Quote: Originally posted by bosoxbill on 6/08/2010The only things that annoy me are:
The loss of the perfect game - though this it tempered by the idea that you could have had the same call in the 7th inning and nothing could be done (or at least: I'm saying nothing should be done)
The idea that everything is hunky/dory with the current system - this story is not going away. Selig has announced that he's looking into more replay as a result of it.
The twin idea that broad replay is the answer. I just don't see the marriage of fallible refs and instant replay getting us anywhere useful. Unless your goal is longer broadcasts with more advertising minutes to sell, of course. If it's that important to get all the calls right, start phasing out fallible humans and start phasing in technology.
That's silly, of course... I only say it to illustrate that I don't think any of us agree that being right is so important that we have to lose the glasses-needing wank behind the plate. Bad calls are a part of baseball, and overcoming them as a team is part of the game. But that doesn't mean we can't care about bad calls.
What we need to realize is when we can be absolutely correct WITHOUT cost. Like here. No cost. Call is overturned. No dangerous precedents are set. No slippery slopes are introduced. A game ends an out sooner than we thought, and the perfect game that so many people witnessed is recognized in the books.
And instead, some people would like a beefed-up replay system with managers throwing flags and everyone taking a few minutes off.
LUNACY.
On the one hand, a simple surgical rule that would HARDLY EVER be involved in a game. At all.
On the other hand, interruptions every game.
And some people would prefer the latter?