Sunbiz1
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- May 6, 2010
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Great, one in HS who won't want to leave and the other 2 younger.
I'd say the chances of Girardi managing here are slim.
Great, one in HS who won't want to leave and the other 2 younger.
I'd say the chances of Girardi managing here are slim.
The deal is that Girardi's situation is different than a lot of managers that he can really pick and choose what he wants to do. He can stay in New York as one of the highest paid managers or he can take a year off to leave his family in New York. If he takes the second option he can not deal with the stress of being a manager, especially in a big market, and whenever he wants to can basically pick whatever job wants whenever he wants to get back into manager.
You're a writer? Gibberish aside. Don't you mean "where ever" he decides to take a job?
Don't forget his wife is from Lake Forest, and that is where her parents used to live (don't know anymore).Great, one in HS who won't want to leave and the other 2 younger.
I'd say the chances of Girardi managing here are slim.
No whenever is correct despite being repetitive. I did forget to include he before wants in that sentence though.
Not sure where I claimed to be much of a writer though.
Sorry, I thought you were a published writer, besides on this board. I fucked up and presumed too much again. My bad.
Publishing things on the internet hardly makes one a writer. I freely admit to writing poorly especially when posting quickly while focusing on two other things at the same time.
OP?Publishing things on the internet hardly makes one a writer.
I guess what threw me was that you're always so eloquent and grammatically correct. Again my mistake.