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Post by beaverbeliever on Aug 5, 2022 10:52:26 GMT -8
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Post by nuclearbeaver on Aug 5, 2022 11:17:28 GMT -8
Good spot for Greg. I think he would have kept having trouble with playing time and getting enough AB here. He will get a chance to shine against good pitching as a coug.
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Post by Henry Skrimshander on Aug 5, 2022 12:08:23 GMT -8
This year's Ernie Harwell Award winner at OSU. Anyone who grew up listening to Tigers' baseball will understand.
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Post by TheGlove on Aug 5, 2022 13:26:04 GMT -8
This year's Ernie Harwell Award winner at OSU. Anyone who grew up listening to Tigers' baseball will understand. So basically no one but you? I can't think that many here "grew up listening to Tigers' baseball."
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Post by jdogge on Aug 5, 2022 15:18:55 GMT -8
This year's Ernie Harwell Award winner at OSU. Anyone who grew up listening to Tigers' baseball will understand. So basically no one but you? I can't think that many here "grew up listening to Tigers' baseball." He was attention-seeking.
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Post by Henry Skrimshander on Aug 6, 2022 7:17:32 GMT -8
So basically no one but you? I can't think that many here "grew up listening to Tigers' baseball." He was attention-seeking. You should know all about that. Instead of taking cheap shots which reflect poorly on yourself, read and learn something about one of the greatest announcers in MLB history. “He stood there like the house by the side of the road and watched that one go by.”As a boy, Ernie Harwell had a speech impediment. To help him become a better speaker, his teachers had him recite poetry and read aloud. As a result, young Ernie Harwell became an avid reader and lover of poetry. One of his favorite poems was “House By the Side of the Road” by Sam Walter Foss, written in 1898. Shortly after his broadcast career began in the 1940s, Ernie used that phrase to describe a batter who took a called third strike. It usually went like this: “Striiike three… Mattingly is out… He stood there like the house by the side of the road and watched that one go by…” Ernie’s inflection on this (emphasis on “He stood there”) was wonderful.Greg Fuch's OSU career in a nutshell.
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Post by jdogge on Aug 6, 2022 19:34:40 GMT -8
He was attention-seeking. You should know all about that. Instead of taking cheap shots which reflect poorly on yourself, read and learn something about one of the greatest announcers in MLB history. “He stood there like the house by the side of the road and watched that one go by.”As a boy, Ernie Harwell had a speech impediment. To help him become a better speaker, his teachers had him recite poetry and read aloud. As a result, young Ernie Harwell became an avid reader and lover of poetry. One of his favorite poems was “House By the Side of the Road” by Sam Walter Foss, written in 1898. Shortly after his broadcast career began in the 1940s, Ernie used that phrase to describe a batter who took a called third strike. It usually went like this: “Striiike three… Mattingly is out… He stood there like the house by the side of the road and watched that one go by…” Ernie’s inflection on this (emphasis on “He stood there”) was wonderful.Greg Fuch's OSU career in a nutshell. lol ...
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Post by lebaneaver on Aug 6, 2022 21:37:23 GMT -8
You should know all about that. Instead of taking cheap shots which reflect poorly on yourself, read and learn something about one of the greatest announcers in MLB history. “He stood there like the house by the side of the road and watched that one go by.”As a boy, Ernie Harwell had a speech impediment. To help him become a better speaker, his teachers had him recite poetry and read aloud. As a result, young Ernie Harwell became an avid reader and lover of poetry. One of his favorite poems was “House By the Side of the Road” by Sam Walter Foss, written in 1898. Shortly after his broadcast career began in the 1940s, Ernie used that phrase to describe a batter who took a called third strike. It usually went like this: “Striiike three… Mattingly is out… He stood there like the house by the side of the road and watched that one go by…” Ernie’s inflection on this (emphasis on “He stood there”) was wonderful.Greg Fuch's OSU career in a nutshell. lol ... It’ll be “drier” in the Spring, on the Palouse….. no s%#t
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Post by wilkyisdashiznit on Aug 6, 2022 22:03:34 GMT -8
He was attention-seeking. You should know all about that. Instead of taking cheap shots which reflect poorly on yourself, read and learn something about one of the greatest announcers in MLB history. “He stood there like the house by the side of the road and watched that one go by.”As a boy, Ernie Harwell had a speech impediment. To help him become a better speaker, his teachers had him recite poetry and read aloud. As a result, young Ernie Harwell became an avid reader and lover of poetry. One of his favorite poems was “House By the Side of the Road” by Sam Walter Foss, written in 1898. Shortly after his broadcast career began in the 1940s, Ernie used that phrase to describe a batter who took a called third strike. It usually went like this: “Striiike three… Mattingly is out… He stood there like the house by the side of the road and watched that one go by…” Ernie’s inflection on this (emphasis on “He stood there”) was wonderful.Greg Fuch's OSU career in a nutshell.
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