All positions in baseball have numbers. Here is a simple go to list of all the positions and their numbers:
1-Pitcher
2-Catcher
3-First Base
4-Second Base
5-Thid Base
6-Shortstop
7-Left Field
8-Center Field
9-Right Field
All positions in baseball have numbers. Here is a simple go to list of all the positions and their numbers:
1-Pitcher
2-Catcher
3-First Base
4-Second Base
5-Thid Base
6-Shortstop
7-Left Field
8-Center Field
9-Right Field
On June 25, 2017, I arrived at Yankee Stadium at 10:00. It was the 71st annual Old Timers’ Day. After an hour of absolute nothing, the Yankees greats finally took batting practice. Since these legends are getting up there in age, the baseballs were not flying out. My one (and only) chance came when a weak dribbler hit against the wall. Four time World Champion Jeff Nelson came over a tossed me the ball (For those of you who don’t know, I have actually met Jeff Nelson at an AT&T grand opening celebration). And as many of pitchers have noticed, the seams on the 2017 baseball around more thin and tighter wounded compared to the 2016 baseballs. This has been thought to have happened after the incline in home runs. Old Timers’ Day was fun, but it was extremely hot.
For the actual game, I was sitting in home run territory right near the left field foul. Despite an epic comeback from a 7-0 devastate, the Yankees fell to the Texas Rangers 7-6. In this game, Yankees outfielder Aaron Hicks left with a rib cage/oblique injury and took an MRI. Team officials say he will be out 3 to 4 weeks.
There are tons of baseball movies. They range from Babe Ruth to girls playing. Here are a few of them:
Often the start of a rally begins with somebody on first base. But how does he get to first base? Here a seven ways a batter can reach first base:
Baseball has been our national pastime for over a hundred years. To the old players like Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig to the current superstars like Mike Trout and Bryce Harper, baseball has always been there for generations and generations. That’s why people need to show baseball the love it deserves.