My dad was my Little League coach and my Cub Master.

I played Little League in junior high and high school.

I love watching players improve - even as a Little League coach.

The great thing about Little League was that anyone could play it.

I wish I could play little league now. I'd be way better than before.

I think Little League is wonderful. It keeps the kids out of the house.

We played on a sandlot all summer. There was no little league back then.

My real-life athletic career was not very much. I played Little League baseball.

Youngsters of Little League can survive undercoaching a lot better than overcoaching.

Little League baseball is a very good thing because it keeps the parents off the streets.

My folks, I don't think my mom or my dad ever missed a little league game or a football game.

My husband and Charlie Sheen played Little League together. They've always been best friends.

Who in their infinite wisdom decreed that Little League uniforms be white? Certainly not a mother.

In the summertime, I played Little League baseball; football in the fall; basketball in the winter.

We went to school board meetings, we went to Little League games, and we did everything to be normal.

Kids should practice autographing baseballs. This is a skill that's often overlooked in Little League.

I'm a soccer dad at heart. I want five kids, and I want to get married. I want to coach Little League.

When I played Little League, I looked up to the big leaguers, too, and collected their baseball cards.

I bet you don't know what is the first thing Little Leaguers always ask me, 'How much money do you make?'

I ran a hot-dog-and-soda stand at Little League, and I started a business planning parties in high school.

This illuminates not only fans' interest in major league teams but also the minors and even Little League.

Even when I played in little league as a kid, I liked making friends, but I didn't want to be there, really.

As a youngster, I played in Little League, Pony League, and all sorts of amateur baseball programs growing up.

All American males are failed athletes, and it was big time even if it was Little League. It meant a lot to you.

I was nicknamed Skeeter in Little League because I was small and fast, like a mosquito flying across the outfield.

In Little League back in Oklahoma, I struck out 14 batters in a six-inning game, and we won the state championship.

I thought the Little League fields were big. You look back now, and its obviously the smallest field you can play on.

I ran track for my school. I played football, but I didn't play for my high school; I played for a little league team.

I was a tomboy through and through; I hated dresses and was personally miffed that I couldn't join the Little League team.

As a kid, I used to love to play baseball and be in Little League and sleep outside with my friends and do all those kind of things.

My father was a Little League dictator. That really affected me, his control-freakery, his impunity, his arbitrary unreasonable power.

I was an umpire at little league softball games. I only lasted a few games because I wasn't one hundred percent clear on all the rules.

I was playing little league baseball when Bruce Jenner was winning the gold but I don't think I was really paying attention at that time.

I played Little League for one year. That was it. Then my mother realized I liked books and threatened my father. I owe her forever for that.

I grew up with baseball; I played in Little League and went to games with my dad. But I, as I grew up, became more of a basketball fanatic than a baseball one.

I would never do 'Dancing With The Stars,' because it's just not fair. I am too good of a dancer. It would be like LeBron James playing little league basketball.

I certainly didn't think of myself as gifted. The standards for being gifted in my environment were if you were good in Little League or if you were good in football.

People don't wanna take a chance. And I just feel like that's what it was, it's like that in every single level I've been in, from little league to high school and college.

I like how in little league they have nine kids who play the field but we have 17 kids on the roster and all 17 kids should hit. I like that we do that down here in Florida.

Whether it was Little League or playing with your brothers or sisters, that was always a problem. If I would lose - because I very rarely lost - then everything would go crazy.

My friends and family know I love playing baseball - Little League through college. And every year in the annual Congressional Baseball Game for charity played at Nationals Stadium.

There is no life for girls in team sports past Little League. I got into tennis when I realized this, and because I thought golf would be too slow for me, and I was too scared to swim.

I was very active in the Parks and Recreation department. I recall a lot of the things we had to do, from the trips for the department to organizing a Little League, those sorts of things.

Most parents were, like, Little League coaches and all that. My dad was a wrestling fan. Instead of going out and playing home run derby with my old man, we just watched wrestling together.

All I know is the same lessons you need to learn at Little League basketball, you need to learn at the upper levels. It's the little things you learn when you're little that apply in college.

My pitching in 'Dazed and Confused' was so bad that they had to use cut-ins with a stunt double, and I spent most of that filming night being ruthlessly mocked by a team of Little League extras.

I love when violent, dangerous art is done by people who are not violent and dangerous. I love that when George Romero was making 'Dawn of the Dead,' he was coaching his son's little league team.

When I was a kid, man, my dad used to buy me the Ted Williams glove at Sears with the Ted Williams shoes with the eight stripes on 'em. I used to play Little League, and I was Ted Williams-ed out.

I'm among the first girls ever to play Little League baseball, and to my knowledge, the very first in western Illinois. It was 1976, and I was a nine-year-old tomboy whose older brothers had played.

When I was 14, I played in a summer league. One night the chief umpire asked me if I would like to try umpiring. There was a Little League tournament coming up and he needed more umpires than he had.

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