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1. Cuban X Senators Posted: April 19, 2009 at 04:42 AM (#3144335):)
Just grab some ramdummy quotes and run with it.
I was at the game today, and yes, there did seem to be a jet stream. The new stadium is much more open-air (in the concourses) and there was a steady breeze blowing straight out, judging by the flags. I'm not going to be concerned about it until it gets really hot and humid over the summer. Is the ball still going to carry when it's muggy and airless? We'll find out.
Identical balls will carry further in humid air than in dry air. Balls don't carry as far in the summer because the humidity reduces the elasticity of the ball.
The Yanks hit 5 HRs on Friday.
I am hoping that this is just a fluke and that the stadium will play like the old one did over the course of the year. I don't want thee Yanks in a band box.
Is the ball still going to carry when it's muggy and airless?
Identical balls will carry further in air than in no air. Balls don't carry as far in airless conditions because the deadness of the players reduces the velocity they can impart to the ball.
I see what you did there.
I read this and continued onto the next post, never realizing that there may be something wrong.
(BTW, Yankee Stadium & Citifield are probably 2 of the 3 windiest parks in baseball. NYC is one of the windiest cities in the country according to climate records, and both stadia are by the water and surrounded by low buildings, parks, and parking lots. KC is probably the windiest based upon climate records. Candlestick used to be windier but the new park was designed to limit the wind; Wrigley certainly has its share of windy days but Chicago is not a particularly windy city once you get away from the immediate Lakefront. Fenway is surrounded by buildings and I've never observed it as a particularly windy place. (Although Boston is an even windier city than New York according to the Logan v. LGA climate records)
Then why the hell is it called "The Windy City"?
For the same reason people think productive outs is the key to winning baseball: because people are idiots*.
*actually, the answer probably is that both of Chicago's airports are away from the lakefront, and that's the legendarily "windy" part of the city. But the Chicago ballparks aren't directly on the water either, unlike the NY stadia, which you can literally travel to by ferry.
There are a lot of theories.
But the point made is somewhat accurate in that the lakefront area weather is distinctly different than several miles away. They always report two temperatures in Chicago, one for the folks near the lake and one for everyone else.
As zop says, it's because the old part of the city is on the immediate lakefront. Where my grandmother used to live, on the West Side, I never remember any particular wind at all. Downtown, I have been stopped in my tracks at times by wind-tunnel effects amid tall buildings. Actually the same thing has happened to me in New York and in Dallas, but how many cities can you call The Windy City anyway?
The famous "cooler near the lake," a phrase I heard on the radio every day of my life when I was a kid.
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