Jason Vargas: Not Stoked

productiveouts:

The 2013 Angels in GIF form.

image

saucyfosse:

killershot:

Josh Hamilton Appreciation Night 
Hamilton accepted butterfingers candy bars from the RF Bleachers 

HOLY SHIT AHAHAHA

This is amazing.
On another note as I type this: ONTO THE 19TH INNINGGGGG.

saucyfosse:

killershot:

Josh Hamilton Appreciation Night 

Hamilton accepted butterfingers candy bars from the RF Bleachers 

HOLY SHIT AHAHAHA

This is amazing.

On another note as I type this: ONTO THE 19TH INNINGGGGG.

(via mullenator)

Jason Vargas: Not Stoked

productiveouts:

The 2013 Angels in GIF form.

image

jupiter-callisto:

Rest in Peace, Nick Adenhart. August 24, 1986 – April 9, 2009

(via ladyintheoutfield)

It’s a beautifully designed game. Timeless, but always changing. It’s a game in which the defense always has the ball; and a game in which every player is measured by the ghosts of all who have gone before.

For more than 150 years, baseball has been a mirror of the complicated country that gave it birth.

From California to the New York islands, through good times and bad, through wars, depressions, and civil strife, it has entertained us, it has inspired us, and sometimes, it has even transformed us.

We pass it down from mothers to sons, fathers to daughters, as every generation invests itself in the sweet hope of springtime and endures the painful realities of fall.

Its essential dimensions never change, yet nothing ever happens the same way twice. It is a game in which the person scores, not the ball; where the objective, always, is to come home.

Home, where no asks where you come from or who you voted for. Home, where all season long, we congregate to cheer and plead, laugh and cry in the magnificent cathedrals of our game – the places, the poet Donald Hall says, “where memory gathers.”

Home, where every October, baseball’s greatest stars do battle.

Nothing in our daily life offers more of the comfort of continuity, the powerful sense of belonging, and the freedom from time’s constraints than does our National Pastime.

It is the place we always come back to – home.

Home” by Ken Burns

(Source: majesticthorinnn)

August 24, 1986 – April 9, 2009

Rest in peace, Nick Adenhart. 

(Source: triplesalley)

mattycantfail:

Every time I watch this I end up in tears. Happy (would be) 25th birthday Nick Adenhart. 

Also, it’s only fitting that Jered Weaver takes the mound tonight. Weaver, fresh off of his 5 year, $85 million contract extension, was to move into an apartment with Adenhart the weekend of Adenhart’s passing. To this day he still writes Adenhart’s initials in the dirt before every inning.

(via triplesalley)

heyyoitsrobee:

This is, and will always be, one of my favorite moments in all of sports.
RIP34

Seriously one of the most touching things in baseball. RIP Nick Adenhart.

heyyoitsrobee:

This is, and will always be, one of my favorite moments in all of sports.

RIP34

Seriously one of the most touching things in baseball. RIP Nick Adenhart.

(Source: laa-angels, via robee)