I tried to notice. Went up on Wed to the game. I waited for 1hr and 45 minutes...of what turned into a 1hr and 55 minute rain delay.
Blond chic pops up on the jumbo at 1hr 40 minutes and says we have no idea when this may happen. I am soaked...and say...well...it looks like they are not playing...and I am soaked...time to go.
Just hit 77 south when I hear the first pitch go out.
D'OH!
Free tickets just above 3rd base + 4 hours in the car + 3 hours in the Stadium + $20 bucks parking = Never even saw 1 pitch
Cleveland Browns receiver Braylon Edwards goes deep in Indians batting practice
Dennis Manoloff Cleveland Plain Dealer May 30, 2009
Braylon Edwards put on a show in batting practice before Friday's Indians-Yankees game at Progressive Field. Yes, that Braylon Edwards, the Browns receiver.
Edwards, dressed in Indians garb from cap to cleats, got better as his session progressed. After a break to talk with Indians hitting coach Derek Shelton, Edwards consistently made solid contact.
Then -- thwack! Edwards ripped one over the left-field wall and into the bleachers.
"It felt good as soon as it left the bat," he said.
Not bad for someone who had not swung in a cage since age 15. Observers said they could not recall a better BP performance by a non-baseball player.
"I was nervous the first couple of pitches, then settled in," Edwards said. "Getting some tips from Derek Shelton really helped."
Edwards figured the homer was a great way to go out. He took the bat -- a Louisville Slugger belonging to reliever Jensen Lewis -- with him during a trot around the bases.
"I don't get to the ballpark very often, so I had to take advantage," he said. "After I hit the homer, I felt the need to run the bases."
Asked if he was a Bo Jackson in the making, Edwards said: "You've got to talk to [Browns coach Eric] Mangini," he said. "Tell him I might need to get out here a little more."
Edwards, who had the day off from his main job, also took part in Indians stretching drills and shagged flies. He definitely looked like he belonged.
"I had a great time," he said. "The Indians were very nice to me. Everybody was real welcoming. I didn't want to get in their way because I knew they had a big game against the Yankees."
Edwards' best friend and manager, Hayes Grooms IV, set up the visit with Tribe media relations director Bart Swain. Edwards had informed Grooms over dinner that he could play baseball better than Grooms could play basketball. Grooms, who once played basketball at Michigan, challenged Edwards to come through on the big stage.
"I'm impressed," Grooms said. "I've got to hand it to him. He did very well."
The clip of him that they showed during the game did make him look good. He looked like a baseball player out there. Braylon is obviously very athletic, one of those naturals.
It's nice to see some cross-sport camaraderie between athletes of our pro sports team. It makes them seem more a part of the community. On Braylon's part, besides being a total blast for him, it seems that he and his "people" are attempting to rehabilitate his image locally. I think thats a good idea after some of the statements he made in the past year.
Quote: It's nice to see some cross-sport camaraderie between athletes of our pro sports team. It makes them seem more a part of the community. On Braylon's part, besides being a total blast for him, it seems that he and his "people" are attempting to rehabilitate his image locally. I think thats a good idea after some of the statements he made in the past year.
i was thinking the same thing, this is the type of thing Braylon should have been doing all along in the community. Instead he has done everything e can to distance himself. I sure hope this a signal of an attitude adjustment by Bray Bray.
KING
You may be in the drivers seat but God is holding the map. #GMSTRONG
In case anyone missed, Choo hit the game winner in the 10th, a single up the middle that hit a seagull and changed the directory just enough to let the ball pass by Coco Crisp.
The birds were hanging out in centerfield all night. Don't see that everyday!
Quote: In case anyone missed, Choo hit the game winner in the 10th, a single up the middle that hit a seagull and changed the directory just enough to let the ball pass by Coco Crisp.
I don't know which was funnier, the gull deflecting the ball or the look on Coco's face (as if he would have had a shot at throwing the guy out at home with his weak-ass arm)...
I think what is even funnier than the ball reflecting off the bird, is Coco actually thinking he has the arm to throw anybody out at the plate, even from shallow centerfield..coco couldnt throw out my grandmother heading home from 3rd using her walker.....and with my granda, I pitty the catcher if it's a close one...
Great performance by Cliffy from what I got to see. Would have loved to see the no-no on national TV, but a complete game shutout is the next best thing.
Fun game tonight- second one in a row on ESPN. What's up with that?
I have tickets to tomorrow night's game. Watch, it'll be some lame 1-0 loss because all the action happened tonight. Last game I went to this year, the Indians I think scored 1 run.
When I left work, the score was 12 to 8, when I got home and saw the final score, the first thing I thought was "I bet Rafael perez gave up a grand slam." That's what's sad. Not that he did it, but that as soon as he came in the game you all knew he was about to throw a first pitch grand slam. He is beyond awful. Someone please put him out of his MLB misery.