Word: carl
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Neil has a good day, Carl has a good day, or Nicky P [Palazzo] has a good day, you know that you did a good job, just because they did so well,” says Soriano. “We all benefit from each other...
...future-NFLers play on the main stage. Harvard’s senior wide receiver Carl Morris and junior linebacker Dante Balestracci are likely to be drafted by the National Football League. Penn wideout Rob Milanese might also be pro-quality. While they usually dominate their competition, these superstars will be especially pumped up on Saturday. Playing at Penn is the most difficult challenge on Harvard’s schedule. There could be 30,000 fans at Franklin Field on Saturday, and most will be cheering for the Quakers—unless you decide to make a difference...
It’s two pitches into Game 3 of the National League Championship Series between the San Francisco Giants and St. Louis Cardinals, but Professor of Statistics Carl N. Morris has already stopped watching. Tucked onto his neon orange clipboard is a receipt-sized table packed with an arcane set of numbers the announcers have probably never seen: the average number of runs per inning major league baseball teams scored in 2001 in each of 24 possible situations, ranging from bases empty and 0 out to bases loaded...
While Harvard sports aficionados typically think of the Crimson’s star wide receiver when seeing the name Carl Morris in the sports pages, it is the former chair of the statistics department who was recently featured in a column on ESPN.com. A slightly frail-looking white-haired 62-year-old whose athletic career peaked on his high school tennis team, Morris would seem an unlikely subject for a feature on the sports website. But Morris’s efforts to promote RPG, a statistical formula that predicts how many runs a lineup of nine of the same player...
...David Bell put men on first and second, and pitcher Russ Ortiz is safe at first after bunting the runners over. It’s bases loaded, none out, and impossible to tear one’s eyes away from the television—unless you’re Carl Morris, who is tracking the inning’s evolution on his expected-runs table. Only after announcing that the Giants should score 2.4 runs in this inning does Morris pick up his head to watch leadoff man Kenny Lofton battle Cardinals starter Chuck Finley...