I understand that Shaquille O'neal is a man that transcends just the NBA, but watching him attempt to play against other athletes in their own sport is extremely difficult to swallow. Watching Shaq attempt to swing a bat was like watching a baby giraffe trying to walk. It was hard to watch yet I could not take my eyes off of it, like a car accident. The 7'1" O'neill attempted to out-slug Albert Pujols, out-spike beach volleyball stars Misty May and Kerri Walsh, and out-throw Ben Roethlisberger, needless to say he could not out-do anybody at anything. The show is a half hour too long and the hosts are extremely annoying. The most important part of the show, the actual competition, takes place in the last fifteen minutles of the show making the first 45 minutes irrelevant. Here are some short examples of the show from Youtube:
Mlb
3 September 2009
20 August 2009
In the National League, the elongated double switch shows again why pitching statistics are quite poorly attributed. A traditional double switch involves the manager inserting a position player into the game for the current pitcher and a new pitcher for a position player--typically one who just made an out, so that the new pitcher won't be batting for nearly a full trip through the lineup.
Posted by Eric Hatleback | No comments yet
10 July 2009
Here'e another quirky entry into the "Win" category: http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=4318608. If we used Team pitching statistics, that win would simply go to the Nationals pitching staff, which clearly it should have.
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9 July 2009
As the Brewers wrap up a series against the Cardinals and Tony LaRussa's peculiar lineup strategy, I thought it might be worth thinking about what would make certain lineups advantageous. LaRussa has been hitting the pitcher in the 8th spot, with a position player hitting behind him in the 9th slot, for several years now. Why?
Posted by Eric Hatleback | No comments yet
6 July 2009
I got into a discussion with Sean yesterday about the post I made a couple of weeks ago concerning when a runner has officially taken possession of a base. We consulted the rule book (online at baseball-almanac.com, a great site) and found no specific details about the situation. (Though, admittedly, I did not carefully pore over every bit of it research-style, since we were simply having an entertaining discussion.) While shifting through various alternative scenarios to try to tease out the answer, this fun one came up:
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3 July 2009
This game typifies why the open base need not always be filled. Particularly with the winning run on third base, you are asking quite a lot of your pitcher to confine him to the box created by bases loaded. The Brewers should have gone after Soto--a player coming in cold off the bench--with runners on second and third and 2 outs. Instead, they blatantly pitched around him for 3 pitches, then intentionally put him on with the fourth pitch to set the stage for the walk-off walk.
Posted by Eric Hatleback | No comments yet
2 July 2009
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23 June 2009
When you play fantasy football, you play (almost exclusively) in a head-to-head, points-based system. When you play fantasy baseball, you play (almost exclusively) in either a rotisserie or head-to-head, categories-based system. When you play fantasy hockey, you play (almost exclusively) in some form of salary cap, everyone-can-have-player-X-on-the-team sysatem.
Continue reading "Why is there "standardization" fantasy sports?"
Posted by Eric Hatleback | No comments yet
20 June 2009
I thought it would be fitting for my first post to discuss a rules question I've thought about for baseball for quite a long time. Here's the situation: Runner on first, less than 2 outs. The pitcher accidentally goes into the windup, and the runner takes off for second. (Or the runner takes off, then the pitcher goes into the windup.) There is a strange combination of blazing speed in the runner and very slow motion in the pitcher's windup. The runner reaches second base before the pitch reaches the plate. The batter hits a lazy fly to the outfield.
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