| 以文本方式查看主题 - 精本科技论坛 (http://www.wh40.cn/bbs/index.asp) -- 精本科技 (http://www.wh40.cn/bbs/list.asp?boardid=2) ---- aid Hominick. Despite being on the wrong end of the Aldo results -- the judges scored it 48-45, 48-46, 49-46 for the champ -- Hominick says (http://www.wh40.cn/bbs/dispbbs.asp?boardid=2&id=4859) |
| -- 作者:liamin -- 发布时间:2015-4-12 19:00:36 -- aid Hominick. Despite being on the wrong end of the Aldo results -- the judges scored it 48-45, 48-46, 49-46 for the champ -- Hominick says CINCINNATI, Ohio -- Reds manager Dusty Bakers mind was worn out from another long, long game. At least he could smile. The Chicago Cubs? Numb, just like always. Jay Bruce hit a tying double and scored on Cesar Izturis two-out single in the 13th inning Monday night, rallying Cincinnati to a 5-4 victory that gave the Cubs their fourth straight loss. The Reds used seven pitchers, 11 position players and one pinch hitter during their latest overtime win, this one lasting 4 hours, 35 minutes. "Im worn out from thinking -- double-switching, trying to keep the pitchers in as long as we could," Baker said. "That was a good one to win -- a great one. Thats one of the best comebacks Ive seen." Luis Valbuena hit a two-run homer in the top of the 13th off Alfredo Simon (2-1) for a 4-2 Cubs lead. But like so many other times this season, Chicago couldnt pull out a close game. Michael Bowden (0-1) gave up a single by Xavier Paul, Brandon Phillips double and Bruces two-run double that tied it. Bruce moved up to third on Todd Fraziers groundout. Izturis then lined a single past diving shortstop Starlin Castro, sending the Reds to their seventh victory in eight games on their homestand. Long games are the norm in Cincinnati, where the Reds have gone extra innings four times and had another game suspended overnight because of rain. Theyve played 13 innings three times. "Long game," Izturis said. "Im glad we got the win. When you go down two runs its hard to get back in it, but we did it." The Cubs have dropped seven of eight and 12 of 15, leaving them in last place in the NL Central at 5-13. Theyve become accustomed to losing close ones -- all 18 of their games have been decided by four runs or fewer. "Its hard to be down," Cubs starter Travis Wood said. "Its not like were getting blown out every game. Were right there. Weve just got to figure out a way to pull them out." The game matched two starters who recently went head-to-head for the fifth spot in Cincinnatis rotation. Both gave up a pair of runs and didnt figure in the decision. Wood, who was Cincinnatis second-round draft pick in 2005, couldnt hold a 2-0 lead in the seventh. Bruce led off with his first homer of the season and Chris Heisey singled. Jack Hannahan came off the bench and hit a triple off James Russell -- his fifth pinch hit of the season -- to tie it. Wood was traded to the Cubs along with two minor leaguers for reliever Sean Marshall after the 2011 season, when the Reds chose to keep right-hander Mike Leake at the back of their rotation. Leake, who was Cincinnatis top pick in the June 2009 draft, had never pitched against Wood before. David DeJesus opened the game with a home run on Leakes third pitch, the 13th leadoff homer of his career. Castros RBI single in the third inning made it 2-0 and gave him a 14-game hitting streak, matching the best of his career. Its the longest active streak in the majors. Cincinnati shortstop Zack Cozart was back in the lineup after missing one game with an injured index finger. He got hit by a ball while trying to bunt on Saturday and initially thought it was broken. X-rays were negative. Yet another Reds player got hurt Monday, though. Reliever Jonathan Broxton left in the eighth inning after knocking down Nate Schierholtzs liner up the middle. A trainer examined Broxtons right hand, and the pitcher flexed it several times before leaving the game. X-rays were negative. The defending NL Central champions have been hit hard by injuries. Marshall, top starter Johnny Cueto, cleanup hitter Ryan Ludwick and catcher Ryan Hanigan are on the disabled list. Shin-Soo Choo kept getting hit -- and getting on base -- at a phenomenal pace. Wood hit him in the right arm with a pitch in the sixth. Choo has been hit by pitches 10 times already, a Reds record for one month. Its the most times a major leaguer has been hit by a pitch in a month since Houstons Craig Biggio was plunked 10 times in August 1997. Choo has reached base safely in 14 of his 18 plate appearances over the last three games. NOTES: Marshall started a rehab assignment with Triple-A Louisville. He hasnt pitched this season because of shoulder tendinitis. ... Castro also hit in 14 games from the end of the 2011 season through the start of 2012. ... The Reds have fanned at least 10 batters in five straight games for the first time in modern franchise history. Ray Nitschke Youth Jersey . Young got that chance Tuesday, signing a one-year deal with the Philadelphia Phillies for $750,000. The 27-year-old outfielder batted .267 with 27 doubles, 18 homers and 74 RBIs for Detroit last season. Paul Hornung Womens Jersey . Instead, they dropped their second straight game against the worst team in baseball on Tuesday night to keep them from wrapping up a playoff spot. http://www.packersproshop.us.com/Womens-Davante-Adams-Authentic-Jersey/ . He finally got one in the eighth inning, but not before hitting two two-run homers to power the Cubs to a 4-2 victory over the Miami Marlins on Friday night, giving Chicago back-to-back wins for the first time this season. Ha Ha Clinton-Dix Packers Jersey . Dating back at least 20 years, studies began to emerge suggesting their may be a price to be paid for all those hits, a notion that only makes sense to anyone whose every watched a game up-close and witnessed what players put themselves through on every single snap. Mason Crosby Jersey . The Pittsburgh Pirates centre fielder stood frozen during the second inning while Matt Hollidays line drive sailed over his head and rolled to the fence for a double.TORONTO -- It wasnt until after UFC 129, when his wife snapped a photo of him with her phone later that night in hospital, that Canadian featherweight Mark (The Machine) Hominick realized what he looked like. Thanks to 25 minutes in a cage with UFC champion Jose Aldo, it appeared that an alien was growing out of Hominicks forehead. In reality, it was a muffin-sized hematoma. "I didnt even know. I thought it was cut until I got to the hospital," Hominick recalled. "My wife took a picture of my face with her phone and I almost fell off the bed. ... Definitely it was a pretty scary sight but it looked worse than it was." Bad enough that the 50,000-plus crowd at Torontos Rogers Centre groaned every time it was shown on the big screens. But Hominick was cleared by doctors that night after an MRI and CT scan. The injury looked like he might have needed the services of a body shop to get his forehead back to its normal shape. But the 29-year-old from Thamesford, Ont., says three or four hours with an ice pack did the trick, leaving him with a pair of black eyes and some swollen cheeks. "Its basically your bodys protecting itself with swelling," he explained. But the injury remains a talking point. "Everybody comes up and looks at me. I think theyre still looking for the bump. Its the first question. But it makes the fight memorable." Hominick (20-9) lost the April 30 co-main event, but came on strong in the fifth round and made the Brazilian 145-pound champion look human for the first time in a long time. Hominick returns to action Saturday night when he takes on the Korean Zombie, Chan Sung Jung, at UFC 140 -- this time at Torontos Air Canada Centre. He is one of seven Canadians on the card, which is headlined by light-heavyweight champion Jon (Bones) Jones and former title-holder Lyota (The Dragon) Machida. A new father, Hominick enjoyed some time off after the Aldo bout -- daughter Raeya arrived two weeks later and he was suspended for 60 days (one of seven such medical bans handed out by the Ontario Athletics Commission). "Perfect timing with the baby," Hominick, who resumed running within two weeks after the fight, said of the break. He used some of his $129,000 fight of the night bonus to pare down his mortgage and top up his daughters education fund. And he treated himself to a quad ATV. A gifted technical striker who has worked hard to feel comfortable on the ground, Hominicks standup skills will be tested against the Korean Zombie. Jung (11-3) turned heads in a slugfest with Leonard (Bad Boy) Garcia in an April 2010 WEC fight. The Korean earned his revenge in March in the UFC when he stopped Garcia with aa rare Twister submission.dddddddddddd "I love watching his fights," said Hominick. Despite being on the wrong end of the Aldo results -- the judges scored it 48-45, 48-46, 49-46 for the champ -- Hominick says he has no regrets. "He won, I lost," he said. "It was a great fight. I was glad I got to show what kind of fighter I was. Because basically I felt I showed the last 15 years of my life in that fight -- the amount of dedication, the amount of heart I put towards the sport and put towards my training. I got to show the whole world. It was almost like a 15-year overnight sensation." "I went in with the mentality that hes just a fighter and any fighter can be beat," he added. "I came close and Im going to work tirelessly until I can beat him or whoever the champion is." Honimick says he has never been hit as hard as by Aldo. But he says the champion couldnt help but notice his work ethic. "Any time you have a fighter that just keeps coming, its frustrating and it can mentally wear on you. I think thats what happened in the fifth round. Because I remember in the fifth round, he kept looking at his corner and the look in his eyes, you could just tell he wanted the time to be over, theres no question." Hominick remembers looking up at the clock in the fifth round. He knew he was behind and time was running out. "For Aldo the clock wasnt moving fast enough. Mine was moving at super-sonic speed." Hominick will remember the Aldo fight for many other reasons. Wife Ashley was pregnant, giving birth to daughter Raeya two weeks later -- a week behind schedule. That just added to the pressure surrounding his title fight in the UFCs first visit to Toronto -- and its largest ever show. A gruelling training camp and plenty of media demand -- not to mention baby classes -- were just part of the pre-show stress. "The anticipation, the media, the demands, just the buildup of the whole show was so much pressure. There was a lot going on," he recalled. Things have been far different this time. "Not even in the same ballpark," said Hominick. And different for a much sadder reason. The fight is the first for Hominick without the help of coach Shawn Tompkins, who was just 37 when he died of a heart attack in August. Hominick says he will feel the loss the most this week -- because just before his fights was when he had the closest bond with his coach. "Its our responsibility to carry on Shawns legacy," added Hominick, whose gym Adrenaline Training Center in London, Ont, is the home to Team Tompkins. "And the way we do that is you go there and win." cheap jerseys cheap nfl jerseys \' \' \' |