I was lucky enough to get back to my pre-op velocity, but it took a full 20 monthsAn Old Friend wrote: ↑17 Feb 2026 15:46 pmI had a bit of juice before Tommy John surgery but never was able to get back to my pre-op velocities.Cardinals1964 wrote: ↑17 Feb 2026 02:03 am I just read a few posts where somebody asked, “have you ever played baseball” or said “obviously you’ve never played baseball”.
So who on here has ever played baseball? I’m not talking little league, high school or senior league. Who has played pro ball?
Not a camp where everyone is invited to try out. I’m looking for the legitimate prospect. I’m guessing nobody.
To go further, who has owned a team? Who is a billionaire? People have lots of advice for billionaires. I figure there has to be a couple on here. NOT.
Just admit as you drive to your middle management job or Taco Bell, you have no idea what it takes to run a $billion corporation.
It’s highly likely that the 1 hour a day thinking about how a team should be ran, doesn’t make you an expert on the subject.
Face it, like me, you’re a fan with an opinion that doesn’t normally make sense.
I do not work at Taco Bell.
Have you ever played baseball?
Moderators: STLtoday Forum Moderators, Cards Talk Moderators
Re: Have you ever played baseball?
Re: Have you ever played baseball?
Played in college
Re: Have you ever played baseball?
I have fond memories of going 9 for 11 in a Little League game while throwing out 5 base runners.
I peaked at 12.
I peaked at 12.
-
rockondlouie
- Forum User
- Posts: 14874
- Joined: 23 May 2024 12:41 pm
Re: Have you ever played baseball?
I'm married to a teacher, my wife's gone from H.S. English teacher to College Prof but her dream was to be a published poet.Voldemort wrote: ↑18 Feb 2026 20:48 pmLouie, I hate this quote. I taught for just under 4 decades.rockondlouie wrote: ↑18 Feb 2026 09:57 amThose who can..........dosikeston bulldog2 wrote: ↑17 Feb 2026 09:47 am There is a thought that thinks those type people, those that observe verse play, make the best coaches and the nstructors; while stars, and the rest of us, coach, but can’t understand how a person Cant do it and make bad coaches.
Those who can't.......,teach
Re: Have you ever played baseball?
I had to stop playing competitively after high school.Cardinals1964 wrote: ↑17 Feb 2026 02:03 am I just read a few posts where somebody asked, “have you ever played baseball” or said “obviously you’ve never played baseball”.
So who on here has ever played baseball? I’m not talking little league, high school or senior league. Who has played pro ball?
Not a camp where everyone is invited to try out. I’m looking for the legitimate prospect. I’m guessing nobody.
To go further, who has owned a team? Who is a billionaire? People have lots of advice for billionaires. I figure there has to be a couple on here. NOT.
Just admit as you drive to your middle management job or Taco Bell, you have no idea what it takes to run a $billion corporation.
It’s highly likely that the 1 hour a day thinking about how a team should be ran, doesn’t make you an expert on the subject.
Face it, like me, you’re a fan with an opinion that doesn’t normally make sense.
I was the best defensive shortstop I ever saw at that level - but I could not hit a lick.
High school version of Brendan Ryan - with even less bat relative to the level of competition.
The world of business was a much better fit.
That said, your assumption that one must excel at playing a game to understand what produces a high performing organization is nonsense.
The factors which produce excellence at the individual leader level and high performance at organizational level vary little from one industry to another.
Baseball is no different.
Which is precisely why Bloom has a job right now.
Fact is, some of us DO KNOW a lot more about how a team should be operated and how success is achieved than Super Slo Mo ever did.
I am one.
There are others.
Your questions and assumption are not relevant.
The real question is whether Bloom is equipped for what he is doing and will DeWitt allow him to succeed?
(As a organizational performance consultant for many years, I can assure you those 2 foundational questions are at the very core of success or failure in nearly every instance.)
Bloom will make mistakes - and already has.
Everyone does.
But I am convinced he has the intelligence and skills to succeed - unlike his predecessor.
Whether he will be provided with the support and resources to do so is another matter entirely - and that is the single most pressing question that will be answered in 2026 and 2027.
-
Cardinals1964
- Forum User
- Posts: 1077
- Joined: 12 May 2024 02:13 am
- Location: St. Louis
Re: Have you ever played baseball?
I don’t blame you for not getting to true meaning of what I write. It’s kind of garbled. Your assumptions are incorrect of what I intended.Melville wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026 08:48 amI had to stop playing competitively after high school.Cardinals1964 wrote: ↑17 Feb 2026 02:03 am I just read a few posts where somebody asked, “have you ever played baseball” or said “obviously you’ve never played baseball”.
So who on here has ever played baseball? I’m not talking little league, high school or senior league. Who has played pro ball?
Not a camp where everyone is invited to try out. I’m looking for the legitimate prospect. I’m guessing nobody.
To go further, who has owned a team? Who is a billionaire? People have lots of advice for billionaires. I figure there has to be a couple on here. NOT.
Just admit as you drive to your middle management job or Taco Bell, you have no idea what it takes to run a $billion corporation.
It’s highly likely that the 1 hour a day thinking about how a team should be ran, doesn’t make you an expert on the subject.
Face it, like me, you’re a fan with an opinion that doesn’t normally make sense.
I was the best defensive shortstop I ever saw at that level - but I could not hit a lick.
High school version of Brendan Ryan - with even less bat relative to the level of competition.
The world of business was a much better fit.
That said, your assumption that one must excel at playing a game to understand what produces a high performing organization is nonsense.
The factors which produce excellence at the individual leader level and high performance at organizational level vary little from one industry to another.
Baseball is no different.
Which is precisely why Bloom has a job right now.
Fact is, some of us DO KNOW a lot more about how a team should be operated and how success is achieved than Super Slo Mo ever did.
I am one.
There are others.
Your questions and assumption are not relevant.
The real question is whether Bloom is equipped for what he is doing and will DeWitt allow him to succeed?
(As a organizational performance consultant for many years, I can assure you those 2 foundational questions are at the very core of success or failure in nearly every instance.)
Bloom will make mistakes - and already has.
Everyone does.
But I am convinced he has the intelligence and skills to succeed - unlike his predecessor.
Whether he will be provided with the support and resources to do so is another matter entirely - and that is the single most pressing question that will be answered in 2026 and 2027.
Let’s see if I can put it more simple.
The Little League guy telling the person that didn’t play little league that they don’t know what they’re doing or talking about because they never played Little League isn’t more qualified than the person that didnt play Little League.
Now go up the scale. Just because you played college you don’t necessarily know more than the person that played high school. The higher your level of play does not make your opinion more relevant than the next persons. That was my intent. Because I’ve read more than once, “you must’ve never played the game”.
Which I don’t think really backs an opinion. If your level of play is the only thing that determines how good your opinion is, only major league Hall of Fame managers should have an opinion.
Re: Have you ever played baseball?
I have made this comment a few times to others here. Typically, it is in circumstances like a person saying that a mlb hitter should just take the ball to right with two strikes. That sounds so easy. If a person has not faced 90 mph + I don't think that they necessarily understand just how hard it is to hit that ball anywhere and not just because of the 90+. The hitter has faced other pitches and has to be able to adjust to them. I do agree with your overall point.Cardinals1964 wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026 15:22 pmI don’t blame you for not getting to true meaning of what I write. It’s kind of garbled. Your assumptions are incorrect of what I intended.Melville wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026 08:48 amI had to stop playing competitively after high school.Cardinals1964 wrote: ↑17 Feb 2026 02:03 am I just read a few posts where somebody asked, “have you ever played baseball” or said “obviously you’ve never played baseball”.
So who on here has ever played baseball? I’m not talking little league, high school or senior league. Who has played pro ball?
Not a camp where everyone is invited to try out. I’m looking for the legitimate prospect. I’m guessing nobody.
To go further, who has owned a team? Who is a billionaire? People have lots of advice for billionaires. I figure there has to be a couple on here. NOT.
Just admit as you drive to your middle management job or Taco Bell, you have no idea what it takes to run a $billion corporation.
It’s highly likely that the 1 hour a day thinking about how a team should be ran, doesn’t make you an expert on the subject.
Face it, like me, you’re a fan with an opinion that doesn’t normally make sense.
I was the best defensive shortstop I ever saw at that level - but I could not hit a lick.
High school version of Brendan Ryan - with even less bat relative to the level of competition.
The world of business was a much better fit.
That said, your assumption that one must excel at playing a game to understand what produces a high performing organization is nonsense.
The factors which produce excellence at the individual leader level and high performance at organizational level vary little from one industry to another.
Baseball is no different.
Which is precisely why Bloom has a job right now.
Fact is, some of us DO KNOW a lot more about how a team should be operated and how success is achieved than Super Slo Mo ever did.
I am one.
There are others.
Your questions and assumption are not relevant.
The real question is whether Bloom is equipped for what he is doing and will DeWitt allow him to succeed?
(As a organizational performance consultant for many years, I can assure you those 2 foundational questions are at the very core of success or failure in nearly every instance.)
Bloom will make mistakes - and already has.
Everyone does.
But I am convinced he has the intelligence and skills to succeed - unlike his predecessor.
Whether he will be provided with the support and resources to do so is another matter entirely - and that is the single most pressing question that will be answered in 2026 and 2027.
Let’s see if I can put it more simple.
The Little League guy telling the person that didn’t play little league that they don’t know what they’re doing or talking about because they never played Little League isn’t more qualified than the person that didnt play Little League.
Now go up the scale. Just because you played college you don’t necessarily know more than the person that played high school. The higher your level of play does not make your opinion more relevant than the next persons. That was my intent. Because I’ve read more than once, “you must’ve never played the game”.
Which I don’t think really backs an opinion. If your level of play is the only thing that determines how good your opinion is, only major league Hall of Fame managers should have an opinion.
Re: Have you ever played baseball?
Thanks for clarifying.Cardinals1964 wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026 15:22 pmI don’t blame you for not getting to true meaning of what I write. It’s kind of garbled. Your assumptions are incorrect of what I intended.Melville wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026 08:48 amI had to stop playing competitively after high school.Cardinals1964 wrote: ↑17 Feb 2026 02:03 am I just read a few posts where somebody asked, “have you ever played baseball” or said “obviously you’ve never played baseball”.
So who on here has ever played baseball? I’m not talking little league, high school or senior league. Who has played pro ball?
Not a camp where everyone is invited to try out. I’m looking for the legitimate prospect. I’m guessing nobody.
To go further, who has owned a team? Who is a billionaire? People have lots of advice for billionaires. I figure there has to be a couple on here. NOT.
Just admit as you drive to your middle management job or Taco Bell, you have no idea what it takes to run a $billion corporation.
It’s highly likely that the 1 hour a day thinking about how a team should be ran, doesn’t make you an expert on the subject.
Face it, like me, you’re a fan with an opinion that doesn’t normally make sense.
I was the best defensive shortstop I ever saw at that level - but I could not hit a lick.
High school version of Brendan Ryan - with even less bat relative to the level of competition.
The world of business was a much better fit.
That said, your assumption that one must excel at playing a game to understand what produces a high performing organization is nonsense.
The factors which produce excellence at the individual leader level and high performance at organizational level vary little from one industry to another.
Baseball is no different.
Which is precisely why Bloom has a job right now.
Fact is, some of us DO KNOW a lot more about how a team should be operated and how success is achieved than Super Slo Mo ever did.
I am one.
There are others.
Your questions and assumption are not relevant.
The real question is whether Bloom is equipped for what he is doing and will DeWitt allow him to succeed?
(As a organizational performance consultant for many years, I can assure you those 2 foundational questions are at the very core of success or failure in nearly every instance.)
Bloom will make mistakes - and already has.
Everyone does.
But I am convinced he has the intelligence and skills to succeed - unlike his predecessor.
Whether he will be provided with the support and resources to do so is another matter entirely - and that is the single most pressing question that will be answered in 2026 and 2027.
Let’s see if I can put it more simple.
The Little League guy telling the person that didn’t play little league that they don’t know what they’re doing or talking about because they never played Little League isn’t more qualified than the person that didnt play Little League.
Now go up the scale. Just because you played college you don’t necessarily know more than the person that played high school. The higher your level of play does not make your opinion more relevant than the next persons. That was my intent. Because I’ve read more than once, “you must’ve never played the game”.
Which I don’t think really backs an opinion. If your level of play is the only thing that determines how good your opinion is, only major league Hall of Fame managers should have an opinion.
I understand that perspective.
-
Cardinals1964
- Forum User
- Posts: 1077
- Joined: 12 May 2024 02:13 am
- Location: St. Louis
Re: Have you ever played baseball?
My perspective is always correct.Melville wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026 18:45 pmThanks for clarifying.Cardinals1964 wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026 15:22 pmI don’t blame you for not getting to true meaning of what I write. It’s kind of garbled. Your assumptions are incorrect of what I intended.Melville wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026 08:48 amI had to stop playing competitively after high school.Cardinals1964 wrote: ↑17 Feb 2026 02:03 am I just read a few posts where somebody asked, “have you ever played baseball” or said “obviously you’ve never played baseball”.
So who on here has ever played baseball? I’m not talking little league, high school or senior league. Who has played pro ball?
Not a camp where everyone is invited to try out. I’m looking for the legitimate prospect. I’m guessing nobody.
To go further, who has owned a team? Who is a billionaire? People have lots of advice for billionaires. I figure there has to be a couple on here. NOT.
Just admit as you drive to your middle management job or Taco Bell, you have no idea what it takes to run a $billion corporation.
It’s highly likely that the 1 hour a day thinking about how a team should be ran, doesn’t make you an expert on the subject.
Face it, like me, you’re a fan with an opinion that doesn’t normally make sense.
I was the best defensive shortstop I ever saw at that level - but I could not hit a lick.
High school version of Brendan Ryan - with even less bat relative to the level of competition.
The world of business was a much better fit.
That said, your assumption that one must excel at playing a game to understand what produces a high performing organization is nonsense.
The factors which produce excellence at the individual leader level and high performance at organizational level vary little from one industry to another.
Baseball is no different.
Which is precisely why Bloom has a job right now.
Fact is, some of us DO KNOW a lot more about how a team should be operated and how success is achieved than Super Slo Mo ever did.
I am one.
There are others.
Your questions and assumption are not relevant.
The real question is whether Bloom is equipped for what he is doing and will DeWitt allow him to succeed?
(As a organizational performance consultant for many years, I can assure you those 2 foundational questions are at the very core of success or failure in nearly every instance.)
Bloom will make mistakes - and already has.
Everyone does.
But I am convinced he has the intelligence and skills to succeed - unlike his predecessor.
Whether he will be provided with the support and resources to do so is another matter entirely - and that is the single most pressing question that will be answered in 2026 and 2027.
Let’s see if I can put it more simple.
The Little League guy telling the person that didn’t play little league that they don’t know what they’re doing or talking about because they never played Little League isn’t more qualified than the person that didnt play Little League.
Now go up the scale. Just because you played college you don’t necessarily know more than the person that played high school. The higher your level of play does not make your opinion more relevant than the next persons. That was my intent. Because I’ve read more than once, “you must’ve never played the game”.
Which I don’t think really backs an opinion. If your level of play is the only thing that determines how good your opinion is, only major league Hall of Fame managers should have an opinion.
I understand that perspective.
Based only on fact.
Never biased.
100% correct half the time.
Re: Have you ever played baseball?
And the other half the time, you are not wrong.Cardinals1964 wrote: ↑20 Feb 2026 00:30 amMy perspective is always correct.Melville wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026 18:45 pmThanks for clarifying.Cardinals1964 wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026 15:22 pmI don’t blame you for not getting to true meaning of what I write. It’s kind of garbled. Your assumptions are incorrect of what I intended.Melville wrote: ↑19 Feb 2026 08:48 amI had to stop playing competitively after high school.Cardinals1964 wrote: ↑17 Feb 2026 02:03 am I just read a few posts where somebody asked, “have you ever played baseball” or said “obviously you’ve never played baseball”.
So who on here has ever played baseball? I’m not talking little league, high school or senior league. Who has played pro ball?
Not a camp where everyone is invited to try out. I’m looking for the legitimate prospect. I’m guessing nobody.
To go further, who has owned a team? Who is a billionaire? People have lots of advice for billionaires. I figure there has to be a couple on here. NOT.
Just admit as you drive to your middle management job or Taco Bell, you have no idea what it takes to run a $billion corporation.
It’s highly likely that the 1 hour a day thinking about how a team should be ran, doesn’t make you an expert on the subject.
Face it, like me, you’re a fan with an opinion that doesn’t normally make sense.
I was the best defensive shortstop I ever saw at that level - but I could not hit a lick.
High school version of Brendan Ryan - with even less bat relative to the level of competition.
The world of business was a much better fit.
That said, your assumption that one must excel at playing a game to understand what produces a high performing organization is nonsense.
The factors which produce excellence at the individual leader level and high performance at organizational level vary little from one industry to another.
Baseball is no different.
Which is precisely why Bloom has a job right now.
Fact is, some of us DO KNOW a lot more about how a team should be operated and how success is achieved than Super Slo Mo ever did.
I am one.
There are others.
Your questions and assumption are not relevant.
The real question is whether Bloom is equipped for what he is doing and will DeWitt allow him to succeed?
(As a organizational performance consultant for many years, I can assure you those 2 foundational questions are at the very core of success or failure in nearly every instance.)
Bloom will make mistakes - and already has.
Everyone does.
But I am convinced he has the intelligence and skills to succeed - unlike his predecessor.
Whether he will be provided with the support and resources to do so is another matter entirely - and that is the single most pressing question that will be answered in 2026 and 2027.
Let’s see if I can put it more simple.
The Little League guy telling the person that didn’t play little league that they don’t know what they’re doing or talking about because they never played Little League isn’t more qualified than the person that didnt play Little League.
Now go up the scale. Just because you played college you don’t necessarily know more than the person that played high school. The higher your level of play does not make your opinion more relevant than the next persons. That was my intent. Because I’ve read more than once, “you must’ve never played the game”.
Which I don’t think really backs an opinion. If your level of play is the only thing that determines how good your opinion is, only major league Hall of Fame managers should have an opinion.
I understand that perspective.
Based only on fact.
Never biased.
100% correct half the time.
Give yourself deserved credit.