Sunday, May 26, 2019

Baseball, you’ve changed. It’s Time for Me to Leave.


It isn’t easy to admit when you stop loving something. There is a sense of commitment to it even after the joy is gone. Falling out of love has been a long and slow process for me. It didn’t happen because a singular event ripped us apart. I am not hurt or angry. It happen because I changed and so did baseball, and we no longer match each other. It happened because the Mariners results didn’t change and the future doesn’t look bright. Baseball and the Seattle Mariners just aren’t for me anymore.

I remember when my disillusion with the Mariners started. It was 2013 when the Astros joined the AL West. The Astros were one of the worst teams in baseball for several years running. They lost over one hundred games in both 2011 and 2012. In 2013 they would finish 51-111. Yet against the Mariners they went 9-10. In their six matchups in April, when the season was still young and there was hope for the M’s, the Astros went 4-2. It was very disheartening seeing the Seattle Mariners get outplayed by the worst team in Major League Baseball. It really broke my passion for the Mariners. It showed me they really were a cursed/pathetic/hopeless organization.

Over the next five years the Mariners weren't even terrible; they never lost 90+ games. But they also weren’t good and they continued to no one’s surprise to miss the playoffs. The Mariners were stale. There were some fun times (Dae Ho Lee!) to be sure. However there was also a lot of the same old thing. The Mariners would start slow, start to climb back up the standings and then collapse right when it started to get interesting.

My cynicism for the Mariners didn’t end my enjoyment of baseball in immediately. That happened more gradually. There wasn’t a single event that made me lose interest.  Instead it was just a slow steady decline resulting in where I am now. Baseball is boring to me.

The games don’t hold my attention anymore. Nothing happens for long stretches of the game. Most of the time you are just watching someone in the batters box fail to put the ball in play. Batters strikeout about a quarter of plate appearances (league median is 22.3%)

Additionally, players and managers have realized the value of walks and try to maximize them which leads to taking more pitches and earning more walks (8.5% of plateappearances in 2018.) combine these two trends and it means players don’t put the ball in play around a third of the time.

Then there are the constant commercial breaks (inning changes, pitcher changes, in game trips to the mound.) It often feels like there is more time not watching baseball then actually seeing the sport. (I must see five Lee Johnson Mazda ads per game. ) I feel like I know the advertising jingles better than the players. The playoffs (not that Mariners fans would know) are even worse. The games can easily last four hours, and the networks broadcasting them try to cram as many ads as possible in. It ruins what could be an exciting playoff system. Instead of the broadcast amplifying the tension and drama of the game it does the opposite by cutting away and showing promos for some new sitcom.

With all of this downtime one of the main things to do, while you watch Kyle Seager take another strike two, is listen to the commentators talk about how great Kyle Seager is and how he is really going to come out of his slump soon, maybe right now. The Mariners broadcast can be unctuous. They pride themselves on being fans, but they fail to call out the bad play or decisions the team has continued to make for 15 years (I won’t hold 2002 or 2003 against them.) for a team that wasn’t so laughably inept it would be acceptable, but the Mariners are one of the most consistently bad teams in the major American sports leagues. They hold longest active streaks for missing the playoffs. If they played in another market with more media coverage nationally they would be a laughing stock, instead they are just irrelevant. The announcers need to be able to admit the reality the fans are watching.

I may sound bitter or mad, but I am not. I am just realistic about what the sport and my home team have become for me. I don’t think I am leaving on bad terms. I have filled my summer evening with other hobbies and I am sure we will still see each other from time to time. The Mariner’s home field is still beautiful and hard to resist on a nice summer evening. Sitting on the first base side of the stands and looking out over the left field bleachers as the sun sets is special. I also don’t expect other diehards to follow my lead or even agree with me. My experience of falling out with baseball is personal. Baseball holds a special place in the hearts and minds of many people. It is nearly synonymous with summer for some fans. It was this way for me once, but not anymore.

Baseball I don’t love you anymore.

Sunday, February 3, 2019

Patriots Win a Super Bowl No One Will Remember

The Patriots just won Super Bowl LIII 13-3 over the Rams. It was probably the most boring Super Bowl in my life time. It was definitely the least memorable. I can't think of an NFL championship game in the last 20 years that had so little of note happen. This isn't just a complaint about the low score. Low scoring games can be interesting if there are exciting defense plays or turnovers. Super Bowl LIII had none of those. There were two meaningless interceptions, five total sacks, and no fumbles. The game was basically incomplete passes and 2 yard runs.

The most memorable part was probably Todd Gurley not getting the ball. For some unknown reason the Rams decided to use C.J. Anderson just as much as Gurley (9 touches to 10). Although neither player did well. Anderson had 34 total yards and Gurley had 34.

The game won't even be remember for its winner. Unlike say Super Bowl 50, where the Broncos won a defensive shown down 24-10, there was no feel good story for the champion. The Patriots have won six Super Bowls now. They have won three of the last five NFL championship games. Additionally the Patriots biggest star, Tom Brady, had a mediocre game. He went 21 for 35 for 262 yards and no touchdowns. Nothing special about his performance. This one will just melt into the collective memory of the Patriots being good.

Super Bowl LIII was probably the most boring rendition of the game in the last 20 years.

Sunday, January 20, 2019

The AFC is Broken

The AFC’s competitive balance is embarrassing. For the eighth straight year the New England Patriots appeared in the AFC title game. For the third straight year the Patriots won that game and will appear in the Super Bowl. The AFC is broken.

This isn’t an NFL problem. The last three NFC teams to face the Patriots in the Super Bowl showed they can be beaten. The Philadelphia Eagles beat the Patriots. The Atlanta Falcons should have beat the Patriots. Instead they had an historic melt down. The Seattle Seahawks battled them to the last second only for an amazing defense play to bail out the Patriots. Eli Manning and the New York Giants beat the Patriots twice. Obviously the Patriots can be beaten.

Bill Belichick is an amazing coach probably the best ever. Tom Brady is a good quarterback. However, Belichick has been coaching in New England for 19 years. Teams should be able to figure him out eventually. He does make mistakes and he never actually plays on the field. Tom Brady is 40 years old and completely immobile. He isn’t an MVP quality player anymore. The Patriots have a distinct advantage with these two men in the organization, but they aren’t invincible. They can be beaten.

The problem is the AFC. It is broken. The other 15 teams are unable to compete effectively against the Patriots in the playoffs. Some clicks and teams fall apart. It makes the AFC boring because you know the outcome before the season starts. Hopefully something fixes this hex soon otherwise we will be watching the same old show for another 5 or whenever Brady finally retires.