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Venezuelan Dictator Threatens US With Shortstop Embargo
Aug 28, 2007 | 5:27AM | report this

CARACAS, Venezuela.  President Hugo Chavez today threatened the United States with an embargo on the export of shortstops until Venezuelan native David Concepcion, a five-time Gold Glove winner for the Cincinnati Reds' "Big Red Machine" teams of the 1970's, is inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

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"The big medal is for Most Improved Right Fielder."

"Venezuela produces the world's most beautiful women and the best shortstops," Chavez said to a cheering crowd at the presidential palace in Caracas.  "Let the Yanqui oppressors try to get by with their little David Ecksteins and Freddie Pateks."

IMGP7176.jpg

Freddie Patek, world's shortest shortstop

On Monday Chavez took out a full-page ad in USA Today touting Concepcion's Hall of Fame candidacy and praising other Venezuelan shortstops such as Luis Aparicio and Miquel Cabrera.  The socialist dictator has become increasingly eccentric over the past few years, calling for an end to presidential term limits and ordering the nation's clocks to be moved forward by a half hour.  "He kept missing the Web Gems segment on SportsCenter," said Marvin Schaeffer, who covers Latin America for The New York Post.

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Dave Concepcion

In addition to shortstops, Venezuela is a major exporter of petroleum, which is marketed in the United States under the "Citgo" brand.  The company is perhaps best known in America for the sign in Boston's Kenmore Square that is visible to spectators in Fenway Park.

citgo_sign.bmp

The Citgo Sign

Conspiracy theorists have speculated that Chavez uses the sign to disrupt the play of non-Venezuelan infielders such as former Red Sox shortstop Nomar Garciaparra and current Boston second baseman Dustin Pedroia, who has developed "Garciaparra Syndrome", a disorder characterized by obsessive fiddling with batting gloves.  Chavez has issued perfunctory denials of that charge, citing the writings of left-wing linguist Noam Chomsky as evidence that America is to blame for world poverty, teenage acne and Johnny Pesky's failure to throw out Enos Slaughter in the 1946 World Series.

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"You think I'm wacked--read some Noam Chomsky."

Democratic Senator John Kerry issued a statement deploring the Bush administration's failure to maintain sufficient reserves to see America through a shortstop shortage, saying "When I was a boy growing up watching Eddie Yost play shortstop for the Red Sox, whom among us would have thought that America would ever lose its position as the birthplace of the world's greatest 'hot corner' men?"   

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Eddie Yost

In the 2004 presidential race Kerry identified Yost, who played for the Washington Senators, the Detroit Tigers and the Los Angeles Angels, as his favorite Red Sox player.

Copyright 2007, Con Chapman

14 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Stuff and Junk, Boston Red Sox, MLB, Baseball, Cincinnati Reds, Detroit Tigers, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Dustin Pedroia, David Eckstein, Miguel Cabrera
 
Friday Night Cruisin' Aboard the Space Shuttle
Jul 27, 2007 | 12:36PM | report this

News item: NASA allowed astronauts to fly drunk.  Associated Press

GROUND CONTROL:  Shuttle Commander, this is Houston, do you read me?

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Van Morrison

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  "You, my-y, Brown-Eyed Girl.  Do you remember when . . ."

GROUND CONTROL:  Shuttle Commander--

CO-PILOT:  The voices--why won't the voices stop? 

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  Oh, Christ--it's Cape Canaveral. 

CO-PILOT:  Didn't we take off from Houston?

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  Whatever.  Hey guy--what's going on?

GROUND CONTROL:  You're supposed to use official terms like "Roger" or "Copy".

CO-PILOT:  Who's Roger?

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SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  The guy who's always eating out of the Tang jar.

CO-PILOT:  Gross.

GROUND CONTROL:  We were recording some erratic flight movements so I thought I'd give you a call.

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  That's awfully god-damned nice of you.

GROUND CONTROL:  You guys--uh--quit drinking last night when I told you to--right?

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CO-PILOT:  Actually, we still had about half the bottle of gin left, and I figured we'd be gone for a long time and it might go bad.

GROUND CONTROL:  Gin doesn't go bad.

CO-PILOT:  Oh, right.  It was the tonic.  We didn't want it to go flat.

GROUND CONTROL:  All right.  What are you guys doing?

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  Now?

GROUND CONTROL:  Yes, now--when did you think I meant?

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SHUTTLE COMMANDER:   Uh, we're playing zero-gravity beer pong.

GROUND CONTROL:  What?

CO-PILOT:  Hair of the dog that bit you, man.

GROUND CONTROL:  You guys are nuts!

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  I know--it's really hard when the ball's weightless.

GROUND CONTROL:  Guys--I thought we had an understanding.

nasa_space_suit.jpg

CO-PILOT:  Right.  We're not allowed to drink in outer space unless we go up in the Space Shuttle first--for safety's sake.

GROUND CONTROL:  That's not how I remember it.  Anyway, you're shut off.

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SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  Aw, c'mon!  I just cracked open a Miller High Life, the Champagne of Bottle Beers!

GROUND CONTROL:  How do you keep it from flying all around?

CO-PILOT:  Sippy-cups.  Hey--why don't we do bar bets.  Each one we win, we get to have another round.

GROUND CONTROL:  Let me check my Shuttle Employee Manual.

employeemanual.jpg

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  It's under the "Bottle-to-Throttle" rule at tab 7.

GROUND CONTROL:  You're right--here it is.  Let's see, astronauts are not allowed to drink within 12 hours of liftoff--

CO-PILOT:  We already broke that one.

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  See--we're okay.  It doesn't say anything about in-flight drinking.

GROUND CONTROL:  All right.  I guess there's nothing I can do to stop you.  Fire away.

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  Who made the first three-point shot in NBA history?

Chris Ford

GROUND CONTROL:  Please--don't insult my intelligence.  Chris Ford.

CO-PILOT:  My turn.  Have two National League teams ever played against each other in the World Series?

GROUND CONTROL:  That's impossible.  You have to have one from the American League--

CO-PILOT:  So your answer is?

GROUND CONTROL:  No.

Cardinals Bruce Sutter and Darrell Porter celebrate the last out of the '82 Series against the Brewers.

CO-PILOT:  BAAAP!  You're wrong.  1982--Cardinals versus Brewers.

GROUND CONTROL:  The Brewers were in the American League then--

CO-PILOT:  Another beer for both of us.

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  You got him that time. 

CO-PILOT:  I'm going to go get some chips.  You need anything?

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  I need to go to the bathroom but you can't do that for me.

GROUND CONTROL:  Somebody's got to stay on the flight deck at all times, okay?

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  One last question then I gotta take a leak.  Name the Jewish ballplayer with the highest season batting average in baseball history.

Hank Greenberg

GROUND CONTROL:  Uh--let's see.  Hank Greenberg?

Rod Carew:  Mazel tov!

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  Nope--Rod Carew.  .388 in 1977.

GROUND CONTROL:  Rod Carew isn't Jewish, he's Panamanian or something.

Sammy Davis, Jr.

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  He converted--like Sammy Davis, Jr.

GROUND CONTROL:  That's a trick question.

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  No use crying over spilt beer.

CO-PILOT:  Hey, we're out of chips.

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  Ground control, permission to change course requested.

GROUND CONTROL:  Why--where are you going?

SHUTTLE COMMANDER:  Phobos, one of Mars' moons.  There's a 7-11 there.  We'll bring you back a Slurpee.

Copyright 2007, Con Chapman

2 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Baseball, Basketball, Detroit Tigers, Rod Carew, Hank Greenberg, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Chris Ford, St Louis Cardinals, Milwaukee Brewers, Boston Celtics
 
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ABOUT ME


GerbilSportsNetwork
Con Chapman is a Boston-area writer. He is the author of "The Year of the Gerbil: How the Yankees Won (and the Red Sox Lost) the Greatest Pennant Race Ever," a history of the 1978 AL East pennant race, and a number of plays, including "Number One Hockey Mom," "Please, Pope," and "What Mickey Belle Isle Told You," a trilogy about hockey (JAC Publishing). His work is available on Amazon Shorts (at 49 cents a dowload), and he writes on sports for Flak Magazine.
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