quote:
Originally posted by Midlo Dad:
Hard to believe you'd argue that the collegiate game would suffer without metal.
You know, they used to play college ball with wood ....
You know, we used to get to work on horseback...
I did argue it, and I'd be much more interested in hearing your counter rather than your disbelief. Actually, as well thought out and presented as you normally are, it's hard to believe that that's all you came up with.
I have an appreciation for the differences between college and pro and fail to see why people cast those differences as a negative. Different isn't bad, different is different.
If baseball were like basketball, where college is treated as the minor leagues, the argument for wood would be much more compelling. However, to allow college to stand apart, without comparison to any other level, is part of what makes it unique. Without that uniqueness, it would then lag behind in public interest as minor league baseball would be a notch ahead for quality of ball. By using aluminum, the college game is unlike any other.
Sure, a little fister off the handle that would have broken wood but drops between the RF and 2b for a hit is different. But to think that's bad is to ignore that both teams hit with the same tools, and aluminum doesn't even the playing field for teams...the better team usually still wins. Nothing is diminished by using aluminum bats. Pitchers still have to hit their spots, fielders still have to pick it and gun it, hitters still have to swing it and run.
My appreciation for the college games doesn't wane because the tools are different from pro baseball, it's enhanced.
For those who want to say, "it's not real baseball", then what is real baseball? How far back do we go to find "real baseball"? There's been more changes than aluminum over the years...how about soft wound balls, no outfield fences, three fingered gloves, spitballs? Are those, "real baseball"?