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47 quotes found searching on Location: Baltimore

Every time Phil (Niekro) pitches, (catcher Bob) Uecker is the one who needs four days' rest.

When he was Vice President of the Braves, referencing the difficulty in catching Niekro's knuckleball

Paul Rapier Richards
Baltimore Orioles
Manager

Davey was the only guy I know who went to John Hopkins University and played in the major leagues. When we won the World Series in 1970, he took a television at cost instead of a World Series ring. He said, "I don't have a television." We're in an era now where everyone talks about "The ring. The ring." This was the only one he would have gotten. But he was just more practical. Davey was the ninth guy on a nine-man staff, happy to do whatever (manager) Earl (Weaver) asked. Nowadays the money is so excessive. Davey played the game because he loved to play. To me, that's what the game is all about.

On teammate and roommate Dave Leonhard (RHP)

James Alvin "Jim" Palmer
Baltimore Orioles
Pitcher
HOF 1990

In frustration [after a strikeout], I whacked myself on the head with my bat in the ninth. I had my helmet on. It's something I've done a million times, but I still can't tell you for sure if that was it. But that's the only thing that I can point to because that night and the next morning, I just didn't feel good. So it's been going on since then. I just have some lack of balance and some headaches, and just stuff that hasn't been a whole lot of fun. It's a lesson to myself, a lesson to the kids to not do that, no matter how frustrated you are.

After missing the last six games of the season for concussion-like symptoms after hitting himself in the helmet with a bat (Roberts had already missed most of the 2010 season due to injuries)

10/05/2010
Brian Michael Roberts
Baltimore Orioles
2B

The cheering you hear is from Oriole fans. Everybody else is in muted silence. The pitch! Line drive! Ripken catches it at shortstop! And the Orioles are champions of the world!

Calling the last out of Game 5 of the 1983 World Series

Jon Wesley Miller
Baltimore Orioles
Radio play-by-play announcer

Boy, there's so many variables involved in the equation that you can't even discuss it, almost. It's not like there's nobody on base every time -- there's guys in scoring position, nobody out, crowd's going crazy. You think, "OK, I screwed up, we can't go with A. What's B, what's C, what's D?"
Who's hitting? Is he hot or cold? Where are the base runners? What's the situation? Where are we in the game? Are we on the road? Are we at home? Is it nighttime? Is it daytime? What has he done the other two at-bats? Let's say it's the seventh inning. Where he's at in the box? How'd he look taking that pitch, or how'd he look fouling that pitch off?
There's all these things going on in your head. And then you take in all this outside input and say to yourself, "Yeah -- but I don't feel good with that pitch." Because your brain tells you, "Look, you should throw this," but I haven't thrown one of those for a strike in four innings. Eventually you just have to have enough balls to say, "Screw it, I've got to do it the way I should do it, and whatever happens, happens." I can't just throw fastballs because he knows I don't have a good enough changeup today, or he knows I don't feel good with my slider today. He doesn't really know that. All he knows is that I have these five pitches I can throw. He doesn't really know that I don't feel good about this one. He may know that I don't look like I have great command because I have three walks already and I usually don't walk anybody, but he doesn't know that I don't feel good with my changeup -- so let's throw it anyway.
That's the kind of stuff you think about, and it's not planned. It's just experience. You just have to do it. But there's so many variables. We could talk for months about variables when you're trying to figure out what to throw.

Describing his thought process

Michael Cole "Mike" Mussina
Baltimore Orioles
P
a.k.a. "Moose"

I don't understand how anyone hits a baseball. You play golf and the damned thing is sitting there and all you've got to do is hit it, and that's hard enough.

Raymond Roger "Ray" Miller
Baltimore Orioles
Manager

You've got to concentrate on each play, each hitter, each pitch. All this makes the game much slower and much clearer. It breaks it down to its smallest part. If you take the game like that -- one pitch, one hitter, one inning at a time, and then one game at a time -- the next thing you know, you look up and you've won.

John Rikard "Rick" Dempsey
Baltimore Orioles
Catcher
a.k.a. "The Dipper"

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