Read More...It has been nearly 16 years since Philadelphia lost Richie Ashburn, one of the greatest Phillies players of all time. The beloved Hall of Famer, who played for the team from 1948 through 1959, died of a heart attack in 1997 after broadcasting a Phillies-Mets game from Shea Stadium. His family buried him in the cemetery outside of Gladwyne Methodist Church, where all was quiet until some developers announced plans to turn the church into condos and put a parking lot next to the cemetery. ...
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1. Best Regards, L.M. posted on July 27, 2012 at 09:29 PM # hit 0 | hit 0Those remarks could be consistent with his thinking he was just getting a B-12 shot from Tejada. Not the only interpretation though.
That regional was my first exposure to MSU sports. I was getting ready to start as a freshman that fall. State had Palmeiro, Clark, Bobby Thigpen and Jeff Brantley. Barry Larkin was at that regional with Michigan. It was a great experience. Attendance was over 10,000, but they didn't have any idea exactly how many people were at the games other than an upper limit for passes sold. You bought a tournament pass and just flashed it at the ticket takers as you ran through the gates to claim the good seats. They tried to keep up with hand-clickers, but it could not have been accurate. The second night was clearly more than the first, and the announced attendance didn't reflect that. There was a haze over the stadium all weekend long from the Left Field Lounge.
What an indoctrination. (Of course, most of the rest of my State fandom has been on the other end of the success spectrum.)
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