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Simple Baseball Poll anyone?
From this list how much would you say you know about MLB Baseball & it's history? P.S No wrong answers here.
A) 0-25%
B) 25- 50%
C) 50-75%
D) 75-100%
30 Answers
- On VacationLv 71 decade agoFavorite Answer
I'd stretch mine out to include 50-100%. I have a history degree and am a huge baseball fan. I watch old documentaries about the golden ages of baseball and try to absorb it.
- baller982Lv 71 decade ago
I would be 0-25% for history, but for this current year I would be 75-100%.
- 1 decade ago
I'll go with B, there's still a lot I don't know, but I do still have a lot of history rolling around in my brain. There is so much baseball history out there and I'm not going to claim I know it all, because I don't. When talking the last 30 years, I'm much better, but talk over 30 years and I'm scrambling, over 50 years ago and I'm starting to get the blank stare..
For the Milwaukee Brewers I'd go with D. I have read researched and breathed the Brewers for so long, and they've only been around for 40 years, so it's easier.
But as far as baseball history as a whole - B, and not even close to 50%
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- RandallLv 41 decade ago
75-100% Many years of reading Baseball Encyclopedia and Bill James. Lifetime highlight: seeing Satchel Paige pitch in the major leagues--still awesome aT AGE 43!
- mattapan26Lv 71 decade ago
NESN has a game show where the questions are based on baseball in general and Red Sox history in particular. I find myself knowing most of the answers, so I will guess C, 50-75%, but I am depending on you to come up with the names of obscure Hall of fame players to keep me humble.
- DonaLv 45 years ago
C) In some cases yes & in some cases no :: My Reasoning?:: I think that if a pitcher has it in him, such as Roy Halladay of the Philadelphia Phillies, that he should be left in. Luckily, some managers and coaches realize this. Lets think back to the recent game where Halladay took the loss, after pitching a complete game [[132 pitches]]. Halladay has pitched 4 complete games so far this season. If the player listens to his body, and knows when to stop, then a pitch count should not matter, but not all players will admit defeat when they are declining in a game. At that point, a manager needs to make the best call for the teams well being. Thanks for asking this question!
- Anonymous1 decade ago
D-75-100%