Dave (imported) wrote: Wed Nov 04, 2009 10:44 pm I will always take baseball seriously. It is the one and only American sport. There is nothing like it in the rest of the world. I grew up a baseball fan and I will die a baseball fan.
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I grew up in LA, Dodger Blue, we went to and watch or radio Dodgers games with Vin Scully, I remember my father two brothers and I went every fathers day to watch the boys in blue, I have watch Sandy Kolfax pitch a no hitter. We as a family did not watch football, then I went into the service and found football. I can count on my hands the number of baseball games I have watched sense.
They call baseball Americas game but is it? They can't even fill the stadium after the first week, look at a Saturday or Sunday game and the place is over half empty. The year after the strike you were lucky to get 5,000 people to a game, if it would not have been for Sosa and McGuire having a home run hitting contest baseball may have totally died, yet both of them are looked at with scorn. * should be put in front of there names, they should never make the Hall of Shame. But they did nothing wrong, there was nothing in the rules at that time? NO. They save your game, so the rest of us get 15 minutes of sports news witch is 14 minutes of baseball. Yup I really wanted to see that guy hit a home run, again. The unassisted triple play, that was worth watching a couple times. But with most sports watching a home run, guy catching a ball in the end zone, making a 6 in putt, doing a slam dunk just gets old. Show me something exciting or nothing. There are simply to many games in baseball, hell even preseason gets more coverage the hockey playoffs and you never hear much about NASCAR and if you do its only the cup series, and then only if there is somebody doing a 2 1/2 double half gainer down the back stretch.
Charles 'Red' Barrett, pitcher for the 1946 St Louis Cardnial's pitched the fewest number of pitches to a win for a world series game. The record still holds because pitchers don't ever pitch a complete game anymore.
He was my uncle Red,
River