The design and business of gaming from the perspective of an experienced developer

Category: Sports (Page 2 of 3)

A Return to Baseball

A week and a half ago, I came home from work to my fiancee watching a baseball game. “I’ve decided to like baseball,” she said.

Before this, her interest in any sport at all was none. If not negative. Any sports fan who has ever dated a non-sports fan knows that this is kind of like finding plutonium in the backyard – extremely exciting, but absolutely necessary to handle with complete care. Continue reading

Fantasy Baseball Lawsuit

There’s an interesting lawsuit that seems like it would have some interesting connotations for many industries, including online games. Previous to 2000, anyone could make a game, publish a book or baseball cards or otherwise take advantage of the stats of a sport. Then fantasy football happened. Once that industry became a multimillion dollar industry, Major League Baseball started claiming that their stats were their own proprietary information, and that only fantasy baseball leagues that licensed from them could use them.

A small company in St Louis has sued MLB. They used to have a license that allowed them to use the stats, but when the ante got raised, they found themselves left out, unable to afford baseball’s high price. So they’re suing. Their claim is that stats are merely historical facts, which can be used freely.

The interesting thing is, as this analysis points out, that MLB may be trying to protect a dime and foregoing a buck.

“Fantasy leagues clearly were giving more to the leagues than they were getting in return,” said Kim Beason, a professor at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville who conducts market research for the Fantasy Sports Trade Assn. Now, all the major sports operate fantasy games, recognizing that players are incredibly loyal fans — the type increasingly coveted by advertisers.

The NFL, which has placed a renewed emphasis on courting fantasy players, “found that people who play fantasy football end up watching two to three hours more NFL action on television,” said Brian Rolapp, the league’s vice president of media strategy. “We’re all watching these weird games that no one else wants to watch,” [said one player].”Who else is going to watch the [Cleveland] Browns and [Baltimore] Ravens unless Jamal Lewis is on your fantasy team?”

Which is to say, fantasy sports creates an appetite for the real thing, and creates interest in games that players otherwise would have no interest in. If MLB is not careful, they could drive out people who play free- and cheap- fantasy baseball, solely in hopes of driving those people to more expensive services that MLB could potentially make a buck off of.

Is this likely to dissuade MLB from the lawsuit? Tragically, no. What is likely to make them settle the case with the company in question is that they’re likely to lose, which would result in them losing the ability to sell their stats. So don’t expect stats to become historical facts – at least, not until the NEXT lawsuit.

Edit: Reading over this, I realize I forgot to ask the pertinent question to this blog, which is, does this affect gaming, especially MMOs? Could an MMO site sue a fan site for posting stats? How about event recaps? What about something like Thottbot?

National Champions

orange tower

I love the NFL, but I generally truly dislike college football. It’s sloppy. The tackling is atrocious, the playcalling worse. It’s typically unfair. The disparity between matchups on the field is tremendous, and far too many games end up being 60-3 blowouts. Continue reading

Football Outsiders

I don’t read them as often as I should, but I always get a kick out of Football Outsiders, a website of amatuer statisticians, who attempt to desperately use nerd math to find new angles on the game that occupies so many of my Sundays.

In particular, I found this article and it’s companion piece on Fox Sport’s website very interesting. It talks about, statistically, what turns out to be a better indicator of football success – a team which systematically dismantles lesser opponents, or a team which manages to squeeze out close victories against the good ones. Human nature is to give more credit to the opponent that squeezes out a gutty victory in the waning seconds. However, the stats don’t bear that out. Continue reading

Dark Secret: I Once Watched Wrestling

I only check the Onion once a month or so, so I was surprised to see they’ve added a sports section. I only mention this because the article “The Undertaker Forced to Manage Eddie Guerrero’s Funeral” made me laugh out loud.

By way of explanation, I should point out that I once dated a wrestling fan long enough to gain a passing knowledge of the ’sport’. In fact, my brother still resents being trapped into watching Pay Per Views at my place.

I Like This Site, Even Though I Like Joe Morgan

I watch sports in moderation. I watch NFL football (sorry, I think college football is broken), and my childhood love of baseball has been reduced to catching a handful of games in the post-season. Still, I know enough about baseball enough, or rather hate sports announcers enough, to love Fire Joe Morgan! Bring the snark! This story was found on CNNSI, which includes a nice interview with the founders. Continue reading

Proof That The Media Isn’t As Smart As It Thinks It Is

This is about the world of sportswriters, but it’s certainly easy to extrapolate the point to politics or games media. Dr. Z examines the official football picks of professional sportswriters and, surprise, they get it right slightly less than half the time. (link).

All you have to do is look at the papers. I like to check the handicappers’ boxes in the New York Daily News and Newark Star-Ledger, occasionally the Post. The News’ seven handicappers, whose selections go under the heading, Our Experts Call The Shots, are, collectively, 22 games below .500, or .478, this season. Only one of the seven is over the 50-50 mark, and don’t forget that a bettor has to pick 52.4 percent winners to break even, figuring in the 10 percent vigorish he has to fork over on every losing bet….The 10 football experts on the Post are, in toto, 46.2 percent winners.

Continue reading

A Football Grievance

Last weekend, the New Orleans Saints football team won a gripping and uplifting victory, kicking a field goal with 3 seconds on the clock. It was a bitterly fought contest, and while the overall platitudes about the resiliency of the human spirit became somewhat tedious before long, the Saints played harder than anyone expected them to given the turmoil in their lives, for the most part dominating a Carolina team many had picked to reach the superbowl.

The Saints inspiring victory earned them the cover of Sports Illustrated. Some call th15em ‘America’s new team’. Many called the victory ‘uplifting’, ‘invigorating’, and ‘a ray of sunshine for hundreds of thousands of displaced Cajuns’. Continue reading

NFL Players Have Opinions on Their Madden Stats

Another sign that video games have entered the mainstream: people in Pittsburgh are upset that Madden ‘06 gives Ben Roethlisburger mediocre stats – and this made the news.

Incidentally, Roethlisburger has his own critique of the game, which isn’t related at all to his stats.

“I think a lot of guys don’t like it as much because [the new vision cone system] makes it much harder. I know they’re trying to make it more realistic and stuff, but it makes it harder, and I don’t know if it’s as fun,” he said.

Yo, back off, dude. You don’t see me out there trying to do YOUR job.

Football and Basic Fairness

I recently finished “America’s Game“, a very informative book describing the history of the NFL. It’s an entertaining read that starts in the early 40s and winds down around Nipplegate.

From a game designer’s perspective, the interesting thing about the book was the discussion about the business decisions that the owners made that allowed the sport to ultimately surpass baseball in popularity. It discusses some of the common theories (including that football’s pacing lends itself better to television), but it keeps coming back to the simple premise that the owners’ unwavering belief that fair and competitive football games were the way to go. The Draft, the Salary Cap, and sharing TV revenue between all teams are the primary examples of where this philosophy has led.

By way of example, in the 40s, the Bears and the Giants won the 8-Team NFL virtually every year. The owner of the Eagles, who were perpetual doormats at the time, came up with the idea of the first sports draft to ensure that the doormat teams of the future would get an influx of good talent every year. The measure passed unanimously — the owners of the Giants and the Bears realized they would lose their lock on the championship game every year, but they also realized that the product that was the NFL would suffer unless games became fair.

It seems like common sense, of course, but can you imagine George Steinbrenner taking this stance? Baseball owners like Steinbrenner have fought aggressively against true reforms for the good of the sport, as have the players, who feel (probably correctly) that a salary cap would slow the ridiculous growth of superstar salaries. As for George, he likes it being a money game – because he has more of it, thanks to the lucrative New York market.

MMOs, believe it or not, face interesting and similar quandries all the time. It is my earnest belief that most people who play MMOs would be interested in PVP and PK combat if it felt fair. The problem is that making fair MMO PVP combat is hard. Almost every MMO with PVP has an ‘ambush’ style class, usually a rogue, that can annihilate most other character classes with little fear of reprisal if they can choose the opportunity of attack. Which is, I confess, great fun for the backstabber. Try to change this, though, and you’ll be accused of creating Carebearland.

Zerging is another not-very-fair tactic – i.e. winning simply on sheer numbers. Not very competitive, and not very entertaining for very long. One of the interesting things about WoW’s battlegrounds and Guild Wars’ instanced arenas is that they can, in theory, guaruntee a fair fight – at least in numbers. Whether these systems will resonate with the players even though they are off the main map remains to be seen.

And MMOs aren’t alone. Magic: the Gathering has had to invent closed-deck tournaments so new players could hope to have any chance to win against the guy with a suitcase full of Magic cards. But fairness is even a bigger issue in skill-based games, where one experienced player exercising very good skill with the sniper rifle can be seen as monumentally unfair to the newbie who can’t seem to spawn and grab the closest gun before an ominous voice says ‘Head Shot’.

Which is the tricky bit. Fairness is, fundamentally, a point of view question. Steinbrenner, for example, is playing by the rules building his Yankees, and if you ask any Yanks fan, they’ll tell you that all’s fair until baseball decides to change the rules.

But I do think that the next great PVP game is going to promise — and deliver– basic fairness in the fights. I think that there’s a lot of people waiting for it.

Original comments thread is here.

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