It was confirmed that Judge, Ohtani and Raleigh were not in the building.
I didnt mind the ending except for the awful reporting. Why the need to ask stupid cringy questions before each went up to bat? Horrible sideline reporters like Ken Rosenthal have become a pet peeve of mine. I don’t know when or why it happened but they’ve all become clones of each other. The cadence and tone of each of them are exactly the same. There is never a good question or answer. It ruins my enjoyment every time.
Let us pray nobody in the commissioner’s office reads this site.
As for AAA all-stars, there was an annual game, last held in 2019. Another victim of Covid. Of course, it’s a non-starter because no-one watched it back when they could. Not an advertisers dream.
I’d rather see an All-Star talent show. I mean who wouldn’t want to see Junior Caminero and Aaron Judge sing “Summer Lovin’?” Or Tarik Skubal perform some street magic?
Bastards. The rest of us have to sit through the whole thing. What’s so damn important that they can’t hang out with their new friends for another hour or two?
Former Cubs second baseman, and Hall of Famer, Ryne Sandberg, posted on Instagram today that he is continuing to deal with cancer. He was diagnosed with prostate cancer early last year, and after announcing that he was cancer-free last August, in December, he learned that it had spread.
That brings to mind a memory I have of an ASG from back in the 80s. Late in the game, the camera flashed to the AL dugout. Standing at the railing and talking with each other were starters George Brett, Jim Rice, and (I think) Rod Carew. Those guys certainly stayed till the last out.
Once a season, maybe. But there’s an extra-inning game damn near every day in MLB. (Last season, there were 216 extra-inning games played in Major League Baseball, or 8.9% of the total 2,430 regular season games.) The excitement of the swing-off would wear off quite quickly. Plus, it would favor those teams with a bunch of home run sluggers.
It’s already worn off for me. I’ve learned to accept the runner on 2nd base for extra innings (although I don’t like it). A swing-off might be the final straw.
Though, NHL shootouts only occur after a 5-minute overtime period of “regular” play does not yield a goal. (“Regular” is in quotes because current rules have it as a 3-on-3 lineup, rather than the usual full-strength 5-on-5.)
It would be more comparable if MLB would institute a swing-off if the game is still tied after 11 or 12 innings, rather than 9 (as was done last night).
Right. I was thinking it might be akin to a penalty shootout in soccer, but that also occurs only after a rather long overtime period.
This, maybe. But ISTM that the number of games that go even to 12 innings is quite low these days. (I can’t seem to find the correct number; damn AI gives me inconsistent answers…)
That wouldn’t surprise me, especially as MLB continues to use the “ghost runner” rule in extra innings – reviled by fans, but probably leads to fewer games going well past 10 or 11 innings.
That doesn’t make it right for baseball. MLB players don’t wear skates either. There is nothing wrong with extra inning games. (to the extent they’re worried about their pitchers, maybe there are other solutions about how the bullpen is used, and we can stop messing with tradition)