One weekend anchor was doing an eleven o'clock news / sports wrap-up, and the visiting team scored the winning run in the top of the ninth on a homer, and called it a 'walk off dinger', but failed to realize the home team got to bat in the bottom of the ninth.Please explain how they use the term wrong :think2:
One weekend anchor was doing an eleven o'clock news / sports wrap-up, and the visiting team scored the winning run in the top of the ninth on a homer, and called it a 'walk off dinger', but failed to realize the home team got to bat in the bottom of the ninth.
I hate when an announcer says about a pitcher,"ya, he just wants to keep the hitter honest".
the fuck does that mean? Is the pitcher going to lie to him? or will he pitch to him and keep him honest?
so dumb
No it actually makes sense if you know the hidden meaning behind the saying. The pitcher will throw unusual pitches in different counts which is different from the usual say 3-2 fastball counts he will throw a curveball instead so the hitter cannot cheat or have an educated guess as to what the pitcher will be throwing next keeper the hitter honest by the hitter not being able to cheat on the next pitch..