by Jay Z » Tue Jan 26, 2016 9:16 pm
"They probably didn't walk Thomson because it would have put the winning run on base, which is something most teams don't like to do..."
The smart play is to set up the force at any base. Runners were on 2nd and 3rd.
Thoughts on Broncos-Pats AFC Championship game
- oldecapecod11
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Re: Thoughts on Broncos-Pats AFC Championship game
"It was a different game when I played.
When a player made a good play, he didn't jump up and down.
Those kinds of plays were expected."
~ Arnie Weinmeister
When a player made a good play, he didn't jump up and down.
Those kinds of plays were expected."
~ Arnie Weinmeister
Re: Thoughts on Broncos-Pats AFC Championship game
But that has been a cardinal rule of baseball, never put the winning run on base. If they do that and Mays hits a double, Thomson could score.oldecapecod11 wrote:by Jay Z » Tue Jan 26, 2016 9:16 pm
"They probably didn't walk Thomson because it would have put the winning run on base, which is something most teams don't like to do..."
The smart play is to set up the force at any base. Runners were on 2nd and 3rd.
Of course, the Polo Grounds was a bandbox down the lines, and Thomson was white hot and Mays wasn't. A case could be made even with foresight that Thomson should have been walked.
Re: Thoughts on Broncos-Pats AFC Championship game
I have to mention one of my all-time favorite "dumb sports stories". The Dodgers actually won the coin flip to determine home field advantage for the 1951 3-game playoff with the Giants, but the Dodgers gave up the option of hosting games 2 and 3 and instead elected to host game 1 and go on the road for games 2 and 3. The rationale given for this was a few years prior to 1951, the Dodgers had a 3-game playoff with the St. Louis Cardinals and were the home team for games 2 and 3. They had a long train ride to St. Louis for Game 1, lost game 1, then had a long train ride back to Brooklyn, lost game 2, and were thus eliminated. The Dodgers did not want the travel time to affect their performance in Game 1 of the 1951 playoff, so they chose to play that game at home and go on road for the remaining 2 games.Jay Z wrote: Of course, the Polo Grounds was a bandbox down the lines, and Thomson was white hot and Mays wasn't. A case could be made even with foresight that Thomson should have been walked.
The distance from Brooklyn to New York was just a short subway ride.
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Re: Thoughts on Broncos-Pats AFC Championship game
That's known as superstition - if it didn't work before don't do it again.Bryan wrote:I have to mention one of my all-time favorite "dumb sports stories". The Dodgers actually won the coin flip to determine home field advantage for the 1951 3-game playoff with the Giants, but the Dodgers gave up the option of hosting games 2 and 3 and instead elected to host game 1 and go on the road for games 2 and 3. The rationale given for this was a few years prior to 1951, the Dodgers had a 3-game playoff with the St. Louis Cardinals and were the home team for games 2 and 3. They had a long train ride to St. Louis for Game 1, lost game 1, then had a long train ride back to Brooklyn, lost game 2, and were thus eliminated. The Dodgers did not want the travel time to affect their performance in Game 1 of the 1951 playoff, so they chose to play that game at home and go on road for the remaining 2 games.Jay Z wrote: Of course, the Polo Grounds was a bandbox down the lines, and Thomson was white hot and Mays wasn't. A case could be made even with foresight that Thomson should have been walked.
The distance from Brooklyn to New York was just a short subway ride.
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Re: Thoughts on Broncos-Pats AFC Championship game
I can see a rationale for that, though. In a three-game series, that first game is a lot more important than it is in a longer series. If you win it, you only have to win one out of two; if you lose it, you have to win two in a row. If I were in a similar situation,I think I might well choose to play that first game at home.Bryan wrote:I have to mention one of my all-time favorite "dumb sports stories". The Dodgers actually won the coin flip to determine home field advantage for the 1951 3-game playoff with the Giants, but the Dodgers gave up the option of hosting games 2 and 3 and instead elected to host game 1 and go on the road for games 2 and 3. The rationale given for this was a few years prior to 1951, the Dodgers had a 3-game playoff with the St. Louis Cardinals and were the home team for games 2 and 3. They had a long train ride to St. Louis for Game 1, lost game 1, then had a long train ride back to Brooklyn, lost game 2, and were thus eliminated. The Dodgers did not want the travel time to affect their performance in Game 1 of the 1951 playoff, so they chose to play that game at home and go on road for the remaining 2 games.Jay Z wrote: Of course, the Polo Grounds was a bandbox down the lines, and Thomson was white hot and Mays wasn't. A case could be made even with foresight that Thomson should have been walked.
The distance from Brooklyn to New York was just a short subway ride.
Re: Thoughts on Broncos-Pats AFC Championship game
Couple of other notes on this playoff:rhickok1109 wrote:I can see a rationale for that, though. In a three-game series, that first game is a lot more important than it is in a longer series. If you win it, you only have to win one out of two; if you lose it, you have to win two in a row. If I were in a similar situation,I think I might well choose to play that first game at home.Bryan wrote:I have to mention one of my all-time favorite "dumb sports stories". The Dodgers actually won the coin flip to determine home field advantage for the 1951 3-game playoff with the Giants, but the Dodgers gave up the option of hosting games 2 and 3 and instead elected to host game 1 and go on the road for games 2 and 3. The rationale given for this was a few years prior to 1951, the Dodgers had a 3-game playoff with the St. Louis Cardinals and were the home team for games 2 and 3. They had a long train ride to St. Louis for Game 1, lost game 1, then had a long train ride back to Brooklyn, lost game 2, and were thus eliminated. The Dodgers did not want the travel time to affect their performance in Game 1 of the 1951 playoff, so they chose to play that game at home and go on road for the remaining 2 games.Jay Z wrote: Of course, the Polo Grounds was a bandbox down the lines, and Thomson was white hot and Mays wasn't. A case could be made even with foresight that Thomson should have been walked.
The distance from Brooklyn to New York was just a short subway ride.
Neither the Giants nor the Dodgers had much home field advantage (Giants were only two games better at home, Dodgers only one game better).
Of course, the Dodgers win in the three game playoff came at the Polo Grounds. They lost the Ebbetts Field game.
In the regular season, there did seem to be a home field advantage between the two teams. Dodgers won the series 9-2 at Ebbetts, while the Giants won 7-4 at Polo Grounds. This didn't carry over to the playoff games, with the road team winning two of three.