LizzieMaine
Bartender
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- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
On the question of the new baseball rules, I submit that baseball, as it has been played for the past twenty or thirty years, with all the fiddling and diddling between pitches, is, itself, an imposition on the basic structure of the game. This isn't just a grumpy statement from an old fan -- it's an empirical statement of fact, and I point to the evidence of hundreds of recorded radio broadcasts of games dating as far back as the mid-1930s. Even when you account for the difference in the length of commercial breaks between now and then, games prior to the 1980s moved at a consistently faster pace. A typical 1930s major league regular-season game lasted a little over two hours, occasionally 2:15 to 2:30, but almost never as long as 3 hours unless it went into extra innings or there was some other extraordinary circumstance. Games did get a bit longer thru the 1940s, moving more to the 2:15 to 2:40 range, but game length remained consistently under 3 hours until the very end of the 1970s. Even a game full of tension, strategy, and excitement like the famous 1978 "Bucky Dent game" between the Red Sox and Yankees was played in just 2:52.
This type of faster-paced, get-right-down-to-business baseball, without all the insufferable "get-me, I'm-a-chess-master" glaring between pitcher and batter and preening for the TV cameras is the game I knew and fell in love with. I don't especially like that a rule change is necessary to force the end of bad habits, but such is the world we live in. Maybe now my 85-year-old mother won't have to force herself into a state of sleep deprivation in order to watch her team.
This type of faster-paced, get-right-down-to-business baseball, without all the insufferable "get-me, I'm-a-chess-master" glaring between pitcher and batter and preening for the TV cameras is the game I knew and fell in love with. I don't especially like that a rule change is necessary to force the end of bad habits, but such is the world we live in. Maybe now my 85-year-old mother won't have to force herself into a state of sleep deprivation in order to watch her team.