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10.24.2008 7:40 am

Jamie Moyer, national hero

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Americans are living longer and remaining active longer, to the delight of orthopedic surgeons everywhere.

So we tend to rally around athletes who sustain success well past the normal sports retirement age. One such hero is Jamie Moyer, who pitched for the Cardinals back in 1991 – during his sixth season in the majors.

Moyer, 45, will start Game 3 of the World Series for the Phillies. Between now and then, he will answer lots of questions about being so old.

“I’m not upset by people asking me about it, but people are sometimes a little disrespectful of it,” Moyer told reporters. “I’m wearing the uniform, and I’m going to enjoy it. Write what you want to write—good, bad or indifferent.

“I’m going to have fun with it. Go walk the street and ask any 40-plus-year-old or 45-year-old or 30-year-old whether they would give their right foot to be in this situation. And they would.”

MYSTERIES OF THE UNIVERSE

Questions to ponder while Tom Brady’s infected knee festers:

  • Did Tampa Bay Rays manager Joe Maddon channel his inner Whitey Herzog during Game 2 of the playoffs?
  • When was the last time you saw that much small ball in the Fall Classic?
  • Now that Auburn has lost its third consecutive game, will Tommy Tuberville have to fire somebody else on his coaching staff?


SAY HELLO TO PEYTON MANNING

The Colts quarterback has become a fixture in the Tennessee Titans defensive meeting room. Manning doesn’t appear in person, of course, but the team has affixed a giant Fathead wall poster of him on a wall.

“He’s over there staring at us. We’ve got him on the wall,” defensive end Jevon Kearse told the Nashville City Paper. “We’ve got a Fathead up there. It’s just a reminder that we need to get real close and personal with him, just an early reminder.”

But Kearse did NOT say that the Titans had a bounty on Manning. Tennessee will leave that sort of chatter to the Ravens.

MAKING FUN OF IOWA STATE

Here is another reason why Tipsheet loves college sports.

Thanks to Deadspin for bringing this to our attention. Also, if you’re a fantasy football fan, you will like this clip that Deadspin highlighted.

QUIPS ‘R US

Here is what some of America’s leading sports pundits have been writing:

Jayson Stark, ESPN.com, on the Rays’ small ball success: “We’d be willing to bet that, before Thursday, we lived in a land of 300 million Americans who all believed, as one unified nation, that making outs was the one thing in baseball you would most want to avoid — with the possible exception of learning that Scott Boras had signed on to represent your cleanup hitter. But then, along came this historic baseball event to teach us that we’ve had it all wrong — that we’ve had it all wrong since birth, in fact. Outs are good. At least if they’re the right kinds of outs. On Thursday, the Rays made all the right outs.”

Steve Rosenbloom, ChicagoTribune.com: “Mark Prior, who didn’t pitch for the Padres last season the way he didn’t pitch for the Cubs the season before, is preparing to file for free agency. Scouts say you could pencil in Prior as no worse than a No. 2 starter on any team’s disabled list.”

Bill Plaschke, Los Angeles Times: “Eight months after the face of the NFL tearfully announced his retirement, that face is bruised and blushing. It is the face of an accused liar. It is the face of an alleged cheater. It is a face lost. The works of a lifetime, tarnished in less than a football season. An American hero, undone by the American way. That’s the thing about freedom. It gives us the right to choose wrong.The score is now final, and it’s not even close. Brett Favre, New York Jets quarterback, Green Bay Packers traitor, fast-leaking legend, should have quit when he said he was quitting.”

Dave Darling, Orlando Sentinel, on letting your kids stay up late to watch World Series games: “Baseball can provide memories for a lifetime, and if they miss a historic moment they’ll regret it. Just ask Cubs fans who skipped the 1908 Series.”

MEGAPHONE

“That’s the cool thing about us. We’re multidimensional. Even when we’re hitting the long ball, we’re still thinking small. We’re mature enough to understand that big things happen when you focus on the smallest of things.”

Tampa Bay Ray Carlos Pena.

25 comments

Comments are closed.

Don’t worry Big Al, you have my supprt too.

As for that youtube video, don’t they know anything about tasteful comedy? What a disgrace to tipsheet!

— Josh "I'm Sloshed" Hancock
12:09 pm October 24th, 2008

“United Socialist States of America, here we come! Muahahahahahahaha!!!!”

Works for me and I sure hope so! Damn sure better than this corporate kleptocracy we have now.

— stl_tl
12:35 pm October 24th, 2008

I just want to have a good time and watch our Blues win. Over 500 people laid off at the old AG Edwards complex down the street…how ’bout she stop by their offices instead. Are they really going to play the Alaska state song before the game? I’m sure the “fair-weather lower bowl fans” will be thrilled.

— PT
12:46 pm October 24th, 2008

I’d like to puck Sarah Palin. Go Blues!

— Drunken Sailor
1:13 pm October 24th, 2008

We have politicians throw out the first pitch at a baseball game so what’s the problem with having Palin drop the puck at a Blues game??

— Frank
1:45 pm October 24th, 2008

Who the “f” made Mac the arbiter of what you can post on here? Hey, Mac, go scratch.

Palin shouldn’t drop the puck because hockey should be apolitical. Fans are being forced to swallow the owners political beliefs…don’t get caught up in the BS that she’s a “hockey mom” and we’re doing it for them. Horse s**t. Just look at what happened in Philly, they had to blast the music so loud to drown out the boo’s…BTW, anyone see Philly’s record since the Palin dropped the puck? They haven’t won a game at all!! Now that’s funny.

BTW, I also don’t like it that Boeing “sponsors” the national anthem. That’s disgusting the way they snine the boening logo on the ice when everyone is supposed to be standing to honor the flag and the US.

— Fuhgeddaboutit
2:30 pm October 24th, 2008

Sarah Palin dropping the puck at a hockey game? next thing you know, Obama will try bowling and use that as a photo-op!

nah, never happen.

— Obamabot
2:52 pm October 24th, 2008

Big Al…why are you so threatened by Palin. Good looking independent women make you a little weak kneed? Nice to have a hockey fan running for the White House. Doubt you’ll see Obama drop any pucks at Scott Trade anytime soon, or ever.

— BigRich
2:54 pm October 24th, 2008

I want my hockey players to finish their checks, deliver clean hits and score goals.

I want my cab drivers to know where they are going, without GPS.

I want my electricians to know how to wire a house.

I want my doctors and surgeons to be far more knowledgeable than me when it comes to medicine.

And I want anyone who is going to be President to understand Constitutional Law and how to best rally our country. You may call that elitist, but remember the framers of the Constitution were not yokels but “elitists” who were some of the brightest minds (who even spoke French, egads!) that wanted to create freedom for all.

Sorry, but I do no want a Bubba or a Hockey Mom–because she’s one of us–to be in the Oval Office. Alaska is a far cry from the most powerful seat in the world.

Go BLUES indeed.

— Big Al
3:25 pm October 24th, 2008

Big Rich–Funny, the first thing you mention about Palin is that she is good looking. Yeah, that’s how you should judge a VP candidate. And BTW, if you find her attractive. LASEK surgery is now about $99. You should check into it. Obama will be President in about 15 days. And thanks to the last 8 years, he’ll be plenty busy.

First African American President. First Blues Cup. Change is good.

— Big Al
3:36 pm October 24th, 2008

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