63 notes Phenomenal headline. Seriously hats off to the genius writers at NY Post. It really is a shame that the money won’t be shelled out to keep him in a Met’s uniform. I wonder who might be shopping for a third baseman? That’s Wright Atlanta!

Phenomenal headline. Seriously hats off to the genius writers at NY Post. It really is a shame that the money won’t be shelled out to keep him in a Met’s uniform. I wonder who might be shopping for a third baseman? That’s Wright Atlanta!

(via sportsnetny)

7 notes Sic drops.

Sic drops.

(Source: oldschoolball)

3 notes How awkward was it that he was only clocked at 93 MPH when we all know he can dial it in at 106.

How awkward was it that he was only clocked at 93 MPH when we all know he can dial it in at 106.

54 notes

(Source: bleedingbrains, via sexfuzzandbooze)

164 notes Doom & Gloom

Doom & Gloom

(Source: notbiz, via oldtimefamilybaseball)

10,939 notes

(Source: nevver)

16 notes

(Source: juan, via le-paon-blanc)

15 notes fuckyeahbarves:

LET’S HAVE SOME FUN THIS THURSDAY!
This Thursday our Braves take on the Miami Marlins at Turner Field (start time 7:10ET)
Projected starters are Beachy vs. Nolasco.
I will be doing some LIVE BLOGGING with your input. Which means we’ll be doing a giveaway. For this game we’ll giving away a Atlanta Braves Window Decal (see above), it measures 4” x 8” How do you win? Simple.
Reblog this post with How many strikeouts you think Brandon Beachy will deliver against the Marlins.

9 

fuckyeahbarves:

LET’S HAVE SOME FUN THIS THURSDAY!

This Thursday our Braves take on the Miami Marlins at Turner Field (start time 7:10ET)

Projected starters are Beachy vs. Nolasco.

I will be doing some LIVE BLOGGING with your input. Which means we’ll be doing a giveaway. For this game we’ll giving away a Atlanta Braves Window Decal (see above), it measures 4” x 8” How do you win? Simple.

Reblog this post with How many strikeouts you think Brandon Beachy will deliver against the Marlins.

(Source: fuckyeahbraves)

3 notes stevenlebron:

El Duque
Years later, Livan Hernandez’s journey to the majors still amazes me.
He was earning six dollars a month as an official Cuban athlete in 1995 and decided to quit and defected to the United States.
Fast forward two years later, Hernandez joined the Marlins as a rookie pitcher and ended up starting and winning two games in the World Series to capture the Most Valuable Player award.
Before the final game of the series, his mother Miriam Carreras flew in from Cuba after three weeks of negotiations with the Cuban government that included a written plea signed by all the Marlins players.
Hernandez still remembers that night and that specific moment when he was reunited with his mother:

“That was one of my best moments in my life. The people that did that surprised me good. I talked to my mommy that morning on the phone and in the afternoon I see her in Miami, we hugged and cried and my mommy bring me the luck and I win the World Series. Those two good things happened that day.”

Still one of my favorite baseball stories of all-time.

stevenlebron:

El Duque

Years later, Livan Hernandez’s journey to the majors still amazes me.

He was earning six dollars a month as an official Cuban athlete in 1995 and decided to quit and defected to the United States.

Fast forward two years later, Hernandez joined the Marlins as a rookie pitcher and ended up starting and winning two games in the World Series to capture the Most Valuable Player award.

Before the final game of the series, his mother Miriam Carreras flew in from Cuba after three weeks of negotiations with the Cuban government that included a written plea signed by all the Marlins players.

Hernandez still remembers that night and that specific moment when he was reunited with his mother:

“That was one of my best moments in my life. The people that did that surprised me good. I talked to my mommy that morning on the phone and in the afternoon I see her in Miami, we hugged and cried and my mommy bring me the luck and I win the World Series. Those two good things happened that day.”

Still one of my favorite baseball stories of all-time.

5,016 notes

(Source: amediter, via sexfuzzandbooze)