Word: gehrig
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...Despite sweeping all four games this weekend, the Crimson only has a two-game lead in the Red Rolfe standings. That’s because each of the other three Red Rolfe teams went 3-1 on the weekend. Overall, the Red Rolfe was 13-3 against the Lou Gehrig this weekend….Klimkiewicz, who didn’t see any action this weekend save for one pinch hit at-bat in Game 2 against Penn, could see a return to the lineup in one of the Crimson’s two midweek games. Brunnig (right elbow) should...
...Columbia and the Quakers this weekend alone would catapult the Crimson to a commanding 7-1 record Ivy record—especially impressive considering Harvard won the division with an 11-9 Ivy mark a year ago—and a nice conclusion to their tour of the Lou Gehrig division before beginning Red Rolfe play...
Fans should consider this possibility: some players are great. In 1927, when Ruth became the first player to wallop 60 home runs, only one other major leaguer, Ruth's Yankee teammate Lou Gehrig, hit more than 30. Indeed, the Babe connected more times that year than 11 of the 15 other teams. (And what illegal substance was he on? Prohibition-era booze.) Bonds could be playing at that level. When he walks to the plate, he's not really facing the pitcher on the mound; he's facing down the legends of the game. That quest is motivation enough...
Ironic words from Tubridy, as they exactly describe the kind of consistency that has come to define her career. Among history’s overlooked heroes, perhaps there is a better analogy to be drawn. One thinks of the “Iron Horse” Lou Gehrig, who toiled for many years in the shadow of Babe Ruth before leaving his own indelible mark in the game by setting a consecutive games played streak that wouldn’t be broken for nearly half a century...
...coax stem cells into becoming particular types of tissue, and for many diseases they don't even know what kind of cells they need to end up with. "With juvenile diabetes," says Goldstein, "I think we have a sense of what cells we want to make. With ALS [Lou Gehrig's disease] we have less of a sense...