Register | Login | |||||
Main
| Memberlist
| Active users
| ACS
| Commons
| Calendar
| Online users Ranks | FAQ | Color Chart | Photo album | IRC Chat |
| |
0 user currently in Sports Center. |
Acmlm's Board - I2 Archive - Sports Center - Odd nomenclature | | | |
Add to favorites | "RSS" Feed | Next newer thread | Next older thread |
User | Post | ||
neotransotaku Baby Mario 戻れたら、 誰も気が付く Level: 87 Posts: 810/4016 EXP: 6220548 For next: 172226 Since: 03-15-04 From: Outside of Time/Space Since last post: 11 hours Last activity: 1 hour |
| ||
okay maybe the thread title has bad word choice but... I've been wondering how some terms came to be in sports. For example, what does inning derive from in baseball? is it from the fact that a team is "in" at bat or something? how about bowling three strikes gets you a turkey? anyways, if anyone knows why things are called this way, please post or if you have any of your own you have noticed |
|||
Heian-794 Red Super Koopa Level: 44 Posts: 122/896 EXP: 611014 For next: 271 Since: 06-01-04 From: Kyoto, Japan Since last post: 21 days Last activity: 10 days |
| ||
Neo, yes, "inning" is as you surmise. The word comes from cricket, when one team would "go in" or "have its innings" whle the other team would go out in the field. I think cricketers had been using the word since the 1700s. One word I always have trouble explaining to non-baseball buffs is "strike" -- it refers to the batter striking at the ball, of course, and doesn't imply whether he actually hits it or not. Since we usually use the word "strike" to mean actually hitting something, it's confusing. |
|||
drjayphd Beamos What's that spell? pimp! Level: 56 Posts: 392/1477 EXP: 1387410 For next: 10766 Since: 03-15-04 From: CT Since last post: 2 hours Last activity: 2 hours |
| ||
Originally posted by Heian-794 Not only that, but there's called strikes and swings and misses being dubbed strikes as well... when the batter didn't touch the ball in either case. One thing that it's nice to see announcers getting straight is the ground-rule double. "Ground rule" kind of implies that it's not always the case in every park, like with the catwalks in Tampa Bay and the ivy in Wrigley. But a fair ball bouncing off the ground and into the stands is always a double, everywhere. So I think it was Jon Miller who started to call it an automatic double. |
|||
Heian-794 Red Super Koopa Level: 44 Posts: 125/896 EXP: 611014 For next: 271 Since: 06-01-04 From: Kyoto, Japan Since last post: 21 days Last activity: 10 days |
| ||
Of course, you could argue that since a fair ball bouncing into the stands is a double in all of baseball, it's not a "ground rule" but rather a baseball rule, and that things like balls hitting catwalks and other things peculiar to the grounds that the game's being played in really are "ground rules". But wasn't it the case in the past that balls bouncing into the stands were sometimes doubles and sometimes home runs, depending on how far the wall was from home plate? I know that in Chicago in 1884, they had a wall so short that anything going over it was a double, not a homer. And in more recent times batters got homers on what would now be a typical automatic double. But in any case... Jon Miller really is a good announcer who thinks about the game. I mis listening to him. |
|||
The Wrong 'Un Red Paragoomba Level: 14 Posts: 25/64 EXP: 12415 For next: 656 Since: 03-24-04 Since last post: 116 days Last activity: 79 days |
| ||
The names of bowling deliveries has always interested me, I wonder if they all have their own story behind them: - Leg Break - Off Break - Toppie - Zooter - Flipper - Slider - Googly/Wrong 'Un/Other one - And of course, the famous ' Doosra' which I know means 'Other one' in Urdu. - Yorker - Bouncer (kinda obviously) - Leg cutter - Off Cutter Plus there's heaps more - I mean, Shane Warne has about 13 deliveries or something crazy just to himself. Tris |
|||
Heian-794 Red Super Koopa Level: 44 Posts: 134/896 EXP: 611014 For next: 271 Since: 06-01-04 From: Kyoto, Japan Since last post: 21 days Last activity: 10 days |
| ||
Wrong'un, does "Yorker" come from Yorkshire? I'm interested in cricket but have never had the chance to play. |
Add to favorites | "RSS" Feed | Next newer thread | Next older thread |
Acmlm's Board - I2 Archive - Sports Center - Odd nomenclature | | | |