Saturday, April 17, 2010

Mark Buehrle play already best of 2010 – on Opening Day

Did you see that Opening Day Mark Buehrle play?Look into that video link at http://www.mlb.com/video/play.jsp?content_id=7282679 because it’s a play you quite possibly never see in a game again. Attacking the strike zone with his wide variety of high-movement pitches is exactly what the Chicago White Sox is known for.

Although he isn't the hardest thrower within the Major league, he nevertheless delivers the ball quickly and disrupts the hitters with his timing.

Sterling control along with these elements made him a successful pitcher in recent years and has made him one of the few hurlers who have played a perfect game. But the now infamous Mark Buehrle play was all about defense, with all the razzle dazzle fans crave. Many people would need a payday loanto afford a Gold Glove. Mark Buehrle earns it on the field.

The Mark Buehrle play can't be planned because it is amazing

According to Sports Illustrated, the Mark Buehrle play was one of the best plays that numerous players on the field had ever seen. Both the Cleveland Indians and the Chicago White Sox wonder how Mark Buehrle was able to track down that liner that went off his foot and squirted toward first base, and, with his back to first base, shovel the ball with the glove between his legs and back to first base to get the big out. To add to the amazing, the White Sox first baseman, Paul Konerko, barehanded the Mark Buehrle play.

Opening Day 2010 was a banner day for baseball

To add to the Mark Buehrle play, Albert Pujols got two home runs for the Cardinals, Jason Heyward, Braves rookie, homered in his first Major League regular season as a batter, and Blue Jay's pitcher Shaun Marcum had a no hitter into the seventh inning. Pujols and Jeyward definitely will hit more home runs before the end, and Marcum's game went south after the first hit was given up.

The Mark Buehrle play, however, is unique and will reside in memory. It may have already earned him his second straight Gold Glove – unofficially at this point, of course.

Mark Buehrle’s perfect game last season was saved by defense

Nevertheless, that defense was not his own. Outfielder DeWayne Wise, who was introduced as a late-innings defensive replacement, went back on a ball that would are a certain home run – if he hadn’t been able to make a great leap and grab the ball just before it cleared the wall. In Major League history, Wise's defensive play was just the thing needed to conserve a perfect game. The perfect game was the 2009 Mark Buehrle play of course.

A history of success for Mark Buehrle

When fans think about the best pitchers within the game, Mark Buehrle’s name generally isn’t the first to come up. Zack Greinke, Felix Hernandez, Tim Lincecum and Chris Carpenter are usually at the top of the heap, but consider Buehrle’s record.

He has won 60 percent of his games, which is good, winning 136 and losing 97 in his career, and threw 200 innings or more in nine straight seasons. He is definitely a workhorse. With a World Series title in 2005, a no hitter in 2008,and a perfect game and a Gold Glove all in 2009, you have a pitcher who often times goes under the radar. All of that amounts to quick cash at contract negotiation time.



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