Recruiting Football Talk VII

Status
Not open for further replies.
Dude I took my Dad to a season game, not playoffs. I'm blessed: but its earned.

#no trust funds here

I didn’t mean it in a “trust fund way” and I never assumed it wasn’t earned @Jackcrevol buddy I was just joking that’s it 😂 and ticket prices for these regional games are high we both can agree on that…the mark up is stupid🫶🏽 love ya buddy
 
Every girl is some man’s daughter, but those two aren’t mine, yours or Glitch’s daughters.
That’s right, and establishing modesty boundaries when my daughter was still under my daily supervision hopefully stayed with her once she was no longer at home. Those twins are trying to monetize their sexuality which isn’t a quality I’d want for my family. JMO, TIFWIW
 
June 2, 2010

It’s one of the most infamous mistakes in sports history.




In a Major League Baseball game played on June 2, 2010 at Comerica Park in Detroit, Michigan, Detroit Tigers pitcher Armando Galarraga nearly became the 21st pitcher in Major League history to throw a perfect game.

Galarraga instead finished with a one-hit shutout in a 3–0 victory. He faced 28 batters and threw 88 pitches (67 strikes and 21 balls), striking out three. The game is sometimes referred to as the "28-out perfect game", the "Almost Perfect" game, the "Extra Perfect Game", the "Imperfect Game" or simply the "Galarraga game."

The perfect game was ruined one out short when first-base umpire incorrectly ruled that Indians batter Jason Donald reached first base safely on a ground ball.

The umpire and the batter both admitted the call was wrong, but Major League Baseball’s commissioner refused to overturn the umpire’s decision and award Galarraga the 21st perfect game in the sport’s 134-year history. Support to overturn came from the White House, the governor of Michigan and all corners of the media.


View attachment 645257
It does not even look that close. Ridiculous.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Advertisement



Back
Top