2013년 11월 30일 토요일

About 'cleveland brown helmet'-Pittsburgh Steelers pleased by razor-sharp offense in rout of Cleveland Browns







About 'cleveland brown helmet'-Pittsburgh Steelers pleased by razor-sharp offense in rout of Cleveland Browns








               Patriot               Games               

               New               England's               veteran               quarterback               Drew               Bledsoe               was               injured               early               in               the               2001               season,               recovered,               but               never               got               his               job               back.

Tom               Brady               took               over               and               guided               the               Pats               through               the               regular               schedule,               the               playoffs,               and               into               the               big               one.



               The               St.

Louis               Rams,               a               two-touchdown               favorite,               were               a               high-powered               scoring               machine               that               was               expected               to               dominate               the               Patriots               in               the               2002               Super               Bowl.

The               unflappable               24-year-old               Brady               in               his               second               NFL               season               gave               his               usual               solid               performance,               kept               the               Patriots               in               the               game               with               the               help               of               a               hard-bitten               defense,               and               engineered               the               final               drive.

With               the               score               tied               17-17               and               seconds               to               play,               the               Pats'               field-goal               specialist               Adam               Vinatieri               read               the               angle               on               a               48-yard               game-winning               kick,               waited               for               the               snap               and               placement,               and               under               everything-riding-on-it               pressure               nailed               it.

It               marked               the               first               Super               Bowl               ever               won               on               the               final               play               of               the               game³⁰               and               made               Tom               Brady               the               youngest               winning               quarterback               in               Super               Bowl               history.

(This               record               was               soon               broken.

In               2006,               23-year-old               Ben               Roethlisberger               quarterbacked               the               Pittsburgh               Steelers               win               over               the               Seattle               Seahawks               in               Super               Bowl               XL.)               

               The               record               crowd               that               turned               out               for               the               victory               parade               on               Boston               streets               a               few               days               later               didn't               know               that               it               was               the               first               of               several               Super               Bowl               celebrations.



Snowboots               Two               weeks               earlier,               the               Oakland               Raiders               were               in               New               England               for               a               playoff               game.

Vinatieri,               in               a               prelude               to               his               Super               Bowl               heroics,               kicked               two               crucial               field               goals               in               a               snowstorm.

The               first,               a               45-yarder               with               less               then               two               minutes               remaining               (the               storybook               Kick               in               the               Snow,               a               line               drive               that               could               have               knocked               a               bird               off               the               crossbar),               tied               the               game.

The               second               a               less-demanding,               but               still               difficult               kick               given               the               conditions               from               23               yards               gave               the               Pats               an               overtime               victory.

Placekicking               on               a               snowy               surface               is               about               as               easy               as               riding               a               bicycle               around               a               hockey               rink.

The               kick               can               be               made               (as               shown               by               the               best               clutch               placekicker               in               NFL               history),               but               the               results               are               usually               ugly.



               NOTE.

The               Raiders               will               be               forever               bitter.

Before               the               tying               kick               they               thought               they               had               recovered               a               fumble,               but               on               review               the               referee               ruled               that               Tom               Brady's               arm               was               moving               forward               as               he               was               tackled.

Hmm.
               Vinatieri's               wintry               kicks               against               the               Raiders               were               reminiscent               of               Pat               Summerall's               (yes,               the               announcer               Pat               Summerall)               long               field               goal               in               a               snowstorm               when               the               New               York               Giants               beat               the               Cleveland               Browns               to               win               the               1958               Eastern               Conference               title.

It               was               snowing               so               hard               that               Summerall               didn't               see               the               long               kick               (off               his               toe,               not               soccer               style)               go               through               the               goalposts               and               could               only               tell               it               was               good               by               the               roar               of               the               New               York               crowd.



               .
Has               He               Ever               Missed               a               Big               One?

After               a               one-year               break,               the               2004               Patriots               put               together               a               15-game               win               streak               to               again               reach               the               Super               Bowl,               this               time               against               the               Carolina               Panthers.

The               teams               were               well               matched,               and               like               the               Super               Bowl               against               the               Rams               two               years               earlier,               the               game               seesawed.

With               a               minute               left,               Carolina's               touchdown               tied               the               game               29-29.

Tom               Brady,               calm               and               precise               as               always,               quickly               guided               his               team               into               field-goal               range,               and,               like               the               climax               in               2002,               Adam               Vinatieri               came               onto               the               field               with               the               game               and               season               riding               on               his               ability               to               make               the               41-yard               kick.

Vinatieri               (has               he               ever               missed               a               must               field               goal?)               lined               it               up,               the               ball               looked               good               off               his               foot,               and               it               was.



               The               2004               Patriots'               15-game               win               streak               was               the               longest               since               the               1972               Miami               Dolphins               put               together               a               perfect               17-0               season.

New               England               coach               Bill               Belichick               is               a               master               improviser               and               probably               the               best               defensive               mind               in               the               game.

He               recruits               good               athletes               who               can               handle               multiple               positions:               Guards               play               linebacker               and               linebackers               become               receivers,               along               with               other               combinations               that               work.

Also,               like               his               intrepid               quarterback               Tom               Brady,               Bill               Belichick               is               a               forward-looking               model               of               consistency               and               discipline               who               knows               how               to               win.



               "If               you               live               in               the               past,               you               die               in               the               present."               -Bill               Belichick
               Three               Out               Of               Four
               New               England               played               most               of               the               fall               of               2004               with               a               defensive               secondary               that               was               decimated               by               injuries,               with               two               all-star               cornerbacks               out               for               the               season               and               the               strong               safety               out               for               several               games.

Not               to               worry,               Belichick               played               Troy               Brown               his               all-Pro               wide               receiver               at               cornerback,               and               the               reserve               defensive               backs               stepped               up.



The               Pats               cruised               through               the               regular               season,               went               through               early               2005               playoff               games               with               the               Colts               and               Steelers               with               relative               ease,               and               faced               the               explosive               Philadelphia               Eagles               in               the               Super               Bowl.

The               icily               efficient               Brady               connected               with               receiver               Deion               Branch               for               a               record-tying               ten               Super-Bowl               receptions.
               The               Patriots               had               used               a               3-4               defense,               with               three               down               linemen               and               four               linebackers,               most               of               the               season.

They               switched               to               a               4-3               setup               for               the               Super               Bowl,               confused               the               formidable               Philadelphia               offensive               line               enough               to               keep               the               dangerous               quarterback               Donovan               McNabb               from               breaking               out,               and               sacked               him               four               times.

And               although               Adam               Vinatieri's               field               goal               was               not               last               second,               it               was               the               margin               of               the               24-21               New               England               victory,               and               a               mini-dynasty               was               born.



               Because               of               his               strong               and               accurate               throwing               arm,               ability               to               see               the               entire               field,               and               serene               leadership               under               extreme               pressure,               New               England               Patriots'               quarterback               Tom               Brady               is               often               compared               to               his               idol               the               eminent               Joe               Montana.

Like               Brady,               Montana               was               a               master               of               late-game               comebacks.
               Eli               and               the               G-Men
               It               was               typical               younger               brother               measured               against               a               preferred               older               brother:               Peyton               Manning,               record-setting               all-Pro,               Super               Bowl-winning               darling               of               the               media.

Eli,               the               sibling               struggling               with               fumbles,               interceptions,               and               the               unrelenting               boos               of               a               satisfied-with-nothing-but-victory               New               York               crowd               seeing               too               many               defeats               and               two               consecutive               years               of               first-round               playoff               losses.



               Suddenly,               as               it               does               for               most               successful               NFL               quarterbacks:               Troy               Aikman,               Dan               Marino,               Joe               Montana,               it               all               came               together               for               Eli               Manning.

With               the               2007               New               York               Giants'               record               at               3-5               and               the               season               slipping               away,               a               refreshed               and               composed               Manning               led               the               Giants               through               a               string               of               wins               leading               to               a               wild               card               playoff               berth.

The               regular               season               ended               with               a               road               game               against               the               15-0               New               England               Patriots.

The               Pats               kept               their               perfect               season               intact               with               a               38-35               victory,               but               the               Giants,               who               fearlessly               played               their               regulars               in               an               otherwise               meaningless               game,               learned               that               they               could               compete               with               New               England,               and               the               team               found               certitude.



               Enough               certitude               to               win               three               straight               playoff               games               on               the               road,               with               the               NFC               championship               game               played               in               sub-zero               Green               Bay.

Eli               Manning               outplayed               Packer-immortal               Brett               Favre               in               a               contest               won               by               a               last-second               field               goal,               booted               after               the               kicker               had               already               missed               three               shorter               ones.

Meanwhile,               the               Patriots               won               two               playoff               games,               and               at               18-0               were               odds-on               Super               Bowl               favorites.

(Contrary               to               folklore,               everything               that               happens               in               Las               Vegas               doesn't               always               stay               in               Las               Vegas.

A               lot               of               smart               money               bet               on               the               Giants               and               against               the               12-point               Patriots'               spread               left               Sin               City.)               

               The               2007               Patriots               set               several               single-season               scoring               records:               589               total               points,               50               passing               touchdowns               from               Tom               Brady               (surpassing               Peyton               Manning's               49),               and               75               total               touchdowns.

Randy               Moss               caught               23               touchdown               passes               breaking               the               record               set               by               Jerry               Rice,               the               master               of               them               all.



               A               juicy               back-story               made               the               Patriots               the               villains               of               the               piece.

They               had               been               fined               by               the               league               and               also               forced               to               forfeit               a               first-round               draft               choice               for               videotaping               the               New               York               Jets               defensive               setups               earlier               in               the               year.

In               addition,               they               were               accused               of               videotaping               the               St.

Louis               Rams               before               they               beat               them               in               the               2002               Super               Bowl.



               The               mutual               loathing               in               the               New               York-Boston               rivalry               was               palpable.

Payback               for               Boston's               2007               World               Series               win               would               be               delicious               for               New               York               fans               who               were               also               depressed               by               the               Celtics'               resurgence               and               the               Knicks'               woeful               play.

Adding               to               the               Super               Sunday               theatricals,               the               Patriots               were               attempting               to               complete               the               first               undefeated               season               since               the               Miami               Dolphins               went               17-0               in               1972.

Also,               a               New               England               win               would               match               the               Pittsburgh               Steelers               and               San               Francisco               49'ers               four               Super               Bowl               titles.



               Tom               Brady               is               virtually               unbeatable               when               given               time               to               throw.

The               Giants               had               the               best               pass               rush               in               the               NFL,               and               the               name               of               their               game               was               get               to               Brady.

They               got               to               Brady               early               and               upset               his               game.

Despite               their               sluggish               play,               the               Patriots               led               at               halftime               by               an               abnormally               low               7-3               score.



               Like               most               football               games,               it               was               won               in               the               trenches.

The               Patriots'               offensive               line               which,               up               until               this               game,               had               protected               the               wonder-working               Brady,               couldn't               control               the               Giants               defensive               line,               and               the               Patriots               defensive               lineup               didn't               pressure               Manning               much               and               only               sacked               him               once.
However,               despite               repeated               sacks,               knockdowns,               and               rushed               passes,               Brady               didn't               throw               an               interception               and               played               a               respectable               game               with               the               Giants'               defense               in               his               face               all               night.

(Pats'               receiver               Wes               Welker               had               a               Super               Bowl               record-tying               11               catches               and               was               runner-up               MVP.)               An               early               fourth-quarter               Giants'               drive               gave               them               a               10-7               edge.

With               two               and               a               half               minutes               left               in               the               game,               a               Giants'               cornerback               appeared               to               trip               on               the               goal               line,               and               Brady               hit               Moss               in               the               end               zone.

14-10.

The               kickoff               put               the               Giants               deep               in               their               own               territory.

Eli               Manning               coolly               led               the               Giants'               final               drive,               although               he               nearly               threw               a               game-clinching               interception.



               The               defining               moment               came               near               midfield               when               Manning               slipped               out               of               the               grasping               hands               of               Patriots'               defenders,               eluding               what               looked               like               a               probable,               third-down               sack,               and               launched               an               interception-bound               floater               to               David               Tyree               in               triple               coverage               at               the               twenty-five               yard               line.

Tyree               and               the               laudable               Patriots'               safety               Rodney               Harrison               were               wrapped               like               a               soft               pretzel               as               they               elevated               pogo-like.

Tyree               got               to               the               ball               first               at               the               apogee               of               their               leap.

With               Harrison               poking               at               the               ball               in               Tyree's               big               hands,               what               looked               like               an               apparent               incomplete               pass               ended               with               David               Tyree               crashing               to               the               turf               with               the               football               pinned               to               his               helmet               and               Harrison               underneath.



               Plaxico               Burress               (who               had               earlier               predicted               a               20-17               Giants'               win)               faked               the               Patriots'               cornerback               out               of               his               you-know-what,               and               Manning               found               him               in               the               corner               of               the               end               zone               with               a               half-minute               to               play.

The               Patriots               couldn't               move               the               ball,               and               the               Giants               had               pulled               off               a               storybook               Super               Bowl               triumph.



               It               was               Broadway's               first               ticker-tape               parade               in               many               years.

The               G-Men               were               bathed               in               unconditional               love,               but               Super               Bowl               MVP               Eli,               no               longer               the               castigated               other               Manning,               was               the               main               object               of               the               New               York               fans'               affection.

(In               the               quote               below,               Hippocrates               spoke               of               the               need               for               physicians               to               take               care               of               their               own               business               and               persuade               others               to               follow               and               cooperate.

The               spirit               applies               to               quarterbacks               as               well.)               

               "Life               is               short,               but               the               art               is               long,               the               opportunity               fleeting,               the               experiment               perilous,               the               judgment               difficult."               

               Adapted               and               excerpted               from               GUTS               IN               THE               CLUTCH:               77               Legendary               Triumphs,               Heartbreaks               and               Wild               Finishes               in               12               Sports,               with               a               Foreword               by               Drew               Olson               of               ESPN.

(Amazon,               Nook               and               Google               e-Books.)






Image of cleveland brown helmet






cleveland brown helmet
cleveland brown helmet


cleveland brown helmet Image 1


cleveland brown helmet
cleveland brown helmet


cleveland brown helmet Image 2


cleveland brown helmet
cleveland brown helmet


cleveland brown helmet Image 3


cleveland brown helmet
cleveland brown helmet


cleveland brown helmet Image 4


cleveland brown helmet
cleveland brown helmet


cleveland brown helmet Image 5


  • Related blog with cleveland brown helmet





    1. thecommissioners.wordpress.com/   05/17/2011
      ...creative helmet like the Tennessee Titans got zero votes? The Cleveland Browns helmet, while incredibly boring, just screams unsuccessful and small market...
    2. stormbringer10.blogspot.com/   05/21/2007
      ...mansion wearing a lime-shaped helmet. They're stalking a gigantic ...aforementioned jewel featuring a certain Cleveland Cavalier... And remember, kids... "Don't...
    3. sportsroadtrips.blogspot.com/   10/04/2013
      ...place went wild and the Browns took the 17-10 lead...scrimmage to tie the game. After Cleveland punted, the ...hit Manuel's knee with his helmet, knocking him...
    4. monkeyhugs.blogspot.com/   02/27/2008
      ...the team at that time. The Cleveland Plain Dealer helped...to accompany coverage of the Browns, especially game stories...of the club's plain orange helmets in 1953. So he asked...
    5. blackandgoldworld.blogspot.com/   12/31/2011
      ...James Harrison's cheap-shot helmet hit on Colt McCoy affected the Browns' season. If Roethlisberger ...wasn't deluged with Cleveland fan mail after the sack. "I...
    6. tophatal.wordpress.com/   01/23/2012
      ... …. (3) Colt McCoy (12) of the Cleveland Browns lays on the ground...to athletic trainers after a helmet to helmet hit from James Harrison (92...
    7. blackandgoldworld.blogspot.com/   01/01/2012
      ... Colt McCoy in the facemask with his helmet on Dec. 8 and ended his season with a concussion. "As long as [Browns fans] take the fine, I'm happy to go in...
    8. tombierbaum.livejournal.com/   11/26/2012
      ...it that the new ownership of the Cleveland Browns is planning to...to alter its traditional logo-less helmets (again, not a move I'd advocate...
    9. blackandgoldworld.blogspot.com/   01/03/2011
      ... them." The Browns' coverage was loose enough...Wallace scratching his helmet. "I couldn't tell you what...do the rest for me." CLEVELAND, OH - JANUARY 02: Quarterback Ben...
    10. spitoutyourgum.blogspot.com/   09/18/2011
      ...the team took his helmet off in celebration a few ...that oppresses the Browns, and the fact that nobody...revitalization of the City of Cleveland and some two-bit backup ...
    11. Cleveland Brown Helmet - Blog Homepage Results

      Cleveland Browns Classifieds Collectibles Memorabilia Jerseys Caps Helmets Autographs and More!
      All Cleveland Browns! All the time! This blog will chronicle the Cleveland Browns year in and year out.
      A Browns fan's blog about Cleveland Browns news, Cleveland Browns opinions, and what it means to be a Cleveland Browns fan



    Related Video with cleveland brown helmet







    cleveland brown helmet Video 1








    cleveland brown helmet Video 2








    cleveland brown helmet Video 3




    cleveland brown helmet































    About 'cleveland browns final score today'-Bills vs. Browns: Live Game Grades and Analysis for Buffalo







    About 'cleveland browns final score today'-Bills vs. Browns: Live Game Grades and Analysis for Buffalo








    Hank               Greenberg               was               not               the               first               Jewish               player               in               Major               League               Baseball,               but               at               the               time               of               his               retirement               from               the               game               in               1947               he               was               the               greatest               Jewish               player               ever.

    Only               Sandy               Koufax               would               rival               Hank               Greenberg               as               a               hero               in               the               Jewish               population,               but               Koufax               did               not               have               to               endure               what               Hank               Greenberg               did.

    Like               Jackie               Robinson,               who               would               arrive               on               the               scene               in               Hank               Greenberg's               last               year,               he               underwent               vicious               ethnic               taunting               and               faced               prejudice               at               all               stops               along               the               way,               only               to               slug               his               way               into               the               Hall               of               Fame.

    Henry               Benjamin               Greenberg               was               born               in               1911               in               New               York               City,               the               son               of               Orthodox               Jews               who               had               emigrated               from               Romania.

    Upon               his               graduation               from               the               James               Monroe               High               School               in               the               Bronx,               Hank               Greenberg               was               a               sought               after               ballplayer,               having               stood               out               in               basketball               and               baseball.

    At               six-foot               three,               Hank               Greenberg               worked               hard               to               become               a               skilled               athlete;               always               afraid               of               being               ridiculed               for               his               awkwardness,               he               would               practice               and               practice               until               he               was               no               longer               clumsy.

    In               1929,               the               Yankees               expressed               interest               in               him,               but               Hank               Greenberg,               who               wanted               to               play               first               base,               saw               his               path               in               the               Bronx               blocked               by               Lou               Gehrig               and               instead               attended               New               York               University               for               a               year.

    In               1930,               Hank               Greenberg               signed               with               the               Detroit               Tigers               for               $9,000               and               rose               quickly               through               their               minor               league               system.
                   While               with               Beaumont               of               the               Texas               League,               Hank               Greenberg               won               the               MVP               Award               with               39               homers               and               131               runs               batted               in.

    One               of               his               teammates               that               year               was               a               player               named               JoJo               White,               who               would               later               be               with               him               in               Detroit.

    White               walked               around               Hank               Greenberg               one               day,               staring               intently               at               him,               and               when               asked               why               he               replied,               "I               have               never               seen               a               Jew               before.

    You're               just               like               everyone               else."               But               Hank               Greenberg's               reception               in               the               majors               would               be               much               more               distasteful               and               filled               with               hatred.
                   The               Tigers               made               him               a               full-time               first               baseman               in               1933,               and               Hank               Greenberg               responded               with               87               runs               batted               in               while               playing               in               only               117               games.

    The               next               year,               Hank               Greenberg               became               a               star,               batting               .339               with               139               RBI               and               26               homers.

    Detroit               won               the               pennant               by               seven               games               over               the               Yankees,               but               lost               the               World               Series               in               seven               to               the               Cardinals,               who               rode               Hank               Greenberg               mercilessly.

    They               would               hurl               one               insult               after               another               at               Hank               Greenberg,               such               as               yelling               "Throw               a               pork               chop               at               him,               he               can't               hit               that",               referring               to               the               Jewish               laws               regarding               kosher.

    The               Cards'               pitchers               wished               they               had               that               option,               as               Hank               Greenberg               knocked               in               seven               runs               in               the               Series               and               batted               .321.

    Greenberg               didn't               always               turn               the               other               cheek,               having               once               gone               after               White               Sox               manager               Jimmy               Dykes               after               being               peppered               with               insults               all               day.
                   As               great               of               a               season               as               that               was,               Hank               Greenberg               surpassed               it               in               1935               when               he               knocked               in               170               runs,               belted               36               homers,               and               batted               .328               to               be               named               the               American               League's               MVP.

    The               Tigers               went               to               the               World               Series               again,               this               time               facing               the               Chicago               Cubs.

    In               Game               Two,               Hank               Greenberg               hit               a               two               run               homer,               but               later               suffered               a               broken               wrist               trying               to               score               from               first               on               a               single               and               was               an               onlooker               as               Detroit               defeated               Chicago               in               seven               games.

    He               broke               the               same               wrist               in               a               first               base               collision               early               in               1936,               after               he               had               gotten               off               to               a               hot               start,               with               16               runs               batted               in               for               just               12               contests.

    Hank               Greenberg               would               not               play               again               in               1936,               but               came               back               in               1937               with               one               of               baseball's               greatest               campaigns.
                   By               now,               Hank               Greenberg               was               a               hero               in               the               Jewish               community,               being               offered               a               plethora               of               free               gifts,               which               he               always               refused.

    On               May               22nd,               1937,               Hank               Greenberg               hit               a               ball               in               Boston's               Fenway               Park               to               centerfield               that               was               called               the               longest               homer               ever               hit               there               at               the               time.

    On               September               19,               Hank               Greenberg               hit               the               first               home               run               ever               to               land               in               the               centerfield               stands               at               Yankee               Stadium.

    At               season's               end,               Hank               Greenberg               had               accumulated               183               runs               batted               in,               the               third               highest               total               ever               behind               Hack               Wilson's               191               and               Lou               Gehrig's               186.

    He               batted               .337               with               40               homers,               yet               he               did               not               win               his               second               MVP,               somehow               failing               to               garner               any               first               place               votes.

    His               teammate,               second               baseman               Charlie               Gehringer               won               the               honor,               batting               .371.

    Hank               Greenberg               had               87               more               runs               batted               in               than               Gehringer               that               year!
                   After               an               assault               on               the               RBI               record               in               1937,               Hank               Greenberg               made               one               on               Babe               Ruth's               home               run               mark               of               60               in               1938.

    By               late               September               he               had               tied               Jimmie               Foxx's               standard               for               right-handed               hitters               with               58,               but               in               the               last               five               games               Hank               Greenberg               got               very               few               pitches               to               hit.

    The               Indians               in               particular               had               their               hurlers               stay               clear               of               Hank               Greenberg's               bat,               as               Cleveland               and               Detroit               were               battling               for               third               place               in               the               league               and               the               extra               money               that               went               with               that.

    But               there               were               also               stories               circulating               that               pitchers               were               intentionally               walking               him               so               a               Jew               would               not               break               Ruth's               record.

    Hank               Greenberg               wound               up               with               the               58               home               runs               and               146               RBI,               but               Jimmie               Foxx               won               the               MVP               when               he               hit               50               with               175               RBI.
                   A               112               RBI               year               in               1939               was               followed               by               a               monster               150               runs               batted               in               effort               in               1940               for               Hank               Greenberg,               who               willingly               learned               how               to               play               left               field               that               year               to               make               room               for               hard-hitting               Rudy               York,               who               was               such               a               bad               fielder               that               first               base               was               the               only               place               you               could               hide               him               defensively.

    The               Tigers               won               another               pennant,               and               Hank               Greenberg               became               the               first               man               to               win               an               MVP               Award               at               two               different               positions.

    Once               more               the               World               Series               came               down               to               a               seventh               game,               with               the               Reds               defeating               the               Tigers,               although               Hank               Greenberg               batted               .357               with               a               homer               and               six               RBI.
                   In               1941,               Hank               Greenberg               became               one               of               the               first               pro               baseball               players               to               be               inducted               into               the               service,               after               he               initially               had               failed               his               first               physical               with               "flat               feet"               but               insisted               on               another.

    He               was               honorably               discharged               on               December               5th,               as               Congress               decided               to               release               men               28               years               of               age               or               older               from               their               military               obligation.

    When               Pearl               Harbor               was               attacked               two               days               later,               Hank               Greenberg               re-enlisted               and               joined               the               Air               Force,               eventually               going               to               the               Pacific               Theater               as               a               first               lieutenant.

    By               time               he               returned               to               baseball               in               1945,               he               had               lost               more               than               four               years               of               his               prime.

    But               he               was               one               of               the               first               ballplayers               to               return,               and               Hank               Greenberg               joined               the               Tigers               in               time               to               help               them               in               their               pennant               race.
                   His               grand               slam               on               the               season's               final               day               against               the               Browns               clinched               the               flag               over               the               Senators,               and               Hank               Greenberg               went               to               his               fourth               and               last               World               Series.

    This               time               he               came               out               on               top               and               played               the               entire               seven               games,               hitting               .304               with               a               pair               of               homers               and               seven               runs               knocked               in               as               Detroit               topped               the               Cubs               for               the               title.

    In               23               Fall               Classic               tilts,               Hank               Greenberg               batted               .318               with               five               homers               and               23               runs               batted               in.

    He               had               another               super               year               in               1946,               with               44               homers               and               127               ribbies,               and               then               the               Tigers               sold               him               to               the               Pirates,               where               he               hit               25               home               runs               in               1947               before               retiring.

    Hank               Greenberg               had               a               lifetime               batting               average               of               .313               with               313               homers               and               1,276               runs               batted               in,               despite               really               playing               only               nine               full               seasons.

    Experts               project               that               had               he               had               a               longer               career,               Hank               Greenberg               would               have               had               from               1,800               to               2,000               runs               batted               in               and               500               plus               homers.

    During               that               1947               season,               Hank               Greenberg               was               one               of               the               few               players               to               welcome               Jackie               Robinson               to               the               sport               publicly,               having               experienced               the               taunting               first               hand               as               a               Jew.

    Robinson               himself               said               of               Hank               Greenberg,               "Class               tells.

    It               sticks               out               all               over               Mr.

    Greenberg".

    In               1956,               Hank               Greenberg               was               the               first               Jewish               player               to               be               elected               to               the               Hall               of               Fame,               with               85%               of               the               vote.

    He               passed               away               in               1986               at               the               age               of               75.
                   
                   In               the               midst               of               a               pennant               race               in               1934,               Hank               Greenberg               faced               a               complex               problem.

    The               Tigers               were               playing               an               important               game               on               September               10th,               which               was               the               holy               day               of               Rosh               Hashanah,               and               there               was               debate               whether               he               should               play               or               honor               the               day.

    Hank               Greenberg               decided               to               play,               and               he               hit               a               pair               of               homers               against               Boston               to               win               the               game               2-1.

    Ten               days               later               he               spent               Yom               Kippur               observing               the               holy               day               in               a               synagogue,               and               Detroit               went               down               to               defeat.

    This               inspired               the               Poet               Laureate               of               Michigan,               Edgar               Guest,               to               pen               the               following-
                   Come               Yom               Kippur               -               holy               fast               day               wide-world               over               to               the               Jew               -               
                   And               Hank               Greenberg               to               his               teaching               and               the               old               tradition               true               
                   Spent               the               day               among               his               people               and               he               didn't               come               to               play               
                   Said               Murphy               to               Mulrooney,               'We               shall               lose               the               game               today!


                   We               shall               miss               him               in               the               infield               and               shall               miss               him               at               the               bat,               
                   But               he's               true               to               his               religion               -               and               /               honor               him               for               that!






    Image of cleveland browns final score today






    cleveland browns final score today
    cleveland browns final score today


    cleveland browns final score today Image 1


    cleveland browns final score today
    cleveland browns final score today


    cleveland browns final score today Image 2


    cleveland browns final score today
    cleveland browns final score today


    cleveland browns final score today Image 3


    cleveland browns final score today
    cleveland browns final score today


    cleveland browns final score today Image 4


    cleveland browns final score today
    cleveland browns final score today


    cleveland browns final score today Image 5


  • Related blog with cleveland browns final score today





    1. boardsanddimes.blogspot.com/   12/14/2005
      ...during his time of mourning and is able to find his place in Coach Larry Brown's system on the Knicks. He set a franchise record for 3-pointers last...
    2. boardsanddimes.blogspot.com/   12/23/2005
      ... coaches. Brown still can't get the ... the league in scoring. And last week, with the highly... last season's Finals matchup — the San Antonio...
    3. boardsanddimes.blogspot.com/   10/27/2006
      ...that end), the Spurs will reach the Finals. Without? Eva Longoria shouldn't plan for much screen time come June. 9. Will anyone score on the Bulls? Yes -- but it won't...
    4. boardsanddimes.blogspot.com/   10/15/2006
      .... Without Gasol, the Grizzlies will look for Gay to give them scoring punch. After a lackluster sophomore season at UConn, Gay's performance in the summer league and...
    5. boardsanddimes.blogspot.com/   10/20/2006
      ...emotionally from the task at hand. Besides, the Mavs made their first appearance ever in the NBA Finals in June and Cuban won't rest until they get back there and redeem themselves from ...
    6. bleacherreport.com/   09/15/2013
      ... down due to ineffective offense. Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports First-half Analysis for the Cleveland Browns Pass Offense: Brandon Weeden was good when given...
    7. thefdhlounge.blogspot.com/   03/13/2008
      ...punt, I know that Derrick Frost has. Edge: Dave Zastadil End Result, or Final Score? 2004 Cleveland Browns - 7 2008 Cleveland Browns - 31 Final Thoughts? Anyone who...
    8. sportsratings.typepad.com/   12/15/2007
      ...13.48 25.65 26. Cleveland Browns 9-5 -0.32 25...college football division finals, this was...21, but Whitewater scored again with one minute...
    9. dabrowns41.blogspot.com/   11/28/2009
      ... the final 2 plays...the game by a score of 38-37, most...least we're not Cleveland" on their way...the story here today was that the Browns proved...
    10. bleacherreport.com/   10/03/2013
      ... up 24-17. The team scored two of their touchdowns.... Andrew Weber-USA TODAY Sports Jeff Tuel...in a 37-24 loss to the Browns. First-Half Grades...



    Related Video with cleveland browns final score today







    cleveland browns final score today Video 1








    cleveland browns final score today Video 2








    cleveland browns final score today Video 3




    cleveland browns final score today