Good night, sweet swing
John Olerud is retiring. Somehow I missed this news last week — probably because he made the announcement in his usual soft-spoken, undramatic fashion. I guess it's only fitting that he leave the game the same way he played it — quietly and without fanfare.
There goes the sweetest swing in the game of baseball.
A John Olerud at-bat was a thing of beauty. He stood easily at the plate, knees slightly bent, bat resting over his left shoulder (none of this rocking and waggling and stretching and perpetual adjustment). He was the very picture of patience and concentration — never swinging at junk, fouling off pitches at the edges, working the pitcher deep into the count, drawing a lot of walks. Between pitches, he would step back and gaze briefly into space, looking lost in thought.
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At first base, his defense was sudden, smooth, and flawless. He put his glove on the ball as nimbly as his bat; his instinctive reactions to drives up the right side were uncanny. To his
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On and off the field, he was a gentleman and a class act — quiet but not detached, reserved but not somber. He loved baseball and respected his teammates (who always got a kick out of kidding the serious guy). He had the concentration, dedication, and professionalism of Ted Williams, but he still enjoyed the game and kept its ups and downs in perspective.
He played for 16 seasons: 7 with the Blue Jays, 3 with the Mets, 4 ½ with the Mariners,
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Few players ever have a season like Olerud had in 1993 in Toronto. With 200 hits, 114 walks, 24 home runs, and 107 RBIs, he led the American League that year in batting average (.363), times on base (321), on-base percentage (.473), doubles (54), and OPS (1.072); he tied Ted Williams's record for intentional walks (33); and he had a league-leading 26-game hitting streak in June. Most notable was the fact that he maintained a .400+ batting average well into August that year.
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Helmets off to Ole.
3 Comments:
Well said. A lot of folks give the M's brass a bad rap for preferring "good character" in their free agent signings, but I think it counts for something. Especially if you can pick 'em like Keith Hernandez at first...
Thanks, and I totally agree. So, Carl Everett? A little injection of temper to knock these guys out of complacency?
Temper and, perhaps, entertainment value when he goes on a campaign to convince everyone on the bench that the moon landing was a hoax.
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