Curt Schilling
Curt Schilling
Curtis Montague Schillingis an American former Major League Baseball right-handed pitcher, former video game developer, and former baseball color analyst. He helped lead the Philadelphia Phillies to the World Series in 1993, and won championships in 2001 with the Arizona Diamondbacks and in 2004 and 2007 with the Boston Red Sox. Schilling retired with a career postseason record of 11–2, and his .846 postseason winning percentage is a major-league record among pitchers with at least ten decisions. He is a...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionBaseball Player
Date of Birth14 November 1966
CountryUnited States of America
I feel great today, ... I'm not sore, my ankle feels great. I haven't felt like this since last April, before I hurt my ankle. I don't have any limitations from a preparation standpoint or a work standpoint.
He was phenomenal. That's as good as I've seen him look since October of 2004. That's exciting. It's very exciting to see that.
I'm nervous, anxious. It's been two years since I've been the guy I was. Until I do what I did before, there's a lot of questions.
I tried to sequence some pitches and approaches as if I was facing big league hitters. But I pitched, and I haven't done that in a long, long time, since early 2004, without other questions going on.
For the first time since April 2004, there really is no physical limit to getting ready for me. That's a big difference.
All of 2004, I was getting shot in the ankle after April. So this has been almost two years since I felt anything remotely close to this. This is what I was like in 2002.
Without David, we don't make the postseason. David made an enormous impact on this team, and you can't understate his impact in the clubhouse, ... Congratulations to Alex. Either one of them could have won it. Both had MVP years.
We just weren't good enough to win again,
In this I-me society, my job is to get people to buy into something bigger than themselves.
You could ask any position player and they'll tell you: pitchers aren't athletes.
The bigger the game the better. I'm an adrenaline junkie. I feed off big crowds and noise.
One of the walls of my bedroom was a collage of about 15 years of baseball photos. I would cut out the baseball pictures from every issue and I had this huge montage of thousands of pictures.
The money I saved during baseball was probably all gone. I'm tapped out.
I've been called a lot of things. But never, and I mean never, could anyone ever make the mistake of calling me a Yankee fan.