

The big one: How long was she in the pool? Meanwhile, a terror-stricken Sandy desperately tried to comprehend what he was witnessing on that tiny screen. She screamed that plea over and over while an ambulance raced to the house. Because I knew that my daughter was dying.” “The only one who could do something for her was God,” Liliana said. Needing a miracle, she did the one thing she thought could help. Getting no response, she abandoned her resuscitation efforts. “I did CPR like five times, but nothing happened,” Liliana said. She pressed on Nahomy’s chest again and again. Liliana hadn’t been trained in CPR, but she tried it anyway. All the things that I looked on her, she was dying, she was dying, she was dying.” “I tried to open her eyes and it was blank. “She looked black, deeply black,” Liliana said. The natural color had drained from her tiny body. Kimbrel 8th pitcher in MLB history to earn 400 saves, Phillies beat Braves 6-4 “She was saying words I didn’t understand. “My wife was screaming, and she was praying,” León recalled. He discovered a horrifying scene with Liliana and their then-15-month-old daughter, Nahomy. He logged onto an app where he can monitor the cameras in their home. “That happens when somebody is making a lot of noise in the house, when the camera gets the sounds,” León said.

Then he began getting alerts from his home security system. He was growing concerned after several unanswered calls. León, then playing for Cleveland, had just arrived by bus to the team hotel in Pittsburgh when he called his wife, Liliana, who was at home in Fort Myers, Florida, with their two small children. 12 that adorns the catcher’s uniform this season with the Texas Rangers, he has to revisit the worst day of his life. HOUSTON (AP) - Sandy León has worn many jersey numbers during a long career in Major League Baseball.
