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Walk-off Mania
Frayed Knot Aug 13 2013 05:19 PM |
About the only good thing from last night's game is that the loss didn't come via a walk-off of some sort as a full [u:2gl6ed4v]1/3 of the Met road losses this year[/u:2gl6ed4v] (10 of 30) have.
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Zvon Aug 13 2013 05:29 PM Re: Walk-off Mania |
Interesting stuff. Alls I can say is they keep themselves in the game. How many big blow outs have we had, win and lose?
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Frayed Knot Aug 13 2013 07:10 PM Re: Walk-off Mania |
Using BB-Ref's definition of a blow-out being more than five runs, the Mets this year are 14-16
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Zvon Aug 13 2013 08:05 PM Re: Walk-off Mania |
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That don't suck. I thought that would be worse.
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Frayed Knot Aug 13 2013 08:46 PM Re: Walk-off Mania |
That didn't really surprise me; we're both two games under .500 in blow-outs as well as two games under in 1-run games.
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Frayed Knot Aug 14 2013 07:51 AM Re: Walk-off Mania |
Walk-off notes:
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Edgy MD Aug 14 2013 08:29 AM Re: Walk-off Mania |
It's got to be murder for pitchers for every pitch to so frequently have the game riding on it, mostly or entirely.
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G-Fafif Aug 14 2013 08:51 AM Re: Walk-off Mania |
An extra-inning win at home can't help but be a walkoff (or walk-off) win, which has always struck me as a bit of a double-dip. That it's an extra-inning win seems praiseworthy enough without the embellishment. The bottom-nine come-from-behinder (calling Fman!) seems like it should rate its own merit badge. A silver or bronze might be in order as well for what I like to think of as walkup (or walk-up) wins, the kind grabbed late and then held onto immediately: go-ahead run score in the bottom of the eighth at home, top of the ninth on the road and the final three outs are directly secured in the opponent's last at-bat.
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Frayed Knot Aug 14 2013 10:09 AM Re: Walk-off Mania |
Yeah, part of the problem is the ESPN-ization of the term "walk-off" which began originally with the Gibson/Eckersly HR but has since been expanded to include every game-ending play including abominations such as "walk-off Sac Flies" and "walk-off ground-outs". Fortunately former Pirate pitcher Bob Walk had most of his career prior to the invention of that term otherwise a free pass by him with the bases loaded in the right situation might have been described by some over-eager sportscaster as the batter getting 'a walk-off walk off Walk'
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TheOldMole Aug 14 2013 12:15 PM Re: Walk-off Mania |
Why does there need to be an equivalent term. Everyone knows what Sayonara means. I say we should adopt it.
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Aug 14 2013 12:29 PM Re: Walk-off Mania |
The thing that distinguished the Sayonara home run in Japan wasn't just that it had a name but that it was the kind of stat they'd officially track and flash on scorebaords and publish on the backs of cards and stuff.
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Frayed Knot Aug 14 2013 03:15 PM Re: Walk-off Mania |
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That would work fine for HRs, but would get over-used if applied to game-winning Sac Flies, singles, etc. It's those game-winning NON-HR situations that need a new term.
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Edgy MD Aug 14 2013 03:36 PM Re: Walk-off Mania |
Walk-off didn't reallyworm it's way in. It was sort of born overnight. It was around, but there was one big walk-off weekend back around 2004 when it was suddenly everywhere.
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Frayed Knot Aug 14 2013 08:52 PM Re: Walk-off Mania |
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I think what probably happened is that it became a catch phrase around the halls of ESPN and when that happens the desk jockeys suddenly can't use it enough. They did the same thing with "one-timer" when narrating over the top of hockey highlights. They mis-used that particular phrase more often than not, but that didn't stop them and they sure liked saying it. Meanwhile, another walk-off/extra-inning win for Arizona this afternoon. That's three in a row over Baltimore and all four of their last four wins.
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