translated from Spanish: Hardest, three no hits than 500 home runs

Coral Gables, Florida (VIP-WIRE).- “They say I’m so old that when I was born the Dead Sea was just sick”… J.V.–o-o-o-one of the toughest achievements in the majors is throwing more than two games without hits. Justin Verlander (Astros) scored his third year at the age of 36 and has been only the sixth to be played ball in the Majors in the 149 years of playing ball in the Majors. Only six, while 24 have won 300 or more games, 17 are listed with at least 3,000 strikeouts; 32 have connected 3 thousand or more unwelcome, 86 collected 100 or more grand slams and 27 have taken out 500 or more home runs. That’s why you see Big Nolan Ryan, who drew seven no-hitters, seven!! Sandy Koufax threw four, and with three appear, Cy Young, Larry Corcoran, Bob Feller and Verlander.But if it’s uphill to collect no-hit trio at this level, it doesn’t seem easy to make two either, because only 29 others, no Latin America, have been able to get into the exclusive club. True, none of so many Spanish-speaking pitchers who have gone through the major slats have achieved more than one no-hit. Here the 35 glorious boys specialists in no hit no run…:Nolan Ryan threw seven; Sandy Koufax, four; Cy Young, three; Larry Corcoran, three; Bob Feller, three; Justin Verlander, three. And the next, two each…: Mike Fiers, Jake Arrieta, Max Schezer, Tim Lincecun, Homer Bailey, Roy Halladay, Mark Buehrle, Randy Johnson, Hideo Nomo, Bob Forsch, Steve Busby, Bill Stoneman, Ken Holtzman, Don Wilson, Jim Maloney, Jim Bunning, Warren Spahn, Carl Erskine, Virgil Trucks, Allie Reynolds, Johnny Vander Meer, Dutch Leonard, Addie Joss, Frank Smith, Christy Mathewson, Theodore Breitenstein, Adonis Terry, Al Adkinson, Pud Galvin.Once asked Cy Young how he was doing his job during no-hitters, and “My intention in every game, no matter how many hits I’ve been connected to or how many innings I’ve been doing without allowing unwelcome, is to outthe turn hitter. I care about the whiteboard, rather than the absence of hits in my box.” And Verlander said in a televised interview in Houston…: “Launch ingaking a no-hitter game, for me, of course it’s very different from any other. After the fifth inning, it’s all pressure. And that pressure is higher in the dugout, than when I’m on the lomita.  Teammates try not to talk about no hit, so that brings bad luck. And those silences penetrate me to the soul. Every inning increases anguish. But it’s best to focus on not stopping dominating the ball, throwing it the way you want it and where you want it.” Attention.- Read the recent archive of “Juan Vené en la Pelota” on the Internet, for “sport comes back together”. Thanks to the life that has given me so much, even a reader like you.



Original source in Spanish

Related Posts

Add Comment