-
OCTOBER TERM, 2000
Syllabus
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PLAYERS ASSOCIATION v. GARVEY
ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF CER...
-
Apparently there was a high school baseball prospect showcase held at Rock Bridge on Wednesday.
According to prepbaseballreport.com, several of the top Missouri prospects for 2012 and 2013 attended the one-day event. A few Columbia kids just happened to impress the PBR scouts, too.
-
No matter how many athletes' lives he might have improved with his orthoscopic breakthroughs, Dr. Frank Jobe's legacy in the sports world will be defined by three words: Tommy John surgery.
Nearly 200 Major League Baseball players - not all of them pitchers - have had their careers extended by the ulnar collateral ligament replacement surgery in their elbow, which Jobe decided to try with the 31-year-old John when he was a Dodgers left-handed pitcher in 1974 and on the verge of retirement.
-
TIMESLAND
Drew Bailey
-
From staff reports The Southern Connecticut Diamond Club will honor 35 area high school baseball players at its annual award banquet Sunday at Monticello's Restaurant in Meriden.
Each player will be presented with the John Whitey Piurek "There's No I In Team" Award. The club will also present the Samuel Burrell, Jr. Coach of the Year award to North Branford coach Billy Mitchell.
-
BOWIE - Ninety of the top rising senior high school baseball players in the state of Maryland descended on Prince George's Stadium on Tuesday night to participate in the Maryland State Association of Baseball Coaches' Junior Classic.
Of those numerous elite ballplayers in attendance, 15 competed for either Anne Arundel County public or private schools this past spring and they composed more than half of the East Team that battled against a contingent from the South region in the first of two scheduled games.
-
For most baseball fans, October signals the start of the post- season. For attorney David N. Pessin, October means it's prenup season.
This year, Pessin's desk is layered with the details of half a dozen prenuptial agreements that need hammering out so players can get hitched and honeymoon before they dust off their cleats and return to the diamonds next February in Florida or Arizona.
-
- United States of America, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Comprehensive Drug Testing, Inc., Defendant-Appellee. Major League Baseball Players Association, Petitioner-Appellee, v. United States of America, Respondent-Appellant. in Re Search Warrants Executed on April 8, 2004 At Cdt, Inc., Seal 1, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Seal 2, Defendant-Appellee., 473 F.3d 915 (9th Cir. 2006)
Elliot R. Peters, Keker & Van Nest, LLP, San Francisco, CA, argued the cause for movants-appellees Comprehensive Drug Testing, Inc., and Major League ...
-
TIMESLAND
Robbie Andrews (Covington/VCU)
-
WINFIELD - There is no concession stand, no scoreboard, and no organ music filling the air. The press box is not open, but that is not a problem because there are plenty of seats in the bleachers available ... and there are only six people in attendance, and one brought a chair. This is baseball for players whom the parade already has passed by ... and they dont care. Its a sunny day, a field, a couple of umpires, and 20-some guys who love the game perhaps the sport in its purest form. The players in the West Virginia Mens Senior Baseball League enjoy every minute of it. This league is really for guys that still love the game and respect its nuances and traditions, said league president and Pirates Manager Kenny Phillips. It was the seventh-place Reds versus the second- place Pirates o...