httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Lnf0hmj6l0
Whenever this song is on a bit of dust seems to get stuck in my eyes. I'll always associate this song with the last time I left Ireland for California.
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Lnf0hmj6l0
Whenever this song is on a bit of dust seems to get stuck in my eyes. I'll always associate this song with the last time I left Ireland for California.
Sam Rice (1890)
John Wesley Donaldson (1892)
Muddy Ruel (1896)
Pete Monahan (1902)
Tommy Henrich (1913)
Frankie Gustine (1920)
Jim Wilson (1922)
Roy Face (1928)
Shigeo Nagashima (1936)
Clyde Wright (1941)
Bill Gullickson (1959)
Shane Spencer (1972)
Livan Hernandez (1975)
Ryan Langerhans (1980)
Justin Verlander (1983)
Jose Morales (1983)
John Wesley Donaldson pitched in the Negro Leagues and averaged nearly twenty strikeouts per game for the All Nations team in the 1910s. He pitched three consecutive no-hitters in 1913.
Pete Monahan played in the minors from 1921-1940, batting .301 and collecting 2,462 hits, but never played in the major leagues.
Third baseman Shigeo Nagashima played for the Yomiuri Giants from 1958-1974 and is considered by some to be the greatest player in the history of Japanese baseball.
Long days don't make for good CoC topics.
Sources tell me that the Wolves traded Kevin Love for Darko.
As good as I am with this sort of thing, last night I realized I'd missed my stepbrother's birthday. Maybe I should get Jeff A to add everyone I know to his lists, just to be safe.
John Morrill (1855)
Dick Siebert (1912)
Hub Kittle (1917)
Russ Nixon (1935)
Dave Niehaus (1935)
Jackie Moore (1939)
Walt Jocketty (1951)
Dave Stewart (1957)
Keith Atherton (1959)
Alvaro Espinoza (1962)
Miguel Batista (1971)
Juan Diaz (1974)
Hub Kittle’s baseball career spanned 68 years. In 1980, he became the oldest player to appear in organized baseball, pitching a perfect inning for AAA Springfield on August 27 at age 63½.
Jackie Moore is a long-time major league coach and minor league manager. He also was the manager of the Oakland Athletics from 1984-86,
Walt Jocketty was the general manager of the St. Louis Cardinals from 1995-2007, and has been the general manager of the Cincinnati Reds since 2008.
These guys somehow use color as an instrument.
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kb6H7KfgXs0
2011
Women's Semifinal (Wednesday, 4am CST)
This is something different. I'm not totally sold, but he's definitely working it.
Not a bad month here. I've got some commentary on Frozen and In Bruges, as well as the extreme ups and downs of Dexter, but it's too late to type it up now.