Jump to content

MLB suspended, Opening Day delayed indefinitely UPDATED


interloper

Recommended Posts

18 minutes ago, atomic said:

Also got his graduate degree from University of North Texas.  Something like the 190th best graduate school for Psychology in the country.  So I wouldn't say he is even an expert in Psychology. 

As a Johns Hopkins grad and psychiatrist, I would say your assessment is accurate.  As a psychologist, he is an excellent celebrity TV person. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

51 minutes ago, Redskins Rick said:

glad you made out well, others are not so fortunate.

try doing that with a house rental with VRBO.

BTW, you also failed to mention the airline.

My airline wont refund my first class tickets, but will to give me a voucher to fly later with them.

I got tickets via miles. I haven't called them up yet to get them reinstated.  They said that they are waiving reinstatement fees for miles for cancelled trips. I will call them (AA) today and let you know.   As I have nowhere to fly I was not in hurry to get miles reinstated. 

I have never done VRBO as I don't feel safe doing that. I  have a friend who does it all the time.  But I guess I am more cautious. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

13 minutes ago, atomic said:

I got tickets via miles. I haven't called them up yet to get them reinstated.  They said that they are waiving reinstatement fees for miles for cancelled trips. I will call them (AA) today and let you know.   As I have nowhere to fly I was not in hurry to get miles reinstated. 

I have never done VRBO as I don't feel safe doing that. I  have a friend who does it all the time.  But I guess I am more cautious. 

Never had the slightest issue with VRBO before, so we shall see in 2 months.

Coldwell Banker in Ocean City isnt playing well with us, but, they havent won yet. :)

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So called American Airlines and they reinstated the miles and refunded the taxes which were about $150 per ticket x 4 tickets.  Now i can fly anywhere in the world.  Well I can't fly anywhere. I feel like I am going to be calling them up again when my summer trip gets cancelled.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, atomic said:

Also got his graduate degree from University of North Texas.  Something like the 190th best graduate school for Psychology in the country.  So I wouldn't say he is even an expert in Psychology. 

 

1 hour ago, tntoriole said:

As a Johns Hopkins grad and psychiatrist, I would say your assessment is accurate.  As a psychologist, he is an excellent celebrity TV person. 

I'm not going to comment on a random celebrity's psychology chops, but there's a lot of confirmation bias in the "you must go to an elite school to be any good" train of thought.  The average Harvard grad is probably better than the average North Texas grad but the distribution curves of graduates and their skill sets definitely overlap, and almost certainly converge the farther away from graduation you get.

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

28 minutes ago, Redskins Rick said:

Never had the slightest issue with VRBO before, so we shall see in 2 months.

Coldwell Banker in Ocean City isnt playing well with us, but, they havent won yet. :)

 

I have rented through Jack Lingo before which does Lewes/Rehobeth/Dewey  home rentals.  Looking at their website it says most of the home owners are trying to work with the renters.  Seems I would have been in same situation as you even with them. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, DrungoHazewood said:

 

I'm not going to comment on a random celebrity's psychology chops, but there's a lot of confirmation bias in the "you must go to an elite school to be any good" train of thought.  The average Harvard grad is probably better than the average North Texas grad but the distribution curves of graduates and their skill sets definitely overlap, and almost certainly converge the farther away from graduation you get.

 It does show that the person who went to a top graduate program worked a lot harder as an undergraduate than the people who went to a third tier graduate program.  

One of my degrees is in Psychology.  I thought about going for my doctorate but if I did I wouldn't be giving people advice I would be doing research once I had graduated.  Working in an educational setting.  I am not sure that the University you attended would have much influence on your ability to provide good life advice.  I highly doubt I would be a good clinical psychologist no matter which university I attended. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

28 minutes ago, atomic said:

 It does show that the person who went to a top graduate program worked a lot harder as an undergraduate than the people who went to a third tier graduate program. 

That might be true in some cases, but to generalize is foolish.  USN&WR rankings do not necessarily correlate to how hard you have to work.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, tntoriole said:

As a Johns Hopkins grad and psychiatrist, I would say your assessment is accurate.  As a psychologist, he is an excellent celebrity TV person. 

So you are saying perhaps it might not be a good thing to solve major family issues ,spliced down to an hour?

Who knew , I  thought everything could get solved in an hour.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Three more teams have adopted a policy of payment through the end of May: the Angels (via Passan, on Twitter), Pirates (via Jon Heyman of MLB Network, on Twitter), and Rangers (per Evan Grant of the Dallas Morning News, via Twitter).

Additionally, the Rockies have adopted a more open-ended policy akin to that of the Tigers, per Britt Ghiroli and Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic (

These 17 teams will pay non-player employees through at least the end of May: the Astros, Blue Jays, Braves, Brewers, Cardinals, Cubs, Diamondbacks, Giants, Mariners, Marlins, Phillies, Reds, Red Sox, Rockies, Royals, Twins, and White Sox. Beyond that, there are no known assurances.

 

No New York teams yet. Orioles not yet either. In fact have not heard much from the Orioles till recently. 

https://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2020/04/20/coronavirus-response-orioles-chick-fil-a-donate-hundreds-of-meals-to-workers-at-medstar-harbor-hospital/

 

https://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2020/04/21/10-baltimore-city-council-members-call-on-orioles-to-pay-concessions-workers-for-missed-games-during-covid-19-pandemic/

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

33 minutes ago, Going Underground said:

So you are saying perhaps it might not be a good thing to solve major family issues ,spliced down to an hour?

Who knew , I  thought everything could get solved in an hour.

Ummm...that is not how it works in my experience.   Which is why it is a TV show.   

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, tntoriole said:

Ummm...that is not how it works in my experience.   Which is why it is a TV show.   

Dr Oz,Dr Phil .I always thought Dr.Who was the smartest.  

 

Maybe get the guy from Bar Rescue to yell at all the Governors. Then he changes the name of each state and each governor hugs him. They do a stress test to see how relaxing the restraints work.Then each state does a relaunch..

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, DrungoHazewood said:

That might be true in some cases, but to generalize is foolish.  USN&WR rankings do not necessarily correlate to how hard you have to work.

Come on.  It is intelligence and how hard you work.  Yeah you might get into Duke or Stanford being lazy if you are great at sports.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, atomic said:

Come on.  It is intelligence and how hard you work.  Yeah you might get into Duke or Stanford being lazy if you are great at sports.  

I don't think it is very common for "lazy" folks to be great enough at sports to get a free ride to Duke or Stanford.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.



  • Posts

    • Yeah the amenities are pretty outdated at the yard and they seem to do nothing year over year to improve them. The touchscreens have been banged on to death to the point they barely function, so you can't accurately fill out your order at the kiosks, and they don't have a way for the people behind the counter to ring you up at many of the food places. The sound is low to non-existent in certain sections of the club level, like around 218. Seems like there should be speakers that reach there but they might have been damaged by rain, etc. and they are too lazy to fix them. If you go to a game that's even slightly busy, you will wait forever to get into the bathroom, and the sink will be an absolute mess with no soap or paper towels. It's even worse on the club level where they have one sink that's right by the door. Nearby businesses don't care, either. The Hilton parking garage reeks of decay, pot and human waste. They don't turn on the air circulation fans, even if cars are waiting for an hour and a half to exit from P3, filling up the air with carbon monoxide. They only let you enter the stadium with one 20 oz bottle of water. It's so expensive to buy a drink or water in the stadium, but with all the salty food, 20 oz of water isn't enough, especially on a hot day. Vegetarian food options are poor to none, other than things like chips, fries, hot pretzels and the occasional pizza. Vida Taco is better, but at an inconvenient location for many seats. The doors on the club level are not accessible. They're anti-accessible. Big, heavy doors you have to go through to get to/from the escalators, and big, heavy doors to get to your seats, none of them automatic (or even with the option to be automatic with a button press). Makes it hard to carry food out to your seats even if not handicapped. The furniture in the lounges on the club level seem designed to allow as few people as possible to sit down. Not great when we have so many rain delays during the season. Should put more, smaller chairs in and allow more of the club level ticket holders to have a seat while waiting for thunderstorms to pass. They keep a lot of the entrance/exit gates closed except for playoff/sellout games, which means people have to slowly "mooooo" all the way down Eutaw St to get to parking. They are too cheap to staff all the gates, so they make people exit by the warehouse, even though it would be a lot more convenient for many fans to open all the gates. Taking Light Rail would be super convenient, except that if there's at least 20k fans in attendance, it's common to have to wait 90-120 minutes to be able to board a non-full train heading toward Glen Burnie. A few trains might come by, but they are already full, or fill up fast when folks walk up to the Convention Center stop to pre-empt the folks trying to board at Camden Station. None of the garages in the area are set up to require pre-payment on entry (reservation, or give them your card / digital payment at the entrance till). If they were, emptying out the garage would be very quick, as they wouldn't need to ticket anyone on the way out: if you can't get in without paying, you can always just leave without having to stop and scan your phone or put a ticket in the machine. They shut down the Sports Legends Museum at Camden Station in 2015 because the Maryland Stadium Authority was too greedy. That place was a fun distraction if you were in the area when a game wasn't about to start, like if you show up super early on Opening Day or a playoff day. Superbook's restaurant on Eutaw is a huge downgrade from Dempsey's in terms of menu and service quality. Dempsey's used to be well-staffed, you could reserve a table online, and they had all kinds of great selection for every diet. Superbook seems like just another bar serving the same swill that the rest of the park serves, with extremely minimal and low-quality food. For that matter, most of the food at the stadium is very low quality these days. A lot of things we used to love are made to a lower standard now if they are served at all. These are gripes about the stadium and the area that haven't changed my entire adult life. Going to an O's game requires one to tolerate many small inconveniences and several major inconveniences, any number of which could easily be fixed by the relevant authorities if they gave a damn about the people who pay to come see the team play. You would think a mid-market team would be able to afford to invest in the fan experience. You would think the city and partnering organizations like garages, the Stadium Authority and MTA would at least try to do their part to make the experience enjoyable and free of kinks. You would think they would put some thought into handling the "growing pains" of the fanbase due to recent renewed interest after the dark years. Instead, all we get is the same indifference and the same annoyances year in and year out. The whole area is overdue for a revamp. Not sure if $600 mil will get it done, but at least it's a start. Hopefully they can start to patch up some of the many holes in the fan experience. If you're not going to invest in Burnes, at least make it so paying customers have an easier, more enjoyable time getting to/from the stadium and having some food while we're there.
    • Elias has only been in rebuild mode with the O's so there's not much to speculate on there.  Houston, where he spent his formative years, doesn't seem to like to be on the hook for more than a couple of big long-term contracts at any given time.  I can see that as being Elias' choice as well, albeit with a lower overall cost - Houston runs a big payroll.  But it's all guesswork.  I really don't know. If Elias takes the 2025 payroll to $150 million it will creep up to $200 million or so by 2028 just from keeping the core together.  That's where I start to wonder about sustainability due to market size, economic forces, etc., etc., etc... If it were up to me, I would add a couple of free agents this offseason even if the contracts were longer than ideal and be conservative about extensions elsewhere until the prospects establish themselves a little better.  I think there's a competitive opportunity that the team is already into that's worth exploiting. I think ownership is very happy to have Elias on board and they're not inclined to force him to do anything.  I also think Rubenstein's demonstrated business prowess is great enough to assume that he has had plenty enough time to come to a mutual understanding with Elias as to goals.
    • We need a RH O’hearn…in addition to Westburg. At least 3 batters that will push up the pitch count and cause damage in the top 5 of the lineup.
    • Boy,  that Jackson Merrill is a good young player that is playing his best ball down the season stretch and in the playoffs.   He's only 21.  I guess some young guys are able to play up to the pressure.   Who could have guessed that?
    • I’m aware.   You are arguing something im Not.
    • What agreement? The agreement you are talking about happened as a result of the move.  The MASN agreement would not have existed if Angelos had gone to court to block the move.
    • I’m saying the Os had an agreement with MLB and that should have held up.  Been pretty clear about that. 
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...