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While todays sentence cannot erase what has h
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2015/01/31 07:29PM
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Latest post: 2015/01/31 07:29PM, Views: 195, Posts: 1
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OAKLAND, Calif. -- Brandon Moss still had remnants of a whipped-cream pie splashed across both sides of his beard in the clubhouse. When someone pointed out the smears, Moss plucked the rest from his face and licked his fingers clean. "Last time, I didnt eat any," he said. "But this time, I ate a lot of it. I left my mouth open." Winning sure taste better in a late September playoff race. Moss hit a three-run homer in the 10th inning after Josh Donaldsons tying two-run shot in the ninth, and the Oakland Athletics gained ground on the first-place Texas Rangers with a stunning 7-4 win over the Seattle Mariners on Saturday. "Epic," As manager Bob Melvin said. "Its a pretty dramatic win, maybe as dramatic as all." For a low-budget ballclub that has had its share of you-have-to-be-kidding-me moments this season, thats quite a statement from the manager. After what Melvin had just witnessed, perhaps its hard to blame him. Coco Crisp singled off Oliver Perez (1-3) leading off the final inning for his fourth hit. Stephen Pryor entered with one out and walked Yoenis Cespedes on four pitches. Moss hammered the first pitch against Pryor well over the wall in right for his 21st home run, sending Oakland (90-68) streaming out of the dugout to celebrate its major-league leading 14th walk-off win. The As are 2 1/2 games back of Texas in the division and 2 1/2 ahead of the Los Angeles Angels for the final wild card. The Angels-Rangers game Saturday in Texas was postponed by inclement weather, and the teams will play a doubleheader Sunday. Tampa Bay also is three games behind Oakland. Oakland hosts Texas in the final three games of the season starting Monday. If the Angels lose the doubleheader and Tampa Bay falls in its finale at the Chicago White Sox, the As could clinch at least the wild card with a win Sunday. "Our mind is still focused on trying to go after the division," Donaldson said. "Every game out there is the biggest game of the year for us. Thats the way its been for the last month." Considering the way the As have played since the All-Star break, no goal seems silly anymore. Donaldsons drive off Tom Wilhelmsen in the ninth landed just over the wall in centre field for his ninth home run to start Oaklands latest rally. Grant Balfour (3-2) pitched a perfect inning to earn the win. With each game becoming bigger than the last, the As have shown no signs of a young team overwhelmed by the pressure. Players tossed a football around during batting practice. Right fielder Josh Reddick even wore a camouflage shirt and punted the ball in flip-flops. The laid-back approach carried over again -- just not right away. Dan Straily allowed four runs, four walks and three hits in 4 1-3 innings while striking out three, though he ended up jumping over the couch in the clubhouse watching Donaldsons homer, admitting he was so excited "I have no idea how I got there." His bullpen backed him up, though, with five relievers tossing scoreless ball. John Jaso walked leading off the second inning and took advantage of a pair of errors for Seattles first run. Justin Smoak grounded out to Moss, who stepped on first base and threw the ball into left field. Cespedes tried to throw out Jaso at third and instead sailed the ball into Oaklands dugout, allowing Jaso to score and give the Mariners a 1-0 lead. "It almost hit our Purell container in the dugout. That would have bothered me," Melvin could joke later. "I use that quite often in the dugout. It just hit the water cooler. That would have been really devastating if it knocked over the Purell container. We can take a run there, we just dont want to lose that." Kyle Seager hit a solo shot over the wall in centre and Michael Saunders lined a two-run homer to right to put Seattle ahead 4-0 in the fourth. It was the 19th home run for each this season. Cespedes singled and scored from first on Moss single in the bottom of the inning. Cespedes was stealing second on the play, and his hesitation around third base fooled right fielder Casper Wells just enough to slide in safely and slice Seattles lead to 4-1. Once again, Jason Vargas quieted the As. He struck out seven and walked none in seven innings. The lefty is 2-1 and has allowed only 10 runs in six starts against Oakland this season. Moss also doubled in the eighth against Wilhelmsen to score Crisp and Stephen Drew was waived home from first by third base Mike Gallego. Second baseman Dustin Ackleys relay throw from Wells in right easily got Drew out at home to end the inning and leave the possible tying run stranded at second. Moss made a diving grab to rob pinch-hitter Jesus Montero for the final out of Seattles ninth to save at least a run and set the stage for another thriller he would finish. "Those guys are feeling it over there," Mariners manager Eric Wedge said. "The fans are feeling it. Obviously the players are feeling it. You can sense the excitement in the air." NOTES: As LHP Brett Anderson (4-2, 2.57 ERA), who strained his right oblique Sept. 19 after a strong return from last years Tommy John surgery, played toss from 120 feet before the game. He will pitch a bullpen session as soon as Monday, and could be back if the As make the playoffs. ... Oakland slugger Jonny Gomes received the 2012 Dave Stewart Community Service Award from the former As pitcher during a pregame ceremony. ... Lefty Tommy Milone (13-10, 3.74 ERA) starts for Oakland opposite Mariners RHP Erasmo Ramirez (1-3, 3.42 ERA) in Sundays series finale. jerseys from china . Nova (3-2) was charged with an unearned run in 7 1/3 innings, helping the Yankees avoid a fourth consecutive loss. The right-hander scattered two hits and walked one. We needed a lift after the way we played in Detroit, losing three games in a row after winning the first one off of (Justin) Verlander, said Yankees manager Joe Girardi. cheap jerseys . Cespedes played for Cuba in the 2009 World Baseball Classic and is projected to be ready for the majors. Cespedes says six teams are interested in signing him, including the Marlins, Baltimore, Detroit, Cleveland and the Chicago Cubs and White Sox. http://www.cheapnfljerseyschinapla... . The other is staying remarkably healthy. Other than the 2007 season when he missed five games with the Edmonton Eskimos, Ray has never missed more than one game in a season since his rookie year in 2002. So when the Toronto Argonauts traded for him last winter, they not only got one of the leagues top quarterbacks, they also got its most durable. [url=http://www.cheapnfljerseyschinaplay.com/]nfl jerseys china . Leino scored twice in the games first 3:44 and Miller was solid, finishing with 32 saves, as Buffalo chased Roberto Luongo from the game early en route to a 5-3 victory over the Vancouver Canucks. wholesale nfl jerseys . Second-seeded Sloane Stephens of the United States made lighter work of her day as she beat 2009 champion and Swiss wild card Timea Bacsinszky 6-3, 6-3. Two seeds fell: No. 4 Kirsten Flipkens of Belgium lost to Katarzyna Piter of Poland 6-4, 6-2, and No. BELLEFONTE, Pa. -- In what sounded at times like a locker-room pep talk, Jerry Sandusky rambled in his red prison suit about being the underdog in the fourth quarter, about forgiveness, about dogs and about the movie "Seabiscuit." With his accusers seated behind him in the courtroom, he denied committing "disgusting acts" against children and instead painted himself as the victim. And then, after he had said his piece, a judge sentenced him to 30 to 60 years in prison Tuesday, all but ensuring the 68-year-old Sandusky will spend the rest of his life behind bars for the child sexual abuse scandal that brought disgrace to Penn State and triggered the downfall of his former boss, football coach Joe Paterno. He leaves behind a trail of human and legal wreckage that could take years for the university to clear away. "The tragedy of this crime is that its a story of betrayal. The most obvious aspect is your betrayal of 10 children," Judge John Cleland said after a hearing in which three of the men Sandusky was convicted of molesting as boys confronted him face to face and told of the lasting pain he had inflicted. The judge said he expects Sandusky to die in prison. In a disjointed, 15-minute address before he learned his sentence, Sandusky said: "In my heart I did not do these alleged disgusting acts." Sprinkling his remarks with sports references, the former assistant coach spoke of being locked up in a jail cell, subjected to outbursts from fellow inmates, reading inspirational books and trying to find a purpose in his fate. His voice cracked as he talked about missing his loved ones, including his wife, Dottie, who was in the gallery. "Hopefully we can get better as a result of our hardship and suffering, that somehow, some way, something good will come out of this," Sandusky said. He also spoke of instances in which he helped children and did good works in the community, adding: "Ive forgiven, Ive been forgiven. Ive comforted others, Ive been comforted. Ive been kissed by dogs, Ive been bit by dogs. Ive conformed, Ive also been different. Ive been me. Ive been loved, Ive been hated." Sandusky was convicted in June of 45 counts, found guilty of raping or fondling boys he had met through the acclaimed youth charity he founded, The Second Mile. He plans to appeal, arguing among other things that his defence was not given enough time to prepare for trial after his arrest last November. Among the victims who spoke in court Tuesday was a young man who said he was 11 when Sandusky groped him in a shower in 1998. He said Sandusky is in denial and should "stop coming up with excuses." "Ive been left with deep painful wounds that you caused and had been buried in the garden of my heart for many years," he said. Another man said he was 13 in 2001 when Sandusky lured him into a Penn State sauna and then a shower and forced him to touch the ex-coach. "I am troubled with flashbacks of his naked body, something that will never be erased from my memory," he said.dddddddddddd After the sentencing, prosecutor Joe McGettigan praised the victims courage and dismissed Sanduskys comments as "a masterpiece of banal self-delusion, completely untethered from reality and without any acceptance of responsibility." "It was entirely self-focused as if he, again, were the victim," McGettigan said. Lawyers for the victims said they were satisfied with the sentence, but with four lawsuits brought against Penn State and several more expected, and Penn State labouring under severe NCAA penalties, cleaning up in the wake of what may be the biggest scandal in college sports history may take years. Ben Andreozzi, a lawyer for one the victims, said the university needs to do more: "Its important they understand before we get into serious discussions about money, that there are other, noneconomic issues. We need apologies. We need changes in policy. This isnt just about money." Penn State fired Paterno after Sanduskys arrest, and the coach died of lung cancer three months later. The scandal also brought down university president Graham Spanier. Two university administrators, Gary Schultz and Tim Curley, are awaiting trial in January on charges they failed to properly report suspicions about Sandusky and lied to the grand jury that investigated him. Over the summer, an investigation commissioned by Penn State and led by former FBI Director Louis Freeh concluded that Paterno and other top officials covered up allegations against Sandusky for more than a decade to avoid bad publicity. After the report came out, the NCAA fined Penn State a record US$60 million, barred the football team from post-season play for four years, cut the number of scholarships it can award, and erased 14 years of victories for Paterno, stripping him of his standing as the coach with the most career wins in big-time college football. In a three-minute recorded statement aired Monday night by Penn State radio, Sandusky described himself as the victim of a "well-orchestrated effort" by his accusers, the media, Penn State, plaintiffs attorneys and others -- a claim the judge dismissed on Tuesday as an unbelievable conspiracy theory. "I speak today with hope in my heart for a brighter day, not knowing if that day will come," Sandusky said. "Many moments have been spent looking for a purpose. Maybe it will help others, some vulnerable children who might have been abused, might not be, as a result of the publicity." After the sentencing, Penn State president Rodney Erickson said in a statement: "Our thoughts today, as they have been for the last year, go out to the victims of Jerry Sanduskys abuse. While todays sentence cannot erase what has happened, hopefully it will provide comfort to those affected by these horrible events." cheap nfl jerseys wholesale jerseys ' ' '
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