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How baseball Twitter account ‘Would it dong?’ gets made
Morse set the bot to tweet about every fly ball that would have been a home run in at least one park. It runs every 10 minutes, so if during a …
Source: nypost.com
Date Published: 3/21/2021
View: 7068
Would it dong? – Botwiki
Would it dong? is a Twitter bot created by Dan Morse that looks at baseball statistics of balls that travelled at least 300 feet (91.44 …
Source: botwiki.org
Date Published: 11/23/2022
View: 1625
BASEBALL | Định nghĩa trong Từ điển tiếng Anh Cambridge
baseball ý nghĩa, định nghĩa, baseball là gì: 1. a game played … They might cite the case of baseball teams that know which of their …
Source: dictionary.cambridge.org
Date Published: 7/25/2022
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Statcast Home Run Tracking | baseballsavant.com – MLB.com
xBA measures the likelihood that a batted ball will become a hit. Expected Weighted On-base Average (xwOBA). xwOBA is formulated using exit velocity, …
Source: baseballsavant.mlb.com
Date Published: 8/21/2021
View: 9948
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주제에 대한 기사 평가 would it dong baseball
- Author: Made The Cut
- Views: 조회수 160,264회
- Likes: 좋아요 1,823개
- Date Published: 2022. 2. 28.
- Video Url link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-A8eE2lbTj0
The inside story of ‘Would it dong?’: the Twitter account settling debates about home runs in quirky ballparks
When Rangers manager Chris Woodward called Yankee Stadium a “Little League ballpark” on Sunday afternoon and claimed Gleyber Torres’ walk-off home run would have been “an easy out in 99 percent of ballparks,” there was only one place to turn for the cold, hard truth:
The “Would it dong?” Twitter account.
Across the country, a warehouse manager for a small company in Washington got a heads-up on his personal Twitter account that he should check out the pet project he created last year. Dan Morse quickly realized it was going to be a big day for “Would it dong?”
The Twitter bot pulls data from MLB’s Statcast and compares it against ballpark dimensions to measure how many stadiums in which a fly ball would be a home run.
For example: Torres’ game-winning home run that provoked Woodward’s consternation. Statcast tracked it as a 369-foot fly ball with a launch angle of 28 degrees that came off the bat at 106.5 mph and landed in the short porch at Yankee Stadium.
The verdict came about 10 minutes later, in an automated tweet via “Would it dong?”
“This would have been a home run in 26/30 MLB ballparks,” the tweet read.
(For reference, Giancarlo Stanton’s 335-foot three-run poke to right field in the Yankees’ 6-5 win over the Blue Jays on Tuesday night: a homer in just 2 of 30 parks. Aaron Judge’s majestic walkoff blast: 30 out of 30.)
Woodward, without a Twitter account (at least not a public one), was not privy to the information that droves of Yankees fans quickly had at their fingertips, courtesy of Morse’s brain child.
“Somebody tagged me and said, ‘Hey, you should check this out,’” Morse said Tuesday in a phone interview. “So then I went and found the Chris Woodward interview and I went, ‘Oh, OK. People really have takes on this, I’m sure.’”
Though Tuesday, the tweet with Torres’ home run stats had 223 retweets, 207 quote tweets and 2,108 likes. The account had around 91,000 followers Sunday morning, and on Tuesday, that number climbed past 100,000. Its followers include the likes of Red Sox manager Alex Cora, Yankees hitting coach Dillon Lawson, Mariners outfielder Mitch Haniger and “The Office” writer and producer Michael Schur.
All for a project that Morse built last year, mostly out of curiosity, as a fan who counts sports stats among his hobbies.
“It always fascinated me that in baseball, this really traditional sport, every park dimension is different,” Morse said. “So a home run in one place isn’t a home run in another place. It’s just bizarre when I compare it to other sports. I can’t imagine if the Jets played on a 90-yard football field and everyone was just cool with it. It almost doesn’t make any sense, but I love it. So that was the main inspiration.”
Morse initially didn’t intend to share the data via Twitter. He taught himself how to write code three or four years ago, and this was a good way to put that to use. But once he got the app working after a few weeks of digging, he figured it would make for a fun account. It went live last May.
“I think it finished last year with around 20,000 followers,” Morse said. “And I was like, ‘This is a lot bigger than I expected.’ And then I wasn’t sure how much it would grow this year, and it grew a lot faster than I expected.”
Morse set the bot to tweet about every fly ball that would have been a home run in at least one park. It runs every 10 minutes, so if during a game a batter hits a fly ball and 10 minutes later “Would it dong?” hasn’t posted about it, that means it would not have been a home run in any MLB park.
It makes for fascinating content and often plenty of frustration, depending on which team fans are rooting for.
Morse’s favorites are fly balls that he calls “unicorns” — the automated tweets label them as such — meaning either a home run that only would have gone out in the park where it was hit or a flyout that would have been a home run in every other park except the one in which it was hit.
“Those are much more rare, and it’s a big compilation of things that have to happen to have a ball go really far in the deepest part of the deepest stadium,” he said. “It just doesn’t happen a lot.”
Though Morse doesn’t usually check the notifications for “Would it dong?” — a smart play, given that most of the replies are typically just raging against a given ballpark — he scrolls through every now and then and finds Yankees and Red Sox fans finding common ground.
“You get a lot of home runs on the short porch at Yankee Stadium,” Morse said. “But then you get a lot of really weird home runs with the [Pesky] Pole in Boston and then the Green Monster — it’s really tall, but it’s close in. So you get these weird line drives that aren’t home runs at Fenway and then these pop flies that would be an out in other places that are home runs at Fenway. So that makes me laugh, that Yankees fans and Red Sox fans both have real arguments against each other.”
Today’s back page: FIRST & BLAST!
New York Post
In search of the real Igor Shesterkin
Just over a week after they entered the playoffs with high hopes, the Rangers enter do-or-die territory tonight.
They will at least be back in the friendly confines of the Garden, but after dropping both games in Pittsburgh, they face a 3-1 deficit in the first-round series against the Penguins.
Igor Shesterkin allowed 10 goals on 45 shots in less than 60 minutes of ice time in the Rangers’ losses in Games 3 and 4. Corey Sipkin
As the Rangers got home Tuesday for a practice — which ended with gassers, perhaps taking a page out of the Herb Brooks playbook — goalie Igor Shesterkin was named a finalist for the Vezina Trophy as the NHL’s best goalie. It did not come as a surprise, but it was a reminder of the goaltender Shesterkin was during the regular season and the one the Rangers need him to be Wednesday night to have any hope of extending their playoff run.
The Rangers’ two losses in Pittsburgh (by a combined score of 14-6) were hardly all on Shesterkin. Their top players have also been missing too often lately. But a goalie’s confidence and play can instill a swagger in the rest of the team that the Rangers could surely use right now.
That’s one hell of a retirement plan
Tom Brady will continue to play football this fall at the age of 45, with opponents 20 years younger trying to crush him on every snap, while making $30 million.
And then whenever he decides he’s done (for real this time), he can sit in a booth every Sunday while making $37.5 million per year? (Hat tip to The Post’s Andrew Marchand for the scoop on the huge 10-year, $375 million deal awaiting Brady to be Fox Sports’ lead NFL game analyst once he retires.)
Once he decides to retire for good, Tom Brady will be headed to Fox Sports’ No. 1 NFL broadcast booth, where he will more than double what he made in his 22-year (and counting) career. Getty Images
Seems like an easy decision: Conserve your body, walk away healthy and get paid more while you’re at it.
Then again, as we know by now, Brady is wired a little differently than the rest of us.
Still, not a bad retirement prize for a guy who made $302 million across 22 seasons with the Patriots and Buccaneers, per Spotrac.
Would it dong?
Would it dong? is a Twitter bot created by Dan Morse that looks at baseball statistics of balls that travelled at least 300 feet (91.44 meters) in the air and tests if this would be a home run across all 30 Major League Baseball parks.
You can also visit author’s website for an app version of the bot.
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Statcast Home Run Tracking
Statcast Home Run Tracker
No Doubters: Out at All 30 Stadiums, Mostly Gone: Out at 8 to 29 Stadiums, Doubters: Out at 7 Stadiums or Fewer
xHR: Ballparks Gone At/30
* Environmental variables (elevation/weather/wind/etc…) are factored into these values.
* Stats Include Regular and Postseason
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