+ Reply to Thread
Results 121 to 134 of 134
Thread: I can't believe..........
-
11-07-2007 09:18 PM #121
-
11-07-2007 09:22 PM #122
-
11-07-2007 09:30 PM #123
Here is a good example of one of those "unwritten" codes that ARod apparently broke back in the summer. Watch the video. Very "grey" area, but was not taken well, and we all know what happened to Arod his first at bat the next game with the jays...........
http://toronto.bluejays.mlb.com/news...=.jsp&c_id=tor
"The incident took place with two outs in the final inning, when the Jays were behind, 7-5. Yankees catcher Jorge Posada stepped in to face Jays rookie right-hander Brian Wolfe with Rodriguez on first base and Hideki Matsui on second. With the count at 3-2, the runners were in motion when Posada lifted a pitch from the reliever high in the air toward third base.
Clark, who was called up from Triple-A Syracuse on Wednesday, camped under the ball, preparing to end the threat. As Rodriguez ran behind Clark on his way to third, he yelled out and the third baseman immediately pulled up, thinking Toronto shortstop John McDonald was calling for the ball. The baseball dropped to the turf, allowing Matsui to score. "I was under the fly ball and I thought I was called off," said the 33-year-old Clark. "It wasn't Johnny Mac. I let it drop. I was under it and I heard a 'Mine' call, so I let it go. "..................
Gibbons wasn't sure what the basis of his argument was when he headed onto the field, except to say that he didn't think it was right to do what Rodriguez had done. The baseball rulebook has plenty of guidelines for interference calls, but it doesn't specifically cover any of the verbal variety.
"Maybe I'm naive, but I haven't seen that before," Gibbons said. "I don't even know if there's anything you can do -- maybe some kind of interference kind of thing. I don't know what the rulebook says. I've never seen that happen. "The Yankees have always done things right, so that surprised me.""So many moving parts. Your whole body's moving, and this ball is not moving. It's standing still, laughing at you." [B] Tiger Woods[/B]
-
11-07-2007 09:30 PM #124
-
11-07-2007 09:31 PM #125
And what does A-Rod being a jerk have to do with running up the score?
-
11-07-2007 09:38 PM #126
This happens all the time, faking a guy out. The kid made a rookie mistake and he was embaressed. How many times do you see that happen in hockey.... all the time the opposition is calling for the other temas player to make a drop pass making believe its his own team mate....
I think this entire discussion has gone from silly to idiotic
-
11-07-2007 09:43 PM #127
Hmmm...........someone (??) made this comment earlier.................
http://forum.ottawagolf.com/showpost...1&postcount=77
"This isn't kids sports. This is professional. The only people to be angry at if you're getting blown out is yourself. Go hard from the opening whistle until the final whistle. That is the first rule, written or otherwise, of any sport."
Guess A-Rod thought it was ok and part of "going hard" to win............."So many moving parts. Your whole body's moving, and this ball is not moving. It's standing still, laughing at you." [B] Tiger Woods[/B]
-
11-07-2007 09:48 PM #128
We are talking about a baseball incident not hockey. Please explain baseball to me Mr. Indio.............
It does not happen all the time re: following quotes.
You'd have to," said Glaus, who added that he had never seen a similar incident in his 10 big-league seasons. "You'd have to discuss and talk to him why that's not a good thing -- why that's not appropriate.
"Not since I think 'Major League 2,' the movie [have I seen something like that]," he added with a laugh. "I've never heard of someone doing it and I've never seen anybody do it. I've never had it happen to me. It's disappointing. That's not proper."
"Maybe I'm naive, but I haven't seen that before," Gibbons said. "I don't even know if there's anything you can do -- maybe some kind of interference kind of thing. I don't know what the rulebook says. I've never seen that happen."So many moving parts. Your whole body's moving, and this ball is not moving. It's standing still, laughing at you." [B] Tiger Woods[/B]
-
11-08-2007 04:31 AM #129
I have been trying to look at this subject objectively, and am still having problems with it. Few, if any, on this site appear to agree with me that it is not the number of times you score that hurts, but the attitude with which it is done. Nor do many of you seem prepared to accept the proposition that teams would be even more irritated by the other team taking pity on them. With this in mind, I keep looking for the objective indicators of what constitutes a breach of the so-called unwritten rule that you ought not score too often in a winning cause.
Did this winning NFL team run up the scores, and breach this rule?
Nov. 14 Houston - W (49-14)
Nov. 21 at Chicago - W (41-10)
Nov. 25 at Detroit - W (41-9)
Dec. 5 Tennessee - W (51-24)
Does it make a difference that the winning team was the Colts in their 2004 season?
And lest anyone ask, I have played golf in many NB and NS provincial amateurs and one Canadian Amateur; played running back and corner back for St. Thomas University; played basketball for St. Thomas University; played fastball for Sackville, NB; played centre field for the Augusta, Maine American Legion team that was scheduled to play Bangor in the state finals before we were DQ'd for having one guy 2 days over the age limit (that one hurt), and was asked to play on NB's Winter Games waterpolo team, which I never got to play because I broke my ankle playing, of all things, football. All of which is to say, I should have some idea of what sportsmanship is about. Oh, and if it makes any difference, I have never been accused of being unsportsmanlike.Proud member of the 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014 Ottawa Golf Ryder Cup teams.
-
11-08-2007 05:13 AM #130
You are confusing two completely different issues here. A-Rod's actions had nothing to do with embarasssing the other team. They had to do with him trying to gain an 'unfair' advantage.
The quote of mine that you have used has nothing to do with A-Rod. Where in my quote does it say that it is okay to try to confuse the other team? Where does it say that there are no codes of conduct? The quote you have taken refers specifically to the issue of playing until the final whistle, and whether or not players should let up with a big lead.
I have not questioned that there are unspoken codes of conduct in sport. In baseball, it seems that yelling to confuse an opponent is one of those. However, that has absolutely nothing to do with whether it is ok to continue playing all-out with a big lead.
Nobody as of yet has given any evidence that this type of thinking predominates within any sports leagues. Nobody has given any reasoning as to why it might be inappropriate to 'embarrass' a team that is playing like . The fact that there are other codes of conduct does not mean that this one also exists. As I've said before. These guys are pros. If they can't man up and play the game, there are plenty of folks who will gladly take their place.
-
11-08-2007 08:41 AM #131
-
11-08-2007 08:44 AM #132
-
11-08-2007 09:23 AM #133
- Join Date
- Feb 2005
- Location
- Forever stuck between single digit and trunk slammer!
- Posts
- 16,809
"A life lived in fear of the new and the untried is not a life lived to its fullest." M.Pare 10/09/08
-
11-08-2007 09:29 AM #134
Thread Information
Users Browsing this Thread
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)