Friday, October 7, 2011

Write Everyday Project #13, Baseball v Football

Nothing having drawn my attention today, I'm returning to something I heard on the radio Football versus Baseball.  This came about because the NFL's ratings remain through the roof, while even playoff baseball is comparably unwatched.

But I think that's apples and oranges.  Not only are there ten times as many baseball games as football games, the former just isn't that good as a TV sport and the latter is less watchable in person.

Baseball, in my experience, works best at the ballgame.  Being able to watch the whole field rather than just the pitcher and batter makes for a better experience.  Plus the pace of the game is such that you end up talking about the situation and what you think is going to happen with the friends you came with.  (Note, unless you're a very social person, you get much less out of a baseball game if you go alone.)

Football, on the other hand, generally gives you a pretty good look at the field from TV, and without TV catching it for you, it's too easy to lose track of what's happening on the field.  What's more, unless you have really good seats, at least half the time the game's so far away it's hard to get anything at all.  You end up watching on the jumbotron, and if you're doing that why did you pay so much money for the privilege?  Also, unless you go early in the season or your team plays in a dome, the weather is almost invariably worse.  Sitting out in the cold and paying $4 to get hot chocolate so I don't freeze isn't my idea of a great time.

So when Sunday rolls around it's only natural that, unless you're a fan of one of the baseball teams actually in the playoffs (which I'm not,) that you'll watch the sport that's better on TV, and that's football.

2 comments:

  1. Malcom Gladwell has started writing about sports, and asserts that Football is the most complex popular sport and is an intensely intellectual effort for the players.

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  2. I wish I could find it quickly, but there was once a great article in the Tribune breaking down all the information Brian Urlacher had to process in one play to get the defense set right. Considering that you have to do that, what, 70-80 times a game? Football is a most impressive sport.

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