Dennis Eckersley hinted at a possible reason when telling an interviewer once about how he became an alcoholic while with the Cubs. When asked if it’s true that the hardest part of baseball was playing day games after night games, he replied “No, the hardest part is day games after DAY games.”
Too much carousing, in a city with lots of opportunity for it. The players get fatigued late in the season.
I happen to know several of the Sox sabermetricians, and if you think they’re capable of walking away from a 90% success rate, you need another kind of search to see if we might get lucky and locate your brain. Have you ever heard of the pop-up? The strikeout? The fly ball to shallow left? The slow hit grounder to the left side that the pitcher can nab? The medium grounder to the ss position that the shifted ss can get back to?
The reason they make them throw 4 pitches is because, unless the bases are empty, there is always a chance of a passed ball or something else that would let the runners advance. With the bases empty, I can see just letting the batter take the base without the pitches.
Random answers to other questions: I like interleague play, the Diamondbacks have the ugliest uniforms in baseball these days, coaches have on-field responsibilities, and therefore need to be in uniform, and the DH is still a Sign of the Decline of Western Civilization.
The rule requiring them to be in uniform could be eliminated, though. It’s an anachronism and it’s not like they have to keep it. It’s never bothered me, personally.
I know, people say that, but think about it. You have an AL pitcher that bats .000 or close to it versus a pitcher that bats .089. Then you have David Ortiz up against Jeff Reboulet. Sure the NL pitcher might be better at laying down a bunt once in a while, but Ortiz has a better chance at hitting the moon then Reboulet.
Well, hopefully one of these days, MLB will shut down, retool, and come away with a salary cap. A real one, not a salary cap that if you exceed, you pay a penalty.
No–what he’s arguing is that if David Ortiz bunts, his success rate at getting to first base is going to be less than 90%. If you saw Ortiz play last year, you’d know that even if there were no infielders and he managed to lay the bunt down in fair territory he probably had a less than 90% chance of actually reaching first base. The guy could have been thrown out from left field.
But, as also noted earlier, that means 4 tastes of “rosin-fingers.”
Marley, if they get rid of the rule about managers wearing uniforms, what will they wear? I know you don’t care one way or the other, but it is a question that would need to be answered. How would you tell the managers apart from a distance without some sort of uniform?
They could wear suits like managers in most other sports, or those ridiculous NFL style jumpsuits. Since the managers come to the field from opposite dugouts anyway, I don’t think you need uniforms with names and numbers to tell them apart.
A small bonus to managers wearing uniforms, though: eventually the Yankees will retire Joe Torre’s 6, and then all of their single digit numbers will be retired.
World Series champs is an unfair standard to judge teams by. Making the playoffs and even getting into the series are better. A 5 or 7 game series will sometimes have weather or luck distort them. A good well run team can get there in a 162 game season. That is all you can reasonably expect.
The Detroit Lions are a huge success for the Ford family. They have filled the seats for 50 years. They have allowed tax payers to build them 2 stadiums. The original 30 mill he paid for the team is not worth 800 million plus. That is success. Fans are disappointed because they judge by a different set of standards. But the Yankees are a success on any level.
The D-backs don’t have the ugliest uniforms in MLB. That honor goes to the Florida Marlins with all their strange combos of black, pinstripes, and teal. The red is an improvement over that horrible purple we wore when we won the World Series.
I think he meant to say the team “is now worth $800 million plus.”
I liked the Diamondbacks wearing purple. It feels like half the teams in the league are using gray and red these days, so the change was absolutely boring.
If I had to pick the D-backs new uniforms, I’d try for some sort of sand and green. It would match the desert colors here. I like the Padres uniforms with their attempt to match the Southern California beach colors.
So when did people stop getting dressed up for baseball games? I’m watching the 1968 World Series Bob Gibson strikeout game on DVD and fans are still dressed in shirts and ties.