Re: Yaay, America!

cricket wrote:

At the risk of being labelled "un-American", let me reiterate my point from last year about this time...
Fireworks are stupid.

I totally agree.
I can't stand 'em.
And they're the reason that I have to keep my dog, which is a permanent outside dog, on doggie downers for the two or three days around the Fourth. If they put a total ban on fireworks it couldn't happen too soon.
Kevin

Re: Yaay, America!

That is the good part of being born is a country that wass born much before fireworks were introduced in Europe. Nobody cracks a bomb. China already have them by the time. On the other end, when there are regional parties, music and bad singing goes around all night long....  sad

Re: Yaay, America!

You haven't seen American-style fireworks until you've been in Hawaii on New Years....I wouldn't say fireworks are stupid - just stupidly used. Sort of like firearms, they bite.....and sometimes they bite someone else.

If you have to play with fireworks, do it right.


Right now, I'm watching the Military Channel's series on the Revolutionary War.

Re: Yaay, America!

Another baseball question:

(sure, this thread is two years old, but what the hell)

When the score comes up, with the three different numbers, what does the third one mean? I know the first is the number of runs scored, the second is the number of hits recorded, but what is the third number?

Re: Yaay, America!

murtalianconfederacy wrote:

Another baseball question:

(sure, this thread is two years old, but what the hell)

When the score comes up, with the three different numbers, what does the third one mean? I know the first is the number of runs scored, the second is the number of hits recorded, but what is the third number?

In a baseball game's line score the third number represents errors committed by that team.
Erik

Re: Yaay, America!

Blacklancer99 wrote:

In a baseball game's line score the third number represents errors committed by that team.
Erik

Some broadcasts have also taken to adding a fourth number -- LOB, standing for "Left on Base", or the number of runners who reached base but failed to score for that team.

Daniel Kast
Majestic Twelve Games
cricket@mj12games.com

Re: Yaay, America!

Geez, even Baseball is getting complicated....


I'd rather watch Little League, more fun - or the local "farm team" - a LOT cheaper to get into the bleachers....

Re: Yaay, America!

thedugan wrote:

Geez, even Baseball is getting complicated....


I'd rather watch Little League, more fun - or the local "farm team" - a LOT cheaper to get into the bleachers....

Tell me about it, "Friendly Fenway" where the Red Sox play is the most expensive ticket outside of the new Yankee Stadium, and once you pay the gas station owner your firstborn to park 6 blocks from the park...well you get the picture.
I stopped going to games when the worst seats in the park went over $20 a pop and I haven't been back since. I'd rather watch the games on TV anyway (they show replays, the food's cheaper, I never have to worry about parking, if it rains I stay dry and can watch something else and when they suck I can change the channel as well). I'll pay to go to a Worcester Tornadoes game (the local independent minor league baseball team) before  would take free tickets to Boston because of all of the hassles involved. Ken Burns can keep the atmosphere, I like money in my wallet and simplicity.  wink
Erik

Re: Yaay, America!

thedugan wrote:

Geez, even Baseball is getting complicated....

It's mainly due to the "sabermetric" revolution over the past 10-15 years; this being a coined word taken from SABR (the Society for American Baseball Research). Most of the traditional statistics kept by baseball fans and teams have been shown to be misleading (batting average) -- or just plain useless (pitcher win-loss record).

What the media has taken from all this is that "numbers are good". So instead of adjusting the computation of batting average to more accurately reflect a batter's contribution to his team's offensive production, batting average is kept as it is and things like OPS and VORP are added on. Which means, ironically, that the search for a better (and simpler) understanding of how the game works has ended up cluttering the stat lines and box scores to the point where that understanding is further away...

Daniel Kast
Majestic Twelve Games
cricket@mj12games.com

Re: Yaay, America!

Well, I'm getting to watch a lot more baseball now. The only channel my family had subscribed to, Setanta, went under a few weeks ago and we've had ESPN America on that channel until they come up with something to replace it. Even watched lacrosse. Wondered why you Americans liked it, then I saw the answer--you can hit people with the sticks, or whatever they're called. Just like ice hockey...:)

Typical, you've always got to bring weapons to a sport...:)

Pity I won't get to see Aussie rules or Gaelic football now, though...:(

Re: Yaay, America!

murtalianconfederacy wrote:

Pity I won't get to see Aussie rules or Gaelic football now, though...:(

Yeah... I really wish American sports networks would give more time to actual sporting events from around the world, and less time to talking heads who "analyze" the Big Four to death (baseball, American football, basketball, ice hockey).

Daniel Kast
Majestic Twelve Games
cricket@mj12games.com

Re: Yaay, America!

That is a thing I've noticed. The one thing you like more than playing sports or watching them is talking about them. But we do the same thing over here, I guess--just start on the topic of football and you've got a massive number of fans having digs at others. 'Course, at the moment the target of choice is Manchester City, who are the richest club in football but can't get any real footballers to them. Kaka, E'too, etc., have all turned them down. Once it was learned I have a good left foot they offered me a contract, but I turned them down...:)

Re: Yaay, America!

Well, this is late, but ...

Happy birthday US of A, sorry I missed the party

Re: Yaay, America!

murtalianconfederacy wrote:

The one thing you like more than playing sports or watching them is talking about them. But we do the same thing over here, I guess

Four years in Germany gave me a great appreciation for football. I really learned to love it and get into it (although I never got to watch much Bundesliga because it was ONLY carried on Satellite TV -- imagine if 80% of Americans could not tune into the NFL every weekend!). But I loved watching Champions League and the international events. Good stuff. It actually meant a lot to me when the USA beat Spain a couple weeks ago. That's frickin' huge!

Re: Yaay, America!

MadSeason wrote:

It actually meant a lot to me when the USA beat Spain a couple weeks ago. That's frickin' huge!

And don't forget about Brazil.
I won't say they should have beaten Brazil, but they very well could have beaten them, being up 2-0 at the half.

Re: Yaay, America!

Yeah, I was impressed by America in the Confederations Cup. Of course, some pundits were complaining (in one of the TV books over here, it had listings of the final saying that "hopefully, the two best attacking teams will be in the final--Spain and Brazil"), but I'd have loved to have seen a US vs South Africa final. Of course, everyone would be moaning about it not being a beautiful game, but I'd much rather win 1-0 playing ugly than lose 5-2 playing beautiful football. West Brom tried the latter, and they finished bottom. Stoke played the former and almost ended up in the top half of the Premiership.

Of course, the Bundesliga is starting to become weaker than other European leagues (don't think their teams have got very far in the Champions League as of late), but well done to Wolfsburg for winning what I believe is their first championship.

Re: Yaay, America!

By the way, congrats to the US for reaching the Gold Cup final. How often is that competition held?