

#dc#dc comics#batman#tim drake#batfam#bruce wayne#dick grayson#batfamily#dc fanart

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Canada
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Russia

seen from Finland

seen from United States
seen from Bulgaria

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Yemen

seen from Russia
Tribe bests Twins, and the “perfect” swing: Between Innings
loser Cody Allen slammed the door. He needed to use force due to Eddie Rosario, Max Kepler, and Miguel Sano all pushing upon it from their place on the bases in the bottom of the ninth inning, but he slammed the door all the same when Joe Mauer flied out to center fielder Lonnie Chisenhall.1 The Cleveland Indians (6-7) bullpen once again demonstrated their elite abilities as they pitched three innings to support a strong Danny Salazar start (6 IP, 7 H, 1 R, 2 BB, 7 K, 103 pitches) as they defeated the Minnesota (7-6) Twins, 3-1.
Salazar struggled with pitch placement early in the game as he allowed three base runners in both the first and second innings, but he battled through to limit the damage to one run. By the third inning, he was grazing the edges of the strike zone rather than laying his pitches through the middle, and the Twins offense ceased to be a threat. Salazar also continued to experiment
Read more about Baseball Swing
with his pitching arsenal as the fourseamer returned to be his highest usage pitch though the sinker and split-change were still featured prominently. Last week in Arlington, he had barely used the four-seam pitch at all. If Salazar is submitting himself to the scouting reports and developing a pitch plan per opponent, then it will be quite interesting to follow his 2017 journey.
Read more about Baseball Swing
Despite only scoring three runs, the Indians had some success at the plate as well. Every Tribe starter recorded a hit except Abraham Almonte (yes, even Yan Gomes). The issue was that only Jose Ramirez had multiple hits. Twins starter Kyle Gibson also limited the damage by walking just two (Michael Brantley, Carlos Santana) and only allowing two extra base hits (Francisco Lindor- double, Brantley- home run)
Click here to read more
Tribe bests Twins, and the “perfect” swing: Between Innings
loser Cody Allen slammed the door. He needed to use force due to Eddie Rosario, Max Kepler, and Miguel Sano all pushing upon it from their place on the bases in the bottom of the ninth inning, but he slammed the door all the same when Joe Mauer flied out to center fielder Lonnie Chisenhall.1 The Cleveland Indians (6-7) bullpen once again demonstrated their elite abilities as they pitched three innings to support a strong Danny Salazar start (6 IP, 7 H, 1 R, 2 BB, 7 K, 103 pitches) as they defeated the Minnesota (7-6) Twins, 3-1.
Salazar struggled with pitch placement early in the game as he allowed three base runners in both the first and second innings, but he battled through to limit the damage to one run. By the third inning, he was grazing the edges of the strike zone rather than laying his pitches through the middle, and the Twins offense ceased to be a threat. Salazar also continued to experiment
Read more about Baseball Swing
with his pitching arsenal as the fourseamer returned to be his highest usage pitch though the sinker and split-change were still featured prominently. Last week in Arlington, he had barely used the four-seam pitch at all. If Salazar is submitting himself to the scouting reports and developing a pitch plan per opponent, then it will be quite interesting to follow his 2017 journey.
Read more about Baseball Swing
Despite only scoring three runs, the Indians had some success at the plate as well. Every Tribe starter recorded a hit except Abraham Almonte (yes, even Yan Gomes). The issue was that only Jose Ramirez had multiple hits. Twins starter Kyle Gibson also limited the damage by walking just two (Michael Brantley, Carlos Santana) and only allowing two extra base hits (Francisco Lindor- double, Brantley- home run)
Click here to read more
Tribe bests Twins, and the “perfect” swing: Between Innings
loser Cody Allen slammed the door. He needed to use force due to Eddie Rosario, Max Kepler, and Miguel Sano all pushing upon it from their place on the bases in the bottom of the ninth inning, but he slammed the door all the same when Joe Mauer flied out to center fielder Lonnie Chisenhall.1 The Cleveland Indians (6-7) bullpen once again demonstrated their elite abilities as they pitched three innings to support a strong Danny Salazar start (6 IP, 7 H, 1 R, 2 BB, 7 K, 103 pitches) as they defeated the Minnesota (7-6) Twins, 3-1.
Salazar struggled with pitch placement early in the game as he allowed three base runners in both the first and second innings, but he battled through to limit the damage to one run. By the third inning, he was grazing the edges of the strike zone rather than laying his pitches through the middle, and the Twins offense ceased to be a threat. Salazar also continued to experiment
Read more about Baseball Swing
with his pitching arsenal as the fourseamer returned to be his highest usage pitch though the sinker and split-change were still featured prominently. Last week in Arlington, he had barely used the four-seam pitch at all. If Salazar is submitting himself to the scouting reports and developing a pitch plan per opponent, then it will be quite interesting to follow his 2017 journey.
Read more about Baseball Swing
Despite only scoring three runs, the Indians had some success at the plate as well. Every Tribe starter recorded a hit except Abraham Almonte (yes, even Yan Gomes). The issue was that only Jose Ramirez had multiple hits. Twins starter Kyle Gibson also limited the damage by walking just two (Michael Brantley, Carlos Santana) and only allowing two extra base hits (Francisco Lindor- double, Brantley- home run)
Click here to read more