Latest news with #ChrisCarpenter
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Sonny Gray Becomes First Cardinal since Adam Wainwright to Accomplish Rare Feat
Sonny Gray Becomes First Cardinal since Adam Wainwright to Accomplish Rare Feat originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Sonny Gray turned in maybe the best pitching performance of the MLB season on Friday night in Cleveland. The Cardinals' ace was pretty much as close to perfect as you can get, as he went all nine innings, struck out 11, gave up just one hit, and surrendered no walks. Advertisement The most impressive part of his outing, though? He did it all on just 89 pitches. With this performance, Gray becomes the first Cardinal to throw a Maddux since Adam Wainwright did so against the Pirates in 2021. Wainwright was the first Cardinals pitcher to accomplish the feat since his good friend Chris Carpenter did it in 2011. Wainwright beat out Gray's pitch count by a singular pitch, only needing 88 to get through all nine innings. Although it's a rarity in today's game, Gray isn't the first Cardinal to toss a complete game shutout this year. Fellow veteran right-handed pitcher Erick Fedde went the distance without allowing a run on June 9 in a 10-0 win over the Nationals. Cardinals starting pitcher Sonny GrayDavid Richard-Imagn Images Gray was asked after the game if he ever thought he'd throw a Maddux. Advertisement His response (in typical Sonny Gray fashion): "I never even thought about it. I do like him, so that's pretty cool." Arguably the best performance of his career, it was Gray's fifth-ever complete-game shutout and first since 2015. His one blemish on the night came in the fifth inning when he surrendered a two-out single to Guardians right fielder Nolan Jones. Gray is now 8-2 on the year with a 3.36 ERA. He is next scheduled to pitch on Wednesday against the Pirates. Related: Latest MLB Mock Draft has Cardinals Selecting Highly Touted LHP Related: Cardinals Back on the Road Following Split with Cubs This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 28, 2025, where it first appeared.

Sydney Morning Herald
20-06-2025
- Science
- Sydney Morning Herald
Fermented poo and lunar cycles: How ‘witchcraft' is used to perfect wine
He prescribed a series of nine 'preparations' to aid farming. The first and most famous, preparation 500, involves spritzing the farm each year with the horn-fermented manure to boost microbial and fungal activity within the soil. 'The manure becomes imbued with growth forces, and it's really microbially diverse, and it's beautiful the way it's transformed,' Mudaly says. 'It looks nothing like cow manure. It's a really dark, almost black, colloidal substance, and we use that at about 85 grams to the hectare. It's quite a potent prep.' Once the solstice has passed, Mudaly will prune the vines and cover the wounds with a paste made from dung, clay and diatomaceous earth mixed with nettle or casuarina tea. Other preparations focus on additions to compost, including yarrow stuffed into stag bladders and animal skulls filled with dandelion flowers. So, does it work? Loading One review found that differences between the grapes, juice and wine composition of biodynamic and conventionally made wines were inconsistent. And there's certainly no definitive science linking lunar phases and plant physiology. But there are a few intriguing glimmers in the limited scientific press on biodynamics, including findings that suggest biodynamic wines taste better. 'Wines from biodynamically produced fruit were described as more complex, fresh and vibrant compared to conventional wines,' reads one study in academic wine journal Oeno One. An analysis of 128,182 French wine reviews also found biodynamic drops ranked about 12 per cent higher on average, although most of the ratings weren't fully blind, meaning reviewers were perhaps prone to unconscious bias. Organic and biodynamic vines offer 18 per cent less yield compared to conventional vineyards, according to a 2019 systematic review. This may be an advantage, flavour-wise, because smaller bunches of grapes ripen better. There is some evidence the resulting grapes hold more antioxidant phenols, which influence a wine's taste and mouthfeel, and flavonoids, which are increasingly linked to longevity. Other studies have reported no significant difference, though, compared to conventionally grown grapes. On the sustainability side, organic farms, which include biodynamic farms, have 30 per cent more species diversity on average and 50 per cent more organisms according to one meta-analysis. Another four-year field trial on German riesling grapevines found biodynamic soils squirmed with more earthworms and had better fertility than conventional and organic vineyards. Biodynamic winemaker Chris Carpenter said he adopted the practice at Lark Hill winery near Canberra to enrich the old, depleted, acidic soils so he could grow Austrian grüner vines. While he believes biodynamic wines are 'spectacular' and appreciably different to the conventional stuff, Carpenter takes Steiner's dogma with a pinch of salt. 'Some of it stands the test of time, and some of it does not at all,' he says. 'That's probably where I clash with more pure practitioners of biodynamics, in that I prefer to treat it à la carte, and take the good science and the evidence-based stuff and apply that to our vineyards.' Carpenter is unconvinced, for example, by preparation 501, where ground-up quartz or silica is left in the sun and applied to crops to enhance photosynthesis. 'That feels a bit more like homeopathy,' he says. A recent study, however, found applying silica to cabernet-sauvignon grapes boosted vine growth and resulted in a darker, more opaque red that was more intense in flavour and aroma. Even if there's no scientific consensus on biodynamic wines, Australia has the second-highest number of biodynamic farming hectares in the world behind Germany, according to academic Dr John Paull. And the practitioners swear by it.

The Age
20-06-2025
- Science
- The Age
Fermented poo and lunar cycles: How ‘witchcraft' is used to perfect wine
He prescribed a series of nine 'preparations' to aid farming. The first and most famous, preparation 500, involves spritzing the farm each year with the horn-fermented manure to boost microbial and fungal activity within the soil. 'The manure becomes imbued with growth forces, and it's really microbially diverse, and it's beautiful the way it's transformed,' Mudaly says. 'It looks nothing like cow manure. It's a really dark, almost black, colloidal substance, and we use that at about 85 grams to the hectare. It's quite a potent prep.' Once the solstice has passed, Mudaly will prune the vines and cover the wounds with a paste made from dung, clay and diatomaceous earth mixed with nettle or casuarina tea. Other preparations focus on additions to compost, including yarrow stuffed into stag bladders and animal skulls filled with dandelion flowers. So, does it work? Loading One review found that differences between the grapes, juice and wine composition of biodynamic and conventionally made wines were inconsistent. And there's certainly no definitive science linking lunar phases and plant physiology. But there are a few intriguing glimmers in the limited scientific press on biodynamics, including findings that suggest biodynamic wines taste better. 'Wines from biodynamically produced fruit were described as more complex, fresh and vibrant compared to conventional wines,' reads one study in academic wine journal Oeno One. An analysis of 128,182 French wine reviews also found biodynamic drops ranked about 12 per cent higher on average, although most of the ratings weren't fully blind, meaning reviewers were perhaps prone to unconscious bias. Organic and biodynamic vines offer 18 per cent less yield compared to conventional vineyards, according to a 2019 systematic review. This may be an advantage, flavour-wise, because smaller bunches of grapes ripen better. There is some evidence the resulting grapes hold more antioxidant phenols, which influence a wine's taste and mouthfeel, and flavonoids, which are increasingly linked to longevity. Other studies have reported no significant difference, though, compared to conventionally grown grapes. On the sustainability side, organic farms, which include biodynamic farms, have 30 per cent more species diversity on average and 50 per cent more organisms according to one meta-analysis. Another four-year field trial on German riesling grapevines found biodynamic soils squirmed with more earthworms and had better fertility than conventional and organic vineyards. Biodynamic winemaker Chris Carpenter said he adopted the practice at Lark Hill winery near Canberra to enrich the old, depleted, acidic soils so he could grow Austrian grüner vines. While he believes biodynamic wines are 'spectacular' and appreciably different to the conventional stuff, Carpenter takes Steiner's dogma with a pinch of salt. 'Some of it stands the test of time, and some of it does not at all,' he says. 'That's probably where I clash with more pure practitioners of biodynamics, in that I prefer to treat it à la carte, and take the good science and the evidence-based stuff and apply that to our vineyards.' Carpenter is unconvinced, for example, by preparation 501, where ground-up quartz or silica is left in the sun and applied to crops to enhance photosynthesis. 'That feels a bit more like homeopathy,' he says. A recent study, however, found applying silica to cabernet-sauvignon grapes boosted vine growth and resulted in a darker, more opaque red that was more intense in flavour and aroma. Even if there's no scientific consensus on biodynamic wines, Australia has the second-highest number of biodynamic farming hectares in the world behind Germany, according to academic Dr John Paull. And the practitioners swear by it.