My first thought was that it was pretty lazy to write about how your son's coach got kicked out of a little league game. I mean, who does Hoffman think he is: Leon Hale (who today took us by surprise and became a Buddhist. Maybe my who view of the world is falling apart, ahhh)?
My second thought was that using your position as a columnist to vent about your child's coach getting thrown out showed a complete lack of perspective of the total insignificance of children's organized sports.
But then I read how the little league team came from behind after their coach was ejected. That was pretty awesome. And even more awesome was that it is my favorite strategy when playing MLB on the PlayStation. Charge the mound, get ejected, the team rallies and wins. I just never thought that is worked in real life. Sadly, managers rarely charge the mound in professional games. Something about acting professional, I guess. In fact the only ejection I can remember was this one.
- October 11, 2003: In the top of the fourth inning of Game 3 of the ALCS at Fenway Park, Red Sox starting pitcher Pedro Martínez hits Yankee batter Karim Garcia, prompting an argument between the two players, which ends with both teams exiting the dugouts. In the bottom half on the inning, a pitch from Roger Clemens to Manny Ramírez is high, and the benches clear with both sides brawling. Yankee bench coach Don Zimmer charges at Martinez who then grabs his head and swings him to the ground. Later, midway through the ninth inning, Garcia and Yankee pitcher Jeff Nelson fight with a Fenway Park groundskeeper in the bullpen.
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Remember the time that I was all high and playing with Nick and Danny? I threw at their pitcher, inducing them to charge the mound and have their starter-- Clemens, I think-- ejected early in the game. That was hilarious.
I do love throwing at the batter and/or charging the mound, though.
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