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MLB Pseudo-Season 2020: Roger, Dodgers

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That being said: Go Dodgers.

Being someone that is a Reds guy and still remembers all those old Western divisions battles w/ the Dodgers, :hugegrin: and :angryrazz:, I have gotten over it and I wish them well. I hope they waddle to home-plate many times, that was a Ron Cey ref., gawd I'm gettin old.
 
Jeez! Another one. Hall of Famer Joe Morgan has died. With Whitey, Al, Lou, Tom and Gibby, that makes six. Fuck 2020.
 
According to MLB Network, White Sox and manager Rick Renteria "have agreed to part ways." Whatevrr that means.

The Sox were headed in the right direction, so kinda weird. Maybe the Sox found their version of Joe Maddon to "take them to the next level"?
 
Jeez! Another one. Hall of Famer Joe Morgan has died. With Whitey, Al, Lou, Tom and Gibby, that makes six. Fuck 2020.

From Jim Bouton's Ball Four:

Norm Miller was doing the broadcast bit in the fourth inning when Joe Morgan came back to the dugout after missing a big curve ball for strike three.

"Joe, Joe Morgan, may I have a word with you?"
"Sure, Norm, how's it going?"
"Fine, Joe, fine. We wanted to ask you about that pitch you missed. What was it?"
"Norm, that was a motherfucking curve."
"Can you tell our listeners, Joe, what's the difference between a regular curve and a motherfucking curve?"
"Well, Norm, your regular curve has a lot of spin on it and you can recognize it real early. It breaks down a little bit, and out. Now your motherfucker, that's different. It comes in harder, looks like a fastball. Then all of a sudden it rolls off the top of the table and before you know it, it's motherfucking strike three."
"Thank you very much, Joe Morgan."
 
In memory of #8 my avatar is back to...

One of the best I ever saw and ever met. He was always "taller" than his listed height.
 
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I know there has been a lot of criticism about Morgan on SNB, but compared to what we have now, I really do miss Morgan and Miller together. That was a pairing that lasted quite a long time and it was a mainstay of the summer season, being able to listen to Morgan and Miller call the Sunday Night game of the week.

I also think Morgan called some Giants games too, so as a fan of the Giants, this does hit a little hard.

RIP Mr. Morgan.
 
Morgan was an utterly loathsome broadcaster but a hell of a player, and by all accounts a genuinely good human being. RIP to another real one.
 
Morgan was an utterly loathsome broadcaster but a hell of a player, and by all accounts a genuinely good human being. RIP to another real one.

Other than your first seven words I totally agree.

Howard Cosell was loathsome to my mind and ear, but for some folks their taste is...;) Harry Carey was a piece of work too.
 
Other than your first seven words I totally agree.

Howard Cosell was loathsome to my mind and ear, but for some folks their taste is...;) Harry Carey was a piece of work too.

At least on Sunday Night Baseball, Morgan never met an opinion he didn't try to twist into a fact. He never liked Ernie Banks, for example, and took that feud to the booth.

This is a story I've told in the past, but it bears repeating:

It was during a Sunday night game on ESPN that Morgan went on a long-winded, utterly insane diatribe about the outfield basket in Wrigley Field, the one intended to keep drunk morons from falling out of the bleachers and onto the field. Anyway, Morgan starts babbling that during his playing days, "everybody" in baseball referred to that basket as Banks Boulevard, because Ernie Banks hit "so many of his homers into that basket."

Follow along, class, and see if you can figure out the problem from these ideas:

- Ernie Banks was on the Cubs' roster from 1953 - 1971. He hit 512 home runs during that time.
- Of those 512, Morgan insisted that a lot of them landed in the basket at Wrigley Field.
- Therefore, without the basket, Banks wouldn't have had anywhere near 512 home runs.

However:

- In 1970 and 1971, Ernie only played in 111 games for the Cubs. This is important because:
- The basket wasn’t installed at Wrigley Field until May 1970.
- Banks hit only eight home runs at Wrigley Field in those two seasons, and one of them was in April of 1970, well before the basket went in.

Therefore:

- Of Ernie Banks' 512 career home runs, the most that could have landed in the basket is a grand total of seven. (And Banks' 500th home run, one of the eight hit in Wrigley Field during those final two seasons, didn't land anywhere near the basket, which gives us six.)
- Some quick math tells us that six of 512 indicates that, at the very most, just over one percent of Banks' career home runs could have possibly ended up in the basket.

So, obviously you can see why Morgan insisted on calling it Banks Boulevard, because the facts certainly bear it out.
 
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