Fred_Merkle
Fred Merkle
Fred_Merkle

I wish Roy Jones Jr. had put this much effort into covering the brown parts.

Apparently, installation was stalled.

I'd get angry about this, but the bar specifically told me not to.

I can't wait to see Atlanta's head coach in front of the HBO cameras. They say he's a real micsmith.

I'm looking forward to part 2 of this series. "Meet George Donner: The Neverest Pioneer You've Ever Heard Of"

Meanwhile an investment in beets will leave you mired in the red.

According to Robert Mathis, his resurgence last season was only coincidentally related to his own consultation with a seminal medicine man.

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Jackson has long battled rumors of associations with illegal executions.

Poor kid is so terrified he's been reduced to sitting on his own stool.

Typical of a racehorse owner, he feels no shame beating a dead horse.

Having fully committed to a flat front, Landry is doing Landry.

It's great that Polanco showed such restraint on his own, since he's so used to the Pirates holding him back.

You'd think Todd Kalas would be a little more toughened.

These thieves are obvious amateurs that will never be able to go pro.

Given their affinity for drinking, I would have guessed Russia.

The very article that you linked shows the peak age for power as ages 24-25. You probably should have read more than the headline first. As for your last sentence, I don't contend that either way.

Baseballreference.com, though great site, does not have the type of granular data (like O-Swing%) that you would need to tell if there is a change of approach over a shorter amount of time for MLB players, much less in their minor league data.

It's a joke, and not even a particularly good one. But neither Giambi nor Tejada ISO'd .200 until their age 26 seasons. That's not particularly young. Neither slugged above .500 until their age 28 seasons. That's not young at all. Then, Giambi suddenly ISO'd over .300(!) in his age 29 season.