had one hit as a Red vs Padres might have been off Greg Maddux' brother. Just splendiferous
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had one hit as a Red vs Padres might have been off Greg Maddux' brother. Just splendiferous
What?
I will repeat because this moment in Reds history is unrivalled. During his legendary tenure with the great 1991 squad, Stan Jefferson appeared as a pinch runner in many contests, but that contribution was trifling compared to his batting average of .093. While working tonight, I paused to remember his one safety, a glancing blow against the Padres. It was a moment to savor
That helps clear it up.
I am never able tostop equivocating over the perenially Brown conundrum. Ever since my salad days, I still cannot make a decision on the relative value of Keith Brown or Scott Brown. Of course both were great, not as great as Andy MacGaffigan or Jim Crowell, needless to say, but then the other tremendous Brown, Marty Brown merits serious consideration as well. Then the enigmatic Chris Brown, great third sacker who was signed by the Reds, but alas never took the field of play, was valuable in his own right.
Makes you wonder if he was as good as his brothers sibling................
Stan Jefferson's concenrtic pinch-running was a trifle perigynous to the muntitudinous and pithecanthropus baserunning skill-set of the effeminate and biodegradable Sam Mejias.
Excellent analysis unfortunately Brook Fordyce and Jack Daugherty disagree
the Jeffersonian opus combines homage (the Unter-Winningham) and historicist anxiety (the anti-Krenchiki) like no other
Of course, we all know the real Jefferson phenom was the one and only Reggie.
Before publishing this disquisition the Jefferson estate checked their facts with the tandem histories of Tom Runnels, Wade Rowden and Tom Foley for authenticity
"Too curst is more than curst: I shall lessen God's
sending that way; for it is said, 'Alan Knicely sends a curst
cow short horns;' but to a cow too curst he sends none."
So sayeth Cecil Espy, Esquire