• Re: National champs! Ole Miss beats Oklahoma, wins first College World

    From Lol! FU edell...@21:1/5 to governor.swill@gmail.com on Mon Jun 27 08:14:16 2022
    XPost: alt.fan.states.mississippi, alt.politics.republicans, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    In article <t1d64c$2v8hl$25@news.freedyn.de>
    <governor.swill@gmail.com> wrote:

    Democrats are dumb fucking hillbillies.

    OMAHA, Neb. — Of all the Ole Miss baseball teams, in all of
    coach Mike Bianco's 22 years, after all the ups and downs and
    heartbreaks and close losses and tribulations and downright
    bummers, this is the team that finally brings a trophy back to
    Oxford.

    This Ole Miss baseball team won a national championship. The
    2022 Rebels defeated Oklahoma 4-2 in comeback fashion Sunday,
    seizing three runs in the eighth inning to bring home the first
    NCAA-recognized men's sports championship in school history.

    This team, that fell from No. 1 in the polls in March to 7-14 in
    SEC play and in jeopardy of missing the conference tournament on
    May 1.

    This team, that benched all of its starting pitchers in April
    and had to rely on a junior college transfer and a freshman to
    save its season.

    This team, that lost four straight series in April, lost clean-
    up hitter Kevin Graham for a month to a wrist injury, lost
    sophomore Calvin Harris to an oblique injury when he was batting
    .524 and lost transfer portal pitchers Jack Washburn and John
    Gaddis to an ankle injury and an appendectomy in April.

    This team, that was the last at-large bid selected into the NCAA
    Tournament.

    This team is the last team standing. Champions of the world. The
    team that brings Oxford back the trophy it so dearly wants.

    "There's so much to be said about how much we overcame this
    year, how much we had to fight through, how much we had to pick
    each other up and never let ourselves get too down," senior
    captain Tim Elko said. "This story of our season is going to be
    told for years and years and years to come. This is the best Ole
    Miss baseball team in history, and it feels so good, and it's an
    honor to be a part of it."

    It's impossible to overstate the improbability of all this. Ole
    Miss wasn't just bad two months ago. The Rebels were so bad they
    were making bad teams look good. Alabama, South Carolina and
    Mississippi State took series from the Rebels in three
    consecutive weeks and then all missed the NCAA Tournament.

    Then, after May 1, something clicked. The Rebels won 18 of their
    last 22 games, outscoring their opponents 160-74. Ole Miss went
    10-1 in 11 NCAA Tournament games, pitching three shutouts and
    averaging 7.5 runs per game.

    Everything culminated in five wins at Charles Schwab Field in
    Omaha, matching the number of College World Series the Rebels
    had in their history before this trip.

    "Life is tough, and there's bad things that happen to
    everybody," Bianco said. "Good people, bad things happen. These
    guys have worked really hard, and I think they've showed a lot
    of people that you can fall down, you can stumble and you can
    fail, but that doesn't mean you're a failure. If you continue to
    work hard, you continue to push and you continue to believe, as
    Tim said, you can accomplish anything."

    Closer Brandon Johnson recorded the last out of Sunday's
    decisive win. He struck out the side on 14 pitches, then blacked
    out. The senior said he usually has a choreographed celebration
    for every save. This time, he had nothing. After all the team
    had been through, he felt nothing. No performance. No
    celebration. Just pure, uninterrupted shock.

    Then his teammates spilled out of the dugout and came chugging
    his direction. Senior Ben Van Cleve cautioned his teammates to
    get ready for pain. He warned them they might have to endure
    three or four minutes of discomfort on the bottom of the pile
    because it wasn't moving.

    Graham's emotions oscillated between shock and exhilaration. One
    moment he looked dumbfounded. The other he was crying.

    Dylan DeLucia, the tournament's Most Outstanding Player was all
    smiles. He greeted his family down the first base line with
    spinning hugs and promises to party.

    Senior Max Cioffi is one of the few players who's been on the
    team since 2018. He endured a home regional loss as a national
    seed his freshman year, a super regional loss one win short of
    Omaha his sophomore year, the elimination of his junior season
    by COVID-19, a Tommy John surgery that took away his senior
    season and all the ups and downs of 2022.

    Through all that, Cioffi knows this team is the one that won it
    all.

    "There was just so much failure," Cioffi said. "We were so close
    for so long. Gosh. But I tell you what, it's worth it. It sure
    is worth it."

    Contact Nick Suss at nsuss@gannett.com and follow on Twitter
    @nicksuss.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/college/baseball/2022/06/2 6/college-world-series-ole-miss-beats-oklahoma-first-
    title/7742001001/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lol! FU edell...@21:1/5 to governor.swill@gmail.com on Mon Jun 27 07:43:56 2022
    XPost: alt.fan.states.mississippi, alt.politics.republicans, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    In article <XnsAC96C0BE265F3PhantomView@95.216.243.224> <governor.swill@gmail.com> wrote:

    Democrats are dumb fucking hillbillies.

    OMAHA, Neb. — Of all the Ole Miss baseball teams, in all of
    coach Mike Bianco's 22 years, after all the ups and downs and
    heartbreaks and close losses and tribulations and downright
    bummers, this is the team that finally brings a trophy back to
    Oxford.

    This Ole Miss baseball team won a national championship. The
    2022 Rebels defeated Oklahoma 4-2 in comeback fashion Sunday,
    seizing three runs in the eighth inning to bring home the first
    NCAA-recognized men's sports championship in school history.

    This team, that fell from No. 1 in the polls in March to 7-14 in
    SEC play and in jeopardy of missing the conference tournament on
    May 1.

    This team, that benched all of its starting pitchers in April
    and had to rely on a junior college transfer and a freshman to
    save its season.

    This team, that lost four straight series in April, lost clean-
    up hitter Kevin Graham for a month to a wrist injury, lost
    sophomore Calvin Harris to an oblique injury when he was batting
    .524 and lost transfer portal pitchers Jack Washburn and John
    Gaddis to an ankle injury and an appendectomy in April.

    This team, that was the last at-large bid selected into the NCAA
    Tournament.

    This team is the last team standing. Champions of the world. The
    team that brings Oxford back the trophy it so dearly wants.

    "There's so much to be said about how much we overcame this
    year, how much we had to fight through, how much we had to pick
    each other up and never let ourselves get too down," senior
    captain Tim Elko said. "This story of our season is going to be
    told for years and years and years to come. This is the best Ole
    Miss baseball team in history, and it feels so good, and it's an
    honor to be a part of it."

    It's impossible to overstate the improbability of all this. Ole
    Miss wasn't just bad two months ago. The Rebels were so bad they
    were making bad teams look good. Alabama, South Carolina and
    Mississippi State took series from the Rebels in three
    consecutive weeks and then all missed the NCAA Tournament.

    Then, after May 1, something clicked. The Rebels won 18 of their
    last 22 games, outscoring their opponents 160-74. Ole Miss went
    10-1 in 11 NCAA Tournament games, pitching three shutouts and
    averaging 7.5 runs per game.

    Everything culminated in five wins at Charles Schwab Field in
    Omaha, matching the number of College World Series the Rebels
    had in their history before this trip.

    "Life is tough, and there's bad things that happen to
    everybody," Bianco said. "Good people, bad things happen. These
    guys have worked really hard, and I think they've showed a lot
    of people that you can fall down, you can stumble and you can
    fail, but that doesn't mean you're a failure. If you continue to
    work hard, you continue to push and you continue to believe, as
    Tim said, you can accomplish anything."

    Closer Brandon Johnson recorded the last out of Sunday's
    decisive win. He struck out the side on 14 pitches, then blacked
    out. The senior said he usually has a choreographed celebration
    for every save. This time, he had nothing. After all the team
    had been through, he felt nothing. No performance. No
    celebration. Just pure, uninterrupted shock.

    Then his teammates spilled out of the dugout and came chugging
    his direction. Senior Ben Van Cleve cautioned his teammates to
    get ready for pain. He warned them they might have to endure
    three or four minutes of discomfort on the bottom of the pile
    because it wasn't moving.

    Graham's emotions oscillated between shock and exhilaration. One
    moment he looked dumbfounded. The other he was crying.

    Dylan DeLucia, the tournament's Most Outstanding Player was all
    smiles. He greeted his family down the first base line with
    spinning hugs and promises to party.

    Senior Max Cioffi is one of the few players who's been on the
    team since 2018. He endured a home regional loss as a national
    seed his freshman year, a super regional loss one win short of
    Omaha his sophomore year, the elimination of his junior season
    by COVID-19, a Tommy John surgery that took away his senior
    season and all the ups and downs of 2022.

    Through all that, Cioffi knows this team is the one that won it
    all.

    "There was just so much failure," Cioffi said. "We were so close
    for so long. Gosh. But I tell you what, it's worth it. It sure
    is worth it."

    Contact Nick Suss at nsuss@gannett.com and follow on Twitter
    @nicksuss.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/college/baseball/2022/06/2 6/college-world-series-ole-miss-beats-oklahoma-first-
    title/7742001001/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)