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GAME 4 TONIGHT 🍿
Wemby and Stephon Castle combined for 55 points in San Antonio’s Game 3 win at MSG, the 3rd consecutive road W to open the series.
Will the Knicks take a 3-1 lead or will the Spurs even things up at 2-2?
Don't miss Game 4 of the NBA Finals at 8:30pm/et on ABC 🏆
@KranepoolSez@michaelgbaron Hi there, just tried the link. The story is part of the newsletter. It is a newsletter that gets sent out, so the section about Scott is halfway down or so. It is all related to the game last night, though
Run the league one decision at a time. Your official Madden NFL 27 trailer!
Become an MVP+ Member for #Madden27 7-Day Early Access & More 🔗: https://t.co/V0kpvniWXn
@Lauderdale11@michaelgbaron I think there’s a temptation in the media and with some fans to think after every win that there is reason to be hopeful of a turnaround. I think this team is disproving that notion. I stand by writing it, I thought it was valid. We don’t have to agree on everything.
@Lauderdale11@michaelgbaron Brett, with all due respect, did you actually read the article, and not just the social post? Because that isn’t what it says at all
We mourn the passing of Hall of Famer Bobby Cox, the fourth-winningest manager in MLB history.
Cox led the Atlanta Braves to unprecedented success, winning 14 straight division titles from 1991-2005, along with 5 NL pennants and the 1995 World Series championship.
The four-time Manager of the Year won 2,401 games overall, behind only Connie Mack, Tony La Russa, and John McGraw. Of the 13 managers with at least 2,000 career wins, only one (Joe McCarthy) got there in fewer games than Cox.
Cox managed the Braves for 25 seasons in all, leading them to six 100-win seasons and eight 90-win seasons. He also managed the Blue Jays for four years, including the franchise’s first winning record in 1983 and first division title in 1985.
As General Manager of the Braves from 1986-90, Cox laid the foundation for the teams he would manage to success over the next two decades by trading for one future Hall of Famer in John Smoltz, drafting another in Chipper Jones, and helping develop homegrown legend Tom Glavine.
Owner of a .556 winning percentage in 29 total seasons as manager, Cox was elected to the Hall of Fame in 2014.
He was 84 years old.
@MidnightBulFrog@michaelgbaron Hey there. That’s the whole point of the article. Questioning if he can, and stating that he needs to put it all together right now. And there’s a healthy dose of skepticism that he can do it based on the last couple of years
@APICS4U@just_mets I respectfully disagree. We’ve talked plenty about Benge, plus the topic you suggested is a nonstarter. Of course Robert Jr. is going to be the everyday CF when he returns. He was doing fine bf getting hurt. RE Vientos, you can’t not discuss something just because you don’t know
@HornsUpMetsFan@michaelgbaron Michael’s question is promoting the newsletter for people to read, which is where we go into it. And which is where I say they are showing signs but, again, we need to see a lot more to really buy in.
@HornsUpMetsFan@michaelgbaron Hi Andrew. If you read the article, I say that. I say they are showing signs, but we also need to see more given who they’ve just played and where. Again, the article gives more context than just the headline alone
The #Mets are like Frankenstein: a horrible mishmash of body parts that just don’t fit together.
That’s why David Stearns deserves the bulk of the blame for the mess currently unfolding in Queens.
https://t.co/RuN4xda065
(S/O to @zulu934 for the excellent Frankenstein line)