shiner
Lifer
- Jul 18, 2000
- 17,112
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Originally posted by: simms
Originally posted by: bobbybe01
10/10 :thumbsup: (even though I hate the yankees)
Don't understand..
Originally posted by: MAME
Originally posted by: simms
Originally posted by: bobbybe01
10/10 :thumbsup: (even though I hate the yankees)
Don't understand..
me neither...what's the story?
Originally posted by: ThePresence
After obtaining him from Cincinnati in yet another high-profile deadline trade, the Yankees were expecting big things from Aaron Boone down the stretch in 2003. Through August and September, they waited patiently as he tried to regain his early-season form. Through the first two rounds of the playoffs, he continued to struggle mightily. As he brought his .161 post-season average to the plate to start the bottom of the 11th in the nail-biting Game 7 of the ALCS, no one could have predicted what was about to happen. We should have known better. The Curse of the Bambino was about to strike again, and another dagger was about to be driven into the heart of Red Sox nation!
To cap one of the most exciting post-season series in the history of baseball, Boone took Tim Wakefield's first pitch of the inning deep over the left-field wall, and touched off another night of wild celebrations in The Bronx. As dramatic as it was improbable, Boone's blast instantly cemented his legacy with the Bombers, joining the likes of Scott Brosius, Jim Leyritz, Chris Chambliss and Bucky Dent on the list of unlikely Yankee miracle workers, and placing him right beside Dent on Boston's list of most despised New Yorkers of all-time.
Originally posted by: MAME
Originally posted by: ThePresence
After obtaining him from Cincinnati in yet another high-profile deadline trade, the Yankees were expecting big things from Aaron Boone down the stretch in 2003. Through August and September, they waited patiently as he tried to regain his early-season form. Through the first two rounds of the playoffs, he continued to struggle mightily. As he brought his .161 post-season average to the plate to start the bottom of the 11th in the nail-biting Game 7 of the ALCS, no one could have predicted what was about to happen. We should have known better. The Curse of the Bambino was about to strike again, and another dagger was about to be driven into the heart of Red Sox nation!
To cap one of the most exciting post-season series in the history of baseball, Boone took Tim Wakefield's first pitch of the inning deep over the left-field wall, and touched off another night of wild celebrations in The Bronx. As dramatic as it was improbable, Boone's blast instantly cemented his legacy with the Bombers, joining the likes of Scott Brosius, Jim Leyritz, Chris Chambliss and Bucky Dent on the list of unlikely Yankee miracle workers, and placing him right beside Dent on Boston's list of most despised New Yorkers of all-time.
so he got a clinch hit, right?
Originally posted by: MAME
Originally posted by: ThePresence
After obtaining him from Cincinnati in yet another high-profile deadline trade, the Yankees were expecting big things from Aaron Boone down the stretch in 2003. Through August and September, they waited patiently as he tried to regain his early-season form. Through the first two rounds of the playoffs, he continued to struggle mightily. As he brought his .161 post-season average to the plate to start the bottom of the 11th in the nail-biting Game 7 of the ALCS, no one could have predicted what was about to happen. We should have known better. The Curse of the Bambino was about to strike again, and another dagger was about to be driven into the heart of Red Sox nation!
To cap one of the most exciting post-season series in the history of baseball, Boone took Tim Wakefield's first pitch of the inning deep over the left-field wall, and touched off another night of wild celebrations in The Bronx. As dramatic as it was improbable, Boone's blast instantly cemented his legacy with the Bombers, joining the likes of Scott Brosius, Jim Leyritz, Chris Chambliss and Bucky Dent on the list of unlikely Yankee miracle workers, and placing him right beside Dent on Boston's list of most despised New Yorkers of all-time.
so he got a clinch hit, right?
Originally posted by: RedPickle
Originally posted by: MAME
Originally posted by: ThePresence
After obtaining him from Cincinnati in yet another high-profile deadline trade, the Yankees were expecting big things from Aaron Boone down the stretch in 2003. Through August and September, they waited patiently as he tried to regain his early-season form. Through the first two rounds of the playoffs, he continued to struggle mightily. As he brought his .161 post-season average to the plate to start the bottom of the 11th in the nail-biting Game 7 of the ALCS, no one could have predicted what was about to happen. We should have known better. The Curse of the Bambino was about to strike again, and another dagger was about to be driven into the heart of Red Sox nation!
To cap one of the most exciting post-season series in the history of baseball, Boone took Tim Wakefield's first pitch of the inning deep over the left-field wall, and touched off another night of wild celebrations in The Bronx. As dramatic as it was improbable, Boone's blast instantly cemented his legacy with the Bombers, joining the likes of Scott Brosius, Jim Leyritz, Chris Chambliss and Bucky Dent on the list of unlikely Yankee miracle workers, and placing him right beside Dent on Boston's list of most despised New Yorkers of all-time.
so he got a clinch hit, right?
What rock have you been living under?
Originally posted by: Ikonomi
Where's the poll?
:thumbsdown: to the pic and lack of poll. :thumbsdown:
Originally posted by: RedPickle
Originally posted by: MAME
Originally posted by: ThePresence
After obtaining him from Cincinnati in yet another high-profile deadline trade, the Yankees were expecting big things from Aaron Boone down the stretch in 2003. Through August and September, they waited patiently as he tried to regain his early-season form. Through the first two rounds of the playoffs, he continued to struggle mightily. As he brought his .161 post-season average to the plate to start the bottom of the 11th in the nail-biting Game 7 of the ALCS, no one could have predicted what was about to happen. We should have known better. The Curse of the Bambino was about to strike again, and another dagger was about to be driven into the heart of Red Sox nation!
To cap one of the most exciting post-season series in the history of baseball, Boone took Tim Wakefield's first pitch of the inning deep over the left-field wall, and touched off another night of wild celebrations in The Bronx. As dramatic as it was improbable, Boone's blast instantly cemented his legacy with the Bombers, joining the likes of Scott Brosius, Jim Leyritz, Chris Chambliss and Bucky Dent on the list of unlikely Yankee miracle workers, and placing him right beside Dent on Boston's list of most despised New Yorkers of all-time.
so he got a clinch hit, right?
What rock have you been living under?