SEPTEMBER 28th - The Power of a Really Lucky Day



Do you have a lucky day? Like an actual date. Maybe you got a promotion on it. Maybe you won the lottery on it. Or maybe you discovered the brilliance of Van Morrison on it. If your spouse is reading over your shoulder--maybe you got married on it. Well let me just say, whatever happened on your lucky day is nothing compared to September 28th for Ted Williams. On this day in 1941, Teddy played in a double header and went 6 for 8 to raise his batting average to .406, becoming the last player to hit over .400. That’s a pretty great day. Fast-forward 19 years, to Williams’ very last at bat in Fenway. Went yard. Smashed a homer his last time up on the exact same date he went over .400. That’s a lucky day. I’m sure the fact that Williams may have been the greatest hitter of all time had a little something to do with it. We make our own luck and all that. But still. If I’m charge of the Williams' estate and it’s up to me to decide when to thaw out cryogenically-frozen, popsicle Ted Williams, you best believe I’m doing it on this date, September 28th. Because if Williams’ personal history has any bearing on the science of being frozen after death, he’d wake up doing a damn jig and peeing like Austin Powers. That is the power of a really lucky day.

This Day has been Marked

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