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NYT > Sports > Baseball
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With Relief Room, a Fan Pays Tribute to Phillies Relievers
With the Relief Room, a Phillies fan has created an over-the-top shrine to baseballâs most unsung players. It is in his downstairs bathroom.
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Some Things Are More Important Than History
As a no-hitter stretched into extra innings, a journalist rooted for something extraordinary while his son just wanted the Yankees to win. They both got what they wanted.
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The Oakland Athletics are the Loneliest Team in Baseball
With the Oakland Athletics having gutted their roster and flirted with Las Vegas, their once-loyal fans appear to be in revolt.
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Abuela, Chef, Boss: Vladimir Guerrero Jr.âs Grandmother Feeds the Majors
For about two decades, Altagracia Alvino has lived with and cooked for her baseball-playing offspring â as well as their teammates and opponents.
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How Tim Flannery, the Giants Coach, Got Back to Writing Songs
Tim Flanneryâs rollicking life as an athlete and a musician was nearly cut short by a staph infection. But one of baseballâs most unlikely characters found his way back.
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John Jaso Gave Up Baseball to Enjoy Life on a Boat
John Jaso walked away from Major League Baseball at 34, potentially leaving millions of dollars on the table. The sea was calling.
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How Joey Votto of the Reds Became a Social Media Star
In the 17th season of a Hall of Fame-worthy career, Votto has made the unusual shift from meticulous hitting savant to social media star.
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How the Emerald Ash Borer Took Ash Bats Out of Major League Baseball
Invasive insects and batter preferences have led to the elimination of the wood that dominated the sport for generations. There may not be a single ash bat used in this postseason.
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A Night With the Best Baseball Team in New York
The Brooklyn Cyclones are leading their minor league division this summer, while New Yorkâs major league teams sit at .500 or worse.
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Why Baseball Is Obsessed With the Book 'Thinking, Fast and Slow'
A psychology book by a Nobel Prize-winning author has become a must-read in front offices. It is changing the sport.
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How John DeMarsico Made SNYâs Mets Broadcasts Go Viral
SNY already had some of the best announcers in baseball. John DeMarsico, the networkâs director, has made every game feel like a trip to the movies.
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Nashville Stars Honor Baseballâs Past by Focusing on the Future
Named after a team from the Negro leagues, the Nashville Stars give young players, Black and white, passion and purpose in the game.
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Gil Hodges and the Christmas Visit That Changed Everything
After a long wait, Gil Hodges was elected to the Hall of Fame. For one of the many people whose lives he helped change with community work, Hodges was already a legend.
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Why Does Oswaldo Cabrera Wear a Pearl Necklace?
Oswaldo Cabrera has had highlights at multiple positions in his first week in the majors. The only constants have been his enthusiasm and his atypical accessory.
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He Wore a âPatrioticâ Hat to a Blue Jays Game. It Got Him Ejected.
The message âCanada is not for saleâ drew attention because of a rule against political slogans at Rogers Centre in Toronto. The team later apologized.
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How Analytics Marginalized Baseballâs Superstar Pitchers
Why has pro baseball made it so hard for todayâs pitchers to achieve greatness?
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How âMoneyballâ and âSugarâ Altered the Baseball Movie
Two contemporary films reimagined the stories we tell about the sport.
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M.L.B. Stars Embrace Content Creation in a Bid to Reach More Fans
During spring training, Major League Baseball players recorded trick shots and podcasts at a content house in the hope of broadening the sportâs cultural relevance.
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Art Schallock, Oldest Surviving Major Leaguer, Dies at 100
A pitcher, he played for the Yankees and the Orioles. When Mickey Mantle was sent to the minors in 1951, Schallock was called up.
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Frank Saucier, Slugger Sidelined by a Publicity Stunt, Dies at 98
He had just recently joined the St. Louis Browns when he was replaced in the lineup by Eddie Gaedel, a 3-foot-7 circus performer, in a game in 1951.
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