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Well, maybe Pete Crow-Armstrong wants more than just a hug

Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

By the end of May, I wrote about the passion sin of Pete Crow-Armstrong. When the Cubs won a game on their walk, Crow-Armstrong was more than just the first game to enter the field to celebrate. He was still on the field before winning. The game is still in progress and the ball is still working, but the Ravens sprint at the third baseline, like a hot missile, breaks the rules and pulls the hero who just beats the game, defeating the most intense hug of the game. It’s a pattern; a joyful, sensual, illegal but unavailable pattern that plays a role in the rising strain of “Go Cubs Go”.

Well, the Cubs have gone twice more in the last five weeks, and Crow-Armstrong hasn’t been disappointed. At the bottom of the 10th inning on June 15, Ian Happ entered the Buccaneers with a single drive single. At the time, Crow-Armstrong was on the deck, which meant he was busy warming up and thinking about hitting the ball. It also means he’s right next to the plate, so he ended up covering Vidal Bruján when he won the victory, then changed course and rushed into the fields to congratulate Happ. For these reasons, he actually didn’t get into the field of competition until a few seconds after the game, but don’t worry. He is still the first cub in the field and the first to wrap Happ in a large, fluffy hug. His love is so powerful that the energy surge temporarily overloads the Marquee Sports broadcast system.

Happ PCA Celebration GIF

Of course, once the video comes back, Happ will hold on to Crow-Armstrong as he tries to leave.

The Cubs came out of the guardian on July 3 and were again at the bottom of the 10th. Matt Shaw came to the plate at third base with zombie runner Nico Hoerner. Shaw drove the ball into the midfield, and although Lane Thomas had no trouble tracking it, it was so deep that Hoerner easily marked it. Thomas did not try to nail the runner to the plate, but jogged until the Ivy took him away.

Lane Thomas in the Ivy

Now, let me show you where Crow-Armstrong is when the game really ends. I had to sync two video angles to find the exact moment when Hoerner touched the plate, but it was worth mentioning. Are you ready? No, you are definitely not. You can’t prepare for this.

PCA When Game Ends

Where is Crow-Armstrong at the end of the game? He is very far away. He is actually a honorary infielder. This situation just swells a little here, as Hoerner slows down and shows for a second before actually touching the plate, but that doesn’t mean the game isn’t going yet! Crow-Armstrong has passed the pitcher’s mound. What would happen if Thomas changed his mind and returned from the ghost world outside the Ivy, after all, trying to throw Horner out? Crow-Armstrong is actually a critical person.

Actually, our entire sequence comes from cameras that focus only on Crow-Armstrong, because where do you also want the camera operator to focus on? Keep going and get the full experience.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qyyuwxnl9xu

This moment belongs to Crow-Armstrong and without anyone else, it will be hard to exaggerate. He jumped over the wall. He was the only one, and he behaved like he owned the space. Not only did he define Hoerner along the third baseline, he did not collide with him yet. Seriously. When you pause the tape, it looks like a crow-Armstrong either tries to skip him or attempts to invent a new type of backpack ride.

PCA Nico Hoerner Collision Course

I was really true when I said this moment belonged to the Crow-Armstrong. Take a look at the bumps in the chest he gave to Xiao. Xiao just defeated the victory. He is a hero. He won the game, and Crow-Armstrong (little did) in Dugout, for a minute or so, Crow-Armstrong and Michael Busch will pour the water-filled cooler over his head. But let me ask you a little. Which of these two guys looks happier?

Pete Crow Armstrong and Matt Shaw Celebrating

Xiao looks like a guy who has just walked past the guardian. He was very happy. As for Crow-Armstrong, I even thought of a hypothetical situation in which someone seemed to be replaced by joy as he was in this moment. He was full of enthusiasm. He was exploding. While he won the lottery and Super Bowl and tasted the chocolate for the first time, he looked like the doctor gave him a pure dopamine syringe. I think that’s what it looks like when someone actually dies from happiness.

This is good news. Pete Crow-Armstrong had to read the Fanggraphs, and he had to pay special attention to this section, and I explained that these rules almost guarantee that he wouldn’t have any trouble if he ran to the field until the game was over. This is the only logical explanation for the fact that he is working harder than ever now.

We should probably celebrate again before we go. Actually, this is just for regular old home runs. Strangely, although Marquee’s staff trained on Crow-Armstrong when it was possible to celebrate a walk, it had begun deliberately getting rid of his home run celebration. He ran twice yesterday. Marque did not show any celebration. In fact, it has been a few weeks since local broadcasts showed Crow-Armstrong celebrated his home run. But Apple TV broadcasts Chicago’s four-game game in July, in which Crow-Armstrong also had two home runs, and no one in Cupertino got the memo. See if you can find out the subtle reason Marque decided to find something, and anything else is to be on the screen, while Crow-Armstrong and Seiya Suzuki celebrate home runs.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2TIKL_HQ8

Yes, maybe not that subtle after all. Marquee Sports Network decided that Cubs fans don’t need to see Suzuki and Crow-Armstrong jumping in the air, well, I’m really trying to avoid using the term “bumpy ugly” here, so let’s call it “United Force.” It turns out that you can run into two glasses and cup.

Suzuki and Crow-Armstrong talked to reporters about the special bond they formed as teammates, and I would say that did happen. They actually joined in the groin. Suzuki told ESPN’s Karl Ravech through an interpreter on Sunday. “There is no necessary language to express certain emotions,” Crow Armstrong said. Bear fans should have the opportunity to watch two stars speak in their own special love language. Marquee last showed the beast that there were two fronts on the camera was June 8 – it was eight home runs, more than a month – they did it because they figured it out Austin Powers– Review mode.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wv1unipj0la

Yes, they filmed the celebration through the gap between the benches. At the moment of impact, all you can see is two belts becoming one. This is a missed opportunity. The bear should place it in front and center and place it in every home in the Greater Chicago area, rather than masking this pouring of joy by photographing furniture. The only thing I really care about is that it seems like a very risky move for two players who are absolutely crucial to the Cubs’ playoffs. The difficulty here is not outside the chart. I was worried about the hamstrings taking off. I worry about the ankles and knees when the groin and tilt collide in the air. I would feel much better if Suzuki and Crow-Armstrong could find a way to dock at sea level. Anyway, I don’t think they should stop, not just because it’s fun. I think we also need to consider the possibility of combining power with Suzuki, or even just the motivation to do so, which has been driving the possibility of Crow-Armstrong’s recent success in the trading session. If we know one thing, it is that he really likes to celebrate.

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