When I was a young boy back in the 1960's, my grandmother got me a transistor radio for my 9th birthday. It opened a whole new world for me! I snuck my radio under my balled up blanket at night (I didn't have a pillow), placed it under my head with the volume low, listening to the dulcet tones of Bob Elson and Red Rush, refusing to fall asleep until the conclusion of that night's game involving my beloved White Sox. When my parents came in to check on me, I pretended to be asleep. They never really caught on, for if they had, my dad surely would have asked me the score! I remember one game vividly, when Ken Boyer, whom the Sox acquired from the Mets in a late July deal, in the twilight of his career and nursing a badly pulled hamstring, blasted a pinch hit SINGLE off the left field wall with two outs to clear the loaded bases in a mid August game against Kansas City in 1967 to help lead the Sox to a much needed victory as they battled in perhaps the greatest pennant race of all time.
During the off season I listened to the Bulls and Black Hawk games in the same manner. When the Sox and the Bulls played on the West Coast (the NHL had only the original six teams at that time and had not yet expanded West), I often fell asleep during the game, waking up in the morning to find the radio playing under my blanket.
Now, nearly 45 years later, I still struggle to stay up late to get the scores. But these are not scores from the West Coast, but are scores from that night's online Strato games. Yes, I still live in the Chicago area and waiting for the scores, which generally come in between 11:10 to 11:50 P.M. Central Time, is very much akin to waiting for Sox scores when they are on the West Coast.
I first bought the Strat-o-matic computer game when it was in its infancy about 15 years ago. Back then, when computers were much slower and the technology comparatively archaic, a whole season, complete with statistical reports and individual box scores, could be played in about an hour. Although I don't have the latest release of the computer gsame, my guess is that a whole season can be played in less than half an hour, which leads me to ask:
[color=red:a6dc96abc1][size=12:a6dc96abc1][b:a6dc96abc1]WHY CAN'T WE GET OUR GAME SCORES EARLIER?[/b:a6dc96abc1][/size:a6dc96abc1][/color:a6dc96abc1]
During the two years or so that I've played the online game, TSN has often solicited suggestions from gamers for improvements to the game. In making the suggestions for improvement, people have focused on the game itself, not when the scores are returned. Yet if the scores were returned an hour earlier I could watch the news, get my scores and go to bed sooner instead of staying up for an extra hour to get the game results.
I know that it is possible to get the scores more quickly, as there have been a few times that system problems resulted in a delay in the start of the games, but when the system came back up the scores were returned at their usual times, despite the delay in starting the games for that night.