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Eephus and The Southpaw
Eephus & the Southpaw
32 episodes
4 days ago
A baseball podcast where we look under the hood at the little things that make the game great.
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Baseball
Sports
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All content for Eephus and The Southpaw is the property of Eephus & the Southpaw and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
A baseball podcast where we look under the hood at the little things that make the game great.
Show more...
Baseball
Sports
Episodes (20/32)
Eephus and The Southpaw
Ballpark Nachos: America's Greatest Culinary Export
First introduced in Arlington, Texas, ballpark nachos became a staple of Tex-Mex cuisine around the world. This is their story.
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2 years ago
25 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
Kenny Lofton: One Man's Trash
Kenny Lofton was drafted by and came up with the Houston Astros after a University of Arizona career in which he'd recorded just a single at-bat. His career would flourish after getting traded to the Cleveland Indians, where he earned five All-Star selections, three Gold Glove Awards, and an American League pennant. Lofton's dynamic presence on the field and ability to impact games with his speed made him one of the most exciting players of his era.
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2 years ago
22 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
The Kessinger Clan
Grae Kessinger's major league debut was inauspicious enough - 0-for-3 with a strikeout - which made it easy to miss a journey that began three generations prior, in 1942 in Forrest City, Arkansas. Don, Keith, Kevin, and Grae Kessinger are a rare three-generation baseball legacy not just in the big leagues, but at their alma mater, Ole Miss, as well.
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2 years ago
32 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
Rube Waddell, The Strangest Man in Baseball
Before Zach Greinke took the title, Rube Waddell was widely regarded as the strangest man in baseball history. But as legendary manager Connie Mack once said, he also "had more stuff than any pitcher I ever saw."
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2 years ago
35 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
Darryl Kile: Gone Too Soon
Darryl Kile was a three-time All-Star who pitched for the Astros, Rockies, and Cardinals during his 12-year Major League Baseball career. Known for his competitive spirit, solid pitching skills, and good sportsmanship, his untimely death shocked and saddened the baseball community.
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2 years ago
20 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
The State of Rhode Island Sues Curt Schilling
Curt Schilling's post-baseball career, as the head of a video game development company, ended disastrously when it filed for bankruptcy not long after releasing its first game. The fallout from that bankruptcy included the state of Rhode Island, which was on the hook for millions of dollars they'd loaned the company, which were never paid back.
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2 years ago
18 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
The Addie Joss Benefit Game
Addie "Gentleman Addie" Joss was one of the greatest pitchers of his era when he died of tubercular meningitis at the age of 31. Moved by his death, several players teamed up for the Addie Joss Benefit Game, in his honor, which paved the way for hundreds of charity games that followed.
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2 years ago
25 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
#FloodTheHall: How Curt Flood Changed the Game for MLB Players
Curt Flood was played for 15 seasons in the major leagues, but it was his role in challenging baseball's reserve clause in the 1960s where he truly made a name for himself. Flood's refusal to be traded to another team without his consent ultimately led to a landmark Supreme Court case that revolutionized professional sports and paved the way for free agency. This episode will explore Flood's life and legacy, focusing on his impact on the game of baseball and his enduring influence on labor relations in professional sports.
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2 years ago
49 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
From Guadalcanal to Yankee Stadium: The Legend of Hank Bauer
A knuckle-nosed pipe fitter whose face could "hold two days of rain," according to Tommy Lasorda, Hank Bauer was a decorated Marine Corps veteran who signed with the New York Yankees after returning home from World War II.
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2 years ago
38 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
Moe Berg: The Spy Who Gloved Me
Casey Stengel called Moe Berg "the strangest man ever to play baseball." From using the pseudonym Runt Wolfe in high school ball to his lengthy post-baseball career as an international spy and man of mystery, Moe Berg lived an absolutely fascinating life.
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2 years ago
33 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
Ping Bodie vs. Percy the Ostrich
Francesco Stephano Pezzolo, better known as Ping Bodie, was a staple for the Yankees in the 1910s. He was also something of a practical joker. Sometimes, however, his jokes went too far - such as the time when he challenged Percy the Ostrich to a spaghetti-eating contest, with disastrous results.
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2 years ago
33 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
The Curious Case of Sidd Finch
In 1985, Sports Illustrated published a fifteen-page article on Mets rookie phenom Sidd Finch. Finch was an unusual player: He had lived in a Tibetan monastery, pitched with one work boot and one bare foot, played the French horn, and could throw a baseball 168mph with pinpoint accuracy. Sounds too good to be true? You may be on to something.
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2 years ago
27 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
The Worst Team in Baseball History
The 1899 Cleveland Spiders are widely regarded as the worst team in the history of baseball, but how bad were they really, and why?
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2 years ago
30 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
Brewer v Brewer
In 1977, the Milwaukee Brewers squared off for one regular season game against the Milwaukee Brewers. The Milwaukee Brewers won. This is the story of that game.
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2 years ago
15 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
Matt LaChappa, San Diego Padre for Life
The San Diego Padres drafted Matt LaChappa in the second round of the 1993 MLB Draft. As of November 2022, he is the longest-tenured player in Padres history. This is a touching story of a player who had everything taken away from him, and about a woman - and an organization - stepping up to make sure that he did not fall through the cracks.
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2 years ago
18 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
A History of The Baseball
A very important part of the game of baseball that very few people ever stop to consider is, well, the baseball itself. Michelle and Anthony do a deep-dive on it and its history in this episode.
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3 years ago
53 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
George Steinbrenner's Vendetta Against Dave Winfield
When superstar outfielder Dave Winfield signed with the New York Yankees as a free agent, everyone was thrilled - except for the Yankees' owner, George Steinbrenner. Irritated over a disagreement in a contract clause, Steinbrenner held a grudge against Winfield that would ultimately cost him control of the team.
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3 years ago
51 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
Anthony Varvaro Walks Away from Baseball
Born and raised in New York City, Anthony Varvaro walked away from a big league career to become a Port Authority policeman. On the 21st anniversary of September 11th, on his way to a memorial to honor the victims, he was killed in a car crash on the New Jersey Turnpike. This is his story.
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3 years ago
35 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
Ed Delahanty - Baseball's First Batting Champion To (Possibly) Be Murdered
A five-tool player in the late 19th century, Ed Delahanty was one of baseball's first superstars, and potentially the first to be murdered.
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3 years ago
45 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
The Million Dollar Arm Contest
In 2008, three men began a contest designed to find and develop baseball talent from India. The Million Dollar Arm contest ignited the imagination of one of the world's largest countries, but whatever happened to the two men who won?
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3 years ago
33 minutes

Eephus and The Southpaw
A baseball podcast where we look under the hood at the little things that make the game great.