Who is the most overrated player in MLB history
1. Mark McGwire
2. Don Sutton
3. Jack Morris
4. David Ortiz
5. Derek Jeter
6. Pete Rose
7. Nolan Ryan
8. Dave Parker
9. Harold Baines
10. Write in a player
1969 (I WAS LUCKY ENOUGH TO GET THE YELLOW CONSTRUCTION HELMET, LEFT FIELD BLEACHER BUMS): WE HAD MURPHY'S BLEACHERS AND NOT TOO MUCH ELSE...ITS BETTER NOW OF COURSE, BUT THEY OVERDID IT......
@WGNNews Sad… but that whole strip of too many brand new bars & restaurants has killed the neighborhood vibe of Wrigley thanks to the Ricketts running out most of the Mom & Pop joints
@mark_giangreco@JeffGurt@BodenTweets Those first few years of the Bulls were full of characters and were so much fun. And they did much better than expected.
If I remember correctly Jack Brickhouse was interviewing Tom B. Post game… he said “Tom you have been a great addition. You’ll be a valuable Bull for many years.” He was traded that night. I may have misremembered as Roger Clemens might say but That’s how I remember it.
They almost never do this: when accused (whether it's doping/steroids, affairs, etc) they angrily deny everything, threaten (lawsuits) etc: almost never works out. How about: confess, give a good excuse (steroid guys): "I was injured, everyone was doing it, it was a mistake".
I remember, 1968: 33 cents per gallon around Chicago (I worked..briefly before I got fired..at a gas station (ARCO)). The Arab Israeli war had pushed prices up a bit I think, but the 1970's oil crises had not occurred yet....
The ceasefire was a complete fiction. While the White House announced one, missiles were still flying across Israel, Iran, and Lebanon. Reality doesn’t match the headline.
The White House was forced to backtrack today because the proposed “10-point deal” from Iran was a disaster that would let them enrich uranium, fund proxies like Hezbollah, maintain leverage over the Strait of Hormuz, and get sanctions relief. Even top allies like Mark Levin and Larry Kudlow are calling it a disaster.
Let’s be honest about how we got here: there was never an imminent threat to the U.S. Now we’re stuck in it, negotiating from a weakened position.