Week of 2-9-15

Legend: 1995 was the season after the 1994 strike that canceled the World Series. Despite the Fall Classic being canceled a year earlier, the 1995 Series was one to remember. It did not only feature one of the greatest pitching rotations in baseball history, but also one of the legendary offense teams. The combination of Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine, and John Smoltz had no easy task as they faced the deep hitting lineup of the 100-win Cleveland Indians. The 1995 Tribe was arguably one of the most powerful offensive teams America’s past time ever saw. The stars to highlight in Continue reading Week of 2-9-15

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Comparing the 3 Stadiums on the West Coast

Ever since Camden Yards opened up in Baltimore for the Orioles in 1992, modernized stadiums have taken the baseball world by storm. Before the construction of the wonderful Oriole Park, stadiums have been plain and simple, but beautiful because of their simplicity; after all, baseball is America’s past time, so it is modeled on the basics of the country. Now though new stadiums are popping up everywhere with multiple different venues inside of the parks, such as, fancy restaurants/clubs/bars overlooking the field, kids playgrounds, super fan stores that sell team appeal, high class food courts, etc. The building of these Continue reading Comparing the 3 Stadiums on the West Coast

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The Padres, a Lock for the Wild Card?

Finally, James Shields has signed with a team to become the last big name free agent to drop of the market. But whom did he sign with? After trading for Justin Upton, Matt Kemp, Wil Myers, and Derek Norris, Padres’ GM, AJ Preller, “puts the cherry on top”, as he swoops in when the market lowered to below $80 million for the former Royals ace, when James Shields agreed to a 4-year pact worth between $72-75 million with the Padres on Monday February 9, 2015. The Padres pitching rotation now has two top tier young studs and a great veteran Continue reading The Padres, a Lock for the Wild Card?

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Week of 2-2-15

Legend: They called him the “Fordham Flash”, because of his quickness at 2B to field grounders, which resulted in him producing a career range factor well above league average. His speedy legs did not only help him be a “stud” defensively, but also on the base pads offensively, as a total of 419 stolen bases helped him on his way to Cooperstown. The 3000-hit club, this player may not be a part of, and it may be due to the fact that he only appeared in 2311 games, but three 200+ hit seasons were produced throughout a wonderful. He was Continue reading Week of 2-2-15

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