Getting to know Chip; a lesson in baseball vernacular
- sighyoung
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Re: Getting to know Chip; a lesson in baseball vernacular
Predicted Carayisms to emerge over the course of the season:
Ice-cream social: a meeting on the mound
Aunt Fritzi: a former star of a team now overshadowed by an up-and-coming player
Toonerville Trolley: a slow roller on the infield
Egg-and-spoon race: awkward attempt to close out a win in the ninth inning
Rita Hayworth: a good looking prospect
Barney Google: a player who looks off that night (AKA has "goo-goo-googly eyes")
Rommel: a pitcher who is tips his pitches, usually to a
Patton: a batter who 'read the pitcher's book'
Sputnik: A high, deep home-run blast by an opposing player
Oliver Twist (verb): to beg for more of something (especially during a losing streak)
Ice-cream social: a meeting on the mound
Aunt Fritzi: a former star of a team now overshadowed by an up-and-coming player
Toonerville Trolley: a slow roller on the infield
Egg-and-spoon race: awkward attempt to close out a win in the ninth inning
Rita Hayworth: a good looking prospect
Barney Google: a player who looks off that night (AKA has "goo-goo-googly eyes")
Rommel: a pitcher who is tips his pitches, usually to a
Patton: a batter who 'read the pitcher's book'
Sputnik: A high, deep home-run blast by an opposing player
Oliver Twist (verb): to beg for more of something (especially during a losing streak)
- SunnyJim
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Re: Getting to know Chip; a lesson in baseball vernacular
Ripped straight from his grandpa's script.sighyoung wrote: ↑June 8 23, 2:49 pmPredicted Carayisms to emerge over the course of the season:
Ice-cream social: a meeting on the mound
Aunt Fritzi: a former star of a team now overshadowed by an up-and-coming player
Toonerville Trolley: a slow roller on the infield
Egg-and-spoon race: awkward attempt to close out a win in the ninth inning
Rita Hayworth: a good looking prospect
Barney Google: a player who looks off that night (AKA has "goo-goo-googly eyes")
Rommel: a pitcher who is tips his pitches, usually to a
Patton: a batter who 'read the pitcher's book'
Sputnik: A high, deep home-run blast by an opposing player
Oliver Twist (verb): to beg for more of something (especially during a losing streak)
When will he start asking how to pronounce Arenado when spelled backwards?
- MinorLeagueGuy
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Re: Getting to know Chip; a lesson in baseball vernacular
Example: "Dylan Carlson was a real Rita Hayworth before he reached the Big Leagues. Now, he's more of a Courtney Love."sighyoung wrote: ↑June 8 23, 2:49 pmPredicted Carayisms to emerge over the course of the season:
Ice-cream social: a meeting on the mound
Aunt Fritzi: a former star of a team now overshadowed by an up-and-coming player
Toonerville Trolley: a slow roller on the infield
Egg-and-spoon race: awkward attempt to close out a win in the ninth inning
Rita Hayworth: a good looking prospect
Barney Google: a player who looks off that night (AKA has "goo-goo-googly eyes")
Rommel: a pitcher who is tips his pitches, usually to a
Patton: a batter who 'read the pitcher's book'
Sputnik: A high, deep home-run blast by an opposing player
Oliver Twist (verb): to beg for more of something (especially during a losing streak)
- sighyoung
- Mayor of GRB
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- Location: Louisville
Re: Getting to know Chip; a lesson in baseball vernacular
"Shelby Miller was a bobby-soxer hearthrob at the start of his career, but has mellowed into a regular Rudy Vallee out of the Dodgers' pen.
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Spider John
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- Radbird
- There's someone in my head but it's not me
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Re: Getting to know Chip; a lesson in baseball vernacular
He just did it again: “Contreras, in harness, is back behind the plate.” So strange, never heard it called that pre-Chip.
- CardsofSTL
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Re: Getting to know Chip; a lesson in baseball vernacular
- Radbird
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Re: Getting to know Chip; a lesson in baseball vernacular
Because then I wouldn’t hear cutting-edge commentary like “He almost Charlie Browned him!!” Compelling stuff.CardsofSTL wrote: ↑June 13 23, 5:59 pmwhy the blankety-blank aren't you watching the SF feed?
- haltz
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Re: Getting to know Chip; a lesson in baseball vernacular
in the soup: in trouble with runners on base
- Radbird
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Re: Getting to know Chip; a lesson in baseball vernacular
Today’s contributions:
From post to pillar: when an outfielder runs to catch a ball.
Something about turning your bat into sawdust, indicating a tense situation for a batter. He used it on Donnie. I think right before his game-tying blast.
From post to pillar: when an outfielder runs to catch a ball.
Something about turning your bat into sawdust, indicating a tense situation for a batter. He used it on Donnie. I think right before his game-tying blast.



