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 Post subject: Re: Wake up guys...
PostPosted: Mon May 09, 2011 8:11 pm 
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zog741 wrote:
Tolle wrote:
...

P - Mike LaCoss (made an all-star game), Bruce Berenyi (I won a bet on a game he pitched), Paul Moskau (Has a city named after him), Frank Pastore (One of these days his potential will be reached), Charlie Leibrandt (I think he is still pitching)

RP - Tom Hume (Boom Boom Hume... he'd Boom them in and they'd Boom them out), Doug Bair (My 1980 program says his name spells relief), Ted Power (Gawd, he was great!), Manny Sarmiento (I think he threw side-armed), Danny Graves

C - Dave Van Gorder (Best Van Gorder to ever play the game), Dann Bilardello (So good he had to add an extra n to Dan)

1b - Dan Driessen (Hit a home run in Tom Seaver's no hitter), Todd Benzinger (Caught the last out of the 90 Series)

2b - Ron Oester (Oester... what more do I need to say), Tom Lawless (Was traded straight-up for Peter Edward Rose)

ss - Rick Auerbach (Was the starting 3b Opening Day the year after Rose left and was still stud enough to man short), Pokie Reese (So great the Reds wouldn't add him in the trade for Ken Griffey Jr.)

3b - Wayne Krenchicki (No one can argue this one), Pete Rose Jr. (I think he got a hit once)

LF - Paul Householder (I got a bat with his autograph on it), Gary Redus (Was a rare 15/40 guy)

CF - Eddie Milner (If it wasn't for coke he would be a HOFer), Dave Collins (Stole a bunch of bases)

RF - Glenn Braggs (He could break a bat on a check swing), Duane Walker (I remember he made a nice catch against the Astros in about 84)

No DH

Manager - Vern Rapp (Almost made it through a season)


Looks like the players the Big Red Machine forgot about.

-- RWM


It got a little ugly after the Machice ran out of gas.


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 Post subject: My experience with Bob Feller was very good.
PostPosted: Mon May 09, 2011 8:32 pm 
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Tolle wrote:
Cloudy wrote:
Yesterday and today in baseball...

I have a problem with those, who would relagate great baseball players and their achievements in days gone by, to something that is interesting, but not up to what we have today. Yeah, now they are all either old or dead. However, if they if they were young and alive today, I think many could still hold their own. The speed, strength, reaction time, etc. of baseball players today are no better than what those, who preceded them, also had. That is unless you believe in some evolutionary leap in the human race in the last 100 years.

Put a young Bob Feller on the mound again today, and he will win the Cy Young Award.

Image ....................Image

p.s. I got to meet Bob Feller. He was a wonderful person. Bob told me that no pitcher ever threw the ball faster than he did, and I believe him.


Bob Feller was a prick... Mr. Feller can I have your autograph - "You got twenty bucks, kid?"


I think it was sometime back in the late 1980's, that I got to meet Bob Feller. He was at a Louisville Bank to sign autographs. The line was very long, and when I finally got up to the table and pulled out the 10 or 15 baseball cards I had brought with me for him to sign, he looked back at the hundred or so people standing behind me. He sighed, and said the line is too long, and time is running out. He told me that he would sign three right now, but if I waited until he had finished with everybody, he'd sign all of them for me. So, I hung around, and not only did he sign everything, he shot the shit with me about baseball for about 15 minutes. He didn't ask me to pay him anything like $20.00 a signiature. He did it for FREE...!

p.s. If you don't already have Bob Feller's autograph, you're too late... :cry:

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 Post subject: Another Red Sox fan...!
PostPosted: Mon May 09, 2011 10:21 pm 
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spotes wrote:
As a Red Sox fan, I loved his game.


Image

SPOTES, you are another Red Sox fan...! I knew there was reason why I liked you. :D

I had a hard time not putting, Carl Yastrzemski, Frank Malzone, Dom Dimaggio, Dick Radatz, Lefty Grove, Tris Speaker, Bobby Doerr, Johnny Pesky, Mel Parnell, Ellis Kinder, Mickey Vernon, Louis Apparicio, Luis Tiant, Birdie Tebbets, Jim Lonborg, Jim Rice, Fred Lynn, Tony Conigliaro, Mo Vaughn, Nomar Garciaparra, Pete Runnels, Pedro Martinez, David Ortiz, Bill Lee, Curt Schilling, George Scott, and Jimmy Piersall, to name but a few, on my all time baseball greats list.

Oh heck, throw Pumpsie Green, Oil Can Boyd, Sammy White, and Clyde Vollmer in there too. :lol:

I tried my best to keep my Red Sox prejudice out of my selections.

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Last edited by Cloudy on Wed May 11, 2011 8:12 pm, edited 3 times in total.

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 Post subject: Re: My experience with Bob Feller was very good.
PostPosted: Mon May 09, 2011 10:54 pm 
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Cloudy wrote:
Tolle wrote:
Cloudy wrote:
Yesterday and today in baseball...

I have a problem with those, who would relagate great baseball players and their achievements in days gone by, to something that is interesting, but not up to what we have today. Yeah, now they are all either old or dead. However, if they if they were young and alive today, I think many could still hold their own. The speed, strength, reaction time, etc. of baseball players today are no better than what those, who preceded them, also had. That is unless you believe in some evolutionary leap in the human race in the last 100 years.

Put a young Bob Feller on the mound again today, and he will win the Cy Young Award.

Image ....................Image

p.s. I got to meet Bob Feller. He was a wonderful person. Bob told me that no pitcher ever threw the ball faster than he did, and I believe him.


Bob Feller was a prick... Mr. Feller can I have your autograph - "You got twenty bucks, kid?"


I think it was sometime back in the late 1980's, that I got to meet Bob Feller. He was at a Louisville Bank to sign autographs. The line was very long, and when I finally got up to the table and pulled out the 10 or 15 baseball cards I had brought with me for him to sign, he looked back at the hundred or so people standing behind me. He sighed, and said the line is too long, and time is running out. He told me that he would sign three right now, but if I waited until he had finished with everybody, he'd sign all of them for me. So, I hung around, and not only did he sign everything, he shot the shit with me about baseball for about 15 minutes. He didn't ask me to pay him anything like $20.00 a signiature. He did it for FREE...!

p.s. If you don't already have Bob Feller's autograph, you're too late... :cry:


Bob Feller and no one else around and he asked for 20 bucks... fuck him.


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 Post subject: You're too late for that too...
PostPosted: Mon May 09, 2011 11:23 pm 
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Tolle wrote:


Bob Feller and no one else around and he asked for 20 bucks... fuck him.


You're too late for that too...

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 Post subject: Re: My experience with Bob Feller was very good.
PostPosted: Mon May 09, 2011 11:43 pm 
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Tolle wrote:
Bob Feller and no one else around and he asked for 20 bucks... fuck him.


Let me preface this by saying that I have always despised Reggie Jackson since I can remember. Being a Yankee probably didn't help his case. ;)
About an hour or so after the Angels finished losing to the White Sox in a game in the old Comiskey Park in 1986, I was walking with some buddies through the halls near where Reggie Jackson was signing autographs for a couple of kids. We couldn't get by him so I said "Excuse me." Reggie turned around and told me to "Fuck off. I'm only signing for these kids." I told him that I didn't want the autograph of a guy that has struck out more than any other player in the history of the game. I just wanted him to get out of the way so we could get through. He didn't say jack. He just moved.
For those on the fence, that incident may indeed prove the existence of a divine creator... :D

On a more positive note:
Norm Charlton was charging $10 or so for autos at a convention in Indy back in 1996.
He asked me if I was a Reds fan. I told him I was and mentioned that one of my favorite Reds plays of all time was when he steamrolled Mike Scioscia at the plate with the winning run back in a 1991 game.
He got this HUGE grin on his face and gave me my three autos for free. Score!


Last edited by spotes on Mon May 09, 2011 11:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: A most creative post...
PostPosted: Mon May 09, 2011 11:45 pm 
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Tolle wrote:
Cloudy wrote:
Wake up guys. Where have you gone...?

Maybe this is something that will evoke a response...

Regardless of the league they played in, who would you place on your all-time best baseball team? You may select 2 players for each position, two designated hitters, and five pitchers. (Yeah, you can even use the steroid boys, if you want.)

p.s. I'm holding my list back, so I can cheat, and steal your ideas... :lol:

p.p.s. Don't worry, there are no wrong answers. (Perhaps some dumb ones, but you can't be wrong.) This is just your opinion, so let's hear it.


P - Mike LaCoss (made an all-star game), Bruce Berenyi (I won a bet on a game he pitched), Paul Moskau (Has a city named after him), Frank Pastore (One of these days his potential will be reached), Charlie Leibrandt (I think he is still pitching)

RP - Tom Hume (Boom Boom Hume... he'd Boom them in and they'd Boom them out), Doug Bair (My 1980 program says his name spells relief), Ted Power (Gawd, he was great!), Manny Sarmiento (I think he threw side-armed), Danny Graves

C - Dave Van Gorder (Best Van Gorder to ever play the game), Dann Bilardello (So good he had to add an extra n to Dan)

1b - Dan Driessen (Hit a home run in Tom Seaver's no hitter), Todd Benzinger (Caught the last out of the 90 Series)

2b - Ron Oester (Oester... what more do I need to say), Tom Lawless (Was traded straight-up for Peter Edward Rose)

ss - Rick Auerbach (Was the starting 3b Opening Day the year after Rose left and was still stud enough to man short), Pokie Reese (So great the Reds wouldn't add him in the trade for Ken Griffey Jr.)

3b - Wayne Krenchicki (No one can argue this one), Pete Rose Jr. (I think he got a hit once)

LF - Paul Householder (I got a bat with his autograph on it), Gary Redus (Was a rare 15/40 guy)

CF - Eddie Milner (If it wasn't for coke he would be a HOFer), Dave Collins (Stole a bunch of bases)

RF - Glenn Braggs (He could break a bat on a check swing), Duane Walker (I remember he made a nice catch against the Astros in about 84)

No DH

Manager - Vern Rapp (Almost made it through a season)


TOLLE, that was a most creative post. You know your baseball shit. I doubt many of us could have come up with your selections. However, if the door is still open, you need to consider adding Eddie Yost (The walking man), Charlie Maxwell (Mr. Sunday), and Clyde Vollmer (The poor man's Ted Williams) to your team. :lol:

p.s. I love your sense of humor. :D

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 Post subject: A nice baseball autograph story...
PostPosted: Tue May 10, 2011 12:34 am 
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A nice baseball autograph story...

Back in the late 1980's the owner of the Louisville Redbirds AAA team, A. Ray Smith, would bring old time baseball players into the downtown Louisville Galleria about once a month to sign autographs. Billy Martin was coming...!

That morning, before I went to work, I got all of his baseball cards I had, my Sharpie pen, and grabbed my Polaroid camera. I wanted my oldest daughter to get to meet him too, so I took off early from work, and drove out to her school to pick her up. Driving back into town I hit terrible traffic, had to park the car, and ran through the south doors of the Galleria. As I came through the doors with my daughter, I saw Billy and his entourage walking out the north doors of the Galleria. No one was still there. I got there too late. It was over.

I dashed through the Galleria, and out the north doors behind them, as they were walking away. I yelled at them, "Mr. Martin, I got here late, but I would like to get your autograph." The people with him yelled back at me that the signing was over. However, Billy thought differntly. He said something to the people, who were with him, turned around, walked back in, and shook my hand. After he had signed all of the baseball cards I had brought with me, I asked him if he would mind if I took some pictures of him with my daughter. No poblem he said. After that was done, he asked me, if I would like to be in one too. I told him of course I would, so he got someone from his group to come back in to take pictures of him, my daughter, and myself together.

Billy Martin gets a lot of bad press, but in my book, HE IS THE BEST...! ! !

Image

Sadly, Billy died in a car accident not long after that day.

p.s. Billy also signed the polaroid pictures that were taken that afternoon.

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Last edited by Cloudy on Thu May 12, 2011 12:17 am, edited 6 times in total.

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 Post subject: Re: THE BASEBALL THREAD.
PostPosted: Tue May 10, 2011 8:46 am 
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In honor of my beloved Pirates being over .500 for this late in the season for the PBB (post Barry Bonds & Bobby Bonilla):

Pitchers:

Dock Ellis--my hero; threw no hitter while tripping on acid. On the roster listed as ELLIS, D!

Steve Blass--World Series hero; couldn't find the strike zone after, alledgedly, catching his wife playing pitch & catch with team's "other " second baseman.

Mudcat Grant--while the A's had Catfish Hunter, we had the MUDCAT; he kinda looked like a catfish

Bob Moose/Bob Veale--if you could combine these two, you'd have one great pitcher; if you could make Moose Veal, you'd have one great meat.

Closer--Dave Giusti--looked like an insurance salesman, talked like a mafia boss. My first understanding of a closer.

Catcher--Manny Sanguillen--a base-stealing catcher nicked named "The Road Runner"; dude was always smiling a big gap-toothed grin and swinging at any pitch remotely near the plate.

1st base--Bob Robertson; oringinal member of "The Band"...wait, wrong guy. Hero of the '71 World Series, when he homered instead of heeding the bunt sign given to him. Plus, he had these huge mutton chops.

2nd base-Bill Mazeroski--HoF player, finally, and World Series Hero in '60. He was on the roster of the '71 Champs, but played sparingly. But he's Maz, so he's starting.

SS--Gene Alley--his neice married my cousin David. I always thought he was under-rated, but I saw something on the MLB channel about all-time best double play tandems that included the duo of Maz & Alley. And them there baseball channel peoples is smart!

3rd base--Richie Hebner--first time I ever saw a bat that the handle was a nub was one of Hebners. Pudgy dude could hit. Plus, he had the thin porn mustache that was all the rage at third (See Ron Cey).

Outfield:

LF--Al Oliver--also rocked the porn 'stache. Could play anywhere in the outfield & 1st base. He made the game look easy and was one cool cat. I have an autographed picture somewhere.

CF--Roberto Clemente--3,000 hits, great fielder, cannon arm. I grew up getting to watch him play and was amazed, especially with his base-running abilities. Best player I ever saw play in person.

RF--Willie Stargell--"Chicken on the Hill with Will"; "Pops" was the heart and soul of the Pirates after the death of Clemente. I think he had the longest home run hit in three or four different stadiums at one time. I know that there was a seat at Three Rivers in the upper deck that was a different color than the other seats, noting where one of Pops home runs landed.

Utility--Richie Zisk--could play infield or outfield, hit with power when he wasn't striking out. I think he ended up with the White Sox. Fisk...Zisk...whatever.

Play-by-Play: Bob 'The Gunner" Prince and Nelly King---The "Royal Family" of broadcasters: Home Run in an Elevator Shaft, Bugs on the Rug, Lumber and Lightning, Big Can of Corn, A Bloop and a Blast, Got Him by a Gnat's Eyelash...all catch phrases that I heard from the Gunner as a kid listening to the radio. The new stadium has the "Gunner Lounge".

Manager--Lloyd McClendon--losing record, never had a winning season, but the guy stole second base. Not as a player, but as a manager. He took the fucking base and went to the clubhouse with it after being ejected. Now' that's my kind of manager!

FWIW--I could not name a player other than McCoutchen (and I may have misspelled that name) in the 2011 Pirates starting line-up. Usually, the person that the Pirates use in their advertisng campaign is traded before the deadline. Hopefully, this does not happen this year.


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 Post subject: Re: THE BASEBALL THREAD.
PostPosted: Tue May 10, 2011 2:36 pm 
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tiefly wrote:
In honor of my beloved Pirates being over .500 for this late in the season for the PBB (post Barry Bonds & Bobby Bonilla):

Pitchers:

Dock Ellis--my hero; threw no hitter while tripping on acid. On the roster listed as ELLIS, D!

Steve Blass--World Series hero; couldn't find the strike zone after, alledgedly, catching his wife playing pitch & catch with team's "other " second baseman.

Mudcat Grant--while the A's had Catfish Hunter, we had the MUDCAT; he kinda looked like a catfish

Bob Moose/Bob Veale--if you could combine these two, you'd have one great pitcher; if you could make Moose Veal, you'd have one great meat.

Closer--Dave Giusti--looked like an insurance salesman, talked like a mafia boss. My first understanding of a closer.

Catcher--Manny Sanguillen--a base-stealing catcher nicked named "The Road Runner"; dude was always smiling a big gap-toothed grin and swinging at any pitch remotely near the plate.

1st base--Bob Robertson; oringinal member of "The Band"...wait, wrong guy. Hero of the '71 World Series, when he homered instead of heeding the bunt sign given to him. Plus, he had these huge mutton chops.

2nd base-Bill Mazeroski--HoF player, finally, and World Series Hero in '60. He was on the roster of the '71 Champs, but played sparingly. But he's Maz, so he's starting.

SS--Gene Alley--his neice married my cousin David. I always thought he was under-rated, but I saw something on the MLB channel about all-time best double play tandems that included the duo of Maz & Alley. And them there baseball channel peoples is smart!

3rd base--Richie Hebner--first time I ever saw a bat that the handle was a nub was one of Hebners. Pudgy dude could hit. Plus, he had the thin porn mustache that was all the rage at third (See Ron Cey).

Outfield:

LF--Al Oliver--also rocked the porn 'stache. Could play anywhere in the outfield & 1st base. He made the game look easy and was one cool cat. I have an autographed picture somewhere.

CF--Roberto Clemente--3,000 hits, great fielder, cannon arm. I grew up getting to watch him play and was amazed, especially with his base-running abilities. Best player I ever saw play in person.

RF--Willie Stargell--"Chicken on the Hill with Will"; "Pops" was the heart and soul of the Pirates after the death of Clemente. I think he had the longest home run hit in three or four different stadiums at one time. I know that there was a seat at Three Rivers in the upper deck that was a different color than the other seats, noting where one of Pops home runs landed.

Utility--Richie Zisk--could play infield or outfield, hit with power when he wasn't striking out. I think he ended up with the White Sox. Fisk...Zisk...whatever.

Play-by-Play: Bob 'The Gunner" Prince and Nelly King---The "Royal Family" of broadcasters: Home Run in an Elevator Shaft, Bugs on the Rug, Lumber and Lightning, Big Can of Corn, A Bloop and a Blast, Got Him by a Gnat's Eyelash...all catch phrases that I heard from the Gunner as a kid listening to the radio. The new stadium has the "Gunner Lounge".

Manager--Lloyd McClendon--losing record, never had a winning season, but the guy stole second base. Not as a player, but as a manager. He took the fucking base and went to the clubhouse with it after being ejected. Now' that's my kind of manager!

FWIW--I could not name a player other than McCoutchen (and I may have misspelled that name) in the 2011 Pirates starting line-up. Usually, the person that the Pirates use in their advertisng campaign is traded before the deadline. Hopefully, this does not happen this year.


You're forgetting Rennie Stinnett... 7 hits in a game isn't too shabby and Kent Tekulve - he makes me look fat.


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 Post subject: Another very creative list...
PostPosted: Tue May 10, 2011 8:39 pm 
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tiefly wrote:
In honor of my beloved Pirates being over .500 for this late in the season for the PBB (post Barry Bonds & Bobby Bonilla):

Pitchers:

Dock Ellis--my hero; threw no hitter while tripping on acid. On the roster listed as ELLIS, D!

Steve Blass--World Series hero; couldn't find the strike zone after, alledgedly, catching his wife playing pitch & catch with team's "other " second baseman.

Mudcat Grant--while the A's had Catfish Hunter, we had the MUDCAT; he kinda looked like a catfish

Bob Moose/Bob Veale--if you could combine these two, you'd have one great pitcher; if you could make Moose Veal, you'd have one great meat.

Closer--Dave Giusti--looked like an insurance salesman, talked like a mafia boss. My first understanding of a closer.

Catcher--Manny Sanguillen--a base-stealing catcher nicked named "The Road Runner"; dude was always smiling a big gap-toothed grin and swinging at any pitch remotely near the plate.

1st base--Bob Robertson; oringinal member of "The Band"...wait, wrong guy. Hero of the '71 World Series, when he homered instead of heeding the bunt sign given to him. Plus, he had these huge mutton chops.

2nd base-Bill Mazeroski--HoF player, finally, and World Series Hero in '60. He was on the roster of the '71 Champs, but played sparingly. But he's Maz, so he's starting.

SS--Gene Alley--his neice married my cousin David. I always thought he was under-rated, but I saw something on the MLB channel about all-time best double play tandems that included the duo of Maz & Alley. And them there baseball channel peoples is smart!

3rd base--Richie Hebner--first time I ever saw a bat that the handle was a nub was one of Hebners. Pudgy dude could hit. Plus, he had the thin porn mustache that was all the rage at third (See Ron Cey).

Outfield:

LF--Al Oliver--also rocked the porn 'stache. Could play anywhere in the outfield & 1st base. He made the game look easy and was one cool cat. I have an autographed picture somewhere.

CF--Roberto Clemente--3,000 hits, great fielder, cannon arm. I grew up getting to watch him play and was amazed, especially with his base-running abilities. Best player I ever saw play in person.

RF--Willie Stargell--"Chicken on the Hill with Will"; "Pops" was the heart and soul of the Pirates after the death of Clemente. I think he had the longest home run hit in three or four different stadiums at one time. I know that there was a seat at Three Rivers in the upper deck that was a different color than the other seats, noting where one of Pops home runs landed.

Utility--Richie Zisk--could play infield or outfield, hit with power when he wasn't striking out. I think he ended up with the White Sox. Fisk...Zisk...whatever.

Play-by-Play: Bob 'The Gunner" Prince and Nelly King---The "Royal Family" of broadcasters: Home Run in an Elevator Shaft, Bugs on the Rug, Lumber and Lightning, Big Can of Corn, A Bloop and a Blast, Got Him by a Gnat's Eyelash...all catch phrases that I heard from the Gunner as a kid listening to the radio. The new stadium has the "Gunner Lounge".

Manager--Lloyd McClendon--losing record, never had a winning season, but the guy stole second base. Not as a player, but as a manager. He took the fucking base and went to the clubhouse with it after being ejected. Now' that's my kind of manager!

FWIW--I could not name a player other than McCoutchen (and I may have misspelled that name) in the 2011 Pirates starting line-up. Usually, the person that the Pirates use in their advertisng campaign is traded before the deadline. Hopefully, this does not happen this year.


TIEFLY,

You (as TOLLE) have come up with a most creative post. Your comments about your selections are a hoot. I'm thinking that I was too serious, and should have taken a more humorus approach to this question. Hell, maybe I will, but you guys have beaten me to it. :(

However, maybe you and TOLLE went this way, because all of the serious best players of all time were already taken by the rest of us. :lol:

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 Post subject: Treat people right...
PostPosted: Tue May 10, 2011 11:17 pm 
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spotes wrote:
On a more positive note:
Norm Charlton was charging $10 or so for autos at a convention in Indy back in 1996.
He asked me if I was a Reds fan. I told him I was and mentioned that one of my favorite Reds plays of all time was when he steamrolled Mike Scioscia at the plate with the winning run back in a 1991 game.
He got this HUGE grin on his face and gave me my three autos for free. Score!


Treat people right, and they will usually respond in kind. Way to go! Got a feeling that you have a way with people. :D

p.s. My autograph doesn't cost all that much, but you could probably get it from me for free, just as long as it isn't at the bottom of a check. :lol:

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 Post subject: Re: THE BASEBALL THREAD.
PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2011 6:39 am 
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Joined: Mon Jan 11, 2010 11:54 am
Posts: 1665
Tolle wrote:
tiefly wrote:
In honor of my beloved Pirates being over .500 for this late in the season for the PBB (post Barry Bonds & Bobby Bonilla):

Pitchers:

Dock Ellis--my hero; threw no hitter while tripping on acid. On the roster listed as ELLIS, D!

Steve Blass--World Series hero; couldn't find the strike zone after, alledgedly, catching his wife playing pitch & catch with team's "other " second baseman.

Mudcat Grant--while the A's had Catfish Hunter, we had the MUDCAT; he kinda looked like a catfish

Bob Moose/Bob Veale--if you could combine these two, you'd have one great pitcher; if you could make Moose Veal, you'd have one great meat.

Closer--Dave Giusti--looked like an insurance salesman, talked like a mafia boss. My first understanding of a closer.

Catcher--Manny Sanguillen--a base-stealing catcher nicked named "The Road Runner"; dude was always smiling a big gap-toothed grin and swinging at any pitch remotely near the plate.

1st base--Bob Robertson; oringinal member of "The Band"...wait, wrong guy. Hero of the '71 World Series, when he homered instead of heeding the bunt sign given to him. Plus, he had these huge mutton chops.

2nd base-Bill Mazeroski--HoF player, finally, and World Series Hero in '60. He was on the roster of the '71 Champs, but played sparingly. But he's Maz, so he's starting.

SS--Gene Alley--his neice married my cousin David. I always thought he was under-rated, but I saw something on the MLB channel about all-time best double play tandems that included the duo of Maz & Alley. And them there baseball channel peoples is smart!

3rd base--Richie Hebner--first time I ever saw a bat that the handle was a nub was one of Hebners. Pudgy dude could hit. Plus, he had the thin porn mustache that was all the rage at third (See Ron Cey).

Outfield:

LF--Al Oliver--also rocked the porn 'stache. Could play anywhere in the outfield & 1st base. He made the game look easy and was one cool cat. I have an autographed picture somewhere.

CF--Roberto Clemente--3,000 hits, great fielder, cannon arm. I grew up getting to watch him play and was amazed, especially with his base-running abilities. Best player I ever saw play in person.

RF--Willie Stargell--"Chicken on the Hill with Will"; "Pops" was the heart and soul of the Pirates after the death of Clemente. I think he had the longest home run hit in three or four different stadiums at one time. I know that there was a seat at Three Rivers in the upper deck that was a different color than the other seats, noting where one of Pops home runs landed.

Utility--Richie Zisk--could play infield or outfield, hit with power when he wasn't striking out. I think he ended up with the White Sox. Fisk...Zisk...whatever.

Play-by-Play: Bob 'The Gunner" Prince and Nelly King---The "Royal Family" of broadcasters: Home Run in an Elevator Shaft, Bugs on the Rug, Lumber and Lightning, Big Can of Corn, A Bloop and a Blast, Got Him by a Gnat's Eyelash...all catch phrases that I heard from the Gunner as a kid listening to the radio. The new stadium has the "Gunner Lounge".

Manager--Lloyd McClendon--losing record, never had a winning season, but the guy stole second base. Not as a player, but as a manager. He took the fucking base and went to the clubhouse with it after being ejected. Now' that's my kind of manager!

FWIW--I could not name a player other than McCoutchen (and I may have misspelled that name) in the 2011 Pirates starting line-up. Usually, the person that the Pirates use in their advertisng campaign is traded before the deadline. Hopefully, this does not happen this year.


You're forgetting Rennie Stinnett... 7 hits in a game isn't too shabby and Kent Tekulve - he makes me look fat.


All the players I named were part of the 1971 World Series champions. And you must not have seen Teke lately...he's got a belly as big as Looper's head!

And on an odd note: Steve Blass is one of the announcers for the Pirates. It being the 40th anniversary year of the '71 championship, it seems that the club is honoring the players from that team.

As part of that, Blass and Bob Robertson re-enacted Blass's leap into the arms of Robertson after the final out to end the series.

I hadn't thought about Bob Robertson in years...then twice in one day...EGADS!!!

Oh, and the Pirates lost last night.


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 Post subject: The Designated Hitter...?
PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2011 8:52 pm 
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The Designated Hitter...?

When the American League adopted the designated hitter back in 1973, at first I didn't like it, because it changed the game. However, over the years I have changed my mind. I understand that the DH eliminates a lot of strategy, but I think it makes the game more exciting. I now think that putting pitchers in the batter's box, for what is usually a sure out, doesn't help attract new fans. (Yep, I know there have been a few pitchers, who could hit, like Babe Ruth, but not many.)

[color=#BFFFFF] ........................................................... Image

What do you guys think?

p.s. Babe Ruth is now on my all-time best baseball players team as a DH. :lol:

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 Post subject: Re: The Designated Hitter...?
PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2011 9:49 pm 
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Cloudy wrote:
The Designated Hitter...?

When the American League adopted the designated hitter back in 1973, at first I didn't like it, because it changed the game. However, over the years I have changed my mind. I understand that the DH eliminates a lot of strategy, but I think it makes the game more exciting. I now think that putting pitchers in the batter's box, for what is usually a sure out, doesn't help attract new fans. (Yep, I know there have been a few pitchers, who could hit, like Babe Ruth, but not many.)

What do you guys think?

p.s. Babe Ruth is now on my all-time best baseball players team as a DH. :lol:


I find that I like watching low-scoring games, and I wish there were more of them. (No, I'm not being sarcastic, and I realize I'm in the minority.) The 13-7 game to me reeks of two teams that cannot pitch and cannot play defense and I frankly find such games boring, in part because such games take so darned long. Conversely, the 1-0 game just seems to have a higher level of play, and the game is certainly close. Eliminating designated hitters would be a step in what I would consider the right direction. The designated hitter is not going away, unfortunately, but I think baseball would be better off without it.

And no, pitchers are not automatic outs, although they tend to be the worst hitters on the team. Generally, they hit around .150 or so, so they do hit the ball sometimes. And the pitcher who can hit is an advantage; Bob GIbson, as I recall, was one such pitcher. Fernando Valenzuela could hit also.

No, I wouldn't want every game to end up 1-0, but I think as a rule baseball had become a little too high-scoring for most of the '90s and '00s; although last season did appear to be an improvement.

-- RWM

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 Post subject: Re: The DH...
PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2011 10:28 pm 
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Don't like the DH, never have, never will.

It takes away from the purity of the game. I understand that it has extended the careers of some players but at what cost? Who is to say whether the DH prevented someone with talent from being called up. How many 'superstars' have we missed out on because of it?

While the AL batting average in '73 jumped from .239 to .259, the NL also increased from .248 to .254* & the AL has led ever since. The DH muddies the waters.


On a slightly different tangent, we need to lose the baseball 'pajamas' many of the players wear these days, looks stooopud. Bring back the high stockings with the stirrups.



*from BaseballPress.com

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 Post subject: Another "No can delete" post
PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2011 11:10 pm 
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Another "No can delete" post.

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Last edited by Cloudy on Thu May 12, 2011 12:09 am, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Who was the 1st National Leaguer to hit 2 grand slams...
PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2011 11:31 pm 
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Who was the 1st National Leaguer to hit 2 grand slams in one game?

(It was many years before someone else did it.)

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 Post subject: 1 to 0 is okay with me...
PostPosted: Wed May 11, 2011 11:36 pm 
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zog741 wrote:
No, I wouldn't want every game to end up 1-0... RWM


1 to 0 is okay with me, just so long as the Boston Red Sox have the "1" :lol:

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 Post subject: I like that "purity" idea...
PostPosted: Thu May 12, 2011 12:07 am 
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THE ICEMAN wrote:
It takes away from the purity of the game.


I like that "purity" idea...

How about putting the home plate umpire back behind the pitcher...? I believe that's were he originally stood to call balls and strikes. :D

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 Post subject: Not quite what I said...
PostPosted: Thu May 12, 2011 12:26 am 
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[quote="zog741"] And no, pitchers are not automatic outs...quote]

Not quite what I said...

To quote myself, "I now think that putting pitchers in the batter's box, for what is usually a sure out ..." I stuck the word "usually" in, and in itallics, because I know there are exceptions. :D

p.s. Don't worry man. I still love you. You're a good guy. :D

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 Post subject: Re: THE BASEBALL THREAD.
PostPosted: Thu May 12, 2011 6:35 am 
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I think a guy who doesn't even need to own a glove and can watch an episode of Dancing with the Stars before he is needed again is not a baseball player. Who wants to watch Shaq shot a free throw(besides the team he is playing)? Doesn't mean a designated free throw shooter is a good idea.

Can the DH.


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 Post subject: Re: Who was the 1st National Leaguer to hit 2 grand slams...
PostPosted: Thu May 12, 2011 10:13 am 
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Cloudy wrote:
Who was the 1st National Leaguer to hit 2 grand slams in one game?

(It was many years before someone else did it.)

Well, IIRC, it was Tony Cloninger of The Braves...a pitcher. Image

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 Post subject: Re: 1 to 0 is okay with me...
PostPosted: Thu May 12, 2011 10:16 am 
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Cloudy wrote:
zog741 wrote:
No, I wouldn't want every game to end up 1-0... RWM

1 to 0 is okay with me, just so long as the Boston Red Sox have the "1" :lol:

NUTS! That eternally damnable evil empire 1b, a/k/a as the eternally damnable FBOSOX, deserve the zero. Image

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 Post subject: Re: 1 to 0 is okay with me...
PostPosted: Thu May 12, 2011 12:05 pm 
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liljol wrote:
Cloudy wrote:
zog741 wrote:
No, I wouldn't want every game to end up 1-0... RWM

1 to 0 is okay with me, just so long as the Boston Red Sox have the "1" :lol:

NUTS! That eternally damnable evil empire 1b, a/k/a as the eternally damnable FBOSOX, deserve the zero. Image


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Yes! Yes! Jackie Jensen has officially hit 10,000 rpm! :mrgreen:


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