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Sunday, February 24, 2019

Baseball Review, Dodgers at Chicago White Sox (2/23/2019)

Baseball Review, Dodgers at Chicago White Sox (2/23/2019)


People named Ronald are just people.  There’s a lot at stake here between the Dodgers and the Sox because the game has a large tally in points on both sides, even if it’s the Dodgers who graduate in flying colors… in blue.  What’s worse for athletes?  Excellence of failure or mastery of easy tasks?  Certainly we find a lot of advertising at the stadium in Arizona where the teams compete on a relatively peaceful sport.  Still, we can note instances of dissolution from the Dodgers team.  The game begins for the blue team with four innings of a good many runs for play and score and then it shifts to the Sox’ side in their points for retrieval.  Mastery and excellence take lots of forms, colors, and shapes.  Dodgers get 7 to the Sox’ 6.  We must also note that even if there’s fuel-efficient vehicles leading these players and their fans to places, we still use energy; it’s unavoidable, because if we’re not driving a car and burning fuel, we’re walking around and burning calories which are fuel.  Carl’s Jr. this time around puts more emphasis on grass-fed hamburgers by signaling a man to do yoga while biting into a sandwich, or, at least the computer graphics let me think so.  Dodgers pound things down for the whole game and continue to become effectual throughout their spring training.  These fans in Arizona look polite enough.  Of course, there’s different classes of people.  Higher classed citizens are likely sitting near the front rows where all the action is taking place since seating at a baseball game goes from far to close, cheap to expensive.  And, even if the tickets pretty much keep the same average range of pricing, people who sit closer to the field are generally people who are more interested in the occurrences around them.  Pitching is up to speed; hitting is up to speed; however, the catching of balls may be improved on under scrutiny from their respective coaches on both sides of the playing field.  A critic we don’t need for this lovely, pleasing baseball game is that guy who wanders the globe in search of smiles and entertainment; in other words, what we don’t need is the guy who sits at home, watches extraordinary actors do stuff on TV, and then leaps into the Earth in search of TV acting from average, everyday citizens.  At least the baseball game makes me forget plenty of problems and, if we’re to dive into spring training this year for baseball, maybe there’s more searching which needs to be counted on.  The baseball game is very athletic and is pleasing to my emotional needs.

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