lackey$42960$ - traduction vers néerlandais
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lackey$42960$ - traduction vers néerlandais

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PITCHER
John Derran Lackey; Lackey, John
  • Boston Red Sox in 2011]]
  • 2007}}
  • Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim in 2006]]
  • Chicago Cubs in 2016]]
  • St. Louis Cardinals in 2015]]

lackey      
n. lakei, knecht, dienstknecht
rubber band         
  • A rubber band ball made from over 3,000 individual rubber bands.
  • Latex rubber elastrator rings and pliers
  • British cave diving style sidemount harness showing snoopy loops used to stow hoses against the cylinders
  • Milton's former world record size ball
  • Ranger bands made from moped inner tube
  • ≈10 Royal Mail rubber bands, on a letter size guide.
  • Measuring a rubber band
SHORT CIRCULAR ELASTIC LENGTH OF RUBBER AND LATEX, COMMONLY USED TO HOLD OBJECTS TOGETHER
Elastic band; Gum band; Binder band; Elastic bands; Rubber band ball; Rubber band balls; Rubber Band; Rubber-band; Gumband; Lacky ball; Snoopy loop; User:Gtarhero; Rubberband ball; Rubber bands; Elastic band ball; Rubberband motor; Rubber motor; Rubber band motor; Lacky bands; Lacky band; Ranger band; Laggy band; Lacka band; Lackey band; Binder (rubber band); Rubber band specifications; Rubberband
elastiek (elastische draad,elastische band)

Définition

lackey
¦ noun (plural lackeys)
1. a servant, especially a liveried footman or manservant.
2. a servile or obsequious person.
3. a brownish moth whose caterpillars live in groups in a silken shelter. [Malacosoma neustria.]
¦ verb (lackeys, lackeying, lackeyed) archaic behave in a servile way towards.
Origin
C16: from Fr. laquais, perh. from Catalan alacay, from Arab. al-?a'id 'the chief'. Sense 3 derives from the resemblance of the coloured stripes of the caterpillars to a footman's livery.

Wikipédia

John Lackey

John Derran Lackey (born October 23, 1978) is an American former professional baseball starting pitcher who played in Major League Baseball from 2002 through 2017 for the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Boston Red Sox, St. Louis Cardinals and Chicago Cubs. A three-time World Series champion with three different teams, Lackey is regarded as a key figure in his clubs' postseason success, winning the title-clinching games of two out of the three Series. Selected to the MLB All-Star Game in 2007, he won that year's American League (AL) earned run average (ERA) title. After missing the 2012 season due to ulnar collateral ligament reconstruction surgery in his pitching elbow, and helping the Red Sox win the 2013 World Series, Lackey was named the winner of the Tony Conigliaro Award.

A right-handed pitcher and batter, the Anaheim Angels selected Lackey from Grayson County College in Texas in the 1999 amateur draft. He made his MLB debut with the Angels in 2002 and helped the franchise win its first World Series title that year. After winning more than 100 games with the Angels, Lackey signed with Boston in free agency prior to the 2010 season. Declining performance and elbow injuries in 2011 led him to allow the most earned runs in the American League before missing the next season due to elbow surgery. Lackey rebounded in 2013 to win his second championship. Boston traded him to St. Louis in July 2014, and prior to the 2016 season, he signed with Chicago as a free agent. Lackey earned his third World Series championship in 2016 with the Cubs.

Known for his intense competitiveness and overall durability, Lackey reached at least 200 innings pitched six times in his career, and in five seasons was in the top ten in games started. With the exception of his rookie season in 2002, he reached at least 10 wins every season of his career. In ten of his 15 seasons, he registered an ERA below 4.00 − once below 3.00 − and four times was in the top ten in ERA. He also twice reached the top ten in both wins and strikeouts. He appeared in ten postseasons overall, recording a career 8-6 record and 3.44 ERA over 144 innings. In 2007 and 2015, he received votes for the Cy Young Award.