-
A Mt. Rushmore of a sort: Shrake, King, Brammer, and Gent
Posted on May 24, 2012 via sponglr with 3 notes
Source: jspong
-
Which brings up one more possibility when dissecting Hamels’ mindset. The act brings to mind the moment in 1974, when Dock Ellis sought to knock the swagger out of the upstart Cincinnati Reds with the revolutionary tactic of hitting every batter he faced. He opened the game by drilling Pete Rose, Joe Morgan and Dan Driessen in succession, then walked Tony Perez on four pitches after the first baseman — in clear recognition of imminent danger — bailed out as soon as each pitch was released. The righthander was removed by befuddled Pirates manager Danny Murtaugh after going 2-0 on the next hitter, Johnny Bench, but by that point it didn’t matter — Ellis’ message had been sent. And here’s the key point: The most important recipients weren’t even members of the Reds, but Ellis’ own teammates. Intimidating Cincinnati was an obvious bonus, but the pitcher’s primary goal was to jolt what he viewed more and more as a complacent Pirates clubhouse.
Cole Hamels honoring code by intentionally hitting Bryce Harper - Jason Turbow - SI.com
I would love to see that Tony Perez at bat.
(via jeffmiller)
(via jeffmiller)
Posted on May 8, 2012 via The Trunk with 15 notes
Source: Sports Illustrated
-
Posted on May 4, 2012 via Def Jam Recordings with 99 notes
Source: defjamblr
-
Posted on May 3, 2012 via The Verge with 49 notes
Source: thisistheverge
-
The Greatest Ranger
So. Very. Awesome.
G.O.A.T.
-
Posted on April 23, 2012 via Least Helpful with 49 notes
Source: amazon.com
-
Humber
via @whitesawx
Posted on April 21, 2012 via It's a long season. with 222 notes
Source: mightyflynn
-
Amazing night. (Taken with instagram)
-
Torta y elote. (Taken with instagram)
-
Source: Joey deVilla/Global Nerdy
Original image by Diana Walker for Time.
(via foreverdigital)
Posted on April 10, 2012 via Texts from Hillary with 1,522 notes
Source: textsfromhillaryclinton






