>Machete?

>
Machete? Really?

For those of you who read this blog before the papers – well read the papers first – Willie joked that Omar is in Denver sharpening his machete. Machete?

Random Thoughts before I waste a sunny day blogging:

The black hats with the blue bill look horrible on TV. You can’t even see the NY logo. Please ban these forever.

Gary Carter is backtracking on his comments. Sorry Gary, you talked yourself out of the running.

Good line by Mushnick today that none of the Art Howe camera shots were racially motivated. Of course that was Sportschannel/FSNY, maybe they were more open minded.

Starting to see “mainstream media” write the “It’s Omar’s fault too” columns. They like to rip the bloggers but they tend to be 4 days behind the bloggers on everything.

The Times has Reggie Jackson saying, “It can play on our mind. We are going to think about it (race) in times of difficulty, whether you feel sorry for yourself, or whether you just acknowledge it.”

Adding that “it’s fair to think about it,” Jackson also said a man in Randolph’s position must be “sensitive how you express it” toward people you are “trying to meld with and create a better environment for all.”

Tomorrow: How the Mets can eliminate the curse on them.

Tuesday’s discussion (plus or minus the manager’s job): “What is a ‘real Met / True Yankee”

Machete?


Machete? Really?

For those of you who read this blog before the papers – well read the papers first – Willie joked that Omar is in Denver sharpening his machete. Machete?

Random Thoughts before I waste a sunny day blogging:

The black hats with the blue bill look horrible on TV. You can’t even see the NY logo. Please ban these forever.

Gary Carter is backtracking on his comments. Sorry Gary, you talked yourself out of the running.

Good line by Mushnick today that none of the Art Howe camera shots were racially motivated. Of course that was Sportschannel/FSNY, maybe they were more open minded.

Starting to see “mainstream media” write the “It’s Omar’s fault too” columns. They like to rip the bloggers but they tend to be 4 days behind the bloggers on everything.

The Times has Reggie Jackson saying, “It can play on our mind. We are going to think about it (race) in times of difficulty, whether you feel sorry for yourself, or whether you just acknowledge it.”

Adding that “it’s fair to think about it,” Jackson also said a man in Randolph’s position must be “sensitive how you express it” toward people you are “trying to meld with and create a better environment for all.”

Tomorrow: How the Mets can eliminate the curse on them.

Tuesday’s discussion (plus or minus the manager’s job): “What is a ‘real Met / True Yankee”

>Alleged 1988 Willie Comment In Winfield Biography

>Real interesting post linked at the bottom here. It’s a sunny day and sensitive topic so I will tread lightly, and I don’t know what Willie said or didn’t.

I was surfing the internet and came across a post saying in 1988 Dave Winfield’s biography quoted Willie as saying a black player could be a “good Yankee” but never a “true Yankee.”

Some serious allegations in there. I haven’t read the book, I don’t know Dave, I don’t know Willie, I don’t know if this blogger is a maniac, I don’t know what Willie said or didn’t….but some quick research below makes it seem like it’s at least in Winfield’s book. Hopefully Steinbrenner and Willie are right on this one.

While looking around for “proof” that this is even in the bio, I found a Times link here that mentions Steinbrenner being mad about some comments being fabricated – which matches Willie’s version.

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE0DF173AF932A05750C0A96E948260

Then I found this link to the LA Times suggests Winfield did write it:
Baseball Blue Jays Have the Horses-but Can They Pull Together This…

Pay-Per-View – Los Angeles Times – ProQuest Archiver – Apr 10, 1988
In his book, “Winfield: A Player’s Life,” Dave Winfield quotes New York Yankees’ teammate Willie Randolph as saying that Yankee tradition prevents a black

All 3 relatedRelated web pages

You click that link and…

In his book, “Winfield: A Player’s Life,” Dave Winfield quotes New York Yankees’ teammate Willie Randolph as saying that Yankee tradition prevents a black player from ever being a “true Yankee.” Randolph has called Winfield’s version a lie, much to the glee of owner George Steinbrenner, who has used Randolph’s denial in his continuing and disgusting attempt to discredit and debase Winfield.

Two respected ex-Yankees, Don Baylor and Ken Griffey, told Claire Smith of the Hartford Courant the other day that Randolph did say it, though Griffey added that Winfield and Randolph have both taken so much abuse, have been criticized by the media and management so many times, that it might have been said in jest as they tried to analyze any one of those moments of abuse.

So there you have it. I’m not Mike Wallace. I also think people should be able to grow in twenty years and become different and better people. Finally, I will take the Willie’s word if he says he didn’t say it, after all he was Captain of the Yankees.

Here’s the blogger that wrote the interesting piece:

http://sportsonmymind.com/2008/05/23/willie-randolph-and-the-death-of-the-race-card/

Alleged 1988 Willie Comment In Winfield Biography

Real interesting post linked at the bottom here. It’s a sunny day and sensitive topic so I will tread lightly, and I don’t know what Willie said or didn’t.

I was surfing the internet and came across a post saying in 1988 Dave Winfield’s biography quoted Willie as saying a black player could be a “good Yankee” but never a “true Yankee.”

Some serious allegations in there. I haven’t read the book, I don’t know Dave, I don’t know Willie, I don’t know if this blogger is a maniac, I don’t know what Willie said or didn’t….but some quick research below makes it seem like it’s at least in Winfield’s book. Hopefully Steinbrenner and Willie are right on this one.

While looking around for “proof” that this is even in the bio, I found a Times link here that mentions Steinbrenner being mad about some comments being fabricated – which matches Willie’s version.

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE0DF173AF932A05750C0A96E948260

Then I found this link to the LA Times suggests Winfield did write it:
Baseball Blue Jays Have the Horses-but Can They Pull Together This…

Pay-Per-View – Los Angeles Times – ProQuest Archiver – Apr 10, 1988
In his book, “Winfield: A Player’s Life,” Dave Winfield quotes New York Yankees’ teammate Willie Randolph as saying that Yankee tradition prevents a black

All 3 relatedRelated web pages

You click that link and…

In his book, “Winfield: A Player’s Life,” Dave Winfield quotes New York Yankees’ teammate Willie Randolph as saying that Yankee tradition prevents a black player from ever being a “true Yankee.” Randolph has called Winfield’s version a lie, much to the glee of owner George Steinbrenner, who has used Randolph’s denial in his continuing and disgusting attempt to discredit and debase Winfield.

Two respected ex-Yankees, Don Baylor and Ken Griffey, told Claire Smith of the Hartford Courant the other day that Randolph did say it, though Griffey added that Winfield and Randolph have both taken so much abuse, have been criticized by the media and management so many times, that it might have been said in jest as they tried to analyze any one of those moments of abuse.

So there you have it. I’m not Mike Wallace. I also think people should be able to grow in twenty years and become different and better people. Finally, I will take the Willie’s word if he says he didn’t say it, after all he was Captain of the Yankees.

Here’s the blogger that wrote the interesting piece:

http://sportsonmymind.com/2008/05/23/willie-randolph-and-the-death-of-the-race-card/