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How much baseball do you watch?
I thought it would be interesting to find out how much present-day baseball people here consume.
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I watch more than 50 games a year. However, many times It is just partial games.....just a few innings at a time if I have somewhere to go. But added all up would amount to over 50 games.
Bob |
There was no 0 answer. The poll is skewed...
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If anyone feels that an emphatic "0" represents your baseball consumption more accurately than "fewer than 20 games", please kindly post that! |
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+1
I never watch- just replay on sportscenter |
I’ll watch the Giants most times they’re on in the evenings after work, many times the games are on in the background while I’m doing other things like cooking etc. but I love the sound of a ballgame even if I’m not glued to the screen.
Playoff baseball is compelling and I try to watch as many games as possible. |
I watch as close to 162 Reds games as humanly possible (I may miss less than a handful per year). I also have mlb.tv and watch dozens of other games each season. Add to that probably 100 minor league games as well. I usually have the Reds on the tv and a Reds minor league game on my phine every night. I love baseball.
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I watch whenever I can, but as others stated, it's often not complete games. Also, I will not watch zombie baseball, so any regular season game that's tied after 9 I will turn off.
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1-2 live games a year
Highlights of another 12-20 games Baseball is the best sport to watch live, and the most affordable. It was commercialized at a time when live games and the radio were the only option, and guess what… it’s the best sport live and on the radio. |
Hmmmm. I don't know how to answer. I listen to a lot of games on the radio but I don't watch much TV at all.
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Only during the post season and only when it's free (CBS, NBC, ABC, or FOX.)
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This much...
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To answer the question, I watched the marathon last night from eleventh to fifteenth inning in the battle between the Tigers and Mariners.
That said, as a Pirates fan, I only watch when Skenes pitches. Can't stand the DH and a runner at second base each extra half inning is the dum(b)est rule ever adapted. |
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PIT has Bubba Chandler. He could make watching at least 2 games a week interesting next year. PIT pitching could easily be one of the deadliest top to bottom in all of MLB. Those bats, though... |
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Have you ever acquired a strong rooting preference for any wider area AL team, e.g. Cleveland Indians, Detroit Tigers? :confused: |
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:confused: |
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Major league, meh...I'd rather just watch the HD broadcast at home relaxing than deal with the "event" that going to a MLB game is these days (with the price tag to match). |
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I watch or listen to every Redsox game. If not playing I'll listen to the Yanks.. I've done this all my life. While serving Overseas and being stationed outside the Northeast was rough but I managed through contacts and positioning the radio just right with out of state broadcasts. Did alot of smooching while in the military to hear the Sox..
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I have mlb.tv (it's free with t-mobile!) and often switch back and forth between games. So, if you need to watch five innings to count as having watched a game, then I probably watch zero games per year. But I'll watch when interesting players are pitching or coming up to bat. I don't really care who wins or loses any particular game.
Also - I'll often watch when players on my fantasy team are pitching or coming up to bat. mlb.tv is great for that. |
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I watch most of the time, but sometimes I drift in and out and it's on the television. Either way, I'm totally getting my money's worth for the MLB package. |
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:) |
More than 50, and between my 2 sons 48 in person college games last year to see them play, throw in a few MLB and MILB in person games as well.
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I’ll go to 4 or 5 Giants games each year and watch a few on TV. I can’t watch a game unless the Giants are in it or it’s the playoffs. Baseball is a very regional game.
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Speaking of recent stats and recent rule changes...
It may be a coincidence, but .300+ hitters are more of a rare thing since they banned the shift 3 years ago (9, 7, 7). We don't have the shift, we have less .300+ hitters than ever. Even before then the .300 hitter was becoming more rare over time. |
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My son, wife and I watch almost every Mets game. Thanks to streaming we are able to watch while we are away on vacation. It’s fantastic. Our son is in high school and has always played so we are a baseball family. And we go to a handful of Mets games a year as well as a game or two away from home, usually when we are on a baseball tournament road trip for our son, even when the Mets aren’t playing, such as in Fenway or Washington. Too bad the Mets keep breaking our hearts but they’ve also given us some incredibly exciting moments that we’ll never forget. We also watch other teams’ games. Today’s pitchers fascinate us with the way their pitches move. To me, it’s true that hitting a baseball is the hardest thing to do in sports. We don’t let bother us how today’s game is different than it was years ago. Every sport is different than when I was a kid (I’m 58) but at its heart, baseball is still about hitting, pitching, fielding, great teamwork and in-game strategy, all things I wished I could perform at an elite level. But since I wasn’t able to, I’ll continue to enjoy watching others do it. With the Mets out, I’m rooting for the M’s and the Brewers.
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:confused: |
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As a former data analyst, I'd say the theory is unproven. |
Indeed. That's why I was skeptical myself.
:) |
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I used to watch around 150 games a year. This was when the Cubs were on WGN and then there were National games I would also view on occasion. When they began changing the rules, adding a clock, restricting defenses, etc. i completely stopped watching. My collection is now my only connection to the game.
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I've lost my interest in the game over the years. I was a fanatic as a kid, then out until around 1996, then fanatical until about 2000, and gradually faded away. I am much more likely to watch a boxing match or a race (F1, NASCAR, Indy) than a baseball game. I follow the Dodgers but I don't watch until deep into the postseason. Hopefully will see my first games of the year in a week or two.
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My sons take me to see the Orioles each year when they come through Houston. Went to two of those this year, my only games to watch live.
I catch a few innings of playoff baseball here and there if a game interests me. I flipped over to the Tigers-Mariners the other night after the Rangers hockey game ended and watched to the end. Sometimes a game is so intriguing that you forget that you don't care who wins, and you're watching as if you do. To be fair, my sports watching in general is way down. I still follow my teams, almost entirely through the usual sports sites online, but sitting down to watch just doesn't appeal to me anymore. |
Something about watching a broadcast is too stressful, perhaps because of its association with everything else that appears on screens these days. I’ll attend a handful of games each year and those are all the live baseball I watch.
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It's very strange. If you told anyone here that they will get one swing on a 90 MPH fastball and if they hit it, they will win $10,000, the people with common sense will probably choke up on the bat for better control, take a shorter swing and a direct path to the ball. Baseball is emphasizing the complete opposite. Smaller bat, uppercut swing, swing hard. I don't know who here watches a lot of minor league ball, but the level of play is garbage compared to 5-10 years ago. I watched hundreds of Low-A games during that time, scouting them for my work. The level of play at Low-A was better than High-A is right now. Part of that is MLB cutting down roster spots for organizations in the minors, which eliminated a lot of those low ceiling skilled players in favor of raw tool players. Teams are hoping to develop upside. I don't blame them at all for that approach, but those low ceiling skilled high IQ players made minor league games better. I watch some Low-A games now where it feels like everyone just learned what baseball was a month earlier. It's also why college stars are shooting through the minors quicker. MLB in 5-10 years is going to be even worse than it is now, and I don't think they care. That's especially true if they expand and increase on the 1,500 players they already use each year. There aren't 1,500 big league quality players now, just like there weren't 1,200 quality players five years ago when that was the typical league usage. They want quicker games, highlighting solo homers and strikeouts and pretending every catch made with a little difficulty is now the "PLAY OF THE YEAR!!!!", even though you saw a better catch made two days ago. |
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1. I listen to more baseball than watch on TV
2. Do my son's games count? He's a 10u local legend (think Greg Luzinski/Bartolo Colon hybrid). That's at least 50+ games this year. |
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