The Red Sox force a Game 7! They beat the Yankees in Game 6 behind Curt Schilling, 4-2.
October 19, 2004

UD Small Banner - Anim

Home

2004 World Series Coverage. Game by game recap, photos.

2004 World Series Inning-By-Inning Recap.

NBA Stuff. Shaq and Kobe Start Their 2004-05 Seasons on Different Coasts.

Link Partners

Friend Search Personals



Sports Fan's Websites, NBA Links
Lakers-Haters!
ihateLA
KingsSuperFans
SacKings.com
KingZine
NBA Preseason Talk
Sacramento Kings Bantor
KingsTalk
KingsFans.com
The Bleacher Mob
NBA.com
Kings HomePage
MikeBibby.com
NBAHoopsOnline
Lakers HomePage
NCAA Basketball
ESPN NBA Board
ESPN WNBA Board
ESPN College Basketball Board

Get Premium Tickets at TicketsNow

Baseball Links
Obey Pedro.com
SammySosa.com
AlbertPujols.com
Red Sox Home Page
Red Sox Nation
Boston Bird Dogs
Yankees Home Page
Yankees Fans
YankThis.com
Red Sox Haters
Team Bashing
Dodger Blues
Baseball America
Baseball Reference
Digital Ball Parks
ESPN Baseball Board
ESPN College Baseball Board
Baseball Chatter Board
Baseball Hall of Fame
PCL Baseball
Minor League Baseball
BuckyBackers.com
MLB.com
Big Leaguers
ESPN.com
NCAABaseball
Oakland A's 2003

Football Links
PeytonManning.com
NFL.com
Raiders Nation
Raiders Haters
ESPN NFL Board
ESPN College Football Board
BearsStillSuck.com
CarolinaSucks.com
JetsSuck.com
MikeBrownSucks.com
PackersSuck.com
SaveTheBengals.com
VikingsSuck.com
Football-Reference
NCAAFootball
The official Tom Brady site

Sports Networks, Newspapers
The YES Network
Sporting News
Fox Sports
USAToday Sports
NBC Sports
CBS Sports
ABC Sports
Sacramento Bee Sports
San Francisco Sports
New York Times Sports
Boston Globe Sports
The Sports Network

Sports Talk Radio
JT The Brick
Jim Rome Show
KNBR 68-San Francisco
790 The Zone-Atlanta
1140 KHTK-Sacramento, Ca
Sporting News Radio
Sports Radio 810-Kansas City, Mo
The Ticket 1310-Dallas, Tx
610 WIP-Philadelphia
WFAN-New York City
1050 ESPN Radio-New York City
XTRA 690/1150-Southern California
WEEI 850-Boston
Sports Talk 980-Washington
WDFN Sports-Detroit
The Fan 950-Denver
KFXX 910-Portland
KFAN-Minneapolis
KJR-Seattle
WGR-Buffalo
ESPN RADIO-Chicago
SportsTalk Cleveland
Sports 970-Pittsburgh
WQAM-Miami
WQTM-Orlando
WKNR-Cleveland
WNDE-Indianapolis


Sports Cards, Memorabilia Websites
Michael Jordan Mem.
2Legends
All Wax Packs
Charm City Cards
Scottsdale Cards
Guchioni Basketball Cards
Fleer Cards
Donruss Cards
Mr. Mint
Score Cards
Baseball Card Trading
Sports Cards on eBay



Kobe Bryant - Stat

Free 

Shipping on Autographed LeBron James Memorabilia!


The Ultimate Store for the Ultimate Fan


Political Humor Sites

Make Sure Your Computer's Speakers are on for full enjoyment!

Dancing George Bush

JibJab.com

Bush & Kerry Hip-Hop Style George Bush Aerobics

Bush & Brittney Spears

Dancing Hillary

Bush & Gore Dance

Bush Family Fun

Clinton, Hillary & Monica Dance


Quick, easy and safe way to buy and sell online. Payaay.com



 

2004 American League Championship Series. New York Yankees vs. Boston Red Sox. Complete game by game coverage below. Game photos, highlights and more.

Yankees Take 1-0 Series Lead.
NEW YORK-Oct 12, 2004 - This American League Championship Series has been billed as a seven-round heavyweight fight.

In keeping with that boxing theme, the Boston Red Sox took a standing eight-count when they fell behind eight runs before throwing a few punches of their own Tuesday night.But the New York Yankees proved they could take a few hits and held on for a 10-7 victory in Game 1 of the ALCS.

Curt Schilling had NOTHING and the Yankees spanked him around. Particularly Hideki Matsui, who had 5 RBI and is a Red Sox "Killer".


Schilling's ankle injury hampered his pitching performance against the Yankees in Game #1.



Mr. Automatic


Mariano Rivera Returns From Panama and Pitches Well.
NEW YORK Oct 12, 2004 -- There is no degree-of-difficulty statistic to measure the true human worth of this save. There is no known category for a man pitching while carrying the weight of tragedy on his back. Mariano Rivera never stood taller for the New York Yankees than he did Tuesday night at Yankee Stadium. He had begun the day in Panama, at the funeral of two family members. He finished the night by saving the opener of the American League Championship Series against the Boston Red Sox.

There was courage here and a sense of obligation that was fierce in the will it embodied. The hardest part of this day, Mariano Rivera said, was "leaving my family in Panama, knowing that they are still in pain.

"It was tough, it was tough, you know coming on that plane alone," Rivera said in a voice that was soft but clear. "I was thinking, you know, and there's tears coming out of my eyes. It wasn't easy, those almost five hours on that plane.

"I wanted to stay there, definitely I wanted to be with my family. But there's nothing that I can do, so I talked to my wife and I talked to the family, that I need to be here, and that's the reason that I'm here. Believe me, I wanted to stay home and stay with my family, but I have a job to do and I have 24 players that were waiting for me and a manager that are happy for me to be here and I'm happy to be here also."

A cousin of his wife, and the cousin's son, had died in a freak swimming pool electrocution at Rivera's home in Panama. Rivera learned of their deaths Saturday night, just as he and his teammates were beginning to celebrate their Division Series victory over the Minnesota Twins. Rivera had been a lifelong friend of the cousin and had been very close to the son, as well.

Rivera left the team and returned home to Panama. The funeral was scheduled for Tuesday. A private plane was provided for Rivera to make the return to New York. Apart from the question about whether he could pitch under these circumstances, there was the simpler logistical issue of whether he could get back to New York in time for this game.

He arrived at the Stadium in the second inning. He strolled out to the bullpen in the bottom of the fifth, as the crowd of 56,135 greeted him with an ovation.

"It was tough leaving my family there," Rivera said. "And I think what helped me, the prayers of my family, God, first of all. And I came here and the fans, and my teammates, treat me like a king. And that was something special. And I appreciated that."

Rivera told Yankees pitching coach Mel Stottlemyre upon his arrival at the Stadium that he was ready to pitch. This was all the Yankees needed to know. There was no doubting him, regardless of circumstances.

"I don't think I trust anybody more than I trust Mariano," manager Joe Torre said. "When he tells you he's OK, he's OK.

"And sometimes in situations like this, everything he's been through and his wife, Clara, has been through for the last few days, back in uniform and out there, maybe it's a chance for him to hide for an hour or so. But he's special, there's no question."

Rivera has stood at the center of the Yankees' success since 1996. The Yankees are used to finding him there. But everyone understood that this was something above the call of duty.

"Mo and I take a golf cart to the bullpen in the bottom of the fifth in every game," backup catcher John Flaherty said. "When I came in, I didn't even know he was here yet. He was dressed and ready to go, I gave him a hug and he said, 'Let's go, buddy.' He was ready to go.

"He looked like he was tired, but it sounded like he was ready to go. He told us he was happy to be back, that he took care of what he needed to take care of. Nobody would ever question this guy's focus.

"It was very special. It tells you a lot about him to know what he's gone through the last couple of days and then do what he did."

Said Alex Rodriguez: "To see what he did tonight, to be a leader for his family, to be a leader for this family here, it's pretty awesome."

For a long time, this looked like the kind of game in which his services would not be required. Mike Mussina was perfect through 6 1/3 innings and the Yankees built an 8-0 lead. But the Red Sox weren't rolling over, and suddenly it's the eighth and the lead is almost gone and the tying run is on third and it is time for Rivera, after all.

Rivera got Kevin Millar on a pop to short to end the threat. The Yankees stretched the lead to 10-7 in the bottom of the eighth. Rivera gave up two singles in the ninth, but got Bill Mueller to ground into a game-ending double play. It was his 31st postseason save. But the first 30 could have been nothing like this.

How did he do this? How did he rise above the accumulation of grief and make this journey from family gravesite to October's center stage all in one day?

"I don't know, that's who I am," Rivera said. "I think the blessings and prayers and being a man of God, I think keep me humble. That's what I believe in, when you believe in God I think you can do anything you want and that helped me get going."

With all that Rivera has meant to the New York Yankees in the last decade, he meant more than ever Tuesday night. It is not all in the stuff or the numbers. Sometimes it is in the heart and soul where the real value of a teammate is best discovered.


Matsui, the Red Sox killer, had 5 RBI in Game #1.


Mussina took a perfect game into the 7th inning in Game #1,

before the Red Sox scored 5 runs to close gap.



Yankees Beat Pedro in Game #2, Up 2 Games to None on Boston.
NEW YORK, Oct 13, 2004- By silencing the Boston bats in a way few pitchers have done all season, Jon Lieber dug a mighty big hole for the Red Sox in this American League Championship Series. The Sox will return to Fenway Park trailing the Yankees, 2-0, in the best-of-seven series. Lieber was positively masterful for the Yankees, allowing precious few healthy swings from the Sox over his seven-plus innings in a 3-1 victory.

By outdueling three-time Cy Young Award winner Pedro Martinez, Lieber has left the Sox a sizable hill to climb. The last 13 teams to win the first two games of a League Championship Series have also won the series.

If the Sox can overturn that trend, they would be the first team to reverse an 0-2 deficit in the LCS since 1985, when both the Cardinals and Royals did the trick.

Martinez gave up four hits and three runs in his six innings, striking out seven while throwing 113 pitches.

The Sox have played well at Fenway Park all year long, where they went 55-26 during the regular season and are 1-0 so far in this postseason.

Following Thursday's off-day, the Sox will send Bronson Arroyo to the mound in a pivotal Game 3. He'll be opposed by veteran right-hander Kevin Brown.

Martinez came out throwing heat, but had trouble locating in the first inning. He walked leadoff man Derek Jeter on four pitches and grazed Alex Rodriguez on the arm with a pitch. Gary Sheffield capitalized, lining an RBI single in front of center fielder Johnny Damon to make it 1-0. Then, Martinez buckled down, striking out Hideki Matsui and Bernie Williams and getting Jorge Posada on a grounder to second. While Martinez got into a steady groove, the Red Sox were unable to establish anything against Lieber, who took a one-hit shutout into the sixth. The Red Sox weren't even making hard outs, as Lieber threw just 45 pitches over the first five innings. Meanwhile, Martinez threw 91 pitches over that same span. In the sixth, Damon worked Lieber for a 16-pitch at-bat, fouling off 10 pitches. But it ended with a line drive to center that Williams caught on the run. It added up to a 1-2-3 inning for Lieber, albeit a long one. The Yankees created some breathing room in the sixth, as Jorge Posada worked a one-out walk and John Olerud cranked a two-run homer to right.

Finally, the Sox were able to establish something offensively in the eighth. Trot Nixon led off with a single to right, prompting Yankees manager Joe Torre to remove Lieber after a terrific evening of work. On came Tom "Flash" Gordon, who was greeted by a double to right-center from Jason Varitek, setting up second and third with nobody out. Orlando Cabrera got the Sox their first run with a fielder's choice grounder to short. After Bill Mueller grounded to short for the second out, Torre went to Mariano Rivera. The ace closer did his thing, striking out Damon looking to end the inning.


.
Johnny Damon is ice cold in this series against the Yankees.


.

The Yankees have shut down David Ortiz in this series.


.

Lieber shut down the Red Sox in Game #2.



.
Olerud connects for a 2-run home run in Game #2.


.
Hideki Matsui has killed Red Sox pitching in this series!


Yankees Bomb The Red Sox in Game #3, 19-8.
Boston, Oct 16, 2004- At this point, the New York Yankees simply are a better team. It's pretty simple. They're more precise, they make plays under pressure and they're smarter. Down 3-0, Boston ran itself out of the first inning when Manny Ramirez tried to go from first to third on David Ortiz's two-out single. They ran themselves out of the third inning when Bill Mueller was thrown out at the plate on Orlando Cabrera's one-out, bases-loaded double. The Red Sox tied the game on the play at 6-6, but they should have had runners at second and third with one out at that point. In the fourth, Ortiz strayed too far from first on Jason Varitek's liner to first. Now, they've pretty much run themselves right out of this series. The only thing left is whether they're completely embarrassed or whether they show at least some life.


.


"I think we're definitely upset, definitely stunned. It's not fun. The good thing about it is the runs don't count tomorrow. We really need to play our very best baseball."

-- Red Sox CF Johnny Damon after Game 3 blowout.


.


Alex Rodriguez, Sheffield and Matsui, New York's 2,3 and 4 hitters, went 12-16, with 13 R and 12 RBI.

The game took 4 hours, 20 minutes, the longest nine-inning game in postseason history.

No Major League baseball team has ever come back from an 0-3 series deficit.


.


Red Sox Live to play another day with 6-4 win in game #4
Boston, Oct 17, 2004- David Ortiz's drive into the right-field bullpen set off a frenzy at Fenway and gave the Boston Red Sox a shot at pulling off the greatest comeback ever.

Down to their last three outs of the season, the Red Sox rallied -- against Mariano Rivera, the New York Yankees and decades of disappointment.

Bill Mueller singled home the tying run off Rivera in the ninth inning and Ortiz homered against Paul Quantrill to end it in the 12th, giving Boston a do-or-die 6-4 victory over the Yankees early Monday that avoided a four-game sweep in the AL Championship Series.

"This is a team that never gives up," Ortiz said.

Red Sox fans who had been praying, holding hands and hoping against hope a few innings earlier, burst into cheers when Ortiz connected. Long after Sunday turned into Monday, there was still plenty of energy inside old Fenway Park.

Even Ortiz danced home to his teammates waiting at the plate.

"We always find a way to make it hard for ourselves," Red Sox starter Derek Lowe said.


.

Mariano Rivera blows it in the 9th, as the Red Sox tie the score.


.
A-ROD slams a home run against Boston in Game #4.


.
David Ortiz saves the Red Sox for now in Game #4.


.
Series Headed Back To Yankee Stadium!


Ortiz Saves the Red Sox...AGAIN!
Boston, Oct 18, 2004- Just like the game that seemed it would never end, Boston's season just won't end.

David Ortiz's RBI single on the 471st pitch of the game with two outs in the 14th inning capped a second straight amazing comeback in less than 24 hours Monday night and gave the Red Sox a 5-4 victory over the New York Yankees in the AL Championship Series.

The Red Sox, down to their last inning Sunday night, now are one game away from climbing out of a 3-0 deficit and forcing an anything-can-happen Game 7.

"The last two nights shows the depth, the character, the heart, the guts of our ballclub," winner Tim Wakefield said. "It took every ounce of whatever we had left to win tonight's game and to win last night's game."

This time, Boston waited only until the eighth inning, when Ortiz's home run and Jason Varitek's sacrifice fly tied the score 4-4.

The next six innings were agonizingly tense, filled with a double play, three passed balls in the same inning, two Red Sox runners thrown out trying to steal second and 10 runners left on base.

When it was over, the teams had played back-to-back marathon games that totaled 26 innings almost 11 hours -- five hours, two minutes on Sunday and five hours, 49 minutes Monday -- the longest by time in postseason history.


.
Pedro lasts six innings and allowed four runs in Game #5.


.
Derek Jeter hits a 3-run triple into the right field corner to give the Yankees a 4-2 lead in Game #5.


.
David Ortiz has put the Red Sox on his back!


.
Mussina allowed two runs in six innings for the Yankees in Game #5.


.
THE SLAP!

Schilling's gutsy effort leads Red Sox to decisive Game 7
New York, Oct 19, 2004- Gritting his teeth and grimacing throughout, Curt Schilling willed away the pain in his right ankle and the Boston Red Sox got the benefit of two reversed calls to move within one win of the most shocking comeback in baseball postseason history.

For the second straight year, the New York Yankees and the Red Sox will go to a Game 7, a winner-take-all battle for the AL pennant between baseball's perennial pinstriped power and a Boston team desperately trying to win the World Series for the first time since 1918.

Pitching on a dislocated ankle tendon that forced him out of the opener, Schilling smothered the Yankees by allowing one run over seven innings to lead the Red Sox over New York 4-2 Tuesday night and pull Boston into a 3-3 tie in an AL Championship Series that was three outs from a sweep just two days earlier.

New York was ahead 3-0 in the series before blowing a ninth-inning lead in Game 4 at Fenway Park and losing in the 12th Sunday night. The Yankees led Game 5 in the eighth Monday, then lost that one, too, another 5-hour marathon that stretched on for 14 innings.

Of the 25 previous major league teams that fell behind 3-0 in a best-of-7 series, none had forced a Game 7. But back in the Bronx, where they wasted a four-run lead in Game 7 last year, the Red Sox broke through with a four-run fourth against Jon Lieber.

The team trying to reverse The Curse benefited from two big reversed calls.

In the fourth, Mark Bellhorn hit a ball over the left-field wall that was at first ruled a ground-rule double before it was correctly changed to a three-run homer that made it 4-0. It was his first postseason homer.

In the eighth inning, Alex Rodriguez hit a slow chopper that Arroyo fielded, and as he was tagging Rodriguez, A-ROD slapped the ball out of Arroyo's glove, sending the ball down the right field line. Derek Jeter scored all the way from first. But, Terry Francona came out and argued the call. The umpires got together to discuss the play. They ruled that Rodriguez was out, and they sent Jeter back to first base. The replay clearly showed Rodriguez slapping the ball out of Arroyo's mitt. Which is illegal. The umpires were right!


.
Schilling shut down the Yankees in Game #6!


.
Bellhorn hit a huge 3-run homer in Game #6!


.
Jeter sits quietly in the dugout in Game #6 as the Red Sox force Game #7


.
Curt Schilling celebrates the Red Sox' win over the Yankees.

End of Damon's slump spells AL pennant for Red Sox
New York, Oct 20, 2004- Boston blew away decades of defeat with four sweet swings.

Believe it, New England, the Red Sox are in the World Series. And they got there with the most unbelievable comeback of all, shaming the New York Yankees, the Evil Empire to the south.

David Ortiz, Johnny Damon and Derek Lowe made sure of that.

Just three outs from getting swept out of the AL Championship Series three nights earlier, the Red Sox finally humbled the dreaded Yankees, winning Game 7 in a 10-3 shocker Wednesday night to become the first major league team to overcome a 3-0 postseason series deficit.

Cursed for 86 years, these Red Sox just might be charmed.

There is no torture this time, no hour of humiliation. Better yet to Boston fans, it's the Yankees left to suffer the memory of a historic collapse.

Boston didn't need any of the late-inning dramatics that marked the last three games, leading 6-0 after two innings.

Ortiz, the series MVP, started it with a two-run homer in the first off broken-down Kevin Brown, and Damon quieted Yankee Stadium in the second inning with a grand slam on Javier Vazquez's first pitch.

After Derek Jeter sparked hope of a comeback with a run-scoring single in the third, Damon put a two-run homer into the upper deck for an 8-1 lead in the fourth.

Lowe, pitching on just two days' rest, silenced the Yankees' bats and their boasting fans, who just last weekend assumed New York's seventh pennant in nine years was all but a lock. He allowed one hit in six innings then Pedro Martinez started the seventh, his first relief appearance in five years, sparking chants of "Who's Your Daddy?"

Three hits and two runs got the crowd going, but the rally stopped there and Mark Bellhorn added a solo homer in the eighth for a 9-3 Boston lead.

Cheering of Red Sox fans could be heard in the ninth, and when pinch-hitter Ruben Sierra grounded to second baseman Pokey Reese for the final out, Boston players ran on the field and jumped together in a mass huddle to the first-base side of the mound.

Yankees players slowly walked off, eliminated on their home field for the second straight season.

On a cool, crisp night in the Bronx, the historical pattern was broken, and the World Series will start at Fenway Park on Saturday night against St. Louis or Houston.

Lowe, pitching on just two days' rest, silenced the Yankees' bats and their boasting fans, who just last weekend assumed New York's seventh pennant in nine years was all but a lock.

But on a cool, crisp night in the Bronx, the historical pattern was broken, and the World Series will start at Fenway Park on Saturday night against St. Louis or Houston.

Now that the Babe's team has been beaten, Boston can try to reverse The Curse, win the Series for the first time since 1918 and bring happiness to the Hub which can scarcely believe the tumultuous turn of events.

From Fenway Park to Faneuil Hall, from Boston Common to Beacon Hill, the 11th pennant for the Red Sox, the first since 1986, will be remembered as perhaps the sweetest.

Just because they won it over New York, in Yankee Stadium, site of the Game 7 meltdown when the Red Sox were five outs from winning last year.

This was for Williams and Pesky, for Yastrzemski and Yawkey, for Fisk and Rice and even Buckner and Nomar, just a few of the hundreds who suffered the pain inflicted by their New York neighbors in a rivalry that has become baseball's best.

None of the previous 25 major league teams to fall behind 3-0 even forced a series to seven games. The wild-card Red Sox became only the third of 239 teams in the four major North American leagues to overcome a 3-0 deficit in a best-of-seven series and win, joining the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs and the 1975 New York Islanders.

It had been 100 years since Boston last won a pennant in New York on the final possible day, a 3-2 victory in a doubleheader opener at Hilltop Park in 1904. New York overcame the Red Sox by winning the final two games of the 1949 season at Yankee Stadium, the Yankees won a one-game playoff for the AL East in 1978 behind Bucky Dent's three-run homer at Fenway Park, and Aaron Boone hit the 11th-inning homer that won Game 7 last year.

New York, which dropped to 10-2 in the LCS, will no doubt face a bitter winter, with owner George Steinbrenner likely to take charge of overhauling a roster that has been short of starting pitching since the spring.

Brown and Vazquez, who both faded in the second half of the season, were each booed by the sellout crowd of 56,129, accustomed to perpetual success from their pinstriped heroes. The Yankees won the AL East for the seventh straight year with the Red Sox the runner-up each time.

Even without Roger Clemens, Andy Pettitte and David Wells, who all left after last year's Game 6 loss to Florida in the World Series, the Yankees had a 4-3 lead in the ninth inning of Game 4 on Sunday night, only to have Bill Mueller single home the tying run off Mariano Rivera and Ortiz hit a 12th-inning homer against Paul Quantrill.

They held a 4-2 lead in the eighth inning of Game 5 before Ortiz's homer off Tom Gordon and Jason Varitek's sacrifice fly off Rivera, and Ortiz's winning single off Esteban Loaiza in the 14th.

Then Curt Schilling, his ailing right ankle held together by suture, beat the Yankees 4-2 Tuesday night to tie the series 3-all.

The Yankees brought out a bunch of bad memories for Boston before the game: Dent threw out the ceremonial first pitch to Yogi Berra, and Reggie Jackson stood behind the cage during batting practice.

Just like last year, when the Red Sox went ahead 4-0 in the fourth inning of Game 7, Boston burst out quickly.

Damon, who entered the game 3-for-29 (.103) singled past Alex Rodriguez at third base leading off and stole second. Manny Ramirez then grounded a single past Jeter at shortstop. Damon, who had to hold up to make sure the ball went into the outfield, was thrown out when left fielder Hideki Matsui relayed the ball to Jeter, who threw a strike to Jorge Posada, with the catcher blocking Damon at the plate.

That was the highlight for the Yankees.

Ortiz, who had three homers and 11 RBI in the series, sent the next pitch into the right-field seats to put Boston ahead 2-0.

The Red Sox loaded the bases with one out in the second on Kevin Millar's single and walks to Mueller and Orlando Cabrera.

Vazquez, who gave up a team-high 33 homers, blew open the game with brutal efficiency. Damon, who hadn't homered since Oct. 1, lofted his first pitch down the right-field line, the ball landing in the front row. Jubilant Red Sox players poured out of the dugout, jumping and yelling.

Damon homered again off Vazquez in the fourth, after Cabrera walked, putting the first pitch of the at-bat into the upper deck in right.

Bernie Williams got to Martinez for an RBI double in the seventh and scored on a single by Kenny Lofton before pinch-hitter John Olerud struck out and Miguel Cairo flied out.


.


.


.


.


The Yankees-Red Sox reports above are courtesy of CBS-Sportsline. Visit their site for more complete coverage of this series between the Red Sox and Yankees! Click Here! to go there now.



Sports Memorabilia, Highland Mint, Autographed Collectibles


This Site Created on September 14, 2004

Back to top

 



This website is hosted for free by Freewebs.com - free website. Get your own Free Website now!