Jump to content

KFDM COOP

Members
  • Posts

    67,787
  • Joined

  • Last visited

    Never

Everything posted by KFDM COOP

  1. 48-42 Utah at the half. >
  2. 12-5 in game 1. High Island took the second game 18 to 9. The Cardinals will face Evadale for the District title Saturday 2:00 pm in Lumberton.
  3. Get there early!
  4. No interviews as of yet.
  5. Hopefully Coach Hooker will have results when he gets in this evening.
  6. Pirates sweep the Astros again!!! Plum Pitiful!!!!!!!!!!!
  7. kogt In his first start, freshman Clayton Ehlert (LCM) threw five-scoreless innings Wednesday night to lead No. 16 Texas A&M past Stephen F. Austin, 6-0, at Olsen Field. Ehlert (1-0) earned his first collegiate win and allowed just three hits, fanned three, and did not walk a batter. Just one SFA runner made it to second base in the first five innings of the game. Aggie relievers Matt Ueckert, Kiel Renfro, and Gary Campfield combined to toss four scoreless innings and allow just one hit. It was the second shutout of the year for the A&M pitching staff. Offensively Brandon Hicks went 4-for-4 with two RBI and a run scored
  8. 2-1 Pirates in the 7th of game 3. >
  9. Their keeping it a Govt. Secret.
  10. Get those people to talking!!!!
  11. The Case of the "Bloody Sock" Mirabelli denies saying bloody sock wasn't real ESPN.com news services BALTIMORE -- The story of Curt Schilling's famous bloody sock from the 2004 playoffs is turning into a bloody mess after a prominent broadcaster claimed one of Schilling's teammates acknowledged the blood wasn't real. For those who have somehow forgotten, here's what happened: Schilling, who had a right ankle tendon injury, had sutures stitched into his ankle to keep the tendon stable so he could pitch in Game 6 against the New York Yankees in the 2004 American League Championship Series. A red stain, presumably blood, could be seen on the sock during the game, which the Red Sox won, and the sock was sent to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., after the Red Sox won the 2004 World Series. Fast-forward to Wednesday night's Mid-Atlantic Sports Network's telecast of Red Sox-Orioles. In the bottom of the fifth, according to multiple media reports, Orioles play-by-play man Gary Thorne said on the air that he had been told by Red Sox catcher Doug Mirabelli that the substance was paint, not blood. "The great story we were talking about the other night was that famous red stocking that he wore when they finally won, the blood on his stocking," Thorne told broadcast partner and Hall of Fame pitcher Jim Palmer, according to media reports. "Nah," Thorne said. "It was painted. Doug Mirabelli confessed up to it after. It was all for PR. Two-ball, two-strike count." Two innings later, according to media reports, Thorne explained Mirabelli had told him the story "a couple of years ago." "Go ask him [Mirabelli]," Thorne said. After the game, Mirabelli flatly and angrily denied Thorne's story. "What? Are you kidding me? He's [expletive] lying. A straight lie," Mirabelli said, according to The Boston Globe. "I never said that. I know it was blood. Everybody knows it was blood." "It gets stupider," Schilling added, according to the newspaper. "I got the 9-inch scar for you. You can see it. ... There are some bad people in your line of work, man." Red Sox manager Terry Francona also questioned the story. "What Schill did that night on the sports field was one of the most incredible feats I ever witnessed," Francona said, according to The Globe. "[Thorne's remarks] go so far past disappointing. Disrespectful to Schill, to his vocation. I'm stunned. "I am just floored. Schill takes his share of shots, and this one is so far below the belt that I'm embarrassed and I wish somebody would have had the good conscience to ask me," Francona said, according to the newspaper. __________________
  12. Great Coaching as well!
  13. Man he was good!
×
×
  • Create New...