RIP Fred White
Fred White, a Royals radio voice for 25 years, died Wednesday due to complications from melanoma, a day after announcing his retirement following a 40-year relationship with the club.
White teamed with Denny Matthews on broadcasts from 1973-98, and since had served as the team’s director of broadcast services and the Royals Alumni.
His retirement was due to health issues, and he died in hospice care.
Login to Join (22 members)
{/exp:tag:subscribed}Page rendered in 1.1810 seconds, 142 querie(s) executed
Reader Comments and Retorts
Go to end of page
Statements posted here are those of our readers and do not represent the BaseballThinkFactory. Names are provided by the poster and are not verified. We ask that posters follow our submission policy. Please report any inappropriate comments.
1. snapper (history's 42nd greatest monster) posted on January 15, 2012 at 03:08 PM # hit 0 | hit 0That would be some stealth negotiation. Send a 3rd party lawyer with an offer.
It wouldn't be worth it for a guy like Colon, but in a really big negotiation, I could see a team wanting to test the waters w/o disclosing their interest, especially if the needed to make a trade to fit the FA.
Billy Beane is doing his best to make the team a bunch of unknowns.
The plan the Giants and the MLB have forced on the As has no room for a pitcher as good as Colon.
#10 - Literally my first thought! Billy is feeling nostalgic, gotta have at least one "Not selling jeans..." guy.
True, but the Champs had Tommy Euler, who was a nice, well-rounded, 4-pitch SP if memory serves.
Hell yes. I always played as the Champs and I could reliably hit triples with the speedy leadoff guy McCall -- mastered the bloop hits the other way down the line and into the gaps.
Euler was great too.
Well that's a whole heap of names I hadn't thought of in 20 years. I think Euler had the advantage of throwing to Miller behind the plate, that lad could hit like a young Johnny Bench.
If I remember correctly, my best pitcher on that team was actually Barnes (or one of the other hitters)... he would throw a "fat pitch" nowhere near the strike zone but called a strike. Not sure if that was a C64-only glitch or not.
That, and Microleague baseball. Replaying the 75 and 82 World Series, years before the internet...good memories.
Sure - especially if you're not all that choosy about confirming the state of the software licenses... You'll also need to DL a DOS/C64 emulator, but there are several sites that have a whole host of old C64/Amiga/80s-early90s games. The hardest part is usually getting your GFX card/driver to cooperate.
I had a c64 emmy on my last PC -- haven't ported it over to my new one -- but I played Hardball and Oregon Trail (the original) on my old PC.
I would suggest, if you're on a windows machine -- set up a separate user account with limited permissions... You can google around easy enough to find plenty of places to DL games (and emulators), but a lot of them also love to pack in the trojans. I never got anything particularly nasty -- just a lot of adware and such -- but if you keep it confined to a limited access account, they're easy to deal with.
Thing is, abilities were based on stats, and it had no concept of small sample size. Thad Bosley from the 1984 Cubs once won the batting title with a BA well north of .400, for example.
But it was awesome. I would work out entire seasons, but since I didn't have the patience to type in the stats for all of the teams, I would play my seasons against the included "all-time great" teams. (The 27 Yankees used to kick my ass a lot.)
That was Microleague for me -- man, when microleague came out with a stats compiler add-on, it was nirvana.
My brother (Tigers fan) and I created minor league all-star teams for our respective organizations, and I still remember this guy being just unfair (we got the stats from the year-end Baseball America almanacs and didn't bother concatenating split levels -- so I used his Pittsfield line from '87). Leonette saved about 60 games over the course of our 162 game schedule - and was only scored upon twice.... My brother felt using him enormously unfair, but I pointed out that this guy on his team stole 150 bases.
I could probably still come up with my entire roster if I think about it for a bit -- Rolando Roomes, Darin Jackson, Dwight Smith (far and away the MVP), Wade Rowden, Mark Grace... that 1987 Pittsfield team was a beast to a sim without MLEs...
The downfall of the league came when we discovered that fast, LHBs could drag bunt their way to ~.750 BAs, even if you played the corners in.
The game I loved, and stuck with for years, was Hardball six. I had an entire fictional league of characters that I kept up for years.
You must be Registered and Logged In to post comments.