The other day I was talking to my brother-in-law and in jest told him that I thought the Yankees must have made a deal with the devil, similar to Led Zepplin's deal, in order to be so dominant. Well, I have amended my theory. I think perhaps Beltre has made a deal with the devil in order to have a dominant season, the kind of season none of us expected him to have. The price for this, however, is steep because the devil is exacting payment in terms of his teammates health. At this point, Beltre may be regretting his deal (because everyone does eventually). After all, now he knows these guys and likes them and if it keeps up they could lose their chance to make the post-season. But you know how it goes with deals with the devil. There's no return policy.
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Friday, July 2, 2010
Deals With the Devil Never Really Work Out
The other day I was talking to my brother-in-law and in jest told him that I thought the Yankees must have made a deal with the devil, similar to Led Zepplin's deal, in order to be so dominant. Well, I have amended my theory. I think perhaps Beltre has made a deal with the devil in order to have a dominant season, the kind of season none of us expected him to have. The price for this, however, is steep because the devil is exacting payment in terms of his teammates health. At this point, Beltre may be regretting his deal (because everyone does eventually). After all, now he knows these guys and likes them and if it keeps up they could lose their chance to make the post-season. But you know how it goes with deals with the devil. There's no return policy.
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adrian beltre,
red sox
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