Uhh, there’s already a robo-broadcaster in Bob Lorenz…so I’d watch what I wish for, Brenly.
Read More...“I’m telling you,” Brenly said on the air, “you get into extra innings, you get into the late innings of a close ballgame, you don’t want the umpire to determine who wins a ballgame.”
Brenly is a former major-league player and manager, but unlike many of his contemporaries, he’s ready for change in the way the game is officiated. He’s ready for new technology to step in. He’s ready ...
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1. Rennie's Tenet posted on February 15, 2013 at 03:54 PM # hit 0 | hit 0Little pillows attached to the ground are not the only actual bases. Anywhere you are safe is actually a base. A rock can actually be a base. A car's door handle can actually be a base. The side of the Empire State Building can actually be a base.
Or, in my neighborhood when we played in the street, a sewer grate, the back end of a car, and someone's sweatshirt thrown on the ground.
I wish the author had explained this a bit more. I can't even begin to imagine how it would work.
E-1 or E-3?
Or something like that.
Iirc a typical sorter is expected to sort three pieces of mail per second. I imagine the PO cuts Frank some slack on that.
We'd often play on playgrounds where first and third bases were fixed, but the organization maintaining the field used a removable second base (due to sliding, I imagine) it stashed somewhere for safekeeping between games. We'd use something light colored for second, and all but adjusted it with micrometers to make sure it was perfectly placed, because nothing is more important when you're nine years old.
I did this too, but a little different. Each half inning lasted either two outs or four batters, whichever came first, and I believe the fourth batter had to hit a home run, or else he didn't count.
But what I am most interested in is how you broke a window with a wiffle ball.
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