If You Don’t Think MLB Needs Replay, You’re a Moron

Yeah, you just have to be a complete idiot to think that it isn’t important to get calls right – plain and simple. Don’t give me Bud Selig’s BS that it affects the “pace of the game”. After all, doesn’t a player or manager arguing a call for several minutes affect the pace of the game? In any case, the overwhelming majority of calls could be gotten right in less than 30-seconds – certainly less time than it takes a manager to even get to the offending ump.

Personally, I think even balls & strikes should be determined automatically; however, who can argue that there aren’t several instances that umpires simply have no ability to make the right calls on a consistent basis.

  • Check Swings: It is literally impossible for the ump behind the plate to see both the location of the pitch and whether the batter swung the bat. Likewise, it is unlikely that the umpires down the line have as good a view as the overhead camera. Why not just appeal to an ump sitting in front of an overhead monitor?
  • Tagging Up: As demonstrated this post season with the atrocious Nick Swisher ALCS call, it is simply impossible for the ump to see the runner’s foot on the bag and the ball in the fielder’s glove simultaneously.
  • Trapped Catches: Come on, how long does it take for replay to get something like this right? Tonight’s call in the 7th is a perfect example of an umpire’s refusal to use common sense in determining the correct call. If Ryan Howard actually thought he caught the ball on a fly, would he have thrown to second or just stepped on the bag for the inning ending double play? What a huge blown call by the ump – instead of bases loaded with 1-out and Teixeira & A-Rod coming up, the inning was over.
  • Safe/Out on the Bases: How often are the umpires blocked or just plain wrong? Whether a tag-out on a pickoff or a close play at first (like in tonight’s top of the 8th inning-ending double play).

In a recent interview MLB commissioner Bud Selig stated:

  “Affecting the game on the field is not something I really want to do.”
Grow a pair, you’re the freaking commissioner! I guess he just prefers to have the umpires affect the game with horrendous calls.

  “I do like the human element and I think the human element for the last 130 years has worked pretty well.”
Are you kidding me! The human element? What the hell are the players for? By that rational, we can replace the players with robots and keep the umps therefore maintaining the human element. Also, it really drives me nuts when people use the rational of ‘well, it worked for ___ years, so…’ I mean, blood letting worked for several hundred years and, come to think of it, human sacrifice did as well!

I would love for someone to comment on this post and offer up a rational reason for not implementing technology that will allow MLB to get as many calls as possible correct. After all, isn’t the integrity of the game paramount?

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The New Yankee Stadium

My beloved franchise, the New York Yankees, has been reduced to money grubbing whores.

I’ve been a season tickets holder for several years and the Yankees have actually resorted to spamming me now. I’ve been getting 3 or more emails a week for the past month and have actually received 2 already today.

The new stadium, like a roster of ‘All-Stars’, is aesthetically beautiful but completely dysfunctional. Watching a game, as my best friend Ben and I did yesterday, is a pain in the ass and not nearly as good an experience as in the old Stadium.

Perhaps a quarter of the seats (or based on attendance, a third of the fans in the ballpark) can’t see the simple box score as it is only posted on the outfield walls. Thousands of the most loyal fans have obstructed views, so that a fancy classless sports bar could be installed. There is advertising absolutely everywhere, like the sick lovechild of a used car dealership and cheap supermarket.

The Yankees will not sell out a single game this year (they won’t even come close) and it is truly embarrassing that the vast majority of camera shots will show thousands of empty seats. Go to Ticketmaster.com and you can purchase tickets for any game you choose. Want to watch them play the Mets, no problem. The defending champ Phillies, no problem. How about the Red Sox? Go ahead and invite a couple of hundred friends because there are tickets galore. Naturally, you’ll have needed to be shorting the stock market for the past year because the tickets start at $375 but, if you’ve got the cash, there are literally thousands of seats available.

As Ben pointed out yesterday, the three most important historical aspects – Monument Park, Retired Numbers, and Championship Years – are barely visible. Monument park is in a cave behind padding while the numbers and years are tiny and painted on what looks like bathroom tile (clearly a last minute addition after a blatant oversight).

To make matters worse, the ballpark is a bandbox which will totally sink our pitching staff and devastate our young pitchers’ confidence. You’d think that for $1.5 Billion they would at least be able to get that part right. Hell, the people who built The Stadium in the early 1920’s got it exactly right!

We’ve arrived at the end of the era of Jeter, Jorge and Mo and entered the dark era of Lonn Trost and Randy Levine.

Completely classless and very sad.

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MLB Parity vs. NBA & NFL

I just saw a really great article and had to break down some of these numbers on MLB parity vs. NBA and NFL (two salary cap sports):

World Series this Decade:

Phillies over Rays
Boston over Colorado
St. Louis over Detroit
White Sox over Houston
Boston over St. Louis
Florida over Yankees
Anaheim over San Fran
Arizona over Yankees
Yankees over Mets

8 different winners in 9 years with 1 team appearing 3 times, 2 twice and 14 (almost half the league) making an appearance.

In the same period, we have the following in the NBA:

Boston over LA
San Antonio over Cleveland
Miami over Dallas
San Antonio over Detroit
Detroit over LA
San Antonio over New Jersey
LA over New Jersey
LA over Philadelphia
LA over Indiana

5 different winners in 9 years with 1 appearing 5 times, one 3 times, 2 twice and a total of 10 making an appearance.

Now, moving onto the NFL, we have close to the same parity as MLB, though this may be due to them only playing 16 games and injuries arguably being far more important.

Giants over Patriots
Colts over Bears
Steelers over Seahawks
Patriots over Eagles
Patriots over Panthers
Buccaneers over Raiders
Patriots over Rams
Ravens over Giants
Rams over Titans

7 different winners in 9 years with 1 appearing 4 times, 2 twice and a total of 13 making an appearance.

And some crazy stats from the article I saw: Over the past 30 years, while 20 MLB teams have won it all, only nine have prevailed in the NBA. Another interesting stat: In 62 years of NBA championships, only 28 coaches have won.

Finally, let’s not forget that in baseball only 8 teams make the playoffs while in football 12 teams and in basketball 16 (half the league).

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Papelbon Calls for Ball in All Star Game

Jonathan Papelbon is an f-ing moron. That he has the audacity to even suggest he should close the All-Star game at Yankee Stadium not only shows his lack of class, but a complete ignorance of the numbers.

Let’s take a look:

  G IP H R ER HR BB SO W L SV BS WHIP ERA
Papelbon 41 40.2 32 16 11 3 7 51 3 3 28 4 0.96 2.43
Rivera 38 42.1 23 5 5 2 4 50 4 3 23 0 0.64 1.06

So, while Rivera has pitched more innings, Papelbon has given up 30% more hits, 300% more runs (though only 200% as many earned runs) and, though he has 1 more strikeout, he also has nearly double the walks and has given up 1 more HR. Finally, in the all-important category of Saves, while Papelbon does have 5 more than Rivera, he’s also blown 4 while Mo hasn’t blown any and has picked up 4 wins along the way!

All I can say is that I’ll be one of the many thousands booing loudly tonight when Papelbon is announced and later brought into the game.

 

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