He was definitely behind, no question. It's taken him a little while to get going, but to be able to start utilizing everything, we still have a long ways to go. |
He was going to split my head with an axe, ... He was berserk, he was screaming. I fired two shots into the wall, and I forced him to lie face down on the floor. |
He was hitting his spots real well and executing his pitches real nicely. I thought he had a great outing, kept them off-balance, and pitched really well for us. |
He was huge. He was ridiculously important [to the team]. This guy went out and all of a sudden he jumps in and he expected to work into the seventh every night. |
He was in a class with Mel Allen and all those great announcers. You always go by the voice, and when they got that good voice, you could listen to them all day. |
He was just a soft-spoken, wonderful American. Every day or night, he'd go out on his walks. (But) it's dangerous to cross on a green light, much less a red one. |
He was kicking their butts. He had this huge litigation hammer hanging over their head. They knew he would chew them up and spit them out if they didn't ante up. |
Jason Kidd (1973-) |
He was obviously bright, a good lawyer, and served his clients well. When it got to be 5 p.m., he closed his law books and went home. He didn't fuss over things. |
He was one of the guys who showed me the ropes. He was very supportive, he was very caring the time he was here. And it's going to be fun to compete against him. |
He was one that didn't jump right in right away. He just kind of sat back and watched, but once he was secure and felt he could do something, he'd join right in. |
He was out there flapping around, flapping around. We were calling out to him and blood was pouring out of the top of his head and that was it and he went under. |
He was pretty good. He threw a three-hitter and didn't have much more than his fastball. He did a good job of locating it and he made the pitches when he needed. |
He was saying, mumbling, something like, 'She's the devil,' talking about the mom, saying, 'She's the devil,' and some other nonsense I couldn't really make out. |
He was the mayor of Shively. He oversaw Shively's growth … from a little city to a larger one. The city was disorganized when he took over. He settled it down. |