To me it looked like he tagged the runner and looked back at the up who was still in third strike pose so he thought he had tagged him. Who knows what the protest process looks like for high school games. Can you even play under protest in highschool like the big leagues?I saw that yesterday. That high school is a smaller school in a low-income town. It's about 45 minutes from where I grew up, so even though their school was smaller, we would still play them every year in basketball and some years in baseball.
I'm surprised at just how small the school's enrollment has gotten over the past 25 years. When I was in school, their enrollment was around 1000. Now, it is around 500. Even though it was a smaller school from a small town, they were always competitive due to them being scrappy in everything.
I read an interview with the coach, and he seems like a quality dude placing the blame on himself for not lobbying and protesting harder.
shouldn't be much of a surprise.I'm surprised at just how small the school's enrollment has gotten over the past 25 years. When I was in school, their enrollment was around 1000. Now, it is around 500.
All that is accurate, however Rifle is from a deep Red part of NY so he’s basically like any other good ol boy from Cabins, WV except wearing Gucci shoes.shouldn't be much of a surprise.
New Yorkers are so worried about crime, sky-high housing costs and struggling schools, 27% percent of state residents said they want to move away in the next five years, a survey revealed Wednesday.
A stunning 30% of respondents — who also cited inept political leadership and soaring taxes as reasons for wanting to flee — said they already longed to live somewhere else, according to a Siena College Research Institute quality of life poll.
Nearly a third — about 31% — plan to leave the Empire State when they retire while even more said they believe it’s not safe for kids.