Mike Mussina: Is Moose Cooked?


Mike Mussina got shelled in his first Spring Training start. The MEDIA is panicking, but Moose is remaining calm because he said he felt good. This goes to show you judging one Spring Training “start” (usually 2 innings) is ridiculous. Guys are just getting into shape at this point. But with Joba, Kennedy, Hughes, Wang, and Pettitte doing well in their early innings, the MEDIA expected Moose to follow suit. Jeff Karstens actually came on and pitched well, as the Yankees won.

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  6 comments for “Mike Mussina: Is Moose Cooked?

  1. Twitter / GreenLandWiki with friends
    December 31, 2011 at 12:50 PM

    A well prepped oven is one of the main factors in ensuring that the cake will be cooked perfectly

  2. 19saturos
    November 15, 2011 at 4:39 PM

    I love that there is at least one dude running from the police…

  3. May 26, 2011 at 6:21 PM

    You can hear the moose neck breaking

  4. Eli
    May 24, 2011 at 1:32 AM

    ask sarah palin. she knows all about moose….mooses….meese?

    she can see russia from her house.

  5. New York Yankees
    April 10, 2011 at 8:39 AM

    How I Learned to Love Mike Mussina –

  6. April 6, 2011 at 10:31 PM

    posted by: MillyMilltown remarks: Interesting article! Amplify’d from http://www.nytimes.com How Slavery Really Ended in America On May 23, 1861, little more than a month into the Civil War, three young black men rowed across the James River in Virginia and claimed asylum in a Union-held citadel. Fort Monroe, Va., a fishhook-shaped spit of land near the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, had been a military post since the time of the first Jamestown settlers. This spot where the slaves took refuge was also, by remarkable coincidence, the spot where slavery first took root, one summer day in 1619, when a Dutch ship landed with some 20 African captives for the fledgling Virginia Colony. Two and half centuries later, in the first spring of the Civil War, Fort Monroe was a lonely Union redoubt in the heart of newly Confederate territory. Its defenders stood on constant guard. Frigates and armed steamers crowded the nearby waters known as Hampton Roads, one of the world’s great natural harbors….

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