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Twice as much fun When Twins No. 19 prospect Jose Miranda launched a two-run homer against Springfield, it not only was his first Double-A homer, but the first in Wind Surge history.
Twice as much fun When Twins No. 19 prospect Jose Miranda launched a two-run homer against Springfield, it not only was his first Double-A homer, but the first in Wind Surge history.
He s already making history
It would be a massive understatement to say Hunter Greene brought the heat in his first start for Double-A Chattanooga.
Hunter Greene threw 37 pitches over 100mph. Most ever by a starter in a @MiLB or @MLB game since the statcast era began in 2015. WOW! pic.twitter.com/OkitTXcZwl Chattanooga Lookouts (@ChattLookouts) May 6, 2021
The count was 2-2, no runners on, two outs in the ninth. Sacramento left-handed reliever Steven Okert twirled a breaking ball toward the outside corner against Columbus right-handed batter Mark Mathias, who swung through the pitch. Sacramento River Cats 4, Columbus Clippers 0. The crowd at Memphis’ AutoZone Park cheered
Scouting report: Detroit Tigers Spencer Torkelson milb.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from milb.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
We talk to former honorees Hannah Kirby, Greg Coleman, and Adam J. Williams, Esq. by Cara Suppa
Jessica Hunter/Jessica Hunter/Matt Kleck Photography
Industry, innovation, and entrepreneurship, you say? When have these three concepts ever been more challenging to maintain than in the last year?
Yet despite the many blows locally to small businesses and organizations, the people of Erie have powered forward, adapting and evolving in the midst of unprecedented crisis.
We at the Reader are not surprised in the least by the gargantuan efforts of three of our former 40 Under 40 recipients.
We caught up with Hannah Kirby (class of 2014), owner of Ember+Forge coffee shop, Greg Coleman (class of 2014), president of the Erie SeaWolves, and Adam J. Williams, Esq. (class of 2013), founder of Rust Belt Business Law.
Photo by Mark Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images
So happy a second St. Patrick’s Day where you should be staying out of the bars and you need to put your own green food coloring in your own beer. But if we stay vigilant for the next couple months, we can probably have something close to a normal summer.
I think I’m only Irish by marriage. The DNA test I took a couple of years ago did say I might have a little Irish in me.
Ben Lindbergh makes a strong case that the primary rule change that baseball needs is to move the mound back about two feet. If baseball’s problem is that the pitchers of today are just too good, then moving the mound back might be the easiest way to address that problem. The mound was last moved back in 1893 because pitchers were throwing too hard. Fifteen years later, the hardest-throwing pitcher in the game was generally considered to be Walter Johnson. Estimates are that Johnson’s fastball topped out at 91-93 mph. That’s an average fastball tod