Results tagged ‘ MLB.com ’
Base Ball Discovered
I hope many of you have been able to watch the highly acclaimed documentary “Base Ball Discovered”, which has been airing on the MLB Network.
As explained in Mark Newman’s article on MLB.com, the film explores the roots of the sport by heading to England to discover how our bat-and-ball games may have influenced the game that became America’s National Pastime.
As a result of this project, a fascinating discovery was made. A local historian in the county of Surrey found a hand-written diary from 1755 in her shed. That’s quite a special thing to find in any event, yet its significance increased dramatically when it was realised that it contains a reference to a person playing a game called ‘baseball’.
This discovery was picked in the Press in Britain last September. I wrote an article about the news at BaseballGB at the time, putting it into the context of other ‘baseball’-related discoveries in Britain and what they mean in regards to the game played in America.
The crucial point is that these discoveries show that a bat-and-ball game (or probably many different variations of a game) referred to as baseball, or more commonly base ball, was being played in England in the mid-sixteenth century. Nothing more, nothing less.
Some of the British news articles devoid of much research on the topic adopted a triumphant imperial tone, basically stating that the ‘Bray Diary’ showed that we (i.e. the Brits) had invented baseball.
Anyone with any knowledge of how sports (and most other parts of popular culture) evolve over many years knows that such a simplistic cause and effect conclusion is unhelpful. The game described by William Bray in his diary would probably have only had a passing resemblance to the game played even by the Cincinnati Red Stockings in 1869, never mind the game we know as baseball today.
Yet that doesn’t mean the discovery is unimportant. The baseball played in America wasn’t created out of thin air and it seems logical that people who emigrated took British bat-and-ball games with them to their new homes. There doesn’t need to be a direct link from the ‘baseball’ seen by William Bray to MLB 2009 for it to part of the same story.
While the Doubleday Myth has been comprehensively disproved, the creation of a standardized version of baseball in America and the way it was embraced as the National Pastime remains untarnished. If games called baseball were being played in England back in 1755, which they clearly were, then that just adds another strand to the fascinating history of the sport.
Further resources to explore
If you are interested in finding out more about baseball and other bat-and-ball games historically played in Britain, here are a few key websites to visit.
Even though it is in its formative stages, the Project for the Chronicling of British Baseball (Project Cobb) has already been responsible for a number of achievements. These have included the creation of an archive for the Great Britain National team and making the British baseball publication Baseball Mercury, edited by baseball historian William Morgan from 1972 until 1989, available online. Learn more about this exciting project at http://www.projectcobb.org.uk/cobb.html
The UK chapter of SABR has done a lot of great work exploring the history of bat-and-ball games in Britain. Unfortunately their website, http://www.sabruk.org/ , is down at the moment. Hopefully it will be live again soon.
Finally, just to reinforce the point that ‘Baseball’ is what you want it to be, it’s worth noting that there is a game called baseball played in parts of Wales and England that few Americans would recognise. Most baseball in Britain does follow the standard ‘North American’ template and this other variation is normally referred to as Welsh or British baseball to distinguish the two. It’s a combination of North American baseball, rounders and cricket. More information can be found at http://www.welshbaseball.co.uk/
The joys of early Sunday baseball
Sunday evenings can often be a bit of a downer. The weekend is almost over and another week at work/college/school is just about to begin.
However, baseball fans in Britain have a great advantage over the non-baseball believers. Typically all but one game in the MLB schedule is played during the day, meaning that our Sunday evening is packed full with great live baseball action. Take today as an example, all times listed in British Summer Time:
Angels @ Yankees 6:05 p.m. Saunders (3-1) Hughes (1-0)
Indians @ Tigers 6:05 p.m. Lee (1-3) Verlander (1-2)
Orioles @ Blue Jays 6:07 p.m. Guthrie (2-1) Richmond (3-0)
Not a bad way to start things off. Phil Hughes showed promising signs in his comeback against the Tigers that he is back pitching to the level that had so many scouts tipping him for great things in the past. Lee versus Verlander is an exciting pitching match-up from the AL Central and the Blue Jays have started the season very well.
Astros @ Braves 6:30 p.m. Rodriguez (2-2) Reyes (0-1)
Reds @ Pirates 6:35 p.m. Cueto (1-1) Karstens (1-0)
Mets @ Phillies 6:35 p.m. Maine (1-2) Blanton (0-2)
Cardinals @ Nationals 6:35 p.m. Lohse (3-0) Lannan (0-3)
Red Sox @ Rays 6:38 p.m. Penny (2-0) Shields (2-2)
The next batch of games starting half an hour later isn’t too shabby either. The Mets-Phillies series has been as good as expected so far and the same can be said for Red Sox-Rays.
D-Backs @ Brewers 7:05 p.m. Petit (0-2) Bush (1-0)
Royals @ Twins 7:10 p.m. Meche (1-2) Baker (0-3)
Marlins @ Cubs 7:20 p.m. Nolasco (1-2) Zambrano (2-1)
The Royals and Twins are two evenly matched teams, so it’s no surprise that this series is tied at 1-1. The series finale brings together two starting pitchers with question marks hanging over them. Meche is a doubt to take the mound after leaving his last start with an injury, while Scott Baker has looked out of sorts after beginning the season on the DL. At Wrigley, Carlos Zambrano takes a break from his pinch-hitting duties to pitch against the Marlins.
Rockies @ Giants 9:05 p.m. Hammel (0-0) Zito (0-2)
Athletics @ Mariners 9:10 p.m. Outman (0-0) Jakubauskas (1-3)
Padres @ Dodgers 9:10 p.m. Gaudin (0-0) Billingsley (4-0)
Oakland pulled out a come-from-behind victory yesterday after suffering a walk-off loss on Friday; with both games being decided by a solitary run. The two teams were wearing some very fetching throw-back uniforms yesterday, but they’ll be back in the standard outfits today (shame!). Chad Billingsley looks for win number five against the Padres.
White Sox @ Rangers 01:05 a.m. Danks (2-1) Harrison (1-2)
The single night game begins at one in the morning UK time. With Monday being a holiday over here, that’s no problem for fans wanting to stay up to watch this one. Personally, I think I’ll be worn out by then with so many games to check out beforehand.
Where would we be without MLB.tv and Gameday Audio?!
Condensed Games are back!
We had to wait a couple of weeks for them, but now they’re back with us and I couldn’t be happier. The Condensed Games are one of the best parts of MLB.com’s multimedia coverage and it’s great to see they are online once again.
I was incredibly frustrated at the start of last year when MLB.com decided to get rid of them and I was far from the only person who felt the same way. Their reinstatement partway through the 2008 season was warmly welcomed and the fact that they were highlighted in the promotional material for the 2009 MLB.TV subscriptions showed that MLB.com realized they had made a mistake last time around.
I’m sure fans in North America enjoy the Condensed Games as well, but they are particularly useful for those of us who don’t live in the States and are unable to stay up in the early hours of the morning to watch all the games we are interested in live. The box scores, game wraps and highlight clips fill in some of the details, but they don’t give you a full sense of how the contest played out.
You would need to watch the full nine innings (or more in extra inning games) to get the whole story and the Archive function via MLB.tv allows you to do just that. However, it’s not easy to find the time required every day, especially if there’s more than one game you want to look at.
Condensed Games are the next best thing.
Take the Yankees-Red Sox clash from last night. Like a lot of baseball fans who don’t support either of the AL East behemoths, the hype machine surrounding their contests gets a bit tiresome. Yet you can’t deny they are two excellent teams and that a special atmosphere is generated when they come together. So I was keen to follow the drama of their first meeting in 2009.
First pitch was scheduled for ten past midnight UK time. While I could have stayed up and watched it live as it was a Friday night/Saturday morning affair, a long week at work made it likely that my body’s desire for sleep would win out over my desire to watch the game and I would only end up dozing off. I resolved to get a good night’s sleep and to check out the action on Saturday morning.
I didn’t know at the time that Condensed Games were back with us and moaned about their continued absence on Twitter. Philipp from Mister-Baseball.com corrected me and I gleefully clicked my way to the Media Center page to find that I could watch seventeen and a half minutes of highlights.
For the uninitiated, Condensed Games show you the final pitch of every plate appearance, whether it results in an out or the player getting on base. The edits are a bit abrupt at times sound-wise, but that’s no problem. By watching every plate appearance, you are left with a keen sense of how the game ebbed and flowed.
That includes some of the smaller elements to a game that will often be left out of the highlights packages. For example, Jeter and Cano turned several neat double-plays, although they were topped by the 4-2-3 DP pulled off by the Red Sox in the top of the ninth.You certainly wouldn’t have known from the box score that Kevin Youkilis nearly took Mariano Rivera’s head off with his single in the bottom of the frame, but the Condensed Game footage allowed you to see the savage swipe and the reeling Rivera all in a heart-stopping moment.
Of course, the Red Sox prevailed thanks to two dramatic round-trippers. First Jason Bay sent the game to extra innings with a two-run blast to just left of centre field, before Youkilis brought the game to a glorious close (for Red Sox fans) by launching a solo shot completely over the Green Monster in the eleventh.
It was a great game and, thanks to the Condensed Games feature, I was able to enjoy it in a shortened but detailed fashion.
Long live Condensed Games!
More Classic baseball
The World Baseball Classic provided another group of exciting games on Sunday.
I wasn’t able to watch any of them live, which meant that this morning served as a trial run for the season ahead. As a British baseball fan, the morning MLB.com visit becomes part of your daily routine. You wake up, fix yourself some breakfast and then log on to see what happened in MLB while you were asleep.
Invariably this will start with a visit to your chosen team’s home page. As the page loads, you cross your fingers and repeat in your mind “win, win, win” before the outcome of the previous night’s game finally reveals itself. It can either get your day off to a bad start or see you heading off to work with a spring in your step. As an A’s fan, the balance of grumpy and happy days leaned firmly towards the former last year, but I’m hopeful that 2009 may be different.
Anyway, this morning’s MLB.com visit led me straight to the four WBC Recap clips.
The big shock was Australia’s thumping win over Mexico. It is always dangerous to count out the Aussies. Their sporting pedigree is second to none, as any English cricket/rugby fan can testify. After winning the silver medal in the 2004 Olympics (demoting a very talented Japanese team – including Dice-K, Kuroda, Fukudome and Jojima - into third place), Australia fell back to earth with a bump when they failed to even qualify for the 2008 event. Of course, the make-up of the team changes slightly when the WBC comes around, but I thought they might see this as an opportunity to put that disappointment behind them and they’ve certainly started off in impressive fashion.
Elsewhere, Cuba had a comfortable win over South Africa, the Dominican Republic put their opening defeat to the Netherlands behind them with a 9-0 victory over Panama (sending the latter out of the WBC) and America booked their place in round two with a resounding 15-6 win over Venezuela.
The highlight of the day was Adam Dunn’s bomb to right field at the Rogers Center. While it was great news for the Nationals, I’m still mystified as to why a play-off contender (and I’m sure Nats fans won’t take offense at me taking their team out of that bracket) didn’t pick him up. A two year/$20m contract looks very reasonable. Although he is poor in the field, Dunn’s production will outstrip what the majority of AL teams will get from their DH spot this season.
In particular, he would have made a massive difference to the Twins’ batting lineup. It’s easy to focus on deals that are made and which go wrong, but sometimes the more costly decisions are where you take a pass on a player.
Dunn’s WBC performance may have a few GM’s questioning whether they made a mistake this off-season.
However, that’s for later. Right now, Korea and Japan have just started the latest instalment in what’s becoming an epic rivalry. Korea will be out for revenge after their loss via the ‘mercy’ rule a couple of days ago.
The games just keep on coming. It’s a great time of year.
Recent Comments