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Just to add to that whole baseball is regional...
Just to add to that whole thread about baseball being regional:
http://money.cnn.com/2007/10/25/comm...sbiz/index.htm I'm not saying that proves that baseball is "national". But if it has been reduced to being a regional sport, that's one he!! of a region. |
I think it would be more proper to say that certain teams have a "national following" such as the Red Sox, Yankees, and Cubs (there may be more) as opposed to teams such as the Rockies, Brewers, Diamond Backs and Nationals for example who have a Regional-Local following.
Using the Cubs as an example I believe they are second to the Yankees (I could be mistaken but they're up there.) in attendance on the road. If you include revenue from Minor League Baseball it may exceed the NFL or at leasr come close. - |
Once again I think the point was completely missed. I think the average fan in MLB could not name players from all the teams even the smallest market teams. I watch baseball and I still cannot name or figure out who most of the Colorado players were. The NFL does a much better job in marketing players and even the worst teams in the league the average fans knows something about them.
Peace |
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The Buccaneers has Jeff Garcia that was with the Eagles when Donavan McNabb was hurt Vince Young is with the Titans and was a first round draft pick last season and is on the cover of Madden 08. The Chiefs have Larry Johnson and Priest Holmes which came back a neck injury about 2 years ago. Now that was without looking. Stop calling yourself an avid if you cannot name some of these names. ;) And the Patriots-Redskins game had more viewers in the middle of the season (52-7) at a different time than the World Series later that night when the Red Sox won the WS. The NFL game received over a 14.0 Nielsen rating and the World Series was around a 10.0-11.0 rating. I worked my first round playoff game on last Friday for the IHSA Playoffs. It rained 30 minutes before the game until the game ended. There were more people in the stands and on the sides of the fences in that one game then there was all my Class A and AA Post Season Baseball games combined during the 2007 season. And the weather was much nicer during every game and with the sun out most of the time as well. And this is an avid baseball town. Peace |
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A. Football stands have FAR greater capacity than do baseball stands, especially at high schools. Duh. :rolleyes: (And I don't think the schools play a schedule composed of 20, 30, 40, or more football games. Of course, you didn't know that.) B. Autumn in Chicagoland has, for the last several years, been much better weather-wise than has spring, when baseball plays. I guess that's baseball's fault, too, huh? :rolleyes: Really. Your posts when attempting to make a "point" have truly gone beyond illogical; they're downright stupid. |
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This seems to be your issue whether baseball is falling off the map or not. I loved baseball as a kid and I played it the longest. There was not even football offered until I was in 8th grade and that was the first year of that league. I played baseball in the backyard more than any other sport and if I could have been the next Willie Stargell I loved that possibility. I played varsity baseball the longest and baseball was the only sport I was a starter over some time compared to my other sports I played. I even spent a summer in Natchitoches, Louisiana because my Mom who was a college professor was doing a sabbatical for some research and she had to find me a baseball team to play for during the summer to keep me preoccupied. It was one of the most fun times of my life. So I am speaking as a fan of a game that for some reason has lost some luster. I even remember when the World Series was on it was constantly the topic of conversation when I was younger. Now the most talk I hear about is on places like this from people that work baseball. You seemed to be having a harder time dealing with those facts than I am. And when I look at schools that have great athletes in the other sports, they choose not to participate in baseball at all. So the best athletes at the younger levels are not playing baseball. And teams that once had a cut, need to take every player they can get. Even look at the Major Leagues and many of the better younger players are coming from outside of the United States. You have every right to disagree; I am just saying something is wrong. When the people my age and in their 40s, 50s and 60s are gone, will there be anyone younger that will get to those ages that will support MLB. All you seem to be talking about is emotion and what once was and what it should be. Nothing wrong with that but stop trying to assume that this conversation is only about what our emotions are. Peace |
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I consider myself a voracious NFL fan, and I can name a good many starters and reserves on every team in the league. I watch every single game available in my area each Sunday. I always watch Monday Night Football. I play in two fantasy football leagues on NFL.com and ESPN.com and I closely monitor all of the star players and worthwhile bench players. That is what I consider to be an avid NFL fan. |
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In my opinion just admit you love baseball and leave it at that. There is nothing wrong with being a fan of any sport. Soccer is the world's sport and you do not see my trying to convince everyone here the beauty and the fluidness of that sport. Who cares what you like. But admit that the sport you claim to love year in and year out loses the general public. Peace |
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I am a voracious NFL fan, college football fan, and baseball fan. I am not a stat junkie, but I do like to play fantasy football. It is only one of several factors which make me an avid fan, not the only factor. Are you ignoring the part where I said that I watch each and every available NFL game telecast in my area? You merely singled out one facet of my comments and are concentrating on it. I know the game and the players and have known them since long before fantasy football was ever invented. I have been a huge NFL (and AFL) fan my whole life. I have watched every Super Bowl ever played. I watched Hank Stram's Chiefs matriculate the ball down the field against the Packers. Which do I want to do well? That's the dilemma. It's also what makes it fun. I often must root for a player to do well against my team. I do happen to own LaDainian Tomlinson in both of my leagues. I did well in the draft and I'm doing just fine. Brady is working out pretty well for me too. This week I had 119 points in the NFL league and 112 in the ESPN league. By far the most of any team in either league. |
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This is my 30th year of umpiring, and I can honestly say the spring was the worst I have ever had for games lost due to cold and/or snow. I lost 17 games in April alone--17! Heck, I had several D-I games wiped due to cold, and we know that D-I games don't get banged unless they have to. And this was in April. Heck, I awoke the morning of April frickin' 11th to find three inches of snow on the ground. My Easter break saw 4 of its days completely wiped due to snow and slush and cold, wet conditions--not anywhere near your "hot" June days. This takes a toll on baseball, a sport NOT intended to be played under such conditions. It has become so serious that the NCAA beginning in 2008 pushed back the start of its college's schedules to accommodate the colder schools' weather troubles and schedules. |
I wear long sleeves more often in April and early May than I do in early June, bub.
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Uh, last time I checked, our high school baseball's postseason is in June, son. Perhaps you're in the southern hemisphere.
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Peace |
Well, if you had an ounce of simple meteorological and mathematical knowledge, you'd understand. But I won't hold my breath. :rolleyes:
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