sully
honorary peso (chingador*)
Posts: 13,045
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Post by sully on Jul 15, 2008 15:00:44 GMT -5
That dude was loving every second of it. Did you see his face? What a good deal for him.
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cowtownmike
honorary peso (chingador*)
I done been thru the scruggles.
Posts: 12,467
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Post by cowtownmike on Jul 15, 2008 16:13:30 GMT -5
This is from Peter Gammons. Thought you guys might enjoy it.
NEW YORK -- One of the best things about baseball is that someone else comes along and recreates being the hero. Out of the embers of the Black Sox scandal came Babe Ruth. As a nation regrouped between World War II and the Korean War, Jackie Robinson bravely changed the face of sports and American society.
After the strike that canceled the 1994 World Series and led to the coldest winter, along came Cal Ripken, the dignity and might of the Joe Torre/Derek Jeter/Mariano Rivera Yankees, and then the summer of '98 with Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa. And when that entire era went to black and the waste depository of the BALCO and aging clinics, Jose Canseco and gopher slimeballs reached the desk of George Mitchell and millions wondered if they could ever trust the sport again. There were 55,000 people at Yankee Stadium on Monday night -- most of whom knew less about Josh Hamilton than Darrell Rasner -- chanting Hamilton's name and rooting for a new hero.
Every revelation about Roger Clemens' past and every "collusion" noise that comes out of some parrot's beak has emphasized the need to move forward. That is why no team has signed Barry Bonds, who can still impact any lineup -- owners and general managers understandably don't want to talk about the past. They want to try to move on into an era with drug testing, in whatever form the morphed sport takes.
Two months ago, a general manager said we are watching the unfurling of two dramas we have never before seen in our lifetime, and may never see again. One is Rick Ankiel, who has played less than two years as a position player and is so good a center fielder and everyday player that he certainly could have been here for the All-Star Game, what with 20 homers, 50 RBIs, an .880 OPS and the defensive show he has put on in center field. To overcome his pitching nightmare of the 2000 playoffs, then after six years to become a hitter, and then overcome a blown-out knee … few players are better inspiration for the capacity to never back down or give up.
By now, Hamilton's story of overcoming demons is two blocks from Hollywood. Oh, it's easy to give it a Nancy Reagan "he made a choice" and so on and so on and so on and so on, but the fact is that millions of people in this country get addicted to drugs and ruin their lives. Hamilton beat his demons and is a hero for millions trying to fight back. Steve Buckley wrote about one such person in this morning's Boston Herald, a pitcher from Peabody, Mass., named Jeff Allison, a one-time Marlins No. 1 draft pick whose life landed in the breakdown lane, out of baseball; he nearly died. A month ago, Allison made the Florida State League All-Star team, and while his comeback is a work in progress, he is pitching and living and succeeding, and when Buckley talked to him about Hamilton, Allison credited Hamilton with being his role model and inspiration.
Long after Yankee Stadium had emptied Monday night, Hamilton sat in front of his locker, answering to everything past and present and future. Told about Allison's story, Hamilton said, "I have heard of him, I'd like to be in touch. I hope I meet him. I hope I hit against him one day."
Our heroes can be flawed. The Babe certainly was. Hamilton never stops reminding us that he, too, is flawed and that he's not ashamed to admit it and never will stop fighting.
Josh Hamilton turned the page in his life, and Monday night he helped baseball begin the long, dry healing process of turning the page on the Dark Ages.
Baseball is not about corporate boxes and extracting licensing pennies from poor kids or taxpayer dollars donated to construct ballparks to help billionaires make millions. It is about Babe Ruth changing the sports culture, Jackie Robinson changing America and Cal Ripken changing lives. Baseball has always been able to turn the page because of someone and something always grew up out of the rubble, and Josh Hamilton began the process of turning the page on Monday night.
It is unbelievable what he has done, and now the nation knows it. Hamilton matters and when we saw his friends like Milton Bradley, Ian Kinsler and Michael Young embrace the moment and the future, we saw the awe and the appreciation in their eyes.
These are not the best of times in America, but we look at baseball and see Ankiel. We see what Jose Reyes and Hanley Ramirez have overcome to reach stardom. We see an Athletics pitcher named Brad Ziegler come back from two fractured skulls and take a run at the record for most shutout innings to begin a career. And then we watch 55,000 New Yorkers standing and chanting Josh Hamilton's name. We are reminded that baseball can help us remember what we stand for, not against, what we believe, not what we fear, and that while we learn from the past, what we all want is to open the door to the future.
The point about Young, Kinsler and even MIlton Bradley watching their friend hit (and I really believed they were all friends!)...that was what struck me about last night. Those guys looked like buddies from the local Little League team instead of jaded multi-millionaire baseball players.
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sully
honorary peso (chingador*)
Posts: 13,045
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Post by sully on Jul 15, 2008 16:55:10 GMT -5
Yeah. Good read. And this team is exciting to watch. I hope nothing happens before the trading deadline.
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Post by Ticket Mouse on Jul 15, 2008 17:46:47 GMT -5
Thanks for posting that Mike. Good point about the guys too. I got chills when they were sitting there in awe of Josh. I got a feeling about these guys. They're a special bunch.
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fischer
honorary peso (chingador*)
Posts: 16,271
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Post by fischer on Jul 15, 2008 18:37:47 GMT -5
Leave it to stubbs to overreact.
Dang son. Settle down. he had a good inning in the Homerun derby. There is no comparison, I mean NONE to what Reggie did. They are also both men, both have two legs, both are still alive, both last names end with N. But you still can't compare the two events.
Not to mention, we aren't going to be telling our kids about a homerun hitting contest. If you are, get some new stories.
I was enjoying last night as a great sports night, one of the greatest in recent memory. Then I get on here and Stubbs has overreacted to it and kind of ruined it.
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Post by The River Assassin on Jul 16, 2008 10:41:38 GMT -5
Great guy, great moment, great story, but probably not something I will tell my kids about 20-30 years from now. Although it will be made bigger if he goes on to be a superstar and future HOFer. This will be seen as his coming out party.
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Post by P. Marf on Jul 19, 2008 16:42:31 GMT -5
Is that like the coming out party you had a few years ago?
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Post by The River Assassin on Jul 21, 2008 9:10:51 GMT -5
Damn you Framp
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Post by Ticket Mouse on Jul 21, 2008 12:52:54 GMT -5
Nice play.
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