Old Articles: <Older 991-1000 Newer> |
|
Sports Central November 2, 2005 Danny Sternfield |
A Journey to the Top The world champion White Sox used a combination of grit and guile to take the title. |
Sports Central October 31, 2005 Jeff Kallman |
Wipe a Season, Not an Unprovable Past Why not eliminate only the statistics of that season in which a player tests positive for any steroid? By itself, that could prove deterrent against further taint -- at least until the next great stain upon the game is alleged to have fallen. |
Sports Central October 25, 2005 Jeff Kallman |
Random World Series Observations Comparing Brad Lidge to Byung-Hyun Kim is unfair... There's no further reason to insist that baseball requires a salary cap for competitive balance... Larry Bowa as Yankees' third base coach the first step to becoming manager?... etc. |
Sports Central October 25, 2005 Sara Normand |
For (True) Love of the Game Like most New Yorkers, Ciofrone grew up rooting for the Yankees. But in 2002, he was drafted out of high school by the Yankees' most despised enemy -- the Boston Red Sox. |
Sports Central October 24, 2005 Bob Ekstrom |
Baseball Folklore, Meet Bradley Lidge Bradley Lidge, star closer of the Houston Astros is now the leader of the Postseason Choke: True grit ultimately advanced the Astros into their first World Series, where they promptly lost the opener to the Chicago White Sox on Saturday night. |
Sports Central October 22, 2005 Piet Van Leer |
World Series: Who Has the Edge? Historical differences aside, the Chicago White Sox and the Houston Astros will seem familiar to one another based on their similar styles of play. So with two teams that practically mirror each other, who holds the edge? |
Sports Central October 20, 2005 Mike Round |
The Boss Needs to Play NL Ball The problem with the Yankees, as always, is Steinbrenner himself -- who thinks he's a fantasy GM and runs his personal fiefdom with meddlesome inefficiency. |
Sports Central October 19, 2005 Jeff Kallman |
Lidge Over Troubled Waters Brad Lidge is neither the first man in baseball history to surrender a pennant-losing home run, nor did he surrender the single most monstrous such shot. |
Sports Central October 19, 2005 Kevin Connelly |
A Walk in the Park Albert Pujols is such a dominant hitter, serious consideration has to be given to walking him every time he comes to the plate. Staying away from Pujols, the Astros win the NLCS in six. |
Sports Central October 17, 2005 Bob Ekstrom |
The Fall Classic: Slots Are Filling Fast The Chicago White Sox against the Houston Astros for all the marbles? Not my first choices back in April. |
<Older 991-1000 Newer> Return to current articles. |