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To a young Red Sox fan, the sight of a player going up into the seats at Yankee Stadium to get his hat was totally badass. Maybe irrationally so, but that's the "young" part.
(Unless it's a super hot chick fan, but that's just me).
And the parting of the sea reference is a clear reference to Clemens roiding in 1986....
"notasgoodasroywhite"
I did not know this. I feel so uneducated.
But hey! Maybe that's why he was so feared! (rim shot)
"I was on the mound, warming up," pitcher Joe Sambito said. "I was in my motion when I looked at the plate and saw that Rich Gedman, the catcher, wasn't there. I wondered where he went. Then I saw what was happening. Everyone went."
Rice wound up wrestling the hat free from the 27-year-old genius. McNamara wound up behind pitcher Oil Can Boyd, who suddenly was having trouble with someone stealing HIS hat. McNamara went to help Boyd and then Don Baylor came along to help McNamara.
"My bodyguard," McNamara said. "He ended it right there. He pulled away the hat and the guy just sort of sat in a seat and Baylor said, 'Stay there.' "
LaSchelle Tarver, the rookie outfielder, won immediate points for good planning. He carried his bat with him into the stands. ("I don't know," he said, "it just followed me out there.") Marc Sullivan went in wearing a batting helmet. Roger Clemens, in what must be his arguing style, turned his hat backward, and vaulted the railing in a rush.
Get a Connecticut State Library card if you can. They have ProQuest.
LOTS of press in 86 about how good Baylor was for the Sox. He finished 13th in the MVP voting, including one 2ND PLACE VOTE, despite being a slow DH with a .238 batting avg.
Quick trivia - Don Baylor drove in 100 runs only ONCE in his career.
The Baylor mystique:
1985, Yankees - 97 wins, second place (this was just before the beginning of the hype)
1986, Red Sox - 95 wins, AL pennant
1987, traded to MN late, but - WS championship
1988, Oakland - 104 wins, AL pennant
A "those winning teams just followed him around" type of deal. He showed later it was probably more of a Forrest Gump type situation.
And got a ######## MVP award to show for it. I wonder if Baylor would have protected McNamara if he knew that Mac would later leave him on the bench instead of pinch-hitting him for Buckner in the Series.
No doubt in my mind that Rice was stronger than Baylor, and he was probably stronger than the wiry, young Roger Clemens of 1986. Oh, and he was feared. FEARED!
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