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base. Thats the only thing that would fix this.In an era on the cusp of self-driving cars, drones delivering packages and weapon
base. Thats the only thing that would fix this.In an era on the cusp of self-driving cars, drones delivering packages and weapon
in Gilde 29.10.2019 06:22von jj009 • 2.159 Beiträge
Leo Harrison, one of the last two county cricketers to have made his first-class debut before the outbreak of the Second World War, has died in his home county of Dorset. He was 94.Harrison, born in the fishing village of Mudeford in Dorset, made his county debut for Hampshire in 1939 as Europe prepared for war. He made 396 first-class appearances and his career flickered as late as 1966 thanks to an emergency return that season, as a coach, when he pulled on the wicketkeeping gloves for the last time.At the start of the war, he joined the RAF, but failed the pilots eyesight test and spent the war making flying instruments for Bomber Command. He played cricket in spectacles after the war, his poor eye sight not bad enough to halt his county career.Harrison had a lifelong friendship with John Arlott, who he first knew as the village policeman, long before Arlotts Hampshire burr became one of cricket broadcastings most famous voices.John Manners, at 102, remains Englands oldest living first-class cricketer - perhaps the worlds - as well as the oldest member of MCC.The careers of both men were celebrated in the 2016 edition of Wisden. USA Soccer Shirts . Murray beat Sam Querrey 7-6 (5), 6-7 (3), 6-1, 6-3 to clinch Britains opening-round victory against the United States on Sunday at Petco Park. "Im proud of the way Im playing just now, because I had to do a lot of work to get back to where I want to be," Murray said after celebrating with his teammates on the red clay court in a temporary stadium in left field of the downtown home of baseballs San Diego Padres. Cheap USA Soccer Jerseys . -- Playing time has been limited for Maxim Tissot this season, so the Montreal Impact defender made the most of his first scoring opportunity on Saturday. https://www.cheapusasoccer.com/ . Los Angeles star goalie survived those perilous gymnastics with no problem, and he eventually backstopped the Kings to a skid-snapping win. Quick stopped 27 shots in his return from a 24-game injury absence, Jeff Carter scored the tiebreaking goal with 7:55 to play, and the Kings snapped their five-game losing streak with a 3-1 victory over the Vancouver Canucks on Saturday night. Wholesale USA Soccer Jerseys . "Thank you for the warm welcome," Beckham said on an 80-degree February morning. In this case, it was soccer weather. The sport moved a step closer to returning to South Florida on Wednesday, when Beckham confirmed he has exercised his option to purchase a Major League Soccer expansion franchise in Miami. USA Soccer Jerseys China . Sgt. Eric ONeal says most of the arrests at Monday nights game were for public drunkenness, though one person was taken into custody on suspicion of trying to steal a seat from the stadium. On social media, that oasis of calm and rationality, plate umpire Tony Randazzo was getting mauled for his strike zone during Game 5 of the Cubs stirring 3-2 win that saved their season and bought them yet another elimination game, Tuesday night in Cleveland. Randazzo was no better or worse than most umpires, but the circumstances for officiating in all sports these days doesnt exactly qualify as normal.Baseball was reluctantly pulled into the replay era four years ago through a half-dozen embarrassing postseason officiating errors that, back in the day, might have been whisked away in a cloud of argument and nostalgia but were unforgiven in the age of Twitter, Facebook, DVR and super-zoom slow motion with 50 million people at home watching the biggest games of the season on 55-inch HD televisions. Now the unrelenting march of technology -- the new iPhone 7 doesnt even have a headphone jack -- is forcing baseball to confront it once again, both philosophically at second base and radically behind the plate.The philosophy of replay was ostensibly simple: Get the call right. Yet during a season in which time of game is a priority, baseball is dealing with an unintended consequence of replay: the spirit of replay on second-base tag plays. Former managers Joe Torre and Jim Leyland, both of whom work in the commissioners office, are vexed that replay has resulted in nitpicking.I think this is an example of where the technology is too good, Leyland said, Where, in this case, were kind of victims of the technology. It works too well. It wasnt put in place to look at 10 different angles of whether a guy came off the bag by a millimeter. It bothers me.Players, however, are more absolutist.No, the technology doesnt affect me at all, said Cubs center fielder Dexter Fowler. It doesnt make me less inclined to run, and I dont think it makes managers want to run less. Maybe you have to get a better lead, be more careful, but thats it.Fowlers faith in the stability of the stolen base comes at a time of its revival, for it wasnt so long ago that the Moneyball era discouraged speed in the game, turned it into a stock market equation of risk tolerance and reward. The Sandy Alderson-Billy Beane-J.P. Ricciardi in a time of home runs and on-base percentage thought the risk too high.I love the replay, actually. I love the fact that they get the calls right. I know there have been tough times, said Cleveland outfielder Coco Crisp. Case in point: I hit a triple when I was playing for Oakland; I slid, and you can clearly see my pinkie touch the base before he tagged me, and I was called out. Still, I love it. I would just like it not to be where, if the call is close, well keep it the same way. I want it to be full-on accurate, right or wrong. If you slide into second base and your foot or leg comes off the base a little bit and the tag is still on you? Well, youre out.Much of the old guard never wanted the technology in the first place. On the field before Game 1 of the 2011 World Series, Torre and I talked about it and he stood firm: Baseball requires the human element. Bud Selig, the commissioner at the time, backed Torre and told me that missed calls were part of the game, part of the beauty and humanity of baseball.In the digital age to a generation raised on better technology, missed calls are viewed a bit more ruthlessly, as part of (a) a fix, (b) negligence or (c) both. They were the equivalent of the rain delay (another part of the game baseball refuses to confront): If the technology can get a call right, so went the thought, why not use it?Be careful what you wish for, said former big league pitcher C.J. Nitkowski. Everyone wanted replay, and overall it has been a positive for the game. Technology is great, and HD cameras are awesome. The downside of all this technology is that if a baserunner comes a half aan inch off the bag on a play, replay may catch him.dddddddddddd?That part of this has been awful. When you beat the ball/tag to the base, you should be safe. If you slide past the bag, you should be out; if you pop off the bag but are still over it, you probably should still be safe. I dont see any way in which baseball can rectify this. I believe it is here to stay. Infielders now have to hold tags, and baserunners have to be extra cautious when sliding. I dont see overhead cameras on every base showing us when a foot or hand is still over a base. Thats the only thing that would fix this.In an era on the cusp of self-driving cars, drones delivering packages and weapons strikes from 15,000 miles away, technology is vexing baseball again, in one sacred area: a rising chorus of having an automated, sensor-controlled strike zone.What? said Cubs pitcher John Lackey. Thats gonna be way past my time. I wont be around when that happens. No way.One of the biggest evangelists of the automated zone works for Major League Baseball, MLB Network host Brian Kenny, who told me he believes the time is now. Former big league outfielder Eric Byrnes also took up the cause, appearing on HBOs Real Sports last month with a similar argument: If the technology is good enough for tennis, defense systems and intricate medical surgeries, clearly the time has come for computers to call balls and strikes.Part of baseballs problem is its unfailing ability to fight with itself. In trying to add value to television broadcasts, baseball nearly 20 years ago incorporated that little strike zone graphic over home plate that has now become ubiquitous. Fans often viewed the K-Zone graphic as an accurate depiction of the strike zone, which enraged umpires and the umpires union because the graphic gave the impression that umpires were missing calls.The league assured the umpires that the cute little graphic was just that, something for the fans so they could stay involved with the game. They did this while privately evaluating the umpires based in part on how closely called pitches during the game aligned with television graphics that were never designed to accurately capture the dimensions of the strike zone.So baseball has a problem. One solution for the second-base issue is to go backward and replace the hard bases with sacks as they used in Torres day, which would allow base stealers to hold on to the base and reduce the chance of sliding off of a solid surface.As for the strike zone, the game could eliminate the television graphics that make its umpires look bad, or actually begin to refine a technology that accurately depicts the changing shape of the strike zone. If fans at home continue to feel umpires are inconsistent with television graphics, the chorus for automation will only increase -- as will resentment from umpires.Im not in favor of it for a few reasons. First, Im not that confident that the technology is good enough. The K-Zones we see on TV are not 100 percent accurate, weve seen that this postseason, Nitkowski said. They also dont adjust for the hitter; not every hitter has the same strike zone based on height and batting stance. In tennis, the lines dont move, so you can have confidence in the technology. I dont have that same kind of confidence in an automated strike zone. Fans and hitters also will not like what pitches would now be called strikes. People forget that the strike zone is three-dimensional and starts at the very beginning of the plate, regardless of how deep a hitter stands in the box. Curveballs with good depth (Kershaw, Hill, Wainwright) that catch the very bottom of the zone will finish in the dirt or close to it. Those will be strikes, and it will be a bad look. ' ' '
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