เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

texas leaguer การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Kreuter's Texas Leaguer came off a 1-2 pitch from reliever John Wetteland.
  • That meal made me proud, the way a Texas Leaguer might feel supping with DiMaggio.
  • Toronto leadoff hitter Rick Bosetti slapped a ball to right, a Texas Leaguer, which Roberts dove for and missed.
  • That's why a cheap fly ball that just clears the infield for a base hit is called a Texas Leaguer.
  • Let's get this cheap but fair shot-- a sort of critics'Texas leaguer-- out of the way early : It's just a game, Ken.
  • Q : Where did the term Texas Leaguer, for a pop fly over the infield, originate ? _ H . R ., Fort Worth, Texas.
  • The term " Texas Leaguer " is often attributed to the debut of Ollie Pickering, either in the majors or the Texas League, who came to bat and proceeded to run off a string of seven straight bloop hits.
  • The spoken-word " Bush Leaguer, " on the new album, is a not-so-subtle assault on President Bush : " He's not a leader / he's a Texas leaguer . . . Drilling for fear / makes the job simple / born on third, thinks he got a triple ."
  • Note how the adjective coveted ( from cupidus, " desirable, " its heart penetrated by Cupid's arrow ) is wedded to the proper noun Bloopie ( from blooper, an oops sound influenced by blunder, originally a baseball term for a ball looped by the batter just beyond the infield, and if not caught synonymous with Texas leaguer ).
  • A : There are several explanations for why a bloop hit has come to be known as a " Texas leaguer, " according to the Dickson Baseball Dictionary, compiled by Paul Dickson and published by Facts on File in 1989 . In his 1912 primer, Hugh S . Fullerton said such hits are usually accidental, but sometimes accomplished on purpose.