September 28, 2016

"After Fatal Boat Crash, Baseballs Apparently Signed by Jose Fernandez Wash Ashore."

Very poignant, haunting, evocative...

Too poignant, haunting, and evocative?

I'm sad this young man died in this boat accident, but I'm really skeptical about the autographed baseballs washing up on the beach.

22 comments:

Expat(ish) said...

It does smell like the "conversations" that Reich or Krugman have when they want to write a column.

OTOH, when I was a kid in St. Pete we used to find bales of pot washed up on the beach frequently enough that it wasn't worth comment.

-XC

Jaq said...

Too good to check.

Jaq said...

Like the dishwasher Trump refused to pay wages to.

rhhardin said...

Pilots refer to the Cessan Citation as the Munson Burner.

Another go-fast celebrity death.

Ignorance is Bliss said...

Expat(ish) said...

OTOH, when I was a kid in St. Pete we used to find bales of pot washed up on the beach frequently enough that it wasn't worth comment.

I hear that's nasty, dangerous stuff. So dangerous that the only safe way to dispose of it is to burn it, and then only in small quantities at a time.

mccullough said...

The bag with the signed balls had his checkbook in it. Maybe he was signing the balls for charity auctions.

Expat(ish) said...

@Ig - @LOL

Sydney said...

He might have taken them with him to sign while on the boat. That seems like the kind of activity you would do to get it finished while at the same time trying to enjoy a nice day. Why stay cooped up in your house signing balls when you could do it in the fresh air and sunshine on the ocean?

Curious George said...

"I'm really skeptical about the autographed baseballs washing up on the beach."

I would be if the finder had kept them and the story was written. There would be a definite financial motive. But turning them over to authorities...

Fritz said...

Trust in God . . .
But Steer Away from the Rocks.

Curious George said...

"Fritz said...
Trust in God . . .
But Steer Away from the Rocks."

Pretty sure they never saw them, or saw them too late. Not too different than snowmobile drivers hitting islands on frozen lakes.

Bob Boyd said...

"Why stay cooped up in your house signing balls when you could do it in the fresh air and sunshine on the ocean?"

Texting while driving?

Laslo Spatula said...

What is poignant are the balls he signed saying "Dear God Help Me I'm Drowning".


I am The Replacement Laslo.

Big Mike said...

If I was going to forge the signature of Jose Fernandez on something in that bag, his checkbook would be more remunerative than the baseballs.

Darrell said...

The baseballs, I might buy. But the 200 signed jerseys and the completed handwritten novel? I'm calling bullshit.

Fritz said...

He was a passenger, not the boat operator. But the charts and GPS almost surely had the rock pile marked, and with a little care, this need never have happened.

traditionalguy said...

Nothing good happens to people out at 3:00 AM in Miami. And the Baseball season was not over.

DanTheMan said...

1200 horsepower + dense fog + idiot operator = boat in bar

Not a sand bar. An actual bar.

http://www.tampabay.com/news/publicsafety/accidents/vessel-slides-up-ruskin-shoreline-and-crashes-into-little-harbor/2218816

Add another 300HP and he could have made the parking lot...

Just_Mike_S said...

baseballs float for only about 10-20 seconds then they sink. So perhaps they rolled ashore on the bottom of the bay. Sure. Why not?

Big Mike said...

@Just_Mike_S, go here. The baseballs were in a zipped-up waterproof bag.

Joe said...

The sad part is that his arrogant, foolish recklessness cost other people their lives and will deprive his child of a father.

Earnest Prole said...

Are you kidding? Beginning with OJ’s butchery and slow-motion chase twenty years ago, we have experienced event after event that even the boldest novelist would be embarrassed to write because they are too implausible for real life and too on-the-nose for a satirist.