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Posted


The way Glen Miller played.

Songs that made the hit parade.

When girls were girls and men were men.

Mister, we could use a man like Herbert Hoover again!

When we didn't need no welfare state.

When our old LaSalle ran great.


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Guest d'Kong76
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Posted


Catcher could stand wherever he wanted after the ball was put in play


Posted


Pitcher warmup circles, cut into the foul ground behind home plate and near the dugouts.

Actual foul ground behind home plate and near the dugouts. God bless Oakland Alameda County Coliseum or whatever it's called now.


Guest themetfairy
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Posted


Seeing people in the stands all dressed up in suits and ties and fancy dresses.


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
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Posted


Centerfield wrote:
I don't know that I can say I miss them, since I have very little memory of them, but I wish they would bring back bullpen cars. I think it's funny what it says about the attitude toward pitchers.

"Can he pitch multiple innings, multiple days? Of course. Why not?"

"Can he run in from the bullpen? Hell no! Get that man a ride!"


Not jumping on the bullpen car thing is a ridiculously-obvious missed opportunity for management. Easy in-game goofiness to engage the kinder, a readymade sponsorship slot, a chance to feature an enterprising local firm that would be willing to engineer, say, a green bullpen hovercraft (so as to avoid grass damage), opportunity for a driving-related Met theme song. IT'S RIGHT THERE.

I miss Shea knishes. As much as I like the new food/beer options, I also miss nothing but crap (save Mama's and the knishes) at the games, because it means much less business for the awesome torta dude and his ilk on Roosevelt.

I miss actual cheap seats.


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
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Posted (edited)


Tortas, though. Tortas as big as your HEAD, man.

I miss giveaway bats. I was never around for it, but I miss three baseball teams in New York.

d'Kong76 wrote:
Beat writers and columnists not having Twitter


I get the annoyance with the way that this has changed some of the shape and tone of reporting, but, really, this is just silly Luddite oldguygrumble. If you like the perpetual baseball coverage, this-- and other information-sharing breakthroughs-- are the reason that exists, and the fuel allowing it to continue.


Edited by Guest
Guest themetfairy
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Posted


dgwphotography wrote:
[youtube]ElNwYTepz1E[/youtube]


That was the only day that I cut classes in college.


Guest d'Kong76
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Posted


LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr wrote:
but, really, this is just silly Luddite oldguygrumble.

#getLWFSane
I'm a lot of things, a Luddite is certainly not one of them! I'll give you
silly, old and occasionally grumble(y)...


Posted


Shea knishes with a mess of mustard that you can't not all over you are a perfect example of not-particuarly-well-executed ballpark food that nonetheless tastes great because it's ballpark food.

My dad taught me to wish the relief pitcher luck as the bullpen car drove past. Kinderengagement!


Posted


The Polo Grounds, Ebbets Field, Forbes Field and Sportsman's Park.
Les Keiter recreating SF baseball games back to New York, and rushing to squeeze the games into his time slot.

Later


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Guests
Posted


d'Kong76 wrote:
LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr wrote:
but, really, this is just silly Luddite oldguygrumble.

#getLWFSane
I'm a lot of things, a Luddite is certainly not one of them! I'll give you
silly, old and occasionally grumble(y)...


Fair enough. After all, you didn't post this via, you know, post.

Yeah, the Mama's sandwich is a matter of simplicity well-executed producing nicely complicated flavor. Little bit of acid from the peppers, thin-sliced mootsadell, marinated-but-not-too-punchy 'shroom, and a little bit of cured meat to round things out.


Posted


Licensing and marketing mostly handled by the team, rather than MLB, making it clear that teams wanted to beat each other from the brand on down.

Relatedly, I miss different teams having philosophies and approaches that distinguished them from each other, on and off the field.


Posted


Benjamin Grimm wrote:
Speaking of afternoon games, I'd like to see World Series games on Saturday and Sunday played during the day.

If I remember correctly, the last time that happened was a 4 p.m. start for a Saturday game in 1987.


IIRC, the game was played in the Metrodome! SMH.


Posted


Edgy MD wrote:
Licensing and marketing mostly handled by the team, rather than MLB, making it clear that teams wanted to beat each other from the brand on down.


Good one. I guess MLB can't trust one of its renegade owners to go and fuck up the brand. They can start with post-season tickets and programs. At least a team's still allowed to print its own regular season programs and yearbooks. Not that the Mets yearbooks are great shakes. I swear that the last two I bought, I did so out of habit and one of those, I still haven't even bothered to look at. Really. Still, they probably weight four or fives times what a 70's yearbook weighs and aren't remotely as interesting or engaging.

So put me down for another one. Mets yearbooks like they were in the 60's and 70's. And Willard Mullin. And Bruce Stark.

Whatever happened to sports cartoonists?


Guest themetfairy
Guests
Posted


I miss the teams controlling their own websites instead of relying upon the cookie cutter MLB template.


Guest Mets Guy in Michigan
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Posted


seawolf17 wrote:
49-cent "cello" packs and dollar "rack" packs of Topps cards.



Dating myself here, but I remember when the cello backs were a quarter and the rack packs were 50 cents. Back in 1974, my friend's mom was horrified that we one day each spent $1 on baseball cards. And we were in awe at what we thought was a massive pile of cards we had accumulated -- and traded doubles the rest of the afternoon.


Posted


1974 Rack packs were 39 cents.

[fimg=444:n6gosvcg]http://www.robertedwardauctions.com/auction/2013images/Item_25272_1.jpg[/fimg:n6gosvcg]

In 1974.

Follow the link to the photo above and you'll discover that this lot of three unopened '74 rack packs sold at auction for $948.00. It couldn't have been the Ron Hodges card driving up the price.


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