tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5293155946761960913.post4931454902328811112..comments2024-03-19T10:41:35.976-05:00Comments on Bronze Age Babies: In Appreciation (and Memory) of: Ron SantoDoughttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04248324005584963229noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5293155946761960913.post-65113695920699442162010-12-12T13:48:07.948-06:002010-12-12T13:48:07.948-06:00JA --
Thanks for the comment. I wondered if anyo...JA --<br /><br />Thanks for the comment. I wondered if anyone else would have a feeling toward this post -- it's pretty geocentric to my neck of the woods. Although WGN television and the Cubs are seen nationwide, I know the radio has a much smaller audience.<br /><br />And I echo your sentiments about Santo and the Hall; having been to Cooperstown, there could be no higher honor for a ballplayer than enshrinement in that place. I think if Ryne Sandberg got in (and he was deserving to have done so), then Santo belongs. Their numbers, as compared to their peers, put them in a similar light.<br /><br />DougDoughttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04248324005584963229noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5293155946761960913.post-71940743454613740292010-12-12T09:45:21.141-06:002010-12-12T09:45:21.141-06:00Thanks for posting this. When I heard about Santo...Thanks for posting this. When I heard about Santo's death, it made me angry all day. He should have been in the HOF years ago. Not because he was a nice guy or because he was dying,but because he was the best 3rd baseman of his era. He deserved one last day in the sun at Cooperstown.J.A. Morrishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15800901321134394272noreply@blogger.com