Ha, ha!.. I just ran to take a piss, and while pissing, I realized I had been taken by someone taking the piss...Mulboyne wrote:ALERT ALERT...Brushback.com = Sports Onion.com
Or was that a double bluff?
D'oh!
GJ
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Ha, ha!.. I just ran to take a piss, and while pissing, I realized I had been taken by someone taking the piss...Mulboyne wrote:ALERT ALERT...Brushback.com = Sports Onion.com
Or was that a double bluff?
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -- Early Monday morning, with dew still moistening lawns in neighboring communities, Hideo Nomo will take the mound in the Devil Rays' minor league complex.
Nomo will twist into and coil out of his windup against Tampa Bay prospects, looking for four innings to project him further into Lou Piniella's plans.
He is 36 now, the man who led off the Japanese line, perhaps nearing the end of his own.
There are so few genuine pioneers, no more in baseball than anywhere else.
Babe Ruth, obviously, for popularizing the home run. Jackie Robinson, definitely.
Maury Wills, certainly. He gave the game legs. Before his 104 steals in 1962, no National Leaguer had topped 60 in 46 years, since Max Carey in 1916. In the 42 years since, 51 have done so.
Bruce Sutter, of course. When he recorded his first save in 1976, the career record was 227, by Hoyt Wilhelm. Now 26 closers own more than that.
And Hideo Nomo. He high-kicked in the door through which Japanese ballplayers have enriched the Majors, and advanced the game itself to the ledge of true globalization....more...
TAMPA, Fla. - Making like one of his childhood heroes, New York Yankees superstar Hideki Matsui hit a first-inning grand slam off Phillies pitcher Randy Wolf on Saturday.
As a child in Japan, Matsui used to admire a big left-handed slugger named Charlie Manuel, now the Phillies manager.
"I had a strong desire to be a hitter like that," Matsui said through an interpreter.
Manuel averaged 31 homers while playing in Japan from 1976-81
"I loved to play there because they played baseball the right way," Manuel said. "You could tell that in their heart, they loved to play."
Manuel is best known in Japan for making a speedy recovery from a broken jaw that came from a beaning in 1979. After missing only six weeks, he returned with three steel plates in his jaw. His first game back, he wore a batting helmet with a face mask.
"I was in elementary school and when I saw Charlie come back with a football helmet, I almost started crying," said Katsushi Nogao, now a Japanese reporter for Sha magazine. "I thought, 'This is a real samurai out there.' It was so exciting."...more...
PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. (AP) Kazuhisa Ishii is looking to build a new reputation in a new town.
Ishii, traded Sunday from Los Angeles to the New York Mets, spent three years with the Dodgers and was known as a left-hander with inconsistent control. Los Angeles manager Jim Tracy dropped him from the starting rotation last August.
Ishii made some changes during the offseason and says his control is better and his fastball is now 145-kph-plus. He also read sports philosophy books.
"I would like it if everyone did not get too nervous about the walks," Ishii said through a translator Monday after reporting to the Mets. "I just want to keep my concentration up and maintain and focus on putting zeros on the boards."
Despite an average of 101 walks per season in the majors, Ishii has a 36-25 career record. Mets pitching coach Rick Peterson says Ishii is evolving, and the pitcher hasn't allowed an earned run in seven innings during spring training. He's given up two hits and struck out 10 in three appearances, walking only four.
Ishii joins a team with high expectations this year.
"I would like to pitch for a ring, and I would like to be a part of the run," he said....more...
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) -- Barry Bonds' chase of Babe Ruth and Hank Aaron on baseball's home run list may be delayed.
Two knee surgeries and baseball's steroids scandal have taken their toll on the San Francisco Giants' slugger, who said he may not play this season.
Saying he was physically and mentally ``done,'' Bonds blamed intense media scrutiny for at least part of his troubles.
Sitting at a picnic table outside the Giants' clubhouse Tuesday with his 15-year-old son, Nikolai, Bonds told reporters: ``My son and I are just going to enjoy our lives. You guys wanted to hurt me bad enough, you finally got me.
``I'm tired of my kids crying. You wanted me to jump off a bridge, I finally did. You finally brought me and my family down. ... So now go pick a different person.''
Captain Japan wrote:
Nomo broke ground for Japan
MLBST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -- Early Monday morning, with dew still moistening lawns in neighboring communities, Hideo Nomo will take the mound in the Devil Rays' minor league complex.
Nomo will twist into and coil out of his windup against Tampa Bay prospects, looking for four innings to project him further into Lou Piniella's plans.
He is 36 now, the man who led off the Japanese line, perhaps nearing the end of his own.
There are so few genuine pioneers, no more in baseball than anywhere else.
Babe Ruth, obviously, for popularizing the home run. Jackie Robinson, definitely.
Maury Wills, certainly. He gave the game legs. Before his 104 steals in 1962, no National Leaguer had topped 60 in 46 years, since Max Carey in 1916. In the 42 years since, 51 have done so.
Bruce Sutter, of course. When he recorded his first save in 1976, the career record was 227, by Hoyt Wilhelm. Now 26 closers own more than that.
And Hideo Nomo. He high-kicked in the door through which Japanese ballplayers have enriched the Majors, and advanced the game itself to the ledge of true globalization....more...
Looks like he has good stuff.. Except he just gave up another run..AssKissinger wrote:Yabu's finally going in with one out and the bases loaded.
Looks like he has good stuff.. Except he just gave up another run..GuyJean wrote:AssKissinger wrote:Yabu's finally going in with one out and the bases loaded.
Me too.. His delivery is so unique; so many chances to make mistakes with so much movement before delivery, but he's fairly consistent.. The most recent stint with the Dodgers, he never seemed to get any run support.AssKissinger wrote:I love watching him...
Yeah. English with non-English camera angles.. You can listen to the commentators go on about how great the last play was as they watch every angle, but you get to see Ichiro stretching or sitting in the dugout..AssKissinger wrote:NHK has their own cameras set up in the Mariner's stadium? I didn't know that. Do those games still have an English sub-channel?
I realize that, but they use the 'authentic' feeds for the other non-Mariner games, and any Mariner away games.. I think Fox charges so much for their cameras, it's cheaper for NHK to have their own monkeys do it..canman wrote:The reason they have their own camera's and don't use the Fox feed is that there are too many ads and the like. For example when they flash a highlight it might be sponsored by some company and NHK doesn't want to show it.
AssKissinger wrote:FWIW, and this is only a speculation, I really don't know but I guess that NHK doesn't actually have cameras at the park they just have a way of controlling the feed so they can choose which shot to put on TV. Maybe they do have one 'Ichiro cam'. Of course, I've noticed that they prefer to show Ichiro scratching his balls over an exciting replay. About the close-ups on the ball (not Ichiro's) that someone mentioned. Yeah, that's fucking retarded. Especially when it's on a line drive. You just see the ball but you have no idea what the fielders and the baserunners are doing. I know the fucking ball is rolling on the grass for Christ's sake! With a homerun though I think it's pretty cool.
SEATTLE (AP) -- Japanese television broadcaster NHK is laying cable at Safeco Field to broadcast all 81 Mariners home games in high-definition television to Ichiro Suzuki fans in Japan.
In addition, 55 home and away games will be broadcast in Japan by regular signal, said Mariners' spokeswoman Rebecca Hale....more...
They used to do that a couple years ago]do[/i] have their own crew; I've seen NHK written on the sides of the cameras.. Plus, some of the Mariner games are broadcast on BS 'high vision' in Japan. Doesn't matter how many pixels you can stuff on the screen; if the camera crew has no sport instinct when broadcasting a sport, as a viewer you're always going to feel one step behind in the action.. And pissed off when they miss a play.AssKissinger wrote:FWIW, and this is only a speculation, I really don't know but I guess that NHK doesn't actually have cameras at the park they just have a way of controlling the feed so they can choose which shot to put on TV.
AssKissinger wrote:Talk about a huge waste of money.
AK have you ever watched the superbowl here in Japan, its the same thing. They refuse to show the replays etc. So you can here the commentators talk about the play but we only get to see the shot of the field, or the fans. Don;t know why.
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