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Former Cubs manager Lee Elia, famous for epic profanity-laced rant against fans, dead at 87

Former Cubs manager Lee Elia, famous for epic profanity-laced rant against fans, dead at 87

Fox News11-07-2025
Lee Elia, a longtime baseball lifer who may be best known for his epic 1983 rant, died this week at the age of 87.
Elia played in 95 big league games and managed 538 with the Chicago Cubs and Philadelphia Phillies. But it was after one of those games when Elia gave perhaps one of the most legendary rants of all time.
On April 29, 1983, Elia was the skipper for the Cubs when they dropped to 5-14 with a 4-3 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Wrigley Field crowd of 9,391 threw garbage at Keith Moreland and Larry Bowa as the Cubs made their way to the clubhouse.
Elia responded with an expletive-filled rant against Cubs fans that included at least 40 f-bombs.
"F--k those f---ing fans who come out here and say they're Cub fans that are supposed to be behind you ripping every f---ing thing you do," Elia began. "I'll tell you one f---ing thing, I hope we get f---ing hotter than s---, just to stuff it up them 3,000 f---ing people that show up every f---ing day, because if they're the real Chicago f---ing fans, they can kiss my f---ing a-- right downtown."
That was just the beginning of the three-plus-minute tirade that was caught on a lone microphone in the clubhouse that day.
As part of his remarks, he declared that 85% of the world was working, while "the other 15% come out here." Back then, there were no lights at Wrigley Field, and the Cubs played only day games at home.
"'They're really, really behind you around here.' My f---ing a--," Elia continued. "What the f--- am I supposed to do, go out there and let my f---ing players get destroyed every day and be quiet about it? For the f---ing nickel-dime people that show up? The motherf---ers don't even work. That's why they're out at the f---ing game. They oughta go out and get a f---ing job and find out what it's like to go out and earn a f---ing living."
Elia, a Philadelphia native, had a 238-300 record in four seasons as a big league manager, two with the Cubs and two with the Phillies. He was a shortstop during his playing career, batting .203 with three homers and 25 RBIs in 95 games with the White Sox and Cubs. He was the third base coach when the Phillies won the 1980 World Series.
Elia also worked for the Seattle Mariners from 1993-97, 2001-02 and in 2008 as a hitting coach, bench coach and special assistant to the field manager.
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Rian Johnson to Receive 2025 Austin Film Festival's Bill Wittliff Screenwriting Award

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New to sports betting? Here are 13 tips to help you this football season
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You can find valuable bets and analysis from Yahoo Sports betting contributor, Matt Russell, at THE WINDOW.

2025 NFL preseason: Why there is value betting on NFL preseason games
2025 NFL preseason: Why there is value betting on NFL preseason games

Yahoo

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  • Yahoo

2025 NFL preseason: Why there is value betting on NFL preseason games

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Mike Tomlin, for example, often plays starters longer than expected to 'set a tone.' Meanwhile, Sean McVay doesn't play starters at all. Understanding coaching motivation, not just track records, gives you a sneak peak into potential value spots as lines open. Quarterback rotations: The hidden key Preseason lines can look weird. Seeing the Chiefs as 4-point underdogs to a bottom-feeder team might make you want to grab Kansas City, but this is not the Patrick Mahomes-led team, and the betting market is pricing in information you likely missed. QB depth matters more in August than it does in January. A team with two fringe roster guys fighting for a spot can be far more dangerous than a team who has its depth chart solidified and is simply getting the rust off. Finding small edges within the landscape of QB battles can lead to value in preseason betting. Last year, for example, the Cowboys leaned heavily on Trey Lance. Not because they wanted to win games, but to evaluate him and drum up trade interest. This could have opened value in games where Lance would be facing teams working through multiple low-level players fighting for roster spots — or could've led to a fade of Lance, depending on your belief in his ability. Here's how he performed: vs. Rams (Lost 13-12): 25-41, 188 Yards | 6 Carries, 44 Yards vs. Raiders (Won 27-12): 15-23, 151 Yards, 1 TD | 7 Carries, 34 Yards, 1 TD vs. Chargers (Lost 26-19): 33-49, 323 Yards, 1 TD, 5 Interceptions | 11 Carries, 90 Yards, 1 TD That's 113 pass attempts in three games. The takeaway: It wasn't about winning; it was about evaluation. Though the Cowboys ended the preseason with a 1-2 record, betting markets reacted to Lance's status as the Cowboys saw an influx of wagers, closing as bigger favorites than they opened in two of the three matchups. Low totals, high leverage: Teasers in preseason A teaser in sports betting is a type of parlay where you can adjust the point spread or total in your favor (usually at least six points) in multiple wagers, but both wagers must win for you to cash. They offer fixed pay structures, which typically aren't worth a bet — but the preseason is not typical. In the regular season, teasing a 7-point favorite down to -1 or lowering a total from 47 to 41 is commonplace. But in the preseason, teasers become more valuable. Why? Because points are scarce. When totals are sitting in the low 30s, like the 32.5 total in this year's Hall of Fame Game, each point is worth more. A 6-point teaser that moves an underdog from +1 to +7 is much more impactful when a game is expected to be a 13-10 type of matchup. The less room for variance, the better. If you're playing teasers, aim for low-total games and look to grab key numbers, especially in matchups where scoring is expected to be ugly — which, in preseason, is most of them. Bet the info, not the teams Betting NFL preseason isn't about which team will be better this season. It's about who's playing, for how long and why it matters. If you're looking for soft numbers and mis-priced info, this is your window. So yes, preseason betting is 100% worth it. Just don't treat it like September football. Treat it like an info war, and make sure you're the one winning it.

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