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*** VD 13 Commentary Thread ***

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  • Meh, this might as well be the mock discussion now.

    So, as I was saying, you guys just plain suck at this. You shoulda been drafting studs like Gene Garber and Mark Lemke and Biff Pocoroba.
    More American children die by gunfire in a year than on-duty police officers and active duty military.

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    • Originally posted by Bene Futuis View Post
      Meh, this might as well be the mock discussion now.

      So, as I was saying, you guys just plain suck at this. You shoulda been drafting studs like Gene Garber and Mark Lemke and Biff Pocoroba.
      I did a write-up on Biff Pocoroba in my old "Let's Remember a Guy" thread. It's amazing how baseball has changed from the 1970s. Teams actually used to use a roster spot or two on 3rd string catchers and pinch hitters, and ol' Biff made a career out of that. He'd never survive today.

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      • Originally posted by revo View Post
        I did a write-up on Biff Pocoroba in my old "Let's Remember a Guy" thread. It's amazing how baseball has changed from the 1970s. Teams actually used to use a roster spot or two on 3rd string catchers and pinch hitters, and ol' Biff made a career out of that. He'd never survive today.
        Yet, strangely, he's the 2nd best player on the Braves behind only Adeiny Hechavarría.
        More American children die by gunfire in a year than on-duty police officers and active duty military.

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        • Originally posted by Bene Futuis View Post
          Yet, strangely, he's the 2nd best player on the Braves behind only Adeiny Hechavarría.
          Apparently he owns and operates "Sausage World" in Norcross, Georgia and it gets great reviews, too!

          He also holds the record for the longest MLB career for anyone named "Biff."

          Comment


          • Originally posted by revo View Post
            I did a write-up on Biff Pocoroba in my old "Let's Remember a Guy" thread. It's amazing how baseball has changed from the 1970s. Teams actually used to use a roster spot or two on 3rd string catchers and pinch hitters, and ol' Biff made a career out of that. He'd never survive today.
            That was one of the best threads on the site. Miss that one
            I'm not expecting to grow flowers in the desert...

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            • #31 Greg Maddux
              I'm not expecting to grow flowers in the desert...

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              • Originally posted by heyelander View Post
                #31 Greg Maddux
                Indeed he was.
                "Jesus said to them, 'Truly I tell you, the tax collectors and the prostitutes are going into the kingdom of God ahead of you.'"

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                • Originally posted by revo View Post
                  Apparently he owns and operates "Sausage World" in Norcross, Georgia and it gets great reviews, too!

                  He also holds the record for the longest MLB career for anyone named "Biff."
                  Southern Abe Froman ?
                  ---------------------------------------------
                  Champagne for breakfast and a Sherman in my hand !
                  ---------------------------------------------
                  The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.
                  George Orwell, 1984

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by revo View Post
                    Apparently he owns and operates "Sausage World" in Norcross, Georgia and it gets great reviews, too!

                    He also holds the record for the longest MLB career for anyone named "Biff."
                    And then he told Seitzer to make like a tree and get outta here!
                    More American children die by gunfire in a year than on-duty police officers and active duty military.

                    Comment


                    • I guess if you want to learn confidence, it's good to study under someone who has navigated life with the name Dick Pole.

                      Then he got off to such a bad start at spring training in 1988 that he couldn’t even sleep at night. In Maddux’s mind — and this is important to know when looking at his career — the words “pitching” and “confidence” were practically synonyms. He never felt like he was throwing baseballs out there. He was throwing confidence. Each pitch in his mind was measured not so much by movement and location as by conviction.

                      He worked through things in spring training, and by Opening Day he did feel more positive and self-assured. He threw a three-hit shutout to kick things off in Atlanta.

                      “I’m just more confident out there,” he told the press after that one.

                      Then he went to St. Louis and pitched well again. And yet again, he felt better about himself. During the offseason, he’d gone down to pitch in Venezuela and he had worked with pitching coach Dick Pole on a more devastating curveball. He had grown to like that pitch a lot.

                      “Last year, if I threw 100 pitches, I’d throw five curveballs,” he said after the St. Louis game. “This year, if I throw 100 pitches, I’m throwing between 20 and 30 curveballs. I just have so much more confidence in that pitch.”
                      ...

                      But Maddux legends? They’re a whole other thing.

                      There is a legend that once Maddux was sitting in the dugout watching the game closely. And then, suddenly, he turned to a teammate sitting next to him and said, “Watch out.” The next pitch was lined foul directly at the teammate’s head, and he ducked out of the way just in time.

                      There is a legend that in 2006, his Dodgers teammate Brad Penny, who was coming off a game where he got badly roughed up by the Mets, asked Maddux if he would call the pitches for him from the dugout the next time out. Maddux did. The game was against the Cubs. Penny threw seven shutout innings, striking out six and walking nobody.

                      There is a legend that, while watching José Hernández batting, Maddux noticed a slight shift in the batting stance. “We might have to call an ambulance for their first base coach,” he told a teammate. The next pitch, blam, a line drive smashed into the chest of Dodgers first base coach John Shelby.

                      There is a legend that once, when asked to intentionally walk a batter, Maddux told manager Bobby Cox, “Why would I do that?” He then explained that he would throw three pitches, and on the third one, he would get the batter to hit a pop-foul to third.

                      Do I even need to tell you what happened?

                      There’s a legend that once when he was with the Cubs, Maddux just started screaming at Atlanta’s David Justice for no apparent reason. After Justice struck out, he was enraged. He never forgot it. Later, when they were teammates, Justice asked Maddux why he did that. “Why do you think?” Maddux said. “To get in your head. And it worked.”

                      There’s a legend — my favorite legend, not least because it’s definitely true — that after he won his 17th Gold Glove, breaking Jim Kaat’s record, he got a congratulatory message from Kaat. But, Kaat pointed out that he still held the record for oldest modern pitcher to ever steal a base. Kaat was 41 in 1980 when he swiped a base against the Pirates.

                      In July that year, when playing for the Padres against the Braves, Maddux knocked a single off Charlie Morton and then, yep, stole second base. He was 42 years old.

                      I mean, I have no idea how Maddux isn’t everybody’s favorite pitcher ever.
                      I'm not expecting to grow flowers in the desert...

                      Comment


                      • So seriously... where the fuck did Pauly come from? How did he end up here, and more importantly, where did he go?
                        I'm not expecting to grow flowers in the desert...

                        Comment


                        • I need to know this because if random people are going to start popping in here I really need to stop shit talking about random people from the board.
                          I'm not expecting to grow flowers in the desert...

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by heyelander View Post
                            So seriously... where the fuck did Pauly come from? How did he end up here, and more importantly, where did he go?
                            Wow...nice to meet you too

                            Comment


                            • Seriously though... no, actually I'm seriously concerned I need to stop shit talking people, but other seriously, Hey Pauly... welcome to the friendliest (me aside) thread on the board... stay a while. There's a new game (supposedly) winding up... come play.
                              I'm not expecting to grow flowers in the desert...

                              Comment


                              • I always thought one of the benefits of having 8000 posts in here about Amish toothpaste is that outsiders would die of boredom before running across the shit we talked about them.
                                "Jesus said to them, 'Truly I tell you, the tax collectors and the prostitutes are going into the kingdom of God ahead of you.'"

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