A Quote by Jerry Coleman

The ballgame is over...in this inning. — © Jerry Coleman
The ballgame is over...in this inning.
We've got to decide, how much replay do we want? Because if you start doing it from the first inning to the ninth inning, you may have to time the game with a calendar.
It's never over. You don't want to be in the position to be down four runs in the ninth inning, but it's not over until the last out.
You've got to try to close every inning out, take it one inning at a time, one batter at a time.
I really believe that what happens one day affects the next, and I think that came from that experience of learning that if I told the score inning by inning, play by play, it built up to its natural climax.
I would love to say that I have an eighth-inning guy, a seventh-inning guy, a left-handed guy, a long guy.
One strange quality of writing about political campaigns is that it's a little like writing about a baseball game inning by inning. We presume we can say something about the final result from the state of play a third of the way through. You can when a game is a colossal blowout, but you can't when it's close.
Baseball is continuity. Pitch to pitch. Inning to inning. Season to season.
all through my childhood, my father kept from me the knowledge that the daily papers printed daily box scores, allowing me to believe that without my personal renderings of all those games he missed while he was at work, he would be unable to follow our team in the only proper way a team should be followed, day by day, inning by inning. In other words, without me, his love for baseball would be forever incomplete.
There is nothing like Ruth ever existed in this game of baseball. I remember we were playing the White Sox in Boston in 1919, and he hit a home run off Lefty Williams over the left-field fence in the ninth inning and won the game. It was majestic. It soared.
And when you learn, over the course of your life, that it's not about pleasing God, it's about learning how to trust God. That's a huge watershed, because trust is a whole different ballgame than appeasement or pleasing.
No one wants to be known as a six-inning guy.
The crowd makes the ballgame.
Trailing 5-1, the Padres added an insurance run in the eighth inning.
The Cards lead the Dodgers 4-2 after one inning and that one hasn't even started.
Bollywood is a whole new ballgame.
I know in the heat of battle, it's hard not to get angry, especially in the 19th inning.
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