This isn’t exactly how Gerrit Cole wanted it, but the 2011 No.1 overall draft pick finally gets what he thought he deserved a couple of months ago — his first major league start today for the Pittsburgh Pirates.
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Cole will face the visiting San Francisco Giants, plugging a hole in what has been a solid Pirates rotation but has been hit by injuries to Wandy Rodriguez and Jeanmar Gomez.
The former #1 draft pick throws in the high 90s, but he hasn’t been missing bats this season: 47 Ks ...
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1. RoyalsRetro (AG#1F) posted on May 14, 2012 at 01:00 PM # hit 0 | hit 0their virginity will remain intact for another year.
At least it appears as if they got out of the basement for awhile.
Well played.
"Nobody can play for 54 hours."
"You ever play for 54 hours?"
"Nobody ever played for 54 hours."
"Mah boy says he can play 54 hours, then he can play 54 hours."
"Well, I believe I've have to take part of that wager."
"Alright, the syndicate will cover any money you got. Koko, get paper."
If it were just Red Sox - Yankees, Foley's would close at 2 am half of the time.
I play a SOM solitaire draft league with players from all different leagues and eras. One season the 1959 Bobby Richardson was drafted by a team playing in Coors Field, 2000. He hit .363, to lead the league...
I must have been doing it wrong, because it would sometimes truly take a half-hour to play one truly epic bottom of the ninth, including pitching changes, pinch-hitters, trips to get a "rally" beer, screaming, groaning, long, involved "discussions" on steal attempt rolls, and out-and-out screaming matches on whether the runners were held/rolls/etc..
Yep, it's not even three days? I guess the hard part is staying up continously, but I'm fairly positive we had some D&D games that covered 60 hours of play over 3 days, and we weren't trying for any type of record.
In college, we had weekends where we started drinking at 4 pm on a Friday, watched college football from 11 am on Saturday to 1 am on Sunday morning, slept for eight hours, then got ready to watch pro football from 1 pm until about 11 pm. Is there a World Record available along these lines?
Not that I've played any board game for 54 straight hours, but is it just me, or is playing Strat-O-Matic for 2 days and six hours (basically , like starting at 4 pm on a Friday, and finishing at 10 pm on a Sunday) not that crazy a thing to do to break a Guinness World Record?
Once they're done you can play for 55 hours and break their record. Or better yet, start simultaneously with them in another location, and once they stop playing, announce that you just beat their record by a minute.
This weekend, I was going to attend my younger daughter's 7th birthday party, mow our lawn, and help my elderly neighbor clean out his attic, but you don't get to break a Guinness Word Record everyday! My wife will be totally cool with this, once I explain how important this is. Yeah, It's On Like Donkey Kong!*
*It is actually not "On Like Donkey Kong" this weekend. I'm not sure if the guys that are setting out to earn this record are married; if they are, they likely won't be after about 54 hours of Strat-O-Matic.
**Additional note: Record for most consecutive hours of Strat-O-Matic played by two females: .5
My wife will be totally cool with this, once I explain how important this is.
Perhaps you'd like to rethink your initial statement about how "crazy" a thing this is to do :)
Anyway, I work about 10 blocks from where this is taking place. Even though I never played SOM, a part of me wants to walk by after work and check it out.
I've said this on another thread, but my baseball board games were (in chronological order) Ethan Allen's All-Star Baseball, the Sports Illustrated game from Avalon Hill and Pursue the Pennant. I think you had to send away for APBA and Strat-O-Matic through ads in Baseball Digest -- at least I never found them in the toy stores -- so they never appealed to me.
My friend used to put his cards in the microwave to try to get his hitters to heat up.
In one of our early leagues we had a Select-O-DL gizmo where you had to leave a burn mark or snip a piece of the card off every time a player went on the DL.
My devoidish Bobby Richardson card looked like some sagittal crestfallen Samsonite gorillas had picked up the game.
Allowing for different sports in different seasons, I'm currently at 36 years of that.
In college a friend and I played a "1980s LCS Losers" tournament on MicroLeague Baseball. Best of seven series for each with my 1987 Tigers eventually edging my buddy's 1981 Expos behind Doyle Alexander's pitching and some timely hitting from Jim Walewander.
Through the tournament we had a no hitter (a not-stroked J.R. Richard), a 22 inning game (80 Astros again, Terry Puhl with the walkoff) and a 3-0 series lead lost (81 A's to the 81 Expos).
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