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JON BURSTEIN
Burstein watches anything on television and spends too much time looking for stupid viral videos, according to his wife...
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I kept rooting for them and hoping and hoping. I never gave up on them.
He attended one of the games of the 1950 World Series and is quick to tell you the Phillies lost each of the first three games of the Series against Joe DiMaggio and the mighty Yanks by just one run.
Nowadays, friends call him the Philadelphia fanatic because he always wears a Phillies hat and talks about his team.
I'm a retired Presbyterian clergyman, Doherty said. I mention the Phillies to the Lord in prayer to make sure they win, or in hopes they win.
He watches all the Phillies games with his wife, another big fan in a family full of them.
Doherty said all three of his children and most of his grandchildren like the Phillies. He vows to work on his four great-grandchildren to continue the tradition as they get older. The oldest is just 6, after all.
Jay Groff, 74, will be watching all the Phillies' World Series games with a bunch of his fellow Conestoga View residents.
Charles Pfrommer, 76, Glenn Wimer, 77, Daniel Rohrer, 72, Robert Lyter, 91, Ralph Grubb, 80, and Richard Sauers Sr., 58, reserve the nursing home's entertainment room so they can cheer the Phils on together.
Groff remembers listening to the Phillies on the radio as a teenager during the 1950 World Series.
The stars have since changed from Robin Roberts and Richie Ashburn to Steve Carlton and Mike Schmidt to Cole Hamels and Chase Utley, but Groff's allegiance hasn't.
He's a little harder on Philly skippers, however.
I get a little mad at the manager when someone's pitching good and he takes him out, and another guy gives up six or seven runs, Groff said. But I watch them whether they're bad or good


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