So I'm reading W.C. Heinz's article The Rocky Road of Pistol Pete, which is brilliant by the way, and I come upon a quote from Branch Rickey. The quote was actually said maybe 15-20 years before the article was written, maybe longer. It's basically just an appraisal of Pete Reiser, but my question is how did he get the quote? It's actually supposedly between Rickey and Reiser, and it didn't sound like a reporter was even around. Surely he didn't get it himself when it happened?
Here's the quote:
"Young man," he said, "you're the greatest ball player I ever seen, but there is one thing you must remember. Now that you're a professional ball player you're in show business. You will perform on the biggest stage in the world, the baseball diamond. Like the actors on Broadway, you'll be expected to put on a great performance every day, no matter how you feel, no matter whether it's too hot or too cold. Never forget that."
See what I mean? It's not like this was said to a reporter. You can't actually use quotations unless he actually says it though, right? I'm sure there's a reason, I just don't know what it is.
Anyway, can anybody shed some light on this for me?
Here's the quote:
"Young man," he said, "you're the greatest ball player I ever seen, but there is one thing you must remember. Now that you're a professional ball player you're in show business. You will perform on the biggest stage in the world, the baseball diamond. Like the actors on Broadway, you'll be expected to put on a great performance every day, no matter how you feel, no matter whether it's too hot or too cold. Never forget that."
See what I mean? It's not like this was said to a reporter. You can't actually use quotations unless he actually says it though, right? I'm sure there's a reason, I just don't know what it is.
Anyway, can anybody shed some light on this for me?