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Classic Baseball Writing: "99 Reasons Why Baseball is Better Than Football"
The Heart of the Order (New York: Doubleday, 1990) | First published: January 1987 | Thomas Boswell

Posted on 11/04/2001 5:43:34 PM PST by BluesDuke

Some people say football's the best game in America. Others say baseball.

Some people are really dumb.

Some people say all this is just a matter of taste. Others know better.

Some people can't wait for next Sunday's Supper Bowl. Others wonder why.

Pro football is a great game. Compared with hockey. After all, you've gotta do something when the wind chill is zero and your curve ball won't break. But let's not be silly. Compare the games? It's a one-sided laugher. Here are the first 99 reasons why baseball is better than football. (More after lunch.)

1. Bands.

2. Halftime with bands.

3. Cheerleaders at halftime with bands.

4. Up With People singing "The Impossible Dream" during a Blue Angels flyover at halftime with bands.

5. Baseball has fans in Wrigley Field singing "Take Me Out To The Ball Game" at the seventh-inning stretch.

6. Baseball has Blue Moon, Catfish, Spaceman and the Sugar Bear. Football has Lester the Molester, Too Mean, and the Assassin.

7. All XX Super Bowls haven't produced as much drama as the last World Series.

8. All XX Super Bowls haven't produced as many classic games as either pennant playoff did in 1986.

9. Baseball has a bullpen coach blowing bubble gum with his cap turned around backward while leaning on a fungo bat; football has a defencive coordinator in a satin jacket with a headset and a clipboard.
.
10. The Redskins have thirteen assistant coaches, five equipment managers, three trainers, two assistant GMs, but for fourteen games nobody who could kick an extra point.

11. Football players and coaches don't know how to bait a ref, much less jump up and down and scream in his face. Baseball players know how to argue with umps; baseball managers even kick dirt on them. Earl Weaver steals third base and won't give it back; Tom Landry folds his arms.

12. Vince Lombardi was never ashamed that he said "Winning isn't everything; it's the only thing."
(Note: Lombardi didn't exactly say that - what he did say was "Trying to win is the only thing." But he never - not once! - tried to correct the distorted record. - BD.)

13. Football coaches talk about character, gut checks, intensity and reckless abandon. Tommy Lasorda said: "Managing is like holding a dove in your hand. Squeeze too hard and you kill it; not hard enough and it flies away."

14. Big league baseball players chew tobacco. Pro football linemen chew on each other.

15. Before a baseball game, there are two hours of batting practise. Before a football game, there's a two-hour traffic jam. (Note: This is inoperative when referring to Dodger Stadium. - BD.)

16. A crowd of 30,000 in a stadium built for 55,501 has a lot more fun than a crowd of 55,501 in the same stadium.

17. No one has ever actually reached the end of the rest room line at an NFL game.

18. Nine innings means eighteen chances at the hot dog line. Two halves meand BYO or go hungry.

19. Pro football players have breasts. Many NFLers are so freakishly overdeveloped, owing to steroids, that they look like circus geeks. Baseball players seem like normal fit folks. Fans should be thankful they don't have to look at NFL teams in bathing suits.

20. Eighty degrees, a cold beer, and a short-sleeve shirt are better than thirty degrees, a hip flask, and six layers of clothes under a lap blanket. Take your pick: sunshine or frostbite.

21. Having 162 games a year is 10.125 times as good as having 16.

22. If you miss your favourite NFL team's game, you have to wait a week. In baseball, you wait a day.

23. Everything George Carlin said in his famous monologue is right on. In football you blitz, bomb, spear, shiver, march and score. In baseball, you wait for a walk, take your stretch, toe the rubber, tap your spikes, play ball, and run home.

24. Marianne Moore loved Christy Mathewson. No woman of quality has ever preferred football to baseball.

25. More good baseball books appear in a single year than have been written about football (Note: In my copy, the typsetter misspelt the word this way: "footfall". How appropriate! - BD.) in the past fifty years. The best football writers, like Dan Jenkins, have the good sense to write about something else most of the time.

26. The best football announcer ever was Howard Cosell.

27. The worst baseball announcer ever was Howard Cosell.

28. All gridirons are identical; football coaches never have to meet to go over the ground rules. But the best baseball parks are unique.

29. Every outdoor park ever built primarily for baseball has been pretty. Every stadium built with pro football in mind has been ugly.

30. The coin flip at the beginning of football games is idiotic. Home teams should always kick off and pick a goal to defend. In baseball, the visitor bats first (courtesy) while the host bats last (for drama). The football visitor should get the first chance to score, while the home team should have the dramatic advantage of receiving the second-half kickoff.

31. Baseball is harder. In the last twenty-five years, only one player, Vince Coleman, has been cut from the NFL and then become a success in the majors. From Tom Brown in 1963 (Senators to Packers) to Jay Schroeder (Jays farm system to Redskins), baseball flops have become NFL standouts.

32. Face masks. Right away we've got a clue something might be wrong. A guy can go 80 mph on a Harley without a helmet, much less a face mask.

33. Face masks are better than helmets. Think of all the players in the NFL (excluding your local team) whom you'd recognise on the street. Now eliminate the quarterbacks. Not many left, are there? Now, think of all the baseball players whose faces you know, just from the last Series.

34. The NFL has - how can we say this? - a few borderline godfathers. Baseball has almost no mobsters or suspicious types among its owners. Pete Rozell isn't as picky as Bowie Kuhn, who for fifteen years considered "integrity of the game" to be one of his key functions and who gave the cold shoulder to the shady money guys.

35. Football has Tank and Mean Joe. Baseball has the Human Rain Delay and Charlie Hustle.

36. In football it's team first, individual second - if at all. A Rich Milot and a Curtis Jordan can play ten years - but when would we ever have time to study them alone for just one game? Could we mimic their gestures, their tics, their habits? A baseball player is an individual first, part of a team second. You can study him at length and at leisure in the batter's box or on the mound. On defence, when the batted ball seeks him, so do our eyes.

37. Baseball statistics open a world to us. Football statistics are virtually useless or, worse, misleading. For instance, the NFL quarterback ranking system is a joke. Nobody understands it or can justify it. The old average-gain-per-attempt rankings were just as good.

38. What kind of dim-bulb sport would rank pass receivers by number of catches instead of number of yards? Only in football would a runner with 1,100 yards on 300 carries be rated ahead of a back with 1,000 yards on 200 carries. Does baseball give its silver bat to the player with the most hits or the player with the highest average?

39. If you use NFL statistics as a betting tool, you go broke. Only wins and losses, points and points against and turnovers are worth a damn.

40. Baseball has one designated hitter. (And that's one too many, but never mind! - BD) In football, everybody is a designated something. No one plays the whole game anymore. Football worships the specialists. Baseball worships the generalists.

41. The tense closing seconds of crucial baseball games are decided by distinctive relief pitchers like Bruce Sutter, Rollie Fingers or Goose Gossage. Vital NFL games are decided by helmeted gentlemen who come on for ten seconds, kick sideways, spend the rest of the game keeping their precious foot warm on the sidelines and aren't aware of the subtleties of the game. Half of them, in Alex Karras's words, run off the field chipring, "I kick a touchdown."

42. Football gave us the Hammer. Baseball gave us the Fudge Hammer.

43. How can you respect a game that uses only the point after touchdown and completely ignores the option of a two-point conversion which would make the end of football games much more exciting? (Note: The NFL now uses the two-point conversion - they must have been reading Boswell! - BD.)

44. Wild cards. If baseball can stick with four divisional champs out of twenty six teams, why does the NFL need to invite ten of its twenty-eight to the prom? Could it be that football isn't terribly interesting unless your team can still "win it all"? (Note: The good news is that the NBA and the NHL are even worse. This was written well before baseball went to the current assoholic division and wild card alignments. Sorry, but Boswell had it right the first time, and wake up, baseball: If the team didn't finish the season with its butts parked in first place, it's wait till next year and be gone with this wild card chazerei...and while we're at it, return the League Championship Series to a best-of-five, exterminate regular-season interleague play, and return the World Series to the position of honour it deserves! - BD)

45. The entire NFL playoff system is a fraud. Go on, explain with a straight face why the Chiefs (10-6) were in the playoffs in 1986 but the Seahawks (10-6) were not. There is no real reason. Seattle was simply left out for convenience. When baseball tried the comparably bogus split-season fiasco with half-season champions in 1981, fans almost rioted. (Maybe fans should almost riot now until the time-honoured championship system is restored to baseball once and for all? - BD)

46. Parity scheduling. How can the NFL defend the fairness of deliberately giving easier schedules to weaker teams and harder schedules to better teams? Just to generate artificially improved competition? When a weak team with a patsy schedule goes 10-6, while a strong defending division champ misses the playoffs at 9-7, nobody says boo. Baseball would have open revolt at such a nauseatingly cynical system. (That was then, this is now - I say again, restore the proper baseball championships and, while we're at it, return to two divisions in each league and cut the scheduling crap! - BD)

47. Baseball has no penalty for pass interference. (This in itself is almost enough to declare baseball the better game.) In football, offsides is five yards, holding is ten yards, a personal foul is fifteen yards. But interference: maybe fifty yards.

48. Nobody on earth really knows what pass interference is. Part judgment, part acting, mostly accident.

49. Baseball has no penalties at all. A home run is a home run. You cheer. In football, on a score, you look for flags. If there's one, who's it on? When can we cheer? Football acts can all be repealed. Baseball acts stand forever.

50. Instant replays. Just when we thought there couldn't be anything worse than penalties, we get instant replays of penalties. Talk about a bad joke...

51. Football has Hacksaw. Baseball has Steady Eddie and the Candy Man.

52. The NFL's style of play has been stagnant for decades, predictable. Turn on any NFL game and that's just what it could be - any NFL game. Teams seem interchangeable. Even the wishbone is too radical. Baseball teams' styles are often determined by their pesonnel and even their parks.

53. Football fans tailgate before the big game. No baseball fan would have a picnic in a parking lot.

54. At a football game, you almost never leave saying, "I never saw a play like that before." At a baseball game, there's almost always some new wrinkle.

55. Beneath the NFL's infinite sameness lies infinite variety. But we aren't privy to it. So what if football is totally explicable and fascinating to Dan Marino as he tries to decide whether to audible to a quick trap? From the stands, we don't know one thousandth of what's required to grasp a pro football game. If an NFL coach has to say, "I won't know until I see the films," then how out-in-the-cold does that leave the fan?

56. While football is the most closed of games, baseball is the most open. A fan with a score card, a modest knowledge of the teams and a knack for paying attention has all he needs to watch a game with sophistication.

57. NFL refs are weekend warriors, pulled from other jobs to moonlight; as a group, they're barely competent. That's really why the NFL turned to instant replays. Now old fogies upstairs can't even get the make-over calls right. Baseball umps work ten years in the minors and know what they are doing. Replays show how good they are. If Don Denkinger screws up in a split second of Series tension, it's instant lore. (And a St. Louis Cardinals sh@tfit. - BD)

58. Too many of the best NFL teams represent unpalatable values. The Bears are head-thumping braggarts. The Raiders have long been scofflaw pirates. The Cowboys glorify the heartless corporate approach to football.

59. Football has the Refrigerator. Baseball has Puff the Magic Dragon, the Wizard of Oz, Tom Terrific, Doggie, Kitty Kat and Oil Can.

60. Football is impossible to watch. Admit it: the human head is at least two eyes shy for watching the forward pass. Do you watch the five eligible receivers? Or the quarterback and the pass rush? If you keep your eye on the ball, you never know who got open or how. If you watch the receivers...well, nobody watches the receivers. On TV you don't even know how many receivers have gone out for a pass.

61. The NFL keeps changing the most basic rules. Most blocking now would have been illegal use of the hands in Jim Parker's time. How do we compare eras when the sport never stays the same? Pretty soon, intentional grounding will be legalised to protect quarterbacks.

62. In the NFL, you can't tell the players without an Intensive Care Unit report. Players get broken apart so fast we have no time to build up allegiances to stars. Three quarters of the NFL's starting quarterbacks are in their first four years in the league. Is it because the new breed is better? Or because the old breed is already lame? A top baseball player lasts fifteen to twenty years. We know him like an old friend.

63. The baseball Hall of Fame is in Cooperstown, New York, beside James Fenimore Cooper's Lake Glimmerglass; the football Hall of Fame is in Canton, Ohio, beside the freeway.

64. Baseball means Spring's Here. Football means Winter's Coming.

65. Best book for a lifetime on a desert island: The Baseball Encyclopedia.

66. Baseball's record on race relations is poor. But football's is much worse...why is a black quarterback still as rare as a bilingual woodpecker?

67. Baseball has a drug problem comparable to society's. Football has a range of substance-abuse problems comparable only to itself. And, perhaps, the Hell's Angels'.

68. Baseball enriches language and imagination at almost every point of contact. As John Lardner put it, "Babe Herman did not triple into a triple play, but he did double into a double play, which is the next best thing."

69. Who's on first?

70. Without baseball, there'd have been no Fenway Park. Without football, there'd have been no artificial turf.

71. A typical baseball game has 9 runs, more than 250 pitchers and about 80 completed plays - hits, walks, outs - in 2 1/2 hours. A typical football game has about five touchdowns, a couple of field goals and fewer than 150 plays spread over 3 hours. Of those plays, perhaps 20 or 25 result in a gain or loss of more than 10 yards. Baseball has more scoring plays, more serious scoring threats and more meaningful action plays.

72. Baseball has no clock. (Thank God! - BD.
) Yes, you were waiting for that. The comeback, from three or more scores behind, is far more common in baseball than football.

73. The majority of players on a football field in any game are lost and unaccountable in the middle of pileups. Confusion hides a multitude of sins. Every baseball player's performance and contribution are measured and recorded in every game.

74. Some San Francisco linemen now wear dark Plexiglas visors inside their face masks - even at night. (This horrid trend has caught on elsewhere in the NFL since. - BD.) "And in the third round, out of Empire U., the 49ers would like to pick Darth Vader."

75. Someday, just once, could we have a punt without a penalty?

76. End-zone spikes. Sack dances. Or, in Dexter Manley's case, "holding flag" dances.

77. Unbelievably stupid rules. For example, if the two-minute warning passes, any play that begins even a split second thereafter is nullified. Even, as happened in this season's Washington-San Francisco game, when it's the decisive play of the entire game. And even when, as also happened in that game, not one of the twenty-two players on the field is aware that the two-minute mark has passed. The Skins stopped the 49ers on fourth down to save that game. They exulted; the 49ers started off the field. Then the refs said, "Play the down over." Absolutely unbelievable.

78. In baseball, fans catch foul balls. In football, they raise a net so you can't even catch an extra point.

79. Nothing in baseball is as boring as the four hours of ABC's Monday Night Football.

80. Blowhard coach Buddy Ryan, who once gave himself a grade of A+ for his handling of the Eagles. "I didn't make any mistakes," he explained. His 5-10-1 team was 7-9 the year before he came.

81. Football players, somewhere back in their phylogenic development, learned how to talk like football coaches. ("Our goals this week were to contain Dickerson and control the line of scrimmage.") Baseball players say things like, "This pitcher's so bad that when he comes in, the grounds crew drags the warning track."

82. Football coaches walk across the field after the game and pretend to congratulate the opposing coach. Baseball managers head right for the bear.

83. The best ever in each sport - Babe Ruth and Jim Brown - each represents egocentric excess. But Ruth never threw a woman out a window.

84. Quarterbacks have to ask the crowd to quiet down. Pitchers never do.

85. Baseball nicknames go on forever - because we feel we know so many players intimately. Football monikers run out fast. We just don't know that many of them as people.

86. Baseball measures a gift for dailiness.

87. Football has two weeks of hype before the Super Bowl. Baseball takes about two days off (Usually. - BD.) before the World Series.

88. Football, because of its self-importance, minimises a sense of humour. Baseball cultivates one. Knowing you'll lose at least sixty games every season makes self-deprecation a survival tool. As Casey Stengel (He managed the Original Mets. - BD) said to his barber, "Don't cut my throat. I may want to do that myself later."

89. Football is played best full of adrenaline and anger. Moderation seldom finds a place. Almost every act of baseball is a blending of effort and control: too much of either is fatal.

90. Football's real problem is not that it glorifies violence, though it does, but that it offers no successful alternative to violence. In baseball, there is a choice of methods: the changeup or the knuckleball, the bunt or the hit-and-run.

91. Baseball is vastly better in person than on TV. Only when you're in the ballpark can the eye grasp and interconnect the game's great distances. Will the wind blow that long fly just over the fence? Will the relay throw nail the runner trying to score from first on a double in the alley? Who's warming up in the bullpen? Did the base stealer get a good jump? The eye flicks back and forth and captures everything that is necessary. As for replays, most parks have them. Football is better on TV. At least you don't need binoculars. And you've got your replays.

92. Turn the car radio dial on a summer night.

93. George Steinbrenner learned his baseball methods as a football coach.

94. You'll never see a woman in a fur coat at a baseball game.

95. You'll never see a man in a fur coat at a baseball game.

96.A six-month pennant race. Football has nothing like it.

97. In football, nobody says "Let's play two!" (In fairness, they don't in baseball anymore, and that is a crime. Bring back the Sunday doubleheader! - BD.)

98. When a baseball player gets knocked out, he goes to the showers. When a football player gets knocked out, he goes to get X-rayed.

99. Most of all, baseball is better than football because spring training is less than a month away.


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To: RussP
Heck, most of the highlights are homeruns. A homerun swing lasts about two seconds, and if you've seen one you've pretty much seen them all. Then the hitter trots casually around the bases. It can't compare to a broken-play scramble by Steve Young, each of which is a something different.

You have an unhealthy obsession with homeruns and highlight reels.

And if you'd ever seen Reggie Jackson hit a homerun, you would never say that they all look alike.

Maven
61 posted on 11/05/2001 10:10:47 AM PST by Maven
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To: innocentbystander
Any chubbette with a stick can play Baseball.
Football requires precision and skill; where Baseball requires knowing how to spit and when to scratch.

Batting is the most difficult skill in any major sport. Pitching is probably second.

Do you think you could catch a ball thrown by an NFL Quarterback? You probably could.
Do you think you could get a hit off of a major league pitcher? Probably not.

62 posted on 11/05/2001 10:36:12 AM PST by Right_Wing_Mole_In_Seattle
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The worst thing about baseball? Those misty-eyed, pencil-neck apologists - George Will, Thomas Boswell, Steven Jay Gould, Doris Kerns Goodwin - wannabe faculty geeks who see in it a grand metaphor for western civilization.

Ahh, yes, baseball; a mystic frolicking pastorale, a Apollonian paean redolent of the symbolic symbolism endemic in the elysian sine qua non of youthful sybarritic yada yada yada.

Gag. Baseball is narcolepsy on grass, a 19th-century schoolyard game craftily designed to minimize any distracting excitement. I hear that hoop-rolling and mumblety peg were big in 1894, too.

63 posted on 11/05/2001 11:06:08 AM PST by IowaHawk
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To: Citizen of the Savage Nation
okay, you got me with the marching band thing, it gives you some time to take a whizz and pop some microwave popcorn though.
64 posted on 11/05/2001 4:29:17 PM PST by Husker24
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Comment #65 Removed by Moderator

To: innocentbystander
Any chubbette with a stick can play Baseball.

Spoken like someone who never could lay the wood on a good fastball or a big breaking curve ball. (You want to talk about chubbettes, take another look at the behemoth hippopotami known otherwise as football teams.)


Football requires precision and skill

The only precision and skill required for football are knowing how much time one has before being piled upon by cannibals disguised as athletes; or, knowing precisely when to stop driving the teeth into the skin before hitting a bone; or, at maximum level, the proper dismemberment, disembowelment, and amputation techniques. (Boswell: Baseball players chew tobacco. Football linemen chew on each other.) Sideways-booting kickers don't count. Refer to Alex Karras: "Most of them come back off the field saying, 'I keek a touchdown'."

...where Baseball requires knowing how to spit and when to scratch.

Only if you're Gaylord Perry, Don Sutton, Tommy John, Mike Scott, Joe Niekro, Rick Honeycutt, Rick Rhoden, Kevin Gross, just about the entire Oakland Athletics starting rotation of 1980-83, Bo Belinsky, Lew Burdette, Bob Purkey, Whitey Ford, Preacher Roe, Eddie Lopat, Hugh Casey, Burleigh Grimes, or any other pitcher who ever mastered and threw the spitball with regularity. (Mike Flanagan, Baltimore Orioles pitcher, showing Thomas Boswell a fresh baseball, then drawing four identical gashes into the smooth spot with a coat hanger: "Any time I need five new pitches, I got 'em.")


There is no comparison; Football is for the warriors among us; Baseball is for everyone else.

Gang warriors, maybe. Baseball is the thinking person's (warrior and otherwise) sport. Underline sport


Where would this nation be without it's warriors?

Doing what it should have been doing in the first place - properly defending her citizens from predators at home (real predators; no vice mongers, please) and enemies from abroad. In case it escaped your notice, the Founding Fathers didn't exactly intend for the United States to sustain standing armies. The Constitution, construed strictly, allowed for raising armies and a navy, not entrenching them. Football players aren't warriors - they're cannibals passing off as warriors.


Baseball is a game.

Thank God! If I want to watch organised terrorism, I can go to South Central L.A. (for the minor leagues and the cheap seats) or the Middle East.


Football is life and death.

Well, you do have a point. Football players spend more time trying to kill each other than play a game of mind and skill. And if you think football fans are the most civilised creatures on this island earth, you sure haven't been to many games in rock-ribbed college football towns (not to mention the Oakland Raiders)...


Carlin's missed maxim, again: Football - sudden death. Baseball - extra innings.

Better yet: Football is for collectivists. Baseball is for individualists.
66 posted on 11/05/2001 5:47:17 PM PST by BluesDuke
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To: 2Trievers
I have no intention of starting a death match.

Unless you happen to be supervising the coin toss at any Oakland Raiders game, you won't be starting any death match.
67 posted on 11/05/2001 5:48:32 PM PST by BluesDuke
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To: innocentbystander
The difference is clear; one can also PLAY Baseball with a can of beer and an obese gut.

Yes. And he was one of the first five inductees into the Hall of Fame. (His name was Babe Ruth.)


In football, one would be sucking wind after the first play.

Since football basically sucks, one should think that an appropriate response. Besides, one usually sucks wind in football not because of running but because of being piled upon by about five thousand pounds of refugee flesh from Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus.
68 posted on 11/05/2001 5:53:22 PM PST by BluesDuke
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To: IowaHawk
Gag. Baseball is narcolepsy on grass, a 19th-century schoolyard game craftily designed to minimize any distracting excitement. I hear that hoop-rolling and mumblety peg were big in 1894, too.

OK, Congressman Gephardt, stop being a wisenheimer!
69 posted on 11/05/2001 5:57:35 PM PST by BluesDuke
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To: BluesDuke
More good baseball books appear in a single year than have been written about football

True, but "Fatso" by Art Donovan was a riot.

70 posted on 11/05/2001 5:59:50 PM PST by OrioleFan
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To: OrioleFan
True, but "Fatso" by Art Donovan was a riot.

OK, that leaves football with about 899 books to go to catch up, I would imagine...*wink*
71 posted on 11/05/2001 6:01:43 PM PST by BluesDuke
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To: BluesDuke
You have a way BD ... the melding of the words you use ... to captivate ... when are we going to resume? ... sans accent grave here ...
73 posted on 11/05/2001 6:22:52 PM PST by 2Trievers
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To: BluesDuke
Dukey, Dukey. Unlike a truly bad movie, baseball can't even be enjoyed on an ironic level.

Not that I disagree with you about the NFL; I can do without the whole bombast schtick. I'll stick with my top 3 -

1. College Football
2. College Basketball
3. Auto Racing

74 posted on 11/05/2001 6:23:49 PM PST by IowaHawk
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To: IowaHawk
Dukey, Dukey. Unlike a truly bad movie

Now, now, no fair, no fair - baseball should not be judged by Safe At Home alone. (I still can't believe Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris actually consented to star in that turkey!)


baseball can't even be enjoyed on an ironic level.

Like there are ironies in football (who can love a sport which is played on something resembling a jail window, considering especially that enough of its players spend as much time in jail as on the 40-yard line these days), auto racing (look - if I want to see reckless driving, I don't have to watch the Daytona 500...anyone who lives contiguous to Los Angeles and cannot find reckless driving just doesn't get out much anymore!), or basketball (what's the big deal about men running around in their underwear - which is what Anna Quindlen once said was the real beauty of basketball; though, in fairness, she did say it before the advent of the abominable WNBA - in hot pursuit of a slam dunk?)

I would rather watch a game played on a diamond backed by a theoretically endless green field where the object is to come home. They don't come home in football, basketball, auto racing, hockey, soccer, golf (please - in golf, they speak of birdies, eagles, bogeys, lies, drivers...what is this, a game or an Audubon Society convention?).
75 posted on 11/05/2001 6:57:20 PM PST by BluesDuke
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To: BluesDuke
Now I know why men play this game - it's not because they like it, it's just to get away from their wives! - Ralph Kramden, on golf.
76 posted on 11/05/2001 7:01:38 PM PST by BluesDuke
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To: 2Trievers
In football, the object is for the quarterback, otherwise known as the field general, to be on target with his aerial assault, riddling the defense by hitting his recievers with deadly accuracy in spite of the blitz, even if he has to use the shotgun. With short bullet passes and long bombs, he marches his troops into enemy territory, balancing this aerial assault with a sustained ground attack that punches holes in the forward wall of the enemy's defensive line. In baseball the object is to go home! And to be safe! "I hope I'll be safe at home!"
didnt u get this from GEORGE CARLIN?? i think BOTH of these sports are bogus - i play on-line COUNTER-STRIKE professionally - football puts me to sleep and baseball puts me in a COMA.
77 posted on 11/05/2001 7:12:26 PM PST by cybertoolzz
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To: BluesDuke
"If you think money hasn't taken over college football"


NCAA = No Cash At All...

...and I've yet to see the first 'Pro'fessional anything - play with with anything near the level of Pride in most of the majority of collegiate sports....

78 posted on 11/05/2001 7:16:22 PM PST by Alabama_Wild_Man
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Comment #79 Removed by Moderator

To: BluesDuke
29. Every outdoor park ever built primarily for baseball has been pretty. Every stadium built with pro football in mind has been ugly.

NOT TRUE!!!! Arrowhead Stadium, where the KC Chiefs play, is a beautiful stadium!

Mark

80 posted on 11/05/2001 7:30:51 PM PST by MarkL
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