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  • Page 2 of 2«12
  • 9 Nov 2006

    Anyone with more than a passing familiarity with baseball knows that there's at least one important rule difference between the American League and the National League: in the AL, the pitcher never bats, and is instead represented by the Designated Hitter, a player who never takes the field. Interestingly, the rule that governs this is 6.10, which begins by stating "Any League may elect to use the Designated Hitter Rule." Apparently the NL has simply elected not to use it. More interestingly, there are a few minor official rules that specifically apply to only NL or AL teams:

    • 1.16(b) - All NL players have to wear a double ear-flap helmet while at bat. According to 1.16(c), almost all other players are simply required to wear one with at least one ear flap. (Aside: Rule 1.16(c) actually grandfathers in players who chose in 1982 to not wear a helmet with ear flaps. Tim Raines was the last player to wear a helmet without ear flaps. He retired after the 2002 season. Julio Franco is the only still-active player who would qualify under this rule. Unfortunately, he chose to wear one-flap helmets, even before they were required.)
    • 4.10(a) - The National League can adopt a rule changing one or both double-header games to be seven innings long. The AL does not have that right. As far as I know, such a rule has never been adopted.
    • 4.12(a)(7), 4.12(a)(8), and 4.12(a)(9) - The NL can adopt a rule making games that have been stopped before regulation (for instance, because of rain) a "suspended game" instead of "no game".
    • 6.02(d) - The NL had to follow this experimental rule in 2006, essentially saying that the batter could not leave the batter's box unless either team was making a substitution or calling a conference. I have no idea if they're planning to make it permanent.
    • 10.23(b) - In the AL, the league pitching champion must have pitched at least as many innings as the number of games each team played that season (162 this year). In the NL, the champion only needed to have pitched 80% that many innings (129.6). As far as I can tell, this rule rarely, if ever, actually matters. The top pitchers in both leagues usually pitch at least 190 innings a year.
    Discuss (4)
    • sports
    • statistics
  • 10 Jul 2006

    I got a new bike, and it's an adventure story.

    Sometime last summer, on two separate occasions, we found two bicycles on the side of the road in Naugatuck with a free signs. Neither was in great condition: they were dirty, rusty, and had flat tires. For some reason, despite M's insistence that we start biking, they were put in our garage and ignored. During her long period without school-work, however, she got them out and started cleaning and rebuilding one. The other was discarded. Before she could complete her work on it — or even put it all back together — we moved to Boston. We brought the bike, in pieces, with us.

    Read more...

    Discuss
    • personal
    • sports
  • 27 Jun 2006

    It's been a very long time since a Nintendo console was launched with a bundled game. The last one was, believe it or not, the Super Nintendo (bundled with the pinnacle of platformers: Super Mario World) in 1991. Wii Fanboy has a great feature about "Wii Sports", a collection of little games that was the centerpiece of Nintendo's E3 demos, and has been covered in detail. Could it be bundled with the Wii? Should it be?

    How console manufacturers can fail to bundle a game with the console is beyond me. Console prices have gotten high enough. Parents considering the purchase for their kids have to also pick a game or three to add to the tab? Ridiculous.

    Discuss (2)
    • games
    • ideas
    • sports
  • 15 Feb 2005

    The operators of FleetCenter in Boston decided it'd be a good idea to auction off single-day rights to rename the stadium and give the proceeds to charity. Honorable idea. Unfortunately for them, the winner of Monday, February 28, was the crude news site Fark.com. They held a competition this afternoon to decide what the name should be. The winning entry: "Fark.com UFIA Arena".

    (This post cross-posted to Metafilter as my first Front Page Post)

    Update Feb 16: Both Waxy links and Kottke linked to my Mefi post. And no one was really anti-Fark in the thread, which I expected from the Mefites. I consider my first FPP a success! Hurrah!

    Discuss (1)
    • humor
    • sports
  • 28 Dec 2004

    You know I love statistics/numbers/trivia. Last night in the gym, the UConn football game was on, and it's got me in the mood for Superbowl XXXIX. Clicking around, reading about some football stuff, led me to a fantastic list of Peyton Manning's amazing season. He broke the record for most touchdown passes in a season; but read the article. He's broken all kinds of records in stupendous fashion, and has been an amazing Quarterback his whole career.

    "So far this year, Manning has more touchdown passes than the Giants, Ravens, Bears, and Cardinals combined (44). He has more TD passes in 15 games this season than the Giants have in their last 50 games (48). If you split Manning up into two quarterbacks, he would rank third and fourth in touchdown passes among AFC quarterbacks with 25 and 24."

    Discuss
    • links
    • sports
    • statistics
  • 29 Oct 2004

    Red Sox World Series victories predict incumbent presidential defeat with 100% accuracy!

    Discuss (2)
    • humor
    • links
    • politics
    • sports
  • 20 Oct 2004

    I'm normally pretty ambivalent about baseball. I enjoy watching the game, sure, but I'm not really a fan of any specific team. But I have to say that when a sports juggernaut goes up against a perennial fumbler, I have to root for the underdog. That's why I'm a bit excited that Boston has done what no other team has ever done before: come from a 3-0 deficit in a League Championship and force a game seven. In celebration, here's a fun post about the antics last night, from a Boston fan.

    In fact, read through most of the recent entries at baseballblogs.org. Most of them are about last night or tonight, and all of them are emotional. I can hardly imagine being that wrapped up in baseball.

    Discuss
    • sports
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