We promise this is not a morning cop-out. We thought of all the things we could write, and we still decided the best thing to do on a day like this is fire up a rerun. You see, we did a Q&A -- with the help of some dear readers -- back in the middle of 2008 with Michael Schur. If you are not familiar with his work, he is one of the creative geniuses behind The Office, and now Parks & Rec (season premiere tomorrow night for both! Woo!). He also was one of the authors of one of the most vicious, clever and hilarious sports blogs around: the now-defunct Fire Joe Morgan. Schur (aka Ken Tremendous) and his old FJM pals are guest-editing Deadspin today. We give you permission to sneak over there every now and then to take a look at what they've cooked up. But first: please do give a read to the Q&A we did with Schur. It's a win.
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Michael Schur writes for "The Office" and has also appeared on episodes of the program as Dwight Schrute's cousin, Mose. He also writes for a (primarily) baseball blog called Fire Joe Morgan. The Office. Baseball. Yeah, it sounded like he would be right up the alley for a RandBall Q&A. We promised to keep the questions plenty bizarre and mostly about baseball. But we couldn't help but slip in a few references to his television program. He was kind enough to answer our questions; four of the questions were at least partially written by either Stu or Fasolamatt (hence the "RB" is really a collective in this case), which is the second part of the fun here. If you can guess all four, you win a special prize. The main part of the fun, though, is that Schur is hilarious. We hope you enjoy:
RandBall: You're stranded on a desert island and only have room for VORP or OPS+. Which do you keep?
Michael Schur: VORP is a better stat. But I might take OPS+ so I can easily compare Juan Pierre's 2003 with Tim Raines's 1985 and have a nice laugh.
RB: A ghost runner of Michael Schur is on first base when a young Joe Morgan hits a double into the gap that rolls to the wall. Two outs, crack of the bat, you're off. Do you follow the rules of ghost runners and stop at third when the entire free world knows you could have scored? Is your answer somehow influenced by the batter?
MS: Well, I haven't really seen enough Ghost Baseball to know one way or the other. The thing about Ghost Mike Schur is he needs to be consistent with his baserunning. There really aren't very many great Ghost Teams anymore. To be a great Ghost Team you have to be Ghost Consistent. The 1975 Ghost Reds were a great Ghost Team because they could do it all -- run, hit, ghost hit, hit for power, field, ghost field, ghost pitch, scare people, haunt houses, stack chairs on top of tables when people's backs were turned, make scary noises, slime people, and sneak into ladies' locker rooms. So I would say that Ghost Mike Schur would try to score, because you have to be aggressive.
RB: Two outs, bottom of the ninth, the Yankees are down by a run. Derek Jeter draws a walk, followed by an Alex Rodriguez home run. Which one is more "clutch?"