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-   -   It's not just a saying anymore... (https://www.civicforumz.com/chit-chat-17/its-not-just-saying-anymore-6949/)

xray 26-May-2008 12:04 PM

It's not just a saying anymore...
 
This is hilarious!!! All along, I thought it was just a saying...

http://i25.tinypic.com/2ebbkoh.jpg

During three years in the low minors, John Odom never really made a name for himself.
That sure changed this week — he's the guy the Calgary Vipers traded for a bunch of bats.
"I don't really care," he said Friday, in Texas. "It'll make a better story if I make it to the big leagues."
For now, Odom is headed to the Laredo Broncos of the United League. They got him Tuesday from Calgary of the Golden Baseball League for a most unlikely price: 10 Prairie Sticks Maple Bats, double-dipped black, 34-inch, C243 style.
"They just wanted some bats, good bats — maple bats," Broncos general manager Jose Melendez said.
According to the Prairie Sticks Web site, their maple bats retail for $** US each, discounted to $65.50 for purchases of six to 11 bats.
"It will be interesting to see what 10 bats gets us," Melendez said.
The Vipers team signed Odom about a month ago, but couldn't get the 26-year-old righty into Canada. It seems Odom had a "minor" but unspecified criminal record that wasn't revealed to immigration officials before they scanned his passport, Vipers president Peter Young said.
Odom said the charge stemmed from a fight he was in at age 17. Although he thought it had been expunged from his record, it popped up during immigration.
Odom spent hundreds of dollars driving to the Canadian border and staying at a Montana hotel while the matter was sorted out. He then drove to Laredo after the trade.
Originally from Atlanta, Odom was drafted late by the San Francisco Giants in 2003. He pitched 38 games, all in class-A, from 2004-06, and was released by the organization this spring.
Laredo intends to activate Odom on Monday and have him make his first start Wednesday.
Odom said he was supposed to be traded for Laredo's best hitter. But when that player balked at moving to Calgary, the bats entered the deal.
Laredo offered cash for Odom, but Young said that was "an insult."
The bat trade wasn't the first time Calgary came up with some creative deal making. The Vipers once tried to acquire a pitcher for 1,500 blue seats when they were renovating their stadium, Young said.


Sunday May 25, 2008 - 11:42am (PDT) Permanent Link | 0 Comments

username 26-May-2008 12:39 PM

haha
How's it feel to know you're worth exactly 655.00?

k_r_a_c_k_e_r 26-May-2008 12:44 PM

ha ah ha

Gallagher 26-May-2008 12:54 PM

:-)

Pyro 26-May-2008 04:48 PM

not as bad as kris draper of the detroit red wings who was traded for $1 by the winnipeg jets in 93 =)

si_ponz 26-May-2008 05:10 PM

lmao, and just a day ago i said i would trade someone for a bag of dorito chips LOL

LEITNER 27-May-2008 08:01 AM

worst trade ever was russ courtnall for the goon who wound up dead...uh...john kordik. bad bad trade....

"John "Rambo" Kordic (March 22, 1965 in Edmonton, Alberta - August 8, 1992 in Quebec City, Quebec) was a hockey player in the National Hockey League. He played for the Montreal Canadiens, Toronto Maple Leafs, Washington Capitals, and Quebec Nordiques. He spent 7 seasons in the league and earned a reputation as being an enforcer, amassing nearly 1000 penalty minutes in 244 games. He won a Stanley Cup with Montreal in 1986.
While on the Toronto Maple Leafs, he wore #27, formerly worn by Leaf greats Darryl Sittler and Frank Mahovlich. He was of Croatian descent.
On August 8, 1992, several police officers were called in to restrain Kordic, who was trashing a room at the Motel Maxim in L'Ancienne-Lorette, Quebec. Following a struggle with police, Kordic was taken to hospital in an ambulance, where he lost consciousness and subsequently died of heart failure and a collapsed lung. A coroner's inquest later determined that Kordic had 0.1 milligrams of cocaine in his system, which according to Dr. Georges Miller, was the most cocaine he had ever seen in a person's blood in his twenty years of practice. At his time of death, Kordic was only 27 years old."


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