Schilling did better last night. He seemed more relaxed, asked leading questions, and provided some decent analysis.
Maybe he was listening. Plus... the dude needs to make some money.
Schilling did better last night. He seemed more relaxed, asked leading questions, and provided some decent analysis.
This really infuriates me.
I see a bunch of egotistical macho-males at ESPN thinking they have to bring in an "interpreter" for the average male-sports-consumed-drones that are the majority of ESPN viewership. Shame on their disrespect of the sport of softball.
Lol. Great thread. The "Bitch about Curt Schilling" thread is 9 pages and the actual WCWS thread is 4 pages.
We constantly complain about the lack of exposure for this game, then ESPN assigns one of the their more name-recognizable analysts to the game - to maybe help it gain some exposure - and that's "disrespect"ful to the game of softball.
Are there probably 1000 people who could do a better job analyzing a softball game than Curt Schilling? Yeah. But not one of them would have brought a single new viewer to the game. Did Schilling? Who knows? But at least it's worth a shot. The only downside is listening to people who would be watching the game anyway bitch about him.
Also, anything, or anyone, that shuts Smith and Mendoza up for 5 seconds about what they would have done in that position is a good thing.
Where's Amanda Scarborough when you need her? Her articulate, well thought out commentary is a breath of fresh air. You can tell she works very hard at her craft.
If Schilling really bothers you guys, turn the sound down go to your computer and pull up the audio on westwood 1.
Amico does a great job. By the way, both she and Schilling were right about playing the outfield in to prevent what Stuart just did.
Wouldn't the say reasoning apply if one were tired of the Schilling comments? LOL Also, had Amico's ball hit off the warning track with the outfield called in, the criticism would have been that the outfield was in when it should have been out. Come on, just how deep is that field and shouldn't standard positioning enable an OF to catch pretty much all balls but that one that fell in? That has been my experience. There are little "triangles" where a ball fought off can fall in between various OFs and IFs. Good defenses catch the rest.