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Wow, how are you not a big league manager!?brett05 said:And it's not hard to come up with the calls at all. Again, Myth
Wow, how are you not a big league manager!?brett05 said:And it's not hard to come up with the calls at all. Again, Myth
How does the NL have advantages? If they play in an AL park the AL has a clear advantage.brett05 said:You either have it or not, but enough with this split and giving the NL advantages in head to head match-ups with the American League.
i actually agree with brett on this tbhGMF1991 said:How does the NL have advantages? If they play in an AL park the AL has a clear advantage.
bosoxlover12 said:i actually agree with brett on this tbh
in an AL park, its their normal lineup with the NL squad having their normal pinch hitter start. in an NL park, its their normal lineup with the AL squad losing a middle-of-the-order hitter and having your pitcher all but guaranteed to get out because they bat so infrequently
NL has the advantage
bosoxlover12 said:but usually the AL's pinch hitter will be a more talented hitter than the NL's DH
I saw a news article on that, so it's not inaccurate.cavsfan817 said:Ratings for the MLB have been up significantly the last two years lol. Saw someone mention that and thought it was dumb
Not hard to figure that one out. Home runs. MLB juiced the world series balls, ratings shot up. It's science*.cavsfan817 said:Ratings for the MLB have been up significantly the last two years lol. Saw someone mention that and thought it was dumb
For some teams, yes, but MLB as a whole was down -6% in prime time ratings this season.cavsfan817 said:Ratings for the MLB have been up significantly the last two years lol. Saw someone mention that and thought it was dumb
I think people appreciate no-hitters and power pitchers getting a lot of strikeouts just as much as homeruns, yet they are more of a rarity.AE. said:For some teams, yes, but MLB as a whole was down -6% in prime time ratings this season.
The World Series ratings were up last season because of the Cubs chase to end the curse and this season was a damn HR Derby. People would rather watch the long ball. Fact.
Not the fair weather folks and casual fans. Most people are drawn to contact and violence in any sport. In baseball, the most we get is Aaron Judge hitting a piss missle out of the park.PWNdroia said:I think people appreciate no-hitters and power pitchers getting a lot of strikeouts just as much as homeruns, yet they are more of a rarity.
the NL doesn't have to take a portion of their budget for a bat and can use it elsewhere when the AL team has to use a portion of the budget for the DH. The advantage is ALWAYS with the NL.CameronCrazy06 said:I don't think it's as big as you say. You don't have that hitter for the entire game, but you also can pick your spot to plug him into any crucial at bat as a pinch hitter whenever you want.
This is so wrong. You don't compare the bench guy the NL uses at DH to the AL DH, you compare him to the pitcher batting for the NL team. That difference is WAY bigger than the AL team losing the DH for a pitcher.GMF1991 said:
Could not disagree more. A guy pinch hitting probably sucks, or is a flat-out platoon player. Then that guy gets thrown in to a DH spot for inter-league play, meanwhile AL teams have somebody who is paid more to be that 9th hitter in the lineup. I dread watching the Mets go to an AL park because they'll throw someone like Brandon Nimmo in to the lineup.
And a lot of times NL teams use interleague play to give a star a day off the field. That guy, a Cespedes for example, DH's and a mediocre hitter with a good glove takes their place. So yea, that NL team gets to improve their defense, but their lineup doesn't improve at all because they don't typically have that solid extra hitter available.
But not comapred to the pitcher which is why it is an advantage for the NL.GMF1991 said:
Exactly why the NL is not at an advantage. The NL DH hitter probably sucks.