| Game Info: | Probable Pitching: | Tune In: |
|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| Game Info: | Probable Pitching: | Tune In: |
|---|---|---|
|
|
|
Watched the miserable US soccer game and then the Penguins game before I turned over to the Bama game. Is this Eli Gold I'm hearing? It sure does sound like him.
Yeah, that's Eli Gold. Didn't know he called baseball games.

Starting Thursday, UA at OU in Norman. Texas is in Tuscaloosa this week for softball.Next up for Alabama: 3 game series on the road vs. #2 Texas.
Starting Thursday, UA at OU in Norman. Texas is in Tuscaloosa this week for softball.
Easy to get confused; I had to look twice yesterday.
(It goes back to a bitch of mine ... I don't want to hear about travel expenses for collegiate sports when these two series could have coincided with scheduling. Seems ridiculous to me.)
I wish I could have seen this live. Was it a late jump for the runner? Sending the runner on that pitch doesn't make sense...in an outside, high pitch? It's just me, I'm sure. "...when no one was looking except 'catch.'"
(And good lord, hang it up, Eli.)
I don't have the experience you do with the sport. What little I had playing is what keeps hitting me. I could be remembering this ALL wrong.Based on what I saw the runner was gambling that that the pitcher was gonna turn his back when he got the ball. Those are almost always run off what they’ve seen on previous plays/throws.
Along with my interpersonal rants about schedules ...Yes, correct. That’s about the 3rd time in my mind I’ve made that mistake.
I don't have the experience you do with the sport. What little I had playing is what keeps hitting me. I could be remembering this ALL wrong.
What I remember was...yes, we were told to play off 3rd and watch the pitcher. But, it was also emphasized he didn't want that with a lefty at bat. The idea was to somewhat shield what the catcher could see.
I didn't pitch. I remember my coach telling those who did, "never turn your back to 3rd in situations with RISP."
Hat tip to the heads up play on d.
Sometimes it’s on the catcher as well. Lazy lobs back to the pitcher can be as detrimental as an unaware pitcher.It's sometime a tendency on a certain pitcher that is picked up on in advanced scouting. If I had to guess, in this situation and based on how that inning went, Steckmesser (who had just come into the game with the bases loaded a couple batters before) was ignoring on the runner when Plattner was throwing the ball back to him (like you alluded to basically, turned his back to him). Either the 3rd base coach gave the runner the green light, or maybe he felt he had it in that situation (he was one of their fastest guys). But if you watch the replay, Plattner checks him, which holds him up. Then the kid breaks and Platter immediately yells at Steckmesser. Ended up an easy out because Plattner was paying attention and doing what he was supposed to do. Sorta made up for his missed tag (although I'm not sure it was actually missed) on the play at home earlier in the game where the throw beat the runner by 10 feet but the Jax St. guy somehow got his hand on the plate under the tag.
I have being meaning to ask this. When A Bama player hits a HR. Why do that players as he pass first going to second, he will flap his arms as he trying to fly?