Bartender I ll have whatever he s having Max Kellerman reacts to Albert Pujols rediscovering fountain of youth after Cardinals veteran smashes 697th career HR
Bartender I ll have whatever he s having - Max Kellerman reacts to Albert Pujols rediscovering fountain of youth after Cardinals veteran smashes 697th career HR × Follow Us Create Notifications New User posted their first comment this is comment text Link Approve Reject & ban Delete Log in Manage your profile Editing Story Queue Video Queue Editing Stats Writer Home SEO Redirection Admin Wiki Edits Taxonomy Home Edit Site Menu Mapping Dashboard Tag Pages Community Social Feed Queue Feed Center Notification Center Affiliate Home Manage Pages Bottom Tagline Dash Timeless Stories Logout Baseball MLB News
(h/t @jmjones)288832339Albert Pujols is all class (h/t @jmjones) https://t.co/7DuZvVBfyq "Albert Pujols is all class." - ESPN Pujols is in his final season and, at the age of 42, plans to hang up his cleats at the end of the year. His outstanding performance despite his age has raised eyebrows in the MLB universe. Sports TV personality Max Kellerman questioned the veracity of Pujols' performance and made a subtle suggestion that he might be using steroids on the ESPN sports talk show "This Just In." Speaking of Pujols, Kellerman sarcastically said: "It is amazing, how Pujols, who was in steady decline for years, suddenly, it’s like he discovered the fountain of youth! I don’t know how he’s doing it! Bartender, I’ll have whatever he’s having! This is unbelievable." "He sure has turned back the clock…how does a player turn back the clock like this? I guess it’s willpower and practice. All these years between then and now he hasn’t been practicing, apparently.” "THIS JUST IN Max Kellerman reacts to Albert Pujols passes Alex Rodriguez with 697th homerun career." - Lỏ Và Chè Vlogs Kellerman's comments received a lot of flak, and he was compelled to apologize.
Bartender I ll have whatever he s having - Max Kellerman reacts to Albert Pujols rediscovering fountain of youth after Cardinals veteran smashes 697th career HR
By Oindrila Chowdhury Modified 14 Sep 2022 Follow Us Comment Share Sports television personality, Max Kellerman; St. Louis Cardinals first baseman and designated hitter, Albert Pujols St. Louis Cardinals first baseman and designated hitter Albert Pujols made history when he smashed his 697th career home run during Sunday's Cardinals-Pittsburgh Pirates game. Pujols overtook former New York Yankees star Alex Rodriguez claimed sole possession of fourth place on MLB's all-time home run list. Pujols' 697th career home run helped St. Louis Cardinals beat the Pirates 4-3. ESPN@espnAlbert Pujols is all class(h/t @jmjones)288832339Albert Pujols is all class (h/t @jmjones) https://t.co/7DuZvVBfyq "Albert Pujols is all class." - ESPN Pujols is in his final season and, at the age of 42, plans to hang up his cleats at the end of the year. His outstanding performance despite his age has raised eyebrows in the MLB universe. Sports TV personality Max Kellerman questioned the veracity of Pujols' performance and made a subtle suggestion that he might be using steroids on the ESPN sports talk show "This Just In." Speaking of Pujols, Kellerman sarcastically said: "It is amazing, how Pujols, who was in steady decline for years, suddenly, it’s like he discovered the fountain of youth! I don’t know how he’s doing it! Bartender, I’ll have whatever he’s having! This is unbelievable." "He sure has turned back the clock…how does a player turn back the clock like this? I guess it’s willpower and practice. All these years between then and now he hasn’t been practicing, apparently.” "THIS JUST IN Max Kellerman reacts to Albert Pujols passes Alex Rodriguez with 697th homerun career." - Lỏ Và Chè Vlogs Kellerman's comments received a lot of flak, and he was compelled to apologize.