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1. Rich Posted: June 17, 2007 at 11:49 AM (#2406834)No, not "I was wrong" or "We disagree", but "If you were just a bit smarter, my wonderfulness would make more sense to you."
I mean, they edit shows like that to make people look as bad as possible, so I always try to cut them some slack for saying dumb stuff, but that one made me sit up and take notice. I am not that certain about anything, and I respect my fiancee's opinions enough not to say that sort of thing, particularly on TV, and particularly not with her sitting next to me.
Times have changed a little. Print something like that nowadays and a player would scarcely notice.
I think you may have misinterpreted what was said.
Haven't you ever had a conversation/argument when its clear that the person who disagrees with you really doesn't disagree? They disagree with what they think your argument is, because maybe you were not as articulate as you wanted to be and they, like most people, picked up on what you actually said and not what you meant to say.
or maybe you are right and he was saying that she doesn't understand me because she's stupid
Oh, no. I have, and I would think that way if it happened to me. My biggest beef was with saying it publicly, made worse by the fact that she was sitting next to him. If you're knee-deep in a project and need someone's help to finish, continuing to argue about who's right and who's wrong is going to engender bad feelings and few positives.
I have that with my father all of the time. :-)
Though Kingman doesn't loom as large as he did to my almost 12-year old eyes, losing him to get Bobby V. and Paul Siebert was the real stinker of a trade.
You know, sometimes you just can't help but think silly thoughts about how the whole world is set up to produce little coincidences (or are they???) involving your life. I just got back from a vacation, part of which I spent in Northern California. During the trip, I spent a day late last week at a spa in Calistoga, where Tom Seaver lives. And now this article appears. It's all about me, people. All.
The quote Madden includes about Nolan Ryan doesn't entirely capture my recollection of what the Young column conveyed, although maybe that was the entirety of what he actually wrote. I thought Young also went further and actually said explicitly that Seaver wanted to be traded because Nancy Seaver was jealous of Ryan's contract. But even if not, Young was such a complete tool; the simple fact of the matter was that Seaver was 100% right: Grant was unwilling to adapt to the new environment and did nothing to try to keep the Mets competitive, and darkness descended on the franchise. Why in the world shouldn't he, as the leader of the team, complain about that, loud and long? And Young was management's mouthpiece, which is an utterly shameful thing for a columnist to be.
As bad as the Kazmir trade was, nothing in being a baseball fan will ever match how awful June 15, 1997 was for me.
It wasn't really into Bill James that I became much more sympathetic to the players.
Sam, you still can't get over Bobby Jones losing to the BoSox 10-1, huh? ;-)
And the Pat Zachry - ballpeen hammer story is a classic.
This was the Caucasian version, Erik.
Sam, you still can't get over Bobby Jones losing to the BoSox 10-1, huh? ;-)
You know what they say. The first thing to go as you age is the typing skills . . . .
I did NOT buy Young's rhetoric about Seaver, but I do remember thinking that even if Seaver personally was greedy and only cared about his contract, the fact was that the team wasn't competing for free agents and was living in the past and -- worst of all -- the Yankees were obviously not playing by the same stupid rules. The Mets were going to be bad because they weren't going to play to win, and even if Seaver had selfish reasons to be calling them on that, he was obviously right.
So the ratings are wrong...he does have a listener!...:)
I was also cognizant even then that the Yankees had the better game plan, while the Mets' game plan left something to be desired (understatement of the year, don't you think? :-)
While I have some fond memories of 1977-83, that was a tough time to be a Met fan.
My uncle was a friend of Joe McDonald's brother. By the time I knew of this and actually met him, Joe wasn't working with the Mets anymore. Bummer. I probably could have picked up a ticket or two. :-(
Madden in general, is a good and intelligent baseball reporter. He knows quite a lot about baseball history, though not quite as much as he thinks he does. Madden's personality, on the other hand, leaves a lot to be desired.
Except that, according to the N.Y. Times, his "Grant's Tomb" sign showed up in 1965, and Ehrhardt kept up his act until 1981. Another website claims the sign was "torn down" by a Met employee named Mat Burns, and Ehrhardt came back with a sign reading "WE SCRIBBLE WHILE MAT BURNS." Which would be cute, except that Ehrhardt always held up his signs over his head and I don't know how you "tear down" a sign from someone's hands.
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