April 3, 2009
To honor the advent of baseball
season, National Review asked fans of all 30 big-league
teams to write a brief squib on "Why I Love the
Fill-in-the-Blanks." Among the respondents are such Reason
contributors as Rick Henderson, Martin Morse Wooster, and John J.
Miller, plus Editor in Chief Matt Welch and Reason Foundation
President David Nott.
Read the whole symposium here.
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Loosing a lot of respect for Matt on this one. Baseball is a fun game to play, an interesting game to follow statistically, and with the right play-by-play man, potentially exciting to listen to. But it is dead boring to watch, and MLB doubly so. Games are stretched out two and three times as long as needs be to jam in more commercials. Baseball is worse than soccer. All one need do, is listen to George Will rhapsodize over it, to know how stupefying it must be.
You know, I still don't buy that anyone 'loves' the Nats, but I
can accept the man crush on Tom Boswell.
And what Rusty said.
All the way with Tampa Bay! Although the Red Sox would be fine,
and now that their century of futility is over, the Cubs can win
without bringing on the Apocalypso.*
*The music of doom.
Games are stretched out two and three times as long as needs
be to jam in more commercials
Wrong, Warren. Baseball is the only major sport that has
naturally occuring commercial timeouts--the half-inning
and end-of-inning breaks. Except for pitching changes, this holds
true throughout the game. You cannot say the same for football or
basketball, each of which has scheduled TV timeouts,
regardless of the action. Baseball remains the perfect sport. Not
that the powers-that-be will not find a way to fuck it up.
Warren,
Matt is a brilliant baseball writer/analyst, and i feel 180 degrees
opposite. It's too bad things like national and global interests
takes his attention away from America's past time. It's truly
tragic, so his few words of wisdom are treasured even more because
they are rarer than they should be. To truly appreciate the genius
of Matt Welch, you have to fully appreciate what he also brings to
the game of baseball.
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