blunty51 said:
compared to baseball, yes. |
lol! That's good. I hate baseball and I'm not dumb enough make that kind of claim.
blunty51 said:
compared to baseball, yes. |
lol! That's good. I hate baseball and I'm not dumb enough make that kind of claim.
Can a baseball crush a cricket?
There's your answer.
Kimi wa ne tashika ni ano toki watashi no soba ni ita
Itsudatte itsudatte itsudatte
Sugu yoko de waratteita
Nakushitemo torimodosu kimi wo
I will never leave you
@outlaw
oh ok I was ready and willing to provide some grounds ;)
Trust me, you couldn't hit a 90 mph fastball. I played baseball for 12 years (in high school started on my team and won the state championship that year) and baseball is definitely not a sport that is easy to pick up. I'm sure cricket has it's own difficulties as well. But you are performing a hasty generalization fallacy in your assessment of baseball. Considering that is illogical, I'm going to discard it as such.
Having played baseball for so long, it is not something that you just pick up and play. Especially when you get into more serious competition. There is a reason why in the MLB, having a batting average of .300 (3 hits out of 10 at bats) is good. You are going to get out more than not because it is so difficult to hit a round ball with a round faced bat. But don't take anything off of pitching. Being able to throw overhand at 90 MPH consistently for 100 pitches while mixing in curves, sliders, changeups, etc is a thing of finese and practice. Tie that all in with accuracy as the strike zone isn't something that is large.
Then of course we haven't even gotten to fielding positions. I can almost guarantee how many would try to catch a groundball and instead get out of the way due to fear. Catching a flyball is maybe one of the easier things in baseball but still takes time and practice to be able to judge it. But of course being a catcher is something not many will ever pick up due to the difficulty of the position.
It might be easy for someone on the outside to be able to call something easy but until you really play it competitively, you are just speaking out of your ass. Which is why I will not simply call Cricket and easy sport that a bunch of silly men play. I respect that when playing competitively it is a sport of technique and strength like most of the others. And it is because I say that, that I am completely logical and you aren't.
I think I'll take a sport that doesn't require a tea time in between innings.
Cricket is cool, but baseball is far more digestible for the average person, I think. Both sports are pretty large, internationally.
It's essentially the same difference between Rugby and American football. Both are very similar in many areas, but they have their divergences.
Back from the dead, I'm afraid.
| FootballFan said: Don't have a clue about baseball. Apart from the US i don't know any other country that plays it. Rounders vs Cricket would have been a better comparison ![]() Cricket is a very technical sport, slow paced and can be difficult to grasp. |
Baseball is huge in Japan.
outlawauron said:
Baseball is huge in Japan. |
Huge in Japan, Korea, and all of North America. Starting to slowly spread into South America as well. Catching on in some parts of Asia as well due to the success of the Japanese baseball teams.
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Zucas said: Well I did clearly say that I am biased and I never claimed to give a whole hearted comparison. For the record, Bowlers in cricket send 90mph+ balls down on a regular basis. Those fews times I played baseball in the U.S, it looked very much like a what a 90mph ball would look, except a little closer. I never played baseball on the highest level, and neither did I with cricket. Therefore the comparisons on that level are a little closer to consistent. Having played baseball for so long, it is not something that you just pick up and play. Especially when you get into more serious competition. There is a reason why in the MLB, having a batting average of .300 (3 hits out of 10 at bats) is good. You are going to get out more than not because it is so difficult to hit a round ball with a round faced bat. But don't take anything off of pitching. Being able to throw overhand at 90 MPH consistently for 100 pitches while mixing in curves, sliders, changeups, etc is a thing of finese and practice. Tie that all in with accuracy as the strike zone isn't something that is large. Indeed! Which is why I stated that it's more a pitcher's game, and I never discredited that. Then of course we haven't even gotten to fielding positions. I can almost guarantee how many would try to catch a groundball and instead get out of the way due to fear. Catching a flyball is maybe one of the easier things in baseball but still takes time and practice to be able to judge it. But of course being a catcher is something not many will ever pick up due to the difficulty of the position.
The comparisons you made in your post have shown that you don't know much about cricket, and since i never claimed to give both sides of the arguement in my OP, you have no right to call me illogical. I have a very comprehensive knowledge of both games. You however, don't seem to, unless you prove otherwise ;)
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Relativily speaking, Baseball is tiny internationally. As you have clearly stated there are very few regions that play it and to my limited knowledge its not the most popular sport in any country.
Cricket on the other hand although not the most popular in England dominates large areas of the world something Baseball could only dream of.
Obviously popularity doesn't show quality but its just more popular, so there you go.

