
It looks like it hit someone else! Or rather, two other people:
It looks like it hit someone else! Or rather, two other people:
Looks more like it should be delivering pizzas to me.
And in my Sunday morning reading, I came across this:
Why is this "hack your grill" and not, say, "use your grill"?
I do frequent mocks at the fantasy site that the first article about him shows in the screenshots and the guy's got a knack for changing his avatar name, but we know its him. He's pretty much the fantasy football equivalent of the Howard Stern fan who pranks CNN just to yell "Baba Booey". Personally, I find it funny…
I came here to mention the same thing.
Didn't I read that some Chinese dude did this too?
It's not that easy to explain something that deeply ingrained into mexican culture. Some of the "latin specialists" that were talking on tv and complaining about hate speech have lived at the most, 3-5 years in Mexico, and that is, if they even lived in Mexico and they didn't spend time on a country on South…
First, Maddux was convinced no hitter could tell the speed of a pitch with any meaningful accuracy. To demonstrate, he pointed at a road a quarter-mile away and said it was impossible to tell if a car was going 55, 65 or 75 mph unless there was another car nearby to offer a point of reference.
Instead of taking the numerical difference between strikeout rates, it would be more beneficial to take a relative difference. e.g Gwynn strikes out 25% as often as his contemporaries (4.242%/17.309%) and Sewell strikes out 16% as often as his contemporaries (1.368%/8.407%). In that light, Sewell is still the better…
Just tried it on my PC at home. If I hold the o down, I get Coooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooote d'Ivoire. Which sounds like a cheer or a chant.
Tony Gwynn was the MAN in San Diego. He was my husband's hero. I am so proud that we were both Aztecs! Guys like Tony come along once in a blue moon. A lot of modern celebrities and sports figures could learn a lot from Tony Gwynn. I grew up in the neighborhood next to where Tony lived and any time anyone ran…
Growing up in San Diego I was always pissed we never won a World Series, but at least we had Tony Gwynn. Damn, what a shit day this is.
As much as people make fun of the Padres (deservedly so), all of these positive comments about Tony Gwynn from non-San Diego fans makes me happy. Our shittiness and blandness as a team didn't obscure or create apathy for our greatest player.
Thanks for sharing all of your memories and thoughts.
Yep. Someone needs to put Trevor Hoffman in bubble wrap.
This is the second time this year that San Diego has had an incredible sports high followed by an incredible sports low. In January the SDSU men's basketball team beat Kansas in Kansas and the Chargers won a playoff game in Cincinnati, but Jerry Coleman passed away that day. Yesterday SDSU's Kawhi Leonard wins the NBA…
Sadly, there comes a day when all sports legends eventually pass away, but as a 33 year old, I think Gwynn is the first superstar player I grew up watching as a kid that passed away. It kind if hits home a lot more than hearing about old timers that I never saw play.