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Wifey Watch 2OO9


Guest Edgy DC

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Guest holychicken
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Posted


Is it possible that Piazza actually isn't gay?


  • 2 weeks later...
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Guest Swan Swan H
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There's no chance that Elmer Dessens' wife is named Elsie, is there?


  • 3 weeks later...
Guest Edgy DC
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Posted


S'long, Tina Church (right)...



...and hello, Katie McCoy Francouer --- totally not camera shy.




Posted


So I'm guessing that the #12 (retired?) jersey is at his high school. He never played in college and didn't stick around the minor leagues long enough to make a mark in any one place I wouldn't think.
He was 'Mr. All-Everything' in HS although you usually think of football numbers being more honored than baseball. There's also a very successful amateur baseball program in the Atlanta suburbs where he grew up so it's possible it's from there.

And maybe it's a window as to what number he'll take. Not sure if 12 was taken when he first got to the Braves.


Guest Swan Swan H
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Posted


Eddie Perez was wearing 12 for the Braves when Francoeur came up, and he had been there, on and off, for ten years.


Guest Edgy DC
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He was 'Mr. All-Everything' in HS although you usually think of football numbers being more honored than baseball. There's also a very successful amateur baseball program in the Atlanta suburbs where he grew up so it's possible it's from there.[/quote:3mez2xfn]

Well, him playing for the hometown team certainly raises his stature in the school's baseball program. It was probably his football number as well.

You usually get honored in high school for what you do after high school, you know?


Posted


oh and Google says its Catie with a "C", yes i just went looking for pictures.


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
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Posted




Interesting that he's posing with a big 12 here. Was that his high school number or something?

Hi Catie.


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
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Posted


A very tooth-some pair.

I hope their children don't require orthodonture... it could have a significant impact on their retirement plans.


  • 1 month later...
Guest Edgy DC
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Posted


The one and, I think, only.

Ignore that link and it's bizarre price. It retails at $29.95 everywhere else.


  • 3 weeks later...
Posted


Nice...I think that might be the first time I have seen Stokes without his cap.

remember years ago Edgy had a video of Stricklands wedding , IIRC it was them dancing to "Beautiful Day".....good times


Guest Edgy DC
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Posted


Got to love a girl who goes strapless while she has tan lines showing. Thumbs up to Se�ora Stokes.


  • 1 month later...
Guest Edgy DC
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Posted


Possible Jack Egbert paramour Alison Christie:



  • 3 weeks later...
Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
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Posted


Gabriella Schoeneweis' death turned into a court case in Arizona, with Scott taking another loss.

December 1, 2009
Court: Pitcher's wife died from drug overdose
By Howard Fischer
Capitol Media Services
The wife of former Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Scott Schoeneweis died of an overdose of cocaine and lidocaine, a pain killer, the state Court of Appeals revealed Tuesday.

The disclosure came in the lawsuit brought by Schoeneweis to block Maricopa County officials from making their findings public about the situation surrounding the May 20 death of his wife, Gabrielle. She was found unconscious by the couple's 14-year-old daughter at the family home in Fountain Hills and pronounced dead at the scene by paramedics.

In writing the unanimous appellate decision, Judge Peter Swann said death certificates issued by medical examiners, while public records, are not subject to public scrutiny.

Swann said, though, the question of whether other documents related to the case can be made public, including the autopsy report and photos, must be decided on a case-by-case basis, with a trial judge reviewing the information in chambers, out of public view. He said factors that trial judge must weigh include privacy concerns of survivors versus the public interest.

And Swann specifically refused to conclude that the fact this case involves the wife of a prominent sports figure somehow tilts in favor of public disclosure.

"The 'public interest' is not synonymous with 'public curiosity,'' the judge wrote. He said the judgments of whether certain documents should become public "are not altered by the relative fame or obscurity of those involved.''

But the judges, without sending this case back to the trial court to review the record, decided on their own to publicly disclose the overdose as the cause of the wife's death. And the court, in its ruling, also revealed that her cocaine use "may have caused harm to another person'' who is not identified in the record.

Tuesday's appellate ruling come after a probate judge in Maricopa County rejected the petition of Scott Schoeneweis, who had been on a one-year contract with the Diamondbacks filed for free agency last month, to seal his wife's death certificate and any other documents pertaining to her death. That judge, without reviewing the records, rejected the plea, saying while she was sympathetic to the husband's privacy concerns, "personal concerns do not constitute grounds to seal or redact public documents.''

Swann said Arizona law concludes that anything record a public official is required to produce or serves as a record of something done is public.

He said that makes the autopsy report public, as the law requires medical examiners to investigate and report on deaths. So too, Swann said, are the photos taken during the autopsy as well as related investigative materials including summaries of statements made by witnesses and photographs of the of the scene.

Similarly, Swann said, the actual death certificate also is a public record.

But Swann said that doesn't necessarily mean public disclosure.

"Public records are not available for disclosure when they are made confidential by statute, when the public interest in disclosure is outweighed by privacy concerns, or when the right to disclosure is outweighed by the best interests of the state,'' he wrote.

Here, Swann said, only the first two factors are at issue.

In the case of the death certificate, Swann said state law permits disclosure only to those who have a "legal or vital interest,'' listing seven specific categories of who fits within that definition, "none of which include the general public.''

Less clear, Swann said, are privacy claims.

On one hand, the judge said, those are of minimal interest when the records involve the activities of a public official are concerned.

"But when records of government action are merely incidental to an otherwise private matter, including the death of an individual, privacy interests weigh more heavily,'' Swann continued.

In ordering the records at issue to be examined by the probate judge, Swann said he believes that much of what is in the files will be determined to be outside the scope of what is public.

"For example, it is difficult to conceive of circumstances that would justify the public disclosure of autopsy photographs here,'' he write. "Other privacy concerns, including the ongoing privacy interests of living crime victims, must be weighed against the need for public awareness of the government's performance of its law enforcement functions.''


  • 3 weeks later...
Guest themetfairy
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Posted


Retro wifey Nancy Seaver is still looking absolutely beautiful -



Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
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Posted


She's gran-tastic!


Guest Kong76
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Posted


Thanks, google ... Nancy is round faced not long/narrow faced.


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