In the late 1970s (that would be during the Carter administration and THAT gas crisis), I drove a Datsun 1200 for a while. It was a good, small, simple car, and I could afford it even though I had virtually no money. As I recall, it had 12 or 13 inch wheels, no power anything, a four cylinder engine, and a four speed manual transmission. It was light weight with no amenities. None. It had an AM only radio and a tinny little speaker. No air conditioning either—can you imagine? No AIR?? On the freeway, when larger cars would pass, the jet wash would buffet the car slightly after the larger car passed. It was orange, and it routinely got 35 to 50 MPG. 40 to 50 on the freeway and 35 to 45 around town. When the tires wore out, it was about as expensive as putting new tires on your bicycle. If it needed brakes, it was about as expensive as putting brakes on your bicycle. Did I just repeat myself? Here's what the car did. It provided reliable transportation
I see that the Marlin's Scott Cousins has been placed on the 15 day disabled list with a "lower back strain", and has been replaced on their active roster by Hanley Ramirez. And that the Marlins are 3-18 since leaving San Francisco. Karma's a bitch.
OK then. Baseball is finally over for my beloved Giants. Thank goodness. This leadership pair of Farhan Zaidi and Gabe Kapler has created a baseball team and method that’s just pitiful. It’s painful to watch. And boring. Tedious. A struggle. Never knowing from day to day who is going to be on the club as players or where they might be in the batting order or what positions they might play. No stars. The way Kapler handles pitchers makes it even worse. One result of the inconstancy in player positions is that the Giants lead all of baseball in errors committed in an era of lower error rates in baseball. I can’t be the only one who sees the problem and the source of said problem. It’s no puzzle why the Giants find it impossible to sign truly first rate talent. I’m a big fan of Mike Yastrzemski and Brandon Crawford, but, other than that…….Who would want to subject themselves to that nonsense, anyhow? It’s no wonder that the ballpark is habitually empty, or nearly so. All
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