runwaylights

joined 2 years ago
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/15569225

Cubs lefty Shota Imanaga stood on the mound and yelled, soaking in the noise at Wrigley Field after striking out Michael A. Taylor to end the seventh inning on Saturday afternoon. He then slowly walked off the field with some more history in his back pocket.

With another seven scoreless frames for the North Siders in a 1-0 walk-off win over the Pirates, Imanaga lowered his ERA to 0.84 on the season. No pitcher in baseball history has posted a lower mark through their first nine career starts since ERA became an official statistic in 1913.

“When you start getting in this territory,” Cubs manager Craig Counsell said, “you have to be a little surprised, for sure. We're fortunate to watch it.”

Prior to Imanaga’s run out of the gates this season, the lowest ERA through nine career starts (excluding openers) was the 0.91 mark spun by Fernando Valenzuela in his sensational rookie showing for the Dodgers in 1981.

 

Cubs lefty Shota Imanaga stood on the mound and yelled, soaking in the noise at Wrigley Field after striking out Michael A. Taylor to end the seventh inning on Saturday afternoon. He then slowly walked off the field with some more history in his back pocket.

With another seven scoreless frames for the North Siders in a 1-0 walk-off win over the Pirates, Imanaga lowered his ERA to 0.84 on the season. No pitcher in baseball history has posted a lower mark through their first nine career starts since ERA became an official statistic in 1913.

“When you start getting in this territory,” Cubs manager Craig Counsell said, “you have to be a little surprised, for sure. We're fortunate to watch it.”

Prior to Imanaga’s run out of the gates this season, the lowest ERA through nine career starts (excluding openers) was the 0.91 mark spun by Fernando Valenzuela in his sensational rookie showing for the Dodgers in 1981.

 

It wasn't just any ol' lucky fan who caught left fielder Spencer Steer's foul ball in the fourth inning of the Reds' 7-3 loss to the Dodgers on Friday night at Dodger Stadium.

The catch was made by Steer's fraternal twin brother, Trevor, who was seated in the loge section behind home plate with several members of their family.

On a 93 mph first pitch from James Paxton, Steer fouled it back, and the ball zoomed right to his brother.

“It was coming right back at me," Trevor Steer said. "I was like, ‘I’ve got to do something.’ It was pretty wild.”

Wearing a Reds cap backward and his brother's former No. 12 jersey that he wore in 2022, Trevor Steer stood up and pointed to the last name on the back to the crowd seated around him.

The Dodger Stadium faithful responded with a round of boos.

“It’s pretty cool," Spencer Steer said. "It’s hard for him to get to games. I think it was the first game he’s seen all year and I hit a foul ball to him. Pretty crazy odds but a really cool story.”

 

It wasn't just any ol' lucky fan who caught left fielder Spencer Steer's foul ball in the fourth inning of the Reds' 7-3 loss to the Dodgers on Friday night at Dodger Stadium.

The catch was made by Steer's fraternal twin brother, Trevor, who was seated in the loge section behind home plate with several members of their family.

On a 93 mph first pitch from James Paxton, Steer fouled it back, and the ball zoomed right to his brother.

“It was coming right back at me," Trevor Steer said. "I was like, ‘I’ve got to do something.’ It was pretty wild.”

Wearing a Reds cap backward and his brother's former No. 12 jersey that he wore in 2022, Trevor Steer stood up and pointed to the last name on the back to the crowd seated around him.

The Dodger Stadium faithful responded with a round of boos.

“It’s pretty cool," Spencer Steer said. "It’s hard for him to get to games. I think it was the first game he’s seen all year and I hit a foul ball to him. Pretty crazy odds but a really cool story.”

[–] runwaylights 2 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I get that feeling on a regular basis watching players around the league.

[–] runwaylights 1 points 10 months ago

Gray is not easy to replace indeed. I'm curious how the pitching staff will do this year

[–] runwaylights 1 points 10 months ago

I don't think so either. Umps called it right

[–] runwaylights 2 points 10 months ago

If he is, then it's not covered up very well with all the different stories out there

[–] runwaylights 2 points 11 months ago

I guess. No tear is good though. I hope for his sake that this doesn't turn into a situation where he takes two months to rest and then needs TJ anyway

[–] runwaylights 10 points 11 months ago

I can relate to your situation. I have two older brothers and I don't speak to them much. I only see them on a couple of occasions. And it's my choice that I don't see them that much. I found that every time I visit them or they visit me they just sap my energy. I don't get anything good from the relationship, only frustration and the feeling I can't be myself. When I speak to them it's either about how good their life is or how they don't agree with my choices. So I decided it would be better if they aren't a large part of my life. And my life is better and more relaxed because of it. Don't let a 'blood bond' fool you into a one-sided relationship.

[–] runwaylights 2 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Otherwise Kiké can play short!

[–] runwaylights 53 points 11 months ago (5 children)

Long. Printers are pretty complicated machines, because they have to work with a natural product that shrinks, expands, folds, rolls itself up and sticks to other pieces of paper. I once heard a printer engineer explain that they use small puffs of air to lift the paper, but because there's also heat involved in the printing process that the paper sometimes rolls itself up or expands which causes jams etc. And I'm sure there's more going on.

Which isn't to say that HP aren't bastards.

[–] runwaylights 3 points 11 months ago

Mmh you're right. Probably robbed a base hit or something

[–] runwaylights 46 points 11 months ago (1 children)

First of all, if you drink and drive you should lose your licence.

Second, this is one of the many reasons why it's so important that we work hard to protect our democratic values and better the democratic systems that are already in place. Unfortunately an increasing number of people are willing to support leaders who aim to break down those democratic systems and enchroach civil rights.

In a well run democratic system (read: not USA) UBI can be a boon. It may be idealistic to a degree, but well worth striving for.

[–] runwaylights 2 points 11 months ago

Oh yeah, a good sandwich can make my day

[–] runwaylights 3 points 11 months ago (2 children)

Yeah, cold sandwiches were probably the first as well. Then maybe boiled eggs, scrambled eggs were not really a thing in the Netherlands back then. After that I helped out with other stuff like boil rice of pasta. And I remember doing some simple groceries alone when I must have been between 11 or 12. But the supermarkets were only 10 minutes away by foot.

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