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Ten Surprising Facts About The Scott Boras/Prince Fielder Binder

The Boras Corporation has created a 73-page binder to extol the virtues of Prince Fielder to prospective teams. What sorts of things are in there?

Dec 14, 2011 - The Boras Corporation recently released the smash-hit book of the holiday season, Why You Should Commit to Prince Fielder for Seven Years and $150,000,000. That's not the actual title, but it's close enough. Jerry Crasnick has some details on the extensive, 73-page binder that was put together for the sole purpose of lauding the works and career of Prince Fielder.

"Prince is a very modest guy, but there were a few things in there he really, really loved," Boras said. "He told me, 'I don't have much in my man cave -- just my Silver Slugger [Awards] and some other things I've done. But this book is going in my man cave.' I figure if we made it into his man cave, it held high standards."

Okay.

But buried in the secret dossier are things that you might not have thought would be in there. Here, then, are ten things that might surprise you about the book:

1. The passages that aren't favorable towards Prince Fielder are written in Comic Sans
I don't even know why these passages were included, but I guess the idea was that Comic Sans would make people skip the section.

And that's how Prince Fielder compares favorably to Jimmie Foxx, Mel Ott, and Willie Stargell. Please ignore the fact that there is only one first baseman in the history of baseball who actually shares DNA with Prince Fielder, and that he was washed up by the time he was 33. Because even though that would seem like a decent comparison, what with genetics and all, it really isn't. It just isn't!

2. The Boras Corporation spent several million dollars on R&D, creating a paper-thin and malleable monitor that can fit in the pages of a book.
This is because they're like me, and they think this McDonald's commercial never gets old, so they want everyone to see it over and over and over and over again.


Prospective teams flip the page, and this baby starts auto-playing. Adorable! And if you're wondering if I'm going to use this video in every Prince Fielder-related article I write, of course I will. I mean, look at that little scamp up there!


3. Section titled: "Prince Fielder Can Pitch, Too!"

It's just the same video as that McDonald's one up there, except this one has "Welcome to the Jungle" playing over the video on a loop.


4. Most of the graphs just compare him to great sluggers in video-game history

 


5. The section titled "Anagrams!" is just four anagrams in really big font.

  • Fielder Prince
  • Re-field Prince
  • Re-prince Field
  • E.R. Field Prince

Those four, in 283-point font, over four foldout pages.


6. There are all sorts of odd factoids sprinkled throughout the book, and most of them are just weird

If you conservatively estimate that Fielder's 260 home runs traveled an average of 400 feet, he has hit the ball over 92,000 feet in his career! That's as high as the famous Air Force hot-air balloon experiment with that dummy in 1957!



 Remember that? That's how hard Prince Fielder hits the ball!


7. There's an incomprehensible section that's some sort of 13-page homage to James Joyce

OMINOUS - FOR HIM!

Prince Fielder said not without regret:
          - And yet he stayed with the same team without having entered the land of promise.
          - A sudden - at - the - moment - though - from - lingering - payroll - concerns - often - previously - overblown, Boras said. And with a great future behind him.


8. Several of the pages feature a fine-print disclaimer

On over half the pages, there's a disclaimer at the bottom that reads, "Note: The Scott Boras Corporation did not come up with this book after dicking around on Baseball-Reference's Play Index for 45 minutes."


9. Six-page section titled "Not On 'Roids Like Some Other Milwaukee Sluggers, Wink Wink"

Excerpt:

In conclusion, some other sluggers in Mlwaukee (wink wink) might do "things" to keep themselves in "game shape," and said "things" might be "scandalous" and/or "undesirable." While some teams feel comfortable giving ten-year, $145 million contracts to these players, Prince Fielder maintains that the money would be better spent on someone who is completely clean. Like him. Which he is. Unlike some other Milwaukee Brewers-related superstars who may or may not have just won a major award (wink wink).


10. The first three pages of the whole thing

It's a little subtle, but it gets the point across. 
Link to .PDF

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Grant Brisbee

Editor

Grant Brisbee has been the lead writer for McCovey Chronicles since 2005, when the San Francisco Giants-themed site became the second blog on the SB Nation network. He graduated from San Jose State... Read full bio


Comments

Display:

Grant,

You are the bomb-diggety.

________________________________
Free your ass and your mind will follow.

by cocktailsfor2 on Dec 14, 2011 8:39 AM EST reply actions  

They didn’t want his .467 avg. and 60 HRs to make Prince look bad.

by GoGiants18 on Dec 14, 2011 3:34 PM EST up reply actions  

I like the PDF link

I LOL’d

Why do my owners like profit>winning? Championships are the wealthy's bragging rights in Yacht rooms. #RDF can go to #!@%^

by Myemail21479 on Dec 14, 2011 9:26 AM EST reply actions  

really.

One way or another, this darkness got to give.

by bgunn on Dec 14, 2011 12:46 PM EST up reply actions  

Summer School

Is a really (x996) good movie.

by BennyGStein on Dec 14, 2011 2:53 PM EST up reply actions  

It convinced me.

2010 World Series Champions!
Adopted 'nephew' to the ever avuncular and always awesome Jon Miller

by Johnny Disaster on Dec 14, 2011 5:46 PM EST up reply actions  

I'm so glad you said something.

I didn’t want to download a PDF, then root around in my folders, then double-click it. Oh the humanity. But I did and sprayed Mt. Dew all over my monitor which was better than the alternative – spraying it all over my keyboard, nasally. Grant, do I send the bill to you directly or Baseball Nation?

by fiji.siv on Dec 16, 2011 1:22 AM EST up reply actions  

James Joyce - brilliant

I think you really captured the essence of his style, Grant

I miss 2010

by DimaK on Dec 14, 2011 1:42 PM EST reply actions  

I wish you didnt type in Comic Sans

I had to skip that section.

Ride the tiger...You can see his stripes but you know he's clean.

by James Westfall on Dec 14, 2011 2:26 PM EST reply actions  

Okay,

That’s just awesome! I bet that .PDF that you linked is actually in there somewhere

Have you been good this year? I hope so, because Gibby. Is. Watching.

by imstillhungry95 on Dec 14, 2011 3:19 PM EST reply actions  

Wait! General Mills?

We trusted our astronauts to a company that made Cheerios?

"People ask me what I do in winter when there's no baseball. I'll tell you what I do. I stare out the window and wait for spring". ~Rogers Hornsby

by extavernmouse on Dec 14, 2011 4:01 PM EST reply actions  

Win, purely on the merit of the Jon Dowd reference.

by Rujasu on Dec 14, 2011 4:26 PM EST reply actions  

#3 I think I've got the timing down

Hit play when Axl starts screeching “Welcome to the…”, then once Cecil has struck out, Prince comes running up to dad with Axl singing “I want to watch you bleed”. It’s such sweet poetry.

by fiji.siv on Dec 16, 2011 1:28 AM EST reply actions  

Just wondering...

… do all men have caves?

"It breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall alone." A. Bartlett Giamatti

by sddbaker on Dec 16, 2011 9:46 PM EST reply actions  

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