Railroaders place to shoot the shit.

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: MIR Random notes in the sports world


The Forum Celestial Advisor

Status: Offline
Posts: 14205
Date:
RE: MIR Random notes in the sports world
Permalink  
 



Reutimann wins 1st Cup race in Coca-Cola 600
By JENNA FRYER, AP
7 hours ago

CONCORD, N.C. (AP) David Reutimann stared at the gray sky and silently prayed for one more heavy rain.

A gamble had put the journeyman driver in position for his first Sprint Cup Series victory, and so long as the clouds lingered over Lowe's Motor Speedway, it would come in the crown jewel Coca-Cola 600.

Reutimann didn't like his chances.

``These things don't ever go our way,'' the 39-year-old thought. ``I don't know why it should now.''

For most of his nondescript career, Reutimann never got the lucky break.

It finally came Monday after 75 races, three rain delays, a moment of silence, a spat with Tony Stewart and a 2-hour wait.

NASCAR declared Reutimann the winner when an ominous weather forecast indicated it would be impossible to run the longest race of the season to its conclusion. The drivers had figured that out a day earlier, when the race was postponed and carried over to Memorial Day for the first time in its 50-year history.

``It wasn't the prettiest win, but somebody has to win,'' he said. ``When you envision yourself winning your first Sprint Cup race, you envision it different. But it's so hard to win these deals, we'll take it any way we can.''

With intermittent showers spraying the track all day Monday, the race was one of strategy, as every driver simply tried to be in front when the event was finally washed out.

Reutimann gave it his best shot when, running 14th, he and crew chief Rodney Childers decided not to join the parade of cars following leader Kyle Busch down pit road during a caution for rain 22 laps past the halfway point.

The race had reached the point where if it was stopped again for rain, it was official, and the Michael Waltrip Racing team prayed the end was soon.

Reutimann claimed the lead, with pole-sitter Ryan Newman and Robby Gordon following him to the front as the rest of the field went to pit road for fuel and fresh tires. He didn't lead a single lap under green-flag racing, but was out front for five laps under caution before NASCAR called the cars back to pit road for the third rain stoppage.

Most drivers headed to their motorhomes to wait out the rain.

Not Reutimann.

He was joined at his car by his 68-year-old father, Buzzie, a racer with one career NASCAR start who still tears it up in dirt track events at East Bay Raceway near Tampa, Fla. The two didn't bother with an umbrella as they stood in a steady drizzle for just over 2 hours.

``I tell you what, people, it's been a long road. It's taken us a long time to get here,'' Buzzie Reutimann said. ``I'm afraid I'm going to wake up in the morning and find out I'm dreaming all of this. Words can't describe how great a father would feel to see his son to win a race.''

Buzzie Reutimann was in attendance for his son's other NASCAR victories, a 2007 Nationwide race at Memphis and a 2005 Truck race at Nashville. The duo never imagined they'd make it to the top level, though, when they were eking out a living in lower levels for most of their careers.

``I wasn't racing to be an NASCAR driver. I was just racing to race, to be able to be like my dad, make a living at racing,'' Reutimann said. ``When I was at East Bay Raceway running for $350 to win in a late model feature, I wasn't concerned about being here, I was concerned about making it to next week.

``That's been the mentality my whole life.''

Newman finished second and Gordon was third. Gordon might have a problem, though. NASCAR confiscated his real axle housing following post-race inspection for further evaluation.

Carl Edwards, who had changed into street clothes by the time the race was called, finished fourth, followed by Brian Vickers and Busch.

Reutimann, 39, didn't get his break in the Cup series until Michael Waltrip hired him in 2007 when he formed his own race team. But Michael Waltrip Racing was terrible, and Reutimann was not competitive as he struggled to even make races.

The team has made small strides in the past 2-plus seasons, and Reutimann has carried the banner. He's lingered around the top 12 in points all season and has given MWR credibility.

Now he's made MWR the first Toyota team other than Joe Gibbs Racing to win a Cup race.

Waltrip, who earned his second Daytona 500 title after a lengthy rain delay shortened the 2003 event, joined the father and son at the car midway through the final delay.

Reutimann also received a congratulatory call from Stewart, who argued with him and one of his crew members during the second rain delay. Stewart was upset with how hard Reutimann raced him earlier when Stewart had the faster car, and a longtime Reutimann crew member intervened.

``I think Tony felt like I raced him a little harder than I should have,'' he said. ``That's all it was.''

Rain ruined a race for Busch for the second time in three days. He led a race-high 173 laps and was out front when he pitted during the final caution. He wound up sixth.

Busch led 143 laps in Saturday night's Nationwide Series race, lost the lead during a round of pit stops, and never had a chance to reclaim it when the race was shortened by 45 miles because of rain.

``Weather, you can't do anything about it, really,'' Busch said.

Defending race-winner Kasey Kahne was also denied a chance when, as he was closing in on Busch's bumper, caution was called for rain. In second as they headed down pit road, he wound up seventh when the race never resumed.

It's the second time this season one of NASCAR's crown jewel events was ruined by rain. The season-opening Daytona 500 was shortened by 48 laps and Matt Kenseth was declared the winner after a short delay.


__________________

If you are in a horror movie, you make bad decisions, its what you do.



The Forum Celestial Advisor

Status: Offline
Posts: 14205
Date:
Permalink  
 

I hope some of you watched ESPN Sports Center recapping
recapping MIR Memorial Day. The NASCAR race, Coca-Cola
600 was perfect MIR. In MLB Toronto lost their 7th in a row
to Baltimore, A-Rod goes 5-5 and the Yanks take care of Texas,
Milwaukee hits a walkoff HR in the 10th to beat St. Louis 1-0
after Carpenter had a no-no going into the 8th, multiple romps
as the Dodgers stomp Colorado 16-6, Detroit 13-1 over KC,
White Sox 17-3 over the Angels (to counterbalance the 20-1
drubbing by the Twins less than a week ago), Cleveland Indians
overcoming a 0-10 defecit to beat the TB Rays 11-10...last time
Cleveland scored 7 runs in the 9th inning goes back to 1901,
Pittsburgh manager decided at the last minute no to sit out
Freddy Sanchez in the game against the Cubs. Sanchez goes
6-6 and the Pirates beats the Cubby's. Sure there is more in
the sports world that hapened this weekend that was rare.
The M's...I basically ignored them today. What glimpses I did
get of the game, I couldn't get used to the A's wearing red caps.
Almost forgot the SD Padres big comeback against the D-Backs.
San Diego has a big winning streak going.

-- Edited by The Krink on Tuesday 26th of May 2009 01:34:45 AM

__________________

If you are in a horror movie, you make bad decisions, its what you do.



500 - Internal Server Error

Status: Offline
Posts: 36517
Date:
Permalink  
 

It's about fucking time!

Indians overcome 10-run deficit to beat Rays 11-10

Preview | Box Score | Recap | Archive
Cleveland Indians' Victor Martinez(notes) watches his ball after hitting a two-run single off Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Jason Isringhausen(notes) in the ninth inning of a baseball game, Monday, May 25, 2009, in Cleveland. Ben Francisco(notes) and Jamey Carroll(notes) scored. The Indians won 11-10.
Cleveland Indians' Victor
AP - May 25, 10:57 pm EDT
capt.579d77bf74c24c8abff67a2a00a5ec4a.bay_rays_indians_baseball_ohtd114.jpg?x=180&y=200&xc=73&yc=1&wc=266&hc=296&q=70&sig=MREc8VjkPfas3lKBl1i.FA--
Cleveland Indians' Victor
AP - May 25, 10:51 pm EDT
capt.eb0f18b5a5d244a8bdebbb3e8b9081fd.bay_rays_indians_baseball_ohtd115.jpg?x=180&y=200&xc=1&yc=1&wc=326&hc=362&q=70&sig=lWiONrJw53enWPFPxg2n_g--
Cleveland Indians' Victor
AP - May 25, 10:39 pm EDT
capt.a9a41330d3ba495197c92a8ec27e343c.aptopix_rays_indians_baseball_ohtd112.jpg?x=180&y=200&xc=39&yc=1&wc=333&hc=370&q=70&sig=bg4e_5VWWIKHrSy.o6wqEQ--
Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Jason I
AP - May 25, 10:28 pm EDT
capt.3895bd9c3b124402bab26ebce6c701ac.bay_rays_indians_baseball_ohtd111.jpg?x=180&y=200&xc=93&yc=1&wc=226&hc=251&q=70&sig=sAxhPXMYfWEnH3xSd7GHSA--
Cleveland Indians' Victor
AP - May 25, 10:24 pm EDT
capt.5f536ef2dd3a447fba065cc0742af75b.rays_indians_baseball_ohtd108.jpg?x=180&y=200&xc=1&yc=1&wc=261&hc=290&q=70&sig=VUwLtYiF5e3akgEf_5wsxw--
Cleveland Indians center field
AP - May 25, 9:07 pm EDT
capt.4eb72e7cd25c46fab33b33b26e846066.rays_indians_baseball_ohtd109.jpg?x=180&y=200&xc=83&yc=1&wc=246&hc=273&q=70&sig=M9GrzYymjxLefRq92Eq2Ww--
Cleveland Indians' Ryan Ga
AP - May 25, 9:05 pm EDT
capt.ace182195a3f461d9e4b98258ea7c73c.rays_indians_baseball_ohtd107.jpg?x=180&y=200&xc=19&yc=1&wc=369&hc=410&q=70&sig=gy773NZlE_aRDDhwuLJFdw--
Tampa Bay Rays' Gabe Gross
AP - May 25, 8:52 pm EDT
capt.ecd52fe847f64826a5f339a2ec2f90fd.rays_indians_baseball_ohtd106.jpg?x=180&y=200&xc=1&yc=1&wc=345&hc=383&q=70&sig=Ossm8M5wzNIUBFmcrJ5ihA--
Tampa Bay Rays' Dioner Nav
AP - May 25, 8:41 pm EDT
capt.991010b5cc2a429f8592666cad94e0c9.rays_indians_baseball_ohtd104.jpg?x=180&y=200&xc=69&yc=1&wc=273&hc=303&q=70&sig=fPIjFk2KeuFmSMeZh.MT5g--
Cleveland Indians first basema
AP - May 25, 8:34 pm EDT
capt.1b57c3a62a6f475282a35c5b088f08c7.bay_rays_indians_baseball_ohtd102.jpg?x=180&y=200&xc=1&yc=1&wc=332&hc=369&q=70&sig=gGLSMkAVnLp3ZzRULCzIWA--
Tampa Bay Rays' David Pric
AP - May 25, 8:18 pm EDT
capt.b923a34605494c07bd5bd4531de28bba.bay_rays_indians_baseball_ohtd101.jpg?x=180&y=200&xc=1&yc=1&wc=313&hc=348&q=70&sig=HNqI3G.VFBnFwhC4gI1W8g--
Cleveland Indians' Fausto
AP - May 25, 8:13 pm EDT

CLEVELAND (AP)Trailing by 10 runs, Victor Martinez(notes) told his Cleveland Indians teammates they could win.

Martinez, in an 0-for-18 slump, backed up his words by lining a two-out, two-run single to cap a seven-run ninth inning that gave the Indians an 11-10 win over the Tampa Bay Rays on Monday night.

You never know whats going to happen, Martinez said after his hit off Jason Isringhausen(notes) (0-1) ruined the Rays night, which began with the much-awaited season debut of starter David Price(notes). The left-hander was staked to a 10-0 lead but ran his pitch count up and lasted only 3 1-3 innings.

When he came out, I said, Go out there and be a tough out, and just keep battling, Martinez said. Thats what we did.

The Indians became the first team to make up a 10-run deficit and win since the Texas Rangers rallied to beat the Detroit Tigers 16-15 on May 8, 2004, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

Series at a Glance

  1. Mon, May 25 - Final
  2. Tue, May 26 - 7:05 pm ET
  3. Wed, May 27 - 7:05 pm ET

When you do something like this, it is special, Indians manager Eric Wedge said.

It was the largest blown lead in Rays history. Tampa Bay had twice led games 10-2 before losing 20-11 each timeto the New York Yankees in 2005 and Cleveland in 1999.

Ryan Garkos(notes) two-run homer off Price in the fourth started the comeback. His three-run shot in the ninth off Grant Balfour(notes) made it 10-7.

I wanted to put the barrel of the bat on the ball and just happened to hit a home run, Garko said of his second homer. The important thing was not making the last out. Nobody wanted to do that.

Jeremy Sowers(notes) (1-2) pitched five scoreless innings for the win in his first relief appearance after 51 career starts.

The loss was Tampa Bays 14th in a row in Cleveland. The Rays have not won a road game against the Indians since a 1-0 victory on Sept. 28, 2005.

The teams combined to use 11 pitchers, who issued a total of 19 walks10 by the Rays.

Isringhausen walked the first three men he faced, forcing in one run to make it 10-8. Martinez then lined a 3-2 pitch to center and was mobbed by teammates in Clevelands biggest win of a disappointing season.

The walks are unacceptable, Isringhausen. Id rather give up home runs than walk guys.

The Indians still have the worst record in the AL at 18-28 and are just 8-11 at home.

But Garko said he felt confident seeing Martinez at the plate with the game on the line. The catcher leads the Indians with 32 RBIs and a .364 batting average.

Thats the guy you want up there in that spot, Garko said.

Price struggled with his command, walking five.

He had great stuff, but was all over the place, Rays manager Joe Maddon said.

Indians starter Fausto Carmona(notes) was even wilder. The right-hander unraveled in the second inning, walking the first four men he faced on 20 pitches and giving up five runs while registering only one out.

Gabe Gross(notes) hit a two-run homer and drove in three runs for the Rays.

Price struck out the side in the first after Jamey Carroll(notes) drew a leadoff walk and went to third on a bloop double by Grady Sizemore(notes). But he couldnt complete the five innings required of a starter to earn a win. The left-hander gave up two runs and four hits, striking out six. He threw 100 pitches57 for strikes.

I was averaging 10 pitches an out, Price said. I didnt have a feel for anything.

He didnt use sitting for long stretches as an excuse. The Rays twice batted aroundin their five-run second and three-run fourth.

Thats what you want as a pitcher, to score runs, Price said. They gave me 10.

Price was recalled from Triple-A Durham, where he was 1-4 with a 3.93 ERA in eight starts. He started in place of Scott Kazmir(notes), who went on the 15-day disabled list Friday with a strained right quadriceps.

Carmona gave up five runs and three hits with five walks in 1 1-3 innings. He has walked 35 and struck out 33 in 54 2-3 innings this season.

Notes

Maddon got a three-year contract extension. Rays INF Akinori Iwamura(notes) will have surgery for a torn left ACL and is out for the season. The Rays put LHP Brian Shouse(notes) on the 15-day DL with a strained left elbow and recalled LHP Randy Choate(notes) from Durham. Rays SS Jason Bartlett(notes), hitting .431 with 19 RBIs in his last 16 games, did not play. He sprained his left ankle Sunday, but Maddon doesnt think the injury is too serious



__________________

© Equal Opportunity Annoyer

Troll The Anti-Fast Freight Freddie

 

 

 

 



The Forum Celestial Advisor

Status: Offline
Posts: 14205
Date:
Permalink  
 

The Mariner's bullpen blows another one as the A's hang up
a 4 spot in the bottom of the 6th and the M's go down 4-3.
A note on Monday's game...Ichiro went 4-4 as well as Adam
Kennedy for Oakland. Turns out that leadoff hitters going 4-4
in the same game hasn't happend for 30 plus years. Just some
MIR trivia for you.

__________________

If you are in a horror movie, you make bad decisions, its what you do.



The Forum Celestial Advisor

Status: Offline
Posts: 14205
Date:
Permalink  
 

Boston pitchers tossed 6 wild pitches in todays game against
the Twins to tie the Major League record. M's scrounge up some
offence to beat the A's 6-1. I'll tell you sports talk radio in Seattle
is going bizerk about the M's...not in a good way. A 100 loss season
a year ago is priming the pump. I say see what happens in June before
abandoning ship.

__________________

If you are in a horror movie, you make bad decisions, its what you do.



500 - Internal Server Error

Status: Offline
Posts: 36517
Date:
Permalink  
 

Indians sweep Rays with 2-1 victory


  1. Mon, May 25 - Final
  2. Tue, May 26 - Final
  3. Wed, May 27 - Final
  4. Thu, May 28 - Final


__________________

© Equal Opportunity Annoyer

Troll The Anti-Fast Freight Freddie

 

 

 

 



The Forum Celestial Advisor

Status: Offline
Posts: 14205
Date:
Permalink  
 

I can tell MIR is coming to an end by the amazing come-from-
behind victory by the M's over the Angels Saturday night.

Mariners pull out dramatic victory
Down to last out, Lopez's homer sends game to extras

ANAHEIM -- It was exactly the type of win Mariners manager Don Wakamatsu has been asking for all season.

Down three runs in the ninth inning with two outs, the Mariners got yet another big hit from Jose Lopez, who drove a 1-1 fastball over the left-field fence to tie the game.

And the Mariners weren't done, as they scored the go-ahead run in the 10th inning by playing small-ball. Wladimir Balentien led off with a double against reliever Jose Arredondo, was bunted to third base by Franklin Gutierrez and scored on a close play at home on a sacrifice fly hit by Yuniesky Betancourt.

It capped off an impressive comeback win for the Mariners, who rallied to beat the Angels, 4-3, on Saturday in front of 39,329 at Angel Stadium.

"We never gave up," Balentien said. "We battled until the end."

The Mariners seemingly were done in the ninth inning as the offense struggled all night against the Angels.

But Adrian Beltre and Russell Branyan both singled off Angels closer Brian Fuentes to put the tying runners on base, and it paid off when Lopez tied the game with his three-run shot.

Lopez's approach was to look for a pitch to drive, and when he got a fastball in, it's exactly what he did.

"I love that situation," Lopez said. "I tried to go deep in that situation to tie the game. Any pitch he threw, I just wanted to go deep."

Lopez has struggled this season with a .219 batting average, but he actually has come through with several key hits this season. He has three walk-off hits and a key home run on Friday night.

"He's a good hitter," Wakamatsu said. "He's going through some struggles, but in these situations, maybe he focuses a little better."

In the 10th, Balentien hit a double to open the inning, and he later scored on a close play at home plate on a throw from Halos left fielder Gary Matthews Jr. The Angels argued that Balentien left early, but third-base umpire Bruce Dreckman ruled Balentien left after the catch.

"He made a good throw, but when I saw the catcher go the other way. I thought I had a chance if I slid inside, and it worked," Balentien said. "I knew that I didn't take off early because I wanted to make sure to leave after the catch because I was the winning run."

Right-hander Felix Hernandez was saddled with the no-decision, but he was superb as he allowed just one unearned run over 6 1/3 innings while striking out six and walking just one.

"I think I was consistently throwing strikes and being aggressive," Hernandez said. "I think that was the key."

It was a far cry from his last outing against the Angels, when he was called out by Wakamatsu after he allowed six runs and five stolen bases in a loss.

"We talked about his outing last time and the stolen bases and the lack of focus, but tonight was the complete opposite," Wakamatsu said. "I saw a guy that held the running game and really attacked with a lot of passion."

Hernandez matched zeros with Angels starter Matt Palmer until the seventh inning, but he allowed a run to score on a double by Erick Aybar after Russell Branyan booted a hard groundball hit by Maicer Izturis.

The Angels tallied two insurance runs in the eighth inning against reliever Brandon Morrow. Izturis hit an RBI ground out with the bases loaded, and Matthews added an RBI single.

But the Mariners came back and won their third straight game to secure back-to-back series wins against the Angels for the first time since 2006


__________________

If you are in a horror movie, you make bad decisions, its what you do.

«First  <  1 2 | Page of 2  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Chatbox
Please log in to join the chat!