When I lived in Seattle, Washington the Mariners used to play games in the God forsaken Kingdome. It was the Yankees and Mariners in a three-game set. I witnessed Rickey beat out a bunt for a base hit, steal second, steal third, and then score a run on a sacrifice fly. He truly was also one of the best leadoff hitters in my generation. It seems the older I get someone else from my lifetime leaves the earth. Time is valuable...don't waste it!
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When I lived in Seattle, Washington the Mariners used to play games in the God forsaken Kingdome. It was the Yankees and Mariners in a three-game set. I witnessed Rickey beat out a bunt for a base hit, steal second, steal third, and then score a run on a sacrifice fly. He truly was also one of the best leadoff hitters in my generation. It seems the older I get someone else from my lifetime leaves the earth. Time is valuable...don't waste it!
So much talent & a great character. Former player/manager Brad Ausmus had this story...
While playing for the Padres in 1996, Ricky was the last one to board the bus. As a veteran, he expected someone to leave him his own row of seats but there wasn't one open.
"No seats for Ricky?', Henderson said standing in the front of the bus. "Ricky don't get no seat? Ain't nobody got a seat for Rickey?"
"Just tell one of the kids to move" said Brad Ausmus. "You've got tenure."
So much talent & a great character. Former player/manager Brad Ausmus had this story...
While playing for the Padres in 1996, Ricky was the last one to board the bus. As a veteran, he expected someone to leave him his own row of seats but there wasn't one open.
"No seats for Ricky?', Henderson said standing in the front of the bus. "Ricky don't get no seat? Ain't nobody got a seat for Rickey?"
"Just tell one of the kids to move" said Brad Ausmus. "You've got tenure."
We went to the same high school, though decades apart. I grew up watching him with the A's. It was special knowing he was home grown. He was truly a fan favorite like no other A before or after him. Not the bash brothers. Not Eck. Probably not Reggie Jackson. Not Giambi. Not the big 3. Rickey was the A's.
TIME TO BRING BACK THE OBAMA CAGES!
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We went to the same high school, though decades apart. I grew up watching him with the A's. It was special knowing he was home grown. He was truly a fan favorite like no other A before or after him. Not the bash brothers. Not Eck. Probably not Reggie Jackson. Not Giambi. Not the big 3. Rickey was the A's.
He was my favorite player at the time and I guess he still is.
I still remember the picture of him in Sports Illustrated holding the little girl that was crying when he came back to play in Oakland after he had got traded.
I think Rickey had two daughters at the time. But he always gave her attention in the stands and was glad to see her at each game. It showed a great side to him. I always liked that and think it is so nice when athletes show the kids such kind gestures.
I remember reading a good study a guy did that made a very good argument to include him as a starter in an all-time outfield because of the runs he generated at the plate and the runs he saved with his speed in the outfield covering ground.
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He was my favorite player at the time and I guess he still is.
I still remember the picture of him in Sports Illustrated holding the little girl that was crying when he came back to play in Oakland after he had got traded.
I think Rickey had two daughters at the time. But he always gave her attention in the stands and was glad to see her at each game. It showed a great side to him. I always liked that and think it is so nice when athletes show the kids such kind gestures.
I remember reading a good study a guy did that made a very good argument to include him as a starter in an all-time outfield because of the runs he generated at the plate and the runs he saved with his speed in the outfield covering ground.
Henderson, who is simply the greatest leadoff hitter in baseball history, did something last week to restore our faith in the connection between player and fan. Indeed, he may have defused the firecracker that Rickey-wannabe Vince Coleman threw at baseball's image earlier this summer.
Perhaps you saw the photograph (below) that was picked up by newspapers around the country: Henderson gently holding a crying nine-year-old girl named Erin States. The caption probably told you that Henderson, on his first trip to Oakland since the Athletics traded him to the Toronto Blue Jays on July 31, was reassuring Erin that her favorite player had not forgotten her.
But there is more to the story than that¡ªjust as there is more to Rickey Henderson than his public persona. Erin is from Tracy, Calif., and her parents are A's season-ticket holders, in section 130 of Oakland Coliseum, along the leftfield line. Erin attended her first game on June 22, 1989, which was the night Henderson returned to play left for the A's after having been traded by the New York Yankees. Erin, then five, got caught up in the excitement of his return, but she became frustrated when her attempts to get Rickey's attention went unheeded. So when she went home, she made a sign that read HI RICKEY and had a heart on it. On Erin's next visit to the park, Henderson noticed the sign, waved to her and in the ninth inning brought her a ball. That was the beginning of a beautiful friendship.
Erin made a series of signs, each meant to congratulate Rickey on a specific feat: NICE CATCH, NICE STEAL, GREAT HOME RUN, etc. Henderson, who has two daughters of his own, always looked for Erin and often gave her mementos. He even mentioned her in his 1992 autobiography, Off Base: Confessions of a Thief, and signed her copy "to my Number One fan."
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From article:
Credit Rickey Henderson with a save.
Henderson, who is simply the greatest leadoff hitter in baseball history, did something last week to restore our faith in the connection between player and fan. Indeed, he may have defused the firecracker that Rickey-wannabe Vince Coleman threw at baseball's image earlier this summer.
Perhaps you saw the photograph (below) that was picked up by newspapers around the country: Henderson gently holding a crying nine-year-old girl named Erin States. The caption probably told you that Henderson, on his first trip to Oakland since the Athletics traded him to the Toronto Blue Jays on July 31, was reassuring Erin that her favorite player had not forgotten her.
But there is more to the story than that¡ªjust as there is more to Rickey Henderson than his public persona. Erin is from Tracy, Calif., and her parents are A's season-ticket holders, in section 130 of Oakland Coliseum, along the leftfield line. Erin attended her first game on June 22, 1989, which was the night Henderson returned to play left for the A's after having been traded by the New York Yankees. Erin, then five, got caught up in the excitement of his return, but she became frustrated when her attempts to get Rickey's attention went unheeded. So when she went home, she made a sign that read HI RICKEY and had a heart on it. On Erin's next visit to the park, Henderson noticed the sign, waved to her and in the ninth inning brought her a ball. That was the beginning of a beautiful friendship.
Erin made a series of signs, each meant to congratulate Rickey on a specific feat: NICE CATCH, NICE STEAL, GREAT HOME RUN, etc. Henderson, who has two daughters of his own, always looked for Erin and often gave her mementos. He even mentioned her in his 1992 autobiography, Off Base: Confessions of a Thief, and signed her copy "to my Number One fan."
But when Henderson was traded to Toronto, Erin was devastated. She wrote a letter to Bay Area newspapers that read, in part: "My friend Rickey Henderson was traded last Saturday from the Oakland A's to the Toronto Blue Jays. I know Toronto is a long way away from here and my mom and dad won't let me move there.... I asked my mom to take down all my Rickey posters and pictures in my room. They make my heart hurt too much to look at. My mom said that the hurt won't be so bad later and I'll be able to stop crying when I hear his name. If someone out there knows Rickey would you please tell him that the girl with the signs in the left field corner of the Oakland Coliseum misses him very much and would you tell him I said goodbye. I didn't even get to say goodbye."
Erin's letter was faxed to Toronto and shown to Henderson, who cried when he read it and said, "The fans and press might be on me, but I knew I could always count on that little girl." When Henderson went onto the field in Oakland on Aug. 30 in his Blue Jay uniform, one of the first things he did was seek out Erin. He gave her a hug and a kiss, and promised her she would always be his Number One fan. He also told her that if the Jays made the World Series, he would steal a base or hit a home run for her.
That Henderson should be so tender and thoughtful might strike some people as surprising. After all, he is baseball's alltime leader not only in stolen bases (1,082 through Saturday) and leadoff homers (63) but also in contract pouts (too numerous to mention). Rightly or wrongly, he has come to stand for the selfish ballplayer.
But over the years Henderson has maintained a wonderful contact with the fans. Even in the on-deck circle, he will turn away from the field to carry on conversations with spectators, often to the consternation of teammates who worry he might get hurt by an errant ball or a hustling catcher.
There can be no doubt that the relationship between players and fans has never been more strained. The fan says, He makes too much money, he has no loyalty, he doesn't sign autographs, and he's no role model. The player says, I don't make enough, the fans have no loyalty, they're probably going to sell my autograph, and don't ask me to raise your kids.
But into the breach step a nine-year-old girl and a 34-year-old superstar, and suddenly the smoke of the firecracker, the shrieks from the stands are dissipated. Henderson has provided baseball with a lot of great moments during his 15-year career. Last week he provided it with a much-needed nice one.
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But when Henderson was traded to Toronto, Erin was devastated. She wrote a letter to Bay Area newspapers that read, in part: "My friend Rickey Henderson was traded last Saturday from the Oakland A's to the Toronto Blue Jays. I know Toronto is a long way away from here and my mom and dad won't let me move there.... I asked my mom to take down all my Rickey posters and pictures in my room. They make my heart hurt too much to look at. My mom said that the hurt won't be so bad later and I'll be able to stop crying when I hear his name. If someone out there knows Rickey would you please tell him that the girl with the signs in the left field corner of the Oakland Coliseum misses him very much and would you tell him I said goodbye. I didn't even get to say goodbye."
Erin's letter was faxed to Toronto and shown to Henderson, who cried when he read it and said, "The fans and press might be on me, but I knew I could always count on that little girl." When Henderson went onto the field in Oakland on Aug. 30 in his Blue Jay uniform, one of the first things he did was seek out Erin. He gave her a hug and a kiss, and promised her she would always be his Number One fan. He also told her that if the Jays made the World Series, he would steal a base or hit a home run for her.
That Henderson should be so tender and thoughtful might strike some people as surprising. After all, he is baseball's alltime leader not only in stolen bases (1,082 through Saturday) and leadoff homers (63) but also in contract pouts (too numerous to mention). Rightly or wrongly, he has come to stand for the selfish ballplayer.
But over the years Henderson has maintained a wonderful contact with the fans. Even in the on-deck circle, he will turn away from the field to carry on conversations with spectators, often to the consternation of teammates who worry he might get hurt by an errant ball or a hustling catcher.
There can be no doubt that the relationship between players and fans has never been more strained. The fan says, He makes too much money, he has no loyalty, he doesn't sign autographs, and he's no role model. The player says, I don't make enough, the fans have no loyalty, they're probably going to sell my autograph, and don't ask me to raise your kids.
But into the breach step a nine-year-old girl and a 34-year-old superstar, and suddenly the smoke of the firecracker, the shrieks from the stands are dissipated. Henderson has provided baseball with a lot of great moments during his 15-year career. Last week he provided it with a much-needed nice one.
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