Posted on 01/19/2013 7:46:55 AM PST by ConservativeStatement
BALTIMORE -- Earl Weaver, the fiery Hall of Fame manager who won 1,480 games with the Baltimore Orioles, has died, the team says. He was 82.
Weaver was traveling on an Orioles fantasy cruise in the Caribbean when he collapsed in his room with wife, Maryanne, at his side on the cruise's ship at about 2 a.m. Saturday, the New York Daily News reported.
Weaver never regained consciousness, the report said.
(Excerpt) Read more at espn.go.com ...
As I recall,the runner, Bernie Carbo never touched the plate, the catcher, Elrod Hendricks tagged him with his glove, but the ball was in his bare hand, and the umpire, Ken Burkhardt made the call, even though Burkhardt’s back was to the plate, so he couldn’t see, after getting knokced over. 40 year ago, you say? I’m not getting old, but my kids are ;) - thanks for the memory!
"During one particular tirade with an umpire, Weaver headed to the dugout screaming, "I'm going to check the rule-book on that" to which the umpire replied, "Here, use mine." Weaver shot back, "That's no good - I can't read Braille."
Actually in a lot of ways, Weaver was the original sabergeek, and he was the opposite of the "old school" baseball conventional wisdom. He also was incredibly intelligent.
In the early years of sabermetrics analysts emphasized that drawing walks was key, base stealing mostly irrelevant and often counterproductive, and sacrifice bunts almost always a stupid waste of time.
Weaver loved players who drew walks, believed in three run homers rather than guys getting thrown out stealing, and hated bunting with a passion.
The good old days !
Classic
I grew up in Baltimore during the 70s and was a huge Oriole fan. I knew more about baseball back then than most of the boys in my neighborhood.
When my best friend and I could afford left field bleacher tickets or if we saved enough, nose bleed upper deck seats, we would catch the no. 6 bus from South Baltimore to 33rd Street and Calvert and walk to Memorial Stadium or convince one of our parents to give us a ride, we were at the game, if not we were watching on TV or listening on my transistor radio. Those were some good times.
RIP Earl.
The Earl Weaver Orioles of the 70s and early 80s had as you said, tons of pitching talent and some heavy hitters. But the Orioles also had some great defensive basemen and fielders like Brooks Robinson, Boog Powel, Paul Blair and Mark Belanger. But it was painful to watch either Brooks or Boog run the bases. FWIW, Al Bumbry who played during the Weaver years was supposedly one of the fastest Orioles on base ever, he was Baltimore's all-time leader in stolen bases with 252.
RIP.
Earl: Son, Id rather have you walk with the bases loaded.
That player was Pat Kelly and yes, Earl did say that to him (at the very end of this video).
There is uncensored version on YOU TUBE right now
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rpS-XFXxJvE&feature=player_embedded
There is uncensored version on YOU TUBE right now
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rpS-XFXxJvE&feature=player_embedded
ff
I grew up listening to the O’s on the radio, listening to the play by play as I fell asleep in bed, waking the next morning to check the paper to see the score. While everyone remembers his tirades against the umpires, he was so well loved by the people of Baltimore. This video sums that up, as reported on by Howard Cosell...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D13-QS5eQMM
We’ll miss you, Earl.
Hope he doesn’t argue too much with St. Peter (:
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