Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
There's a new No. 2 in the New York Yankees' rotation behind Gerrit Cole. A familiar face is getting a fresh start leading the Cincinnati Reds. Meanwhile, Shohei Ohtani & Co. are preparing a title ...
He joined the Seattle Post-Intelligencer as Mariners beat writer in September 1998 and began writing for The New York Times in 2000. After two years as a Mets beat writer and eight as a Yankees beat writer, he became the newspaper's national baseball writer in 2010, moving on to The Athletic as a senior national baseball writer in September ...
Just days after the superstar outfielder signed, New York added arguably the best left-hander on this year’s free-agent market in Max Fried. In doing so, they gave him the largest contract for a ...
After graduating in 1926, Daley was hired almost immediately as a field reporter for The New York Times, [1] and for the rest of his life the newspaper would be "his one and only employer". [3] Among his first major assignments was the 1927 heavyweight championship boxing match between Gene Tunney and Jack Dempsey – the infamous "Long Count ...
2B/OF Armstrong Muhoozi, Pittsburgh Pirates. It was eight years ago that South African infielder Gift Ngoepe made his major-league debut for the Pirates, becoming the first native of continental ...
He wrote for The New York Times and before that the Associated Press on baseball and sports legal and labor relations. In 2003 the Baseball Writers' Association of America honored him with the J. G. Taylor Spink Award. He took a buyout from the Times, along with Supreme Court writer Linda Greenhouse and dozens of others, in April 2008.
The best measure of strikeout prowess isn't actually K/9. A better option — and a record that could be broken in 2023 — is K%.
Vecsey was born on July 4, 1939, in the Jamaica neighborhood of Queens in New York City to George and May Vecsey. [1]Vecsey has written about such events as the FIFA World Cup and the Olympics and on a wide variety of sports including tennis, football, basketball, hockey, soccer, and boxing, but considers baseball, the sport he's covered since 1960, his favorite, [2] and has written more books ...