Happy Trails Robin Ventura, best known by gamblers for the grand slam that wasn't!

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Robin Ventura announces he's retiring after Dodgers eliminated Sunday night....

Ventura was best known for his dramatic game ending walk off grand slam in the playoffs vs Atlanta that was officially switched to a single...The play turned the betting world upside down as the Total and RL were directly affected by the oddity (thank God I was not on this game :biglaugh: )

Ventura was also known for his uncanny ability to succed with bases loaded, finishing near the very top of the alltime grand slam leaders...and how can we ever forget the complete ass-drubbing Nolan Ryan gave a young Ventura when he charged the flame thrower....:neenee: :neenee: :neenee:



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Ryan offered Ventura some Advil after the ass whoopin he delivered :think:

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:love: You do not charge the mound on Nolan Ryan
 
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Post from a sportsbook owner;

Sportsbooks live in fear of such results as anything that causes confusion or anger for our players is ultimately bad for business. The worst case I can think of in recent years has to be Game 5 of the 1999 NLCS. Bottom of the 15th, score tied 3-3 and the bases were loaded for Robin Ventura who hit a Grand Slam. Final score was 7-3. Wait, he never touched third base or home because he was mobbed by teammates. Make the final score 5-3. Phew…with a total of 7.5 and the Braves the 1.5-run favorite, all is well as the Over is still the winner and there is no impact on the runline. Wait, the umpires only saw one runner touch home so the final score was officially 4-3. Now the Under is the winner. Cue the angry phone calls…for months.
 

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Good Riddance *******. He cost me alot of money on that rainy night that he hit a "SINGLE" over the Right Center field fence. The players attacked him on second base. and thats where he stopped. Hated him ever since. He could've finished rounding the bases but he didn't. Of course I had the over.:finger:
 

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JimFiestSux said:
Good Riddance *******. He cost me alot of money on that rainy night that he hit a "SINGLE" over the Right Center field fence. The players attacked him on second base. and thats where he stopped. Hated him ever since. He could've finished rounding the bases but he didn't. Of course I had the over.:finger:
Imagine the poor guy down to his last parlay, who had Mets and Over :neenee:
 

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http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/b...12-12_robin_ventura_is_rockin_once_again.html

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Former Mets third baseman Robin Ventura is rockin' once again

BY Mitch Abramson
DAILY NEWS SPORTS WRITER
Saturday, December 12th 2009, 5:01 PM

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Shaw/Getty
The Mets celebrate Robin Ventura's 'grand slam single' in Game 5 of the 1999 NLCS.

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Robin Ventura, a two-time All-Star during his MLB career, now says he's 'out of the loop' when it comes to the game.



<!-- ARTICLE CONTENT START -->With the Mets down 3 games to 1 to the Braves in the 1999 NLCS, Robin Ventura, the hard-nosed Mets third baseman, stepped to the plate in the bottom of the 15th with the bases juiced and the Game 5 tied at 3-3.
Facing Kevin McGlinchy, Ventura mashed a 2-1 pitch over the right-field wall to hold off the Braves and send the series back to Atlanta for Game 6. The final score? Mets 7, Braves 3? No. What should have been a grand slam home run will forever be known as the "Grand Slam Single" as Ventura was mobbed by teammates (particularly Todd Pratt, the runner on first, who hoisted him in the air), preventing him from even reaching second base. Since he failed to touch all four bags, his clutch bomb was ruled just a single, and the only player declared to have crossed home plate was Roger Cedeno, the runner on third, giving the Mets a 4-3 victory.
"That was a fun moment," says Ventura, after a 16-year big league career that saw him play with the Dodgers, Mets, Yankees and White Sox. "Those were good times."
Today, Ventura, a six-time Gold Glove winner and two-time All-Star, spends his time watching his four children (he has three girls in high school and an 11-year-old boy) and managing his various real estate investments. Aside from calling the College World Series on ESPN and showing up to the occasional White Sox spring training workout to hang with the coaches, he is pretty much out of baseball.
"I'm out of the loop," he says. But he is still reminded of the impressive career that he left behind.
A not so good time for Ventura, who played for the Mets from 1999 to 2001, was when he mauled his right ankle sliding into home during a 1997 spring training game while playing with the Chicago White Sox, where he started his career. He suffered a compound fracture. It would change the course of his career and his life forever.
By 2004, his final season with the Dodgers, he wasn't playing much, and his ankle was still a problem. He had spent the previous seven years injecting himself with cortisone shots just so he could suit up, but enough was enough.
"I was just to the point where I couldn't do to much anymore," he says from his home in Royal Grande, Calif., where he has lived for the past two decades. "(My ankle) wasn't going to allow me to play much anymore. It was time to stop."
A year after he stepped away from baseball, his ankle degenerated to the point where Ventura was now walking around with a cane. He considered having titanium plates and screws inserted into his ankle as a remedy, but that wasn't a long-term solution, he was told.
"The titanium could have worn out after like five years," he said. "So I decided to roll the dice and do something different."
On the advice of the White Sox trainer Herm Schneider, Ventura opted to undergo a new-fangled surgical procedure called ankle transplant surgery in which a piece of a bone taken from a cadaver is inserted into his ankle. The process was successful and Ventura, who had the operation in 2005, no longer walks around in pain.
"I know it was a gamble but so far it's worked out," he said. "I didn't know if it was going to work but it has. It was frustrating not being able to really get around too much. It was definitely worth the risk. So far, so good."
 

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1/24/14

White Sox, Ventura agree on multiyear contract extension


The White Sox and manager Robin Ventura have agreed to terms on a multiyear contract extension.


Ventura is in his third season as the White Sox skipper after being hired as the 39th manager in franchise history on October 6, 2011. He was one of three finalists for American League Manager of the Year in 2012 after guiding the White Sox to an 85-77 record and second-place finish in the Central division.


"I have great confidence that Robin's leadership and direction will help us reach our goals," said Rick Hahn, White Sox senior vice president/general manager. "There was never really any question in our minds as to who we wanted in the White Sox dugout now and into the futur
 

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