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#1
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Jee maybe i should have tried out for ballgirl as the local broadcasts down here always does a camera shot of the ballgirls a couple times a game
Philliefan Jen
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#2
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That might be the only thing that could get me to change my baseball loyalty.
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#3
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Hey, baseball fans. Are you all aware of this pitcher in the Yankees farm system, Pat Venditte, who is ambidextrous? He'll be at Single A Tampa this season, but he pitched for the big-league club yesterday for 1-1/3 innings against the Braves.
He wears a 6-fingered glove and switches pitching arms depending on the batter. If I hadn't seen it for myself, I'd think it was a Sports Illustrated hoax for April Fool's Day! Last edited by smc; 04-02-2010 at 04:07 PM. Reason: Fixed mistyped word. |
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#4
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#5
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Philliefan Jen
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#6
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Red Sox Nation, where we know the proper way to raise a child, is getting ready for Sunday night's season opener against the Yankees.
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#7
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Does anybody remember a pitcher from 10-20 years ago who was ambidextrous? He might have pitched in the 70's even.
He was right-handed but he did throw left-handed in MLB games. He played for The Phillies, and I think The Padres and Mets. He was told not to do it anymore by one of the teams he was on. He was a player on the bubble of the teams he played for, and he was okay at best. He only threw lefty to a few batters before being stopped. He wasn't clobbered when he did it, but it was only a few batters. |
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#8
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There was a major league pitcher in the mid-1990s named Greg Harris who was ambidextruous. He threw one inning of shutout ball for the Expos in 1995, against the Reds, facing four hitters: two as a lefty (walking one), and two as a righty). Before that, Harris had been up and down between the minors and the majors for the Mets, Reds, Expos, and Padres, beginning with his 1981 MLB debut. In 1985-88, he pitched for the Rangers and Phillies, and was claimed off waivers by the Red Sox after Philadelphia let him go. He was nothing to write home about for the Sox, sometimes in the rotation and sometimes in the bullpen. The Sox released him mid-season 1994, he was with the Yankees for a bit, and then tried his luck with the Expos in 1995, retiring at the end of that year.
I remember that in Boston he was expressly forbidden to pitch with both hands. Lou Gorman, then the GM for the Sox, said it would be a "mockery" of baseball." It wasn't until his Expo stint that he got to "mock" major league baseball like that! |
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#9
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![]() This unlucky Dutch kid, a Feyenoord fan, now has to live down the humiliation of being associated with the Red Sox from such an early age. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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#10
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As for being Dutch, it seems to me that the young lad has a healthy career ahead of him plugging a dike with that finger. |
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#11
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So that means you're raising them up to be Phillie fans which is the only properway to raise a child
Philliefan Jen
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#12
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Sorry, Jen, but around these points we don't teach our toddlers to shout obscenities at just any random strangers, only Yankees fans.
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#13
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