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Thread: REGGIE JACKSON'S Lost Season
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02-25-2011 08:11 PM #31
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02-26-2011 06:57 AM #32
GCL O's
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Hey Patrick
This is jmi1960 from the sun board...maybe we'll run into you at the yard this season. Hope you are doing well.
Back on topic...I was 16 the year Reggie played for us and like a lot of oriole fans I often wonder what could have been if we would have signed him as a free agent.
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02-26-2011 10:18 AM #33
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02-26-2011 05:17 PM #34
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02-27-2011 09:00 AM #35
I remember it. I couldn't believe it when it happened.
I was glad he was only in an O's uniform for that one year!
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03-01-2011 07:26 PM #36
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It was a great year, no doubt about it. I went to a game the first week, and Dennis Martinez was pitching in relief of Rudy May. He couldn't hold a baserunner to save his life, and the team looked so green. They lost 5-1 before a Saturday afternoon crowd of barely 5,000 fans. By mid-season, they were playing great baseball. Really, that was the launch of a great era of Orioles baseball.
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03-02-2011 12:56 AM #37
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Reggie actually led the league in OPS+ that year.
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03-08-2011 08:10 PM #38
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03-25-2011 11:19 AM #39
In light of the conversation about our excellent 1977 season following Reggie's departure, this is an excellent article from late July of 1977 from Sports Illustrated. Enjoy.

BEAT FEET, BUT EYES RIGHT
Ken Singleton has led the Orioles to the top with a quick bat that more than compensates for his slow locomotion
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vau...2633/index.htm
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03-26-2011 12:02 AM #40
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Reggie Jackson and Curt Schilling. Two of the best players ever to play the game, two of the biggest jerks to ever play the game... and two players we let get away...sigh.
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03-28-2011 01:07 PM #41
Except that Schilling was much more in our control than was Reggie Jackson. Schilling was a guy that we chose to trade early in his career. Jackson was already a superstar who became a free agent at the end of the 1976 season, and he wasn't going to stay with the Orioles, particularly with the Yankees offering him to be the highest paid player in baseball history.
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03-29-2011 02:58 AM #42
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03-29-2011 09:39 PM #43
Don't forget, we traded him to Houston and they traded him him for next to nothing a year or two later.. it wasn't until he got to Philly that he reached his potential. Even if we hadn't made the Davis deal and lost Schilling that way, what makes you think we would have been more patient than the Astros and held onto him long enough to reap the benefits?
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05-15-2011 07:29 PM #44
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05-16-2011 11:21 AM #45
As another poster pointed out, Reggie Jackson was FAR FROM lazy. A pain in the ass, but definitely NOT lazy. In 1976, Jackson posted a career-high for stolen bases in a season (28) for the Orioles ...... in spite of missing the first month of the season when he held out.
When one of the all-time great power hitters steals more bases in one season than he ever has in spite of missing one month of the season ........ playing for a manager that was NOT KNOWN as a big fan of a lot of stolen bases ............. there is no possible way that his effort(s) can be construed as lazy.
http://www.baseball-reference.com/pl...acksre01.shtml



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