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Lookout Landing

46-73, Game Thought

A few weeks ago, I happened across a fan of another team criticizing me on his own team's blog. I don't seek this kind of thing out, but like most people, I imagine, I am most definitely interested in what other people have to say about me and what I do, so I stuck around to read what he said. "It's all in the name of personal growth," I said to myself. "Should some of his criticisms be valid, you can take them to heart, and come out all the better for it."

That was the mindset going in, at least. But I wound up tuning it all out and decided to move on with my day when I realized the main thrust of his criticism. You see, this individual's biggest complaint was that I, a baseball writer, had the audacity to say that sometimes I don't like watching baseball.

I get it. Baseball is a beautiful game. It's a game many of us have loved since we were little children, and it's a game that forms the soundtrack to our summers. Few experiences compare to following the day-to-day drama of a contending team throughout the season, but as fans of bad teams so often remind themselves, baseball doesn't always need to be good for baseball to be worth watching. Meaningless baseball in August, after all, is better than no baseball at all. There's a reason people count down the days until pitchers and catchers.

So, yeah, I understand how it could be a little startling or off-putting to discover that a supposed hardcore baseball fan has times when he just doesn't want to watch his team play. A fan who struggles to find consistent enjoyment in the game, it follows, is hardly a fan at all.

In my defense, though, this game.

There was nothing compelling about this. This was one of the worst teams in baseball taking on another one of the worst teams in baseball, behind a pair of fairly uninteresting starters. The game was completely meaningless, and it was being played in front of a sparse crowd made miserable by humid, sweltering heat that also rather visibly caused some of the players to drag. From the beginning, this game didn't have a whole lot going its way.

And then the gameplay itself was shy of spectacular. The pitching was iffy. The defense was inconsistent. And the offense - despite fleeting glimpses of life - struggled to deliver the big hit, as the two teams combined to go 4-23 with runners in scoring position. Sure, the Mariners hit back-to-back homers, but those came in the third inning. Between the top of the third and the top of the tenth, there was nothing. Just a lot of blown chances, a lot of mistakes, and a lot of deep counts.

I barely noticed when the middle innings passed by, like cars on a freight train that's blocking your way. All I noticed was that no one had scored, and that we were therefore doomed to extra innings. And while Adam Moore's home run was obviously neat, as soon as David Aardsma started to struggle I just wanted to reach a resolution. I didn't care if the Mariners won or if the Mariners lost. I just wanted the game to end in the tenth. So I was mad when we went to eleven. Not at David Aardsma for walking in the tying run. At Brian Roberts for swinging at ball four when it could've been the winner.

Now, I don't and never have actually taken pleasure in watching the Mariners lose, so it should tell you something that I wanted them to blow it in the tenth, and that I was relieved when they lost it in eleven. It should tell you something that I know I wasn't the only one who felt that way. This game, and many of its 227 minutes, were nearly impossible to watch. Or, as Geoff Baker said:

This game is officially terrible.

When Adam Jones laid down a perfect bunt to win the game, I cheered in my living room. I didn't cheer because the Mariners lost. I cheered because the game was over, and I didn't have to watch it anymore. I cheered because, for the first time in four hours, we could turn the TV to something else, like Martin, or Cash Cab.

So, yeah. I will readily admit that, for much of those four hours, I didn't enjoy watching the Mariners. I'll readily admit that, for much of those four hours, I would've rather been weeding or doing dishes than watching another baseball game on FSN. But then, who among those that watched the game could blame me? Was anyone enjoying this?

Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe this does reflect negatively on me as a fan. Maybe I don't like baseball as much as I think I do. Maybe I don't like baseball as much as other fans. As better fans.

I think the greater likelihood, though, is that fans of other teams - fans of better teams - just don't get it. They don't understand what it's like to deal with sloppy, meaningless baseball, because they're so infrequently put in that position. Yeah, okay, you could tell me to look at the positives, like how Adam Moore homered and singled three times and threw two runners out. Adam Moore had a legitimately magnificent game. I'm not going to remember this as the game where Adam Moore dominated the Orioles, though. I'm going to remember this as the godawful game that wouldn't end, until it did.

I don't think the problem lies with me. I think the problem lies with baseball, and with fans of other teams who romanticize everything and fail to understand that, sometimes, baseball just sucks.

15 recs  |  39 comments

Comments

Preach it to me, brother.
I enjoyed this more than many games because of Adam Moore doing good things, Michael Saunders tripling

and Doug Fister is at least more interesting to me than, say David Pauley or Luke French, because at least he might stick around for a little while.

That being said, I know the feeling. I get it most when we play the Athletics.

I agree it has nothing to do with levels of fandom.

During baseball season, I live and breathe baseball but games like this make me not want to watch either. You not only watch this team but you write about it on an almost daily basis. If that’s not hardcore, I don’t know what is.

As a lifelong Mariners fan, watching major league baseball has sucked the majority of the time.

Still wouldn’t trade it for many things. Nature of the beast.

It's definitely one of those things where the shortly-lived highs cancel out the arduous lows
I agree. Suffering through bad times makes the good times more special. And that goes for most things, not just baseball.
We have two watchable starters right now.

God, I hope Fister gets back into pre-injury form.

Are you sure this isn't Fister's regular form?
Does Beltre make that play in the 11th today?

I’m kinda drunk and just saw the replay…honestly just asking the peanut gallery

To be fair, how many 3B besides Beltre would make that play?
It's definitely in the range of doing chores.

If it wasn’t for Dave Niehaus I’d probably not even bother to listen.

I watched Cash Cab afterwards.
Jeff Sullivan invented the Humorous Personal Narrative form of sportswriting

True story.

You are more interesting for not finding every game a gripping form of entertainment.

Some of your best writing comes when your mind is less distracted by actual baseball and is therefore free to do whatever else your brain does, like figuring out who probably smells. The notion that you have to be enthralled with bad baseball is laughable. It’s not fair to dictate what someone else should and should not find enjoyable and you still provide entertainment either way. It’s not like I really want a detailed analysis of why Langerhans only gets off the bench to pinch-run. By this point in the season, it is both clear why that’s the case and irrelevant. Mariners!

Quite frankly, the Mariners are amusing because they are awful, not for any actual redeeming quality

awful things tend to get old really fast – why should baseball be any different? It’s funny once a week for the novelty, but I simply have zero desire to spend three hours of my life watching this awful team every day.

Not that this means that I don't follow the team, that I don't get excited when Jose Lopez homers

or that I’m not miffed when we whiff on signing Ryne Stanek. It’s the entire idea that I care about the team, but I don’t care about this particular version of it. I’d tell them to call me when they’re interesting again, but they won’t have to – I’ll have been following the entire time, just not devoting my life to watching the awfulness.

Divish and Baker are clearly tired of watching this team as well so it's not just because Jeff is some detached blogger or whatever the accusation may be.
I am so glad last night was movie night so I didn't have to watch this

And I am eternally thankful that Jeff watches so we don’t have to.

It wasn't intended to be movie night, but movie night began in the 9th at my house.
I question your grit/hustle.
And rightly so.
Damn it ExPat, she's a blog commenter not WFB!
Because you have these impure thoughts, Ken Burns is on his way over to your house to kill you.

He is bringing his Luca Brasi, David McCullough, with him and they will bore you into a deep, dark coma.

I dont have cable

so it’s easy not to watch, but even if I did I’d probably skip most of the games we’ve had since like the end of April.

I have gone to more games then I have watched on TV, in fact. I have listened to quadruple that amount on the radio as it happens to be on when I head to work. But I do miss a lot of M’s games.

The only consistent, daily Mariners related activity I do is come here to Lookout Landing to see what my favorite baseball authors have to say about how terrible we are. So thanks Jeff and Matthew, for doing what I don’t want to do, in the name of entertainment and fandom.

One would think bloggers of terrible ballclubs with a history of being a terrible ballclub would get mad props for being great baseball fans.

I had a 3 hour meeting that started at 5pm PDT so I missed the game.

Now I feel like I came out ahead. Thanks Jeff!

It was humid and miserable.

The O’s fans in my section laughed at me when Aardsma walked in that run. I took my hat off in shame.

But hey! Dingers! Somehow with a combined 25 men left on base. And lots of bunting! And Sean White!

You deserve a medal for sitting through that bullshit in that heat.

At least Camden Yards is an amazing park, I guess.

It really is, actually.

I was surprised.

I was just looking at some of Moore's periferrals and some of them look way off-base

He is striking out 30% of the time and hardly walking. He didn’t walk a ton in AAA but he also struck out about 1/2 as much. I think we expected him to come up and make contact and hit line drives. So far he’s hit a shit ton of groundballs and since he is slow means his BABIP which in the minors was really good now sucks. Stop striking out and hitting groundballs. That skillset has never worked for anybody, especially for a slow catcher with who has never shown great power.

So you're telling me that a guy who is performing poorly right now is generating outcomes that are unfavorable?
Who expected him to hit line drives?
I guess I thought he hit more

But only racked up 17% in the minors. His GB rate in the minors was pretty high at almost 50% so I guess it shouldn’t be a surprise.

Lately I've been putting the game on while I do other things

Like laundry, cooking, checking my PLU email, facebooking, and reading. It’s not worth my full attention but I’ll peak my head out when something happens so I can cheer or groan about it.

I do the exact same thing....

…although I usually get home pretty late and only have the chance to watch the end of the games. It’s always on when they’re playing, radio or TV.
It’s clear that we love our Mariners, but it’s hard in times like this, so there’s no shame in not wanting to watch. But I think is plenty of shame in not watching at all.

I haven't watched an inning of baseball in three days and I feel no shame whatsoever
Running a BAC of .2 kills off all feelings though.

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