You can't unring a bell, because there's no way to reverse sound waves. Waves are waves and they make sounds, and there's no backward and forward to them, except in cases where we expect a highly organized set of sounds. You can tell if I say this sentence backward to you, but you won't hear a difference if a bell rings backward. Most importantly, too, you can put all the atoms that make up the air right back where they were, but it won't change the fact that the vibrations passed through them.
That's how baseball works, too. Carlos Rodón didn't pitch all that badly, for most of his outing. He retired eight of the first 10 batters he faced, and the last two, and he was lifted early as much because the World Series is a high-stakes environment requiring special measures as because damage seemed imminent again. The problem: in between his strong start and those solid couple of batters to finish, he allowed a double, two home runs, and another double. The Dodgers, who are just lethal this way, rang the bell loud and hard.
Basketball doesn't really have an analog for this, but the other major team sports all do. Within any game, there will be strongest and weakest stretches for you, and that's fine; it's unavoidable. The quality of your opponent determines your margin for error, though, and if your worst stretch is a little too sloppy and your opponent is really good, the rest of it might not matter. Football games can slip irretrievably away because of one bad turnover that the opponent turns into points. Even more akin to baseball is soccer, where the scoring baseline is low enough that a lapse of just a few minutes can render 85 minutes of hard fight and sound plans meaningless.
Yoshinobu Yamamoto never had that prolonged slip. He gave up a solo home run to Juan Soto, just as Rodón did to Tommy Edman, but he never had another bad stretch on which the Yankees could capitalize. Blake Treinen nearly did, but New York's inferior lineup depth denied them the ability to seize their opportunity the way Los Angeles had.
There's a better metaphor for the unrung bell that we have to talk about, though, because if this Series makes it back to Dodger Stadium from here, one big reason will be a play that didn't involve Rodón or Yamamoto or Treinen.
If you're a Caretaker, scroll down for the rest of your exclusive content! And if you're not, maybe consider becoming a Caretaker? The best reason is it just feels good to support something you love, and you want it to be there for the next generation.
Plus, there are many other benefits, like a free Winter Meltdown ticket and early access for guests, special callouts on the site, and lots more inside or in-depth content like this. So please consider joining our little club. The money goes to a site you love, to support coverage you love, and to writers you value. Thank you so much.
Become a Caretaker
We love providing this level of deep-dive coverage, but it's expensive - too expensive to be paid for just by internet ads. So, we reserve the rest of this story for the Caretakers that make this kind of coverage possible.
It may be time for you to become a Caretaker. You'll love it. You'll get more meaty stories like this, plus perks like Winter Meltdown tickets and other special recognition. And you can join for as little as $4/month. You can read all about it and sign up here.
Become a Caretaker
The rest of this deep dive content is only available to Twins Daily's Caretakers. Our Caretakers take care of the site, and in return, we take care of them. That includes us investing in deeper dive stories, free Winter Meltdown tickets, acknowledgment in the forums, and other perks.
If you visit Twins Daily often, consider joining our Caretakers. We would love to have you join our little club, and you'll love being a part of it, too, and not just for the perks. Just click here to get started.
Become a Caretaker
We have arrived at the point of the content where things get a little meatier, but that content is reserved for Twins Daily Caretaker’s eyes only. Creating deep-dive stories like this is too expensive to be supported by ads alone, so we limit it to those Caretakers who support the site.
Fear not: You, too, can become a Caretaker for as low as $4/month. In addition to reading more in-depth stories like this, you get free Twins Daily publications, Winter Meltdown tickets, and other special recognition. Just start here.
Become a Caretaker
Only Caretakers get to read this whole story because they support the extra expense that stories like this cost. They also get:
- Exclusive deep-dive content on the Twins like this all year
- A free Winter Meltdown ticket
- Recognition in their comments on Twins Daily
But best of all, they know they're supporting a community and coverage for the next generation of Twins fans. Join us now by becoming a Caretaker.
Become a Caretaker
Recommended Comments
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now