it was, you know, in new york city, they named a candy bar after reggie jackson, in baltimore, when itthat's who brooks robinson was, the impact. he was bareshnikov with a rawlings fielding mitt on his hands. but he was an enormously wonderful human being. you'd meet him, joe, and say, we playing softball on saturday, he had that look of a regular guy because he was a regular guy. >> he was, indeed, he was mr. oriole and you captured so well what he meant to that city, and tell us a little bit about the poignancy of robinson passing away at a moment of rebirth for this franchise, that had been so down in recent years, but built back up with young players, none of them quite flashed the leather like brooks robinson, great players, a game or two away from clinching the american league east. >> it's great for baseball, it's great for baltimore, obviously, but it's really great for baseball to see the rebirth of a truly valued franchise in major league baseball with the first -- the first in the original of the new ballparks, camden yards, designed and built by larry lakino who went to the