Howie Rose

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Howie Rose

Howie Rose

@HowieRose

Longtime Radio Play by Play voice of the @mets on @wcbs880. 30 years NHL PBP w/NYR, NYI. Member of four Halls of Fame. Licensed curmudgeon. All You Need is Love

Katılım Nisan 2020
543 Takip Edilen128.1K Takipçiler
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Howie Rose
Howie Rose@HowieRose·
Having all kinds of fun on social media, so let’s keep it going with personalized messages on Cameo. You can find me at cameo.com/rosey54. As a great philosopher once said, “Why not?’
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Howie Rose
Howie Rose@HowieRose·
The most memorable scene I ever experienced at Shea Stadium. That moment and ovation certified that Tom Seaver had become a forever superstar and that the Mets had arrived as a legitimate contender. I get goosebumps just looking at that picture.
MetsRewind@metsrewind

This photo of Tom Seaver batting on July 9, 1969, just gives me goose bumps. He was chasing a perfect game at the time and @Mets fans let him know -- no hitter, perfecto, one-hitter, a win -- he was loved and appreciated in New York. #LGM  #Mets

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Howie Rose
Howie Rose@HowieRose·
Peace and Love.
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The Beatles Legacy
The Beatles Legacy@TheBeatlesPMcC·
7 juillet 2026, Ringo Starr a 86 ans aujourd'hui. Avoir été un Beatle de dernière minute lui a offert des millions d'opportunités qui n'étaient pas prévues de par ses origines sociales. Il a été riche, célèbre, légendaire, reconnu et aimé. Sa préretraite dure depuis 56 ans. Quelques albums, quelques concerts et une dernière tournée qui dure depuis 25 ans. Une vie de rêve à Los Angeles, une ancienne James Bond Girl pour femme, des amis musiciens sur toute la planète, la vie de Ringo Starr ressemble dorénavant à celle d'un millionnaire bronzé et souriant. Ses collègues de travail s'appelaient Lennon, McCartney, Harrison. C'était un privilège inouï mais aussi un fardeau. Exister parmi ceux-là, c'était impossible. Et Ringo a réussi l'impossible. Sa batterie n'était pas un simple accompagnement sans relief. Ringo a créé un style, un rythme et des parties de batterie que les plus grands batteurs citent comme des références absolues. McCartney a dit : "Quand Ringo est arrivé, on a compris ce qui nous manquait". Oui, tout le monde aime Ringo Starr. Mais c'est parce qu'il le mérite tout simplement. Car c'est en plus un super mec. Longue vie Sir Richard Starkey, Peace and Love ! "With A Little Help From My Friends", Ringo Starr & Friends, 2015.
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Howie Rose
Howie Rose@HowieRose·
Update. The mad scientists in charge in Miami decided that seven perfect innings and 92 pitches from Eury Perez were enough for one day. That’s right. Perfect after seven. Done for the day. Modern baseball at its most confounding. Serenity Now!
Stirrups Now!@uniformcritic

At 12:31 am on this day in 1963 the greatest game ever pitched ends in the 16th inning on a Willie Mays HR. The Giants win 1-0 over the Braves. Juan Marichal defeats a 42 year old Warren Spahn & both pitchers go the distance. Spahn threw 201 pitches, Marichal 227. Remarkable!

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Keith Raad
Keith Raad@KeithRaad·
We thank the legendary Bob Murphy for his words today. See you tomorrow.
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Jay Horwitz
Jay Horwitz@Jay_HorwitzPR·
No one played the game harder than Ron Hunt our first All-Star. Now Ron needs our prayers. He is in hospice in St. Louis suffering from multiple illnesses. metsinsider.mlblogs.com/ron-hunt-in-ho…
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Howie Rose
Howie Rose@HowieRose·
I have never seen or heard Bobby Ojeda tell this story before, but if you think he was a tough customer on the mound (and he was) read this entire story. Simply remarkable.
Bob Ojeda@BobOjeda19

This story has laid largely dormant in my mind for 25 years. Never gone, but very hard to think about the horror of that morning and I’d rather not. This is my morning of September 11, 2001. At this point in my life, I am a pitching coach for The Brooklyn Cyclones, the Mets’ minor league baseball team. I have a sponsor’s softball game at our ballpark at 10 AM. My house in Jersey is about an hour drive away. I’m at my kitchen table having coffee, getting ready to head in at around nine. I put on the news. The traffic report mentions it’s a little heavy so I decide I’ll leave early. Just as I’m heading out the door the news breaks that a small plane appears to have hit one of the Twin Towers. I stopped to listen. The news reporter looks concerned and confused, but not panicked. It’s an unfolding moment and she’s keeping her cool. The look of disbelief was unstable; no answers, just confusion. She was trying her best, in her own way, to not create a mass panic. Whoever she was, she deserves a ton of credit, along with the other reporters who did the same thing. I head to my car and put on 1010 WINS. I decide to head up Route 36. There is a bridge that crosses the Shrewsbury River that allows a direct view to the city. When I get there, I’m in disbelief. There is smoke coming from the top of one of the towers, yet still no panic on the radio, just reporting of what is currently known. I call my daughter, who works in the city. I asked her where she is. She tells me she’s coming up the escalator from the bottom floors of the World Trade Center, exiting the subway. We stay on the phone. I hear the strain in her voice. Whatever has happened is not good and she is witnessing it firsthand. The radio does not betray the gravity of what happened. They are in disbelief along with all of us. I step on the gas, and race up 36. By now I figure I’ll turn left, head into the city, pick up my daughter, and then drive on to the ballpark in Coney Island. We get cut off on the phone. The confusion on the radio continues and escalates. She calls me back a few minutes later. “Dad, I just came up the escalator and there are people jumping out of the windows, there’s people jumping out of the windows.” I ask her how high they are jumping from, trying to get a feel for what is happening. I am not ready for what she’s about to say. “80 floors.” A second plane hits the other tower. This is a nightmare, and I begin to feel panic coming up within me. I take the Staten Island exit off of the parkway and approach the Outerbridge. I see cars stopped. Then the news comes over the radio. All bridges and tunnels are closed to the city. At the last possible moment, I turned off to the right and circled back down, heading back to my house. I’m doing over 100 miles an hour. I highly doubt a cop is going to stop me. I’m thinking, “What now?” I call my friend Lenny and say “I need your boat!” He asked me,“Where are you going?” I said, “To the city to get my daughter.” He’s well aware of what’s going on, and says, “I’m going with you.” I said, “No you’re not. I don’t know what I’m getting into. I don’t know what’s gonna happen. I don’t even know if I can get there but I have to try. I appreciate your offer, but I got it.” We plan to meet at his boat within 20 minutes. I pause going over the bridge on 36, take a look back, and it is beyond horrific. There’s people in those buildings and I hope one is not my daughter. I call my daughter back, thank God I get a hold of her, and let her know the plans. I tell her to stay at her office. “Stay there until I get there. Stay put!” I swing by my house real quick. I have an idea I’m probably gonna need my father's flag. He was an army veteran who spent time in Iwo Jima. I plan on hanging it off the side of the little boat. Hopefully that will let the authorities know I’m on the home team. I run in the house and remove it from the triangle box in which I keep it and head down to the marina. My friend’s there and insists on going. We jump in and off we go. Within minutes, a little comic relief. We need gas. Thankfully, there’s a fueling marina at Bahr’s Landing. We pull in. The young man working the pump was curious about where we are going. We fill up, he says good luck, and on our way. The radio is on. The news is still confusing but becoming clearer. Both towers have been hit. Both towers are on fire. We look at it. We see it in front of us, knowing we’re heading in. I call my daughter. I tell her I should be there within a half hour, if we lose contact, I tell her to make her way down to the ferries evacuating people off the island. “Get to the top deck and look out to the open water. I’ll be in a small boat with grandpa‘s flag hanging off the side. Get to the top deck and wave and wave. If I see you, I’ll turn around and follow the boat back. If not, I’ll keep going.” We’re a few miles out from the Verrazano Bridge. At this point, I think it’s going to be a dead end. I can’t imagine there won’t be police and Coast Guard closing off from that point. Suddenly, a small biplane with wings painted red and white appears. It is flying towards us but very erratically. I have no idea what that was about. I have my daughter back on the phone. She finally arrived at her office on Wall Street. I tell her our ETA and then she feels something. The building shakes. “Dad, what was that?” I hear on the radio, which has made this whole scenario surreal. The radio has one report, my daughter has the live report, and we’re in the middle, trying to make sense of the whole thing…it’s impossible. You cannot make sense of this moment. I hear on the radio that the building collapsed, but I tell my daughter not to worry about it. It’s probably just all the trucks and everything rumbling around. I make up some nonsensical answer, and she was not in the mood to analyze anything. She was terrified. Still no Coast Guard or police boats. We keep going under the bridge. Smoke billowing in front of us. The smell is unimaginable. It just smells like burning everything. It’s an acidic, rancid smell. Heartbreaking. Because I know what it is. We’re beginning to approach Governors Island. I tell Lenny to stay to the right, we’ll go around and then go straight towards Pier 11. So far, everything is going according to plan, a plan that is being made up as I go. I’m looking at the smoke, the haze and everything and I’m in disbelief. My mind makes up that the tower is still there. “I can see the tower Lenny, can you see the tower?” “I can’t see it.” “It’s right there.” But it wasn’t there. It was gone. It was a pile of rubble. Confirmed by the papers, worksheets and everything flying through the air over our heads. Literally, pieces of paper. Pieces of paper that somebody sitting at their desk was working on an hour ago are now floating through the air, as well as the poor soul who was doing the work. We’re around Governors Island and then, the inevitable. A small Coast Guard boat, that looks like a red inflatable boat, makes a B-line right for us. Machine gun mounted on the bow. I stand up on our bow and I’m frantically waving my father's flag that I’ve tied to the side of the boat. They come racing up in a no nonsense mood, helmets, guns, everything pointing right at us. They come right up next to our boat. “Where are you going?” “I’m going to pick up my daughter.” They turn, have a short conversation, I don’t know what’s gonna happen, then they turn back to me and say “Go ahead.” I could’ve fallen over. I call my daughter again and thankfully get through and tell her head to the water. I’m coming up to Wall Street now. We head for the pier and pull up. lt’s kind of bouncy because of all the tugboats loading people on and getting them off the island. It was organized chaos but it was organized. I have so much respect for the men and women who handled that without panic. We pull up next to the pier. It’s about a 5- or 6-foot reach to the railing. I grab it. I’m holding on, ready to let go, throw my leg over the railing, and Lenny yells, “Don’t let go!” “Why? What’s the matter?” The engine died. This is great, I’m this close and I’m gonna fall in the water. I’m holding on with one hand on the boat and the other on the railing, being stretched like I’m in a torture device. Between the current and the bouncing, I don’t know how I stayed up. The longest 30 seconds of my life when he goes, “OK, OK. I got it.” I let go of the boat and climb over the side. I tell him to circle around right here. I’ll be back. I begin to run up Wall Street. Unbelievably the first police officer I see on shore is from my hometown. He is directing people to the massive tugboats and the ferry boats getting people off of the island. He sees me and asks what I’m doing there. I explained to him that I’m going to get my daughter. He says good luck, I’ll see you at home. Seconds later, strangely, an older lady comes up to me and says, “Excuse me, aren’t you Bobby O?” “Yes I am.” “Oh, I just love you. You are so fun to watch.” Then her son, who understood the gravity of the situation, says, “OK mom, come on, we gotta go.” I thanked her and her son and went on my way. Can’t make that stuff up. I continued making my way up Wall Street. Incredibly, there’s my daughter coming down. It’s like a miracle. It’s a miracle in front of my eyes. I grab and hug her. We head back down to the water. We get to the water’s edge where the railing is, she looks down. Lenny has pulled up by then and she looks down and I said “Look, you gotta jump. There’s no other way, you’ve gotta jump.” It’s probably at least a 5-foot jump down to the deck to a bouncing boat with a wet bow being pushed around by the current and choppy water. She looks at me one last time, looks at the boat, and jumps. She lands and rolls but she is fine. I look around one last time at the surreal scene of I don’t even know what to call it. I jump down, hug my daughter again, sitting in our seats. We turn and head back down home. No one deserves this to happen to them. This weekend, I am reminded of and send nothing but respect to the individuals, first responders, ferry and tug boat captains beside me, who organized amongst the chaos to help one another on a horrific day.

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Howie Rose
Howie Rose@HowieRose·
Love the move of A.J. Ewing to the leadoff spot. Have felt from early on that he would wind up there as he became better acclimated to big league pitching. Ideally, will walk a bit more and strike out a bit less, but moving Carson Benge to middle of order also seemed inevitable.
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Howie Rose
Howie Rose@HowieRose·
This was incredible in its day, 63 years ago. By today’s five and fly standards it’s laughably unbelievable. Spahn was 42 and Marichal pitched at a high level for close to another decade. Check out the box score. 5 walks and 12 strikeouts combined. Balls in play. What a concept.
Stirrups Now!@uniformcritic

At 12:31 am on this day in 1963 the greatest game ever pitched ends in the 16th inning on a Willie Mays HR. The Giants win 1-0 over the Braves. Juan Marichal defeats a 42 year old Warren Spahn & both pitchers go the distance. Spahn threw 201 pitches, Marichal 227. Remarkable!

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Howie Rose
Howie Rose@HowieRose·
The man with the basketball is an old acquaintance from the early 1980s named Darrow Igus. He was a tremendously talented performer who was a regular with Larry David on the ABC show Fridays. Darrow and his wife Toyomi were terrific, sweet people. Hope they’re well.
Today In History@historigins

Larry David playing basketball (1980s)

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Howie Rose
Howie Rose@HowieRose·
You’re not supposed to read a column describing every morsel of a game you watched more than two weeks ago and come to the end with your heart pounding but @MikeVacc just pulled it off. This is brilliant, even beyond Vac’s legendary standards. Superb work. nypost.com/2026/06/27/spo…
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Howie Rose
Howie Rose@HowieRose·
5:20 scheduled start.
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Howie Rose
Howie Rose@HowieRose·
The Mets managerial change felt inevitable following Wednesday”s DH debacle but please don’t lose sight of the fact that however much blame he’s charged with for this season, he deserves twice as much credit for the run in 2024. He’s a wonderful man and a pleasure to work with.
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