Friday, June 7, 2013

vin scully's latest: d-day and...

another gem -- well, i've got two -- from..."the man i love"
during last night's game, vin scully gave us a little history lesson -- actually, a big history lesson -- and a wonderful baseball story

as the top of the second began, scully...narrated
the braves hit a lot of home runs -- they're leading the national league with 81 [on the screen, a list of the top three home-run-hitting teams in the league -- below that, the dodgers, with 44 (ranking 13th)]
they also strike out a lot -- they have struck out, five-hundred and thirty-six times -- and that counts the two, tonight
they're one ahead of the rockies, and...18 ahead of the cubs -- dodgers are not really gonna get a call, if they were offering
so for freddy gonzalez [on screen], he has to exercise some patience -- they strike out a lot, they hit a lot of home runs -- and they're seven-and-a-half games in front
second inning -- brian mccann, who just picked up his one-thousandth career hit, recently
the catcher...takes a strike -- and the count, 0-and-1
all-star, six of the last seven years -- hitting 269
of course it was a matter of course to write his name in -- until buster posey arrived on the scene
so now it's posey and mccann 
brian -- solid ballplayer
hitting 314...against right-hand pitching 
takes, inside -- under the hands -- 1-and-1
are there youngsters near the television set, or the radio -- youngsters who might not know what this day is all about
the 1-1 slow curve is low -- ball two -- 2-and-1 
today is june the 6th -- but for those of us who lived through it, today is june the 6th, 1944 -- d-day
the 2-1 pitch, on the way -- swung on and missed -- 2-and-2
first of all, you have to understand about d-day [on the screen, the flag, beyond the center-field fence] -- the 'd' doesn't stand for anything -- the 'd' is derived from the word 'day,' and it really just means the day in which a military operation begins -- it's been used a lot, but, nowadays, it's only for the invasion
[crack of the bat...on ball] a drive into right -- quig comes over -- reaches up and backhands it, for the out
so mccann hits it hard, and lines out to yasiel puig -- that puts a big grin on the face of both ethier and puig -- [replay] mccann hit it hard, and yasiel just moved in, and picked it off
one away -- and the batter...is dan uggla
dan uggla is struggling -- hitting just 179
and he rolls one, up along third -- no balls and one strike
let's get back to d-day, a little bit -- the invasion of normandy -- operation overlord
but,...more importantly, really, you have to realize what happened, in the two months before...june sixth -- i mean, after all, the germans were well embedded, in the normandy coast [close-up of flag, on pole] -- embedded they were -- so they had to be softened up
the strike-one pitch is high -- 1-and-1
so, in april and may of 1944, the allied air forces lost... -- are you ready -- twelve-thousand men -- in the two months before the invasion
the pitch is swung on and missed -- and the count, 1-and-2
they also lost over two-thousand aircraft -- so they paid a tremendous price, just to get ready...for june sixth
one ball and two strikes -- greinke deals -- that's a little low -- two-and-two, the count
and then, finally, the night before -- june fifth -- a lot of parachutists -- paratroopers -- were dropped behind the enemy lines -- again, all a part...of setting up the invasion
2-2 pitch -- strike-three call
so, uggla...strikes out -- third strikeout for greinke -- two outs, second inning -- no score -- and the batter will be...ramiro pena, who's done very well, at third base
ramiro pena,...hitting 333, in the last two weeks -- at short -- he's also played second and third
hitting 375, with three home runs,...against right-hand pitching -- and, overall, batting 321 
greinke, into the windup, and delivers -- and the first pitch, in, for a strike 
there were five beaches...in normandy -- five -- the united states had two beaches to cover -- utah...and omaha -- the allies -- the british, canadians,... -- had gold, juno and sword
here's one, hit over the head of gonzalez, down the right-field line -- so, pena, on his horse, heading for second -- and he is in there, with a slicing double
so the switch-hitter hits a flare into right -- down the line -- and, with a two-out double, the batter will be b.j. upton
puig, making a strong throw, but had no chance
so pena continues...his solid hitting -- and here is...the other brother -- b.j. -- hitting only 153 -- i mean, here's a fellow who hit 300 for the rays -- but that was six years ago -- he had 28 home runs, last year, and he hit 246
right-hand batter -- and takes, low -- ball one -- 1-and-0
now b.j.'s given name is melvin emmanuel -- but do you know what 'b.j.' stands for -- 'bossman junior' -- the boss man [laughs], that's his father, manny's, longtime nickname -- bossman junior -- the 1-0 pitch, on the way -- off the plate -- ball two
b.j. -- a couple years older than justin
the father, manny, was a football and a baseball star at norfolk state 
two balls and no strikes, the count
greinke, out of the stretch -- looks at second -- back -- and misses low
so, fallen behind, 3-0, to upton 
tim hudson, on deck [on screen, hudson, swinging, in the on-deck circle]
hudson, so far this year, has six hits -- one home run -- and three runs batted in
tim federowicz goin' out to talk to greinke 
so it was d-day -- and early that morning, the u.s. troops arrived -- on utah and omaha -- turned out, that...omaha was a bloodbath -- compared to utah -- and the invasion was underway
3-0 pitch, in for a strike -- and the count, 3-and-1 
on that day, d-day, they have verified twenty-five-hundred...american fatalities -- a total of...four-thousand, four-hundred and fourteen dead...on the beaches -- about a thousand canadians and british, on gold -- and the same number at sword
3-1 pitch, on the way -- and that's taken for a strike -- 3-and-2 
the total german casualties on d-day, somewhere, as high as, maybe, nine thousand 
so, when you see the flag, when you see the calendar, when you hear the day...june the sixth -- especially for the youngsters...listening and watching -- don't ever forget it 
3-2 pitch...is high -- ball four
so b.j. draws the walk -- the braves have runners at first and second, with two out -- and tim hudson, comin' up
hudson, hitting a very solid 273
strikes out,...less than a third of the time 
any pitcher, who strikes out, less than half,...certainly is considered a problem 
so, two on, two outs -- second inning -- no score 
greinke, ready, and delivers -- for a strike -- and the count, 0-and-1 
when it is all said and done -- and june the sixth was the beginning...of the battle of normandy -- over four-hundred and twenty-five thousand...allied and german troops were killed -- four-hundred and twenty-five thousand
strike-one pitch...is down and away -- one ball and one strike
so it's not as if i know all these things -- i looked them up -- only because i want...the kids, especially, to never forget this day -- i think it's an obligation 
1-and-1, the count to hudson -- pena and upton...out on the lines
the next pitch -- in the dirt -- and a swing and a miss, by hudson -- 1-and-2, the count to tim 
the atlanta braves -- they've won five straight -- 15 outta 19 -- and the other note -- and freddy gonzalez knows about it, by heart [gonzalez, on the screen] -- if the braves...score first,...they are...25-and-3 -- 25-an'-3 [with a chuckle in his voice] 
hudson waiting -- greinke trying to get out of the trouble
the 1-2 pitch -- off-speed -- nubbed, in front of the plate -- federowicz throws to gonzalez, and that's it 
no runs, a hit, a walk, and two left -- and, at the end of an inning and a half,...no score
the baseball story (not a direct quote):
today is don sutton bobblehead day
[sutton threw out the ceremonial first pitch (before the game), to old battery-mate steve yeager]

doug harvey was a marvelous umpire -- he always told this story about don sutton -- i can't vouch for its...what's the word -- veracity -- but...he always told this story...about don

don was a great pitcher -- all-time leader for the dodgers in innings pitched, wins, shutouts -- he's in the hall of fame -- but he was always...suspected of doctoring the baseball

nothing was ever proven, but...there was always this suspicion -- that maybe he was using sandpaper

well, don was pitching, one day, and, that game, doug harvey was behind the plate

doug calls time out, and he goes out to the mound

"let me see your glove, don"

sutton hands him the glove

doug searches the glove, and he finds a piece of paper there

on the paper it says: you're warm, but it's not here

No comments:

Post a Comment