Best reason for his team to build a ballpark tailored pretty much for him | Forum

Position des Themas: Forum-Startseite » User Foren » Allgemeine Fragen
Mitglied
wzh123 Apr 28 '19
Crystal Palace defender Damien Delaney insists referee Andre Marriner reluctantly awarded Liverpool a stoppage-time penalty. Cheap Nike NBA Jerseys Free Shipping . Palace lost 2-1 with virtually the last action of the game when Christian Benteke netted a spot-kick after he went down inside the box with Delaney in close attendance.Television replays showed Delaney pulled his left foot away before making any contact, only to clip Benteke with his right knee as he slid through. The Republic of Ireland international addressed the issue on social media on Sunday evening, when he claimed Marriner said he did not believe it was a penalty. Damien Delaney and Scott Dann appeal to referee Andre Marriner after Liverpools late penalty award I can honestly say I didnt make contact with Benteke today and if there was slight contact I didnt impede him and certainly didnt feel there was enough to award a penalty in the 96th min ... If a penalty is awarded that late it has to be unequivocal, Delaney stated.I waited over an hour to speak with the officials and in fairness to Andre Marriner he said he didnt think it was a penalty but he trusted his linesman that much he awarded it.That is a big call. I looked at the referee immediately and he gave a goal kick. It was only afterwards I saw loads of people running towards the linesman. It sums us up at the minute.I did not feel any contact. When I saw him go down and looked around to the referee giving a goal kick, I thought it was the correct decision. Someone said the linesman was flagging furiously.There is no way he could have been 100 per cent sure. He gave it so quickly. I looked at it afterwards and he is flagging before he has even hit the ground. It looked like he could not wait to give it. It looked like he wanted to give it.I would like to see a crackdown on (diving). I did not think it was a penalty. Delaney concedes the penalty that Benteke scored to seal a dramatic win for Liverpool Delaney was further irked by the decision as he felt challenges on Yannick Bolasie and Wilfried Zaha had gone unpunished throughout the game.With the way the game was refd and the physicality of both teams it was unbelievably harsh. With how Wilfried and Yannick were man handled by Liverpool players over the course of the game, which Ive no problem with, it was a really tough decision to take so late.All I can do is swallow it and hope to put this right. Also See: Pardew fumes over penalty Palace-Liverpool talking points WATCH: Did Benteke dive? Carra on Liverpools late win Cheap Nike NBA Jerseys Authentic .S. -- Nikolaj Ehlers registered a hat trick for the third straight game and Jonathan Drouin had a goal and five assists as the Halifax Mooseheads hammered the host Cape Breton Screaming Eagles 10-1 on Tuesday in Quebec Major Junior Hockey League action. Discount Nike NBA Jerseys . Note: The Calgary Flames announced Tuesday that Sean Monahan would not be made available to Canadas World Junior team. http://www.cheapchinajerseysnba.com/ . Durant finished with 24 points and 13 rebounds, Jackson matched his career high with 23 points on 10-of-14 shooting and Lamb scored 12 points on 5-of-7 shooting, lifting the Thunder to a 94-88 win over San Antonio and snapping the Spurs 11-game winning streak. You know, I thought this was a fun idea. Pick the 10 greatest players of all time. What a cool midsummer project, I thought -- until I actually had to come up with the 10. Then I realized the word for this was not fun.How about impossible? Im going with that word. Impossible. Cant be done.Like my friend, Dave Schoenfield, I didnt like the idea of compiling a list comprised mostly of guys who were active in, like, 1923. Ive covered baseball for more than 30 years. Ive seen greatness with my own eyeballs. I wanted to honor that greatness.But if you just try this for yourself at home, youll get why even that sentiment turned into such a nightmare. If you include Rickey Henderson?or Randy Johnson?or Alex Rodriguez?or Greg Maddux, then who the heck are you expelling from the top 10? Ted Williams? Stan Musial? Cy Young? Honus Wagner? Lou Gehrig? Youre kidding, right?So humor me as you read these names, OK? One of the basic rules of top-10 lists is that you cant cram 30 names in there, with evil tricks like, ... and in a 20-way tie for 10th ... . But trust me. Its tempting. Thats how many names I played around with -- for more than a week.I settled on this list. But I have a notebook full of crossed-out names, arrows pointing upward and downward, other names scrawled in margins. So you know what Ill say when you start screaming about the two dozen legends you think have to be in the top 10? Youre right! Now you try it.10. Mike SchmidtI covered this man for a decade in Philly. So Im going to make an informed guess that he got booed more than all the other players on this list put together. But a funny thing happened while Philadelphia was taking his talents totally for granted: Schmidt was building a case as one of our planets greatest living players. He won more home run titles, eight, than anyone except Babe Ruth. He won more Gold Gloves, 10, than any third baseman except Brooks Robinson. He cranked out annual 35-homer, 100-walk, .900-OPS, Gold Glove seasons like an assembly line. He collected three MVP trophies and a World Series MVP award along the way. The best player I ever covered. So why is he here? Because its my list. Thats why.9. Rogers HornsbyYou can tell it isnt easy to crack this list if a guy who once batted .402 over a?five-year span (1921-25) only shows up at No. 9. And Ill admit, I actually thought about leaving Hornsby off this top 10 entirely -- until it hit me: That would be insane. I dont care how different the game was in this mans heyday, roughly 1916-31. Ill even allow you to look past his .358 career batting average -- the best in modern NL history -- if youre not a fan of stuff like batting averages. If we cant find room in our top 10 for a fellow with a .434 career OBP, a guy who led his league in slugging nine times (second only to Ruth), a guy who led the National League in OPS in all but one?season of the 20s, then were trying way too hard to make some other point. And I guess Im just not going to be that guy.8. Stan MusialHeres another man I wasnt capable of leaving off this list. Musial spent his whole life being way too underrated and far too overlooked. So youll never, ever catch me overlooking him. Got it? Back in 2003, after Williams died, Sports Illustrated polled 550 active players and asked them who should succeed Williams as baseballs greatest living player. Musial not only finished eighth, he barely got more votes than Babe Ruth, who had stopped qualifying as, well, living a mere 55 years earlier. So lets correct this injustice one more time. Musial won seven batting titles. He walked more than twice as many times as he struck out. His career slash line of .331/.417/.559 is topped by just four men since 1900 (Hornsby, Williams, Ruth and Gehrig). And he was so good for so long, he actually had a higher OPS at 41 (.924) than he had at 21 (.888). I love this man. Hes the most criminally underappreciated great player of modern times.7. Ted WilliamsWhen youre trying to figure out, in your own feeble way, who belongs on these lists and who doesnt, in the end, it cant be just about numbers. I know there are people in this land who believe that only the numbers matter. Im just not one of those people. You want numbers? Williams owns the highest career on-base percentage (.482) in the history of baseball. We could stop the numbers portion of this competition right there. But Williams also had something else. Namely, an aura about him that, later in his life, could bring grown All-Stars to tears (see: 1999 All-Star Game). Ill confess right here: Im fascinated by this guy and everything about him. By how he talked. By how he thought. By how he prepared. And by every awesome Williams story Ive ever heard. One of my favorites comes from Leigh Montvilles incredible book, Ted Williams: The Biography of an American Hero. The story is about a blind man who used to go to Fenway just to hear Williams hit, because the sound was so different from when anyone else hit that even a blind man could tell the difference. Wow. Its worth including him in this top 10 just for that story.6. Walter JohnsonThere arent enough pitchers on this list. I plead guilty to that charge. Im not even sure why. Could have included Roger Clemens, Greg Maddux, Cy Young, Tom Seaver, Grover Cleveland Alexander or even Kid Nichols, and Id have felt fine about it. Instead, the only pitcher who made my top 10 was the Greatest Pitcher Who Ever Lived. And thatll have to work. Have you ever taken a good look at Walter Johnsons career? These were his year-by-year ERAs from 1910-16: 1.36, 1.90, 1.39, 1.14, 1.72, 1.55, 1.90. In real life. More than 300 innings in every one of those years. After his first 13 seasons, his career ERA was 1.65. And his Adjusted ERA-plus was 172. Thats how much better he was than evverybody else. Wholesale Nike NBA Jerseys Store. I have no idea how the Big Train would have fared if he had to pitch in this century instead of his own. But his strikeout rate was 55 percent higher than the average pitcher of his generation, which makes him the equivalent of what, say, Jose Fernandez is in 2016. So Im guessing Johnson wouldnt have been any teams No. 4 starter.5. Hank AaronIs it possible Aaron is underrated? OK, I guess not. If youre the answer to the question, Who played in more All-Star Games than any player in history? it might be impossible to describe you as underrated. But now that Ive gotten that out of the way, do we truly recognize Aarons astonishing year-in and year-out greatness? This man got MVP votes in 19 consecutive seasons. In the 16 seasons from 1956-71, there was only one in which he didnt end the year in the top four in wins above replacement among all NL position players. He finished in the top three in his league in slugging 13 times, in the top five in the batting race 10 years in a row, in the top five in OPS eight years in a row and in the top four in total bases 14 times in 15 years. He won three Gold Gloves, once stole 31 bases and was still thumping 40 homers and slugging .643 at age 39. And youll notice it took this long before I even mentioned that he broke a certain exalted home run record, amid a racial hailstorm, while exuding a sense of dignity that has never faded to this day. Hank Aaron. American icon.4. Ty CobbWhen you see where Cobb lands on our final #MLBRank top 100, its possible youll be shocked. I know I was. And it wouldnt surprise me if one of the reasons people voted the way they did had nothing to do with how good this man was at baseball. Theres an excellent chance it was actually because Cobb is so widely believed to have been a vicious, spike-sharpening racist that he showed up in a 2004 book entitled American Monsters, in which he was lumped with a cast of characters that included Charles Manson, John Wilkes Booth and (yep) O.J. But if you believe that too, Im guessing you havent read Charles Leerhsens amazing book, Ty Cobb: A Terrible Beauty. It convinced me that theres as much myth attached to Cobbs reviled image as there is reality. So if this is just about baseball, theres pretty much no way to argue Cobb isnt one of the four greatest players who ever lived. He has the best career batting average of all time (.366). He won 12 batting titles in 13 years. And hes the only man who could ever say he once led his league in homers, steals, batting average, on-base percentage and slugging percentage in the same year. Hard to do, folks!3. Barry BondsYeah, Ive read Game of Shadows. Yeah, I have a pretty good idea how Bonds turned into the all-time Home Run King. Hey, Ill tell you what. Ill have a grand jury sort that out some day. All I know is, in my time covering baseball, this was the best player I ever saw, so I wasnt going to find a reason to leave him off my list. How feared a hitter was Barry at his most terrifying? How about this: He was handed more intentional walks in one?year (120, in 2004) than Alex Rodriguez has accumulated in 22 years (97). Ill give you a moment to digest that. Now lets finish this thought: Maybe if Bonds hadnt been on a Hall of Fame track before?his Game of Shadows phase, Id reconsider this ranking. But from the day he set foot in the big leagues in 1986 until he got jealous of Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa after 1998, guess who led all players in baseball in wins above replacement? Right. It was Barry Lamar Bonds, of course, with 99.6. And it wasnt even close. Ken Griffey Jr. was second -- with 65.6. So does Barry belong on this list? Heck yeah, he does.2. Willie MaysDoes this even need explaining? The only debate is whether Mays should be the first, second or third name in this distinguished group. Hes our greatest living player. Hes the only member of the 600 Home Run, 300 Steal, 3,200 Hit Club. He was very possibly the best offensive and defensive outfielder of his time. Hes definitely the only man ever to rip off 10 straight seasons that included a Gold Glove and at least 29 home runs. And Brian Kennys fun new book, Ahead of the Curve, makes an excellent case that he should have, or at least could have, won 10 MVP awards, not two. Willie Mays. Awesome. Id have been happy to rank him at No. 1. Except for this guy ...1. Babe RuthMy buddy Schoenfield ranked the Bambino fourth, based on the supposition that Ruth wouldnt have been the same player in our time that he was in his time. Fun argument. But Im not here to even attempt to rank Ruth in any alternative universe. So lets just ask what he was in the universe he existed in. Answer: Oh, only the most important and transformative hitter/pitcher/larger-than-life character ever. Thats all. In that brief period when he was pitching for a living, he was the most unhittable left-handed pitcher in baseball. (Look it up sometime.) Then he found other stuff to keep him busy. And once he grabbed a bat full time, he was so much better than anyone else at hitting a baseball over a fence that he had a season in 1920 in which there was only one team in the entire sport that hit more home runs than he hit. So has there ever been anyone like that in any sport? Best pitcher. Best hitter. Best personality. Best gate attraction. Best headline generator. Best nickname. Best reason for his team to build a ballpark tailored pretty much for him. All I know is, if he were alive today, hed definitely host the ESPYS. So Ill be happy to listen to any and all arguments for other guys as the No. 1 player of all time. But heres how Id describe those arguments: Wrong! ' ' '