Wednesday, June 5, 2019

No. 32 redux: Blue Jays draft Roy Halladay's son

6-5-2019=11,30,50,23...156th day 209 left
Harry Leroy Halladay III[1] (May 14, 1977 – November 7, 2017),
From and including: Tuesday, May 14, 2019
To and including: Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Result: 23 days

It is 23 days from the start date to the end date, end date included...on a day with 23 numerology. 6+5+2+0+1+9=23....23 is the reflection of 32.
also it was 3 weeks and 2 days...32
  • This is about the "draft"=32
  • Word or PhraseFull ReductionSingle Reduction
    Blue Jays2332
32+23=65
he's from Florida=65 Clearwater=65 Harry Leroy Halladay III-331..331/65th prime
This news comes out on 6/5..65.

MLB debut
September 20, 1998, for the Toronto Blue Jays
Last MLB appearance
September 23, 2013, for the Philadelphia Phillies
MLB statistics
Win–loss record203–105
his debut was on the 263rd day of the year..263/56th prime number..56 reflection of 65
His debut on a day with 56 numerology..9+20+1+9+9+8=56
his last game was on the 23rd with numerology of 32. 9+23=32..and 65...9+23+20+13=65
Philadelphia=65
he won 203 career games..203/23
 The Blue Jays organization posthumously retired his number 32 on March 29, 2018.
ha..a day with 32 numerology. 3+29=32.

The Blue Jays already have two sons of Hall of Famers starting for the team this year, and 
Wednesday selected the son of another, Toronto icon Roy Halladay, in the Major League Draft.
Braden Halladay, a right-handed pitcher out of Calvary Christian High School in Clearwater, Florida, was taken by the Jays in the 32nd round of the MLB Draft. Roy Halladay wore number 32 in the 12 seasons he spent with the Blue Jays from 1998 to 2009.
Braden Halladay has committed to play college baseball at Penn State and said in a tweet Wednesday that Jays understand he intends to play college ball instead of turning professional.
Roy Halladay, taken by the Jays in the first round of the 1995 draft, was an All-Star in six of his seasons in Toronto and won the American League Cy Young Award in 2003. He was traded to Philadelphia in 2010, and won the National League Cy Young Award with the Phillies that year.
Halladay retired after the 2013 season, and died four years later, on Nov. 7, 2017, when his amphibious plane crashed into the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Florida.
The Blue Jays organization posthumously retired Halladay's No. 32 in 2018, and he was posthumously elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in January, in his first appearance on the ballot.

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