical record of what happened here. The other works - mine included - will have faded away, but the 'Win It For' thread on The Sons of Sam Horn will remain as the voice of voices concerning the 2004 Boston Red Sox."
Membership, threads, and nicknames
SoSH membership is restricted; the administrators and members feel this is necessary to keep a high quality of discussion on the boards. Frequently found on the main boards are statistical analyses of player performance similar to Bill James' sabermetrics. SoSH believes that they specialize in tracking Sox minor league prospects through the farm system; an entire sub-forum is devoted to the "Adopt-a-Prospect" system. The site has also helped to popularize a number of nicknames for Sox players, such as "Florida" for David Ortiz (purported to be the nephew of former TV actress Esther Rolle), "The Pro" for Bill Mueller, "Eye Chart" for Doug Mientkiewicz, and "Hershi" for Geremi González, whose quest to pitch three consecutive perfect innings during the 2005 season was followed intensely by the SoSH community.
Effect offline
Longtime member Eric Van became well known on the message board thanks to his self-confidence and use of invented statistics. He secured a position with the Boston Red Sox front office in 2005, possibly as a result of his SoSH tenure. Other members, such as founding member Cheri Giffin, have appeared in numerous print and television pieces. Most notable, however, was the launching of the career of Ryan Foley, whose insightful writing in off-topic fora was noticed by the publishers of Healthcare Review. Foley was subsequently hired as the publication's editor.
2009 All-Star Game Ballot
An internet campaign, started by the Nationals fanbase NATSTOWN in MLB forum, is calling for the vote and sending of Milledge to the All-Star Game, via online ballot. Despite him having lackluster numbers in the season, the objective of this campaign is that his appearance in the game would serve as a wake-up call to the Nationals front office, whose management of the franchise has proven ineffective both short term (the team as of May 8th holds a record of 8-18, the worst in the Major Leagues) and long-term (the team's minor league system ranks at 28th, or third-to-last in the Majors).
 
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