Wednesday, November 22, 2023

who's coming to dinner?

i recall reading back during the second bush administration that the president arranged for a lunch or dinner at the white house that included a number of baseball hall of famers. i believe he made it an annual event and so was able to spend time with a large number of the greatest baseball players from the 1950s through the 1990s. there is absolutely no doubt in my mind that i would do the exact same thing if i were ever in a position to do so.

it's a play on the old question of who you would invite to dinner if you could invite anyone. sometimes, the "dead or alive" option is granted, and i think i will apply that to this exercise.

like michael scott, let's say that i only have six wine glasses so here are the five baseball dignitaries i would invite to join me for dinner.

vin scully
this is a no-brainer. scully would serve as the emcee - keeping the conversation going while staying quiet when others are carrying the conversation. and, he had stories for days about the game.

pete rose
i was at a couple of hot stove dinners that rose attended back in the late 70s and early 80s, and i remember him commenting at one of them that it had turned in to a mild roast. the other players were sharing some benign stories about rose, and i would love to hear his side of those stories as well as others that probably weren't fit for a hot stove crowd. one of my favorite pete rose quotes comes from george will's "men at work" where pete says during a moment of severe turbulence on a team flight something along the lines of "we're going down but at least i have a .300 lifetime average - what do you have?" it would be a blast, i think, to hear more stories from rose.

steve garvey
another no-brainer for me as a fan, although they say never meet your heroes. i would definitely run the risk with the garv. i would love to ask him about a few things and maybe even bring up don sutton or the 1981 world series mvp announcement that initially had him as a co-winner and not steve yeager.

jackie robinson
robinson would bring some gravitas to the dinner, i think, but i would want to focus on the on-field activities and hear about playing in the 1950's. sometimes i wonder if because of who he was and what he represented, jackie's playing experience and record lacks the level of respect it deserves.

lou gehrig
gehrig would bring the pre-war perspective to the party. i've been a fan of him since reading a biography back in elementary school. he may turn out to be a boring guest, but i would take that chance.

others i thought of in the first minute or so of this exercise

dusty baker

rickey henderson
old ross hadbourn
joe jackson
ty cobb
sandy koufax
tommy lasorda
and did i consider inviting jim tracy
just to ask him what the heck he was thinking with his lineups back in 2005? yes i did. these days, i don't care so much about tracy and his band of ja(y)sons, but 18 years ago he may have made the invite list.

not sure if this is "bat around" material, but i'd be interested in hearing your ideas for baseball dinner party guests. happy thanksgiving no matter who your dinner guests are!

4 comments:

  1. Ted Williams
    Johnny Bench
    Tug McGraw
    Hannah Jeter
    Kate Upton

    ReplyDelete
  2. Great question. I'd go with Mr. Padre and #42 as locked in guys. I'd love to tell Gwynn how much I loved watching him play during his career and explain that he's the main reason I became a Padres fan. I'd tell Jackie how much I appreciated him breaking down the color barrier in baseball and if he was up to it, I'd love to hear stories about guys that supported him... and people who didn't.

    Next up... I'd go with the Bash Brothers. Not because I'd really want to talk to either of these guys. I'd just like to see how McGwire would squirm sitting at the same table with his former teammate.

    Last, but not least... I'd invite John Fisher to let him know how annoyed, frustrated, and hurt that he decided to relocated the Oakland Athletics. I realize it's not 100% on him... but at the same time... he played one of the biggest roles in taking my favorite franchise in sports away from it's home of 50+ years.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'd really like to see this turn into a bat around. I think I'll try to do one too, but it'll probably take me a few weeks to get to it.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Not to rain on your fancy dinner parade; but if both Pete R and Rickey H showed up to your dinner, there wouldn't be enough microphones as they wouldn't shut up!

    ReplyDelete