Sports Theme Area Rug MLB

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on pinterest

Project Assignment: Fabricate a gorgeous sports theme area rug for Toronto Blue Jays facility. Size: 6′ diameter

 

A sports themed area rug for all occasions.

We make a lot of sports themed area rugs. Ideal for any sports related special event or locker room. These rugs lean more toward the high-end on costs because they are one-offs (all custom). You won’t find a higher quality area rug. They are durable, easy to clean, and will keep you company for many years.

MLB Blue Jays – A little backgound on the team.

The Toronto Blue Jays are a Canadian professional baseball team based in Toronto, Ontario. They compete in Major League Baseball as a member club of the American League East division. The team plays its home games at the Rogers Centre.

The Blue Jays played their first game on April 7, 1977 against the Chicago White Sox before a home crowd of 44,649. The game is now perhaps best remembered for the minor snowstorm which began just before the game started. Toronto won the snowy affair 9–5, led by Doug Ault’s two home runs. That win would be one of only 54 of the 1977 season, as the Blue Jays finished last in the AL East, with a record of 54–107. After the season, assistant general manager Pat Gillick succeeded Peter Bavasi as general manager of the team, a position he would hold until 1994.

World Series Champs of 1992

After the 1991 season had ended, the Blue Jays acquired pitcher Jack Morris, who had led the Minnesota Twins to victory in the World Series by pitching a 10-inning complete game shutout in Game 7 and had been named the World Series MVP. To add veteran leadership to their explosive offence, Toronto signed Dave Winfield to be the team’s designated hitter.

The 1992 regular season went well, as the Jays clinched their second straight AL East crown with a final record of 96–66, four games ahead of the Milwaukee Brewers. They also went the entire season without being swept in any series, becoming the first team in 49 years to accomplish the feat.[11]

The Blue Jays met the Oakland Athletics (who had the same record as the Jays and won the AL West by six games over the defending champion Twins) in the ALCS, winning four games to two. The pivotal game of the series was Game 4, considered by many to be one of the most important games in Blue Jays history: the Blue Jays rallied back from a 6–1 deficit after seven innings, capped off by Roberto Alomar’s huge game-tying two-run homer off A’s closer Dennis Eckersley in the top of the ninth. This paved the way for a 7–6 victory in 11 innings, a 3-games-to-1 lead in the series and an eventual 4–2 ALCS series win.

The Blue Jays then faced the Atlanta Braves in the World Series. The Braves returned after being beaten by the Twins the previous year.

The Blue Jays became the first team based outside of the United States to win the World Series. Pat Borders, the Jays’ catcher, was the unlikely player who was named MVP after hitting .450 with one home run in the World Series. Oddly, Morris was acquired in large part for his reputation as a clutch postseason pitcher, but he went 0–3 in the playoffs. Morris, however, pitched well in the regular season, becoming the Blue Jays’ first 20-game winner, with a record of 21–6 and an ERA of 4.04.