stevegleason
SteveGleason
stevegleason

As a lawyer, Asa fought for more majority African-American districts in the state legislature.

Found it:

There is no better tweeter than Will Hill from college. I remember one along the lines of:

"I really like to sing as loud as possible, but the song they asked me to sing isn't exactly conducive to that. So I'll just sing a completely different song with the words from the song they asked me to sing."

That's cheesy.

Swing and a miss.

That's uh... that's not how you spell threw in this case.

Why would Bo Wallace spike it in that situation? They have a freshman kicker that just got the job a couple weeks ago; he wasn't sure if they were going to go for the 3rd and 2 with 9 seconds left or try the 42-yarder. If he spikes it, there's no choice but to kick it. The coach needed to make the decision quicker

It was third down. You really think they'd pass up a 47 yard field goal for a 4th and 7 try? The point of the play was obviously to take a shot at the sideline (for a shorter FG) or a touchdown (for a win). The touchdown attempt would be a last resort, "put it where only your guy can get it," kind of play, but Bo

Our writers don't know anything about sports but at least our commenters are here to act as our editors!

In America? College football is what matters today. Tomorrow it will be NFL football. In a little under 4 years from now, soccer will once again have it's couple of weeks to shine.

Let me just say, thank the good lord someone cared enough about a girly-man sport to write this diatribe about how it's the only thing that matters on a Saturday afternoon.

Lol

Bumgarner will do that to you. Ask the Pirates and the Cardinals.

No one is going to mention that the runner's forward progress was stopped for a good 3 seconds?

My favorite part is where she thought the microphone for the broadcast was somehow also functioning as a microphone that everyone in line behind her could hear.

Best part is dude with the dreads reaction from about 0:15-0:21

Those stats prove nothing. What does the fact that the guys whose only job is to get the last 3 outs are successful 75% of the time prove? What is the success rate of hold opportunities? What's the save rate of pitchers who aren't everyday closers (as would be the case here, if Rosenthal pitched in the 9th)? How often

It's a pretty well-accepted thought that the last 3 outs are the hardest to get in baseball, hence having a player specifically for those situations (a situation that Wacha has never been in before in his professional career, as far as I can remember).

If your point is that he should've brought in someone other than Rosenthal or Wacha, then I can agree with that. I was responding to the author of this article, who clearly believed the choice was Rosenthal. He wrote: