Pre-registration for MLB 9 Innings Season 23 has begun! this maybe help

 


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-Cy Young wins No. 511 (1911): Young wins four games in 1911 to bring his total for 511. Doubt we'll ever see that again.
-Ty Cobb beats up a handicapped fan (1912): The quintessential story surrounding Cobb's legendary temper.
-Babe Ruth converted to batter (1919): Before selling Ruth to the Yankees, the Red Sox shifted him from pitcher to right field and put him in the lineup full-time. Smart move.
-Bill Terry bats .401 (1930): Terry batted .401 in 1930 and to this day is still the last National League player to hit .400.
-Hiram Bithorn makes the majors (1942): Bithorn became the first Puerto Rican-born player to make the majors, opening a door for some of the greatest players to ever play the game.
-Herb Score injury (1957): Score was one of the great young pitchers in the game before being struck in the face with a line drive off the bat of Gil McDougald. He was never the same.
-Warren Spahn wins No. 363 (1965): On September 12, 1965, a 44-year-old Spahn walked off the mound for the final time as a winning pitcher after throwing a complete game in a 7-2 win over the Cubs.
Spahn's 363 wins is the most by any MLB lefty and since he recorded his final win in 1965, no lefty has come close to him.
-Mets draft Steve Chilcott over Reggie Jackson (1966): Imagine Reggie Jackson as a Mets icon instead of a Yankees legend. It should have happened.
-Ron Santo Day (1971): Santo struggled with diabetes in secrecy for his entire adult life. He didn't disclose his debilitating condition for his entire career and finally acknowledged it publicly at Ron Santo Day in 1971. His struggles were great, but he was an icon of Chicago baseball for 50 years.
-Steve Blass loses his control (1973): Blass was a top pitcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates for nearly a decade, until one day he just lost it. When Blass went out to pitch in the 1973 season, he simply couldn't throw a strike. He suffered from a mysterious mental block that came to be known as "Steve Blass Disease."
-Goose Gossage converted to closer (1977): In 1976 White Sox manager gave Rich Gossage a shot at the starting rotation. He went 9-17 and was shipped to the Pirates where he was converted to a closer. Thus began the Hall of Fame career of one of the position's pioneers.
-1981 Baseball Strike (1981): The strike caused the cancellation of 713 games and caused the season to be split into two halves.
-Sidd Finch (1985): Sports Illustrated decided to play an April Fool's joke by putting mysterious Mets prospect named Sidd Finch on their April 1st cover. Fans and reporters fell for the joke hard after reading George Plimpton's article that said he threw 168 mph among other things.
-Pete Rose vs. Dave Pallone (1988): Well at least one good thing that came out of Pete Rose's gambling scandal was that a lot of people forgot this ugly incident. Pallone made slight contact with Rose during an argument and Rose retaliated by shoving the umpire multiple times.
-Bo Jackson's All Star game home run (1989): For a stretch of time, it would be hard to argue that Bo Jackson wasn't the best athlete on the planet. His home run leading off the 1989 All Star game was one of the top moments of his career.
-Dave Stieb finally throws no hitter (1990): Steib was perhaps the biggest hard-luck pitcher when it came to potential no-hitters. He threw five one-hitters over a 15-month span and even took no-hitters into the ninth on consecutive starts. He lost a perfect game in the ninth as well. Steib finally broke through on September 2, 1990 and completed a no-hitter.
-Deion Sanders reaches World Series (1992): As a member of the Braves, Sanders participated in the 1992 World Series. He later would play in a Super Bowl, becoming the only person to accomplish that feat.
-Nolan Ryan pummels Robin Ventura (1993): Ryan may have been an old man, but he was a tough old man. Ventura found out the hard way when he charged the mound, was instantly put in a headlock and beaten about his head.
-Dwight Gooden throws no hitter (1996): Not many people have squandered as much talent as Gooden. During the mid-1980s, he was capable of throwing a no-hitter at any time. He never did. It was good to see Gooden finally have a crowning achievement when he finally threw a no-hitter in 1996.
-Marlins win World Series in walk-off game seven (1997): Edgar Renteria delivers Craig Counsell to give the Marlins a 3-2 win in the 11th inning to capture the World Series in walk-off fashion.
-Umpire walk out (1999): In 1999 more than 50 MLB umpires resigned as part of a labor negotiating ploy. It ended up being a major strategical blunder as MLB accepted the resignations of 22 umpires and didn't let them back.
-John Rocker (2000): Rocker set off a firestorm with comments in a Sports Illustrated article that attacked and offended just about everybody.
-Mike Piazza vs. Roger Clemens (2000): When Clemens fired the barrel of Piazza's broken bat at the slugger as he ran towards first base, many fans wondered why he would do such a thing. It was probably because he was a steroid-filled, angry psychopath.
-Amphetamines banned in baseball (2005): Although steroids got most of the headlines, the banishment "greenies" probably had a more wide-ranging effect on the game. The use of amphetamines dated back decades and was a common way for players to get through the season.
-Game 162 (2011): Coming into the final game of the season, the Rays needed to beat the Yankees and have the Red Sox lose to the Orioles to clinch a spot in the playoffs. The Rays were down 7-0 in the eight inning and the Red Sox had a late, 3-2 lead on the Orioles. Things looked bleak for Rays fans until they rallied for six runs in the bottom of the eight and tied the game on a two-out solo homer in the ninth.
In events that happened nearly simultaneously, The Orioles scored two runs in the bottom of the ninth for a walk-off win over the Red Sox and Evan Longoria hit a 12th inning homer to send the Rays to the postseaso

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