Lottery Look-In: September 16
Briefly

Lottery Look-In: September 16
"They're often big and slow - think knights and giants - but they keep the baddies from wailing on your bards and mages. I never really play as a tank. I don't think it's terribly fun to be that character. Instead, I'm usually a mage, and I deploy that character to drag everyone away from me. Let me conjure fire rain while elves shoot arrows at you, other knights stab you, and other mages unleash hellish spells upon you."
"He didn't make it through 4 while giving up 3 runs on 7 hits and walking 3, and it took him 92 pitches to do it. Michael Busch got to him immediately with a leadoff home run, and Pete Crow-Armstrong added an RBI single. Ian Happ and PCA added sacrifice flies to give more than enough offense for whatever you call Pittsburgh's offense. Cade Horton had a fine start, and 4 relievers combined for 4 one-hit innings and Sox strikeouts."
Tanks in Role-Playing Games serve to draw enemy attention and soak damage, while mages stay back and unleash ranged spells. A player preferring a mage tactic uses area magic and allies to divert foes. Paul Skenes experienced a rough outing, failing to reach the fourth inning, allowing three runs on seven hits with three walks and throwing 92 pitches; opponents scored on a leadoff Michael Busch home run and a Pete Crow-Armstrong RBI single, with sacrifice flies adding insurance. Cade Horton provided a solid start, and four relievers combined for four one-hit innings. In another game, starters Cam Schlitter and Zebby Matthews struggled as the Yankees scored ten runs in the first four innings; Matthews yielded 11 hits and nine runs, while Schlitter's fifth inning included multiple walks, a Josh Outman home run, and a wild pitch, followed by a late rally that cut the lead.
Read at Battery Power
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]