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Siniscalchi struck out 13 in 5 2/3 innings and Canada upset Tokyo 10-4 on Friday
to snap Japans 23-game opening round winning streak in the Little League World
Series.It was Japans first loss to open a LLWS since 1965.Canada, a club from
Vancouver, British Columbia, opened the first inning with two straight singles
and took a 2-0 lead after a fielders choice and a double steal. Siniscalchi
scored on a passed ball in the third and Sean Coventry crossed home on a wild
pitch to make it 4-0. Japan had five wild pitches in the first three
innings.Cristian Santarelli smashed a two-run homer over the center-field wall
in the fourth for a 6-0 lead. In the fifth, Canada loaded the bases with one
out. Stefano Dal Sasso had a RBI single up the middle and Nathan Clegg drove in
two runs with a bloop double for a 9-1 lead.Japan got on the board in the fourth
when So Hirao scored from second after a throwing error to first. Japan tacked
on two runs in the sixth.
Buy Vapormax Australia . The Celtics closed
out their first preseason under Stevens on Wednesday night with a 101-97 victory
over the Brooklyn Nets, who rested a lot of their lineup including former
Celtics Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce.
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the Colorado Avalanche beat the Carolina Hurricanes 4-2 on Friday night to match
the best 10-game start in team history.
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defence is doing its part, too. Drew Brees threw a pair of touchdown passes in
the first half and the guys on the other side made sure that was enough, sending
the Saints to a 17-13 victory over the Atlanta Falcons on Thursday night. NOBODY
THOUGHT IT would be his last, least of all him. On July 18, Alex Rodriguez hit a
second-inning solo shot off Baltimore Orioles pitcher Kevin Gausman deep into
the left-field seats at Yankee Stadium. It was only A-Rods ninth homer of the
year, but it was also the 696th of his career, and it gave the New York Yankees
a 1-0 lead en route to a 2-1 victory. After the game, he told reporters, Im
getting to see the light at the end of the tunnel.Turns out it was a train. Last
week, the Yankees pressured him into retiring after Fridays game, when he still
could hit another. Or he could decide to come back at a later date. But for now,
he remains tantalizingly close to joining Barry Bonds, Hank Aaron and Babe Ruth
as the only members of the 700 Club.For some of the games greatest hitters,
farewells dont always end well. Parting is such sweet sorrow and all that, but
theres little poetry in balls, or players, reaching the warning track.Thats
something to keep in mind as 40-year-old David Ortiz tries to finish what he
says will be his last season with a bang?(528 HRs and counting); as Prince
Fielder is forced to call it quits with 319 homers (same as his father, Cecil);
as Mark Teixeira (404 ... do I hear 405?) takes a final bow. And as A-Rod, who
just turned 41, hangs em up. In announcing his retirement, A-Rod said, As far as
700 or those types of milestones, look, I would have had an unbelievable fun
time trying to go after them. ... [But] those are not the cards I was dealt.If
Friday is indeed his last game, and No. 696 was his last homer, its worth
replaying his trot around the bases.?As he circled the bases against the
Orioles, Rodriguez blew a chewing gum bubble.As it always does, the bubble
burst.SOME DAY, A-ROD will go to Cooperstown. Six days after his home run, the
honors belonged to Ken Griffey Jr. and Mike Piazza. This year, as usual, the
hamlet was crawling on induction weekend with gods, some in a higher pantheon
than others, but all adored by their worshippers. Its as good a time and place
as any to dust off the memories.George Brett, No. 317. The man in a golf shirt,
shorts and Kansas City Royals ankle socks is about to tee off on the sixth hole
of the Leatherstocking Golf Course in Cooperstown, New York. Its the annual golf
tournament that precedes the ceremonies, and while Brett waits his turn, he is
asked to go back to Sept. 26, 1993 -- the day he hit his 317th, and last, home
run.Refresh my memory, he says. No, wait, its coming back to me. ... It was a
10th-inning, two-out game winner against the Angels in Kansas City. High
fastball into the balcony in right.Brett then hits his tee shot straight down
the middle, and, as he drives off down the fairway, he shouts, Hey, that was my
second homer of the game.After his round, he asks, Who did I hit it off of? Paul
Swingle.Greg Swindell? It couldnt have been him. This guy was a right-hander.
Yes, he was, but his name was Paul Swingle. S-w-i-n-g-l-e.Oh. I dont remember
him. And who gave up my first homer in that game? John Farrell. The Red Sox
manager? Really? Thats kind of neat.Neater still was that the home runs came on
the day after Brett had tearfully announced his retirement. When that Sunday
game ended with his walk-off, his line in the box score read: Brett 5-3-3-5.As
he says, I got to be George Brett for one more day.Mike Schmidt, No. 548. Fate
is funny. With the fifth pick of the second round of the 1971 draft, the Royals
selected a shortstop named George Brett. Right after that, with the sixth pick,
the Philadelphia Phillies also went for a shortstop: Mike Schmidt. They would
become the greatest third basemen of their generation, making 25 All-Star Games
between them.They went head-to-head in the 1980 World Series, won by the
Phillies, and Schmidt would win three MVPs, two more than Brett. But when it
came to their final home runs, Brett got the better deal.Schmidts was a two-run
homer off Jim Deshaies in the first inning of a May 2, 1989 game at the Vet --
it gave the Phillies a 2-1 lead in a game they would lose 12-4. It was a high
fastball that I hit down the left-field line, Schmidt says. It barely stayed
inside the foul pole. I had no idea at the time that it would be my last.Nearly
a month later, Schmidt broke down at his retirement news conference.Looking
back, the only reason to have delayed my retirement would have been the career
numbers: I was two short of 550 home runs and five short of 1,600 RBIs -- one
good game. But I was feeling my age, the team was in transition, and I had what
I thought were Hall of Fame credentials and enough money. Im actually very
comfortable with how my career ended and how my retirement played out. I even
have the home run ball in a case at home.I just wish Id have written a better
goodbye speech.Frank Thomas, No. 286. There were two Frank Thomases in
Cooperstown. There was one who was in the Hall of Fame, and then there was the
large hulking man signing photos and balls at a card table on Main Street.The
other Frank Thomas is an 87-year-old Pittsburgh native who played for seven
National League teams over 16 seasons. When fans tell him how good it is to see
him alive, he tells them, Well, its a lot better to be seen than to be
viewed.Thomas was a pretty good slugger in his day, not to mention the Home Run
King of New York in 1962 (he hit 34 for the original Mets, while Roger Maris hit
33 and Mickey Mantle 30 for the Yankees). Asked about his final homer, Frank has
to think. I dont remember much about it. Wait, I was with the Astros, and it was
against the Mets. And it got me traded!It was Aug. 31, 1965, at Shea Stadium,
and, like Brett, Thomas hit his last two home runs in the same game. In fact,
the right-handed-hitting first baseman provided all of the Astros offense in a
4-3 victory, with a three-run bomb off Larry Miller in the first inning with Joe
Morgan and Jimmy Wynn aboard and a solo shot in the third off Darrell
Sutherland.The next day, they sent me to my old pals on the [Atlanta] Braves for
a player to be named later, Thomas says. I guess they figured I had something
left. No more homers, but I got to play the last month of the season with Hank
[Aaron] and Eddie [Mathews] again. Joe Torre and Phil Niekro, too. Thats four
Hall of Famers right there. That was my reward, I guess.Frank Thomas, No. 521.
The Big Hurt was also in town, looking as imposing as ever beside his plaque,
which has him in his White Sox hat. But it didnt end well for him in Chicago: He
was hurt big when the club released him after winning the 2005 World Series. He
signed with the Oakland As and hit another 39 in 06, then 26 more as the Toronto
Blue Jays DH in 07. Then the fly balls started coming up short. On Aug. 9, 2008,
back on the As and playing at Comerica Park, Thomas hit one last home run, a
two-out, first-inning shot to left-center off Armando Galarraga.He played 18
more games that season, then went into denial, refusing to announce his
retirement. Finally, on Feb. 12, 2010, Thomas officially called it quits by
signing a one-day contract with the White Sox, who announced that they would be
retiring his No. 35. At the news conference, he said, For some reason, it seems
like there is never a happy ending to superstars careers. They end up playing
for other teams -- but they always end up coming back.Had he hit one more home
run, Thomas would be alone at No. 20 on the all-time list. But hes in very good
company with 521, tied with Willie McCovey and ...Ted Williams, No. 521.
Standing sentinel on the first floor of Cooperstowns museum is The Splendid
Splinter. His statue perfectly captures his lefty-swinging follow-through -- the
same follow-through he used to hit his 521st homer off Jack Fisher in the eighth
inning of a 5-4 comeback win over the Orioles.It was not only the last at-bat of
his career but also the inspiration for one of the finest sports stories ever
written. Here is how John Updike described the third pitch of the at-bat in Hub
Fans Bid Kid Adieu, which appeared in the Oct. 22, 1960, issue of The New
Yorker:Like a feather caught in a vortex, Williams ran around the square of
bases at the center of our beseeching screaming. He ran as he always ran out
home runs -- hurriedly, unsmiling, head down, as if our praise were a storm of
rain to get out of. He didnt tip his cap. ... The papers said that the other
players, and even the umpires on the field, begged him to come out and
acknowledge us in some way, but he never had and did not now. Gods do not answer
letters.Al Kaline, No. 399. As Williams was to Boston, Kaline was to Detroit.
Mr. Tigers final round-tripper was a ninth-inning, two-run homer off Reggie
Cleveland in Fenway on Sept. 18, 1974, but it didnt mean much to the Tigers, who
lost 8-5, or to Kaline at the time.I hardly recall it, says Kaline, who was at a
cocktail reception in the Hall of Fame gallery, not far from the Williams
figure. I do remember my home run off Steve Carlton in the 1968 World Series and
my 11th-inning homer off Rollie Fingers in the 72 ALCS. But I never really tried
to hit home runs. I was more concerned with getting to 3,000 hits. That was the
mark I was really after. ... It wasnt until Yaz came along that I really
realized the significance of 400 home runs.Kaline did get his 3,000th hit, in
his hometown Baltimore, and five years later, Carl Yastrzemski recorded both.
Indeed, its right there on his plaque: FIRST AMERICAN LEAGUER TO HAVE 400 HOME
RUNS AND 3,000 HITS.Roberto Clemente, No. 240. He hit it on Sept. 13, 1972, and
it was his 10th homer of the season. Seventeen days later, he got the 3,000th
hit of his career. Who could have known they would be the last of each --
Clemente died in a plane crash on New Years Eve, en route to delivering aid to
earthquake victims in Nicaragua.What a shock, says Ferguson Jenkins, the Hall of
Famer who gave up the Hall of Famers final home run. I loved facing Roberto, and
believe me, we faced each other a lot over the years.It was the sixth time
Clemente had homered off Jenkins. The only other pitcher to give up as many as
six to Clemente was Sandy Koufax. I remember it like it was yesterday, Jenkins
says. Wrigley Field, seventh inning, right? Man on and two outs, score tied 3-3.
He was a bad-ball hitter, so I tried to throw it off the plate, get him to
chase. I forget the count, but I threw it inside, and he hit it over the ivy in
left. You win some, you lose some, and that one I lost.Because this was the 25th
anniversary of Fergies induction, he invited his family up to Cooperstown. He
showed them the Clemente statue in the museum.Steve Garvey, No. 272. When he
retired in 11988, there was no way Garvey wasnt going into the Hall of Fame --
not with his 10 All-Star appearances, his .
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series, the National League record for most consecutive games played (1,207).But
his numbers were diminished by the sluggers of the steroid era, and his once
angelic reputation was tarnished by a soap operatic personal life. Now Garvey is
stuck in purgatory, and, on this HOF weekend, he is sitting at the same table in
the same souvenir shop with the devil himself, Pete Rose.Garveys last home run
came on April 12, 1987, a three-run, first-inning homer off the Cincinnati Reds
Guy Hoffman at Riverfront Stadium that gave the San Diego Padres a 3-0 lead en
route to a 5-2 victory. One Hall of Famer, Tony Gwynn, scored ahead of Garvey,
and another, Barry Larkin, watched it sail out of the park.It went into the
seats in left-center, Garvey says. I didnt think it would be my last, but then,
you never do.?Bicep tendinitis got to me, and I [missed the rest of the 1987
season]. I didnt know what became of the ball.But then a funny thing happened.
Six or seven years ago, a box arrives in the mail. Its from one of the
groundskeepers at Riverfront. Back in those days, you could buy game balls and
stuff in the team store, and he bought the home run ball. I guess he saw the
date and realized the significance. Eventually, he tracked me down and sent it
to me because he thought I might like to have it.Its kind of special. Not so
much because of its significance but more because a fan went out of his way to
send me a gift he thought I might want.George Foster, No. 348. Right across the
street from Garvey, in another souvenir store, is another man who thought he
might be going to Cooperstown for a different reason. I really thought I would
get 500, which would have gotten me into the Hall of Fame, Foster says. Just
five more 30-homer seasons. But injuries got the best of me.When Foster hit 52
home runs for the 1977 Reds, only seven other players had hit more in a season.
But after the Mets acquired him in 82, he went from great to good to gone: He
and manager Davey Johnson locked horns, and he was released in August of 86. The
White Sox picked him up, and it was for them that he hit No. 348, a solo shot in
the fourth inning off Bill Wegman on Aug. 15. Two months later, his ex-teammates
on the Mets won the World Series.Though his MLB career was soon over, Foster
still had a little left in him: He reappeared in 1989 in the Senior Professional
Baseball Association, where he hit 11 homers in 70 games for the St. Lucie
Legends.Eddie Murray, No. 504. A final home run ball is worth saving. But
sometimes circumstances prevent that. Murray was playing for the Angels on May
30, 1997, when he hit a solo shot in the second inning of a game the Minnesota
Twins would win 4-3. It was off Bob Tewksbury to center field, he says. Thats
about all I remember. I dont even know what happened to the ball.The funny thing
is that, the year before, when I hit 22 for the Cleveland Indians and Baltimore
Orioles, the balls kept bouncing back on the field, and people were collecting
them for me. I think I have 19 of those. But that last one happened so early in
the season that I had no idea it would be my last.Actually, that was not the
last professional home run that Murray hit. Yeah, I hit two more that season for
Albuquerque after the Dodgers picked me up. That was weird, me playing with all
those kids. I have no idea who gave up my last one.Just for the record, it was a
Phoenix pitcher named Mike Villano.Donora, Pennsylvania, No. 1,259. Seven hours
west-southwest of Cooperstown is another baseball mecca, a town of 5,000 that,
thanks to native sons Stan Musial, Ken Griffey Sr. and Ken Griffey Jr., can
claim more home runs per capita than any other place on earth. Together they hit
1,257 -- the other two came from Steve Filipowicz, a Donoran who had them for
the 1945 New York Giants.The last one was hit by one of the men celebrated in
this Cooperstown weekend, Ken Griffey Jr. It came on Oct. 3, 2009, in the bottom
of the fourth inning of a game between the Rangers and Mariners at Safeco Field.
Junior took Tommy Hunters 3-1 pitch deep to right field to give the Ms a 1-0
lead in a game they would win 2-1. At the time, it was his 19th homer of the
season, the 630th of his career.Nineteen years and 595 home runs earlier, there
was another date to remember: Sept. 14, 1990. Thats when the Griffeys homered
back-to-back off the Angels Kirk McCaskill to become the first father-son combo
to go yard in the same game. After touching home plate, Senior told Junior,
Thats how you do it, son.Willard Brown, No. 1. Hes in the Hall of Fame for his
hitting, baserunning and outfield play for the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro
Leagues. But he did play for the St. Louis Browns in 1947, and became the first
African-American to hit a home run in the American League: an inside-the-park
homer off future Hall of Famer Hal Newhouser of the Tigers on Aug. 13. It was
also his last in the majors, and the last for the bat he used.It seems he had
borrowed it from teammate Jeff Heath, who was so enraged at his presumption that
he smashed the lumber to pieces in the dugout.Hank Aaron, No. 755, and Billy
Williams, No. 426. Whats it like to give up a Hall of Famers last home run? Dick
Drago knows. Pitching for the Angels, he gave up two in a two-week span.Aarons I
knew about, Drago says. But I had no idea I also gave up Billys last one.The
Aaron homer came first, 40 years ago on July 20, 1976, in County Stadium, a solo
homer deep to left in the seventh inning of the Milwaukee Brewers 6-2 victory.
It was a hanging slider. I tried to get cute. Not the best inning of my career
-- I gave up a homer to George Scott when Hank was in the on-deck circle. Other
than that, I dont remember much, just him circling the bases and me fuming on
the mound.When was the Williams home run?Aug. 8, an eighth-inning solo shot in a
9-3 loss to the Athletics in Oakland.I did give up a few. I guess its kind of a
distinction that I gave up Hank Aarons last. You know, we signed balls together
a few years ago. But Ive never seen the actual ball.Therein lies a tale. A
part-time groundskeeper named Richard Arndt caught the ball in the bleachers.
Not knowing its future significance, he just wanted to give the ball to Aaron
and maybe have his picture taken. But he was told that Aaron was busy and that
he should hand the ball over. When he refused, he was fired.Later that season,
Arndt tried to get Aaron to sign the ball, but the legend balked, saying the
ball belonged to him. Over the years, Arndt entertained various offers for the
ball, even some from Aaron and the Brewers. He finally sold it to a Connecticut
portfolio manager for $655,000, a large chunk of which he gave to Aarons Chasing
the Dream Foundation. (What, nothing for the guy who hung the slider? Drago
says.)That ball is now on loan to the museum, in a third-floor exhibit called
Hank Aaron: Chasing The Dream.As for the Williams ball, Billy had it once. I
threw it in my baseball bag, he says. The next year, I was in Midland, Texas,
looking at some hitters for the Cubs, and a kid asked me if I had any baseballs.
That was the only one I had to give him.Barry Bonds, No. 762. Bonds hit two
balls worth a lot of money. The first was the one he hit to pass Aaron, No. 756,
an Aug. 7, 2007, homer off Mike Bacsik of the Nationals. It was caught at
AT&T Park by college student Matt Murphy and sold to fashion designer Mark
Ecko for $752,467.20 so that he could make a statement by engraving an asterisk
on it. Thats now housed on the third floor of the HOF museum, in an exhibit
called One For The Books: Baseball Records and the Stories Behind Them.The
second was the last home run ball of Bonds career, a two-run homer off rookie
Ubaldo Jimenez in the first inning of the Giants 5-3 win in Colorado on Sept. 5,
2007. (Rockies outfielder Matt Holliday actually asked that the homer be negated
because of fan interference. You decide.)The fan who emerged from the scrum with
the ball was Jameson Sutton, who put the ball in a safe-deposit box in the hopes
that it would be Bonds last waltz around the bases. When Bonds retired without
another home run, collectors predicted that Sutton would get as much $1 million
for the ball.He sold it that offseason to an unnamed collector through SCP
Auctions for $376,612. Sutton used the money to pay off the medical expenses of
his stepfather, who had just died after a battle with lung cancer.That ball is
not in Cooperstown. It remains to be seen whether Bonds himself will be
there.Babe Ruth, No. 714. It was May 25, 1935, and the 40-year-old Bambino
waddled up to the plate for the truly dreadful Boston Braves on a chilly
Saturday afternoon before 10,000 curious Pittsburgh fans in Forbes Field. No
longer wanted by the Yankees -- firewood had been stored in his spring training
locker and No. 3 had been given to George Selkirk -- he signed with the Braves,
who needed a turnstile draw.He came into the game batting .183. But in the first
inning, he hit a two-run homer into the right-field stands off Red Lucas. That
was 712. He gave the Braves a 4-0 lead with another two-run shot, this one off
Guy Bush, in the third -- 713. The Pirates tied the score, but Ruth put the
Braves back ahead 5-4 with an RBI single in the fifth. In the top of the
seventh, with the home team back ahead 7-5 but the crowd behind him, Ruth took a
mighty swing at Bushs 3-1 pitch ... and launched it clear over the right-field
roof. No batter had ever done that in the 26-year history of the park: 714.In an
article for the Society of American Baseball Research, Jack Zerby described the
scene thusly: After rounding the bases in a 1935 version of his classic trot,
Babe saluted the fans with a tipped cap, and then excused himself from the game.
Sole access to the visiting clubhouse was through the Pittsburgh dugout. En
route, he plopped himself down at the end of the bench and told rookie Pirate
pitcher Mace Brown, Boy, that last one felt good.After going 4-for-4 with three
homers and six RBIs that day, Ruth played five more games, but he never got
another hit.The ball that Ruth hit for No. 714 is now part of the Hall of Fames
touring exhibit, We Are Baseball, which is at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City
until Aug. 21. Then its on to St. Louis. Thats the thing about last home runs.
Long after the batter touches home, the ball is still traveling. ' ' '