I wasnât feeling it today, didnât really find anything I was all that interested in to write about in this Popcorn Stand when I came across this date in history in 1990 when Mary Robinson became the first woman to be elected president of Ireland. So I thought to myself this would be a great excuse to write about one of my favorite people, Yogi Berra.
Yogi died a couple years ago and of course heâs remembered for hundreds of things he said or as Yogi put it, âI didnât say all the things that I said.â Thatâs an actual quote of Yogiâs when he tried to point out many of the quotes attributed to him werenât actually comments he made.
But when I read about the first female president of Ireland that reminded me of another thing Yogi actually said when reacting to a Jewish man, who was elected mayor of Dublin, Ireland: âOnly in America.â
My favorite Yogi story happened on a hot day at Yankee Stadium when he was well-dressed in a nice suit. The mayorâs wife told Yogi, âyou look pretty cool in that suitâ to which Yogi replied, âyou donât look so hot yourself.â
Yogi was actually a smart man who knew just when it was the right time to negotiate his contract with Casey Stengel. Even as a young boy when all the kids were asked what position they wanted to play, Yogi noticed nobody was choosing the position of catcher, so he ran as fast as he could to home plate.
And the reason why Yogiâs quotes are so memorable is because thereâs actually truth to them. Like âYou can observe a lot by watchingâ or âthis game is 90 percent mental and the other half is physical.â Yogiâs math may have been off, but Yogi still made a good point about how important the mental approach to baseball was.
And, of course, the day Yogi died the first thing that came to mind was when Yogi said, âYou should always go to other peopleâs funerals, otherwise they wonât come to yours.â
So on a day when I wasnât feeling it, thank you Yogi for reminding me I can only write what I write.
â Charles Whisnand