9 Things to Love About Baseball | Teen Ink

9 Things to Love About Baseball MAG

By Anonymous

The beginning of spring always brings a new season of baseball. So, in celebration, here are nine reasons to love this sport, one for each inning.

1. No Time Limit
Unlike most sports, baseball has no time limit. That means it ain’t over ’til it’s over, and the excitement of an extra-inning ball game is second to none. Need some proof? The longest recorded Major League game was on May 1, 1920. After 26 innings, Boston and Brooklyn ended with a 1-1 tie. Long enough for you? If not, in 1984, Chicago defeated Milwaukee 7-6 in a game that lasted eight hours and six minutes.

2. Who Needs Instant Replay?
In baseball, there is no challenge flag, no video booth so the umpire can take a second look at a close play. From calling balls and strikes, fair or foul, safe or out, the game is completely under the umps’ control, which adds to the fact that baseball is a gentlemen’s game, and that ultimately, you can only control how you play your game.

3. Its Unique Language
ERA, WHIP, OBP, SLG%, BA, SV, K, BB, E, IBB, H, R, IP, AB, LOB, HBP, W, L, CS, RBI, 1B, 2B, 3B, HR, GIDP, DP – just a few examples of the second language baseball players and fans know and love. Baseball is all about numbers. It’s an intelligent game, not for the weak-minded, but yet when you boil it down, it’s quite simple. Hit the ball, field the ball, throw the ball, catch the ball.

4. The Presence of Failure
A 30 percent success rate in most sports isn’t considered good. But in baseball, fail to get a hit seven out of ten times, and you’re one of the better players. In baseball how often you fail is less important than your timing when you do succeed.

5. It’s a Game of Inches
Sixty feet and six inches. That’s the exact distance from the mound to home plate. The height of the mound from the ground is 10 inches, and 17 inches is the width of home plate. And those are just regulations. Imagine the actual surface area while trying to hit a round ball with a round bat. The batter has only fractions of a second to react to a 96 mph fastball. Baseball is as precise as it comes.

6. Every Player Has a Large Role
Everyone matters on the 25-man roster. Whether he is the third guy off the bench or the lefty specialist in the bullpen, each comes into play in almost every game.

7. The Postseason
It’s what every team strives for during the year. It’s the common goal. Whether it’s winning the division, or getting the wild card, the prize for best of the rest, the light at the end of the tunnel is the postseason. This is where dreams are made, or broken.

8. The History of the Postseason
To faithful baseball fans, some names will ring in memory forever. David Ortiz and his amazing 2004 playoff performance. Reggie Jackson, whose nickname is “Mr. October.” Joe Carter for his heroic walk-off home run that allowed the Blue Jays to take the ’93 World Series. Derek Jeter for his many postseason records. Don Larson for his perfect game five in the 1956 World Series. And of course (sorry, Cubs fans) Steve Bartman, who proved that the Cubbie Curse is still very much alive. The postseason has the power to take a no-name utility player and turn him into a hero, one who will live on in baseball history.

9. Baseball Is Truly American
As American as the Fourth of July and apple pie, baseball is a game that represents the red, white, and blue. Not only is it widely accepted as America’s pastime, but its everlasting spell is alive in every father and son who play catch. Baseball is a game that embodies the American spirit. It’s about patience (waiting for that good pitch), perseverance (playing through a slump), and seizing any and all opportunities (stealing bases).

Prepare yourself for another amazing season of America’s favorite pastime.



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This article has 5 comments.


on Mar. 17 2016 at 11:48 am
carothesparrow GOLD, Lilburn, Georgia
15 articles 9 photos 248 comments

Favorite Quote:
dont give up she will talk someday my friend made this quote she is really cool cause she understands about my sister<br /> it starts with ONE to make a differerence!!! i learned this quote at a leadership camp<br /> <br /> ohana means family no one gets left behind

I have to agree with all these points i wasn't that into baseball until i got to college but now i love it

just rock said...
on Feb. 25 2009 at 8:28 pm
awsome

on Feb. 13 2009 at 6:03 pm
hey i really liked your story i so no what u me baceball is a great sport

JaceAce713 said...
on Jan. 29 2009 at 6:53 pm
In response to TitansDude,

Baseball is a team sport. Playing for six years has taught me that. I've played alongside kids who thought they could do everything- by themselves and perfectly. They were the ones who played the worst. With a guy (or girl) at every few feet of the field, it's impossible not to work with your teammates.

Games are normally two-three hours, not eight. It is a game of skill. You have to understand every aspect of the game, and you need to be attentive about what's going on.

Playing baseball includes alot of upper body strength as you alluded to, but you need to be able to run and react easily to a ball being hit, and you need to react to it in enough time not to mess up the play.

Just because baseball is complex doesn't exclude it from football or soccer, or other sports that I find simple.

TitansDude said...
on Jan. 3 2009 at 4:04 am
Baseball is hardly what it is worked up to be. Simply put who would want to sit in front of the TV for 8 hours watching people swing a bat ? And furthermore as much as every players role is "large" they are all independent on offense and can play in their own world and its hardly a team sport. Baseball is for people who can throw hard and far and don't have the physical prowess to play a real sport