(no subject)
Oct. 20th, 2004 12:34 amMy sister, who does not like sports at all, just called me at 12:17am. She wanted to talk about the game.
"It's so exciting!" she said with a certain tone of helplessness to her voice. "They just needed one more out, and they, they got it!"
She was stuck without a TV, so she watched the whole thing on MLB GameDay. I got to tell her about the blood soaking through Curt Schilling's sock and the A-Rod interference fiasco. And the riot police.
"I can't believe you're up," she said at one point. "Don't you have to work tomorrow?"
"Don't you have to work tomorrow?"
"...Yeah."
"It's so exciting!" she said with a certain tone of helplessness to her voice. "They just needed one more out, and they, they got it!"
She was stuck without a TV, so she watched the whole thing on MLB GameDay. I got to tell her about the blood soaking through Curt Schilling's sock and the A-Rod interference fiasco. And the riot police.
"I can't believe you're up," she said at one point. "Don't you have to work tomorrow?"
"Don't you have to work tomorrow?"
"...Yeah."
no subject
Date: 2004-10-19 09:38 pm (UTC)Thank goodness.
no subject
Date: 2004-10-19 09:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-19 09:54 pm (UTC)Say, did you hear the bit about how the Red Sox are the only team to go from 0-3 to forcing a Game 7?
no subject
Date: 2004-10-19 10:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-19 10:01 pm (UTC)(Also, my partner has joined the legions of the slightly confused new fan. She's fun.)
no subject
Date: 2004-10-19 10:04 pm (UTC)I feel compelled to point out
Date: 2004-10-19 10:19 pm (UTC)I wish them well, but I will believe tthey have managed to avoid snatching defeat from the jaws of victory only after a game seven win tomorrrow night.
Re: I feel compelled to point out
Date: 2004-10-20 04:44 am (UTC)Re: I feel compelled to point out
Date: 2004-10-20 07:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-20 01:05 am (UTC)I'm writing an essay on World Series security for UPI.
B
no subject
Date: 2004-10-20 03:52 am (UTC)The police officials then waved some cops in riot helmets and some sort of bulky clothing (might have been body armor, but I couldn't tell) out of the dugouts, and approximately a dozen came out of each dugout and moved down to where the tarps are kept rolled up along each foul line. They knelt down on one knee, originally facing into the crowd, but they soon turned to face the batter's box, although at least one cop continued to watch the crowd at each moment. No weapons were drawn, although I saw then all with long batons.
They stayed out through the rest of the eigth and the top half of the ninth, and then they went back into the dugouts. The announcers didn't mention the crowd getting unruly or throwing objects onto the field of play for the rest of the broadcast.
no subject
Date: 2004-10-20 06:08 am (UTC)The play in question was originally miscalled by the umpire. Bronson Arroyo (the Red Sox pitcher) was trying to tag Alex Rodriguez (the Yankees runner) out on the way to first base. Rodriguez reached out one hand and chopped at Arroyo's arm, causing the ball to squirt out of Arroyo's glove and roll away. The closest umpire didn't see what happened, and ruled that Rodriguez was safe. The Yankees' Derek Jeter, who was already on base, came all the way around to score a run, bringing the score to 4-3 Red Sox.
Then the umpires conferred, ruled (correctly) that Rodriguez was out for interfering with the play, and took Jeter's run off the scoreboard. The crowd went crazy. At one point you could hear them over the announcer's voice, chanting in unison: "Buuullll-shit! Buuullll-shit!" They threw things onto the field and at the Red Sox players, so much so that the Red Sox manager, Terry Francona, actually brought his players in off the field into the shelter of the dugout while order was restored.
Of course the fans in the stadium didn't get to see the play over and over again in slow motion, as those of us watching TV did. The replay made it very, very clear that Rodriguez was at fault, but from the perspective of fans in the stands, they'd just been robbed of a run for no legitimate reason.
no subject
Date: 2004-10-20 08:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-20 09:54 am (UTC)In this case, I agree, it would have been good to show the replay to quiet down fan anger.
no subject
Date: 2004-10-21 04:05 am (UTC)Commenting more on the riot police....
Date: 2004-10-20 04:17 am (UTC)On the other hand, I've got our own local derby on Sunday: Hearts (West Edinburgh, mainly protestant/unionist) v Hibernian (East Edinburgh, mainly catholic/irish). It'll be fun....
Re: Commenting more on the riot police....
Date: 2004-10-20 05:56 am (UTC)And yeah, riot police on the field aren't a common element of the baseball experience. Tensions are awfully high between these two teams - not to mention their fans. Last year in the same postseason series, play stopped because of an enormous brawl in which, among other things, an elderly coach for the NY Yankees charged the pitchers' mound to physically attack the Red Sox pitcher.
no subject
Date: 2004-10-20 06:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-20 11:30 am (UTC)Me: Isn't it funny how 'strike' is both a baseball term and a bowling term?
;-)
-J