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Point is the anecdotal evidence writ large is something doesn't jive with audiences and fans. So they can keep trying to find data that predisposes support for their current trajectory, or they can take a critical look at the systemic state of things based on actuals, as in actual fan popularity.
By some objective accounts, the game's relative popularity as an entertainment choice in sports or otherwise, is waning, and they are busy adding new menus and more expensive boxes at the ballparks.
Regardless of time spent, the game is still largely not about tactics. The number of runs scored--predominantly via the long ball, which is indisputable--make those nuances meaningless.
I loved the game it used to be, which is maybe why I now almost exclusively play ATG and can't even sit through a live game for more than an inning or two. The days of anticipating the joy watching Mel Allen's This Week in Baseball--that is long gone. Or watching any random ballgame on NBC on a weekend with Garagiola, Scully, etc. Long gone. Playing pickup games after school (heck in my county we now have as many cricket and soccer fields as baseball). Gone.
I don't think that is an old guy reminiscing--first because I am not that old--second because clearly baseball has lost ground in people's lives in a relative sense.
What is clear--is everyone here loves the game...I guess we agree on that.
By some objective accounts, the game's relative popularity as an entertainment choice in sports or otherwise, is waning, and they are busy adding new menus and more expensive boxes at the ballparks.
Regardless of time spent, the game is still largely not about tactics. The number of runs scored--predominantly via the long ball, which is indisputable--make those nuances meaningless.
I loved the game it used to be, which is maybe why I now almost exclusively play ATG and can't even sit through a live game for more than an inning or two. The days of anticipating the joy watching Mel Allen's This Week in Baseball--that is long gone. Or watching any random ballgame on NBC on a weekend with Garagiola, Scully, etc. Long gone. Playing pickup games after school (heck in my county we now have as many cricket and soccer fields as baseball). Gone.
I don't think that is an old guy reminiscing--first because I am not that old--second because clearly baseball has lost ground in people's lives in a relative sense.
What is clear--is everyone here loves the game...I guess we agree on that.