The last few years, injuries have taken a toll on Miguel Cabrera. He can’t generate the power he once had because of his bad knees and he won’t leg out many infield hits, but he’s still dangerous with a bat in his hand despite being in nearly constant pain.
The last few years, injuries have taken a toll on Miguel Cabrera. He can’t generate the power he once had because of his bad knees and he won’t leg out many infield hits, but he’s still dangerous with a bat in his hand despite being in nearly constant pain.
The last few years, injuries have taken a toll on Miguel Cabrera. He can’t generate the power he once had because of his bad knees and he won’t leg out many infield hits, but he’s still dangerous with a bat in his hand despite being in nearly constant pain.
The last few years, injuries have taken a toll on Miguel Cabrera. He can’t generate the power he once had because of his bad knees and he won’t leg out many infield hits, but he’s still dangerous with a bat in his hand despite being in nearly constant pain.
Former Detroit Tiger outfielder and first baseman Harry Heilmann became part of an unusual radio pairing in 1934 when he began broadcasting the team’s baseball games on WXYZ. The station, now WXYT, fed game broadcasts to the Michigan Radio Network which carried them throughout the state as far as the Upper Peninsula and into neighboring states.