 He was one of those guys, Jack, that was one of a kind. A couple of things about Gaylor Perry. First of all, how about the fact that he wrote a book called Me and the Spitter while he was still an active pitcher in 1974? Here it is, boys. Here's what I do. But my story is really a David Cohn story. On the 1983 Royals, Perry was on their staff, and Cohn was rehabbing as an injured minor leaguer. And he would play catch with Perry. So he wanted Perry to teach him the spitter. He finally got up the courage to ask him, and Perry said, no. Cohn, we all know him, he was persistent. He kept asking him and kept asking him. And then essentially, Perry told him, no, by saying, you've got a mid-90s fastball. You've got a knee-buckling slider. You don't need a spitter. Your major league career, you're going to go through the front door. Somebody who threw a spitter like me, I'm kind of going through the back door. The back door is the hall of fame, by the way. So he taught Cohn a lesson in that moment. Yeah, I think a Gaylord Perry and a guy won over 300 games. You got to find a way to do it a little bit differently. The spitball was a big part of it. But I think the mental part of the game, too, when he was standing out on the mound, and he would be touching all these different parts of his body, making the illusion, or giving the illusion that he was loading up the baseball. Just imagine being a hitter, and you're looking in there, and you're looking at all these different things that he's doing out on the mound. He would find a way to beat you. He did it for a long time, an amazing career. And you just want to focus on hitting. You want to look for a release point, right? You're not getting it, because you're thinking, what's he doing, why is he touching his hair? Why is he, yeah. Like Wade Boggs told me, he said, look for that little window right by the right ear, but you're facing Perry. You're thinking about all these different spots. What's he doing? You're complaining on Pires. He probably took everybody's focus away from hitting the baseball. Well, some folks might not know that he was the inspiration for the character of Eddie Harris in the movie Major League. Perry was known, obviously, for his spitball. We've talked about that. He totaled 314 wins. And in addition to his success on the mound, he's also remembered for having incredible timing as part of a funny story in baseball lore. In the early 60s, after he debuted with the Giants, Perry's first Major League manager, Alvin Dark, once said that there would be a man on the moon before Perry could hit a home run. And Dark turned out to be right. On July 20, 1969, the module-carrying Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin touched down on the moon at 1.17 PM Pacific time. And later that same afternoon, Perry went deep against the Dodgers for the first of his sixth career home runs. After his playing day's ended, he founded the baseball program at Limestone College in Gaffney, South Carolina, which is where he was living at the time of his passing.