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Post by nutsberryfarm ⛑ on Jun 20, 2019 23:04:06 GMT
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Post by nutsberryfarm ⛑ on Jun 21, 2019 0:02:25 GMT
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Post by SirMoeHimself on Jun 21, 2019 1:22:09 GMT
They need to debut quicker. Damn that was an ugly inning.
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Post by nutsberryfarm ⛑ on Jun 21, 2019 4:36:53 GMT
They need to debut quicker. Damn that was an ugly inning. Yordan Alvarez hit another tater, at least.
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Post by pizzabagel on Jun 21, 2019 10:32:51 GMT
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Post by SirMoeHimself on Jun 24, 2019 1:43:52 GMT
AIR YORDYYYYYYYYYYY!!!! He's been a shining light in that loss streak, but they snapped it today, Tyler White with the grand salami and Astros take the season against those damn yankees 4-3.
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rhs6358
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Post by rhs6358 on Jun 28, 2019 15:02:11 GMT
Alex Bregman? That's a great John Houseman name. No, wait. Not John Houseman. John Cleese.
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rhs6358
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Post by rhs6358 on Jun 28, 2019 15:02:55 GMT
They need to debut quicker. Damn that was an ugly inning. Yordan Alvarez hit another tater, at least. rhs: A "tater"? Who are you? George Scott? nuts: The guy who played Patton?
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Post by nutsberryfarm ⛑ on Jun 29, 2019 14:54:28 GMT
Yordan Alvarez hit another tater, at least. rhs: A "tater"? Who are you? George Scott? nuts: The guy who played Patton? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_baseball_(T)A home run. The term started to appear in the 1970s, specifically as "long tater". The ball itself has been known as a "potato" or "tater" for generations. A long ball is thus a "long tater", shortened to just "tater" for this specific meaning.
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rhs6358
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Post by rhs6358 on Jun 29, 2019 15:12:39 GMT
rhs: A "tater"? Who are you? George Scott? nuts: The guy who played Patton? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_baseball_(T)A home run. The term started to appear in the 1970s, specifically as "long tater". The ball itself has been known as a "potato" or "tater" for generations. A long ball is thus a "long tater", shortened to just "tater" for this specific meaning. George "Boomer" Scott was well-known for calling them "taters".
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Post by pizzabagel on Jun 29, 2019 15:52:20 GMT
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_baseball_(T)A home run. The term started to appear in the 1970s, specifically as "long tater". The ball itself has been known as aGeorge "Boomer" Scott: Oh, yeah. I've been known to call home runs "taters." But then again, I've been known to call home runs a lot of things. "potato" or "tater" for generations. A long ball is thus a "long tater", shortened to just "tater" for this specific meaning. George "Boomer" Scott was well-known for calling them "taters". George "Boomer" Scott: Oh, yeah. I've been known to call home runs "taters." But then again, I've been known to call home runs a lot of things.
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