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pachyderm
kick assery king

Gabe Kapler is absolutely right for calling out baseball's idiotic unwritten rules
Teams like the Padres need to stop being so lame.

I love this response from Kap.
And I agree 100%.
So from what I gather our beloved former 3B, Matt Williams, took exception to the bunt?
Is that correct?
Love to see a clip or a gif of this.
And someone on FB finished off a post with, "..Will Clark blah blah blah...". WTF?
Did #22 complain? Has he said anything about it?
Even if he did I'd have to disagree with my #hero.
From what I've read the Madres were employing the shift, right? A hitter should bunt everytime the opposition does that.
So from what I gather our beloved former 3B, Matt Williams, took exception to the bunt?
Is that correct?
Love to see a clip or a gif of this.
And someone on FB finished off a post with, "..Will Clark blah blah blah...". WTF?
Did #22 complain? Has he said anything about it?
Even if he did I'd have to disagree with my #hero.
From what I've read the Madres were employing the shift, right? A hitter should bunt everytime the opposition does that.
Both Williams and Clark are more old school than Kapler. I'd loved both of them as players but some of the "its the way its always been, thus it should always be" thinking does need to be gone in baseball. Does any of the players stop to think "why was this unwritten rule started? Do I know? And is it really necessary, other than 'baseball gods' . . . 'tradition' . . . 'I was told and/or expected to do it so these players should do so as well' nonsense?"Found it:
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Will Clark: 'As long as there are people like me are in the game, someone's getting hit'
Baseball has changed, and Tuesday April 12 make be looked back on as a tipping point.www.knbr.com
I disagree with #22 ... oh well.
But he's correct, someone will probably get beaned and someone will probably bunt against us in the same situation.
In honor of Joc, Gabe, and tzill (and G-d):Tradition is well and good, I love the idea of things being passed down from generation to generation but that should not be the sole reason something is done. Some tradition is good and some is bad. Some started good but is no longer needed. Tradition for tradition's sake is dumb.
I relate more to this one . . .In honor of Joc, Gabe, and tzill (and G-d):
Agreed and that's how I feel about those stupid haka dances...Both Williams and Clark are more old school than Kapler. I'd loved both of them as players but some of the "its the way its always been, thus it should always be" thinking does need to be gone in baseball. Does any of the players stop to think "why was this unwritten rule started? Do I know? And is it really necessary, other than 'baseball gods' . . . 'tradition' . . . 'I was told and/or expected to do it so these players should do so as well' nonsense?"
Tradition is well and good, I love the idea of things being passed down from generation to generation but that should not be the sole reason something is done. Some tradition is good and some is bad. Some started good but is no longer needed. Tradition for tradition's sake is dumb.
Are you talking about the dances some soccer teams do before their matches? I think they originate from islanders or New Zealand or something…Agreed and that's how I feel about those stupid haka dances...
Are you talking about the dances some soccer teams do before their matches? I think they originate from islanders or New Zealand or something…
Whomever does them...Are you talking about the dances some soccer teams do before their matches? I think they originate from islanders or New Zealand or something…
yupI think it’s the rugby team from New Zealand that does them before every game.
It got really bad when Bob Brenley got all bent out of shape when a batter on the other team bunted for a base hat in the 7th (I think) of a 1-0 game where his pitcher was throwing a no-no.Basebalk has been part of my life for about 65 years now. I have never really accepted these unwritten rules when it comes to a professional sport. Saw 'mercy rules in high school and in little league. As a professional sports athlete you almost always try and give 100 percent effort in 100% ofthe situations. In a game where the Giants were up by 10 runs did either Clark or Williams purposely try and make an out, not score on a base hit. Just don't see it happening.
Much easier to talk about throttling back than actually doing it. Also makes incentive rewards a little strange
I mentioned elsewhere that if the situation happened exactly as Richardson describes (Shildt blowing up with no provocation of any kind) than he is an ass.![]()
LaMonte Wade Jr. has something to say
Why LaMonte Wade Jr. believes the issue at the center of the Antoan Richardson-Mike Shildt tiff needs not be forgotten.www.knbr.com