I love baseball. I'll probably end up one of those old farts who go to spring training in Florida every year and drive from game to game all day.
You can talk about teamwork on a baseball team, but I'll tell you, it takes teamwork when you have 2,900 men stationed on the U.S.S. Alabama in the South Pacific.
Baseball is a red-blooded sport for red-blooded men. It's no pink tea, and mollycoddles had better stay out. It's a struggle for supremacy, a survival of the fittest.
It's a weird scene. You win a few baseball games and all of a sudden you're surrounded by reporters and TV men with cameras asking you about Vietnam and race relations.
I was looking for something like baseball, where there's a lot of data and the competition was pretty low. That's when I discovered politics.
When I'm not at work, I put deep conditioner in my hair and wear a baseball cap. I'll just roll around on the off-days with goop in my hair, and then just rinse it out.
The debate analysis in the media is rampant with contest analogies of war, baseball, boxing, football; you name it. Any testosterone contest imaginable is fair game.
The best player I ever played with was Dennis Johnson.
I am nothing without the players.
I was always a closet blues player.
I try to win every tournament.
I keep lot of my opinions to myself.
I am not a player.
I don't give players a chance to hit me.
The courts are as a stage, people love to see attractive players.
In cinema, the leading player is the director.
Paris is a beautiful city.
Concentration is a fine antidote to anxiety.
There's no ego when you're a ukulele player.
I'm a wicked ping-pong player.
Hopefully I'll continue to have the success I've had.