New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

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bapo!
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New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

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It's the Home Opener! So much optimism. Can't you feel it? All of this pomp and circumstance, but it's so low-key and not polished at all. The Good Brothers sing the National Anthems. Damaso Garcia picks up the 1982 team MVP award. Other players receive plaques for presumably doing stuff. The cheap nylon tablecloth almost blows away once all of the plaques are removed from the table. A guy throws out the ceremonial first pitch.

It looks cold. A stiff wind is blowing the flags straight out, and the broadcasters tell us that it's 7°C/44°F. And that Astroturf just makes things look cold and unforgiving. And because of Exhibition Stadium's configuration for baseball, it looks barren, even tho there are 36,000 people there. Seriously, that stadium was a travesty.

Image

Hey, Jim Gott is Toronto's quasi-opening-day starter! I met dozens of athletes when I was a kid and collected autographs, and Gott was one of the sweetest, kindest, funniest guys I met. (Also receiving votes: Dermontti Dawson and Sam Clancy.) I know nothing about his pre-Pirates career, so this will all be new to me. Go Jays! Doyle Alexander is New York's starter. Your managers: Bobby Cox and Billy Fucking Martin. Don Chevrier and Bobby Mattick have the call.

I really liked those '80s Jays teams. Some of the names are magic: Rance Mulliniks, Jesse Barfield, Lloyd Moseby, Garth Iorg.

Form-fitting uniforms. The Yankees wore button-down jerseys, but the Jays were all about the V-neck pull-over. Sadly, they wore their home whites for this game instead of the powder blues.

Ernie Whitt wore a batting helmet with no ear flaps. When he was catching, he wore a mask pulled over a soft baseball cap. Why not make the batting helmet pull double-duty?

Jim Gott pitched into the 7th inning, then was pulled after the first two batters reached base. Steve McLaughlin, who looked like a poor man's Trey Anastasio, came in and walked Dave Winfield on four pitches, then was immediately pulled for another guy with a beard. A lot of beards in Canada in 1983. The game started to bog down in this inning. There were a lot of pitching changes, a lot of shots of Bobby Cox waddling to the pitcher's mound, and CTV apparently didn't sell ad time, so the broadcasters just talked about whatever for minutes at a time as the pitchers warmed up.

Nice sequence in the 8th inning. Goose Gossage came in and put a couple of runners on. Ernie Whitt hit a pop-up to shallow right field. The CF, RF, and 2B all converged and collided and dropped the ball. Jesse Barfield followed this with a home run. There was much joy in Toronto.

This was a CTV broadcast, being shown locally by CKCO-TV in Kitchener, Ontario, so I was hoping to see some signs of 'otherness' in the commercials. Gas station commercials referencing liters instead of gallons? Check. A Labatt's commercial showed almost pornographic amounts of skiing. Even a Budweiser commercial was about skiing.

A commercial for Grecian Formula featured a hockey referee, because Canada. Then, at the end, I realized that it wasn't just any referee -- it was Maurice Richard!

Anne Murray shilled for Commerce Bank. I was surprised that I was able to remember/recognize her, but then I recalled that I owned a couple of Anne Murray albums in 1983. They fit in nicely with my Air Supply and Journey albums. (I wasn't always this cool, folks.)

A series of PSAs about workplace safety were a little too real for my liking. A commercial for a circus that would be passing thru Kitchener and London made me feel very, very sad.

Okay, this Coffee Crisp commercial mimicking Queen is certainly 'other.' Nicely done.

Overall, the commercials were sweet-natured. A lot of singing. I was going to say that it was refreshing to see so many commercials that weren't hyper-sexualized, but these homo-erotic Labatt's commercials made me rethink that.

Oh! Here's something. It's a commercial for the Provincial Lottery featuring cartoon caricatures of old-timey entertainers: WC Fields, Groucho Marx, Mae West, etc. It's actually really cute. And then the money shot: Al Jolson in blackface. This commercial caused a bit of an uproar in 1983, so the blackfaced Jolson was turned white. Problem solved.
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

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this should be its own website. bravo, amazing ass.
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

Post by degenerasian »

agreed, how a website called 30 years ago today?

30 years ago fits with most of our childhoods. Have a blog entry everyday describing a sports event that happened 30 years ago.
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

Post by Pruitt »

I was at that game - missed only one or two home openers at that shit hole of a stadium.

What a funny piece of Canadiana! I will be watching this one later - but without even watching the video, I can remember those workplace safety ads. Guy steps on nail, guy gets buried alive, guy falls off a roof. Good times Ontario!
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

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Pruitt wrote:without even watching the video, I can remember those workplace safety ads. Guy steps on nail, guy gets buried alive, guy falls off a roof. Good times Ontario!
At least two of them were aired during the game. This was the tame one. The second one -- I'm not even going to describe it.

Here's the 'buried alive' PSA. Yikes.
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mister d
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

Post by mister d »

Because I was introduced to like 90% of the league by baseball card before seeing them on TV or live, I spent a very long time saying his name as "Rance Mullikins".
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

Post by MaxWebster »

dammit, am just seeing this and have only a minute but the first thing i wanted to go to was the Maurice Richard commercial because i remember that without even watching....but i just did. "2 minutes for looking so good" - damn i remember quoting that quite a bit. classic!

i'll bet i watched this very game on "...you're watching CTV Toronto. Channel 9....cable 8"


so much canadian tv watching in the early 80s. so. much.
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

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Dermontti Dawson is indeed a saint.
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

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AB_skin_test wrote:Dermontti Dawson is indeed a saint.
The sweetest guy. I was a random 12-year-old kid who just wanted an autograph, but he took the time to have a conversation. Asked me what my favorite subjects were in school, etc. And here we are decades later, and I'm gushing about a guy just because he took an extra few seconds to be kind to me.

Cerrano and Degen, I hardly ever post here, and you're already telling me to post somewhere else?! :) Fear not, I'm not going to turn this into a daily thing, here or elsewhere. (Well, one more post tonight.) But as I said, I've been feeling that pull of nostalgia, and I like revisiting this stuff sometimes. And this time of the year, I'd rather watch a 30-year-old baseball game than a live college basketball game. Graig Nettles > Jahlil Okafor. Fact.
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

Post by Shirley »

bapo! wrote:Graig Nettles > Jahlil Okafor. Fact.
I think I just threw up in my mouth a little.
Totally Kafkaesque
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

Post by Rex »

Nettles could play defense. You'll hear no argument here.
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bapo!
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

Post by bapo! »

Shirley wrote:
bapo! wrote:Graig Nettles > Jahlil Okafor. Fact.
I think I just threw up in my mouth a little.
Maybe a slight exaggeration. Nettles had a good, long career, tho. (You have to look past the fact that he was once caught using a corked bat filled with superballs.)

I had originally written 'Graig Nettles > John Calipari' because I know that Kentucky is on tv tonight. But I edited it because even I know better than to post something like that.
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

Post by mister d »

http://www.fangraphs.com/leaders.aspx?p ... &players=0" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Only 5 true 3B ahead of G-Nett in fWAR. Granted, he's heavily skewed towards defense, but so was Brooks Robinson, right?
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

Post by howard »

My favorite Graig Nettles story. On a flight, he rang the stewardess, and explained that he was concerned. The bathroom had a sign saying 'No Foreign Objects Allowed in Toilet'. She said, yes, is that a problem? He said, "Luis Tiant just went in there."
Who knows? Maybe, you were kidnapped, tied up, taken away and held for ransom.

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Over a long time ago
Oh yeah…
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

Post by MaxWebster »

plus he got Springsteen. Bottom of the 9th.
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

Post by Johnny Hotcakes »

These are fantastic. Thanks bapo!
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Re: New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays, April 9, 1983

Post by govmentchedda »

MaxWebster wrote:plus he got Springsteen. Bottom of the 9th.
They'll pass you by.
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