tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6290596144828299977.post6890803259506750790..comments2024-03-19T08:42:56.412-07:00Comments on Not Another Baseball Card Blog: They Played for Both II: The PitchersMike Matsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07423029196949506523noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6290596144828299977.post-41581088497501849992016-04-03T09:42:52.837-07:002016-04-03T09:42:52.837-07:00It's tough to describe how I feel about Selig....It's tough to describe how I feel about Selig.. I mean he did end up doing a fair bit of good for baseball, but at the same time he was the main reason for Jeffrey Loria in Montreal, the subsequent gutting of Montreal when Loria left for the Marlins, the Puerto Rico "home" games, and their eventual moving.. Mike Matsonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07423029196949506523noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6290596144828299977.post-39621997441760623212016-04-03T06:20:24.179-07:002016-04-03T06:20:24.179-07:00Despite pitching in the less-driven-by-the-stat 19...Despite pitching in the less-driven-by-the-stat 1980s, Plesac is still the Brewers all-time leader in saves. He was my favorite player in my early high school days because he was young and sort of cocky and still funny -- sort of what you still see him being on MLB Network. I think he was another casualty of the Bud Selig years when Bud said, "screw my team being good...we need to be bad to show that small market clubs can't compete!"Tony L.https://www.blogger.com/profile/01349226671097456632noreply@blogger.com