Read More...One of the most formidable tools in a pro baseball pitcher’s arsenal is the consistency of pitching motion when throwing different kinds of pitches. If your delivery looks the same to an opposing batter when throwing a 95-mph fastball, a 80-mph curve, and a 85-mph change-up, well, you’ve really got something there. Texas pitcher Yu Darvish is ripping up the AL this year with a 4-1 record, 1.65 ERA, and 49 strikeouts, which prompted Drew Sheppard to layer five of Darvish’s pitches on top ...
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1. Matt Welch posted on February 13, 2013 at 08:28 AM # hit 0 | hit 0Don't know if it ever happened, though I suppose one could look it up on BBref if one were inclined, but a series of Ryan, Niekro, Richard would have created all kinds of messed up timing issues for the opposing hitters.
Wonder how those guys would've done against Cal Ripkin Jr. and Ryan Sandburg.
Oh, am I inclined.
The first series of the year against the Dodgers was Richard/Niekro/Ryan in the first three.
First series against the Mets was also those three and they allowed 7 runs in 30 innings.
http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/HOU/HOU198609230.shtml
http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/HOU/HOU198609240.shtml
http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/HOU/HOU198609250.shtml
I lived across the street from the Astrodome at the time and made a last minute decision to attend the 9/25 game. The division race was already a foregone conclusion, but to see a no-hitter and the division clinching game at the same time was quite exciting.
things changed so much - after roger clemens came to town. the day the astros clinched the WC - the last day of the 04 season it wasn't EVEN standing room only and the streets were packed too
and less than 3 years it was all gone. and it ain't coming back.
i keep tellin myself i should just be glad that i was there to see it cuz it ain't never comin back
No, they got Condoleezza wrong too.
Not just the hitters: handling that rotation might be Alan Ashby's best argument for the Hall of Fame.
Holy shit.
I suppose she's a good pick if you want to meet in person the banality of evil, a corporate bagwoman who floated like pond scum to the top her field, then made a lateral move into mass murder because people and nations are just pieces on a chessboard. I'd be fascinated to sit with her for an hour and try to find any remorse at all.
As Orwell said, "In our time, political speech and writing are largely the defence of the indefensible." and Rice was as good at making war crimes sound like plausible strategy as anyone.
If asked me that question it would be a tough one, but I'd go with at least one baseball pick: Branch Rickey, even though I'd have to abstain from drinking. Maybe Thomas Jefferson for the other.
Maybe not in the next few years, but I would never say never. I plan to live in Houston my whole life (I'm 39) and I hope to see the Astros in the World Series again.
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