What are your favorite Skip quotes, especially from the pre-1991 years? The
AJC lists some of his more wry comments ("The bases are loaded, i wish I was
too.") Others?
Colin
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"Science is based on a fundamental insight - that the degree to which an
idea seems true has nothing to do with whether it is true"
--
zig
"Get out of my boat. I've already caught my limit of kookfish"
tim in the coffeeshop
That is another good one.
From a spring training game:
"Giovanola to Graffanino to Pecorilli...double play. Somebody get me some
pasta!"
Colin
I forgot that one. I loved it.
--
Cranial Crusader dgh 1138 at bell south point net
The one that I'm surprised no one has yet mentioned is his call of the last
out of the 1995 World Series. From "Yes! Yes! Yes!" to bringing "the first
championship to Atlanta!" ... a standout memory, not only for Skip's call,
but because he was right about how significant it was and still is for the
city.
I can't remember the details of what I consider his funniest quote,
but sometime in the 91 (or 92) season we managed to have two runners
on second and he said something like "we've got runners all over the
bases". Of course the absurdity of the moment played into it, but
Skip's always the first to pounce on it to bring it to your attention
and bring the point home.
While we're on the subject, can anyone explain the infield fly rule?
For that matter, what DOES Antonio Alfonseca do when someone cuts him off in
traffic?
During the 1992 WS I think: "Same two teams tomorrow night ... and
if it weren't, wouldn't that be a story".
> While we're on the subject, can anyone explain the
> infield fly rule?
You jest! It's easier to explain women.
my iconic skip moment was during a come-from-behind win over the mets:
(paraphrasing) that's two runs for atlanta, as the forces of good
overcome the forces of evil.
who else remembers the squirrel?
--
Ben
Does anyone remember this story? He told it several times but I can't
remember the details. It was from 80's vintage Braves "terriball" era.
IIRC, the Braves player, maybe it was Rafael Ramirez but I think it was
another Hispanic player, was trying to stretch a double into a triple, but
the outfielder made a great throw to third and the runner was only about
halfway to third when the ball arrived. In describing the play to Skip
afterward, the Braves player described it as "that's the outest I've ever
been". Just priceless as told by Skip.
--
Bob Horton
"Que the Duck"
"Caught by a fan from Valdosta"
>Of course, we all remember his most famous ones, even if we didn't hear them
>live: "I don't believe it, he caught the ball!" is one I caught live. His
>calls on Sid's slide and the 95 championship are etched in our memories, but
>larely via replays because most people were watching the TV while he was on
>the radio only in the postseason.
>
>What are your favorite Skip quotes, especially from the pre-1991 years? The
>AJC lists some of his more wry comments ("The bases are loaded, i wish I was
>too.") Others?
>
>Colin
This isn't a quote, but rather an incident described in one of Lewis
Grizzard's books. I wish I could find it online, but here it is to
the best of my memory.
Lewis was at a bar in the city one evening and one of the other
patrons was Skip. Apparently both had been imbibing for sometime.
Skip gets up and leaves without saying anything. A few minutes later
Lewis looks up at the TV and there is Skip, doing the local sports on
the evening news.
I remember one game against the cubs in which relief pitcher
Heathcliff Slocumb had walked the bases loaded. Skip reported that the
manager (I forget who) "is scribbling on his lineup card as he
approaches the mound to have a chat with his pitcher... probably
something to the effect of 'remind Heathcliff to throw strikes.'" I
was in my car at the time and I nearly ran off the road I was laughing
so hard.
i remember once doing the pregame one day against the padres, pete
referred to SD starter andy benes as the "bell cow" of that staff.
skip thought it was hilarious and it became a running joke throughout
the entire game, with skip using the "bell cow" metaphor every chance
he got.
Was Skip the one that coined the "Oh-seventy-six ... Bingo!" comment?
He's the first I recall using it.
I noticed that Joe Simpson said that line the other night and got a
little choked up. Ok, so did I.
As said to Joe Simpson on occasion, "And the horse you rode in on".
One of the Mets broadcasters noted on the day he died that Carey, during
an extended losing streak back in the mid-80's when the team was awful
said, at the beginning of the game:
"Like lambs to the slaughter, the Braves take the field".
That's something Uecker would say in a "Major League" movie.
--
"Ever since the 60's, it's been all downhill" - Keith Hernandez, on how
far we've sunk as a culture