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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Thursday, June 07, 2007
Think Outside The Bunco…
Taco Bell’s “Swing for a Million” promotion will be shown during FOX’s coverage of the All-Star Game’s pre-game ceremonies with one contestant receiving three attempts to “swing for the fences” from a tee at home plate with a real chance at walking away with some cash. One power slug of 280 feet on the fly and our contestant becomes an instant millionaire. Swings falling short of 280 feet may still win a heavy payout as a 255 foot blast will reward $250,000 and a 230 foot drive will secure $100,000.
“We love baseball and want to celebrate baseball’s fans by giving them a unique ‘inside the game’ chance they won’t soon forget,” said Bob Fulmer, interim chief marketing officer, Taco Bell Corp. “This is a fantastic opportunity for a fan to take the field with some of baseball’s biggest stars and get a shot at becoming a millionaire.”
Repoz
Posted: June 07, 2007 at 04:00 AM | 25 comment(s)
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1. North Side Chicago Expatriate Giants Fan Posted: June 07, 2007 at 06:58 AM (#2395921)It would be hard for even major leaguers to hit a ball off a tee that far, wouldn't it?
Hitting a line drive off a tee is easy. Hitting for distance off a tee, with a wood bat, is not easy in any way, shape, or form.
Speaking of which: Could you have done it, before you got hurt?
The biggest problem of hitting off a homer off a tee is going to be getting an optimal angle. It's very difficult to uppercut a ball off a tee and also transferring almost all the force of the swing directly to the ball.
A slow pitching machine would be much more fair, but, then again, that's not the purpose of the contest. Contrary to the headline, Taco Bell has no hopes of finding a million dollar swing. A random fan hitting it 280 feet off a tee? Might as well be a crooked carnival game.
Primey
Exactly. Someone at work said they'd love to try it, but I said the chances of me smashing the ball off the pitcher's mound (or worse, repeating my age 5 mistake of constantly hitting the tee and not the ball) make me think I don't want to be mocked for an entire day during the SportsCenter repeat cycle.
I'd have to go dust off my copy of The Physics of Baseball to get into specifics, but the take-home point is that a significant portion of the force responsible for a 400-ft home run is supplied by the pitcher. When hitting off a tee, the batter has to generate the same force all by himself. As I recall, this has to do with the magnitude of the force of the bat-ball collision itself, the time over which it is applied, and the degree of compression sustained by the ball as a result. But it's been a while...
But if you could do that, the 280 ft. distance is nothing for any semi-athletic person under the age of 50 with normal muscle definition. Of course doing all this in front of a stadium full of people in only three tries might be a bit of a problem.....
It's easier if you take the right drugs.
I'd have to go dust off my copy of The Physics of Baseball to get into specifics, but the take-home point is that a significant portion of the force responsible for a 400-ft home run is supplied by the pitcher. When hitting off a tee, the batter has to generate the same force all by himself.
Then why do you always see obviously out of condition coaches routinely hitting pre-game fungos to the warning track? The difficulty has to come from the unfamiliarity of hitting off the tee itself. And 280 ft. is not 400 ft.
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