GOOD DAY South Florida Legal Community....and beyond.
The sun is shining. We have electricity. It's a good day and many more good days to come.
It's Thursday and today is TUA TIME, as your Miami Dolphins play on Thursday Night Amazon Football against the returning to previous form Cincinnati Bungles. Last week we opined that playoff football teams win the games against divisional rivals they need to win. Today we note that playoff teams beat other playoff teams in the regular season. Strap on your helmet, put on your cleats and get to work (unless you're a lawyer in Miami. Then you have today off to enjoy the sun). Go Fin! We are going to ride the Dolphins all season. Miami +3.5 and the money line +165 (no points, bet 100 win 165 ). The over is tough at 47.5. Who likes to root for the under? No one, so pass on that.
We have a new co-leader on the real single season home run record. Aaron Judge, of the NY Yankees belted 61 Wednesday night in Toronto, surpassing The Babe and joining Roger Maris for the single season, non-steroid fueled home run record. It's a big deal.
Blue Jays Bullpen coach Matt Buschmann caught the ball, which a Blue Jays fan named Frankie Lasagna (we are not making this up) narrowly missed. Buschmann is married to sportscaster Sara Walsh. When Buschmann nabbed ball#61 Sara Walsh Tweeted this:
Sara Walsh is a hottie.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of Coco, Hanzy and Coco will be in Naples and the West Coast, handing our water bottles and food (foie gras on ice and crackers for one) and generally commiserating with our west coast primos and primas, once again demonstrating that there is no known bounds to their humanity and concern for the well-being of others.
ReplyDeleteYou can follow their progress up and down the west coast of FLA on the Hanzy&Coco aid van cam.
Not sayin fer sure, but someone we all know and love loves flirting with those hot fire-rescue babes.
ReplyDeleteLost in the hoopla is the statistical oddity of Maris hiting 61 home runs. Sticking strictly to the AL, both Ruth and Judge are home run hitters par excellance. Judge hit 52 his rookie year, missed a lot of games the next two years to injuries and then hit 39 last year but his potential was never questioned and his accomplishment not all that surprising. He will probably do it again. Ruth was, well, Ruth. Enough said. Maris, though, was an anomaly. He had hit 39 home runs the year before but never hit more than 33 (once) after his 61. He hit 275 for his career. Respectable yes, but not HOF material like Judge and Ruth and he hit in front of Mantle.
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