Because The Contingency deserves a thread as awesome as his nickname.
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Wes Helms 2010
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Tags: 2010, agree, awesome, braves, can't, chicago, cody, days, espn, experience, face, florida, fredi, fuck, game, goal, gonzalez, great, half, hanley, hitting, hope, it's, juan, make, manager, marlins, maybin, mind, news, nick, phillies, pitchers, player, post, problem, ramirez, shit, stanton, star, start, streak, talk, thinks, thought, thread, time, traded, uggla, what's
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Not only were Marlins players upset with Hanley Ramirez for his lack of hustle Monday, but they were irked by his comments Tuesday, Wes Helms said.
Ramirez said, ``We got a lot of people dogging it after ground balls. They don't apologize.''
Helms said that comment is ``unacceptable. Don't bring the other 24 guys into your problem. Don't start throwing people under the bus.''
Ramirez also said Fredi Gonzalez ``never played in the big leagues'' and that ``he does whatever he [expletive] wants.''
Said Helms: ``To say the things about the manager -- it doesn't matter whether Fredi played in the big leagues or not -- there is no honor in that and I have no respect for that. It's wrong. What he said really hurts us as a team and hurts a lot of peoples' feelings. This is just mind-boggling.''
On his lack of hustle Monday, Helms said, ``It upsets me, makes you wonder where his heart is.''
While I agree with Mr. Contingency's sentiment, he kind of needs to STFU and stop playing this thing out through the media. Handle it internally, like he supposedly did with some Hanley-related issues last year that occurred prior to the Hanley-Uggla incident.
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CHICAGO -- Some of the younger Marlins players call him Uncle Wes. In a few years, he may also be known as Coach Wes.
Wes Helms, Florida's veteran leader, makes it clear that he aspires to get into coaching when his playing days are over.
Helms turned 34 on May 12, and he'd like to play four more seasons after this year. If he achieves that, he would have a 15-year MLB career.
Whenever he decides to step away as a player, he wants to be in uniform in another capacity.
"That's the goal I've set for myself," Helms said. "Then I want to pursue coaching. It's something I've thought about, and something I want to do.
Helms' leadership and his approach to the game have earned him the respect of his teammates.
A pinch-hitting specialist and spot starter at either third base or first base, Helms has playoff experience from his days with the Braves and the Phillies.
He may wind up managing in the big leagues someday. If that happens, he would be an example of a position player rising up the coaching ranks. So often, catchers move into coaching and managing.
"Catchers, to me, they are in control of the whole game," Helms said. "They see what's going on. They put the plays on. They get the signs from the coaches. They are involved in the game on every pitch. They are learning the game from a managing aspect faster than the other players.
"A lot of catchers do pursue coaching when they get out of the game. It's something I want to do. I've thought about it a lot."
Hehe.
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he only gets crap because he's such an immense bag of dicks about everything. i'd bet he's the creepy guy in the corner at a party that awkwardly pushes his way into a conversation
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oh NOW i see why fip is defending himOriginally posted by Madman81Most of the people in the world being dumb is not a requirement for you to be among their ranks.
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