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Category: Education

The Struggles of Abundance

Categories:
2021 Regular Season,Broadcasting,Education
Written by:
on May 29, 2021

In these days of having every live game at your fingertips, it is important to not let yourself fall into a trap.

It is important to let yourself settle into a game.

Resist the temptation to slip into ‘highlight mode’ and bounce from game-to-game.

“hey look at that score in the 6th!”

“oh look at that interesting situation in the 8!”

Blah.

In order to make Critical Observations, one must give themself over to the game completely or run the risk of turning into a highlight-hungry glam-fan ogling over superstars.

This is when giving up on a game can hurt:

You are watching Houston vs San Diego, and jumped to watch another game
because Houston looked like a mountain when they got out to a 5-run lead
in the 5th…

Hours later you are back at the same game which San Diego tied in the
9th, 10th and 11th innings, and eventually got a three-run home run in
the 12th in what had by then become the longest game of the year…

You saw the last home run.

You do not even feel good about that.

You feel empty.

This is exactly the type of game you scan for in the off-season.

But

With all this choice at your fingertips, and now that you know so much, you thought listening to the New York Yankees radio announcers boo their own team as the Yankees were losing to the Detroit Tigers in the 7th would be more fun.

It was not more fun.

You were wrong.

Baseball is observing.

Be on the lookout for time-conflicts.

It is challenging when all the games start at 7pm because it forces a decision.

The 1pm, 4pm, 7pm, 10pm relieves you of so much frog-hopping.

Do yourself a favour:

  1. Check the schedule
  2. Get the game times and interest (or not-interest) of the situation
  3. Set the schedule
  4. Hang in there

X-Factor

Categories:
2021 Regular Season,Education,Rules and Standards
Written by:
on May 19, 2021

Clayton Kershaw demonstrates this when he pitches

Yadier Molina demonstrates this when he is catching

influencing plays….. with….. body language?

body language says a lot

you can interpret much from a series of “ugly swings”

that is a type of body language that is easy to count

but a definable, palpable swagger is somewhat more nuanced

it says something when you see pitchers go out of their way to get involved in defense early in games

we recognize this as a good strategy (just dont get hurt)

on deck

Categories:
Education
Written by:
on May 8, 2021
your at-bat begins before you are at bat

this is one of those lessons that is easier to be reminded of when you are at the ballpark and you can decide where to focus your attention –

when you have the limited view that the TV broadcasts provide, sometimes you need to do some hunting to catch these behind-the-scenes foundations

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