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A Storage Place - Chula Vista Chula Vista, CA 91911 Tel: (619) 425-8222 | Drive Up AccessInside Hallway UnitsRV/Boat StoragePacking SuppliesOn-Site Management Video SurveillanceGate Code EntryMilitary DiscountsFree Moving Truck*Hablamos Espanol Special: 50% OFF 4 Months For 5x5 & 5x10 Inside Hallway Units Please call to learn more about FREE use of moving truck. * Some restrictions apply, and availability is limited. A Storage Place - Chula Vista Providing storage in Chula Vista, CA for 20 years! A Storage Place - Chula Vista is located at 605 Anita Street between Broadway and Industrial Ave. We are family-owned and have been serving the Chula Vista Storage needs for 30 years. We offer both residential and commercial storage units with sizes to fit every need. Our site is professionally landscaped with a well-maintained lawn and plants in the front.We offer a variety of discounts including Military (15%) and Seniors (10%) and discounts for Students and Chamber Members.
All of our large storage units are ground level, drive-up with outside roll up doors, and our aisles are wide enough to accommodate most moving trucks. Smaller units are inside hallways, which are also ground level with no stairs, elevators or lifts. The hallways are well-lit and wide with no hidden areas. We have a nice wide-entry driveway which makes entering and exiting our facility very easy. We offer a variety of moving and packing supplies, from boxes & tape, to furniture covers & room labels to identify your boxes. The facility is open from 6am until 8:45pm - at which time our outside gate closes and the infrared security beams set. State-of-the-art video surveillance cameras, which operate 24 hours a day, and our digital keypad access system which records all entry and departures from our site, help us keep you and your property as safe as possible.We are proud of our professionally-trained staff and our goal is to be sure customer needs are met in the most courteous and friendly manner possible.
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Free moving boxes and packing material! Poor and erratic internet connectivity Free moving boxes and packing materials and advice, classifieds, important alerts, and much more on Nextdoor. Nextdoor members in share concerts, street fairs, garage sales, community meetings, and more. Pottery & Glass Seconds Sale To bring important news and information to residents, Nextdoor has partnered with these Santa Cruz agencies. 264 posts on Nextdoor Santa Cruz County Sheriff's Office 91 posts on Nextdoor County of Santa Cruz 30 posts on Nextdoor Santa Cruz County Regional Transportation Commission 13 posts on Nextdoor CERT Training on Eastside Glover St Shooting Investigation Last call for submitting questions for Santa Cruz Neighbors Candidates FORUM Online Survey Regarding Short-term Vacation Rentals for City View all public agency posts Joel Martin Zumaya (born November 9, 1984) is an American former professional baseball pitcher.
He pitched in Major League Baseball for the Detroit Tigers from 2006 through 2010. He is known for his record-breaking fastballs. Zumaya was drafted out of Bonita Vista High School in the 11th round by the Tigers, the 320th overall selection of the 2002 MLB Draft. He was chosen because of his power arm, but it was not clear whether he would be able to develop adequate control of an off-speed pitch. He is known for his 100 miles per hour (160 km/h) fastball. Zumaya began his stint in the Tigers minor league system as a starting pitcher. Because he was drafted straight out of high school, Zumaya frequently pitched against players older than himself. In 2003, the 18-year-old Zumaya made great strides pitching for the Low-A affiliate West Michigan Whitecaps. 2004 saw Zumaya begin the year pitching for the High-A affiliate Lakeland Tigers, before a late season promotion to the Double-A Erie SeaWolves. He finished the season with a .500 win–loss record and struggled with walks. Zumaya began the 2005 season back in Erie;
however, his results were much improved from 2004, and he was soon promoted to the Triple-A Toledo Mud Hens. He finished the season with 199 strikeouts in 151 innings pitched. In 77 games over four seasons, Zumaya was 27–19, and averaged 6.4 hits and 11.1 strikeouts per nine innings. With the Tigers, he was most often used as a middle relief pitcher and occasionally as a setup man. Zumaya was a fan favorite for his intense, aggressive attitude on the mound and his 100 miles per hour (160 km/h) fastball, which topped out at 104.8 miles per hour (168.7 km/h). This was the fastest pitch ever recorded at that time.[2] He also has a very good knuckle-curve that he uses as an off-speed pitch. He was among the primary reasons for the Tigers bullpen success in 2006, joining fellow rookie Justin Verlander on the resurgent 2006 Tigers team. However, Zumaya was hampered by injuries to his throwing arm following his rookie season in 2006, and was never the same pitcher again. While he held batters to a .187 batting average in 2006, he was even tougher with runners in scoring position (.176), and two outs and runners in scoring position (.143).
Zumaya remained in the bullpen for the 2006 playoffs. However, Zumaya was sidelined for the 2006 American League Championship Series by a sore wrist, which Tigers general manager Dave Dombrowski disclosed in a December 2006 radio interview was due to Zumaya playing the PlayStation 2 video game Guitar Hero.[4] On the Xbox 360 version of Guitar Hero II, the credits read: No pitchers were harmed in the making of this game. He had it coming.[5] In a 2016 interview with the Detroit News, however, Zumaya said the Guitar Hero story was just a cover, and not true. While refusing to disclose the actual source of the injury, and calling the Guitar Hero story his "final answer," he also admitted that it was "some bogus stuff." Zumaya's future was then clouded by injury: in May 2007, he ruptured a tendon in his hand, requiring surgery and 12 weeks rehab. On August 2, 2007, the Tigers activated Zumaya from the 15-day disabled list after not playing since May 1. The next day, he made his first major league appearance following the injury, pitching to one batter in a game against the Cleveland Indians.
Zumaya sustained another injury, this time to his shoulder, during the 2007 offseason. While helping his father move some boxes in the attic at his father's home in advance of a fire approaching the area, a 50 to 60 pounds (23 to 27 kg) box fell on his right (pitching) shoulder, separating it. He was placed on the 60-day disabled list at the start of the 2008 season. After appearing in six successful minor league rehab games for the Single-A Lakeland Flying Tigers and Triple-A Toledo Mud Hens, Zumaya rejoined the Tigers on June 20, 2008. Zumaya was placed on the 15-day DL with a sore right shoulder on March 27, 2009.[8] He was reactivated by the end of April; however, he was placed back on the 15-day DL following a July 18 appearance against the New York Yankees, where it was reported he could barely move his right (throwing) arm. Zumaya had surgery in August, ending his season. On June 28, 2010, Zumaya injured his elbow in the eighth inning, while pitching against the Minnesota Twins' Delmon Young at Target Field.
He was in obvious pain and needed assistance walking off the field. The next day an MRI revealed he had a non-displaced fracture of the olecranon. Doctors said it would take four months to heal, ending his season. Zumaya missed the entire 2011 season after undergoing exploratory surgery on his right elbow on May 10. While the surgery, performed by Dr. James Andrews found no new damage, it was determined that the screw inserted during his previous surgery needed to be replaced.[10] He was unable to recover sufficiently to return to the team that season, his last before being able to enter free agency for the 2012 season. On January 15, 2012, Zumaya agreed to a one-year contract with the Minnesota Twins worth $800,000 to $1.7 million. On February 25, 2012, Zumaya tore an ulnar collateral ligament in his throwing elbow 13 pitches into a live batting practice session, requiring Tommy John surgery and ending his 2012 season, in which he was guaranteed to earn $400,000.[14] He was released on March 3.
Zumaya retired in February 2014. Zumaya pitching for the Tigers during 2009 Spring Training During the 2006 season, Zumaya often threw pitches that were measured at or above the official record reading of 101 miles per hour (163 km/h). On July 3, 2006, at McAfee Coliseum in Oakland, California, Justin Verlander, Joel Zumaya, and Fernando Rodney each threw multiple fastballs measured in at over 100 miles per hour (160 km/h), becoming the first time in MLB history that three pitchers on the same team had done so during a game. Just five games into the season, they became the first MLB team to have the same three pitchers throw over 100 miles per hour (160 km/h) in a season. On July 4, 2006, at McAfee Coliseum in Oakland, California, Zumaya threw a pitch measured at 103 miles per hour (166 km/h), thus tying the "unofficial" record held by Mark Wohlers.[16] Similarly, on May 20, 2006, Zumaya gave up a grand slam to Ken Griffey, Jr. on a pitch that FSN Detroit's radar gun measured at 104 miles per hour (167 km/h).
Zumaya hit 104 miles per hour (167 km/h) on the Comerica Park radar gun on August 7 while pitching against Minnesota Twins infielder Nick Punto. Zumaya reached 101 miles per hour (163 km/h) or higher on five of six pitches during the at-bat. He also reached 103 miles per hour (166 km/h) during the Tigers' 4–3 playoff victory at Yankee Stadium on October 5, 2006;[18] and also on October 10, 2006, during Game 1 of the ALCS in Oakland, against the A's. In an interview for Detroit radio station WRIF, former Tigers pitcher Denny McLain stated that he believed the numbers on stadium and television radar guns were inflated. However, he also claimed that Zumaya had the most consistently fast pitches he had seen in person since former Houston Astros Nolan Ryan and J. R. Richard. However, there is a new technology on the horizon that reads pitch speeds more accurately and does not inflate those numbers. It uses cameras and software to obtain the data. This new technology comes from Major League Baseball in its Advanced Media section.
Part of Enhanced Gameday tracks pitch speed, break, and trajectory.[20] One pitch registered on this was measured at 104.8 miles per hour (168.7 km/h) at release by Joel Zumaya. This was during Game 1 of the ALCS against Frank Thomas of the Oakland Athletics on October 10, 2006, at Oakland's McAfee Coliseum (other readings were at 103 miles per hour (166 km/h); the slowest reading was 102 miles per hour (164 km/h)). After the 2006 season, The Bill James Handbook published a list of pitchers and the number of their pitches thrown at 100 miles per hour (160 km/h) or more. Zumaya led the major leagues with 233. Zumaya's average fastball was 98.6 miles per hour (158.7 km/h), with 100+ mph fastballs coming one out of six pitches. In 2009 and 2010, Zumaya's fastball averaged 99 miles per hour (159 km/h), according to Pitch f/x.[22]Pitcher hurt playing video game Archived March 22, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. ^ Dave Dombrowski on WXYT 12/13/2006 Archived December 18, 2006, at the Wayback Machine.