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Old 01-07-2005, 01:32 PM   #1 (permalink)
pan6467
Lennonite Priest
 
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Location: Mansfield, Ohio USA
Greedy players get greedier and greedier

Granted assinine fans who refuse to give important balls back to baseball players reaching milestones suck. And I truly believe that the person who gets the ball should be rewarded in some form to keep the person from e-baying the item.

But I read this and am fucking disgusted. Players get paid enough, even the fucking scrubs get paid more in 1 year than I may see in a lifetime. What this tells me is if a ballplayer (already making millions) is going to use the ball for money, then he either doesn't know how to save, is not much of a team player, OR needs money so badly that any dimestore hood could probably pay him to throw games.

Baseball is embroiled in enough controversy (steroids, DC, etc) that it doesn't need this.

The player should turn the ball over to the REDSOX as he is an employee of the team, the ball is a tool from the job and therefore belongs to his employer. That ball IS baseball history and if the Bosox didn't want it, to frame and display for fans (which would be stupid if they didn't), I'm sure COOPERSTOWN wanted it.

This guy is committing career suicide. This just furthers my belief that players are saying to the fans, "fuck you, greed rules and I am going to get every penny out of my career I can even if it does fuck with my team and you."

Or this is all just sour grapes because he sucked and believed he should have had more playing time.

Sell the damn ring you got.... sure that will be worth more than the baseball ever will be.

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Sox first baseman keeps ball gloved for last Series out


January 7, 2005
BOSTON (AP) -- Red Sox fans have seen the video over and over again. A ground ball to pitcher Keith Foulke. He tosses it underhand to backup first baseman Doug Mientkiewicz, who raises it high as Boston celebrates its first World Series championship in 86 years.

Mientkiewicz still hasn't let go of the ball. But now the Red Sox want it back.

Calling the ball, ``my retirement fund,'' Mientkiewicz stored it in a safe deposit box. Red Sox CEO Larry Lucchino said Thursday he's going to ask Mientkiewicz to return it to the team.

``We want it to be part of Red Sox archives or museums so it can be shared with the fans,'' Lucchino told The Boston Globe. ``We would hope he would understand the historical nature of it.''

Mientkiewicz seems to understand it very well, which is exactly why he held on to it.

Historic baseballs have recently fetched impressive sums. The baseball Red Sox catcher Carlton Fisk banged off the foul pole in the 1975 World Series sold for $113,373. The ball Barry Bonds hit for his 73rd home run went for $450,000. The most expensive baseball of all time is Mark McGwire's 70th homer, which went for $3 million.

Mientkiewicz said he thinks the Boston World Series ball has more value than a home run ball.

``Those are important and all, don't get me wrong, but there are always going to be more home runs,'' he said. ``This is something that took 86 years, and 86 years is a long time. Personally, I went through hell and back this year. But winning the World Series is something I'm going to remember for a long time.''

Mientkiewicz came to Boston from Minnesota in the three-team midseason deal that sent Boston shortstop Nomar Garciaparra to the Chicago Cubs.

Mientkiewicz, who batted .215 for Boston, was used primarily as a late innings defensive replacement, and the former Gold Glove first baseman has indicated his unhappiness with the role.

Boston broke its championship drought by beating the New York Yankees in seven games in the American League Championship Series, then sweeping the St. Louis Cardinals in four games in the World Series.

After the game, Mientkiewicz said he put the ball in his locker, then gave it to his wife, Jodi, who put it in her purse. The next day, the ball was authenticated by Major League Baseball.

Carmine Tiso, spokesman for MLB, told the Globe that Mientkiewicz owns the baseball, though Joe Januszewski, Red Sox director of corporate partnerships, said he thinks the team owns it.

Mientkiewicz couldn't be reached for comment Thursday by the Globe after Lucchino said the club wanted the ball back. But on Wednesday, he left no doubt that he believes the ball belongs to him.

``I know this ball has a lot of sentimental value,'' Mientkiewicz said. ``I hope I don't have to use it for the money. It would be cool if we have kids someday to have it stay in our family for a long time. But I can be bought. I'm thinking, there's four years at Florida State for one of my kids. At least.''


LINK: http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news;_yl...v=ap&type=lgns
__________________
I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?"
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