Little things mean a lot

I remember reading a study on the subject of how girls felt about having to wear uniforms to school. In general, they seemed not to mind the seeming uniformity of uniforms because they found all sort of ways to individualize them. Details like just how high the socks were and what shoes were worn became of much more importance than would have been the case had the girls had unlimited choices in their clothing.

The same thing is true in sports or probably in anything else: the more you know about it, the more small details seem to matter. Where the casual fan sees a bunch of actions that all look fairly uniform, the avid fan sees a whole panoply of little details and unexpected richness that completely changes the perceptual experience.

Here is a good example. Recently, Giants player Pablo Sandovar, he of the fantastic nickname Kung Fu Panda, was the first player since 1905 to pitch a scoreless inning, steal a base, and hit a home run. He was playing against the Cincinnati Reds. The last player to perform the same feat was legendary Hall of Famer Christy Matthewson, also playing for the Giants and also playing against the Reds but on May 23, 1905.

I have a couple of takes on this oddity. In all the thousands of games played since then in the last 114 years, this has never once happened!!! How is that possible? And how likely is it that the same two teams would be involved more than a century apart? If things this rare are still in the ballpark, is anything out of bounds? Can odds be stretched to the breaking point and yet reality still allows the event? Apparently so.

Now I’m a fairly avid baseball fan, but running down this oddity would never occur to me. Who is it that is so avid about the game that they could hit a computer to get the answer, and who would have programmed that computer to start with? The answer is The Elias Sports Bureau. Evidently, they must employ trivia masters whose jobs are all about knowing the equivalent of the length of every girl’s shoe lace down to the merest micron. Whew!

So I guess the uptake on all this is that if you want to be a really avid fan of anything, you had better have a sharp eye for detail and a darn good computer programmer. I think I’ll stick to the bleachers, and maybe I’ll see you there.

 

Millerton resident Theodore Kneeland is a retired teacher and coach.

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