UConnDan97
predicting undefeated seasons since 1983
- Joined
- Feb 12, 2012
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-kid stands at the penalty kick mark on a soccer field. he gets ten tries to kick the ball in the goal.
-kid stands at the foul line and he gets ten tries to make a basket(foul shot)
-kid stands at the plate and he gets ten pitches to hit a base hit
u tell me which one is the hardest?
-soccer its just u vs the goalie
-bball its just aiming your shot at that age
-baseball you have to hit a moving ball with a bat, then hope fielders dont make th play on you depending on where you hit it.
the skill set in baseball is harder. its just a perception thing based on how a certain person was raised and what you grew up around. if baseball or fball or hockey were easy sports, even bball at the high levels, they wouldn't get paid a **** load to play in the pros. there is a reason lax will never be anything more than a fun to watch college sport that gives kids sships.
-anyone can pick up a bball and go to a local park and shoot hoops. you can go to the ice rink and free skate and day u want. fball and baseball you needs other players who are skilled at the sport.
First of all, why would you go to a penalty shot for a soccer kid? Penalty shots happen so infrequently that the analogy is horrible. The better analogy is kicking a moving soccer ball at a goal with a goalie in front of it while someone is chasing you, which happens every eighth or ninth play. Then, how does your math look?
Also, the pay in baseball has nothing to do with the skill level. It has to do with the fanbase. That's what the fans here will pay to watch games both live and on tv. In Europe, there are guys making soccer contracts that make A-Rod's deal look like a rookie draft pick! Is that because of the skill level, or because people will spend half their paycheck to see Ronaldo and Rooney?
Second, hitting a baseball is not one of the hardest things to do, actually. It is a misrepresented statement that I hear all the time. Let's hold aside the fact that I don't believe swinging a bat makes you an athlete any more than swinging an axe makes a lumberjack an athlete, since my personal definition of an athlete requires both strength and fitness. Having said that, almost every batter that steps to the plate in baseball hits the ball, which should in and of itself invalidate the statement. And if you are referring to "getting a hit" or "getting safely on base," the average pro is getting on base 1/4 of the time he is offered the opportunity through hitting and more so through the opportunity of walking or getting hit with a pitch.

