Buckner and Burns blunder their way into inglorious sporting immortality | Andy Bull

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Thirty years after his error in the 1986 World Series, people still talk of pulling a ‘Buckner’. Might ‘Doing a Freddie’ go the same way?

It was the one last wafer-thin wisecrack that made Bill Buckner snap. On 4 July 1993 he was signing autographs in a parking lot outside McCoy Stadium in Pawtucket, and when a boy passed him a ball to sign a man passing behind them said: “Don’t give him the ball, he’d just drop it anyway.” Buckner left, dumped his stuff in his truck, came back, grabbed the man by the collar and pinned him up against a wall. Buckner managed to stop himself from punching the guy – “thank God for that” – but it was right around then that Buckner finally decided it was time to for him and his family to quit Massachusetts and move to Idaho.

Buckner had a 20-year career in Major League Baseball, turned out for five different sides, made 2,715 hits in 9,397 at-bats. But he’s famous for one thing – letting a ground ball hit by Mookie Wilson slip between his legs in the 10th innings of game six of the 1986 World Series.

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Written by Andy Bull
This news first appeared on https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2018/oct/16/freddie-burns-bill-buckner-inglorious-failure under the title “Buckner and Burns blunder their way into inglorious sporting immortality | Andy Bull”. Bolchha Nepal is not responsible or affiliated towards the opinion expressed in this news article.