The World According to Larry Andersen . . .
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Larry Andersen, the Houston Astros’ relief pitcher, throws a fastball and talks a screwball. He wonders about things most of us probably don’t ever consider:
--”What do they call a coffee break at the Lipton Tea Co.?”
--”What do they package Styrofoam in when they ship it?”
--”How do you explain counter-clockwise to someone with a digital watch?”
--”When you see a fly on the ceiling, was it flying upside down all the time, or was it flying right-side up and flipped over at the last possible second?”
Think tank: Why in the world would Andersen think about such things?
“If you spend 10 years in the minors, like I did, you have to have a sense of humor,” he said.
More Andersen-isms: “I dropped spot remover on my dog, now he’s gone.”
“I can’t tell if I’m in a groove or a rut.”
“If at first you don’t succeed, failure may be your thing.”
“All I want is less to do, more time to do it in and to get paid more for not getting it done.”
Trivia time: What National Football League team outdrew every other in home paid attendance in 1988?
Book Review: Announcer Milo Hamilton asked Yogi Berra, a coach with the Houston Astros, what his new book, “Yogi: It Ain’t Over,” is about.
Said Berra: “I don’t know. I haven’t read it yet.”
For what it’s worth: The Lakers were 13-12 on Kareem Abdul-Jabbar tribute nights.
Time out: Ray Buck of the Houston Post wrote a story of Yogi-isms last week that included one tale about Yogi bumping into a man carrying a grandfather clock. As Berra rubbed his shoulder, he said: “For crying out loud, why don’t you wear a wristwatch like everyone else?”
Berra insisted the story wasn’t true.
That may be, but it’s not a bad story.
Required feting: Joe Garagiola swears this one is true. When Berra was honored at a banquet in St. Louis, he said: “I want to thank everyone who made this night necessary.”
Trivia answer: The Buffalo Bills, who drew 631,181 paid customers to Rich Stadium in suburban Orchard Park, N.Y.
Add forgettable facts: According to the book, “The Baseball Superstats,” which uses on-base percentage and slugging average plus a stolen-base factor and a ballpark rating--theoretically because some ballparks are easier to hit in than others--the greatest-hitting catcher ever is . . . Gene Tenace.
Quotebook: From relief pitcher Dan Quisenberry: “I’m just a garbage man. I come in and clean up other people’s messes.”
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