Skip Caray was my favorite announcer as I grew up listening to the Braves on TBS and on the radio. One night, listening to a game that was headed into extra-innings, the broadcast was just breaking away to commercial when Skip said, 'Free baseball in Atlanta!' One of the best lines I’ve ever heard.
Tucker ElliotStichwörter: baseball atlanta-braves skip-caray
... there’s almost nothing worse than spending an entire day anticipating watching a Yankees vs. Red Sox game, only to have the score be 9-0 in the third inning.
Tucker ElliotStichwörter: baseball boston-red-sox new-york-yankees
It’s hard to dismiss the obvious symmetry between Longo [Evan Longoria] and the franchise for which he’s now the poster-child: for the player, Hondo Junior College to MLB All-Star … for the team, worst to first.
Tucker ElliotStichwörter: tampa-bay-rays baseball-evan-longoria
It was like the baseball gods were showing off just for him, in honor of his first day of big league baseball. And surely the baseball gods were smiling that day, because the next batter was Larry Brown, and he was a scrawny, scrappy 23-year-old kid who’d never hit a big league home run. And yet he stepped to the plate and became just the second player in baseball history to connect and give his team four consecutive home runs.
Tucker ElliotStichwörter: major-league-baseball cleveland baseball-trivia cleveland-indians-iq
Sometimes are feats aren’t so fabulous, they’re just dubious—but either way, they’re fun to talk about.
Tucker ElliotStichwörter: baseball major-league-baseball baseball-trivia baseball-quotes cleveland-indians baseball-history
General manager Frank Lane made his mark on the club by making several unpopular or unsuccessful trades. Among the guys he traded to other teams are Rocky Colavito, Roger Maris, Norm Cash, and … manager Joe Gordon? Uh, yes. Lane and Detroit GM Bill DeWitt traded managers—Joe Gordon for Jimmy Dykes. Lane’s tenure ended shortly thereafter, long before the damage he caused.
Tucker ElliotStichwörter: baseball-trivia baseball-quotes cleveland-indians baseball-history baseball-stats baseball-trades joe-gordon rocky-colavito roger-maris
I don’t know how long we talked about that game the first time my dad showed me the ticket stub. He admitted he hadn’t even been sure that he still had it, that he was surprised when he’d been able to find it. But we’ve spent hours and hours and hours talking about it since. And it’s pretty amazing, because that ticket stub sat in a box for two decades—once it let my dad into a stadium to see a baseball game, and then later, it let me into my dad’s world, into his past, to learn about the man who taught me to love a game so passionately that it shaped nearly every aspect of my life.
Tucker ElliotStichwörter: trivia major-league-baseball baseball-trivia baseball-quotes cleveland-indians
Baseball is known for superstitious players and cursed teams—and at the root of every curse there’s a story. Boston’s curse was to trade Babe Ruth to the Yankees. Cubs fans claim a billy goat is responsible for their futility. And Cleveland’s curse? The club struggled after its Pennant-winning 1954 season, but it was rich with optimism just two years later as an onslaught of new talent promised to lift the club once more to the ranks of baseball’s elite—and by 1959 the club was contending for the Pennant again. And then GM Frank Lane traded Rocky Colavito to the Detroit Tigers and cursed everything.
Tucker ElliotStichwörter: baseball-curses baseball-trivia baseball-quotes cleveland-indians baseball-history baseball-stats
The Indians franchise is more than a century old. It’s been called the Blues, the Bronchos, and the Naps. It’s also been called a lot worse during hard times when the team wasn’t winning.
Tucker ElliotStichwörter: major-league-baseball baseball-trivia baseball-quotes cleveland-indians baseball-history
Free agency changed the baseball landscape in many ways. It created more opportunities for players, but it also meant increasingly fewer players would spend an entire career playing for one franchise—and that’s especially true for players capable of becoming “legends,” the ones in such demand on the free agent market.
Tucker ElliotStichwörter: major-league-baseball baseball-trivia baseball-quotes baseball-stats free-agency
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