lunes, 21 de septiembre de 2020

Longtime Seattle Mariners fan, once seriously hurt by foul ball, gets hit again — in the cardboard cutout

Seattle Mariners fan David Boardman’s cardboard cutout. (Photo courtesy of David Boardman)

Longtime Seattle Mariners fan David Boardman was 2,700 miles away from Seattle, in Philadelphia, when he managed to “catch” a foul ball during a baseball game at T-Mobile Park. More precisely, his cardboard cutout caught a foul ball. Well, technically, his cutout didn’t catch a foul ball so much as it got hit by one.

In any event, through the magic of modern sports, that ball is on its way to Boardman.

Based on our basic knowledge of Major League Baseball’s Statcast technology, we assumed there was a high-tech system that enabled this precise tracking of foul balls hitting cardboard fans, just as it measures the distance and velocity of home runs. As we learned, the solution is actually very low tech. But it’s an interesting example of the efforts teams across various sports are making to keep fans engaged when they can’t fill stadiums in person. And there’s a great backstory to the “catch” by Boardman’s board.

Boardman is well-known in Seattle media and the larger community. He spent 30 years at The Seattle Times, retiring in 2013 as executive editor and vice president. He moved to Philadelphia to become dean of the Klein College of Media and Communication at Temple University.

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