Will Lewis

Will Lewis
William Lewis or Willie Lewis may refer to:...
pain book writing
It's such a pain in the ass to write a book, I can't imagine writing one if I'm not interested in the subject.
wall made crisis
Wall Street is not being made a scapegoat for this crisis: they really did this.
All of a sudden the market is all about algos and routers.
enemy foraging stock-options
It is far better to keep the enemy close, by bribing him with stock options, than to have him out in the wild, foraging.
smarter
Why isn't someone smarter than us doing this?
baseball team people
It is the nature of being the general manager of a baseball team that you have to remain on familiar terms with people you are continually trying to screw.
weakness form
Every form of strength is also a form of weakness,
sports echoes world
The sports world is an echo chamber. All it takes is one quote from a general manager and a thousand sports columns bloom.
baseball running home
Jacks are home runs. So are dongs, bombs, and big flies. Baseball people express their fondness for a thing by thinking up lots of different ways to say it.
baseball team heart
There are several insights at the heart of the A's system that I think are wonderful for baseball. One, that it's a team game. That no one player is going to make that much of a difference to your team, so for god's sake don't go blow a quarter of your budget on one guy.
mother children japan
In Japan, mothers insist on achievement and accomplishment as a sign of love and respect. Thus to fail places children in a highly shamed situation.
fire media half
The Red Sox are a curious thing because so much here is media driven. You can't go fire half your scouts here because they are all friends with the local reporters. Your life is going to hell in the papers.
long
We change for the good so long as good exists around us.
baseball player television
There was but one question he left unasked, and it vibrated between his lines: if gross miscalculations of a person's value could occur on a baseball field, before a live audience of thirty thousand, and a television audience of millions more, what did that say about the measurement of performance in other lines of work? If professional baseball players could be over- or under valued, who couldn't?