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  • Baseball Thread.

    This is my 4th thread. You can post the latest news feeds about baseball. Thanks.
    Follow my blogs and tweets. http://dxjayrocksnotes.blogspot.com/ and https://twitter.com/dxjayrock


    Road To Rio 2016.

    Kwentong Gilas ~ Gilas Serye. LMAO!!!

  • #2
    News feed from yahoo sports.

    Giants bring first World Series title to S.F.

    By Steve Henson, Yahoo! Sports 26 minutes ago






    ARLINGTON, Texas – A sophisticated city by a magnificent bay parched for a baseball championship can pop corks and douse itself in bubbly. The San Francisco Giants won their first World Series since 1954 and first since moving from New York four years later Monday night with a 3-1 Game 5 victory over the Texas Rangers.
    Giants shortstop Edgar Renteria(notes), in the twilight of a career highlighted by the winning hit in the 1997 World Series, hit a three-run home run with two out in the seventh inning, and Tim Lincecum(notes) and closer Brian Wilson(notes) made the lead stand up, the last out coming on a strikeout of Nelson Cruz(notes) at 9:30 p.m. CT at Rangers Ballpark. Wilson was embraced by rookie catcher Buster Posey(notes) and engulfed by teammates seconds later.
    More From Steve Henson





    Edgar Renteria's home run helped the Giants bring a first title to San Francisco.
    (Getty Images)

    Willie Mays must have let out a joyous “Say hey!” Juan Marichal might have approximated his signature high leg kick. Barry Bonds might have allowed a smile. A proud franchise that has more victories than any other – yes, including the New York Yankees – finally delivered a championship to San Francisco.
    Facing Cliff Lee(notes), a pitcher who until this Series had been invincible in two consecutive postseasons, Renteria drove a 2-0 cut fastball over the fence in left-center field, silencing the sellout crowd of 52,045 and scoring Cody Ross(notes) and Juan Uribe(notes) ahead of him. Renteria, who batted .412 in the Series, was named Most Valuable Player.
    The drought included Series losses in 1962, 1989 and 2002. It included the long and storied careers of Willie McCovey, Will Clark, Bobby Bonds and his more celebrated son. It included managers from Bill Rigney, Alvin Dark and Herman Franks in the 1960s to Dusty Baker and Felipe Alou in the 2000s. And it lingered through the Summer of Love, a major earthquake and the turn of a century.
    The Giants won on the strength of tremendous young pitching and a collection of mostly short-term rentals around the horn, players manager Bruce Bochy affectionately called “castoffs and misfits.” No Giants player ranked in the top 10 in any significant statistical category during the regular season.
    But as San Francisco eliminated the Atlanta Braves and Philadelphia Phillies en route to the National League pennant, a succession of unlikely postseason heroes emerged: Ross, Uribe, Aubrey Huff(notes), Freddy Sanchez(notes) and, finally, Renteria.
    Lincecum outdueled Lee for the second time in the Series. If a black cat is bad luck, a black cap is the best luck when worn by Lincecum. Stained and shabby, the same cap has been on Lincecum’s magnificently hairy head since he broke in with the Giants in 2007. He won Cy Young awards in 2008 and 2009 with it, and went eight brilliant innings against the Rangers with it.
    A home run by Nelson Cruz in the seventh inning was the only damage against Lincecum, who struck out 10, walked two and allowed three hits. The Rangers never did figure out Giants’ pitching. They were shut out in Games 2 and 4 with young starters Matt Cain(notes) and Madison Bumgarner(notes) getting the wins. And Lincecum beat them in Games 1 and 5.
    Josh Hamilton(notes), Vladimir Guerrero(notes) and Cruz &ndash the heart of a Texas lineup that had bashed its way past the Tampa Bay Rays and Yankees in the postseason – were a combined 7 for 54 in the Series. Wilson retired those three batters in order in the ninth and a celebration began that reverberated all the way to the West Coast, all the way to San Francisco.
    Follow my blogs and tweets. http://dxjayrocksnotes.blogspot.com/ and https://twitter.com/dxjayrock


    Road To Rio 2016.

    Kwentong Gilas ~ Gilas Serye. LMAO!!!

    Comment


    • #3
      Profile of San Francisco Giants pitcher Tim Lincecum. He's Half-Pinoy. =)

      Tim Lincecum
      Lincecum in June 2008 San Francisco Giants — No. 55 Starting pitcher Born: June 15, 1984 (age 26)
      Bellevue, Washington Bats: Left Throws: Right MLB debut May 6, 2007 for the San Francisco Giants Career statistics
      (through September 30, 2010)
      Win–Loss 56–27 Earned run average 3.04 Strikeouts 907 Walks 293 WHIP 1.18 Shutouts 5 Teams
      Career highlights and awards
      Timothy Leroy Lincecum (pronounced /ˈlɪnsəkəm/;[1] born June 15, 1984) is a pitcher for the San Francisco Giants of Major League Baseball. He is nicknamed "The Freak"[2] and "The Franchise."[3] He throws right-handed and bats left-handed.[4] Lincecum is known for his long stride, unorthodox mechanics, and ability to generate high velocity despite his slight build of 5'11",[5] 172 lbs.[6] Lincecum has won the last two National League Cy Young Awards, and was the first second-year player to win the Cy Young since Dwight Gooden and Bret Saberhagen both won in 1985. Lincecum is part Filipino. His mother, Rebecca Asis, is a daughter of Filipino immigrants.[7]

      Major league career

      With an injury to the Giants' fifth starter, Russ Ortiz, Lincecum was called up from Fresno to make his first major league start on May 6, 2007, against the Philadelphia Phillies. He earned a no-decision; the Giants ultimately lost the game, 8–5. In his first career inning, Lincecum gave up two hits and two runs, and struck out three.[3]
      He earned his first major league win in his next start, on the road against the Rockies.[19] Lincecum, who is often compared to Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Roy Oswalt,[20][21] faced him in each of his next two starts, Oswalt with the Astros at the time. After the first match-up, Astros third baseman Mike Lamb said, "The stuff he was throwing out there tonight was everything he's hyped up to be. He was 97 mph with movement. You just don't see that every day. He pitched very much like the pitcher he is compared to and out-dueled him throughout the night."[22] The pair dueled to a no-decision the first time, and Lincecum pitched eight innings and got the win the second time.[23]
      In his first four starts in June, he allowed twenty-two earned runs in 18⅔ innings, for a 10.61 ERA. He failed to make it to the fifth inning in any of the last three starts, against Oakland, Toronto, and Milwaukee.[24] In July, he went 4–0 with a 1.62 ERA.[25] On July 1, in a seven inning performance against the Arizona Diamondbacks, he struck out twelve, the fourth highest total ever by a Giants rookie.[26]
      Lincecum pitched into the ninth inning for the first time on August 21 against the Chicago Cubs. He had allowed just two hits and one walk through the first eight, while throwing only eighty-eight pitches. He took a 1–0 lead into the ninth, but allowed three consecutive hits before being pulled. The Cubs scored several times against the Giants bullpen and Lincecum took the loss. Cubs shortstop Ryan Theriot said after the game, "He's got electric stuff. The best stuff I've seen all year."[27]
      Lincecum was shut down in September as a precaution, due to his high inning count in his first full year of professional ball.[28] Between the minors and the majors, he pitched a total of 177⅓ innings.[29][30]
      2008

      The Giants asked Lincecum not to throw the bullpen sessions typical of other pitchers during the off-season. Manager Bruce Bochy told the San Francisco Chronicle that they were being careful with Lincecum because there have been studies that show that pitchers who throw 200 innings early in their career were more susceptible to injuries.[31]
      On May 15, 2008, after Lincecum struck out ten Houston Astros in six innings, Houston first baseman Lance Berkman offered his view of Lincecum: "He's got as good of stuff as I've ever seen. ... He's got three almost unhittable pitches."[32] After falling to Lincecum and the Giants 6–3 on May 27, Arizona Diamondbacks first baseman Conor Jackson gave his impression of facing Lincecum: "He's got good stuff," Jackson said. "From what I saw tonight, that's the best arm I've seen all year, no doubt. You've got to almost hit a ball right down the middle. You're going to pop up the ball at your bellybutton, which we all did tonight, and the one down, it's coming in at 98 mph, you're not going to put too much good wood on it. Even the ones down the middle are coming at 98. He's good, man."[33]
      Lincecum was on the cover of the July 7, 2008, issue of Sports Illustrated,[34] and on July 6, he was selected to play in his first Major League Baseball All-Star Game. However, he was hospitalized the day of the game due to flu-like symptoms and was unavailable to pitch. In a July 26 game against the Arizona Diamondbacks, he struck out thirteen batters in seven innings while allowing only seven hits, two earned runs, and no walks.
      Lincecum pitched his first complete game shutout against the San Diego Padres on September 13, 2008.[35] In nine innings he threw 138 pitches, gave up four hits and struck out twelve batters.[36] On September 23, he broke Jason Schmidt's San Francisco single-season strikeout record with his 252nd strikeout of the season against the Colorado Rockies. He finished the season with 265 strikeouts (54 of them three-pitch strikeouts, the most in the majors), making him the first San Francisco pitcher to win the (NL) strikeout title, and the first Giant since Bill Voiselle in 1944.[37] His 10.5 strikeouts per nine innings pitched were the best in the majors, and his .316 slugging-percentage-against was the lowest in the major leagues, as was his .612 OPS-against—but his seventeen wild pitches tied for the most in the major leagues.[38][39] His 138 pitches on September 13 were the most by any pitcher in a game in 2008.[40] On November 11, 2008, Lincecum was awarded the NL Cy Young Award, making him the second Giant to win the award after Mike McCormick.[41]
      2009

      After winning the NL Cy Young Award in 2008, Lincecum continued his dominance in the NL. On July 3, Lincecum was announced as the NL Pitcher of the Month for June.[42] In his six June starts he went 4–1 with a 1.38 ERA, and pitched three complete games. Lincecum was announced as an NL All-Star along with his teammate Matt Cain. He was also the starting pitcher for the NL. Lincecum went two innings in the All-Star Game, giving up two runs, one earned, and striking out one.[43]
      Through twenty starts in 2009, Lincecum had gone 11-3 with a 2.30 ERA, 183 strikeouts, four complete games, and two shutouts. Lincecum also had a twenty-nine scoreless inning streak, third-best since the Giants moved west in 1958.[44]
      On July 27, Lincecum pitched a complete game and had fifteen strikeouts against the Pittsburgh Pirates, a career high. He is the first Giant pitcher to strike out fifteen since Jason Schmidt fanned sixteen on June 6, 2006.[45]
      Lincecum missed his first game since coming up to the big leagues on September 8 against the San Diego Padres.[46] Madison Bumgarner took his place that day, making his major league debut. Lincecum was healthy enough to make his next start on September 14, pitching seven innings with eleven strikeouts lowering his ERA to 2.30, and picking up his fourteenth win of the year.[47] Lincecum finished the 2009 season with a 15–7 record, 2.48 ERA and 261 strikeouts. Following the season, Lincecum was named Sporting News NL Pitcher of the Year for the second consecutive year.[48] On November 19, Lincecum was awarded his second consecutive Cy Young Award, narrowly edging out St. Louis Cardinals pitchers Chris Carpenter and Adam Wainwright.[49] In doing so, he became the first pitcher in history to be awarded the Cy Young in each of his first two full seasons in the Major League Baseball. However, this Cy Young came with controversy: two weeks prior to being awarded the Cy Young, Lincecum was cited during a traffic stop for misdemeanor possession of marijuana.[50]
      2010

      Lincecum continued his dominance in the league by starting 5–0. His strikeouts piled up quickly and was atop the Major Leagues in the category through the early season. However, issues concerning Lincecum's control over the movement of his pitches arose when he walked five batters for the fourth consecutive start on May 31.[51] Although the early struggles have been mostly dismissed as a "lack of confidence" or "mental" issues,[52] Lincecum himself admits that this slump has lasted "longer than I was hoping it would".[53]
      Lincecum eventually recovered somewhat from his slump and made the 2010 National League All-Star Team. As of the All-Star break, Lincecum was 9-4 with a 3.16 ERA over 116.2 innings pitched.
      On July 15, in his first start after the All-Star game, Lincecum pitched a six-hit complete game shutout against the New York Mets.
      After a disappointing August, Lincecum came out of his slump on September 1; pitching against one of the league's top pitchers, Ubaldo Jimenez, Lincecum went 8 strong innings of 1 run ball. This was Lincecum's first win since July 30. Lincecum continued to improve throughout September, finishing 5-1 with 52 strikeouts and 6 walks as compared to the 20/13 ratio in August. Lincecum managed to win his third consecutive National League strikeout title, he also set a record for most strikeouts by a MLB pitcher in his first four seasons. He has a bad haircut.
      On October 7, 2010, in his first postseason game, Lincecum pitched a complete game two-hit shutout, striking out 14, against the Atlanta Braves in game 1 of the NLDS, breaking the all time record for strikeouts in Giants postseason history.[54] In his next postseason start, he outdueled Roy Halladay by pitching 7 innings and giving up 3 earned runs, while striking out 8 in the Giants' 4-3 victory over the Phillies in Game 1 of the National League Championship Series.[55]
      Game One of the 2010 World Series saw Lincecum contribute to an 11-7 win over the Texas Rangers. After presenting a strong start, he sat more than half of the game out as the rest of the San Francisco pitching roster delivered a comfortable win. In his next start, on November 01, 2010, Lincecum struck out ten Rangers and only yielded one run from a Bengie Molina home run in the bottom of the 7th to clinch the 2010 World Series for the Giants.
      Lincecum won both Games 1 and 5.
      Pitch repertoire

      Lincecum throws a four seam fastball at 92-95 mph, but mostly uses a two seam fastball grip which he throws around 89-92 mph for more sinking movement to get more ground balls. This pitch has little lateral movement, due to his overhand delivery and the speed at which the pitch is thrown. He has a big breaking curveball that is thrown at a range of 77-81 mph and breaks away from a right-handed hitter. Lincecum uses a changeup that he grips similar to a splitter to offset his top two pitches and keep batters off-balance. His changeup appears similar to his fastball for the first 30 feet, but then breaks down and in toward a right-handed batter as it approaches the plate, with a difference of 10 mph or more in velocity from his fastball (82-86 mph).[56] The majority of his strikeouts are recorded with this pitch. Lincecum also has a hard slider that breaks down and away from a right-handed hitter at a speed slightly higher than his changeup (84-88 mph). With his power fastball and strong secondary pitches, he has established himself as one of the elite pitchers in the game. [57]
      Follow my blogs and tweets. http://dxjayrocksnotes.blogspot.com/ and https://twitter.com/dxjayrock


      Road To Rio 2016.

      Kwentong Gilas ~ Gilas Serye. LMAO!!!

      Comment


      • #4
        Finished 2nd in my MLB Fantasy League. Roy Halladay served me well.
        Sacramento Kings
        HERE WE STAY UNTIL THE COWBELLS COME HOME

        Comment


        • #5
          My Philadelphia Phillies have signed free agent pitcher Jose Contreras to a two year contract worth $5.5 Million with a Team Option for 2013.
          Sacramento Kings
          HERE WE STAY UNTIL THE COWBELLS COME HOME

          Comment


          • #6
            From Yahoo! Sports.

            They took different paths to baseball immortality

            By Tim Brown, Yahoo! Sports Jan 5, 8:42 pm EST



            Of the Hall of Fame inductees of 2011, one’s father was a major league baseball player and the other’s was a bumper straightener.
            Of Roberto Alomar and Bert Blyleven, you could probably guess which was which.
            One learned the game in big-league clubhouses, during early batting practice and playing with the sons of other big leaguers.

            Roberto Alomar called his Hall of Fame induction announcement "the happiest day of my life."
            (Darren Calabrese/AP Photo)

            The other developed his signature pitch listening to Vin Scully describe Sandy Koufax’s curveball on the radio, using his imagination, pitching off a mound his bumper-straightener dad constructed in the backyard.


            One will be remembered for a golden glove, the breadth of his infield range, a .300 lifetime batting average, decent power, a dozen All-Star Games and, unfortunately, one hucked-up loogie spat squarely into the face of an umpire.
            The other for a legendary curveball (a Sports Illustrated story once said it “breaks so quickly and so far that some batters swear they can hear it change direction”), a tendency to finish what he started (242 complete games), 3,701 strikeouts and too many hot-foots to count. In fact, Blyleven’s arc on the Hall ballot mirrored that of his career, given he so often hung around to the end, long enough to either win or lose.
            When Alomar retired in 2004, Blyleven had been gone for 12 years. Their careers crossed for a single game, in July of 1992.
            “I got him when he was a little bit older,” Alomar said Wednesday.
            Blyleven was 41. Alomar was 24.
            Almost 19 years later, their lives crossed again, the baseball blueblood from Puerto Rico and the baseball junky from the Netherlands. And soon they will meet in a sleepy, leafy town in upstate New York that every year hosts one very busy weekend.
            “I feel real honored,” Alomar said Wednesday afternoon, in the Hall after last year’s stunning failure.
            “I thank the Baseball Writers of America who, I’m going to say, are finally getting it right,” Blyleven said, referring to his 13 previous shortfalls and apparently not above gloating now.
            There was a time, too, when the announcement of Hall of Fame inductees would end there, when we’d give Alomar, Blyleven and Pat Gillick their due, mourn the near-misses and set off to string the bunting in Cooperstown.
            Not anymore.
            For a month I’ve been told to get off my high horse (he’s not high, he’s tired), to pull my head out of my, um, the sand, to quit being such a hypocrite.
            To stand against a culture of frauds has become, to many, duplicitous, pious and uninformed.
            To believe in the idea of a decent game has become impossibly old-fashioned.
            A Hall of Fame vote no longer asks that one compare era to era, but clean to dirty, amphetamine to Winstrol, Fay Vincent’s proclamation to Bud Selig’s urine testing.
            I had dinner with a sports columnist buddy of mine last night and in the course of conversation I mentioned the dilemma of the Hall voter.
            What’s the story now, I asked.
            “Blame Bud,” he said.
            But I can’t do that. I can’t free the consciences of grown men who chose the easier path at the expense of the game (and their union brothers) by scapegoating a guy wearing wing-tip shoes in some office on Park Avenue.
            The players snuck around and plunged needles into their rear ends, and they’ve left us to sort that out.
            As a result, we get Wednesday’s vote:
            Mark McGwire: 19.8 percent
            Rafael Palmeiro: 11 percent
            Juan Gonzalez: 5.2 percent
            Kevin Brown: 2.1 percent
            Benito Santiago: 0.2 percent
            Worse …
            Jeff Bagwell: 41.7 percent
            The referendum is in on players linked to steroids, and three more arrive in two years: Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and Sammy Sosa. They probably won’t be Hall of Famers. That’s good by me, but I’m sanctimonious like that.
            For Bagwell, if he’s been dragged into this purely by virtue of the age in which he belonged, it’s sad. He received what amounts to the vote of ambivalence, just as Mike Piazza might in 2013.
            “That’s a bunch of baloney,” Bagwell’s former manager, Phil Garner, told mlb.com.
            Bagwell himself was more measured on a Wednesday afternoon conference call, though only slightly.
            “Suspicion is going to happen because of the era I played in,” he said. “Suspicion is ridiculous. Because I worked out? Come on …”
            For a decade baseball writers have been vilified for not being suspicious enough. Now, we’re too suspicious. I suppose that comes with the ballot, with the responsibility, and with the cesspool.
            Fortunately, there’s still plenty to believe in. There’s Alomar, who said Wednesday was “The happiest day of my life.” And there’s Blyleven, who said, “I got goose bumps.”
            Remember when the story ended with happy and goose bumps? As for the epilogue, well, Blyleven seemed pleased to be going to a cleaner – maybe slightly cleaner – place.
            “I think the writers are saying this was a steroid era, like they’ve done for Mark McGwire,” he said. “They’ve made their point. … The steroid era had a lot to do with it. Guys cheated.
            “They cheated themselves. They cheated themselves and their teammates. The game of baseball should be played clean.”
            Get off your high horse, Bert. That’s one bumper that can’t be straightened.
            Follow my blogs and tweets. http://dxjayrocksnotes.blogspot.com/ and https://twitter.com/dxjayrock


            Road To Rio 2016.

            Kwentong Gilas ~ Gilas Serye. LMAO!!!

            Comment


            • #7
              World Series champs Giants join drive against bullying of gays
              05/18/2011 | 03:37 PM


              SAN FRANCISCO - The San Francisco Giants have become the first professional sports team to join the "It Gets Better" campaign against bullying of gay youths, the online activist group Change.org said on Tuesday.

              The Giants, who play in a city with a large gay population, joined the campaign after 6,000 people signed a petition asking for the Major League Baseball (MLB) team to produce an "It Gets Better" video, according to Change.org.

              Giants spokeswoman Staci Slaughter confirmed the team will produce a video for the campaign before it hosts an annual lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender night on August 29.

              The team has not determined which players, if any, will appear in the video, Slaughter said.

              In recent weeks, a pair of pro sports figures made headlines with anti-gay comments.

              In April, a Giants fan accused Atlanta Braves pitching coach Roger McDowell of making an anti-gay slur against him during a game at AT&T Park in San Francisco.

              As a result, McDowell was suspended for two weeks by MLB.

              Also last month, Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant was fined $100,000 by the National Basketball Association (NBA) for uttering an anti-gay slur against a referee.

              There are no openly gay professional athletes actively playing in any of the four major U.S. professional sports -- The NBA, MLB, the National Hockey League or the National Football League.

              Syndicated columnist Dan Savage created the "It Gets Better" campaign last year in response to a number of suicides by teenagers who suffered bullying over their sexuality.

              President Barack Obama starred in an "It Gets Better" video last year, and a number of major technology companies from Google Inc to Microsoft Corp have supported the campaign. - Reuters
              Follow my blogs and tweets. http://dxjayrocksnotes.blogspot.com/ and https://twitter.com/dxjayrock


              Road To Rio 2016.

              Kwentong Gilas ~ Gilas Serye. LMAO!!!

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              • #8
                Mets knuckleballer Dickey baffles Yankees in 2-1 win

                05/21/2011 | 02:09 PM



                NEW YORK - Knuckleballer R.A. Dickey won an unlikely pitchers' duel as the visiting New York Mets nipped the New York Yankees 2-1 on Friday to take the opening game of their weekend Subway Series in interleague play.

                Dickey, who gave up six runs and 11 hits in five innings against the Astros his last time out, befuddled the Yankees for six innings.

                The tricky right-hander yielded one run on four hits and struck out six to improve his record to 2-5 with the help of three spotless innings of relief and lift the injury-hit Mets to the .500 mark at 22-22 with their third successive win.

                Mets first baseman Daniel Murphy, who had been mired in a batting slump, led off the sixth with a line-drive home run down the right-field line off Freddy Garcia to snap a 1-1 tie.

                "I'm really proud of the way the club has held together with all the banged-up guys, Mets manager Terry Collins told reporters. "These guys have done nothing but gone out every night and just played as hard as they can play."

                Yankees manager Joe Girardi said Dickey had his batters fooled in the briskly played two-hour, 47-minute game that dropped the Yankees to 23-20.

                "Whenever you face a knuckleballer you're not sure what's going to happen," said Girardi, whose lineup produced 13 runs on Thursday in a win against Baltimore.

                "It's not something you see very often. It's a totally different day for all of our hitters."

                Yankees starter Garcia (2-4), who yielded five runs in five innings in his last start against Boston, pitched five-hit ball for seven innings but took the loss as the Bronx Bombers went out with a whimper, stranding five men in scoring position.

                The home team struck first when Mark Teixeira reached out and hooked a 3-1 pitch just over the outstretched glove of Mets right fielder Carlos Beltran and into the seats to give the Yankees a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the third.

                The Mets answered in their next at-bat, with back-to-back doubles by Fernando Martinez and Justin Turner tying the game 1-1 in the top of the fourth.

                A spectacular play by shortstop Jose Reyes kept the Yankees from scoring in the fifth.

                With men on first and second and two out, Alex Rodriguez hit a sharp grounder that was headed for center-field. Reyes dove outstretched to snare the ball, popped up and fired to first to retire Rodriguez and end the inning.

                Murphy immediately capitalised on the run-saving play with his fence-clearing blast for the game-winning run.

                Mets relievers were superb in preserving the one-run lead as Mike O'Connor, Jason Isringhausen and closer Francisco Rodriguez each pitched a perfect inning as the last 11 Yankees were retired in order including seven by strikeout.

                When Rodriguez, nicknamed "K-Rod" for the scoring symbol for a strikeout, fanned Nick Swisher for the last out of the game, it was met with the loudest roar for a visiting team victory likely to be heard this season at Yankee Stadium. - Reuters
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                Road To Rio 2016.

                Kwentong Gilas ~ Gilas Serye. LMAO!!!

                Comment


                • #9
                  Pittsburgh Pirates picks Gerrit Cole (UCLA) as First Overall on the MLB 2011 Draft.

                  LIVE COVERAGE and DRAFT HISTORY at ESPN
                  Sacramento Kings
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                  • #10
                    One of the best World Series in ages. Though I would have been more ecstatic had my Phillies not crash.
                    Sacramento Kings
                    HERE WE STAY UNTIL THE COWBELLS COME HOME

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                    • #11
                      Game 7 Here we come!!! Go get it, Rangers!

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I like the Cards. But the Rangers have never won the World Series. I love it for first timers, so go Rangers!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Cards cap 11th World Series Title.

                          If you ask Pujols, it is all about bringing smiles to St. Louis.
                          Sacramento Kings
                          HERE WE STAY UNTIL THE COWBELLS COME HOME

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                          • #14
                            good morning

                            thank you so much for the posts

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                            • #15
                              yahooooooooooooo Pujols, Baby!!!!!!! Pujols !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
                              ABUSADOR !!!, ABUSADOR !!!, ABUSADOR !!!, ABUSADOR !!!, ABUSADOR !!!

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