Broncos' opponents have a combined record of 4-12. Let's wait a bit before we crown their asses.
Broncos' opponents have a combined record of 4-12. Let's wait a bit before we crown their asses.
At 4:35 Ogilvie drops Yaz's fly ball; no way is that a catch. The fielder must make a "voluntary release."
Massachusetts. The state Hernandez lives in.
Thank you, OSU Sports Information Office, for this contribution to Deadspin.
You're an asshole.
Hey video guy: Did you know your phone can turn sideways?
So you feel the same about saves, I assume? Because that's the flip side of this coin.
So now ESPN and Deadspin are serving as mouthpieces for Oklahoma State. You guys are pathetic.
Speaking of credulous hacks, now you're doing exactly what you're accusing the authors of doing: taking what the administration tells you at face value. Did you ask the Pulitzer-Prize winning writer if he had contacted the administration? (My guess is they said "No comment")
Since you haven't seen it at your specific sorority at your specific school it therefore couldn't possibly be happening at Alabama.
It's the very FIRST Amendment; have you not even read that far? Let me help:
Yes, Deadspin hates it when actual journalists do actual investigating and get people to talk on the record about what's really going on. Instead of, you know, just pretending you know what's going on and making snarky posts about other people's work.
Seriously? At no point does he appear to be aiming for his waist? He's going low from the second he leaves his feet.
As the announcers said, that's the second time Cabrera has been tossed for arguing balls and strikes. Everyone knows the rules; it's pretty clear he thinks he's above them.
You had me at "nympho nun"...
So that's the new definition of "flips out"?
His toe is irrelevant in this case. The ball never reached the goal line, which is the deciding factor.
What you're talking about is clearly interference. The rules already cover that.
The NCAA, high schools — pretty much every other level of baseball — have rules prohibiting this. It's actually pretty straightforward.
If the catcher chooses to block the plate then I can understand (though not necessarily like) allowing the runner to blow him up. But the runner had a clear path to the plate without having to go through the catcher. This is far too dangerous to careers, which is why it's outlawed at every level of baseball EXCEPT the…