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04-28-2024, 10:16 AM | #46 |
Sometimes it's black and white
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: California
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Posts: 6,515
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04-28-2024, 10:52 AM | #47 |
"You like to drink?"
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: "I like to drink."
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I'd guess somewhere in the 70s where college and the pro-game became a bigger pull on the public consciousness.
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Posts: 44,249
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04-28-2024, 11:20 AM | #48 |
MVP
Join Date: Oct 2012
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Major league ownership has really failed the sport imo. You have the easiest sport to put a kid in. It takes talent yea, but any kid can go hit off a tee and get involved. Football on the other hand gives kids one good hit and that scrawny kid whose hearts not in it is never coming back. Every kid should grow up playing a little baseball and be a fan to an extent. Baseball kids get to play 2-3 games a week. Football kids practice 3-4 times and play 8-12 games a year.
My son loves playing baseball he’s a 10 year old playing up in 12u. He wants to play fall ball and quit football then try out for a traveling team. But he runs home from practice and games and turns on YouTube to watch NFL programming. For the same reason he hates playing football barely any games played, he loves the NFL because every game matters. You can’t get him to watch anything about baseball let alone a game on tv (like there’s any of those available without a subscription). Baseballs getting overtaken by soccer at least where I’m at. And it’s baseballs fault. |
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04-28-2024, 11:35 AM | #49 |
Rock Chalk Jayhawk
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: PA
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I think on a national scale 94 is the right answer.
For me baseball was biggest for me when I was a kid because the Royals were really good and had won a World Series. In fact that's when I started following sports. Marty ball is what started pulling me closer to football. |
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04-28-2024, 12:35 PM | #50 |
Admitted Planet Junky
Join Date: Oct 2000
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The last MLB strike. I think that is either 1994 or 1995.
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04-28-2024, 12:37 PM | #51 |
**** That Noise
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Jack Trice
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Posts: 15,103
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04-28-2024, 01:04 PM | #52 |
Facts are stubborn things.
Join Date: Dec 2008
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Baseball has been a regional sport my entire life (I’m 47) but perception changes much slower relative to reality. Once upon a time there were baseball towns but even in StL football has been king for a long time. Football has been king for probably about as long as pro football has been more popular than college and its rise can be linked IMO to increased tv coverage and Americans access to it - baseball as stated ITT was made for radio. The survey linked at the beg of this thread by someone shows 1972 as a line of demarcation which makes sense when you consider the growth of televisions in US households throughout the 1960s.
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04-28-2024, 01:09 PM | #53 | |
I Like The Kansas City Chiefs
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: Shawnee, KS
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Quote:
MLB “felt” very important in the late 90’s. Those Yankees teams were a big ****ing deal. But the Steroid Era and everything that followed really took the shine off the league. It was sorta the equivalent of the Tour de France and Lance Armstrong. Normal people actually watched cycling back then. Then the scandal hit, and it never “felt” the same. |
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04-28-2024, 01:22 PM | #54 |
pie is never free
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: the drivers seat
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For me, it all started in 1971... baseball bores the bejesus outta me
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04-28-2024, 01:27 PM | #55 |
Suupraa Geniuuusss
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: North Phoenix, AZ
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For myself, Ripken breaking the record saved baseball in my heart. At least until pretty recently. Until that moment, you could’ve razed every ballpark to the ground and I wouldn’t have cared.
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04-28-2024, 01:31 PM | #56 | |
Supporter
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ozarks
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Quote:
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04-28-2024, 01:53 PM | #57 |
Champion Golfer Of The Year
Join Date: Aug 2001
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Nothing better than the radio and a patio on a summer evening. I grew up on Buddy Blattner/Denny Matthews and then Fred White and Denny Matthews on radio. Al Wisk and Denny Trease on TV when it was long before these MLB cable **** ups.
Then they hired Bob Davis and he was just kinda okay but also kinda terrible. Still the #1 game in my heart. I lived and breathed it as a kid. Watched all those episodes of This Week In Baseball with the show's theme music on my phone during the season. |
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04-28-2024, 02:00 PM | #58 | |
Sometimes it's black and white
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: California
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Quote:
Run after ball, try to kick it that way. I played soccer and first base softball as a little kid. Little kids can't throw accurately to first base. I played soccer as a kid, but that never created a desire on my part to watch soccer. Soccer just isn't that interesting as a spectator sport. I never played football, but yeah, I always found it interesting to watch. |
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04-28-2024, 02:36 PM | #59 |
MVP
Join Date: Apr 2017
Location: Texas
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Probably 1960’s or early 1970’s. Wikipedia says the biggest World Series TV rating was 1978 and 1980, both of them around 42-44 million American viewers. By comparison, the Super Bowl made it above 75 million American viewers during this time period.
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04-28-2024, 04:20 PM | #60 |
The Insider
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Lake of the Ozarks
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Way more parity in baseball than the NFL especially when it comes to championships. But facts don't matter to CP. 8 different champions in the last 9 years. In NFL, Brady and Mahomes have 6 of the 9 Super Bowl wins. In the NBA, LeBron and Curry have 6 of the 9 NBA Finals wins.
Royals have the same number of World Series wins in the last 40 years as the Dodgers, Cardinals, and Braves. Yankees haven't been to the World Series since 2009. |
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