"Any of the four pitches could've been called a strike and the last two were definitely strikes. Froemming came to the mound after Stahl walked and I called him every name that I knew in the English Language. When I ran out of names, I started calling him names in Greek." - On his claim that home plate umpire, Bruce Froemming denied him a perfect game on 9-2-72 by awarding a walk to Larry Stahl with two outs in the ninth inning after he had retired 26 straight batters
Friday, May 11, 2012
Milt Pappas
"Any of the four pitches could've been called a strike and the last two were definitely strikes. Froemming came to the mound after Stahl walked and I called him every name that I knew in the English Language. When I ran out of names, I started calling him names in Greek." - On his claim that home plate umpire, Bruce Froemming denied him a perfect game on 9-2-72 by awarding a walk to Larry Stahl with two outs in the ninth inning after he had retired 26 straight batters
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3 comments:
I agree with Pappas in theory. If the pitch was that close, Stahl should have been swinging or the ump should have called it a strike. Yet, I hate to see Pappas continually gripe about this. It tarnishes the accomplishment.
I wish there was video of the pitch.
Playing devil's advocate, assuming Froemming was not a complete jackass, he may have intended to give Pappas every pitch that was anywhere close but for the integrity of the game, it was simply a "no-doubt" ball that he had to call.
Again, I wish there was video of the pitch.
I agree with Johngy. Milt's whining is embarrassing.
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