Telling the story of South Baltimore Little League and kids who are ready for tournament time with Brendan O’Brien and Greg Szczepaniak, who explain modern youth baseball to Nestor. The league is hosting the District 4 All-Star tournament for 8-10-year-olds from June 28 to July 2, with the potential for state and national competitions.
Nestor Aparicio discusses the Maryland crab cake tour and highlights the South Baltimore Little League (SBLL), which has been active since 1957. SBLL, led by President Brendan O’Brien and Assistant Greg Szczepaniak, serves a large district including parts of Baltimore, Brooklyn Park, Essex, and Dundalk. Last year, the league had over 625 participants. The league is hosting the District 4 All-Star tournament for 8-10-year-olds from June 28 to July 2, with the potential for state and national competitions. The league also hosts the 9-11-year-old state tournament in late July. SBLL fields are well-maintained, with fences for home runs.
SUMMARY KEYWORDS
South Baltimore Little League, tournament time, Maryland crab cake tour, Little League International, district tournament, state tournament, youth baseball, softball, community involvement, field facilities, all-star games, local businesses, player development, family tradition, sports memorabilia.
SPEAKERS
Greg Szczepaniak, Brendan O’Brien, Nestor Aparicio
Nestor Aparicio 00:01
Welcome home. We are W, N, S T. Am 1570 Taos of Baltimore. We are Baltimore positive. I’m going to prove it in this segment. We’re going to be out doing the Maryland crab cake tour throughout the community, a delicious crab cake from clean cuisine up at the Y in Randallstown last week. All of it brought to you by the Maryland lottery. I have the Back to the Future scratch offs. I will have these at readers crab house on the 26th I will have it cost us in Timonium at the new cost this coming up in July. We’re going to be added Eldersburg at 1623, brewing as well. That’s the day after the all star game. And then also, we’re going to make our way for the very first time to deep Pasquale is in Canton, Maryland, and I’m going to talk about sausages and probably lasagna and all sorts of good things, as well as coffee at Zeke’s coffee. I’m doing the coffee Friday morning coffee mafia later on in July, I’m getting out, and then I’m going to Mako and Ocean City later on this summer. But baseball, you know, when things go bad for the Orioles and things haven’t been good for the Orioles, there’s other baseball to be had. Greg’s Hispanic has been my friend for 30 years. He and his dad came to the barn to meet Ray Lewis the first night Ray Lewis did the show that was September 2, 1996 so we’re working on 29 years, or give or take, Greg has been involved in the South Baltimore Little League. And if you do remember, Greg sort of hijacked my show over to Costas and Dundalk, I hope he doesn’t do the same thing at Timonium, because I’m being nice to him. And besides that, he’s got other things to do, including running this little league thing. So I want to welcome Greg back onto the program, along with Brendan O’Brien. He is the president el presidente, like Louis Tiant, like like Benny Martinez, like King Trump. Um, he is the president of SB, I hope you’re kinder and gentler, president of the South Baltimore Little League. Um, they’ve been doing since 1957 I have been at a couple of opening days down there at various points. If you’re familiar with the Harris Teeter and the McHenry road project right there on Ford Avenue, my old stomping grounds of Locust Point that you know, they used to call it port Covington down there. Now it’s the just near the peninsula. Greg and Brandon, welcome in Happy Little League World Series to you guys, or whatever it is that you’re doing, Greg, I love you, and I’m just basically letting you hijack the radio station to talk about Little League. And I And you told me that you and Brendan were going to be
Greg Szczepaniak 02:32
presidential. Good to be here again. Nestor and again, I won’t be crashing Timonium, that restraining order that you put in. I think that’s why we’re doing a zoom today and not doing this in person. So the first beer
Nestor Aparicio 02:43
was fine. The second beer was friendly. After that, he got to go. You know what I mean, like, after that, you know, once we get done, Brandon, you’re, um, you’re not from around here, right? Like, you’re, like, sort of a baptized Oriole fan. You’re, um, but you, you’ve, you’ve made this thing work, because you all have kids that play Little League, which is kind of
Brendan O’Brien 02:59
cool. That’s right. Yeah, I’m originally from the Boston area, but have been here since college, and I graduated in 91 so I’m a true Baltimorean. Now, I think baptized myself as an Oriole fan 12 years ago, and my 12 year old son was born. So yeah, I’m a nose fan, and we’re doing baseball down in Locust Point with South Baltimore Little League, and we’re really excited about what we’re doing down there and what Greg has been helping me
Nestor Aparicio 03:26
do. Greg, where’d you play Little League?
Greg Szczepaniak 03:29
So growing up in Parkville, but in in the city, I played for Hamilton Little League, right off of Moyer Avenue. So like Moyer and close to Taylor Avenue, wave, I want
Nestor Aparicio 03:40
to say, if you had all stars, did you come to the Joseph Lee fields over by Our Lady of Fatima, by the grace of God, the Lou car Pusey fields next to City Hospital, which is now whatever the hell they’re calling Hopkins Bayview. Yes, I play like there were teams that came from all over the city. Little Flower, all of them, you know, the whole curly mafia, I mean, all the Barry stitches and all those guys. I played little league with all those kids, and everybody from around the city came in, and it was like the greatest All Star tournament ever. I mean, and I share my east with little league stuff. Me and Johnny Rollo played on the same team, and Mark Carol Caskey went on to play at University of Maryland. Richie path struck me out. He played for the Milwaukee Brewers. He made it to double a ball. Played with curly so, like, I had this background a little league. My kid played a little bit. We were out in Perry Hall. But like, I don’t know much about city Little League, other than when I’ve driven past some fields here and again, and I see a lot of lacrosse in the city, but the fields that I know that you guys are promoting in the Under Armor sign and all that, there’s always activity going on down there, but I can’t measure where the kids are from or what colors they’re wearing, what’s a house league, what’s a travel League and all of that, I it’s got to be different than it was when it was Hamilton and Eastwood, right? I mean, it’s a little
Greg Szczepaniak 04:59
different, right? Yeah, so, so when I played for Hamilton, way back when it was interesting, it wasn’t strictly city all stars that we played. We played against Harford Park, which was off of Northern Parkway. We played lot against lock Raven. We played against overly which was right up the street, but over the city county line. So I’m not sure all the dynamics, how that came together, but that’s usually who we battled, against you’re talking
Nestor Aparicio 05:21
about in the 80s, right? 70s and 80s, right? We’re talking about 40 years ago, the modern state of Little League. Brandon, what is, what is South Baltimore, Little League and and give me some parameters, because I don’t. I have all these soccer nerds on with boys and girls. And we got a club, and we got a thing, and we got to crest, and they we charge them this, and they come here, and we like, I don’t if I had a grandkid, maybe I’d figure this out. But what would I figure out if I had a kid, six, 810, 12 years old, that not just wants to run the bases on Sunday of Camden Yards, wants to play ball,
Brendan O’Brien 05:55
right? Well, South Baltimore Little League is part of Little League International, and we are a chartered Little League. As you mentioned, we’ve been in Baltimore since 1957 and South Baltimore Little League. The way Little League works today is you’re given a district. So we are the South Baltimore Little League district. And you’d be shocked if I showed you the map of how big our district is. I’ll draw it for you. You can envision it in your mind. Take go straight up 83 from downtown. Take 695, to the east, and make that half circle all the way back to downtown. Everything in that circle, or half circle is South Baltimore Little League district. We also go down into Brooklyn Park and over into Essex and Dundalk. We have a little bit of of our district,
Nestor Aparicio 06:47
my people, that’s my people over there, that’s your people, yeah. So how many fields? How many? How many fields are? Because what do you have? Like, two fields, four fields. Now, by McHenry rose, it’s a couple little fields, right? Yeah. We
Brendan O’Brien 06:59
call it five fields. There are really three playable fields, and then a couple of little T ball fields there, but two main fields on our upper campus. This property at Ford Avenue was donated to us by Coca Cola 25 years ago. There was a bottling plant right next to it. It’s now says McHenry row on it. But Coca Cola, as they were pulling up the stakes, they donated the land to the Little League, and we have those four fields that we play every weekend. This, Lord
Nestor Aparicio 07:31
knows, I invested enough in Coca Cola when I was a kid, so I’m glad they gave something back to the community. They
Brendan O’Brien 07:36
did it was it’s been wonderful. We’re one of the few little leagues I think that owns their own fields. Most little leagues have to go through their local Rec and Parks to make sure that the fields are available. And this past year, we did, because of our Greg’s probably told you, we’ve grown tremendously in the last three years. We’re up more than 100% I don’t know what youth baseball statistics are like out there. I don’t know what look like that most places. By the way, we are growing like again, gang gangbusters. We had 625 kids in our league last year. That’s both boys and girls baseball and softball. And we’re on our little postage stamp there on Ford Avenue. We did branch out. We’ve played a little Riverside Park, and we did have some fields at Swan Park, if you remember Al K line field down there for our 14 year olds, and we played and practiced in Patterson park this year, because we just don’t have the room to put everything on our on our fields with all the kids that are beating down the door. You
Nestor Aparicio 08:41
know, when I think of all my failures in Little League and striking out with the bases loaded Richie path when I was in Oriole and he was a Yankee, and I’m still tortured by it, and Barry stitts loves to torture me by it when he sees me over curly I had my moment of glory at Patterson Park. I want a pitch hit and run. Tom McCann, I got a plaque. Get some shoes. No, this is a serious thing, man. I went over to Memorial Stadium and I got to compete like an all star thing, and I got my ass kicked there. I I just didn’t hit the ball out of the infield that I was I, I had the yips that day at the stadium, but I did, like, literally win a pitch, hit and run up on the top field of Patterson Park. I told my wife every time, right off a limbo when I go through there, have my glory in Island down. But it is, you know, little league is memorable like that. I remember what the plaque looked like. I remember every trophy. Remember every team I played on. I have pictures. I played at Berkshire after played at Eastwood. I’m at friends for life. I mean, somebody will be listening to this. Mark. Carol Caskey, I know you’re after. Monty Otis cam a lift, who’s a rock and roller. They’re all my little league buddies, and they’re still in my life. They’re my Facebook page. I know what their wives look like. We’re all pushing 60, you know, we don’t get together and like, drink beer. Have, you know, whatever? By the way, had Doug the sensei is on Greg. About three months ago, Doug the sensei came to our banquet. You. In 1978 he was wearing a brown bomber jacket. I got a Polaroid. My parents had the little camera that shot the picture out. You know, yeah, I have that with Doug the senses. So this is baseball. Makes the world great. It gets guys from from Boston, like Brendan. Brendan is here. He is Brendan O’Brien. He’s the president of South Baltimore Little League. Greg is my old gangster partner of Loyola making and Little League. And you put me up to this, not just because, like, it’s important, but because you guys had, like, a big thing going on this summer that I remember as what I talked to you about, where the kids from Hamilton would come on, you know, with their parents and little flower. And there would be on that top field, the Joseph Lee fields, because you could see down the hills and up the hill to the pony league. I want to tell you there were a dozen fields there when I was a boy. And on August the 16th, 1977 when we lost the king Elvis Presley, I was there on that field. I remember being a little League All Star. But the thing I remember about it, the snowballs, hot dogs, all of that. But how many colors there were? You know, everybody would wear their universe. Totally Bad News Bears, same era, late 70s, gray, yellow, gold, Canary. Some people want to look like Willie Stargell, the whole deal. So I think there’s some pageantry about what you guys are doing as I envision it, because whenever I’ve gone grocery shopping down there, there’s always little tykes running around playing ball. But you’re telling me there’s, like, a big thing that you want to invite our audience to down and participate and, you know, maybe watch some kids play some ball the way my dad wanted to watch Timmy Norris and Cal senior or Cal Junior play back in the day.
Greg Szczepaniak 11:39
Yeah, absolutely and very exciting at the end of the month. And, you know, with Brendan being our quote, Mel Brooks here, our Dr Frankenstein of the South Baltimore Little League, I’m just the literally Igor here, his assistant. But we’re super excited for the district All Star tournament, which South Baltimore is fortunate enough to be hosting in the 810 or also known as the 10, you division, coming up on June 28 and that’ll go through July 2, you know, weather pending. So
Nestor Aparicio 12:10
we got eight, nine year olds basically here, right? This is pure baseball. They’re playing for the love of the game, like, literally, right?
Greg Szczepaniak 12:17
Yeah. So most, mostly nine and 10. And I guess this is the where, the part where I get to plug my son, who was at nine years old, fortunate enough, was selected for this team. I mean, a good kid all around, you know, really plays hard. I mean, all the kids do, but, you know, getting selected at that age, you know, very, very excited, he’s already surpassed me every way, athletically at age nine. But those of you out there that that might know me or remember me playing, that’s a pretty low bar right there, but, but Brendan will fill in all the details. But we’re going to have, we are representing, I think it’s District Four. Is that right? Brendan,
Brendan O’Brien 12:50
that’s right. Yeah. We’re hosting two tournaments this year. The first one is the districts, and if you win the districts, you move on to states. So we’re hosting that eight to 10 year old district tournament. And, man, you ought to see these kids play. This is real baseball. These kids hit the ball, catch the ball, pitch, they do it all. It looks like real baseball. And our team, we think, has a pretty good shot at winning their district and running the flag up the flagpole over on Ford Avenue at the end of the month, and then in
Nestor Aparicio 13:23
drink apple juice. If we win, what do we do? I mean, I’d like to know what a kids
Brendan O’Brien 13:27
do every every player gets a Freezy pop at the better
Nestor Aparicio 13:32
damn will be egg custard, if it’s in South Baltimore, you know. I mean, I would think right with marshmallow.
Brendan O’Brien 13:36
Let me tell you if there’s some, if one of your listeners has a snowball machine, and they want to set up on our fields for that. Have them call me, I’m reach out to me. I’d love to have that, because that is true. Baltimore, we don’t own one, so we could, would love to have one.
Nestor Aparicio 13:54
My dad would my dad, we had a snowball machine at Colgate. We have one at at Eastwood and Berkshire. We had snowball we made snowballs joy as I believe they were really syrupy, but and the bees would come. It’s a long story, but my dad would take us at the end of the year, after like the banquet ceremony, he would take us over to East Point mall, and we would go to friendlies, and every kid would order a fribble or Jim dandy, you would be one of those glutton kids, right? Greg, you would, you would have got, you would have gone all bananas, split in, right? You’d have done that, right? Hot Fudge, the whole deal, right? You’re muted. Maybe I like you better muted. You just muted yourself. I don’t know. I’m back, yeah, do that. Your real team meetings. They’re gonna, you’re not gonna get hired. You know, I think my wife, my wife,
Greg Szczepaniak 14:38
hit the mute button. They’re so fine. But, yeah, no, I was, I was just jumping in with, uh, when you said friendlies, the old friendly car. Friendlies, the old friendly Cola, where they used to make it with their own syrup, like right in the store back, way back when. Well, I got a
Nestor Aparicio 14:48
couple things for both of you guys. By the way, we’re just talking little league here. What are the dates and people can get more information if anybody wants to learn about this, if you want a kid to play ball. Sobo, little league.org, sob. Oh, not not like folk folk, not that. Sobo, little league.org,
Greg Szczepaniak 15:08
sorry, it’s South Baltimore Little League. And is that Brandon? Is that.org or.com but it’s South Baltimore Little
Nestor Aparicio 15:15
League. So Bo, little league.org,
Brendan O’Brien 15:17
sobo,
Greg Szczepaniak 15:19
part of me, I’m sorry, I’m on the
Nestor Aparicio 15:21
website, Greg, I’m reading. I’m a professional here. So a couple things. Mr. Butch was my little league coach, and it’s so bad news bears when I think about my little league experience, because I have some regrets about my little league experience, and I’ll give you the one. But the one isn’t that it was incredibly competitive. I played on the Orioles. The Yankees were the bad guys. They beat us. Stitz was on that team, but Rollo was on my team, and I had great players, Carol kowski and all that my buddies, but Mr. Butch, which is Mark’s dad, was the manager of the team. And Mr. Butch was serious, and he’d lean in with his glasses. He’d get us all into the huddle, and he’d say, see the Yankees over there, they put their pants on the same way we do. I’m giving you the same speech. I’m like, this is total words, right? No, no, hold on. And then he’d say, now listen, I know you got a pool to get in. I know your neighbor said don’t get in the pool on game day. Okay, we want you to save your energy. We need you to save your legs. We might need your legs in the fifth, sixth inning today. Okay, classic. All right, so that’s what that’s the kind of little league I played in. All right, so that’s serious. Now, the other part of this is I come by your little league, and there’s like fences now every little league I ever played in. So that would be at the Colgate Park. Up at the top. There was a fence there, but you couldn’t hit it as a little kid, and the Budweiser trucks were behind it, because that’s where winter distributing was. At Colgate, we just had two, two fields that faced each other, one for the big kids, one for the little kids, the big kids the big kids with the ball down on the little kids field. And we’d stop the game because the ball come running through in a center field to be running. So that was that East one was a million fields. There were no fences, just just like a golf course and and Berkshire was just the elementary school with backstops and whatever had some glory. There some girls too. Hi, Ruth. Hi Lisa. But nonetheless, uh, cute girls always watched us play ball at that point. We’re like in eighth grade. So I these are my memories, but the one thing I never had, and the bad news bears had it. And one time, Luke Jones, and I know you’re fond of Luke, Greg, uh, Luke took me up to his hometown, up there in pennsyl Tucky, across the border, and he took me out onto Farm road off of Shrewsbury, looked a little deliverancy. And I turned the corner, and his little league field looked like something out of Iowa, like straight out of field, like there’s farms, there’s corn, and then there’s a little league field, the field house, and they had it. They had an outfield fence, and you could actually hit a home run over the fence. And I said to Luke, did you ever hit one over? And I think he said, Yeah, a couple times. I’m like, I know I had that thrill. And wiffle ball in the neighborhood, we put it on the roofs, we put it on the warehouses. We do all sorts of stuff, kind of like Duncan when you weren’t tall enough, you know. But like your did your little leagues have a fence? Because it was very romantic for me, like Kelly leak coming in on a chopper, and there was a fence that you could hit the ball over. I’ve always felt like I had a great little league experience. I’ve gone through that in this whole segment. I’ve given you my glories and my my shames, but we never had a fence. Did home runs on and I’m like, that makes it so pure to me. So please, I see that in South Baltimore. Give me your ideology on that, because that’s the most important
Greg Szczepaniak 18:48
thing. Yeah, absolutely. South Baltimore, you’re correct. We do have fences on those fields. Growing up, when I played at Hamilton Little League, we also had fences, which was, it was indeed a great thrill a lot of when I grew up at, and I went to Saint Michael the Archangel grade school on Bel Air Road. A lot of my buddies that were from overly played at the overly fields, which were taken care of by the county, were absolutely immaculate, but they didn’t have fences, so you hit them all into the gap. It just goes to drive over. Shortstop gone.
Nestor Aparicio 19:18
Yeah, it’s headed. Yeah, it’s right. I mean, somebody’s chasing it,
Greg Szczepaniak 19:22
right? Really, need those exactly, really neat those, yeah, the fences in place, yeah, it’s like they said to sort of get that feel of, hey, this we
Nestor Aparicio 19:29
break any, um, Brenda, do we break any windows down in South I mean, like, there’s, I worry about that. I mean, like, I’m not parking my maybe eight to 10 year olds can’t pop it that far but once you get to 12 to 14 year olds, man, I you know my buddy Ray. Task is he played on my Berkshire team. Dude, it was like hitting a golf ball. He could hit the ball 300 he could really hit the ball at 12 or 13 years of age. He was incredible.
Brendan O’Brien 19:53
There were a lot of home runs this year from some of our older kids. I’m going to give Greg. Eggs. Son will punch his chance of maybe knocking it out straight away. Center field, on field one at our fields, which is what we talked about, about two and a
Nestor Aparicio 20:08
quarter. What are we looking at here? Greg, no, no, it’s it’s pretty shallow
Brendan O’Brien 20:11
at our fields. 166 at straight away, but deeper down the lines. 190 and 180
Nestor Aparicio 20:18
sort of like right field champion this week, right like, a little bit, like
Brendan O’Brien 20:22
Steinbrenner field, a little bit, yeah, we share two fields, and they kind of, they kind of shorten, but so I give will a punches chance. It’s probably not going to fly too far in the eight to 10, but in the, in the at the end of July, we have the nine to 11. We’re hosting the state tournament, where they’re going to come from Berlin and Salisbury and Western Maryland and DC and montgomery county. And you’re going to see some fireworks in that one. In fact, last year we hosted this same tournament, and if you’re familiar with that, our fields on field one, there was a kid from montgomery county who hit the ball and he hit the building across the street. We mapped it out to be about 265 feet in the on the fly. And so there will be some there’ll be some fireworks. I wish we had fireworks, but there’ll be some fireworks at our at our tournaments this year. Let me
Nestor Aparicio 21:14
check the ball. Did we check the bat? Was the back court, anything like that? Go on. Cuz, listen, I’m gonna tell you right now. I’m gonna tell you right now. These kids coming, these kids coming from Eastern Shore and from out Western Maryland, they better not have no ringers. Greg, make sure they got no ringers on that team. Now, how does this work in the day? Man, like there were always ringers. There was always some kid, and I’m like Kid six two, he’s got a mustache, but he’s got hair on his chest,
Greg Szczepaniak 21:43
a mustache, and are driving themselves to the game. I think that’s clue one. Yeah, right there. We’ll have to keep an eye out.
Nestor Aparicio 21:48
We got
Brendan O’Brien 21:52
a couple of those kids. Little League makes us jump through some hoops to make sure that they’re all They’re all on board and above board, let’s say
Nestor Aparicio 22:01
a red shirt, and kids in Texas. I mean, I see all of this, and I’m like, and I just have to laugh out loud, because, like, I’ll come and watch your eight, nine year olds play before I’m going to watch a last place baseball team 40 bucks to throw in 20 bucks a beer. I mean, like, seriously, and I probably be wildly entertained watching your kids run around down there. So give me the dates, and I’m going to send everybody up to sobo Little League org, and I’m going to give Greg a kick in the nuts on the way out, and then we’re going to have a good weekend here, and we’re all going to go eat crab cakes. Alright, Greg, you got the dates?
Greg Szczepaniak 22:29
Yes. So it’s we have June 28 is what was the start of the tournament. And actually, our our 10 U team, will be playing at 130 that day. We already know our opponent. We’re going to be playing the Annapolis area team at 130
Nestor Aparicio 22:44
bad news for Annapolis there. I just want to go ahead, keep
Greg Szczepaniak 22:48
going and then and then and then, and then our again, to plug our team. We’ll be playing against Sunday on the 29th at 230 there’ll be other games going on with teams from Laurel Greenbelt, a few others as well. The tournament again, weather permitting, will run through July 2. I guess if there’s like a rain out, you may have to push it, you know, back a day or so, but that will be the district tournament. As Brendan mentioned earlier, the district tournament winner will go on to the state tournament, which I believe those dates are. I think it’s July, 12 to the 18th. We’ll have to, have to double check on that. But if I, but if I could just give you a little plug. So the the 10 you team, again, my son is associated with this, that team last year is now the 11 U team. That team last year was one game away from winning the state of Maryland, Brendan. I think they’re going out there was at Hagerstown. I think it was right, one game away. So a lot, most, if not all, those boys, are coming back to play at home this year for 11 you. So we’re certainly expecting so
Nestor Aparicio 23:47
go see kids from all over the state play ball. The best kids in the state playing ball. I love
Brendan O’Brien 23:51
that. All right, all coming here. They stay in hotels, and they’re going to bring some business with them, and we’re going to have a heck of a time in that tournament. And we have a very good chance this year, Nestor of taking down a state title at either the 10 year old or 11 year old, I think is our best shot. 12 year olds have a puncher’s chance, and that’s the one that would go to Williamsport. That team looks very good, but we’ll face a juggernaut in montgomery county that won it last year. So we’ve got our work cut out for us, but I think we’re going to be raising some state flags this
Nestor Aparicio 24:30
year. Well, you mentioned Williamsport. I’ve been to the Little League Hall of Fame in Williamsport. I’ve touched Mike messinas plaque there, so I know a little bit about that, as well as Bucha, who’s a little league player, and I mean, a bunch of people through the course of time, you can Google all that stuff up. Have some fun with that. Greg’s paniak is here, and his Kimo Sabe, and partner at the sobo Little League South Baltimore Little League is Brendan O’Brien. He’s the El Presidente of all things here. Did I leave anything out? Garage. Are we good? Are we clean? Now that I get this done right
Greg Szczepaniak 25:02
way, I think we’re in good shape here. Really appreciate the time. And you know, as Brendan said, you’ll come out to see so good baseball. I think it’s free, free admission to get in. We our concession stands. Take Venmo, so we’re not just cash only. And support the local businesses like LP stevers and all the other places that are close by. You’ll be able to park right on Ford Avenue. And I bear barracudas, and they have several other places that you can walk to and grab something to eat. 2468,
Nestor Aparicio 25:30
who do we appreciate? Greg is here. Brendan’s here. If your kids are out playing Little League, if they’re playing lacrosse, get rid of that lacrosse. Stick it and playing baseball. I’m a true Aparicio there. I’m Nestor. We are W, N, S, T, A, M, 1570 task in Baltimore, and we never stop talking. Little League makes me want to, like, go back and coach, and, I don’t know, make a move. Had a hair back then brings back some great long as we could do breaking training and go to the Astrodome that’s eat fried chicken back for more right after this.