The Man. The Myth. The Legend. The Braves’ New Catcher.
Dan Quisenberry’s book of poetry, published the year he died, says a lot about the man and the pitcher.
Baltimore finds a Matt Wieters replacement, Milwaukee adds rotation depth, and Colorado buys a watch.
Are baseball gamblers in it for the money or the feeling or being right? What if they were combined on every pitch?
Arguing about the Hall of Fame is an annual tradition, but catchers have been getting a raw deal for decades.
Eric Thames returns from Korea with many home runs, Carlos Ruiz lands in Seattle, and Oakland does a very Oakland thing.
With great power (ranking) comes … well, almost no responsibility, actually.
The Man. The Myth. The Legend. The Braves’ New Catcher.
One fielder, three outs, and lots of weirdness.
Some fan facts are neither fun nor facts, but they do provide a portal back to the 1980s.
October baseball makes new heroes every year, but what exactly is a baseball hero?
Forty-one times this season a pitcher was thrust into active duty in the name of catching a pop up.
Steve Clevenger’s tweets got him suspended by the Mariners, but the issue runs deeper than one backup catcher.
Rickey Henderson has one of the greatest records in modern baseball. Did Unwritten Rules, and Rickey’s relationship to them, help or hurt his pursuit?