drowninginflame
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Everything posted by drowninginflame
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We all live in New Orleans. I moved here two years ago.
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I'm leaving New Orleans Friday night to go to the game on Saturday. It's my gf's first Sox game. It's gonna be fun because it's me, and her best friend, who's also from Chicago and her best friend's bf is from ATL. We're going to the home opener too vs. the Cubs, we're getting Braves t shirts and wearing our Sox hats. I'm bringing her up for Cubs/Sox as well. I'm excited for this season.
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http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=ap-d...p&type=lgns
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I have 7 tattoos and my right arm is almost sleeved. After I finish that I'm getting a sox diamond and my left shin done.
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I have no issues with pods haging around the system.
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Joe Crede video tribute from last night?
drowninginflame replied to wilmot825's topic in Pale Hose Talk
That was a really cool video. I hope that he realizes that he'll pretty much always be known as a White Sox wherever he goes post Minnesota. -
Your next president could be a die hard White Sox/Bears fan. That's pretty awesome.
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They beat us fair and square and here on out I'm cheering for the little guy. I hope they beat the snot out the Red Sawks.
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Miiiiillllleerr liiiiiiite, genuiiiinnneee drreaffffffttt!!!! I GOT BEEEEERRRR!!!!
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Come on down to Chicago, Brett. We'll gladly take you, no better way to get revenge.
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I get drunk prior to first pitch. Beers inside the park are to only keep it going.
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Thome’s in the 500 Club, but Maybe Not in THE Club
drowninginflame replied to Linnwood's topic in Pale Hose Talk
He's my favorite for sure. -
Konerko needs to be benched/traded
drowninginflame replied to YonderLaroche's topic in Pale Hose Talk
oh you know, he's just there to collect a paycheck. Who cares about winning? That's what the young dudes care about, why bother having another ring? One is more than enough. -
He's coming back and I'll feel good wearing my jersey again.
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Wow, you're pretty smart cause that my made my brain sad to try and figure out.
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pretty cool of him to show support like that. ps. no hitters are cool.
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I heard about this @ work, one of the guys in the soymeal pit is 2nd in command under reinsdorf.
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Since everyone here is bumming me out, I wanted to list things I liked so far: Darin Erstand is a gamer and I think if pods gets his s*** together, they could be a nasty 1-2 punch. David Aardsma looks much better in black than blue and his 3 strikeouts were awesome. AJ is looking good this year as well. I liked Steve Stone alot on the radio, I think that guy might have a future somewhere doing this baseball thing. I like the green seats, and that they're tilted alil more towards the mound. please add, otherwise go back to b****ing about 2 games into the season.
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Luckily, anyone from the WS team is totally ok to wear like 10 years from now, it'll be one of those bears things where those guys still have power 20 years later. Historic players like Thomas, Fisk, Ventura, Guillen, those never get lame either. I did see someone with a Wunsch jersey last season and it made me scratch my head.
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I've got Aaron Rowand, I want a Robin Ventura.
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King of pain By Tim Brown, Yahoo! Sports March 15, 2007 Tim Brown Yahoo! Sports SURPRISE, Ariz. – Darin Erstad was going on about the wonder of his little girl taking her first solo steps this week, how he stood back and counted each trembling stride, "One, two, three, four, five … ." He sighed. "Amazing," he said, sweetly. "It was great." He was so pleased to have been given a moment that will never pass, and then reminded of the triumph of upright (if somewhat wobbly) self propulsion, the effort of getting off the floor and getting on with life. Really, the timing could hardly have been better, as now they enter the baseball season as a father-daughter tandem, one foot pushing ahead of the other, Darin working just a bit harder than she will to get into the right-center-field gap. "Things happen, you know," he said. "I'm not going to second-guess anything. It's just the path I was chosen to have. And whatever it is, it is. I couldn't have had a better time in Anaheim. I loved it. When I said I wanted to spend the rest of my career there, I meant it. But, it didn't work out that way. You move on." An Angel for long enough to play in three geographical designations – California, Anaheim, Los Angeles – Erstad took his opening step toward the uncharted in early October. He'd undergone ankle surgery at the end of a season in which he'd managed only 95 at-bats, batted .221, gone homerless, and watched his friends and teammates lose touch with the Oakland Athletics in the middle of September. His Angels had other plans for center field and first base, and there was no guarantee that Erstad – the man who'd gotten behind and pushed a World Series championship and two division title winners in the past five seasons – would ever be that Erstad again. Plus, he had this right ankle to deal with, a hard cast to lug around, a few hundred hours of rehabilitation ahead. On some of those mornings, he admitted, retirement sounded pretty good, even at 32. So much of his game was in his feet, in the way he wouldn't budge on anything, ever. And now he was just trying to maneuver the front steps without tumbling into the driveway and getting run over by the newspaper delivery truck. "It crossed my mind," he said. "During the winter, I didn't know. They tell you they fixed as much as they could and just hoped that would do the trick. After a couple months, the doctors said to start running on it and see how you feel. There were some iffy days in there where I wondered, but I just kept grinding it out and eventually it started to feel good." More than five months later, Erstad is running again, just as he always did – elbows out, shoulders hunched, face burning red – and by appearances directly into the Chicago White Sox's starting lineup. He's batting .351. It's not the number, though. It's the significance of it, and the 37 pain-free at-bats he's taken. He's healthy for the first time in a year, and the White Sox need him. "Aaron Rowand gave us an edge two years ago," general manager Kenny Williams said. "That grinder effect, if you will. We missed it last year. I've always thought that Aaron Rowand and Darin Erstad were the poster children for that style of play." In the season after the White Sox won their World Series and held their parade, there were times the edgiest guy in their dugout was the manager. Plenty of times, actually. "A lot of people say, 'Oh, he plays hard,'" Ozzie Guillen said. "No, that's the way people should be playing the game. If half the players played the game the way he does, this game would be more fun." So, Erstad may still be the second-edgiest guy in the White Sox dugout. He took a $1 million contract – with a chance to make $5 million more – to come and save their outfield situation to Jermaine Dye's right, one in which Scott Podsednik is just now back on the field after hernia surgery and Brian Anderson had a fairly disastrous rookie season. He's been playing center field and batting lead off, playing more than anybody, chasing the final few inches of recovery, and, honestly, feeling pretty good about it. He chose the White Sox over a hard free-agency push from the Florida Marlins to be right here, in the game again. "I have a lot to prove," Erstad said. "I've got to prove that I can do this still. That's all the motivation that I need." To whom, exactly? "To myself," he said. "I've had a lot of injury problems. I've worked hard. Just prove to myself I can do it. Again, it boils down to looking yourself in the mirror and being able to live the rest of your life knowing you gave it everything you had." It'll start, presumably, the same way every day. With the first few steps toward doing what he does. One, two, three, four, five… Tim Brown is a national baseball writer for Yahoo! Sports. Send Tim a question or comment for potential use in a future column or webcast.
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I hope Rowand comes back and we don't trade everything away to get him back. thats all.
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this thread sucks. really.
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I'd go but it's sold out.
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Sale on sox stuff @ footlocker on state street
drowninginflame replied to drowninginflame's topic in Pale Hose Talk
I could care less about how the letters were sewn on
