Rusty Silber 리트윗함
Rusty Silber
138.9K posts

Rusty Silber 리트윗함
Rusty Silber 리트윗함
Rusty Silber 리트윗함

Rusty Silber 리트윗함

One of my favorite TV calls in baseball history
Pedro Martinez@45PedroMartinez
What’s one baseball moment that still gives you chills? Go! ⚾
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Rusty Silber 리트윗함
Rusty Silber 리트윗함

Tuesday, March 24, 2026, 6:38 PM: As promised, the weather pattern is going be changing as we get into April 2026 from the first through the sixth, 2026, as the big ridge high pressure axis has now finally broken down.
This has been a very similar situation to January 2026; we went from really intense heat to now back to a rain pattern. Once again, now the question is, this is almost like a reverse spring, meaning that it will feel like winter, but it’s gonna be extreme because we had such an extreme historic brutal heat wave just a week ago. But this is also strongly connected with the warming of the Pacific, which has been continuing now for the past 12 months. I’m still monitoring the intensity of this double low axis; part of it is coming from the Gulf of Alaska and from the Hawaiian Islands.
Now, as you know, Hawaii has received a tremendous amount of rainfall in the last two weeks, so this pattern will also help bring the moisture into our region, especially Southern California, Central California, and Northern California, and yes, it may even help out with the renewed snowpack as well. #CAwx

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Rusty Silber 리트윗함

What's going on?
It's been 38 years since anyone at @TheMasters made a hole-in-one at the 12th hole (Curtis Strange, 1988).
Yet... it's only 155 yards.
On average, PGA Tour players have a 1-in-850 chance of holing out from that distance.
Since 1988, there have more than 11,000 tee shots hit on the 12th hole at The Masters.
(Prediction: This is the year...)

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Rusty Silber 리트윗함
Rusty Silber 리트윗함

Tired of sweating it out in this heat wave? Well, we have good news for some of you — but you’ll have to ride out the record-smashing temperatures for a few more days, first. weather.com/forecast/natio…

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Rusty Silber 리트윗함
Rusty Silber 리트윗함
Rusty Silber 리트윗함

"We're just so proud of them."
Los Angeles Golf Club owner Serena Williams talks with @notthefakesvp after watching her team win the TGL Finals 🏆
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There's a price to pay if you want to make the NBA.
To Bulls guard Yuki Kawamura, that price is $5 million.
Kawamura is in his 2nd year now in the NBA and is on a two-way contract making $354,794 (per spotrac).
During his last season in the Japan B-League, Kawamura was making around $2.5 million.
That figure is already seven times less than what he's currently making.
If he gave up on his NBA dream and chased the bag, he'd make around $5 million.
Former NBA player Yuta Watanabe currently plays in the Japan B League with the Chiba Jets and is expected to make $5 million after taxes.
In NBA contracts, that figure would command an average annual salary of $12 million before taxes, per @BasketNews_com.
It's not every day you see someone leave $5 million on the table.
But Yuki Kawamura is living proof that some dreams simply don't have a price tag 🏷️

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Rusty Silber 리트윗함
Rusty Silber 리트윗함
Rusty Silber 리트윗함
Rusty Silber 리트윗함

Full week of East Coast hockey ahead! 🏒
Stream the Hawks: go.chsn.com/subscribe
(@AureliosPizza)

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Rusty Silber 리트윗함

Sandwiched in-between two relative heatwaves (US and Arctic Circle), has been extreme cold in Canada & Alaska. You can’t have extreme heat or cold without having the opposite dipole elsewhere. In the case of the height of the #heatwave late last week, Parts of Canada & Alaska were - and to some degree - still are - record cold. So far Alaska is having one of its coldest March’s in a long time. Some cities, like King Salmon, are having their coldest on record.
It’s dipoles like this which is why we don’t say “climate change caused the heatwave”… that’s still not accurate. The dominant hemispheric pattern dictates amplification and location of extremes. Climate change then amplifies that pre-existing pattern… making formerly impossible events, not just possible, but probable. Climate change makes every heatwave more robust. But these heatwaves don’t happen without the governing large scale dynamics, much of which is driven by natural variability, being established. That’s not to say that global warming can’t influence steering patterns or even potentially Sudden Stratospheric Warming events through Arctic Amplification (more research needed), but as far as we know natural oscillations still set the table.
With all this said, the heat extremes now-a-days are simply more extreme than the cold extremes in the vast majority of cases, as the climate baseline continues to warm.

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