Craig Albernaz said the Orioles had the contact play on third to "force them to make a play."
"It's a tough play for Abrams. He made a great play. It's one of those things where the infield's drawn in, you got to go on contact, read, force them to make a play."
@zimwhodey@BRENding_it@t2t_c3@stone_2x There have been multiple answers for what you present, you stupid fuck. You are on a short list of the most pathetic sports fans on this app, which is saying something. You, and the team you root for, are pathetic.
@PeterJenki49286@ShakirBetta Your entire fanbase has not shut up about this since 2023. Pathetic whining like people conspired against Josh Allen to take away an MVP. Look in the fuckin mirror dude. Probably want your boy to play better in the playoffs too considering the Bills haven’t done shit either, huh?
Franchise that has never won anything will be upset about a near unanimous MVP that was clearly deserved for the rest of their existence. Focusing on the wrong thing dude. Fucking losers
@BrettKollmann I will agree with this and add another hot take and it’s that the way that Ed Reed played the game allowed for Ray Lewis to be that dominant in that era of football whereas he may get more exposed today
Lamar Jackson is incredible. So is Josh Allen. Any real football fan should just sit back and enjoy watching them both play.
Instead we have to listen insufferable, brain dead engagement farming trolls like yourself who make their entire personality hating an all-time great.
My hot take is that Ray Lewis, while an all-time great, did not have a skillset that translated across eras in the way that Patrick Willis did.
You could put 2007 Willis on the field today and he would still be the best in the game.
2006 Lewis fit better in 2006.
Donald Trump’s reading of history is upside down. On economics his assertions are flat-out nonsense. And his grasp of the technicalities of the tariffs he was announcing was pathetic https://t.co/nvT1yVUSWn
American war planning usually takes place in highly secure facilities. But the Trump administration planned its strikes on the Houthis using a group chat—and accidentally included The Atlantic’s editor in chief, @JeffreyGoldberg. https://t.co/jvBzeJwEuy