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Mike Sielski: Man behind ‘Bull Durham’ wants to turn a classic Ted Williams story into a movie. Sign me up.

PHILADELPHIA — I’m writing this column about a writer who is writing a screenplay about a writer. So before this gets any more meta than it already is, let’s get the details down.

Ron Shelton has created some of the most memorable sports movies in film history. He wrote "Blue Chips." He wrote and directed "Tin Cup" and, a few years before that, "White Men Can’t Jump" — the first 20 minutes of which is a stream of screen dialogue that reads and sounds like a dream. And, of course, his best film, and the film for which he is best known, is the 1988 classic "Bull Durham": Kevin Costner as Crash Davis, Susan Sarandon as Annie Savoy, Tim Robbins as Ebby Calvin “Nuke” Laloosh, life in the Carolina League, candlesticks and lava lizards and long, slow, deep, soft, wet kisses that last three days.