Jake Burger woven with Jake

Jake Burger hopes to spend a pleasant weekend in San Francisco when Texas Rangers competed for a series of giants in the afternoon.
The series between the three games started unusually-the team owner team honored a visitor to the host organization at the pre-play ceremony.
The giants created a Giants Heart of the Game Heart this year to honor players who are connected to children with special needs. Burger was chosen as the first honor.
Burger, who was born with his 6 -month -old daughter Penelope Down syndrome, joined the Burger Family Foundation, which is dedicated to helping children and children with his wife Ashlyn last month.
Burger, who had previously dressed up 30 and 36 in his career, has moved to 21 to 21 to bring more light to what is known as Trisomy 21, and the number representing the extra chromosome 21 set that creates health problem.
“For the first time for me, I can choose a number that is close to my heart, but also close to many people’s hearts.” He said. “For me, I am really proud of this number and I am really excited to wear it, and I represent not only my daughter, but also many people.”
He was amazed by the gesture of Rangers’s first year member Giants.
Orum I know that the organization of the giants has done a lot with children who have special needs, Bur Burger said at the Friday ceremony. “It is really incredible for a different organization to give me an award for what we do with our foundation.”
Burger doubled and ran 2-0 wins on Friday’s ceremony, and then lasted both Texas run with sacrificial flies on Saturday at 3-2 losses.
The first master met with Giants’s planned market launcher, Jordan Hicks (1-3, 6.59 ERA), his right hand, and was a victim of a strike only once in his career.
HICKS has only three lifetime appearance against Rangers. In these games, he went 1-1 with 5.40 ERA.
Rangers is expected to resist the right-hand Jack Leiter (2-0, 0.90 ERA), a large league, a large league that has not yet met San Francisco.
Giants had to gather the series due to a 2-0 deficit to prevent a 0-2 start, which reached a climax at a walking single by Patch Hitter Patrick Bailey on Saturday.
San Francisco’s first two runs have long been delivered to Willy Adames by the club’s heir for a long time.
Crawford, who played in the championship teams in 2012 and 2014, is crediting for his former team -mate Buster Posey, the head of the organization’s baseball operations.
“I still have a lot of friends on the team, so I’m absolutely watching,” Crawford, who is confident in Oakland’s suburb of Pleasanton, continued his high school. “It seems to have a new energy led by Buster. I think you feel it in the club building. It was fun to watch.
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