Published 4/29/2008
at Yahoo! Sports - MLB News
No one in the Tampa Bay clubhouse savored the moment more than Carl Crawford. Climbing into a tie for first place in the AL East indeed was sweet, even if the season was not yet a month old. Crawford, a two-time All-Star and four-time AL stolen base champion, has played more games for the Rays than any other player in franchise history, experiencing more excruciating lows than he cares to remember.
(link)
Tags:
Related Content
A Changing Market
wegotaguythere.blogspot.com 4/29/2008 — Why are the Tampa Bay Rays a team to reckon with? Check it out here.
How do you solve the losing streak blues? Toilet humor
blog.masslive.com 4/29/2008 — I have no idea why this new video was tagged "Red Sox," but as far as I'm concerned, that's excuse enough for me to post it here. Especially since we Red Sox fans could use a little levity after watching...
There's Reason For Optimism in Rays Country
sportsloungeblog.com 4/29/2008 — When your franchise has never won more than 70 games or finished higher than fourth in the division standings, its easy to go overboard with early season success. But, we’ll throw the Tampa Bay Rays a bone because they finally look like they are ...
AL East Gets Two Big Names Back
blog.baseballdigestdaily.com 4/30/2008 — Two AL East teams will be getting their big stars back in the coming days as they finish their stints on the DL.
Kazmir excited for Fenway start Sunday —
Major League Baseball News 4/29/2008
Scott Kazmir will make his first start of the season Sunday in Boston against the Red Sox, after spending over a month on the DL. He is excited about the Rays' strong start, and feels 100 percent healthy as the Rays took their time getting him off the DL.
Kazmir set to return on Sunday —
FOXSports.com News for MLB 4/29/2008
Scott Kazmir is expected to make his season debut for Tampa Bay on Sunday after missing more than a month with an elbow injury.
Kazmir made his third rehabilitation start Monday, pitching for Triple-A Durham against Richmond. The left-hander allowed ...