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#1
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I LOVE reading about encounters with player...HOF'ers, scrubs...it doesn't matter.
Who was GREAT to deal with? Who was an absolute insolent ass? When I young I worked at a grocery store and dealt with Danny Darwin, Rich Gedman, Jeff Reardon, Roger Clemens, Oil Can Boyd, KC Jones (Celtics coach), Lee Smith and Dwight Evans...EACH guy could not have been nicer and signed an autograph from me at the register! |
#2
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I really liked Juan Marichal and Bobby Valentine. I was sitting in the outfield at a game when Valentine was a rookie with the Dodgers - he just seemed super happy to be there and was smiling and acknowledging the fans before the game. You could throw stuff down from the bleachers and Marichal would sign it and throw it back up. He also was great after the games.
Since my fondest pro interactions as a kid were with NFL football players, I'll also mention Lee Roy Jordan and Alex Karras. On the I.A. side - Dick Butkus
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$co++ Forre$+ |
#3
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As close as I can get is former NHL player Mike Eaves was the student teacher for my 4th grade gym class. He was a star player the University of Wisconsin at the time, and I went to an elementary school about four miles from the UW campus. As a nine year old, did I ask him for an autograph? Yes. The funny thing is all I had for him to sign was that brown bathroom hand paper from the locker room.
Last edited by drc; 05-20-2013 at 10:08 PM. |
#4
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Only two baseball players.
Brooks Robinson, at a Sports Illustrated hospitality room in 1976. Really great, held up the line to talk baseball a bit. When someone complained he told them somewhat loudly "I'm talking to the kid about baseball! You can wait" I think he stretched to conversation a bit. Bob Feller. He pitched a homerun contest between games of a minor league doubleheader - I think maybe 74 or 75? Afterwards he came up in the stands and signed as much as you wanted, he had probably a couple thousand 8 1/2 x11 printed picture sheets. Most of the kids made paper planes out of them. When I asked if that bugged him he said it was ok because they were kids. Since I was hanging around he asked about little league, and spent most of an inning talking about pitching, and what the pitchers in the game were doing. The Russian rider at the 73 ISDT who signed by having a pen attachment molded into his arm cast was amazing, even without much interaction. Language barrier, just finshed 6-8 hours riding mostly challenging off-road trails with his arm in a cast, day 3 or four I think, and I'm not sure just when he'd injured the arm. And the first thing he did heading out of the motorcycle impound/pits was have the mechanic bring the pen and put it into the cast. Steve B |
#5
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The summer before he died I saw Bob Feller in Cooperstown. He had been signing at a table in front of one of the stores but it was late in the day and no one was around. I didn't want to bother him but he greeted me as I passed. We talked for about 15 minutes. I found out that he collected antique tractors and he talked about how he loved to visit Cooperstown. I told him I had a copy of the Daily News from the no-hitter he pitched against the Yankees. He told me to bring it next summer so he could sign it for me. Alas, that didn't happen.
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#6
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I love Feller. I met him twice, first was at TwinsFest about 5+ years ago. Just walked by his table, and he struck up a conversation. We talked about who the best hitter he ever faced was, and he looked at me and said, 'it was this man named Ted Williams, some may call him the Splendid Splinter.' That was great.
Second time was at the Bob Feller Museum to get some high grade rookies signed in person. He looked at the '48 Bowman (and his memory is SHARP) and said, 'Ah yes, I remember this, this was taken at Yankee Stadium in '47 I believe.' Killebrew was amazing, I had my mom get him to sign a few rookies for me because I was unable to attend the event, and he told her 'I was 18 in this photo, and damnit I was handsome!'
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HOFAutoRookies.com |
#7
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Don Newcombe
I posted this eight years ago but this thread seemed like a good place to reprise: I had a really great experience. A friend invited me to Dodger Stadium to have lunch with Don Newcombe and to meet the current team, as part of a charity thing he'd won at a golf tournament. It was amazing. We met Newk at 2:00 sharp and spent the next hour and a half on the field at Dodgers Stadium. I met Shawn Green, Paul Lo Duca, Manny Mota, Maury Wills (who gave me tips on teaching my daughter to field), Jose Hernandez, David Ross and Alex Cora. Jose Lima was really cool; gave my nephew his batting gloves. My nephew, who is 5, also got to meet Eric Gagne and got a single-signed ball. I had the players sign my hat and had Green sign a 2001 Upper Deck Vintage card (the ones that look like 1971 Topps cards). I also took a bunch of pictures and an hour or so of video. Best of all, I was able to get Don Newcombe to tape a greeting for my Dad, who was a Brooklyn Dodgers hardcore fan, and sign a nice personalized team photo for him. The field is like the nicest golf green you have ever seen. The players are all a heck of a lot bigger and stronger than they look on tv. Most are about my size (6'3") but built a heck of a lot differently. They also have a lot of fun that you never see. The pitchers were taking bunting practice and playing games with it, and the regulars were playing home run derby. Honest to God, they were putting the ball into the bleachers and giving different points for the closer orange seats and the farther away blue seats. Green even smashed one into the scoreboard, which must have won him something. You cannot believe how hard these guys can hit until you are ten feet away in an empty stadium listening to the ball explode off the bat. Lunch was great. Newcombe played 2 years in the Negro Leagues and then 3 in the minors and 10 in the majors, so he saw it all and did it all. Since my friend and I are baseball history nuts (me much more so than him, which is why he wanted me there to talk with Newcombe), we had a hell of a 2+ hour discussion about what it was really like back then. Among the more interesting things we learned: --The best pitcher he ever saw: short term, Koufax. For a career, Spahn and Roberts. --The toughest hitter: Stan Musial. I asked him about Williams. He said that he faced Williams a couple of times in an all-star game. Teddy Ballgame hit the hell out of the ball all four at bats. Two were caught over the fence, the others were long hits. I said I guessed he was pretty tough too; Newcombe sighed and shook his head. --Beanballs: He was adamant about the lack of quality of today's pitching because of the reluctance to go inside. He said that his era had pitchers who dominated the plate (which is why Clemens is the pitcher he likes most today) and there were never the fights that break out today. It was just part of hard, tough play. He said that once at Wrigley, Duke Snider had a home run and the Cubs hit Rocky Nelson, the next batter. Robinson asked him to do something about it. Newk threw at the next 7 Cubs. The ump came over and told him to stop, as did Alston. Alston said if he did not stop, he'd have to come out. Newk told him to take him out after the next two because he still had two batters to throw at. Alston yanked him. He also said that no one threw at him because the pitchers all knew that they'd have to stand in against him later on. --Minnie Minoso: I asked him if he'd played with Minoso in the Negro Leagues because I'd heard the guy was a character. Newcombe said no, he wasn't a character, just crazy. He said that there was only 1 restaurant in Tampa Bay that would serve the black players, so all of them ate there. Minoso liked their chicken and would order it every time. The others would come over to talk with him and steal the chicken to eat. Finally, Minoso got so mad that he spit on all the chicken and dared the others to take it. Of course, he had to eat spit covered chicken afterwards. --Racism: I asked whether he felt he had been held back because of his race when he was signed. He said absolutely, that he was 54 and 9 in the minors over 3 seasons, but Rickey was reluctant to promote too many black players at once. --Chuck Connors: the Rifleman was a teammate of his in the minors. He said that the only time someone charged the mound against him was when a redneck came at him. He ducked out and Connors "beat the hell out of him." Connors said that he (Newcombe) wasn't allowed to fight, but he (Connors) was allowed to fight. Afterwards, he was approached by an elderly black man who said that he had done the right thing not to fight. It was Bill "Bojangles" Robinson. --Jackie Robinson: I asked whether it was true that Robinson told the black players to get out and mingle with white teammates. He said they were very careful to do that. In fact, the clubhouse man had put all 3 guys (Robinson, Campy and Newk) lockers side by side by side and they insisted that they be spread out instead. --Josh Gibson: He pitched to Gibson and says that he was every bit as good as any major leaguer, and then some. --Batting Practice: He used to throw BP instead of throwing on the side between starts, which he said was great for him and for the batters because he could work on live batters and they could hit live pitching. He claims that the Dodgers started using a screen at his request because he was tired of ducking liners. They used to try to hit it through the box at him and he would always threaten to knock them down. Carl Furillo was the "best" at hitting back through the box in BP. --No pepper: he has no idea what the reason is why pepper was banned. He said that he and Furillo played it constantly as a means of improving their control. --Drysdale: Whenever Drysdale had a batter who liked to dig in, he'd yell: "Keep digging, because you are going into the hole!" and then throw at them. --Cheating: Lew Burdette taught him to throw a spitter. He in turn taught a number of players on other teams. I asked him if it was a feeling of pitchers against hitters and he agreed that there was a cameraderie among pitchers that extended beyond teams to the point where they would share information and techniques. He also told me how pitchers load it up today. You can go to the mouth off the mound and there is no way to force the pitcher to dry off afterwards. I asked him how a spitter worked (I already knew from physics, but I wanted to hear what a pitcher thought about it). Sure enough, he had a practical explanation of what the ball does that fits right in with the physics explanation: the ball is thrown straight as a fastball and it dives. (The scientific explanation is that a spitter works by changing the wind resistance on a ball, causing a straight looking pitch to dive). What I did not realize is that water and sweat don't work. It takes spit. Anyhow, it was an awesome experience to talk baseball for hours with a ROY-MVP-Cy Young winner. Oh, I had him sign all 3 of his Exhibit cards, a 1956 Brooklyn team card and a 1955 Bowman card. He also got Vin Scully to take a moment from his pregame and sign a 1961 Union Oil piece for me. ![]() ![]()
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Read my blog; it will make all your dreams come true. https://adamstevenwarshaw.substack.com/ Or not... |
#8
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My "meeting" was actually by phone. Over in another BB card group, OBC, (yeah, we love beaters, too), I started up the Hall of Mediocrity....guys who had no shot at the real Hall but we liked them anyways. My guy was Billy Hoeft, who I had gotten interested in because of his several variation cards. One day I got an email from his son asking what this was all about, this Billy Hoeft Fan Club. I explained, he liked it, and that was that, until some time later. He contacted me again, explained that his brother was coming back from the Gulf and they were having a family reunion....any chance I would like to get on the phone with his Dad for a bit and ask any questions I might have? (Are you KIDDING me???) It happened, I had lots of off the wall questions, we talked a lot about his career and travels, players from the '50's and '60s', cards, the game, etc. Billy spent two hours on the phone with me, his sons listening, because they didn't know much about Dad's career, they had been too young. Fine gentleman was Billy, and he didn't have to do that. He just liked people and talking BB. I'll close with one of the questions I asked him........the difference between his era and today. He thought about that for just a moment, and said "I hate the way guys grandstand now, posing at home plate after launching one. We never showed anybody up. If anyone had done that to me, the next time I faced him, I'd throw a teaser low and away. I'd put the next one right in his f***ing ear.
Thanks Billy, for my Field of Dreams moment. |
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