Small Frenchies Nails 2024-07-06 Small Frenchies Nails - Last update images today Small Frenchies Nails Boulter, Draper Knocked Out Of Wimbledon ATLANTA -- Atlanta manager Brian Snitker could laugh Thursday about being hit below the belt by a foul liner off Ozzie Albies' bat in the Braves' 3-1 win over the San Francisco Giants on Wednesday night. The sharply hit foul ball took one hop and reached Snitker so quickly in the fifth inning he didn't have time to defend himself. But even in the moment, the 68-year-old manager smiled instead of showing any hint of pain. And, to answer the obvious question, Snitker doesn't wear a protective cup. "Without protection? Yeah, I know," Snitker said, adding he had received multiple text messages about the incident and how he smiled instead of bending over in pain. "Well, it hit me right below the belt," he said. "... OK, a little high." Snitker said he wasn't sore when he woke up Thursday but acknowledged he "tensed up" and felt some discomfort during the game. He was able to smile because the ball barely missed hitting him in a more sensitive area. Snitker said he intentionally avoided TV Thursday morning "because I said I'm not going to watch this thing." Snitker's son, Troy, who's on the Houston Astros' coaching staff, made sure the replay made it to his father. "My son sent me a video of it," Snitker said before Thursday night's game against the Giants. Albies' at-bat ended with a fly ball to center field. The Braves second baseman immediately walked up to Snitker when returning to the dugout. "He felt worse than me," Snitker said. "He's such a good kid." Snitker was a longtime third-base coach before becoming Atlanta's manager in 2016 and leading the Braves to six consecutive NL East championships and the 2021 World Series title. The third-base coaching box can also be a dangerous place, and Snitker said he suffered a broken wrist and other injuries when hit by foul balls there. Snitker said he had another reason to smile immediately after avoiding injury on Wednesday night. Braves first baseman Matt Olson told Snitker he likely would have been hit by the foul ball if Snitker, standing on the dugout steps, had not been in the way. "So I said, 'Well, I'm a hell of a lot easier to replace than he is,'" Snitker said. "So I'm glad it hit me." 7c96015f1a64efa7b05f6793fa8db5da Aaaa08123beda4a4c5293249ef8e1117 8fb7a483b110efe594fdf478215a7f69 E24e7c728643d28234bb9756a079d2b4 Ef1ac4bdd4d157661354e9341f0a2775 33e1161f163ec218f50e0b07e41d5abd 19b1e5fde9b6e2443cb153c6b1626b92 B611cb0bba63790feb343b81a0fb4f41 6fb951a19a9b26b2ba0e1dc1cf286f54 613080c72a285e7e183e5d60ad1b5cf0 1544cfa57dd2dde6b6720ef8a4233b57 D951c06bd4f30c7d346141bd246f03fa E05e6661312220fcd943561eebc13b40 0a9f8e043ba248e6643e0f7751538f07 6ac849d8e9647d41f370fc532335b135 6674fb2413988a031c8df96d063d9bbc 7eb277183d7726b41c52c6ff0aa76a63 9ba29a077d56c53fa84ebe081a7987bf Il 1080xN.4844277559 Mja0 79577e94b4aae0104ac3c566bc41aaed 59dd31971b70269d1cede6c0ba3003c5 D05fd364698b0939ccf3290ebec53aa0 5h7vd4966aw71 ?width=1188&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=9e4af81bfc253ffc1986dfeeb245ee8098d2f196 11568f04abd9dd070bd3c524cd9a7adc 2e6f1dd33b6021c7f303aa0feedc8f79 52969447842 Bb76c7f972 B 6ab843538eca2b1524bd30aec93fb4c8 C71f941de1276b27a667b18f979ae4a9 D3132dfa7aa7e589d72bf2c28cbbbc16 6ca249536e8efa84cca7074a8d141b32 526bc313fa03c38324ad10b0bda69468 013bb1c0b89bf875d7b5844ed6dd931f A5213e6de2cc4e651df9bd50607770a1 Nail Art