A Conversation for Trick Pitches in Baseball

To the Editor

Post 1

Lochinvar

There is no such verb as "homered'd." The proper past tense of the word to homer (meaning: to hit a home run) is "homered." If you want to avoid the strangeness of the word please use "hit a home run."

Thank you
Lochinvar


To the Editor

Post 2

Bright Blue Shorts

I believe that the discussion on Spitball's could probably make reference to Bernoulli's principle at http://www.bbc.co.uk/h2g2/guide/A517169. I think that changing the ball so that it is no longer spherical (rather like cricketers shining one half of a cricket ball) creates drag on one side of the ball, so that air travels quicker around the other, thus imparting a curved flight path. Or something like that.

BBS smiley - smiley


To the Editor

Post 3

Lochinvar

This is a point well made. I originally had a link to Bernoulli's Principle from "spin," as all of the pitches use it to some degree by the amount and direction of the spin on the ball.

Lochinvar


To the Editor

Post 4

World Service Memoryshare team

Hi Lochinvar and Bright Blue Shorts,

I've reworked Bernoulli's Principle back into the text and have changed the homered'd reference. Thanks for all your help! I've only ever been to a baseball game once (on holiday in Maryland) and didn't have a clue what was going on - I was even flummoxed during the Mexican wave! So thanks for making the world of baseball a clearer one for me smiley - biggrin


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