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Dec
10
Then you haven’t heard or read Frank Deford:
A record should be one simple, outstanding thing, i.e., Wilt Chamberlain scored the most points in one game: 100. Thank you, QED, next.
But these new idiotic records combine two or more disparate numbers to make what only sounds like a very important point. Here are some actual examples I’ve come across:
He’s the first teenager in the last 33 years with three triples and two intentional walks in one season.
Now just stop. Have you ever heard any fan say, “Well, one thing about Joe, he’s a valuable guy because he hits triples and gets intentional walks?” Of course not. So, next:
He was the second quarterback since 1970 to complete less than 30 percent of his passes and throw four interceptions in a victory.
And hey, if you’re going to talk about the past, for it to mean anything, you have to stick to round numbers. But not any more.
He was the second pitcher in the last 83 years — 83! — to win 13 more games than he lost for a team finishing 13 games or worse under .500.
You gotta stand in awe of whoever figured that out.
He’s the only pitcher in — get this — the last 4,113 to debut with 10 strikeouts and no walks.
Wow, how many before the last 4,113?
He’s the first player since 1912 with 50 doubles and 50 stolen bases in one season.
A combination of doubles and stolen bases? How ’bout hit by pitcher and sacrifice flies?
He’s the first catcher over the age of 35 to hit .330 with 20 homers and 85 runs batted in.
So, did some other plus-35 catcher have 25 home runs and 80 RBIs?
He’s the first National League player to account for as many as 30 steals and 25 double plays in one season.
Steals and double plays together? This is like saying, “He’s the first archaeologist to find 23 dinosaur bones and 12 Spanish doubloons on the same hunt.”
Here’s a meaningless pick-a-number quintuple nonsense record:
He is only the third player to hit .300 with at least 15 triples, 10 home runs, 20 doubles and 50 stolen bases.
Imagine the time it takes to find these goofy combinations.
Only five clubs in the wild-card era have trusted 15 starts to three 23-and-under pitchers.
Please, say, how many 22-year-olds with 12 starts?
He is the first pitcher in 24 years to win 70 percent of his decisions while logging more strikeouts than innings pitched.
He is one of 17 players under the age of 23 to twice hit 20 home runs and drive in 90.
His 5.17 ERA was the fourth worst in National League history by a left-hander with at least 200 innings.
And finally, I say:
These are the stupidest combination numbers stuck together by anyone over the age of 17 who speaks English since 1914.
Please.
By Jill Miller Zimon at 6:57 pm December 10th, 2008 in Humor, Sports, Writing
Comments
One Response to “If you think automakers are saying, “Stooopid $&%^@#^% numbers!”…”



LOL baseball fans can be as uh, fanatical as civil war buffs. Gotta love Deford. And I seem to recall Kirby Puckett of the Twins being able to foul off more pitches than you could imagine just so he wouldn’t strike out. LOL. Love your comment about 22 yr olds with 12 starts