


MLB has 162 games per season. He is dead 162 days from his birthday







He is dead 22 days from the anniversary of his World Series





Just the basics 🙂 of Baseball Rules.



MLB has 162 games per season. He is dead 162 days from his birthday







He is dead 22 days from the anniversary of his World Series





Just the basics 🙂 of Baseball Rules.
This was gonna be a brief comment, but I got on a roll.
Jim Poole = 570 (like his death age of 57).
David (Justice, the opponent who hit the series-clinching HR off of him) = 570 too.
James Poole = 666, 44.
He died of ALS, which is contained in the acronym ALCS (American League Championship Series), the series his Indians won to advance to the ‘95 World Series, where he gave up the humiliating title-clinching HR to the Braves. (As above, so below.)
Jim Poole = 95.
David Justice hit that home run.
David = 95, 66.
Justice = 113 (deceived, illusions, steal, stealing).
Home run = 95, 187.
Home runs = 113.
Braves = 95. (The hilarious reason they had to struggle so long before winning a title that particular year. Struggled = 113, by the way.)
Unsurprisingly, Poole went to a Catholic high school & Justice went to a Catholic h.s. and college.
And look at this: Atlanta = 720, 95. Their series-clinching game 6 began at 7:20 PM in ‘95.
Nineteen ninety five = 72.
Glancing at the final stats from that ‘95 ALCS, I noticed that in the three main stat categories, the Indians had 23 runs, 53 hits, & 7 errors, which add up to the deadly number 83.
The Indians had had a remarkable eight .300 hitters in their starting lineup that season, for a subtle 83 or 38.
The Indians finished with 44 losses that regular season. Kill = 44.
Due to a strike, it was shortened to a 144-game schedule, which also has a 44.
Atlanta Braves = 44.
I’m not even a baseball fan, but found this all out via Wikipedia & a gematria calculator in a few minutes. I’m sure others have before me. This has to be up there as one of the most scripted titles ever, right down to the start time of the final game, not to mention the matchup of two teams with Native American names. Stunning and “brave”!
From a broader standpoint, October (= 33, 666) ‘95 was a notable month. That month O.J. Simpson was shockingly found not guilty in the killing of his white wife in the “trial of the century.” And it was the month of the Million Man March in D.C. for black justice. (Its attendance didn’t match its name.) The World Series’ game-winning HR was hit by a partially-black player named Justice, off of a white pitcher. And the final score of that game was 1-0, like 10 (October). Black icon Michael Jordan also embarked on his first full season back – after retiring due to his dad’s murder 33 days after he scored 666 total points in the ‘93 playoffs – that month. (Well, the preseason, to be exact. Their regular season began Nov. 3rd, or 11/3, like 113 for deceived & illusions.) This is often considered the greatest NBA team / season ever, the ‘95-96 Bulls, who set the all-time single season wins record. Guess how many wins? 72. In sync with Atlanta being 720, and the 7:20 start time. Those Bulls had 10 losses, again like the 10th month. And they added defensive stopper Dennis Rodman, who wore number 10, and was listed at 6’7” (2.01m, like 201).
Speaking of ALS & the ALCS, I wanted to see if the Indians had Als (multiple players named Al) that ‘95 season, as petulant slugger Albert Belle was their huge star, leading the AL in HR & RBI that year. Sure enough, they also (heh… als + o) had Sandy Alomar Jr., Álvaro Espinoza, & Albert “Albie” Lopez. Simply incredible.
And we don’t need to mention why 95 is such an important number. (Cough… Martin Luther.) Its inverse is also très important. This pairing is seen with most of the big 2-digit numbers: 38 & 83, 47 & 74, 59 & 95. (33, 44, & 66 are already palindromes.) 35, 36, 42, & 56 are the main 2-digit numbers that don’t seem to have important reverse counterparts.
As always, I use extended gematria, not just the four main ciphers. But the majority of these numbers were found in the main four, so the elites clearly wanted their handiwork to be noticed.
-CR
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