erous Grand Slam embarrassments from the past.Y

#1 von mary123 , 25.10.2019 09:31

Editors note: This story originally ran on Aug. 2, 2016.For as far back as Jose Fernandez can remember, he was throwing rocks in the streets of Santa Clara, Cuba.Id throw a lot at peoples houses and peoples doors -- that wasnt cool. I got my ass whipped a lot of times for doing that, Fernandez said.So his family had no other choice but to let him play baseball -- maybe then he would quit throwing rocks.I started playing when I was five, and after that I noticed that I was good, Fernandez said. My family, a lot of coaches, told me, Hey, hes very good. Theyd tell my mom this. I always had a good arm. I used to play forever. In Cuba, you love baseball as soon as you can play.Part of his story will always be about a Cuban immigrant coming to America no matter the cost. After three failed attempts to defect from Cuba; after time in jail for trying to defect; after finally making it to Mexico, then Tampa, then Braulio Alonso High School in Tampa; after being drafted in 2011 by the Marlins, he debuted in the majors on April 7, 2013.In his first season in the majors, he went 12-6, won rookie of the year and had a 2.19 ERA with 187 strikeouts.The following season a devastating injury forced the 21-year-old to undergo Tommy John surgery on May 19, 2014.I always believed, Fernandez said, then pausing for a minute.Ive been through so much in my life already. I always believed this was just another step, and I just had to follow the process.Fernandez never doubted surgery was the right path, but after being in the operating room for two hours, he woke up with a bandage from his upper arm down to his wrist and was in a great deal of pain.When somebody like Jose is having an operation to save their career, to get back to doing what they love to do, or do professionally, crossing that bridge and taking the last few steps to having an operation is an emotional thing for most of these guys, said Dr. Neal ElAttrache, the orthopedic surgeon who performed Fernandezs surgery.So you can imagine what it must be like to face doing this, going under anesthesia and having a two-hour operation, waking up and having pain. Pain enough to think, Wow, I dont know if I can move my elbow without pain, let alone get back to pitching.Fernandez echoed that sentiment: It was scary. It was lonely, you know? ... It was tough times. The team was playing well and I couldnt be there to help. It was tough, it was tough.In his first full season back since the surgery, Fernandez is making a remarkable comeback. His 2.79 ERA ranks third in the National League and his 184 strikeouts are second.Part of this success comes from the way Fernandez went about his rehab process.Jose was wonderful. I went through a brief process with him of what it means to make a new ligament, ElAttrache said. Hes a bright guy, so he got it. ... I told him, Keep in mind, you tore the ligament that God gave you by throwing the ball 100 mph. You can definitely tear the one I put in. So please, give me every chance you can give me to let this thing heal and become a living ligament again. He got it.For an elite athlete like Fernandez, the greatest challenge to full recovery is wanting to do too much too soon.You sit down with the player and you begin with, Everybody including you wants you to pitch. You were without this game for over a year and a half. I do not want that to become a permanent dynamic, said Scott Boras, Fernandezs agent.Part of the plan was occasionally doing a light workout, just enough to wake up his muscles.The way we did it, we built in rest during the process that we didnt need, because why not? Fernandez said. Why not take a break? Every month or so wed just take a week off from throwing. I think that helped a lot.After the surgery, Fernandez said he also began to take a closer look at his pitching mechanics.Im really big with mechanics, said Fernandez. I know and I feel when I do something wrong. My arm glove was low. It was flying open. So my arm glove was flying open and my elbow was coming lower and I was putting a lot more pressure on my elbow.Fernandez is a high-velocity pitcher. This year his average fastball velocity, 95.1 mph, ranks fifth fastest in the majors. But he is learning how to pitch and not just powering through and blowing his fastball by everybody.J.T. Realmuto, the Marlins catcher who has known Fernandez since 2012 when they were in the minors together, sees this in Fernandez as well. He said Fernandez has been doing a better job with his fastball location the past few months.Earlier this season, he was trying to light up the radar gun, throw 98 or 99, Realmuto said. But as this season has gone on, he has developed and learned that location is just as important as velocity.While Fernandezs strikeout to innings pitched ratio is 13.18 and leads the majors, Realmuto said Fernandez is no longer trying to just strike people out.Marlins manager Don Mattingly agreed.I think hes trying to grow up as a pitcher, develop and mature for his long-term development, Mattingly said. I think thats what he knows, that were after his long-term health.The bigger questions now are about protecting a talented young pitcher. As the Marlins get deeper into the season, at what cost to Fernandezs long-term health is a win worth? Will fans demand the ace of the pitching staff put his career on the line for a few postseason games? Will Fernandez himself take the time to slow down and develop into a pitcher who will be around in the majors until hes 35 years old?On April 29, 2016, Mattingly pulled Fernandezs teammate, left-hander Adam Conley, out of the game against the Milwaukee Brewers four outs shy of a no-hitter. The 25-year-olds pitch count was at 116 pitches. After that game, Fernandez spoke to Mattingly.So, Jose is like, You couldnt do that to me, Mattingly said. I said, Why not? How many would you be willing to throw? He said, However many it takes. So, thats his thought process, right? And he said, Well, Id get an extra day the next day out. And I said, What about the rest of your career? What if you never pitch again? Hes like, I dont want to think about that. So, they dont think about that. We take it seriously, that were trying to help him develop and be good for a long, long time.ElAttrache said a pitcher in his first full season back after Tommy John surgery should not be exposed to more innings or more pitches than they had in the year they got injured.Following the All-Star break, Fernandez skipped a start to help rest his arm and reduce his innings pitched.Thats part of the plan where we have a range for him, said Michael Hill, the Marlins president of baseball operations. We will continue to follow that and be mindful of his stressful pitches, and his stressful innings, and make sure that we have him for the long haul.Teams talk a lot about innings limits and stressful pitches, but the true test of how Fernandez will be handled by the Marlins comes as the postseason approaches. Right now, the Marlins are second in the NL wild-card race. Before the injury, Fernandez had a maximum of 172 2/3 innings pitched. Entering Tuesdays start against the Chicago Cubs, Fernandez has pitched 125 2/3 innings.We get very worried in these high-velocity pitchers whenever their exposure is not only equaling but surpassing their exposure prior to their injury, ElAttrache said.But Fernandez said he is sticking to the plan for how his workload would be handled.We all understand whats at stake; its a career youre putting on the line, Fernandez said.Fernandez doesnt want to live with any regrets. He thinks about how many kids in America would love to play in the majors and finds beauty in how hard the game is.I compete. I compete like crazy, Fernandez said. That is just the person I am. I like to have fun. I want for people to say he was always having fun. I want people to say he was a hard worker, that hes not going to give up. Thats it. Thats all I can ask.Added Boras: This kid lives on an edge, an absolute edge not knowing. The guy comes here from a foreign country. Everything in his life is around baseball and his career. Hes not made any money at all, really. The security of his family, the well-being of his family are all on the line. His want to play the game is on the line. All these things are there.Fernandezs story will always be about baseball. He will give the game of baseball everything he has. The ending to his story, though, will be determined by how baseball treats Fernandez.Baseball is my life, Fernandez said. Its just fun, man, to come out on the field and to do what your dream is. Sometimes we forget that. Air Max 200 Nz . The news was first reported on Gonzalezs Twitter account and confirmed by the Rockies. Gonzalez has a six-week window before position players have their first workout at spring training in Arizona. Nike Air Max Axis Nz .ca NBA Power Rankings, ahead of the Miami Heat and San Antonio Spurs. http://www.airmaxnzwholeale.com/ . Radwanska, making her debut in the Seoul tournament, hit eight aces in a match that lasted 1 hour, 4 minutes at Olympic Park tennis stadium. "It was definitely a very good match -- I was playing really good tennis," Radwanska said. Nike Air Max 2020 NZ . Boucher previously coached the Tampa Bay Lightning and had a 97-78-20 record over two-plus seasons. He was dismissed by the team last March after the Lightning struggled in the lockout-shortened season with a 13-18-1 record. Air Max 97 Nz Cheap . Cote was eligible to become a free agent Feb. 15. Cote helped running back Jon Cornish run for a league-high 1,813 rushing yards en route to being named the leagues most outstanding player. NEW YORK -- Venus Williams stood on the floor of Arthur Ashe Stadium on Monday afternoon with a guttural roar rising all around her. The racket dangled loosely in her right hand alongside her thigh, a sheen of perspiration on her upturned face. She savored the approval of the crowd and took a moment to drink it all in, having just arrived at match point late in the third set of her fourth-round dispute with US Open No. 10 seed Karolina Pliskova.Across the net, Pliskova felt very lonely.But at least I have my serve, she remembered thinking. So at least something was on my side. I was just thinking, I have to go. I have to put everything into this point. And yeah, I made it.Dismissing the match point enabled Pliskova to hold serve for 5-all in the final set, and from there, she went on to win the 2-hour, 24-minute barnburner 6-4, 6-4, 7-6 (3).The match will be remembered by many spectators as a heartbreaker and the long moment when a courageous, boundary-shattering, exemplary woman and uber-athlete of 36 was denied a thoroughly deserved win. It will seem to some that justice, even if only the poetic variety, was not served.But looking at it that way is the real injustice, and Williams would be the first to tell you that. She had a wonderful time. She acquitted herself beautifully in her own eyes. The love showered upon her by the crowd was inspirational. She said, It was a high-, high-quality match. Its such an amazing feeling. I enjoyed every single moment of that.Pliskova arrived in New York with a hot hand, having logged back-to-back wins over No. 3 Garbine Muguruza and No. 2 Angelique Kerber in winning Cincinnati. But she was carrying some heavy baggage too, in the form of a growing reputation as a Grand Slam underachiever. Ranked No. 11 (and as high as No. 7 in the past), Pliskova was the only member of the top 20 who had not been as far as the fourth round at a major. Her record at Grand Slams before the Williams match: 16-17.The first two women Pliskova had beaten had an average ranking of No. 217. Williams had two US Open titles and a 74-14 record at Flushing Meadows. Speculating on what she might do to Pliskova in the cauldron of Ashe was an ugly enterprise.But one counterintuitive factor escaped everyones attention: In many of the ways that count, the 36-year-old Williams and the 24-year-old from the Czech Republic are mirror images. It was suggested in their previous meeting. They played in Zhuhai, where Williams won in just more than two grueling hours 7-5, 7-6 (6).Like Williams, Pliskova is a lean 6-foot-1. The engine driving her game is a big serve. (They cracked eight aces apiece in Mondays match.) Pliskova leads the WTA Tour in aces. Williams and Pliskova both whale on the ball off the ground, looking to force the action, open the court and create an opportunity to move forward.dddddddddddd Each of them is a glutton for pace, giving and taking it with gusto. Williams might be the greater athlete, but age is a great leveler.The similarity between the women also might explain why the match was played in such an air of poise and dignity. Both women wore their hair pulled back and out of the way. They wore understated tennis dresses. Neither of them indulged in fist-pumping or emotional outbursts, even in the most pumped-up or emotional moments.The factors holding Pliskova back have been largely mental; the one quality she doesnt share with Williams is that basic champions cocktail of will, talent and confidence. But she might be getting there. The win Monday certainly shatters memories of numerous Grand Slam embarrassments from the past.Yeah, I hope they will stop [talking about my Grand Slam failures], Pliskova said. Even if they will discuss in the future, I dont care.Its a reasonable stance, given how this match played out. Pliskova started slowly. She spotted Williams the first set after falling behind 3-0. It looked like a blowout might be in the works when Williams went ahead 3-1 in the second set, but Pliskova broke right back, and from that point, it was game on. Her own serve improved, and Williams began making errors off the ground.Still, Williams reached match point at 4-5, 30-40 in the third set. While the crowd roared, Pliskova held counsel with her serve and then decided to go to the forehand. She tagged a good one. Williams belted it back. Pliskova hammered out a sharp reply and moved in to finish the point with a forehand volley.The threat was neutralized, and Williams was never again in position to win. But she had no regrets about how the match point played out.She had a great serve. She hit another great shot, and I still played a great defensive shot, Williams said. I did the best I could on that. Whenever you have a match point on someone elses serve, its a little bit of an asterisk. I really have no regrets on that.Indeed, Williams had no reason to regret anything -- not on this day, not in this tournament and perhaps not in her career. That career, incidentally, is still a work in progress. Williams said so, and Pliskova endorsed her desire to continue.I still have the feeling she can play for so many years because shes moving so well, Pliskova said. I remember her. I was [a] little girl watching her, obviously Serena, on TV. They are still playing. They are still playing the best tennis ever. Its amazing. ' ' '

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