A Quote by Joe Garagiola

The Chicago Cubs are like Rush Street-a lot of singles, but no action. — © Joe Garagiola
The Chicago Cubs are like Rush Street-a lot of singles, but no action.
[On the Chicago Cubs:] Being a Cubs fan prepares you for life - and Washington.
I always had problems with making singles because I'm not a singles type of guy. I never needed radio to blow me up. I'm a street legend.
Ethnic life in the United States has become a sort of contest like baseball in which the blacks are always the Chicago Cubs.
I live and die with the Chicago Cubs
I live and die with the Chicago Cubs.
It's a character-builder to be a fan of the Chicago Cubs.
Someday, the Chicago Cubs are going to be in the World Series...
Chicago Cubs fans are ninety percent scar tissue.
I didn't realize it was October until I saw the Chicago Cubs choking.
My dad studied at the American Conservatory in Chicago, so he lived on all those streets. He said the war probably saved his life because he'd have ended up a dead musician, with all the crazy stuff they did on Rush Street back in the day.
California is a tragic country — like Palestine, like every Promised Land. Its short history is a fever-chart of migrations — the land rush, the gold rush, the oil rush, the movie rush, the Okie fruit-picking rush, the wartime rush to the aircraft factories — followed, in each instance, by counter-migrations of the disappointed and unsuccessful, moving sorrowfully homeward.
I love Chicago, but I didn't think I had enough soul to be a Cubs fan.
I was thinking (when he hit his 500th home run) about my mother and dad, about all the people in the Chicago Cubs organization that helped me and about the wonderful Chicago fans who have come out all these years to cheer me on. They've been a great inspiration to me.
I'm a kid from the small Illinois town of Batavia, who grew up on the Chicago Cubs and made sports his life's work, although there's never been a day where it actually seemed like work.
Getting to be in Chicago when the Cubs won the World Series was one of the most magical experiences I think I've ever had in a city.
We tried the first evening to go down Division Street and Rush Street, but we couldn't get in anywhere because they didn't like [ Emilio Estevez] sneakers and they didn't like my boots. This was 1983 or '84, so it was ridiculous. We ended up at a jazz club, where you go downstairs and there's a very cool place.
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