With the World Series complete, some questions to ponder as Shohei Ohtani officially hits the open market as a free agent.
Author: Michael
Led by a GM on a mission, a legendary manager, a few proven veterans and an assembly of young stars, Texas delivered the first title in the franchise’s history.
At 8:09 p.m. Mountain Standard Time on Nov. 1, Corey Seager smiled.
He had smiled before, of course. His teammates hate the idea—which, in fairness, Seager perpetuates—that their shortstop is a collection of wires and gears programmed to mash baseballs and mutter monosyllabically. Seager smiled before Game 5 of the World Series when Rangers backup catcher Austin Hedges told him, “We’re going to win this game. And then I’m going to get you so drunk on tequila that I can take all your fantasy football players from you.
Everyone already knew what Corey Seager could bring to the table because he’s done it before. This postseason the World Series MVP ensured that nobody will ever forget it.
The Raiders and any other team pursuing Jim Harbaugh will have to ask some important questions. And until there is a concrete answer, any other suggestion will fall into speculation.
An old Michigan nemesis helped set a unique precedent involving Roger Goodell showing solidarity with an NCAA ruling and punishment.
After the Mets trade him at the deadline to the Texas Rangers, Max Scherzer spoke about winning his second World Series.
It wasn’t pretty but the Warriors survived a scare from the Kings thanks to a Klay Thompson game-winner with 0.2 seconds remaining.
Two seasons after losing 102 games, the Rangers completed a remarkable turnaround Wednesday night by finishing off the Diamondbacks in five games to clinch their first World Series title.
Corey Seager, who led the way for the Rangers as they claimed their first World Series crown, joined Reggie Jackson as just the second player to win World Series MVP awards for two different teams.