Coming off their most successful season in franchise history, the Phoenix Coyotes are left to sit, wonder, and wait.
Cardinals defensive end Darnell Dockett is never one to hold his tongue on any topic, so on Wednesday, on Day Five of OTAs, he was in his usual form.
The American Junior Golf Association made its way to Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale over the weekend for the Thunderbird International Junior.
The Diamondbacks first pick (third overall) last year is on the fast-track to success and judging from his steady climb through the Dbacks minor league affiliates, don’t be surprised to see the 6’1 right-hander with the quirky delivery at Chase Field in the near future.
The Diamondbacks and All-Star catcher Miguel Montero recently came to terms on a five-year, $60 million contract extension.
Prior to Friday night’s series opener against the Brewers, Diamondbacks manager Kirk Gibson took time to speak to the media, and talked about the first meeting between the teams since their playoff series last fall.
“It is a story that needs to be told.” That is how forward Mikkel Boedker described the 2011-12 Phoenix Coyotes. And what a story it was.
The Cardinals, like every other NFL team, know what it’s like to lose significant players on their roster for long stretches of the season (i.e. Kevin Kolb & Dan Williams) due to injury.
Coming off an improbable season a year ago which included a National League West title, 94 regular season wins and a trip to the NL Division Series, nobody would have expected Kirk Gibson’s Arizona Diamondbacks to be 20-25, near the bottom of the division and 10.5 games behind the Dodgers in late May.
After rolling through the first two series, the ‘Yotes dream season came to an abrupt end when Dustin Penner slipped the puck past Mike Smith in overtime giving the Los Angeles Kings a 4-3 win in Game 5 of the Western Conference Finals Tuesday night at Jobing.com Arena in Glendale.