WHO CAN Hit THE #$@&*%
?p"TEAM Pace? GET SOME Large#$@&*%$*! WHO CAN Hit THE #$@&*%!$* BALL OUT OF THE PARK,dallas cowboys!""TEAM Pace? GET SOME Large#$@&*%$*! WHO CAN Strike THE #$@&*%!$* BALL OUT OF THE PARK!"On a Saturday afternoon in mid-March, the most irascible supervisor in the background of the Baltimore Orioles is viewing an Orioles pitcher get pasted, 1 hitter after an additional. This is only a spring training sport at quaint Fort Lauderdale Stadium, not something that counted back again at Baltimore’s previous Memorial Stadium, on 33rd Street. But Earl Weaver, cap pulled low, that leprechaun’s twinkle in his eyes gone dark, does not like what he sees. All of his fantastic teamsand they were all pretty greatwere constructed on a foundation of dependable pitching. He won the pennant 1 year by making only 167 pitching changes in 159 video games. Another year he won a championship by using 12 pitchersnot just in the World Series but the whole season.Whack!"Mix in a wild pitch or some thing!" the old supervisor blurts out.Whack,bill conlin!"Oh, my God!" Weaver croaks. An additional shot, some four hundred feet of solid get in touch with, disappears out of sight, foul.Whack!"Who the hell is pitching?"It does not diminish Weaver’s agitation that this is a spring training game. His reason for becoming is fairly simple. If somebody is maintaining scorebe it in the Grapefruit League, in the World Collection or in Ping-Pong games against blue-haired women on a cruise shipEarl Sidney Weaver desperately wants to have more of what ever is being counted than you have. What drove him absolutely insane as a manager, or absolutely [bleeping] crazy in the Weaver patois,survivor, had been all the messy hurdles to his simple want to win. What stood maddeningly in his way, apart from the guys on the other side of the field, were ballplayers of his who produced outs on the base paths, umpires, people who thought the strike-and-run play was great baseball, sacrifice bunts, umpires, the 5-guy rotation, that smart-aleck Palmer, umpires, pitchers who did not throw strikes, fans who wanted the Orioles to operate more and, nicely … those bleeping umpires.Weaver: You’re right here for 1 [bleeping] specific cause.