I believe in baseball and miracles.

Joined March 2009
751 Photos and videos
Porzingis was a force. Draymond with a strip that was as game-winning a play as any of them.
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Someday hopefully, I'll talk to my grandchildren about Steph the way my grandpa talked to me about The Babe.
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What a win! Just when you don't think they have anymore in them. Add this to the list of the great ones.
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Rick Hurd retweeted
My dad always told me with every hit never show boat around. Play the game with respect for yourself, coaches, teammates and your opponents
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Four words I would use to describe the 2026 @Athletics pitching staff and especially the bullpen through two weekends: “First pitch. Ball One.” Some of the worst pitching I’ve ever watched. Gonna be a dismal summer if they don’t fix it.
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So I'm watching Purdue vs. Miami in the NCAA Tourney, and the refs, in order, missed a traveling (4 steps), a carry (palm ball), and a double dribble, all in one possession. The guys in the stripes in all sports are just awful these days.
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Dave was beloved.
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Way, way, way, way back in the day, Jeff Passan approached me at a Royals game in 2004 and introduced himself. He was young, bold and supremely gifted. We all knew he'd be a superstar. If there's somebody who serves up truth as truth is, @JeffPassan is that guy. Thanks for this.
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Nailed it. John Fisher could well go down as public enemy No. 1 in all of Oakland's sports history.
World, this is Walter Haas Jr. Haas bought the A's in 1980 for around $12 million. The A's were, at the time, the worst team in baseball. (In 1979, they went 54–108.) They had baseball's lowest attendance. The Coliseum, now 14 years old, was drab and showing wear. Oakland, meanwhile, was corkscrewing. The city was bleeding employers. Crime was surging. And its most important institutions all seemed to be abandoning it. Charlie Finley—the man Haas bought the A's from—had been trying for several years to move the team to Denver. Al Davis was in the middle of suing the NFL for the right to move the Raiders to Los Angeles. Things seemed bleak. Just a few years prior, Oakland had been the most successful sports town in America. Now it seemed to be dying. Many outside observers wrote both team and town thoroughly off. No doubt casual fans around the country would have bought the idea that the Oakland Coliseum was no longer a place worth investing in. Haas—former president and CEO of Levi Strauss and Co.—said fuck that. He spent his own money to upgrade the Coliseum. He built up the organization, hiring the likes of Sandy Alderson, Andy Dolich, and, later, Billy Beane. He invested in the community. ("We built 10 little league fields in and around Oakland,” Dolich, an Executive VP, told me, for my book. “Reading programs. Affordability programs to bring little league groups and schools to games. We were partners with the Oakland Zoo. We tried to immerse ourselves in the community. That stuff makes people proud.”) And he compiled a roster full of stars (Jose Canseco, Mark McGwire, hometown heroes Dave Stewart and Rickey Henderson). By the end of the 1980s, the A's were the very best team in baseball. They had baseball's second highest attendance. They had baseball's highest payroll and among its highest revenues. They went to three World Series in a row, beating the Giants in one. In 1987, Oakland hosted the All Star game. Health failing, Haas sold the A's in 1995 for $85 million. The price was laughably low—Haas offered buyers a discount, in return for their promise that they keep the A's in Oakland—but it still constituted a massive return on that initial $12 million investment. The idea that the A's, just ten years later, were not an organization worth investing in—that both baseball and business success could never be had in East Oakland—betrays an ignorance of history and a lack of imagination. Fisher could have spent money on players in Oakland. He's a billionaire (richer than Haas was) who collected revenue-sharing checks nearly every year of his tenure. In 2017, he could have built a new stadium right at the Coliseum site. The Raiders were gone (again). He had the historic East Bay market to himself. He could have had what Haas had. He could have given Oakland what he's now giving Las Vegas. Oakland would have rewarded him for it. Let us be frank about what happened: he chose not to. That choice should not be accepted at face value. As Walter Haas's son, Wally, once told the @sfchronicle, it was, rather, "unforgivable." I appreciate Evan's reporting here. It's an incredible about-face we're witnessing. But the history that was thrown away in Oakland is an important part of this story. Without it, the story's incomplete.
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Amen.
“We’re not going to recruit selfish guys, I guys, or guys who don’t want to pay the price.” - Curt Cignetti 🔥 That line should be printed on every locker room wall in America. Talent matters. But mindset, toughness, and team-first habits matter more.
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This guy will start WWIII and nuke us all to our makers in order to cover up what happened on that island.
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Greatest American victory of my lifetime and nothing else even in the conversation. Our country needs something like this.
Jan 26
MIRACLE: THE BOYS OF '80 premieres January 30. Relive the story of "Miracle on Ice" told with never-before-seen 16mm footage and firsthand reflections from the 1980 US Hockey team players who delivered a historic Olympics victory against the USSR at the height of the Cold War.
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At the VERY VERY least, shouldn't this ICE shooter at least be on paid administrative leave? Why have I not seen not one single report that he is?
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Rick Hurd retweeted
Should one day there ever be a class/course on how NOT to be a pro sports owner, these 2 ass hats should featured predominantly in it. #FuckJohnFisher #FuckMarkDavis #TheVegasCurse
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14 Nov 2025
This man. What a hero. Some events shake you to your core. This is one.
Coach John Beam, beloved staple of Oakland sports, dies from gunshot wound trib.al/zCX8mFZ
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2 Nov 2025
All true: 1) Dodgers earned it. 2) It was there for Jays, and they blew it lots of ways. 3) One major way: Jays’ baserunning thru the series was bad to atrocious, capped by IKF getting a lousy secondary lead and being stationary on the bases loaded 4-2. Should’ve scored.
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2 Nov 2025
Why is baseball SO beautiful. You can’t run out the clock and the most obscure guys can be the biggest hero. Jays’ turn now.
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1 Nov 2025
Atrocious baserunning.
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28 Oct 2025
Not even Kelly Leak got on base 9 times in a game.
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28 Oct 2025
1st guy ever with two walkoff World Series dingers? Gotta be right?
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