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Monday, March 23, 2009

Sloppy trousers could cost Span

Countdown to Smitty…

Major League Baseball is cracking down on players who pull the legs of their pants too far over their cleats—with a close eye on Twins outfielder Denard Span.

Span has been warned that he will be fined $1,000 by the league after he was caught with his pants over his shoes during a series in Baltimore last season.

In fact, Twins manager Ron Gardenhire had to read a letter to the players on Thursday about the crackdown—a letter that included a photo of Span in a take-out slide with the bottom of his pants looped over the back of his spikes.

Span said on Sunday that, if that’s the game in question, then he’s a victim of circumstance. He said one pants leg got hooked under a cleat.

“I didn’t realize until after the game when I had a hole in the bottom of my pants from the cleat,” he said. “The following day, the USA Today showed me taking out the second baseman. If it wasn’t for the picture USA Today took—so I blame USA Today—no one would have found out.”

Span laughed after he said that. But he maintained he never wears his pants that low, so it should never happen again.

Repoz Posted: March 23, 2009 at 12:37 PM | 32 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralSpecial TopicsMinnesota

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   1. phredbird  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 12:12 PM (#3111566)
Span has been warned that he will be fined $1,000 by the league after he was caught with his pants over his shoes during a series in Baltimore last season.


YES!!!!

now if only the league would go one step further and make them pull up high enough to show calf.

this is one of my alltime pet peeves.
   2. robinred  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 12:21 PM (#3111592)
Sloppy trousers could cost Span


Mariotti knew it all along.
   3. villageidiom  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 12:21 PM (#3111593)
I think the $1 million Manny is contributing to charity as part of his new contract is actually an advance payment for uniform violations in the next two years.
   4. Steve Treder  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 12:25 PM (#3111598)
This is one of my pet peeves, too.

Isn't the point of having team members wear uniforms that they be, you know, "uniform?" Either require every player to wear his pants down or up or in between, but the idea that everybody should choose how his uniform looks is absurd.
   5. Van Lingle Mungo Jerry  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 12:33 PM (#3111619)
Where's Smitty to comment on this?
   6. Pasta-diving Jeter (jmac66)  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 12:35 PM (#3111624)
Either require every player to wear his pants down or up or in between, but the idea that everybody should choose how his uniform looks is absurd.

how about wearing your cap at a jaunty angle?
   7. Primakov is once again done with politics  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 12:48 PM (#3111650)
villageidiom FTW.
   8. Primakov is once again done with politics  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 01:09 PM (#3111695)
how about wearing your cap at a jaunty angle?


I read this as "cup". Yes, that's wrong.
   9. Pujols Shot Ya  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 01:12 PM (#3111701)
who cares how they wear them? as long as they're not on my lawn...
   10. flournoy  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 01:25 PM (#3111723)
Calf-high socks, preferably with stirrups, caps with curved bills facing straight forward. Home whites and road grays, while we're at it; no garish alternates.
   11. Crispix Attacks is in the best shape of his life.  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 01:27 PM (#3111726)
How will this affect his Hall of Fame chances?
   12. RichardInDallas  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 01:33 PM (#3111736)
It's about time somebody did SOMETHING, but as usual, too little, too late. The standard ought to be that pants are worn no lower than half way between the knee and ankle. Provide umpires with tape measures and instruct them to use them whenever in doubt or if an opposing manager challenges, with the player being ejected if they are not in compliance. Once again, SIMPLE!! If King George can get away with forcing haircuts and shaves, this should be easy......
   13. csi: bedford falls  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 01:38 PM (#3111747)
Sloppy trousers? Sounds like a digestive issue. More fiber, less sugar.
   14. Chipper Jonestown Massacre  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 01:43 PM (#3111754)
The Cincinnati Reds used to have something like this in the 70's when players used to pull up their stirrups so high that they looked like a stripe.

The Reds said that the stirrups had to stay down low (to show the team colors). They also mandated no visible logo's on the cleats, they had to be solid black.

Reds players had their moment of rebellion when they made the All-Star team and, since they were beyond the reach of the Reds organization, they pulled up their stirrups and wore (usually white) logo-bearing cleats.
   15. phredbird  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 01:48 PM (#3111763)
i know it makes me sound like an old f@rt, but the low trousers make them look really stupid. they don't look like 'ballplayers'. i liked watching bonds play; i like watching ramirez play. but god, their uniforms look ridiculous.
   16. what the hell, just use your initials or something  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 01:54 PM (#3111767)
You really want players to all wear their uniform pants the same way? Easy. Bottom of pant leg = bottom of strike zone, unless bottom of pant leg is above the knee. Bringing back the stirrups will be a little tougher.
   17. Chipper Jonestown Massacre  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 02:00 PM (#3111775)
You really want players to all wear their uniform pants the same way? Easy. Bottom of pant leg = bottom of strike zone...


Well, Vladimir Guerrero could still keep wearing his pant legs all the way down.
   18. Tom Nawrocki  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 02:10 PM (#3111786)
I don't know why you guys get so exercised about this. I prefer the Jim Thome-style high pants too, but allowing the players to flash a bit of their own personal style is a good thing, as is allowing natural trends to take their course.

I like that baseball styles change over time. I don't want the teams to be locked into always wearing 1948-type flannels. Someday we'll look back at a game from 2008 and marvel at the fact that the players were wearing their pants so low, just like we'd look back at a game from 1998 and wonder if goatees were mandatory.
   19. Walt Davis  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 02:16 PM (#3111789)
You know what gets my goat?

Tattoos, earrings, necklaces, sunglasses, batting gloves, and batting helmets. Why, these pussies even wear mitts!!

EDIT: And don't even get me started on the forward pass!
   20. robinred  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 02:28 PM (#3111806)
What's kind of funny about this is that in all ways except the low pants, the absence of stirrups, and the occasional alternate jerseys, unis today are much more "traditional" than they were in the 1970s and 1980s. When I began following baseball as a kid, we had the tight pants, the thin-line stirrups, the powder blue and multi-colored unis, zippers, colored and white shoes, and the elastic waistbands. Even the 1970s Reds even kept those last ones.

Now, the unis are worn baggier, the powder blue is gone except for some retrostuff in KC and Toronto, everybody has belts and buttons, a lot of teams wear black shoes again, and there is a lot of gray and white with teams wearing the alternates once or twice a week.

I personally think strirrups look better than no stirrups, since I am used to them from my childhood, and I am with flournoy on the gray/white road/home thing, but it is not something I think about much.

My "pet peeve" is the alternate black jerseys some teams wear, even if black is not one of the team colors.
   21. Slinger Francisco Barrios (Dr. Memory)  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 02:30 PM (#3111812)
Hey, as long as the pants are covering the ass, I'm good. I can't believe I'd have to say that, but geez, I sort of wonder what the point of pants even is nowadays.

Get off my lawn!
   22. Chipper Jonestown Massacre  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 02:37 PM (#3111825)
Why, these pussies even wear mitts!!


Well, since the first baseball mitts appeared around the mid-1870's, I'd say that line probably sounded more like:

"Why, these honeyfugglers even don feminine accoutrements upon their dainty, child-like hands."
   23. Srul Itza  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 02:37 PM (#3111826)
Where's Smitty when you need him?

Oops -- didn't read the Repoz lead in.

And how dare he make such an un-Repozian, obvious reference!!
   24. Frisco Cali  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 02:44 PM (#3111839)
Back when I played baseball, which they called rounders in those days, we put green pills in our coffee. Made us feel more awake than we really were. So when that featherknocker Tyrus Cobb slid into our face with his sharpened spikes, we'd punch the hell out of him. He was too dumb to care since he was from Georgia. The peanut state. Peanuts, now there's a story...
   25. Charlie O  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 03:06 PM (#3111868)
It seems like there's more concern about the clothes they wear on the team flight than the uniforms they wear on the field. If I owned a team, my players could wear whatever they damn well pleased during travel but on the field, they'd wear the same uniform. I'd let them have the choice between long or short sleeves under the jersey and low, mid, or high top cleats but that's about it. And if they want to grow long hair and a beard, that's okay too. Wear the same uniform as your teammates and I'll even let you sit around on my lawn.
   26. Bhaakon  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 03:17 PM (#3111883)
I actually like that baseball was the least fascist of the big 3 leagues about its on-field dress code.

What's kind of funny about this is that in all ways except the low pants, the absence of stirrups, and the occasional alternate jerseys, unis today are much more "traditional" than they were in the 1970s and 1980s. When I began following baseball as a kid, we had the tight pants, the thin-line stirrups, the powder blue and multi-colored unis, zippers, colored and white shoes, and the elastic waistbands. Even the 1970s Reds even kept those last ones.

Now, the unis are worn baggier, the powder blue is gone except for some retrostuff in KC and Toronto, everybody has belts and buttons, a lot of teams wear black shoes again, and there is a lot of gray and white with teams wearing the alternates once or twice a week.


A few years ago, the Giants wore uniforms from the 20's or 30's. As it turns out, REAL "old school" uniforms makes Manny's baggy pants look like control-top pantyhose. Jason Schmidt had to change back into a normal uniform because he was being blown off the mound.
   27. phredbird  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 03:19 PM (#3111886)
What's kind of funny about this is that in all ways except the low pants, the absence of stirrups, and the occasional alternate jerseys, unis today are much more "traditional" than they were in the 1970s and 1980s.


good point. i guess that's why it galls me so much. the players are one fashion shift away from looking the way i like them to look. like i said, its just one of my pet peeves ... it isn't going to chase me away from the ballpark.
   28. Suff  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 03:27 PM (#3111892)
I prefer powder blues to grays on a lot of teams, the Missouri teams in particular, just as long as they wear belts and button-down jerseys.

I don't like the long baggy pants, but I don't know if they ought to make a rules about them. I just never understood how they could feel comfortable when you play. Seems like playing in trousers that get under your spikes.
   29. Barnaby Jones  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 03:28 PM (#3111893)
I don't know what it says about me that upon reading this headline all I could think about were trouser snakes and sloppy seconds.

No, wait, I do know.
   30. SoSHially Unacceptable  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 03:43 PM (#3111906)
I'm just surprised no one is posting as "Denard's Sloppy Trousers" by now.
   31. Harry Balsagne Teaches The Correct Way to Hit!!  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 05:58 PM (#3112035)
Span just wants to show off his tramp-stamp.
   32. Harry Balsagne Teaches The Correct Way to Hit!!  Posted: March 23, 2009 at 06:00 PM (#3112038)
The first thing I thought of upon reading "sloppy trousers" was that video of George Brett telling a visibly uncomfortable player the story of the last time he #### his pants in vivid detail.
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