It hurts Shields just as much when his ankle snaps off as it does Wang
It hurts Shields just as much when his ankle snaps off as it does Wang
That may be a more accurate way to put it, but basically it's the same thing: the only reason he is unpopular is because his family owns that team. If not for that, no one would know who he is... so he'd just be some guy stating an opinion (perhaps not even one that was well thought out) in response to a negative event affecting the company he owns. Or, a sports team he likes...
Of course people spout off like that all the time, but when most of us do so it doesn't sell newspapers or generate page views. Or outrage.
No, it's time to remove it. Did the US accept slavery? Did women accept they couldn't vote?
Are we really to the point that people are comparing the DH to slavery and woman's rights?
LOL.
Wow this took a turn for the worse. I regretably mentioned slavery in an example to state that times change and what once was thought as popular and right is no longer. Bad choice I suppose lol.
I agree houston,Lots of rules in the guise of laws have been struck down. The DH violates a fundamental rule so there is no question it shouldn't even be here.. Maybe we can get rid of the 9 inning game and go back to the first team to make it to 21, as it was one of the original rules.
No they didn't accept those things. So why should owners accept a rule that says they must expose rare valuable commodities to additional and unnecessary risk when an 'optional' alternative has been tested and proved successful? Works both ways eh?No, it's time to remove it. Did the US accept slavery? Did women accept they couldn't vote?
That was a classic spin, you should be a politician or host an extreme political talk show lol. You should've taken it farther and asked if NL teams would be hoisting Communist Soviet flags at upcoming games.I hope not, because that'd be very inaccurate. The DH rule doesn't infringe on a pitcher's inalienable right to bat. In fact, it provides freedom of choice.
Opposing the DH in un-American! Why do you people hate freedom?
Oh. Woops. Didn't catch that. lol
[quote]LOS ANGELES -- C.C. Sabathia made a pregame promise to his teammates that he'd swing for the fences.
He backed up that boast in a hurry.
Sabathia hit a tape-measure home run in his first at-bat of the year and also struck out 10, highlighting the Cleveland Indians' 7-2 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers in 11 innings Saturday.
"I told everybody I was trying to hit homers today because I had two singles last year and everybody was all over me, saying I was a singles hitter," the reigning AL Cy Young winner said. "It was awesome."
Sabathia enhanced his reputation on the mound and at the plate in the interleague game at Dodger Stadium. He launched a home run estimated at 440 feet and improved to 12-for-40 (.300) lifetime as a hitter with two career homers and seven RBI.
He didn't even take any practice swings in the on-deck circle or going up to the plate because he spent too much time trying to locate his batting helmet.
"It's always fun for me to hit," Sabathia said. "I took BP the other day in Colorado, but that was it. I've been looking forward to this. I started counting the days back in May, trying to figure if I was going to hit in Colorado or hit here. I love to do it, so it was a lot of fun today."
With NL rules in effect, Sabathia wasted little time once he got to the plate. He drove a 1-0 fastball from Chan Ho Park into the lower seats in the right-field corner leading off the third, drawing a collective gasp from the crowd of 45,036.
"I was just looking for a fastball out over the plate," said the 6-foot-7, 290-pound pitcher, who did a slow trot around the bases in the 95-degree heat. "Everybody was laughing when I got back to the dugout."
Sabathia's other home run came in 2005 against Elizardo Ramirez at Cincinnati, a two-run shot to center field in a 10-3 victory.
"C.C. told me he couldn't sleep last night. I don't think it was because of his pitching. I think it was because he knew he was going to get a chance to hit," manager Eric Wedge said. "He's a fantastic athlete." [quote]
Hank? Any thoughts?