Baseball folk
Posted: Sun May 25, 2008 10:25 pm
On the obvious major-league baseball page, if you saw a headline like this
Friars beat Reds
would you know what it meant?
Friars beat Reds
would you know what it meant?
Did the Pads beat the Redlegs?Ritterskoop wrote:On the obvious major-league baseball page, if you saw a headline like this
Friars beat Reds
would you know what it meant?
In 18 innings, yes.ulysses5019 wrote:Did the Pads beat the Redlegs?Ritterskoop wrote:On the obvious major-league baseball page, if you saw a headline like this
Friars beat Reds
would you know what it meant?
\Ritterskoop wrote:In 18 innings, yes.ulysses5019 wrote:Did the Pads beat the Redlegs?Ritterskoop wrote:On the obvious major-league baseball page, if you saw a headline like this
Friars beat Reds
would you know what it meant?
They make us put the score in this tiny type over the photo
Padres 12, Reds 9
so I try not to use the team nicknames again in the main head. But I could not fit Cincinnati, so I tried to be creative.
I am told we don't use that nickname because no one knows what it means.
I am disheartened. I thought it was historically known.
Or the Swinging Padre mascot or how you can become a Frequent Friar?ulysses5019 wrote:
You mean, no one knows about the famous Friars Club in Beverly Hills or the Warren Beatty Oscar winning movie?
Of course I live here in southern California and have heard them referred to as the Friars quite often.TheCalvinator24 wrote:I was able to figure it our pretty quickly, but I have never heard the Padres referred to as the Friars.
And having followed baseball for most of my life, I have heard "Reds" used many a time in the LA Times.TheCalvinator24 wrote:I was able to figure it our pretty quickly, but I have never heard the Padres referred to as the Friars.
OK, thanks.TheCalvinator24 wrote:I was able to figure it our pretty quickly, but I have never heard the Padres referred to as the Friars.
Definitely regional. But the Padres are named after an old PCL club (Ted Williams, a local boy, played for them). But the name goes back to Father Junipero Serra, a member of the Franciscans who founded the first of 21 missions in California, at San Diego. I learned all this in my fourth grade catholic school and even had to build a model of one of the missions. Oh, I didn't learn about Ted and the PCL in Sister Veritas' class.Ritterskoop wrote:OK, thanks.TheCalvinator24 wrote:I was able to figure it our pretty quickly, but I have never heard the Padres referred to as the Friars.
Maybe it is regional, and I saw it in old essays and newspaper column collections.
Ritterskoop wrote:On the obvious major-league baseball page, if you saw a headline like this
Friars beat Reds
would you know what it meant?
I'm just glad he didn't pitch the 18th...littlebeast13 wrote:Ritterskoop wrote:On the obvious major-league baseball page, if you saw a headline like this
Friars beat Reds
would you know what it meant?
Yes...
And that game cost me a win in the BBBL thanks to the gift 18 points Aaron Harang gave Fishie by pitching the 13th-16th innings....
lb13