So I write a letter to David Ortiz this morning and by the
afternoon we already have a response. Talk about service right? And only
service you can get here at The Greedy Pinstripes mind you. I wish we had that
much pull around the team and around baseball but instead I am referring to the
article that Ortiz posted on the Derek Jeter owned Players Tribune where he
wrote a letter to New York and the fans of the New York Yankees. To read the
entire article head over to the Players Tribune and give it a read while I
sample it for you here before tonight’s finale in the Bronx.
“The other day, one of
my teammates comes over to me in the clubhouse and says, “Hey, you see what
they’re gonna do to you in New York?”
I don’t know what he’s
talking about.
I’m like, “What’s up?
They gonna give me a pizza or something?”
He says, “Nah. Your
last game, the fans are gonna pull their pants down.”
I’m like, “Nah, bro.
Come on. Be serious.”
Then he shows me an
article on his phone about some guy who’s trying to get everybody in Yankee
Stadium to moon me.
This dude even made a
whole website: moonbigpapi.com.
Bro.
Bro.
Come on.
Let me tell you
something. If 50,000 people moon me, I promise you two things.
First, I’m gonna laugh
so hard I might start crying.O
When the tears dry,
I’m gonna step up to the plate and try to hit the ball all the way to the choo
choo train. You gotta be careful. You guys don’t have Mariano no more, you know
what I’m saying?
Listen, Yankee fans. I
gotta admit something to you. And I’m serious about this. I got love for you.
It’s just a little bit
of love, but I do.”
Okay. The fact that he’s seen MoonBigPapi.com and then plugged it on
this post is absolutely amazing. I love it. So awesome. Carrying on.
“My mom did everything
at home, and she still had side-jobs to get us extra money. In those days, you
could buy clothes real cheap in Curaçao, so she used to take shopping trips to
the island. She would load up two suitcases full of dress clothes and bring them
back to Santo Domingo to sell them to the workers at the hotel resorts.
It was a way to make a
little bit of extra money. She would do whatever it took to make sure we were
fine.
When I was playing
Double A ball in ’97, I got her a visa to come to the States for the first
time. It was just the two of us chilling in Connecticut for a few days. She got
to visit New York City before she flew back home, and she was just so happy.
Her dream, her whole life, was to give her kids an opportunity. New York City,
to us, was like the capital of the world.
My mom died in a car
accident in 2002, before I got to the Red Sox and really started having success
in the big leagues. My life has turned out amazing, but the only thing I wish
is that she could be here for all this. When I take the field at Yankee Stadium
for the last time, she’s not gonna be there to see it. That’s kind of tough, to
be honest with you. But I know she would be so proud that we made it to the top
of the world.”
Many forget that Major League Baseball players are also human. This is
not “just a kids game” to them. This is life and they have a life outside of it
just like you or I. Moving on.
“When I was a kid, I
used to tear the heads off my sister’s dolls and use them as baseballs. I’d
steal a broomstick from my mom’s closet and hit the heads over this
fence. Whoom, Barbie went flying into the sky.
I used to dream that I
was hitting home runs at Yankee Stadium.
Nowadays, I hope the
kids doing that same shit are dreaming they’re at Fenway.
Yankee fans, I got one
final thing to tell you.
Thank you. For real.
You pulled the best out of me.
When you boo me, it’s
one of the best feelings in the world.
I’m not gonna lie to
you. Sometimes I get outta bed in the morning, and it’s like, Damn. What
happened? I got old. It takes me a long time to get my body ready for
these games now. But I guarantee you this. When our bus pulls up to Yankee
Stadium today, I’m gonna be ready to go. And when I hear you boo me, I’m gonna
try to hit the ball over that white fence, all the way to the mother*******
choo choo train.
Respect.”
Let’s hope not.
I must say, my reaction is 100% of the time, F Boston, F David Ortiz. F all of the state of Massachusetts. That won't change.
ReplyDeleteBut I just read the full letter to New York. And Daniel, you did a good job writing up about it, because I didn't hear of this article. But that didn't do it justice lol. His talks about rivalry of early to mid 2000s, and with him Manny and Pedro, it kind of lights up that passion.
So, go read the full article, it's pretty badass.
To be fair, not that I'm anywhere near big enough for this to happen, I could only sample so much of it before it becomes plagiarizing... and then you get a call from a lawyer, LOL.
DeleteThe thing I most hate about Ortiz is he is a juicer and got away with it. That's BS to me and I'm not saying he is a bad human being, I'm saying he got away with something like OJ got away with murder. He isn't a HOF and if he gets in its purely a racial thing in my opinion. He gives the writers what they want to hear and they love him for that. No one can challenge Ortiz because he plays the Dominican race card. How dare anyone challenge me is his thought process. BS all the way
ReplyDeleteNo one not wearing a Red Sox jersey would challenge you on this one. He failed a drug test, bottom line. He admitted it and blamed it on some "shit at GNC" in the mall. What's good for one should be good for all.
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