Morales delivers in debut
Kendry Morales made his spring debut on Monday at Surprise Stadium and picked up right where he left off last season — banging base-hits and driving in runs.
Morales singled home a run during a two-run first inning and singled home another in the fifth as the Angels erupted for four runs.
The reigning AL West champs saved their best offensive performance of the young spring for their division rivals, the Rangers, who were showing off new DH Vladimir Guerrero.
Maicer Izturis singled to right twice to send leadoff man Erick Aybar scurrying to third after a walk and single. Juan Rivera hammered a pair of run-producing hits, a single and double, and the big thunder came from Mike Napoli and Brandon Wood. Napoli launched one to dead center, his second homer of the spring, and Wood’s first hit landed on the grass beyond the 379 sign in right center.
Scott Kazmir, slowed by a sore right hamstring he brought into camp, will pitch two innings in an intrasquad game on Wednesday. The plan, if that goes well, is to get him to 45 pitches in a Cactus League game five days later.
Torii Hunter hopes to be able to play alongside Hideki Matsui, in his Angels debut as the DH, on Tuesday when the Padres send towering Chris Young to the mound at Tempe Diablo Stadium. Hunter felt a twinge in the area of his surgically repaired right groin on his first slide of the spring on Friday against the Rockies on a double.
“Right now, there’s no sense of urgency,” Angels manager Mike Scioscia said. “He’ll play tomorrow, and if not tomorrow, a matter of days. We’re not concerned with him. If it was March 28, it’d be another story.”
Kevin Jepsen (tender right shoulder) and Scot Shields (knee surgery recovery) are down to throw 15 pitches each in simulated games on Tuesday. Fernando Rodney (sore shins) is progressing in bullpen sessions, Scioscia said. - Lyle Spencer
Leave a comment Comments (You may
use HTML tags for style)
To preview your
comment, start typing:
« previous post |back to blog
Spring game 4 final angels 13 rangers 9
Spring Game # 4: FINAL- Angels 13, Rangers
9FinalAngels 13Rangers 9
HighlightsJosh Hamilton made his spring
debut and went 2-3 with a run scored. He says his
body is feeling fine, and he should be good going
forward.
Brandon McCarthy pitched 2
innings and gave up 4 hits and 2 runs.
Other pitchers of notice- Colby Lewis, Luis
Mendoza, Derek Holland, and Ben Snyder.
This was Holland’s first appearance since
injuring his leg two weeks ago.
Next
UpTuesday, March 9, 2:05 p.m. CSTvs. Oakland
Athletics
Leave a comment Comments (You may
use HTML tags for style)
To preview your
comment, start typing:
« previous post |back to blog
How We Do 2010With the real season coming up here quick, let’s take a moment to see what we look like in the grand scheme of things before we add another year of numbers. (AKA, another excuse to make charts in Excel!)
From beginning
of time to last season, the Giants rank #2 in the
league for win percentage. Not bad
really. The Yankees are the winner, of
course, and it doesn’t look like they will
be dethroned anytime soon. Dodgers are
catching up, but we still got a decent enough gap
there. (And just as an FYI, we rank #1 in
total actual wins, but since not every team
started in the 1800s, that standing isn’t
exactly a fair comparison.)
And since I was at it, here’s the rest of the league, for my imaginary readers whose team didn’t make the top 15:
I’m
betting Rays fans are hard core.
Now about some head-to-head? How do we compare to other teams on a face-to-face level?
Giants are still
beating out everyone else in the National
League. They have more wins vs losses than
each and every team, though it looks like the
Dodgers are a few wins away from pushing that bar
to the left. But that’s what makes
good rivalry, right? Who wants to have a
rivalry with a team that sucks?
American League
is kicking our butts a bit harder. Of
course, we face them much less, which makes each
loss much more powerful than the National League
chart. Looks like 6 out of 14 teams are
beating us more than we’re beating them,
including the A’s, which…sucky!
Still above average though.
All-in-all not a bad state of affairs. Again though, this is over the Giants entire history, so I’m betting a lot of their momentum was built back in the day. Best make sure we keep things going so we can stay on top, eh?
Leave a comment Comments (You may
use HTML tags for style)
To preview your
comment, start typing:
« previous post |back to blog
Hangin out with the globetrott
Hangin’ out with the Globetrotters
I had a thrill on Friday night when I got to hang out with the Harlem Globetrotters for one of their games in Glendale, Arizona, in the Coyotes’ NHL arena.
I was actually on the floor for a while with my old buddy, LaTroy Hawkins, doing a routine with a basketball that the Trotters put together for us. LaTroy is pitching for the Brewers. We go way back to when I was 17, just getting started in baseball with the Twins. We were roommates back in 1993. So that was definitely a lot of fun, being part of our little act together.
Here I am, 34 years old, and I’m acting like I’m 10 around these guys. No matter how many times you’ve seen them - this was my fourth time in the past 10 years - they always crack you up. They contacted Tim Mead, the Angels’ PR man, and asked him if I could come out and do a skit with them. We invited them over to camp on Friday, and they entertained the guys before we went out to our workout.
Everybody had a great time, especially Bobby Abreu. He’s a part-owner of a basketball team in Venezuela, and they said they wanted to try out for Bobby’s team. Bobby’s got a great sense of humor, so he loved it.
I’ve always loved the Globetrotters. Being around them now, I have a whole new respect for what they do and the way they do it. These guys work out, eat right, keep themselves in great condition. You have to be in shape to travel the world and entertain people the way they do.
They’re on their way to England next and will be on the road for a month. Some of them have family in the Phoenix area, so they were enjoying that while they could before going back to work.
These guys are legends. They were in every household on TV, in cartoons. It was these guys and Scooby Doo for me. They had their own cartoon show, and every Saturday we’d watch them. To have a chance to hang with them, talk to them and laugh with those guys, it’s really something special.
These guys are athletes, dancers, perfectionists. They take their job very seriously, and their job is to make people laugh - kids, middle-aged people, old folks. Everybody loves the Globetrotters.
Think about all the good will and joy they’ve spread over the world, and it’s awesome, really. I was looking around the arena and parents were cracking up right along with their kids. They had that old routine where one of the guys would run out carrying what everybody thought was confetti - but it turned out to be water, and he splashed some people.
Spring Training can get a little monotonous at times, going through drills day after day when you really want to just go out and play the game. But you have to prepare yourselves right to be ready - it’s part of the deal. Lucky for me, I got one of the best breaks in the routine you could possibly imagine when the Globetrotters invited me to be a part of their show.
It’s one of those things I’ll never forget. I wish all those guys the best in their travels.
1 Comments
I love you Mr Hunter!
I haven’t had the opportunity to watch the Globetrotters yet but I hope so! And my goodness I watched the Cartoons too! I remember Scooby doo featuring the cartoons on the show lol.. I can’t wait to see them in person! I’m glad you’re healthy and working hard this season.
Best of luck to you mr hunter! GO ANGELS!
http://mimi.mlblogs.com
Leave a comment Comments (You may use
HTML tags for style)
To preview your
comment, start typing:
« previous post |back to blog
Reckling chatwood show right s
Reckling, Chatwood show right stuff
PHOENIX - Angels fans visiting Tempe Diablo Stadium on Friday were treated to a sneak preview of potential coming attractions at Angel Stadium.
Trevor Reckling and Tyler Chatwood, back to back, put on impressive displays, going two innings each against the Rockies. Reckling allowed a run while striking out three men, and Chatwood yielded two hits in two scoreless innings.
Reckling, a lefty from New Jersey, has star qualities and is mature beyond his years. He’ll be 21 on May 22, and it appears as if he’s on the fast track to the big time.
The Angels’ Minor League Pitcher of the Year in 2009, Reckling has a delivery quirky enough to disrupt hitters’ timing, and he unleashes mid-90s fastballs along with a big bender and a quality changeup. As his command improves, he’ll move closer to The Show.
“It felt good being out there,” said Reckling, a steal in the eighth round of the 2007 First-Year Player Draft. “I thought I had pretty good stuff and made some good pitches. It’s always a challenge facing big league hitters, and I’m trying to make the best of my opportunities.”
Chatwood, the club’s second-round choice in 2008, is entering his third professional season at 20. By 2012 or 2013, the kid from Redlands, due east from Angel Stadium, could be joining Reckling in the Angels’ rotation.
Chatwood grew up in Redlands, about an hour east of Angel Stadium. His tool kit, Like Reckling’s, is loaded with sharp instruments. Unimposing physically at 6-foot and 185 pounds, he has adopted as role models two pretty fair righties who make up for physical stature with talent and production: Tim Lincecum and Roy Oswalt.
“Those were the guys I was looking at when I started pitching my junior year [at Redlands High School] - mostly Lincecum,” Chatwood said. “I was a position player my whole life before I began pitching seriously as a senior.”
He’d undergone Tommy John surgery for a loose ligament in his right elbow at age 15, having pitched one inning while he was in the process of making a U.S. national team as a third baseman in a tryout in Phoenix.
His sophomore year was wiped out by the surgery, and he got a feel for pitching as a junior before putting it all together in his senior year, drawing the attention of Angels scouts.
Drafted in the second round in 2008, he has put together two solid Minor League seasons and needs only to develop his changeup and find consistent command to make a major jump.
Angels manager Mike Scioscia said he was impressed with the way Reckling and Chatwood attacked hitters with their live arms and attitudes against the Rockies.
“They weren’t scared,” Scioscia said.
Anxious, maybe, but not afraid to take a big step toward their eventual destination.
Leave a comment Comments (You may
use HTML tags for style)
To preview your
comment, start typing:
« previous post |back to blog
Rodney ready globetrotters sur
Rodney ready; Globetrotters surprise guests
The news of the day involved Fernando Rodney, the hard-throwing right-hander signed to a two-year, $11 million free-agent deal over the winter. Rodney, experiencing soreness in his shins, has been cleared to start throwing off the mound.
“Really good news,” Angels manager Mike Scioscia said.
That means all the club’s pitchers are now able to get their work in as Scioscia begins to formulate plans for a variety of power arms aligned in the bullpen.
The entertainment news came in the form of the Harlem Globetrotters, who put on an exhibition of sorts for Angels players behind closed doors in their daily morning meeting.
The Trotters accepted an invitation by Torii Hunter, who plans to don a uniform when the world-famous outfit performs in the area on Friday night.
“Bobby Abreu is involved in the ownership of a Venezuean basketball team,” Scioscia said. “We said we’ve got some guys who want to try out for his team.”
And here came six Globetrotters to do their matchless magic act on the floor of the clubhouse, to the delight of 60 players, a group of coaches and executives and one beaming manager.
“It was great,” Scioscia said.
Leave a comment Comments (You may
use HTML tags for style)
To preview your
comment, start typing:
« previous post |back to blog| next post »
Fuentes: mission accomplished
Early March Cactus League games are about the process, not results. It’s more about how you feel than how you do, unless you’re trying to catch a manager’s eye.
Accordingly, Brian Fuentes accomplished what he set out to do in his spring debut on Friday at Tempe Diablo Stadium during a 7-5 loss to Colorado.
Entering in the third inning against his former club, Fuentes struck out the first man he faced, Ryan Spilborghs. He walked Troy Tulowitzki and yielded a single to Ian Stewart for a first-and-third situation. Miguel Olivo went down for a breaking ball and hit it to the wall in left for an RBI double.
After striking out Matt Miller, Fuentes’ day ended.
Not bad, not great. A good day’s work, which is exactly what the Angels’ closer had in mind.
“For me, I just want to show I’m healthy and throwing pitches where I want to, and for the most part I did that,” Fuentes said. “I did walk a man and started falling behind and made a bad pitch to Stewart, a breaking ball that stayed up. But the breaking ball to Olivo was a good pitch, down, and he hit it to the wall. I’m all right with that.
“I moved the fastball around and put pitches where I needed to, so it was a good day.”
It could have been a lot worse. Fuentes could have been stuck in traffic for more than three hours like Rockies starter Ubaldo Jimenez, who didn’t reach the ballpark until the game was underway because of a wreck on I-10.
“I didn’t move forever,” said Jimenez, who chose to drive on his own and not take the team bus. “I left [Tucson] at 9 and got here at 1:30.”
Jimenez entered in the fourth and worked two innings, yielding four earned runs on two walks and three hits while striking out three men.
Fuentes, meanwhile, was throwing more off-speed stuff than is his custom this early in the spring. He feels he has plenty of time to find his fastball command.
“I never really push it too hard in the spring,” he said. “No matter how many bullpens you have, you don’t have the same arm strength. I had two batting practices and three bullpens under my felt.”
Fuentes endured back spasms that set him back last spring, but he found his rhythm after a rocky start and led the Majors with 48 saves in 55 opportunities.
“I try not to base it on results and numbers,” he said, referring to his springtime evaluations. “Do you feel healthy or not? That’s all I focus on now.”
Fernando Rodney, who closed for Detroit last season and brings his heat to the Angels’ bullpen as a free agent, was cleared on Friday to begin throwing bullpen sessions after experiencing soreness in both shins.
“We haven’t discussed it yet,” Fuentes said when asked about how Rodney will fit along with Scot Shields, Kevin Jepsen and Jason Bulger in the back of a deep bullpen. “My personal opinion is having Fernando in the back of the bullpen is a good thing. I saw him in Detroit, and he’s thrown lights out.
“From the outside looking in, it’s good to have him.”
Angels manager Mike Scioscia has made it clear Fuentes is his closer, and that Rodney and Shields occasionally will spell him in the ninth inning when he needs a breather.
“His arm speed was good, his arm slot was good,” Scioscia said when asked about Fuentes. “He had good stuff. He threw a lot of pitches, 27, 28, and we didn’t want him getting in the 35-pitch range. That was a full workout for him.”
Angels starter Sean O’Sullivan yielded five earned runs on four hits and a walk while getting four outs, but prospects Trevor Reckling and Tyler Chatwood had impressive debuts. Each worked two innings, Chatwood holding the Rockies scoreless while Reckling yielded a run while striking out three hitters.
“Sully had a tough start,” Scioscia said, “but I thought our younger pitchers — Chatwood, Reckling — you could see the life in their arms. They weren’t scared. They went right after guys.”
Offensively, Maicer Izturis (two walks,
single) had a perfect day leading off, and Terry
Evans stroked a pair of singles, driving in a run.
Mark Trumbo slammed an opposite-field double to
open the ninth inning, and Michael Ryan drove
in a pair of runs with a single and had a
lenghty at-bat to prolong the ninth before
the Rockies nailed down the
win.
1 Comments
Itzuris GETTING THE JOB done tells all the naysayers asked who will take up slack when figgins leaves. THIS GUY. That’s who. Now you see.
Leave a comment
Comments (You may use HTML tags for style)
To preview your comment, start typing:
« previous post |back to blog
Some problems are good to have
Sometimes it’s nice to have good problems
Take Mike Scioscia and Terry Francona as examples. Both managers have the problem of having way too many options in their starting rotation.
(mobileapplicationtestingtimes.files.wordpress. com)
They each have 2 or 3 guys who could be the ace, and they each have a couple of options for the number 5 spot.
Just look at the options for Francona’s Red Sox.
Josh Beckett, Jon Lester, John Lackey, Tim Wakefield, Clay Bucholtz, and Dice-K. That doesn’t include any potential talent that is being shown by AAA players.
(sports.yahoo.com)
But who is the ace? Beckett has been the go-to guy for the past few years but with the performance of Lester last year, can Josh still hold that spot? What about newly signed Lackey? He was the Angels’ ace for the last several years. Wake and Bucholtz should get the 4 and 5 spot, as Dice-K is injured yet again.
Out in the Cactus League, Angels manager Mike Scioscia is dealing with a problem that has him smiling these days. He has 5 guys who could be, or have been, aces. They are the youngest rotation (26-31yrs old) in the League right now, and a force to be reckoned with.
Probable ace, Jered Weaver, is coming off an amazing season in which he was the only member of the rotation who was NOT on the DL at any point at all. Jered can pitch a SOLID 7+ innings.
(sports.yahoo.com)
If opposing teams are hoping to catch a break by waiting for the next pitcher in the rotation, they are in for a surprise. Waiting in the wings, in some order, are Ervin Santana, Joe Saunders, Scott Kazmir and Joel Pineiro.
In the Rays camp, Joe Maddon has the Zobrist-Rodriguez situation. We know that Ben Zobrist will be on the roster. Where? That’s the question. With Sean Rodriguez winning Rays fans over by being on this hitting streak, it looks like he could take that 2B slot.
(sports.yahoo.com)
That would mean moving Ben to RF - which he played last year quite a few times - and putting Gabe Kapler as his backup. Could work.
Maddon is also looking at Reid Brignac, Jason Bartlett’s backup, who may become the new Super-U guy. Unless, Perez wins that role….
Spring Training is still young. There will be guys sent back to AAA - some who need to be there, others who are to be the backups in case of injury. Still, having these good problems is a good headache to have.
Kids’ Corner
Colin has been trying to help Joe Maddon with some of his decisions. He has talked to the TV, yelled at the TV, rolled his eyes, threated to change the channel. Yep - that’s my boy. He learned to use the remote control this winter. He’s only 4 years old and HE can channel surf faster than me, AND can navigate the computer, AND can kick my butt at bowling on the Wii.
Amy has already asked if she can try writing for my blog this year too. She has been writing about baseball for some of her school work, and wants to write more. She’s also the one who keeps trying to give me new ideas of what to write about.
Until next time,
Go Rays!
7 Comments
Interesting Post. A lot of teams are auditioning for the fifth starter position and it is always interesting. I justwrote a two part post about the padres 5th starter spot. Though i wish we had the infield depth you guys do. Would you rather see Rodriguez or Brignac back in AAA to start the year?
Matt, fislinl.mlblogs.com
I love that Amy wants to write for your blog! I think that would be adorable to have her opinions on baseball matters. You raised her right!
- http://janeheller.mlblogs.com
I love the Rays! I enjoy watching Rays games
because it reminds me of the Angels :).
Y’all have Joe Maddon and Sean Rodriguez!
I’m hoping for another playoff run for
y’all
That would be great!
Our rotation is alright
I don’t know about our
playoff chances though. It’s slim this year
but you never know!
http://mimi.mlblogs.com
If Rodriguez gets the nod, as you say Zobrist will be found a spot somewhere, but then E. Johnson would probably be on his way somewhere else… It’s nice for those teams to have the pitching excess, but only if they all stay healthy…. I also see RJ Swindle is in the Rays training camp, now there’s a kid with an amazingly slow curveball…
wow - rays scored in the 10th to beat the Phillies, thought the Phillies were gonna end up with another tie..
~peter
Outside the Phillies Looking In
http://devilabrit.mlblogs.com
Haha Ginny! Lol he can surf channels better than me and can beat my but on Wii bowling.
That’s the kid everyone wants!:)
But if he knows about the Rays and baseball already in his life, he is off to a very good start and I think you should be proud.
What has he bowled on Wii Bowling? I once last
week got back to back 300’s. It was not a
bad day for me.
Good luck to the Rays. You know ST is the time for speculation. Heck when your the Angels or the Red Sox and you have to deal with two pretty good pitchers for the four and five spot…. your lucky!
When your the Indians your four and five guys are well.. not so good.
Ted
http://tribewithted.mlblogs.com/archives/2010/0 3/andy-and-russell-a-happy-couple.html
I wish the Dodgers had such a problem.
http://catlovesthedodgers.mlblogs.com
that is the best possible problem to have.
nothing better than a pitching problem filled with
top of the line starters. itll be interesting to
see how the Yanks/Sox staffs do this year.
http://pittpeas.mlblogs.com
Leave a comment Comments (You may use
HTML tags for style)
To preview your
comment, start typing:
« previous post |back to blog
There’s no tying in baseballThe White Sox took on the Angels in Tempe earlier this afternoon during the first full day of 2010 Cactus League play. And, in case you were under the impression that these games matter, Major League Baseball cleared that up for you when it decided to allow this contest to end in a 4-4 tie after 9 innings. Goodbye, three hours of my life!
Seriously, is there any point to watching a sporting event if there isn’t a damn winner? Otherwise, it’s like watching the horses walk around the paddock, going to place your bet, and then having the race called off or the track shut down. Good grief.
Now, I’m not an idiot–I’m obviously using the term matter quite loosely here. Sure, this is just spring training and, as such, the final scores don’t count towards a team’s standing–in that sense, these exhibition games absolutely don’t matter. But the games are very useful to the coaches and players, as they allow them to shake out the winter rust, identify problems, practice strategies and, sometimes, compete for spots on the roster; as a fan, though, you might do something better with your time while waiting for the regular season to start. From our perspective, these games offer little more than fodder for drunken debates.
Moving on …
In recent weeks, Sox manager Ozzie Guillen has talked about wanting to once again play ’small ball’ as a means to win. GM Kenny Williams has seemingly given Guillen the tools, i.e., players, with which to do this. Here’s just one example: in the recently acquired Juan Pierre, we have a 32-year old leadoff man (though he’s not young, Pierre’s supposed to have good leadership qualities and a nice clubhouse presence) with 10 years of MLB experience, a .301 career average, and the potential to steal 30 to 40 bases this season, maybe more. Then again, maybe less.
On a related note, the Sox unceremoniously dumped Scott Podsednik during this past off-season, a move that has the potential to bite us right in the bum, as Pods has since signed with one of our division rivals, The Royals. Podsednik, of course, was an important part of our 2005 championship team and who, last year, stood out as the Sox’s spark plug, hitting .304 and stealing 30 bases. More importantly, though, he came through in clutch situation after clutch situation. The Sox have essentially swapped Podsednik for Pierre, in that they’re both leadoff-hitting outfielders.
Pierre, though, should prove to be an asset. (’Should’ being the operative word here.) In the 5th inning of today’s game, for example, he laid down a bunt single and then stole second base. He later scored when Gordon Beckham hit a shot up the middle. This is precisely what Ozzie wants to do: bunt to get on base, steal in order to move into scoring position, and then use that speed to score on base hits and doubles. Good show, good show.
For good measure and to show that we’ll take and use the power when we can, catcher A.J. Pierzynski hit a 2-run homer later in the 5th, driving home Beckham.
One lingering question Ozzie will need to address, if not fully answer, concerns short stop Alexei Ramirez. Ramirez, who enters his third year with this team, is a promising player but hasn’t yet demonstrated that he can consistently produce in both offensive and defensive roles–he commits his fair share of errors and is hot-and-cold at the plate. We can expect him to hit about .280 or .290 this season, which is fine, but I’m wondering what those hits will look like. Specifically, where does Ramirez fit into Ozzie’s ’small ball’ scheme?
Alexei has the speed to steal bases, sure, but will he be swinging for the fences (he’s capable of hitting 20-plus HRs) or will he be laying down bunts in order to get on base? Probably a bit of both, I suspect, as Guillen has said he’s not as interested in ’small ball’ per se as he is in ’smart ball’–I take this to mean that he’ll make calls based on what a particular situation presents and, thus, what it requires. But the question remains: is Ramirez capable of, say, bunting like Podsednik or Pierre can? Can he come through, whether bunting or swinging, in the clutch? Will Ramirez struggle through the first weeks and months of this season as he has in the past? As the old cliché goes, only time will tell.
Tellingly, Ramirez ended that otherwise awesome top-half of the 5th inning for the Sox by flying out deep to left-center field. Would I be wrong to interpret that as a kind of analogy? That Ramirez, both literally and figuratively, swings for the fences but somehow manages to always, or at least mostly, come up short?
Anyway, the Sox ended the game with 4 stolen bases (they would’ve had 5, but Jordan Danks was gunned down by a p-e-r-f-e-c-t throw in the 9th) and, as if to declare to everyone that small (or smart) ball is back on the South Side–and that it’s our style, not yours–White Sox up-and-comer Tyler Flowers ended the 9th inning and, thus, the game by throwing out an Angels player who was attempting to steal 2nd.
Game over.
Leave a comment Comments (You may
use HTML tags for style)
To preview your
comment, start typing:
back to blog
Play ball pale hose face angels in tempe as their cactus league season begins
Play Ball! Pale Hose Face Angels in Tempe as Their Cactus League Season BeginsThe 2010 “new look” White Sox will officially be unveiled today as the South Siders travel to nearby Tempe to face the LA Angels of Anaheim in Game 1 of spring training.
Many of the regulars will be starting with a couple of top prospects rounding out the starting lineup. Juan Pierre will be in left, Andruw Jones in center (Alex Rios is nursing a sore shoulder) and Jordan Danks in right. Jordan will be backing up big brother John, who gets the start and is scheduled to pitch two innings.
Dayan Viciedo, a natural third baseman, gets the starting nod at first as the Sox want to see if he can make the switch to the other side of the infield. Gordon Beckham is set at second, Alexei Ramirez at short and Mark Teahen at third. A.J. Pierzynski will be behind the plate and Mark Kotsay the DH against Angel righty Joel Piniero.
I’m definitely ready.
Leave a comment Comments (You may
use HTML tags for style)
To preview your
comment, start typing:
« previous post |back to blog
