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A perfect game from Doc Halladay, a walk (carted) off Grand Salami, Huff carted off after line drive off skull. Strange day in BB yesterday.

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- Kendry Morales took a leap toward home plate and all of a sudden, a jubilant trip around the bases turned into a deflating trip to the disabled list.

Morales broke his left leg after hitting a game-ending grand slam in the 10th inning of the Los Angeles Angels' 5-1 victory against Seattle on Saturday.

Morales landed awkwardly when he jumped on home plate and twisted his left ankle. He had to be carted off the field and taken to the hospital. He was placed on the 15-day disabled list.

"It'll change the way we celebrate," Angels manager Mike Scioscia said before the extent of Morales' injury was known. "It sure was exciting, but you always wonder if it's an accident waiting to happen. This is definitely unfortunate. We've just got to wait and see what we're dealing with. We'll know more information as the night moves on.""It's definitely not the mood we would expect in the clubhouse after a win, but when something like that happens, it's definitely disturbing," he said. "These guys all feel bad about what happened, but you've got to pick up the pieces and get ready to play tomorrow. It's a lesson for all of us."

A smiling Morales threw down his helmet a few steps from the plate, took a hop and then jumped toward the plate as teammates began to pat him on the head. Morales quickly went down and grimaced as he rolled onto his back.

He lay on the ground for at least 10 minutes and waved his arms to the cheering fans as he was driven away."Anytime you have a walk-off hit, everybody celebrates at home plate," said starting pitcher Jered Weaver, who was icing his arm while watching the situation unfold on television. "It was just a fluke thing. You never want to see anything like that happen to a guy like that who's having a great start to the season -- or anybody for that matter.

Hopefully it's not as serious as we think, but we're going to have to deal with it.""Obviously, we're going to have to change the way we go about celebrating something like that," he said.Players who hit game-winning home runs often toss off their batting helmets as they head home, hoping their teammates won't pat them too hard on the head during wild celebrations.Angels center fielder Torii Hunter left the game with a bruised left hand after getting hit by a pitch in the first inning.

The three-time All-Star and nine-time Gold Glove recipient is batting .272 with seven homers and 29 RBIs in 47 games. But his concern over Morales was his first priority."I'm just worried about Kendry. He's one of our best hitters.

To see a great moment go sour like that, it's pretty bad. Hopefully he's just got a sprained ankle or something small like that," Hunter said."It's tough. You don't want to see him hurt like that. I was in here, checking out my X-rays and icing my wrist, but I was watching the game and screaming after the home run. But the screams just went to silence.

I've never seen that in baseball, and that might be cut out in this organization.
 

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arnie11 wrote:
Is crying in Hockey allowed ??? :WW:WW:WW

:%:%:%
No! Just ask Jeremy Roenick when he was a Flyer.

His jaw broken in 19 places misses a few game.

or

Duncan Keith, loses 7 teeth in game 4 against the Sharks, misses 10 minutes.
 

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sportscenterisnext wrote:
arnie11 wrote:
Is crying in Hockey allowed ??? :WW:WW:WW

:%:%:%
No! Just ask Jeremy Roenick when he was a Flyer.

His jaw broken in 19 places misses a few game.

or

Duncan Keith, loses 7 teeth in game 4 against the Sharks, misses 10 minutes.
Just checkin. Remember............... no crying in hockey either. :madd
 

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I have Kendry on my fantasy baseball team, picked up another 1st baseman last night. Saw this morning that Morales fractured his leg and may be out for the remainder of the season. Waiting for Strasberg to get called up, he has been taking up space on my lineup since the start of the season. Looks like a week or so before that happens.
 

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They HAVE TO STOP the silly celebrations and now someone has gotten seriously hurt. THAT TEAM IS NOT EVEN GOOD and they were celebrating like they won the Championship. This was a dumb injury and they HAVE to stop these pointless home plate pig piles where people just have the real potential to get injured, or worse.
 

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thunderingpants wrote:
I have Kendry on my fantasy baseball team, picked up another 1st baseman last night. Saw this morning that Morales fractured his leg and may be out for the remainder of the season. Waiting for Strasberg to get called up, he has been taking up space on my lineup since the start of the season. Looks like a week or so before that happens.
He had his worst minor league performance yesterday. I'm looking forward to seeing how well he handles his 1st MLB start, and suture starts, I will probably select him that day, hope he does not get shelled!
 

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sportscenterisnext wrote:
thunderingpants wrote:
I have Kendry on my fantasy baseball team, picked up another 1st baseman last night. Saw this morning that Morales fractured his leg and may be out for the remainder of the season. Waiting for Strasberg to get called up, he has been taking up space on my lineup since the start of the season. Looks like a week or so before that happens.
He had his worst minor league performance yesterday. I'm looking forward to seeing how well he handles his 1st MLB start, and suture starts, I will probably select him that day, hope he does not get shelled!
Yeah, I ended up with him draft day, do an auto draft through yahoo because I don't follow baseball that much. I try to follow my players throughout the season. I have a pretty good pitching staff, so I left him on the bench awaiting his debut and will go from there. He has been tearing up the minors except for his last outing, we will see.
 

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Wow what a freak accident.That blows.They definately have to cut out that celebrating at the plate like that.It's getting old any way.You can celebrate it in a traditional manner.Cross home plate,and get congatulated by your team mates with hand shakes,and high fives period.
 

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Domtime wrote:
Wow what a freak accident.That blows.They definately have to cut out that celebrating at the plate like that.It's getting old any way.You can celebrate it in a traditional manner.Cross home plate,and get congatulated by your team mates with hand shakes,and high fives period.
I like the pie in the face, ala 3 Stooges.
 

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The Unbearable Lightness of Perfect Games
From Baseball Nerd

There have been 20 official Perfect Games (sorry, Harvey Haddix; sorry, Pedro Martinez) in baseball history, and thanks to Dallas Braden and now Roy Halladay, there have been two of them in just twenty days.

Of course it's more preposterous than that. Because Mark Buehrle threw his perfecto for the White Sox just last July 23rd, there have now been three perfect games (15 percent of all of them, ever) in the last 130 days of Major League Baseball play.

Wait - it gets worse. The first perfect game, by Lee Richmond of Worcester of the National League, was thrown on June 12, 1880. The second, by Johnny Ward of Providence (also still in the NL that season), took place just five days later. So now we're talking about a quarter of all of them, ever, being concentrated in a net span of 135 days of play.

Wait - it gets worse still.After Richmond and Ward set the standard for pitching perfection in less than a week, the next perfect game thrown in their league, was a mere 84 years and four days after Ward's, on June 21, 1964. That was Jim Bunning's 27-for-27 against the Mets, which, to round it out neatly, was the last such game thrown by a Philadelphia Phillies' pitcher until Halladay did it tonight in Miami.

And yes, therein lies the last bizarre coincidence. Halladay's victim: Florida. Braden's, three weeks ago? Tampa Bay. Buehrle's, last year? Tampa Bay. Those three perfect games in the 130-day span were each against the two Florida teams.

HELMETS AND GROUP HUGS:
Baseball got lucky again; David Huff of the Indians was sending out his own health updates on Twitter, and actually back in the ballpark with his teammates before they finished their rally against the Yankees.

But the luck can't last forever: at the current rate of growth of bat speed, a pitcher will be maimed or killed before the decade is out, and the sport must take any action that will even slightly reduce the chance or delay the possibility.

The easiest solution has been mentioned here before: since at the end of their deliveries, pitchers are closer to batters, than batters were when the pitchers released the ball, pitchers and batters alike should be wearing helmets. Period.

As to the Kendry Morales disaster, this too has been coming for awhile (ask Jake Peavy about it, or Denny Hocking). You are not excluded from the laws of physics just because you're happy and celebrating. Presumably this needs no new rules, just players seeing the videotape.
 
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