sikeston bulldog2 wrote: ↑04 Aug 2025 05:26 am
butsir01 wrote: ↑03 Aug 2025 14:22 pm
rockondlouie wrote: ↑03 Aug 2025 10:59 am
Anyone who's ever thrown a wet ball knows you have little control over where it's going.
No one wants a pitcher throwing 95+ MPH trying to control it since he could really hurt the hitter while P. Manning's wet ball wouldn't do any damage to anyone.
Not to mention a hitter trying to pickup the spin thru the rain drops while keeping the water out of his eye's and his hands semi-dry.
No way to play unless it's a really light rain.
Yea baseball just wasn't meant to be played in the rain.
I was playing very low-level rec slow-pitch. Raining cats and dogs. The aluminum bat slupt (we’ll see if anyone remembers this) and nearly hit the third-baseman. Too dangerous when very wet. Different from soccer which I played collegiately and refereed for forty years.
Forty years. Let me ask you. Why do high schools in Louisiana play their soccer from November -February, coldest and wettest part of year.
Complete misery and agony watching my kids in 35 degree and light rain.
Good morning, Dawg. Good question. In Ohio, girls and boys played August through early November, the traditional months. When I was a kid in Saint Louis, only had boys’ soccer (1960s), and they played from two weeks after the end of American football through March. The preceding is context.
Currently in Missouri, boys play in the fall and girls in the spring. In that way, girls can play softball in the fall, when weather is more predictable, i.e., August-November, and soccer from February onward.
My best understanding as to why Louisiana plays February onward is that it is just too hot to play down there in August and September and that softball has a better chance weather-wise in the fall. Other southern and southwestern states play like Louisiana does for like reasons
When I grew up in Saint Louis, there was no organized youth soccer during the summer, because it was too hot. I hope this was helpful.