Amen amen there’s a lower power.
Read More...Bold move in Seattle, as the Mariners are optioning catcher Jesus Montero to Triple-A Tacoma, reports Ryan Divish of the Tacoma News-Tribune.
Montero, whom the M’s acquired from the Yankees as part of the Michael Pineda deal, was ranked by Baseball America as the sixth-best overall prospect coming into 2012. This season, however, Montero has authored a grim batting line of .208/.264/.327 in addition to playing spotty defense in his 225 1/3 innings behind the ...
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1. AndrewJ posted on November 16, 2012 at 08:08 AM # hit 0 | hit 0Already happened.
0 takes up a lot of space on a scoreboard.
Agreed 100%. I last went to a baseball game 2 years ago and I think that was the last time I watched a full game. I still follow the game closely from a distance, but I can't stand the way baseball is shown on television, so I stopped watching full games. However, if there was a team in Montréal, I would have at least a partial season ticket plan, for sure. Even a crappy stadium like the O is better than watching at home.
I think my favorite part of watching the game live that you miss on TV is watching the fielder positioning and the impact on results... there's something amazing about being able to watch the pitch come in and see the fielders react to the ball off the bat.
Hockey is better live as well, but the difference compared to TV is smaller (and it costs much more than seeing a baseball game, so you're getting less value for the dollar).
One day in the future we may have the TV option of a simple wide-range unadulterated feed of the field with the only sound being noises from the park. However, it would presumably cost a hefty subscription fee considering that the current raison d'etre for on-screen graphics and the announcers themselves is advertisement delivery.
At Safeco, they have long shown the TV feed on monitors throughout the stadium, but not on the big screen. Monitors are by food stands on the concourses and hanging from the upper decks so people sitting toward the back of the lower decks or standing behind can see them, including the usual TV broadcast replays. This leads to cheers or jeers from the back of the stands when they're shown, while folks near the field don't see them, as they're verboten on the big screen.
The play where Fielder was gunned down at the plate in the WS is a great example. The replay showed the whole thing, the outfielder in the background, Fielder in the foreground and you could see it develop.
You may actually be alluding ironically to this, but I bought something close to that from mlb.com for the 2011 playoffs, for six bucks or something. Exceedingly good way to watch a game on video. Radio audio feed was available too, taking care of some of the advertising concerns. It's a niche product, and the minimal costs these days of making a camera feed that's running anyway available to the entire world must be well-recouped by the modest fee.
bringing my g.f. to baseball games has helped her appreciate the sport more, for just what you said. she was amazed to see how much the fielders are concentrating on each pitch.
I wonder if Samsung is going to start emulating the Viagra and Cialis commercials.
What is the res on this?
Not that high, after all it's the angular resolution that is important and no one watches this from close up.
If Jerry Jones and Nolan Ryan start holding hands from separate bathtubs while they watch a huge video screen, I really am seceding.
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