Rynar wrote:
It isn't a fallacious appeal to tradition when we are talking about a sport which markets itself as "America's Pastime". Baseball, unlike any other sport, depends on this. Traditional statistics are benchmarks, and those benchmarks are sacred. It's the reason we don't care about All-Pro football stars who get suspended for PED use, but have banished an entire generation of baseball players from Cooperstown.
Did you even read what I posted? I said, for the most part, I agree.
Rynar wrote:
As to the seating, if it didn't effect the closeness to the game, why are those seats in the first few rows amongst those valued most by fans?
Again, did you read what I posted? I am taking about the seats lining the outfield fence. Have you sat out there? Assuming you have, as I have too, a row or two back from the threshold of the homerun isn't going to make much of a difference. As season ticket holders, I remember each year our tickets kept creeping around the stadium, closer and closer to the infield and away from the outfield, you know, closer to the game.
You are acting as if I want to rewrite the rules of the game. I am just suggesting that stadium layout address the fact that it is at all possible for a fan to touch an inplay, potential homerun ball. I am not suggesting nets or backing seats up 50 ft from the fence, just a subtle change. Is that so difficult to comprehend? Much, I'm sure, has changed in baseball over the years of it's existance, surely a small change that can only be for the better isn't so much to consider.
@Khross:
Go Phils!
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This must be
Thursday. I could never get the hang of Thursdays.