legless pitcher cut from H.S. team

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Anthony Burruto



A Florida high school baseball team's decision to cut a double-amputee player from the squad had critics crying foul.


Pitcher Anthony Burruto -- who has prosthetic legs, can throw an 80-mph fastball and was featured on the cover of ESPN the Magazine -- was cut after he tried out for Dr. Phillips High School varsity team.


Coach Mike Bradley's main concern about Burroto was him trying to field bunts off the pitcher's mound, according to the Orlando Sentinel.


"He's not looking at him as an athlete. He was looking at him like he's a disabled person," Anthony's mom, Diane Burroto, told the paper.


Dennis Rasmussen, who pitched in the majors for 12 seasons, said simply, "This decision was wrong."



"You took away the hopes and dreams that Anthony's been hanging onto," Rasmussen, a friend of Burruto's family, told the Orlando Sentinel. "He crushed a young man with no apparent reason."


But Principal Gene Trochinski stands by the coach's decision.
"I think the coaches made a determination of who could contribute to the team this year and not that Anthony couldn't, but other kids could at a higher level," he told MyFoxOrlando.com.


Anthony had his legs amputated as a baby because he was born without a shinbone in his left leg and without a fibula in his right one.


Despite the setback, he doesn't make any excuses for being cut.


"I want to earn my position on the team. I want him to say I'm good enough to play," he told the paper
 

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I admire anyone who can overcome handicaps like that. If it was me I'd be tempted to put a shotgun in my mouth. I fear incapacitation a hundred times more than I fear death.
 

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He was born like that pretty much so he's used to it but I agree with you. I fear the same thing. Being blind is one thing that I know I could not take. I'd pull a Bud Dwyer.
 

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I admire the coach with the balls to cut him, you know that is 100% against public opinion but if he is not going to be able to field it would make a joke of the game. I wish this kid the best.
 

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He was born like that pretty much so he's used to it but I agree with you. I fear the same thing. Being blind is one thing that I know I could not take. I'd pull a Bud Dwyer.

We get at least 10 different organizations that ask for clothers, etc. I always only give the one that assists the blind. I remember when I was a kid, my Dad bought some stationary and a dictionary from a guy selling door-to-door, who was blind. I said that was more expensive, and he said i would rather spend a few bucks more and help a person visually impaired then worry about a few bucks. Always felt sorry for the blind and agree, don't know if I could handle it.
 

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I admire the coach with the balls to cut him, you know that is 100% against public opinion but if he is not going to be able to field it would make a joke of the game. I wish this kid the best.

My thoughts exactly. The kids effort and heart is remarkable but to truly make the handicap feel normal they need to be graded on the same competitive scale as the capable.

Now if only we could do something about these females that want to be treated as equals to their male counterparts ONLY when it is to their benefit.
 

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I admire the coach with the balls to cut him, you know that is 100% against public opinion but if he is not going to be able to field it would make a joke of the game. I wish this kid the best.

not only is his fielding a 'q mark', but the kid only throws 80mph, which, for the most part would end up getting pumbled by any good hitting team...he has gut's and determination, that's for sure. i too, wish this kid the best....
 

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hes only 16,

"His 80 mile per hour fast ball has earned Burruto the attention of ESPN and if not for his condition, could make him a top prospect for the major leagues"
 

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As much as I admire the coachs balls, its only HS ball. I am sure he could of made room for him on the roster. That may be one of the high points of this kids life, along with him being such an inspiration to others out there. Plus its a win win situation with him on the team. No one is going to argue he shouldnt be on the team.
 

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As much as I admire the coachs balls, its only HS ball. I am sure he could of made room for him on the roster. That may be one of the high points of this kids life, along with him being such an inspiration to others out there. Plus its a win win situation with him on the team. No one is going to argue he shouldnt be on the team.


+1
 

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could probably be a starter for the yankees this coming year
 

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I'm surprised no one has posted "He doesn't have a leg to stand on".
 

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As much as I admire the coachs balls, its only HS ball. I am sure he could of made room for him on the roster. That may be one of the high points of this kids life, along with him being such an inspiration to others out there. Plus its a win win situation with him on the team. No one is going to argue he shouldnt be on the team.
I pretty much agree with you since it's just HS ball. But I think there is some grey area when it comes to handicapped athletes and sports. Like the Casey Martin case a few years ago where he was going out trying to qualify for his PGA tour card. The fans were naturally on his side, but the tour wasn't because of his desire to be able to ride in a cart due to his handicap. And the PGA deemed it an unfair advantage over the other golfers, and didn't allow it. Then Martin sued them under the Americans with Disabilities Act. I'm not sure if he ever won his case. But I have a feeling we haven't seen the last of handicapped athletes trying to make it at a higher level.
 

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Why would anyone post that?

Because it's a saying that means he doesn't have a case, and theRX is not often a place that holds messed up comments back.
 

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Monte Stratton in the early 30's relying primarily on a trick pitch called the "Gander," Stratton posted 15-5 and 15-9 marks for the White Sox in 1937-38 before his major league career was tragically ended at age 26. While he was hunting rabbits near Greenville, Texas in November 1938, his pistol accidentally discharged, sending a bullet into his right knee, severing the femoral artery. The leg was amputated the next day. In 1939 White Sox management sponsored a charity game in Comiskey Park between the Cubs and the White Sox, the proceeds of which (about $28,000) went to Stratton. In a touching, courageous display, Stratton took the mound to demonstrate that he could still pitch, though he was unable to transfer his weight effectively to the artificial leg.

Lou Brissie won 44 games in the majors after a shell shattered his left shinbone during WWII into more than 30 pieces. He also broke his left ankle and right foot. The doctor saved the leg, but it meant Brissie shuffled through hospitals for 1½ years. When he finally limped out, his left leg was an inch shorter than the right. In his climb to the majors, Brissie's mobility was so limited by his war injuries that hitters often tried to bunt off him to get on base. "I couldn't run very well," Brissie told ESPN.com. "I was about as fast as syrup."
 

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Because it's a saying that means he doesn't have a case, and theRX is not often a place that holds messed up comments back.

I understand what the saying means, but if someone here on the rx would ever make a statement pertaining to the young man's condition & the saying they should be barred for life,no questions asked, keep up the good work JT.
 

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oh come on, he was trying to make a joke.....we're all entitled to a dud every now and again.....at least i hope so for my own damn sake

get em tomorrow jake
 

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