Wednesday, April 22, 2020

“Godfather” Lasorda “gets whacked” by GM Brodie “Corleone” van Wagenen, after Another Mets Non-Victory

By Grand Rapids Anonymous
Wednesday, April 22, 2020 at 3:32:00 A.M. EDT

When legendary manager Tommy Lasorda remarked in an interview, after being hired by Mets’ GM Brodie Van Wagenen, that a) he wanted Ron Cey to bat fifth and b) Frank Sinatra and Don Rickles would help him manage his first baseball game in 24 years, reporters scoffed (to put it mildly).

But sure enough, on Tuesday night, there was 72-year-old Ron Cey penciled in at 3rd base and hitting fifth in Lasorda's line-up—thanks to assistant GM Allard Baird’s good hearing and a deep sense of admiration for Lasorda.

Baird overheard the Lasorda press conference, and then called Cey in California.

Baird found out Cey was in decent shape for a man in his early 70s and convinced “The Penguin” to come to New York, by repeating one famous phrase:

“The Godfather (Lasorda’s nickname) is making you an offer you can’t refuse.”

Cey responded, “Godfather wants me on the Mets? I’m in.”

Baird followed that move by hiring Sinatra impersonator Brian Dupree and Rickles lookalike Mike Walter to greet Lasorda in the dugout—in full Mets’ uniforms.

“Where the hell have you guys been?” Lasorda said, as he hugged the fake celebrities, “Come on, we have a game to win.”

Faux Sinatra sang the national anthem, phony Rickles told phony Sinatra “You don’t sound like yourself tonight-you sound better!”—and the game began.

Fortunately for Cey, Lasorda, “Sinatra,” “Rickles” and the rest of the Mets, Michael Wacha was on his game—either striking out or forcing popups of the opposing Pittsburgh Pirates’ batters.

Two hits were allowed—slow rollers to the left side of the infield—which Cey waved at, but that was all.

Pirates’ ace Mitch Keller was just as effective through six and a scoreless tie was the result, heading to the top of the seventh.

Back-to-back home runs by Gregory Polanco and Josh Bell catapulted the Pirates to a 2-0 lead, which held up until the bottom of the ninth.

Reliever Juan Nicasio struck out Robinson Cano and Yoenis Cespedes for the first two outs, bringing up Pete Alonso.

In a move sure to be talked about for years, Pirate manager Derek Shelton held out four fingers—for an intentional walk of Alonso, in order to face longtime AARP member, Cey, hitless in three at-bats, with comical swings that had Met’s fans stampeding to their cars, in complete hopelessness.

But Cey somehow, some way, connected with a Nicasio change-up and sent a majestic fly ball over 400 feet to left centerfield and over the fence, tying the game up at 2—and the crowd poured back into Citi Field to cheer Ron Cey’s heroics.

This extravaganza went to extra innings—and then more extra innings-
and then even more. Twenty-seven total innings were racked up with no runs scored, and at 3 a.m. the game was stopped, due to fog.

Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred declared the game suspended.

Afterwards, a sleeping Lasorda “got whacked” (fired) by Van Wagenen, Cey announced that, without Lasorda as manager, he was retiring—effective immediately—and the Mets remained at 0-18.

The suspended game will be finished up before the regularly scheduled contest.

Danny DeVito and Arnold Schwarzenegger were hired as co-managers, to which Ahhhnold joked, “We should be managing the Twins—like that movie we did together.”

Two more losses seem likely on Wednesday.
--GRA


2 comments:

Anonymous said...

jerry pdx
There are lots of Sinatra imitators, plenty of guys can sing kind of like Frank but a Don Rickles imitator? How many can duplicate his faster than light wit? Nobody as far as I'm concerned but I looked up Mike (Wally) Walters on Youtube and he doesn't just look like Don but does a Rickles tribute performance onstage. He's not Rickles of course but acquits himself well, he's still far funnier than 90% of comedians today and doesn't appear to have bowed to political correctness by sanitizing Don's non PC style of humor. If you want to enjoy the memory of the great Don Rickles, here is Mr. Walters doing his homage to the master: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTj_69Fza08
Thanks for the tip, when I run out of old Rickles videos to watch, I'll watch Mr. Walters. He has a Facebook page and was touring through the Pacific NW last year, too bad I didn't know about him before, I would have tried to catch his show: https://www.facebook.com/pg/mikewallywalterakadonrickles/posts/?ref=page_internal

Anonymous said...

METS BEING PURSUED BY J-LO AND A-ROD
(NYPOST)Alex Rodriguez and Jennifer Lopez are looking to pick up the Mets with a little help from a friend, and at a coronavirus discount.

According to multiple sources familiar with the situation, J-Rod is assembling an ownership group of four to five people who could pay up front for the entire franchise. But insiders also point out that the Wilpon family, which has been trying to sell the team for months, might have to accept a low offer thanks to the financial impact of the pandemic.

“He’s got a group with some real names,” one source familiar with the J-Rod bid told The Post. “Alex is gonna get this because of COVID. It’s gonna fall in his lap.”

Multiple sources say the key money player in the arrangement being put together by investment bankers at JPMorgan appeared to be Miami billionaire Jorge Mas, who tried to buy the Miami Marlins in 2017 but lost out to a group fronted by A-Rod’s former Yankees teammate and longtime frenemy Derek Jeter.

Forbes has estimated Mas’ net worth at just over $1 billion. Mas is no stranger to installing living sports legends in ownership positions, having staked a large part of David Beckham’s bid in Major League Soccer’s newest franchise, Inter Miami.
GRA:Not a good time to own/try to sell a sports franchise.
--GRA